Archive for June, 2015

News brief: Police investigating death of little boy in Centralia

Wednesday, June 10th, 2015

Updated

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police are investigating the death of a 9-year-old boy this morning.

Detective Patti Finch said officers were dispatched at approximately 10:22 a.m. to a home on the 300 block of North Diamond Street regarding the child who was found unresponsive in bed by his mother.

Officers arrived to find CPR in progress, according to Finch. Members of the fire department were summoned at the same time.

The child was transported to the Providence Centralia Hospital in critical condition where he was pronounced dead a short time later, according to responders.

Finch indicated the boy had a recent medical procedure, but didn’t elaborate on what that was.

An autopsy will be performed on Thursday.

Nothing obvious at the scene suggested foul play, but anytime a child dies unexpectedly, police will get involved and investigate the circumstances, she said.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, June 10th, 2015
2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

•••

SHOPLIFTING

• Centralia officers “physically subdued” a 25-year-old homeless woman who was running from a store security person last night following an alleged shoplift. Police called to the 500 block of South Tower Avenue just before 10 p.m. arrested Shila K. Brennan, 25, for third-degree theft and booked her into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

CAR PROWLING

• Chehalis police were called a little after 2 o’clock this morning to the 400 block of Northeast Adams Avenue where a woman said she’d gone out to her car to get something and found a man inside it with a flashlight. He ran off and was not located, according to the Chehalis Police Department. It appeared a neighbor’s vehicle had also been prowled, police said. The suspect was described only as white and in his mid-20s, with short hair or bald and wearing “skater” shoes, according to police.

BAD CHECK

• Chehalis police were called about 2 p.m. yesterday regarding someone trying to fraudulently cash a check at a bank on the 1400 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue. The case is under investigation, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

ASSAULT

The Olympian reports a 37-year-old Centralia man accused of choking and beating another man at a mobile home near Rainier a week and a half ago pleaded not guilty yesterday to second-degree assault and felony harassment in Thurston County Superior Court. News reporter Amelia Dickson writes the victim’s girlfriend and children witnessed the altercation that began with Mike J. Poulton banging on the man’s door while he slept.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, misdemeanor assault, probation violation, driving with suspended license; responses for dispute, shoplifting, suspicious circumstances … and more.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, June 9th, 2015
2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

•••

Updated at 3:19 p.m.

PARACHUTING ACCIDENT

• Medics and firefighters were called to the airport in Toledo today for an injured skydiver, who they were told passed out on his way down. The man landed on the tarmac and suffered non-life threatening injuries, according to Lewis County Fire District 2. Firefighter-EMT Tracy Summers said the patient was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital following the approximately 12:45 p.m. call to the airfield off Jackson Highway.

DEER BREAKS MAN’S LEG

• Deputies responded to the 600 block of West Reynolds Avenue in Centralia after an approximately 2:40 p.m. incident yesterday when a deer ran into the side of motorcyclist traveling down the road, breaking the driver’s leg. The 61-year-old Rochester man’s Harley Davidson was undamaged, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

PEDESTRIAN INJURED

• Police were called about 8:20 p.m. yesterday to Reynolds Avenue and Pearl Street for a pedestrian versus vehicle accident. A boy, whose age was not readily available, was transported to the hospital for minor injuries, according to the Centralia Police Department. The driver was issued a citation, according to police.

BICYCLIST HURT

• A bicycle rider was transported to the hospital with minor injuries after a collision with a vehicle at about 7:20 a.m. yesterday at Pearl and Maple streets in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department.

UNWANTED VISITOR

• Police were called yesterday by an individual at the 200 block of Southwest Lewis Street in Chehalis who said sometime during the night someone came onto their deck and knocked over planters, and stole one of them.

VEHICLE PROWL

• Police were called about 5:30 a.m. yesterday to the 1100 block of South Pearl Street in Centralia after the discovery someone got into a parked car and removed its stereo, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday from the 1000 block of South Pearl Street regarding a car prowl the evening before in which someone broke out the window and stole a purse. Among its contents were money and credit cards, according to the Centralia Police Department.

FRAUD

• Centralia police took a report yesterday from an individual who said his wallet, with credit card, had been stolen from his home on the 200 block of East Chestnut Street and he learned someone else made charges on his account.

DRUGS

• A deputy serving an arrest warrant at the 200 block of Panisco Road in Cinebar yesterday morning ended up arresting a woman for possession of methamphetamine. The deputy reports the woman attempted to walk away and after she was placed on the ground to be handcuffed, she tried to throw a glass tube, which contained a white crystal powder, that field tested positive for meth, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Bobbie H. Valentich, also known as Bobbie Hansen, age not readily available, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the sheriff’s office.

LOST AND FOUND

• Centralia police were called yesterday morning by the owner of a 5-month-old Australian cattle dog who said the pup went missing from their yard on the 1200 block of Alexander Street. Police describe the pet as mostly white with a hint of gray. Officers took note a scraggly looking stranger had been seen in the area, but the man was not located, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Police and deputies searched for a 4-year-old child reported missing about 10 a.m. yesterday by his father at the 2000 block of Johnson Road. The investigation revealed the child was not missing and in fact was safe with his mother in the Rochester, according to police.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, misdemeanor assault; responses for alarm, hit and run, suspicious circumstances, possibly suicidal person, dog left alone inside parked vehicle, keys found at Penny Playground, someone letting the air out of someone else’s tires, suspected stolen iPad that was found, suspected stolen purse that was found … and more.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, June 8th, 2015
2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

•••

Updated at 3:22 p.m.

CHEHALIS TRUCK THEFT SUSPECT CHASED TO MORTON

• Chehalis police responded to a 4 a.m. alarm at an auto dealership on Sunday morning and discovered someone had used their vehicle to smash out the glass doors to the showroom. An individual had gone inside Titus-Will and grabbed several keys and tried them until they found one that worked, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Missing was a 2012 Dodge pickup truck, which was spotted leaving the area of the 2500 block of North National Avenue by another responding officer, police said. A police pursuit ensued that took them, along with a Centralia police officer, all the way to Morton, via Centralia-Alpha Road, according to detective Sgt. Gary WIlson. The officer temporarily lost sight of the stolen truck in town, but it wasn’t long before it was located at the Chevron station, where its driver was attempting to fuel up, Wilson said. A Morton officer joined them just before 4:30 a.m. and they took Brian A. Fortune, 29, of Chehalis, into custody. Fortune was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail for burglary, theft of a motor vehicle, eluding and, possession of methamphetamine, according to police.

POSSESSION OF STOLEN VEHICLE: MAYBE, MAYBE NOT

• A 32-year-old man was arrested after a deputy traveling through Vader checked a license plate on a parked car and discovered it was stolen out of Federal Way. The deputy contacted the individual believed to have parked the 2001 Nissan Maxima at the 100 block of Spring Court at about 2:20 a.m. yesterday and booked him into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree possession of stolen property, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Glen A. Harmon had just moved from Federal Way to Vader a week earlier, according to the sheriff’s office. He is to be released without charges pending further investigation.

SUCKERED IN CENTRALIA

• Centralia police took a report on Saturday evening from an individual who said two people offered to fix dents in their vehicle while they shopped at the 1100 block of Harrison Avenue, and paid them, but didn’t get what they expected. When the victim returned, there was makeup and bingo blotter ink spread on the car, according to the Centralia Police Department.

PILFERING IN CHEHALIS

• Chehalis police were contacted about 12:20 p.m. on Friday by an individual who reported a small metal tool box was stolen from their unlocked garage on Southwest 21st Street. Also missing was a solar-powered glass globe from the patio, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

VEHICLE PROWL

• Centralia police were called about 5:30 a.m. yesterday to the 1100 block of South Pearl Street where someone during the night broke into a car and stole its stereo, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Chehalis police were contacted yesterday by an individual who said that while they were parked in a downtown city parking lot the night before, someone prowled their vehicle and stole items including at least one purse.

• A 51-year-old Longview painter contacted law enforcement on Saturday morning after discovering someone broke into his work van while it was parked overnight at the Shell station on the 100 block of Mulford Road outside Toledo. Someone pried open a door and stole two paint sprayers – one a Graco 395 and the other a Titan – a buffer, a sander and two extension cords sometime after 4 p.m. on Friday and before 10 a.m. on Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The loss is estimated at $2,600, according to the sheriff’s office.

VANDALISM

• An officer responded to the 1200 block of Alder Street in Centralia after a 6 p.m. report yesterday someone damaged a motel room.

• A 26-year-old man was arrested for allegedly breaking a windshield during a dispute on Saturday evening at Haviland Street and Lum Road in Centralia. Brandon D. Genin, from Marysville, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND, FROM MORTON

• A dispute between two boat owners was reported in the 200 block of Westlake Avenue at 10 p.m. on Friday. Parties were arguing over one of them driving too close to the other boat while parking, according to the Morton Police Department. Officers encouraged those involved to park across the parking lot from one another, police reported.

• A motorist who fled an attempted traffic stop on Davis Lake Road in Morton around 2:30 a.m. on Saturday hasn’t been found, according to the Morton Police Department. The vehicle was later located unoccupied on a nearby logging road, but the driver is wanted for reckless driving, according to police.

NOT A SPRAY PARK, NOT AN OUTDOOR SHOWER

• Chehalis police were called about 8 o’clock on Sunday morning about a male in his underwear taking a bath in the fountain in front of the library off Northeast Park Street. He actually was wearing jogging shorts, but was told what he was doing wasn’t appropriate, according to the Chehalis Police Department. There was no soap involved, police said.

FAIL

• Two Glenoma residents were hurt during a driving lesson when the driver accidentally hit the wrong pedal on Glenoma Road late yesterday afternoon. The 58-year-old student driver, who was not licensed, suffered a possible fractured jaw and her boyfriend a possible broken arm, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. A deputy responding about 6:20 p.m. to Morton General Hospital was told by the 55-year-old passenger that his girlfriend got nervous and he told her to hit the brakes but she hit the gas instead, and both grabbed the steering wheel in an attempt to miss a tree, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. They ran into a small ditch and struck an alder tree, Brown said. The 1997 Geo Prizm was described as totaled. The woman was cited for no valid operators license, according to the sheriff’s office.

DUI WRECK

• A 25-year-old Centralia man was injured in a single-vehicle accident on the northbound viaduct on South Gold Street in Centralia on Saturday night. Riverside Fire Authority reports it responded at 9:50 p.m. where airbags had deployed but the occupant had serious injuries and suspected internal injuries. He was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital, according to the fire department. Police report they responded at 8:52 p.m. and cited Aurelio Almontes Barboza, for driving under the influence.

MOTORCYCLIST AIRLIFTED

• Firefighters responded about 10:40 a.m. today to a wreck between a small motorcycle and a car at South Pearl and Cherry streets. The 64-year-old man operating the motorcycle was transported to Harborview Medical Center by medical helicopter for possible internal injuries, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Centralia police indicated the man had been ejected and described his injuries as non-life threatening. The driver of the other vehicle was issued a notice of infraction for failure to yield the right of way, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, shoplifting, misdemeanor assault, no-contact order violation, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license; responses for alarm, dispute, stolen wallet, misdemeanor theft, collision on city street, fire in an oven, to find a person with a misdemeanor warrant hiding under a bed on display at a business … and more.

Read about Rochester man may not recover from I-5 construction area collision …

Monday, June 8th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

KIRO Radio reports a $20 million claim has been filed against the state Department of Transportation and its contractor Scarsella Brothers following an April incident in which a Rochester motorcyclist slammed into a dump truck at the Harrison Avenue freeway onramp in Centralia.

Scott R. Bliss, 44, of Rochester, was thrown from his Harley Davidson, and flown to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle on the morning of April 17, the state patrol reported at the time.

Reporter Sara Lerner writes the attorney for his longtime partner Cheryl Alton contends the truck driver was making an illegal U-turn near the Interstate 5 construction area and Bliss’s diagnosis of major brain damage has left him with less than a 10 percent chance of recovering.

Wesley G. Snelson, 61, from Galvin, was the driver of the 2004 Mack dump truck and was reportedly unhurt, according to the state patrol.

Read more here
•••

For background, read “News brief: I-5 construction area crash sends one to Harborview” from Friday April 17, 2015, here

News brief: Dog mauling leads to two pit bulls shot on Mandy Road

Monday, June 8th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Another incident with a dog fight and a shot gun in Toledo is highlighting the importance of people keeping their animals on their own property, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Two dogs were shot early Thursday morning after they attacked another dog on the dog’s property on the 600 block of Mandy Road, according to the sheriff’s office.

The victim German shepherd was taken to a veterinary hospital in critical condition with bites and cuts all over its body, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said on Friday morning.

Brown gave the following account of what took place:

A 29-year-old Toledo man heard growling in his front yard and discovered two of his neighbor’s pit bulls had his pet pinned to the ground, with one biting its neck and the other latched onto its hindquarter.

When his shouting didn’t stop the attack, he retrieved his shotgun. He fired a warning shot.

He shot one dog, which got it to let go and run away. He shot the other dog which had the same effect.

The 29-year-old followed to make sure they headed home, and when one of them came towards him, he shot it again, killing it.

Brown said the German shepherd owner’s actions were found to be justified under the cricumstances, as he was protecting his pet on his own property.

The pit bulls had left their property after the owner’s son accidentally a gate open, she said.

No humans were injured.

The German shepherd’s owner didn’t want the 39-year-old owner of the pit bulls cited for his dogs’ actions, according to Brown.

It was just four days earlier when a dog owner on Herriford Road shot a neighbor’s mastiff which came into his yard and tangled with his German shepherd. Both pets in that case survived.
•••

For background, read “Toledo dog fight, shooting bring anger, sorrow and fear” from Sunday June 7, 2015, here

Toledo dog fight, shooting bring anger, sorrow and fear

Sunday, June 7th, 2015
2015.0606.matiff.missy.todd.camping

Missy a purebred mastiff being treated for a shotgun wound to her face is shown resting on the shoulders of Todd Jewett, one of her owners, during a fall camping trip. / Courtesy photo

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The rescue puppy Mary Fairbanks acquired five years ago grew up to be 114 pounds of dog she describes as a “petite” mastiff.

It and its companion, a black Labrador retriever, were being taken care of by a house sitter while the Toledo resident and her fiancé were out of town, visiting a new grand-baby when they got the phone call.

Their neighbor had shot Missy the mastiff with a 12-gauge shotgun, Fairbanks said. “The whole left side of her face was blown off.”

As the phone got traded around, through several conversations including with a deputy sheriff who responded to the scene along Herifford Road and Shoreline Drive, Fairbanks learned Missy somehow got out of their fenced yard, went next door and tangled with the neighbor’s German shepherd.

2015.0601.missy.mastiff.injured.smaller

Missy, after she was rushed to a veterinary hospital.

The neighbor Douglas Bramhall told the deputy they’d gotten their pet safely inside and he went outside twice, the second time carrying his gun out his back door.

She learned Bramhall said her dog lunged at him, and he fired once, then her dog ran home bleeding.

Fairbanks, who said veterinarians refer to the large breed dogs as “gentle giants” found the neighbor’s story unbelievable.

Missy is a dog who children could lay on, who greeted numerous contractors over the past couple of months at their new home without a hint of aggression, and got along with other animals, according to Fairbanks.

“We lived for two and a half years on five acres in Tenino, with no fences and no issues,” she said. “Our dogs visited our neighbor’s dogs.

“There’s just so much more to this, we just don’t understand.”

Most upsetting, was trying to figure out why the neighbor went back outside if he thought he was putting himself in harm’s way.

“He’s in his house with his door shut,” Fairbanks said. “If she’s this horrible mean dog, why’d he go back out?”

That was last Sunday morning. By Thursday, Missy had undergone surgery at a veterinary hospital in Tacoma, and had a surprisingly good prognosis.

“What saved her is she’s young, she’s healthy, and strong,” Fairbanks said.

The vet picked what Fairbanks called pellets out of her face, leaving in the ones they couldn’t get to, she said. A feeding tube is getting installed, that Missy will have for at least six weeks.

“As long as no infection sets in, she’ll make it,” she said.

Fairbanks had endless questions, such as did the Bramhall’s dog, whose customary bathroom spot is property now inhabited by strangers, antagonize Missy.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office investigated and a spokesperson said they didn’t expect any charges on either side.

Both parties were talking about suing each other, however.

“The law is, you have a right to protect your life and property,” Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said on Friday. “People can armchair quarterback it, but the investigation shows it was a justifiable shooting at this point.”

As for Missy’s owner, Lewis County has an ordinance that addresses “prohibited activities of animals”, such as biting or threatening others as well as “animals at large” that prohibits dogs from roaming off their own property. Civil infractions can be issued, but in this case it seemed clear it was an accident when Missy got out of her fenced yard, according to Brown.

The deputy’s report indicates the house sitter inadvertently left the gate to the backyard open while watering plants.

“I think this is an unfortunate situation for everyone involved,” Brown said. “The learning point is, even if you live in the country, you have to keep your dogs on your property. Because if they get out, unfortunate things can happen.”

Further, Brown said, dog owners often will say their animal never behaved badly before, but dogs act differently when they are under the control of their owner.

Fairbanks and her fiancé Todd Jewett moved to Lewis County in early April. The property was vacant before they constructed the shop building where they reside until they can get a house built.

Bramhall meanwhile, is upset too.

The 56-year-old said he knew the new neighbors had dogs and was surprised to come home late one night and learn that while he was out, his 14-year-old son had opened their front door because the mastiff and their German shepherd were fighting on his porch.

“My dog had some bite marks and came in and laid down,” he said. “My son got the door shut before the mastiff got in here.”

He thought it was odd, because the neighbor’s dogs were always penned up, he said. Jewett had cautioned him though, he said, that he needed to watch out for the big one, Missy.

Bramhall said he and his wife talked, and thought maybe the next day, he needed to talk with Jewett.

“We wake up on Sunday morning, about 8:30, and all of the sudden on the front porch, there’s a commotion again,” he said.

He said the mastiff was out there, fighting with his dog and when his wife opened the door, their dog came in and the mastiff tried to follow it.

He tried to open the door to holler at the dog and it continued trying to get inside, he said.

“I went out the back door, yelling, ‘Todd, Todd, get over here’,” he said.

The mastiff heard him and came around the house, barking and snarling, he said. He slammed the door.

Bramhall said he grabbed his mole gun for protection, and went out the back again, because he wanted to get a hold of Jewett.

“(She) makes a lunge, I pull the trigger,” he said. “I was point blank when I shot the thing.”

Bramhall said he told his wife to call the sheriff.

He still sees the glazed eyes, and the snapping jaws on a head the size of a pumpkin, he said.

“One of us was gonna wind up hurt, me or the dog,” he said.

Bramhall said the deputy came and he gave his statement.

“He calls the people, tells them the story, I’m feeling bad,” he said. “I have animals. I’m an animal person. I go out of my way for animals.”

The Bramhall’s dog, Zena, escaped with nicks on her neck and ears, and some on her leg, according to Bramhall.

It’s sad it went down the way it did, he said, but it wasn’t out of mean spiritedness or anything of the sort.

“If I was vindictive, I’d have grabbed a gun that would have killed it,” he said.

In Lewis County, when an animal kills livestock, or bites or is acting aggressive, deputies forward the case to the code enforcement department for review. Another portion of the county ordinance on animals has provisions for a civil process by which a dog can be labeled dangerous, and then various requirements will kick in, according to Bill Teitzel.

Teitzel, a supervisor at Lewis County Public Health, said he looked over the deputy’s report and concluded Missy’s actions met the definition of a potentially dangerous dog.

“It’s really a warning,” Teitzel said, noting that if something happens again, the animal is flagged.

Before the weekend began, the two couples met and came to agreement it was a tragedy that shouldn’t have happened.

“We exchanged hugs, we exchanged tears,” Fairbanks said in a phone message on Friday. “We exchanged words of what we all did wrong in the situation, and what we could have done better.”

They want to put it behind them, she said, especially in light of Bramhall receiving numerous threats since a graphic photo of the injuries appeared on a Go Fund Me page, and other social media.

“That’s not what we want,” Fairbanks said.

Bramhall echoed her sentiment.

“These people are grieving, and I feel their grief,” Bramhall said. “Nobody’s happy it happened.”

They talked about what they could have done to prevent it, he said.

“They realize they should have taken the time to introduce their pets,” Bramhall said. “I’m thinking about what I could have done different.”

While Fairbanks and Jewett spoke of how much he’ll love Missy when she comes home and they introduce the two properly, Bramhall said he’s not sure he wants to meet the dog.

“I’m just scared,” he confessed.

He said he plans to invest in an electric fence for his property.

•••

Read the Lewis County ordinance regarding animals, here