Archive for October, 2013

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Sunday, October 6th, 2013
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The aftermath of failure to use safety chains when towing trailer. / Courtesy photo by Trian DelaMater

THE TINY SHIP WAS TOSSED

• A small boat took an unexpected detour off its trailer and onto the sidewalk along South Gold Street in Centralia last night, narrowly missing a building. Responders arriving after the approximately 8:30 p.m. mishap found two vehicles damaged in the used car lot belonging to Sunny Valley Sales. “We’re fortunate it actually hit the cars instead not the showroom,” Debbie Mills said. She and her husband Brad Mills had just left the business moments earlier and were at home not far away. “Brad was outside with our dogs and said he heard the worst racket ever,” she said. “Then a friend called and said you’d better get down here.” Tow truck driver Aaron Towman (not his real last name, but the name he goes by) said he believed the driver was coming down off the viaduct and the trailer began to bounce before coming unhitched. Towman said the errant trailer must have been clipping along fairly fast as its tongue stabbed through the grill of a Ford F250 pickup and the boat continued on, knocking down the business’s tall sign. That landed on the roof of a Nissan Maxima. Police say they cited the 53-year-old Onalaska man for losing his load. Marc Vonsovic was towing his trailer without safety chains, according to the Centralia Police Department. “The worst thing is, that truck was going to be sold tomorrow,” Debbie Mills said.

DRUGS AND STUFF

• A 44-year-old man from Port Hadlock was arrested about 5:30 a.m. today at the 400 block of East Plum Street in connection with a stolen Madza recovered by police there – which had recently been involved in a hit and run accident – for warrants and also for possession of methamphetamine, according to the Centralia Police Department. Earnest E. Farris was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

CARS SHOT

• Police were called just before 11 a.m. yesterday to the 600 block of Fulton Street in Centralia where several vehicle windows were broken, apparently shot at with a BB or pellet gun, according to the Centralia Police Department. Similar reports were taken earlier in the morning on Oxford Avenue.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license, misdemeanor domestic assault, misdemeanor theft; responses for minor collisions … and more.

Maurin murder trial: Twenty-seven-year-old case to commence in Chehalis

Friday, October 4th, 2013
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Ricky Riffe consults with defense team member Richard Davis in Lewis County Superior Court today during preparations for his murder trial.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – As many as 180 potential jurors will be questioned when the trial for the 1985 kidnapping and murder of an elderly Ethel couple opens next week.

Described as one of the most horrific homicides in Lewis County, prosecutors have said the targets were selected more or less at random, taken from their home prior to a Christmas party and forced to  drive to their bank to withdraw money before getting shot in their backs and dumped on a logging road.

One of the two long-suspected brothers – then in their 20s – who was arrested last year plans to take the witness stand in the weeks-long trial, according to his lawyer.

“He’s absolutely going to testify,” Seattle-based attorney John Crowley said today.

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Rick Riffe

Ricky Riffe, now 54, remains in the Lewis County Jail, held on $5 million bail since he was brought back to town from his home in Alaska a year ago in July. He is charged with murder, kidnapping, robbery and burglary, with numerous aggravating factors such as the vulnerability of the victims. His younger brother John Gregory Riffe died last summer.

The bodies of Ed Maurin, 81 and Wilhelmina “Minnie” Maurin, 83, were finally found on Christmas Eve days after they vanished from their home.

“This is a case where Mr. Riffe is going to tell the jury he did not do this, it’s going to be very simple,” Crowley told the judge today.

Lawyers on both sides met with Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey this morning to go over details for the trial that begins on Monday morning.

For the state, elected Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead are assisted by sheriff’s detective Bruce Kimsey.

On the other side, Crowley and his paralegal Richard Davis will be sharing the defense table with Riffe.

Likely, the judge will weed out those who cannot serve for the lengthy case before a questionnaire is filled out by those remaining.

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John Gregory Riffe

Crowley and prosecutors today discussed such issues as whether the  written inquiry should be so specific as to share that Riffe is charged as either the principal player or an accomplice in the crimes. It won’t.

Meyer requested a potential juror be excused now, since he works for the county and was needed to continue to help with the technical systems which will be used in the courtroom. He was.

Halstead said they’d like to take photos of the more than 200 witnesses they will call to the stand, which may be used  in a visual presentation during closing arguments. They can.

Judge Brosey said he wants six alternate jurors, in case any of the 12 chosen for any reason can’t continue.

Crowley was adamant they shouldn’t today address setting a trial date for an unrelated charge of child rape which prosecutors filed earlier this year.

He suggested that prosecutors were attempting to influence pre-trial publicity against his client and said it should not take place until after this jury is selected. Brosey postponed it.

They spoke of whether the Maurin’s car should have a place in the proceedings, and Crowley took the opportunity to note none of the 40 pieces of evidence collected from the car is connected to Riffe. The vehicle wasn’t preserved, Halstead said.

“Both sides have to deal with the fact this is a 27-year-old case,” Brosey said.

Both sides finally agreed they had all of the so-called discovery from the other – copies of all the statements, all the evidence, anything that either party plans to use in the case.

Prosecutors have more 400 items which will be presented as evidence during the trial.

Among the witnesses expected are a friend of the Riffes who said he used drugs with the brothers and recalled mentioning the couple must have a lot of money as the three drove past the Maurin’s house not long before their death; an individual who revealed in 2004 that John Riffe threatened to kill both him and his mother if he spoke about seeing the brothers with the Maurins in the Maurin’s car; another man interviewed in prison who said John Riffe paid him more than $2,000 in $100 bills for cocaine after the deaths; and numerous other people who have reportedly told detectives of seeing a man or men who matched the brothers’ descriptions at various key places that day, often noting one wearing a dark stocking cap, wearing an Army jacket or carrying a gun.

The trial will take place in the largest courtroom on the fourth floor of the Lewis County Law and Justice Center. It can hold 150 individuals.

The judge said no person will be kept out from any part of the proceedings. It will take at least all day Monday to pick the jury, according to Halstead.

The attorneys have previously said the trial could last three to four weeks. The judge will be telling prospective jurors it could last as long as six weeks.

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Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead, right, Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer, center, and sheriff’s detective Bruce Kimsey share the table on the left side of the courtroom.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, October 4th, 2013

Updated at 6:50 p.m.

SMALL FIRE CAUSES EVACUATION AT NURSING HOME

• A good portion of patients at a Centralia nursing home were evacuated today when a fire started inside a closet. Crews called just after 1 p.m. to the 1300 block of Alexander Street found smoke in the hallways and a wall burned. A heat lamp placed in the utility room that included the fire sprinkler controls had shifted its position and ignited the wall, Riverside Fire Authority Acting Capt. Jennifer Ternan said. Someone on the scene had already used a fire extinguisher on it, she said. Nobody was injured and nobody was treated for smoke inhalation, according to Ternan. She praised the staff of Riverside Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for getting the residents outside in an organized and safe manner, even grabbing their medications and bringing a cart of water to the parking lot. They were allowed to return after about 40 minutes, she said.

MATTRESS NEXT TO HEATER IGNITES

• Firefighters were called to the 100 block of Meadow Drive in Adna just before 8 o’clock this morning when a small mattress pushed up against a wall heater caught fire. The residents were just getting ready to leave when a smoke alarm alerted them, according to Lewis County Fire District 6. Nobody was hurt, the fire was small and it was extinguished, Firefighter Kyle Eiswald said.

THEFT

• A 27-year-old Centralia woman was arrested after she was allegedly seen in someone else’s garage on the 400 block of Jefferson Street in Centralia yesterday morning. Some items were taken and some were recovered, such as jewelry, according to the Centralia Police Department. Santana L. Sanchez was booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree burglary, according to police.

DRUGS

• A 45-year-old Centralia man contacted by a community corrections officer was subsequently arrested for both an outstanding warrant and possession of methamphetamine yesterday morning. Dale A. Drew had some “scraper baggies'”which field tested positive for the drug, according to the Centralia Police Department. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

FROM THE COURTHOUSE

• The former Thurston County Superior Court judicial assistant charged with growing marijuana was convicted in a bench trial yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court. Debbie Requa, 60, said it belonged to someone who rented her garage space and she thought what he was doing was above board. Judge James Lawler found her guilty of manufacturing marijuana. Lewis County Chief Criminal Prosecutor Brad Meagher said Requa faces a sentence of zero to six months in jail as a first-time offender.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, driving under the influence, misdemeanor assault; responses for stolen / missing cash, building tagged with graffiti, a call about a male walking with a military-looking gun that turned out to be a kid who purchased an Air-soft gun at a pawn shop and was on his way home; complaint someone else’s vehicle is parked in caller’s spot, upstairs apartment neighbors are noisy; other as in a found wallet with cash and credit cards turned into the police department … and more.

Search for man missing near Packwood expands

Friday, October 4th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office is now asking if anyone has seen a missing mushroom picker, as a dead battery in his vehicle leads them to suspect he may have slept in it on Saturday night and walked out the following morning.

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Saykham Tiansevilay

More than 25 search and rescue personnel on Wednesday began combing the area around Forest Service Road 47, approximately five miles northwest of Packwood after the man’s parked vehicle was found by his family late the afternoon before.

Saykham Tiansevilay, 68, left his home in Auburn to gather mushrooms in the Packwood area and was reported missing the following day.

Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Browns says Tiansevilay may have walked toward Packwood or Ashford, or even been picked up by someone.

He is an experienced mushroom hunter, has no known medical conditions but wasn’t equipped to be outdoors for more than a few hours, according to Brown. He was wearing street clothes.

The search area has been expanded utilizing multiple teams, the sheriff’s office does not suspect foul play and they will continue to investigate as a missing person case, Brown said in a news release this morning.

If anyone has seen him or has information about his whereabouts, they are asked to call the sheriff’s office at 360-748-9286.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, October 3rd, 2013

WRECKS

• A 19-year-old Toledo resident escaped injury yesterday morning when a deer ran out in front of him as he was driving along the 600 block of Smokey Valley Road near Toledo. A deputy responding to the approximately 6:15 a.m. wreck learned that Cassius Hughes tried to avoid the animal, stepped on his brakes and went into a ditch, causing major damage to his 2008 Ford Focus, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• A 29-year-old Toledo woman wrecked her vehicle but was unhurt when she lost control of her Toyota Forerunner, left the roadway, hit the ditch and rolled it onto its top. It happened about 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon at the 200 block of South Military Road near Winlock; the driver was Natasha Pogue, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. There was no mention of a deer.

FROM THE COURTS

• Former Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Hal Sprouse  won’t be getting his job back after the state Supreme Court denied his petition for review yesterday. Sprouse was fired in January 2010, and his termination was upheld by Lewis County Civil Service Commission. However, a Cowlitz County Superior Court hearing his case ruled in Sprouse’s favor. But Sheriff Steve Mansfield appealed the decision and won. In part, according to case documents, it was related to Sprouse’s actions after he received a letter of discipline as sheriff’s office command staff investigated a leak to the press of an outside investigation of the sheriff. Sprouse was let go after he claimed witness tampering to a deputy prosecutor, something the sheriff’s office felt was vindictive. For more background and links to some of the documents, look here.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, driving with suspended license, shoplifting; responses for disorderly subjects, protection order violation; complaint of a speeding blue Jetta; fire department response for a tree falling onto a power line, a minor collision between a car and a semi truck on Interstate 5 near the Chamber of Commerce Way interchange … and more.

Onalaska man loses bid for further look at manslaughter conviction in shooting case

Thursday, October 3rd, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The conviction will stand for the Onalaska man who fatally shot a suspected burglar outside his house three years ago.

Ronald A. Brady was sentenced to just over five years in prison for the death of 56-year-old Thomas McKenzie of Morton.

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Ronald A. Brady, convicted

The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office got word yesterday the Washington Supreme Court denied Brady’s petition for review.

Brady argued self defense in his June 2011 trial. He avoided a first-degree murder conviction, but a jury found him guilty of second-degree manslaughter.

He told sheriff’s detectives he was staying overnight at the uninhabited house he owns on the 2100 block of state Route 508 in case burglars from earlier in the day returned. The then-59-year-old described opening the garage door and finding flashlights shined in his face and then firing several times with a .22 caliber rifle.

The rejection by the court means he will stay behind bars.

“It means the defendant petitioned the Supreme Court to review the Court of Appeals affirmation of his conviction,” Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Sara Beigh said. “And the Supreme Court said no, we’re not going to look at it.”

Through his attorney, Brady had appealed on several grounds, including contending the court erred when it refused to give his proposed jury instruction on the right to resist the commission of a felony. The appeals court said in its April decision the facts of the case did not support such an instruction, as any felony that may have been committed did not pose an immediate threat of death or great bodily harm to Brady.

Longview lawyer John A. Hays said that actually wasn’t his strongest argument.

Hays said his main concern was jurors were not allowed to hear information that showed McKenzie and his wife were there to steal. Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt kept that out saying the defendant didn’t know it at the time, he said.

“I don’t think the evidence was presented fairly at all,” Hays said. “Of course the trial court didn’t see it that way, neither did the appeals court or the Supreme Court.”

The shooting occurred on April, 19, 2010. Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield believed Brady’s use of force was justifiable, and declined to arrest him. The prosecutor’s office reviewed the case and filed charges the following September.

Brady is housed at Cedar Creek Corrections Center, a minimum security facility near Littlerock, according to the state Department of Corrections. The earliest he could be released, with so-called good time, is January 2016.

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer said he didn’t think yesterday’s rejection by the Supreme Court necessarily clarified questions such as can a person use deadly force to protect property or how much does it matter if the person shot is inside or outside a house.

“I don’t think so, because this wasn’t self defense,” Meyer said. “It may make it more clear what self defense isn’t.”

There are so many variables, he said, he can’t give an easy answer or a checklist for what’s okay.

“Any action you take against another is going to be reviewed at multiple levels,” he said. “There’s no clear cut answer.”

Meyer did offer this however: “If someone acts in self defense, they are protected by the law.”

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For background, read “Breaking news: Onalaska murder trial: Guilty of second-degree manslaughter” from Friday June 24, 2011, here

Read the decision

News brief: Mushroom hunter search resumes

Thursday, October 3rd, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The search continues today in the forest outside Packwood for the 68-year-old Auburn man who didn’t return home from a Saturday mushroom gathering outing.

More than 25 search and rescue personnel set out yesterday morning in the area northwest of Packwood following the discovery of his vehicle the afternoon before on Forest Service Road 47.

Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown indicated this morning she believes the same teams, along with family and friends, are out there looking today.

The man’s family reported him missing on Sunday, but a ground search didn’t start until late Tuesday afternoon when his family found his vehicle. The sheriff’s office says he wasn’t equipped to be outdoors for more than a few hours.