Archive for June, 2013

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, June 19th, 2013

BAD EMPLOYEE

• A 31-year-old worker at a Centralia warehouse was arrested yesterday for allegedly punching his supervisor in the face. A deputy called to Millard Refrigerated Services at the Port of Centralia off Harrison Avenue was told Michael J. Erhardt, of Kelso, assaulted the 49-year-old Chehalis man and then left, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. A deputy subsequently contacted Erhardt and booked him into the Lewis County Jail for fourth-degree assault, according to the sheriff’s office. Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown, a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, said it is unknown what the argument was about.

BAD NEIGHBOR

• The sheriff’s office reported this morning a 54-year-old Silver Creek man was arrested for allegedly kissing his 16-year-old neighbor’s head, face and neck when he gave her a ride home. Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said a deputy took a report on Saturday about that day’s incident and contacted Barry R. Engeseth on Monday to take him into custody. The girl said she got a ride from the Texaco station in Silver Creek by Engeseth because she knows him, but he stopped Ike Kinswa Park on the way and he kissed her and tried to grab her breasts before taking her home, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Engeseth was booked into the Lewis County Jail for fourth-degree assault with sexual motivation, according to Brown.

BAD DRIVERS

• Police were called when a vehicle ran into the exterior of the Centralia Women’s Center on the 1000 block of South Schueber Road in Centralia just after 7 p.m. yesterday. The damage was minor and nobody was hurt, according to police.

• The sheriff’s office is looking for an older red car, possibly a Geo Metro, that struck a 17-year-old Chehalis girl’s car last night at Highway 603 and Brown Road East outside Chehalis. A deputy called about 10:20 p.m. was told the car pulled out from a stop sign in front of the girl’s Honda Civic causing her to lose control and then struck the driver’s side of her car but left the scene, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The damage to her car was minor, according to the sheriff’s office.

BAD PIECE OF EQUIPMENT

• An explosion yesterday afternoon in the Chehalis Industrial Park included a fireball and damage to a piece of equipment but nobody was injured. Firefighters were called to Conrad Industries, a business on the 100 block of Melhart Road which recycles tires, at about 2 p.m. and found one of the workers spraying water, but there was no fire left to put out, according to Lewis County Fire District 6. They have something called a “heat cyclone” which was apparently shut down but for whatever reason built up pressure, according to Firefighter Matt Foley. The force of it broke bolts that allowed a metal lid to fly up and put a hole in the ceiling, he said. It also broke a four-inch pipe in half, he said.

CAR PROWL

• Centralia police took a report about 1:40 a.m. today of a vehicle prowl at the 2000 block of Borst Avenue. Stolen was a Pioneer stereo and a purse, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrant, driving under the influence, other misdemeanor assaults; responses for misdemeanor theft, suspicious circumstances … and more.

Read about Chehalis fisherman missing in Alaskan waters …

Wednesday, June 19th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Anchorage Daily News in Alaska reports a 25-year-old man from Chehalis is missing from a fishing boat west of Juneau.

Alan Young went overboard on Monday night and the skipper who tried to rescue him fell in as well, according to the news item published this morning.

KINY radio out of Juneau reports the Coast Guard found the skipper alive, but suspended its active search last night.

Read about it here, and here

Attempted drug deal turns violent in Centralia

Wednesday, June 19th, 2013
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Police detain one individual on Long Road in Centralia following an assault in the parking lot of the Peppertree Motel. / Courtesy photo by Raymond Smith

Updated at 11:16 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

An individual who was trying to buy heroin instead was beaten and shocked with a stun gun by the three males he met up with last night in Centralia, according to police.

Police were called about 9:45 p.m. to the parking lot of the Peppertree Motel on Alder Street by citizens who saw what was happening and called 911, according to the Centralia Police Department.

Officers learned the participants were inside a car when the victim was choked, punched and then zapped with a hand held Taser, according to police. The 32-year-old Chehalis man was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital.

Police from Centralia and Chehalis, as well as the state patrol, searched the neighborhood, eventually taking two suspects into custody. The third has not been located.

Sgt. Kurt Reichert said the victim fought back and didn’t give up his money. He didn’t yet know this morning the dollar amount involved.

It’s not clear if the trio even had any drugs they intended to sell, according to Reichert. None were found, he said.

One suspect had fled in the car to the dead end of Long Road, pursued by a witness, and then departed on foot, according to police. Joseph M. Hanks, 30, of Rochester, was soon located in a grassy field and detained, according to police.

An individual who jumped out of the way of the fleeing vehicle and fell down was hurt, so they were taken to the hospital with unknown injuries, Reichert said.

The other suspect turned up a few blocks away on South Cedar Street, being held at gun point by a citizen, Reichert said. Elijah M. Garibay, 25, of Elma, was then taken into custody.

After the car was impounded, police found the stun gun device, but no heroin, according to Reichert.

Hanks and Garibay were booked into the Lewis County Jail for robbery, assault and attempted delivery of a controlled substance. Police say Garibay also had outstanding warrants.

“This is what we had last year,” Reichert said.

He was speaking of the seller of purported medical marijuana who got into the car of two teenagers he thought were customers on the street in front of his East Van Buren Street home.

In that mid December case, 28-year-old Joshua Z. Smith was robbed of his weed at gunpoint and struck in the face before he bailed out of the vehicle. Smith shot at the car as it departed and was recently charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, while armed.

The Tacoma area residents have since pleaded guilty for their role.

Mammoth road-blocking semi from Friday is just one of 13 more coming through

Tuesday, June 18th, 2013
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State Route 505 at North Military Road. / Courtesy photo by Jo Withrow

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A giant oversized load on a semi truck that blocked state Route 505 to Winlock for more than four hours last week was a tunnel boring machine on its way to China, according to the Washington State Patrol.

Troopers were called about 12:45 p.m. on Friday when one of its wheels went into a ditch as it tried to make the turn to continue up North Military Road, a state patrol spokesperson said today.

Trooper Will Finn  said they had to call some folks up from Kelso to help get the big rig on its way.

Later that night, it got stuck again trying to make a corner in Centralia.

And it was stalled the night before at state Route 506 and Military Road near Vader.

Finn said he learned the load originated in Canada and traveled through Montana and Idaho trying to get to the port in Grays Harbor so it can be shipped across to Asia.

It’s just one of many trying to make the same journey, according to Finn.

“There are 16 of them, it’s the third one they’ve moved,” he  said.

He said he wasn’t actually certain if each load is an entire tunneling machine or just components, but he did know the truck, trailer and load that had so much trouble on Friday was 120 feet long and 17 feet tall.

He wasn’t sure why it didn’t choose to travel on Interstate 5, and asked about that, he said.

“I guess the company hauling it didn’t want to deal with I-5 because they didn’t want to deal with the over passes,” he said.

His understanding was each time it would come to an overpass too low to clear, it would have to exit the freeway and get back on.

Lewis County granted the travel route permit, but if it allows another one, things will be different.

“I can virtually guarantee we’re not going to go through that again,” Tim Elsea, the director of Lewis County Public Works said today.

Elsea said he doesn’t yet have all the details, but they are looking at the situation.

He described the procedure for such permits: The pilot company proposes a route and the county looks into height and weight restrictions that would prevent travel on certain roads and over certain bridges, Elsea said.

“But we don’t check if they can make all their turns,” he said.

Elsea said he followed the same protocol as usual for issuing a route permit.

The pilot company originally wanted to go a different way, but there were three bridges on Jackson Highway that aren’t authorized for anything above normal weight loads, he said.

“I will say the haulers kind of felt like we were too restrictive of them because of the bridge collapse in Skagit County,” he said. “But that’s not it at all, it was our normal process.”

Elsea said the truck managed to get through at state Route 505 by taking some of the axles off, making the turn and then putting them back on.

In Centralia at about 8:30 that night, the same giant oversized load blocked an intersection at Mellen and Yew streets, long enough for the owner of a parked car to be located to so they could be asked to move their car in order for the truck to get around a corner, according to the police department.

Finn said it’s unknown when the next 13 similar loads may attempt to travel through the area.

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State Route 505 at North Military Road. / Courtesy photo by Jo Withrow

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, June 18th, 2013

Updated at 3:16 p.m.

WINLOCK MAN HOSPITALIZED AFTER ACCIDENT WITH FIRE

• A Winlock resident in his 20s was airlifted to a Portland hospital yesterday for injuries he sustained when he apparently was attempting to ignite a burn pile using gasoline. “It flashed on him and he received burns severe enough he needed to go to a specialty burn unit,” Lewis County Fire District Assistant Chief Kevin Anderson said. It happened about 3:30 p.m. at the 1500 block of King Road. The patient was taken to the elementary school to be picked up by a helicopter and taken to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, according to Anderson. Firefighters advise it’s never safe to use gasoline to fuel a fire, Anderson said.

CENTRALIA AREA WOMAN RUN OVER BY SMALL PICKUP TRUCK

• A woman in her late 70s was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle after she was run over by her own small pickup truck west of Centralia yesterday. Firefighters called about 3:30 p.m. to the end of Lincoln Creek Road found the patient conscious and alert but because of her age and the way the incident occurred, sent her to the regional trauma center, according to Riverside Fire Authority. “She was able to get up on her own and call 911, it had rolled across her chest,” Firefighter-Paramedic Jesse Berry said.

ALCOHOL OVERDOSE

• A 16-year-old Toledo boy was hospitalized early this morning with apparent acute alcohol poisoning and his neighbor is in trouble for allegedly providing the beer he got drunk on. Deputies were called about 3:45 a.m. to the 5400 block of Jackson Highway, where the teen was so intoxicated and out-of-control his father had to hold him down, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The boy passed out and aid was called, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. An investigation found the 16-year-old had been at a neighbor’s bonfire, until his parents were called to come and get him because he was incoherent and combative, according to Brown. The case involving the 20-year-old neighbor will be referred to prosecutors for a possible charge of providing a premises for minor in possession, Brown said. The case involving the boy will be referred for a charge of minor in possession, she said.

FIGHT

• Centralia police were called overnight to the 1300 block of Windsor Avenue about a  person being assaulted by two males. The suspects fled before officers arrived, according to the Centralia Police Department. Sgt. Brian Warren said the male victim was taken to the hospital and the investigation is ongoing so he didn’t yet have more details.

POSSIBLE BURGLARY

• A woman who lives on South Market Boulevard in Chehalis called police yesterday evening to say she suspected someone had been slipping inside her apartment while she was away and stealing food. The residence previously wasn’t secured as well as it could be, but that has been remedied, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

GAS DRIVE OFF

• Chehalis police were called to a gas station on West Main Street about 4:40 a.m. today to a report a motorist fueled up and left without paying. The loss is more than $100, according to the Chehalis Police Department

DRUGS

• A 27-year-old resident of Pacific Beach was arrested about 1 a.m. today for a warrant and possession of methamphetamine after he was contacted by an officer at Southwest 18th Street and Kelly Avenue in Chehalis. Police found a baggie of suspected meth and a pipe in the pockets of Matthew L. Emery, according to the Chehalis Police Department. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

THEFT

• Morton police reported they were called on Sunday to the 100 block of Collar Avenue where someone had stolen lawn ornaments – solar lights and a solar flower.

VEHICLE PROWL

• Centralia police took a report about 8:20 p.m. yesterday of a window broken out of a vehicle at the 1300 block of Windsor Avenue.

• A 37-year-old Centralia area man called the sheriff’s office yesterday to report he noticed on Saturday that his handgun had disappeared from where he put it under the seat of his pickup truck. The gun is a Kel-Tec 32 semiautomatic with a seven-round magazine, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Two holsters were missing as well, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. He suspected the theft could have occurred sometime since June 8 at the 600 block of Dobson Court in Chehalis, his sister’s apartment where he has spent a lot of time and at least one time left a window cracked open, according to the sheriff’s office.

NOT ANIMAL ABUSE

• A call last week about suspected animal abuse at the 600 block of Westlake Avenue in Morton wasn’t what it seemed, according to police. An officer was told someone was hitting a dog on the evening of June 10, according to the Morton Police Department. The owner was hitting the dog, because it had a smaller dog in its mouth and the owner was trying to get the adult dog to drop it, according to police. The little dog was okay, according to police.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, misdemeanor assaults; responses for alarms, misdemeanor theft, a person behind a building talking to himself and acting strange, a registered sex offender making an inquiry as to what his restrictions might be for going to parks and public swimming pools … and more.

Centralia police track illegal Oxycodone trade to prison inmate

Tuesday, June 18th, 2013

Updated at 12:15 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Efforts to quash illegal pain pill sales in Centralia have led to an inmate who allegedly headed up a drug trafficking organization from prison, using fabricated telephone numbers to direct and set up deals between suppliers, sellers and customers, Centralia police revealed today.

The investigation that began after the local man was incarcerated in January has caught 20 other individuals in four counties and culminated yesterday in searches at New Beginnings Wellness Centers in Tumwater and Aberdeen, which involved the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, according to the Centralia Police Department.

At the center of the alleged drug ring is 30-year-old Forrest E. Amos, formerly of Napavine, according to police.

It’s mainly Oxycodone, Centralia police’s Anti-Crime Team Sgt. Jim Shannon said this morning.

“We’re doing everything we possible can to reach out as far as we possibly can to cut that off at its source,” Shannon said.

The organization has primarily been involved in illegal delivery of prescription pain relief medication but also has illegally facilitated medical marijuana authorizations, according to Centralia police.

Intercepted prison phone conversations and surveillance of the ensuing drug deals have resulted in arrests, identification of more suspects and further arrests over the past several weeks, according to police.

In the process, authorities have confiscated approximately 1,650 illegal prescription pills with a street value of as much as $66,000, according to Shannon.

Besides Centralia and Chehalis, the arrests have been made in Napavine, Longview, Lacey and at Sea-Tac Airport, according to news release from the Centralia Police Department.

Some of the 20 people ‘caught” have not been arrested, but their cases referred to prosecutors for evaluation of possible charges, according to the news release.

It’s not a marijuana investigation, but officers have also confiscated 156 marijuana plants, one and a half pounds of dried marijuana, according to police.

The investigation has included the seizure of five vehicles, $19,000 cash and a house in south Chehalis, according to Shannon.

Shannon said they have more arrests to make today.

The list of potential charges for Amos and others is long, including  leading organized crime, extortion, identity theft, fraud, first-degree assault, delivery and/or possession with intent to deliver controlled substances, as well as Medicaid fraud, according to the Centralia Police Department.

Shannon said yesterday’s search warrants served in Tumwater and Aberdeen focused on medical records and other documents. New Beginnings Wellness Centers is operated by a nurse practitioner named Sharol Chavez, he said.

DEA agents and the U.S Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General will be reviewing them for possible federal violations, according to Shannon.

Other entities involved in the investigation include the Longview Police Department Street Crimes Unit, the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Homeland Security Investigations and the Washington State Department of Corrections Internal Intelligence and Narcotics Group, according to the Centralia Police Department.

Police Chief Bob Berg called it a complicated and lengthy investigation which would not have been possible without the cooperation of several agencies.

“The chief suspect in this case, while not in the community, continued to have a major impact on our community,” Berg stated in the news release. “The continued good work of the department’s Anti-Crime Team has been a contributing factor in the downward trend of crime in Centralia.”

Amos is serving time for possessing prescription drugs without authorization. He was sent to prison in January, according to Shannon.

Police allege Amos attempted to hide his prison phone conversations by extorting personal information from sex offenders in prison and using it to set up fake phone accounts. Inmates can communicate with outsiders via collect phone calls, according to Shannon.

Shannon said prison investigators caught onto the telephone scheme early on.

Amos allegedly arranged with a co-conspirator to have contraband smuggled in as well, according to Centralia police.

Police made the investigation public today because it is nearing its completion at the local level, according to police.

Details about the mentioned first-degree assault were not immediately available.

The residence local authorities are in the process of seizing came out of the arrest of Justin Currier in February, according to Shannon. His team was investigating the pain pill trade and just incidentally turned up more than 150 marijuana plants at Currier’s home, he said.

News brief: Rochester wife arrested after husband stabbed

Tuesday, June 18th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 42-year-old Rochester man was hospitalized last night after he was stabbed, allegedly by his wife.

Deputies and aid were called about 9 p.m. to a residence in the 7700 block of 196th Lane Southwest where the victim said, initially, the wound came from falling on some bricks, according to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office.

An investigation however concluded he and his 35-year-old wife had been arguing in the kitchen and she stabbed him in the back of his shoulder, according to sheriff’s Lt. Greg Elwin.

Sarah A. Horr, 35, of Rochester, was arrested for first-degree assault, according to Elwin.

Her husband was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital for treatment.

The investigation is continuing, according to the sheriff’s office.