Archive for October, 2015

Searchers comb Centralia lake for fisherman

Monday, October 5th, 2015
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Part of the dive team is stationed on the west edge of Plummer Lake as one member get sonar pictures from a Chehalis Fire Department boat.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – A dive team is looking for a man who vanished beneath the water at Plummer Lake in Centralia today.

Police and firefighters responded to an approximately 11:55 a.m. call to the large pond just east of Interstate 5.

A Centralia resident had been in a boat fishing and a witness saw him swimming toward his life vest and then go under water, never resurfacing, Centralia Police Department Sgt. Pat Fitzgerald said.

After an initial search by Centralia firefighters using the missing man’s boat, Chehalis firefighters brought their boat over and have been working this afternoon with members of the Thurston County Dive Team.

“They’re doing a grid search in the water,” Fitzgerald said.

Chehalis Fire Chief Ken Cardinale said the lake is very deep, and visibility good for only about 14 feet, so they began taking pictures with a sonar.

At least one woman who said she went to school with the victim was among the responders and guests of the Lakeview Inn who watched and waited on and near the motel’s lawn at the south shore.

Sixty-five-year-old Kermit Wood said when he saw the individual out there, it looked like he was splashing and trying to swim toward his life preserver. His empty boat was floating away, he said.

“Honestly, there was nothing we could do, and it was very difficult,” his wife Jackie Wood said.

Fitzgerald said he would be at the scene until the dive team left. They don’t work after dark, so depending on how it goes, they could return in the morning, he said.

Detective Dave Clary recalled the last time anyone drowned in the lake was in 2007, when 45-year-old Frank Mako died.  His body was actually found just beyond the north shore, closer to Hayes Lake, he said.

Just this past May 30, another Centralia resident, 26-year-old Jessy Hamilton, drowned on the other side of Interstate 5, at Fort Borst Park near where the Chehalis River meets with the park’s pond.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, October 5th, 2015
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•••

Updated at 8:41 p.m.

SLEW OF HONDA CAR THEFTS IN TWIN CITIES

• Centralia police were called about 6:30 a.m. today about a Honda Civic stolen from 1000 block of B Street and located a block away.

• An officer took a report last night of a black 1993 Honda Civic missing from the 2100 block of West Hanson Street in Centralia that was later found by its owner abandoned in the 1100 block of South. Tower Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A Honda was reported stolen from the 900 block of F Street yesterday morning and then discovered a few blocks away, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Chehalis police responded to an approximately 9:50 a.m. call yesterday about a red 1994 Honda Civic stolen from the 10 block of Southwest Fourth Street Chehalis.

• Centralia police responded about 6:45 a.m. yesterday for a Honda stolen during the night from the 1300 block of Crescent Avenue. It was recovered about that same time in Chehalis, according to police.

• A blue 1991 Honda Civic stolen from Centralia was found about 7:50 a.m. yesterday on the 500 block of Southwest Cascade Avenue in Chehalis.

• Chehalis police took a report just after 6 a.m. on Saturday of a white 1991 Honda Accord stolen during the night from Southwest Second Street.

• A green 1997 Acura Integra was stolen overnight from the 700 block of G Street in Centralia, according to a report made to police about 7:15 a.m. on Saturday.

NEIGHBOR DRAWS WEAPON OVER LOUD MUSIC

• A 66-year-old Toledo man was taken into custody after an argument with a neighbor over loud music ended with him allegedly pointing a pellet rifle at the neighbor. A deputy responding about 4:25 p.m. on Friday to the 400 block of state Route 506 was told by the 68-year-old victim he thought it was a real firearm and was in fear for his life, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The pellet gun was seized, the suspect was taken to the hospital emergency room to be checked out and ultimately was not booked into jail because of a medical issue, according to the sheriff’s office. The case is being sent to prosecutors for a possible charge of felony harassment against Ronald L. Chadderton, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

SEXUAL ASSAULT

• Chehalis police were called at about 1:10 a.m. today to take a report of a rape. The case is under investigation, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

MOTEL MISCHIEF

• Three men were arrested last night after one of them was seen climbing into a motel room window on the 1000 block of Eckerson Road in Centralia. An officer detained them inside the room, according to the Centralia Police Department. Booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree burglary were: Daniel C. Miller, 25, of Chehalis; Panther W. Risling, 26, of Centralia; and Brian L. Friend, 36, from Vancouver, according to police. Prosecutors declined to file the charge against Friend.

OTHER THEFT

• A compressor was reported missing from the 200 block of East Plum Street in Centralia on Saturday. It was taken sometime over the previous several weeks, according to the Centralia Police Department.

CAR PROWL

• Centralia police responded to the 900 block of F Street following a Saturday afternoon report someone had taken a stereo from an unlocked vehicle.

• Chehalis police took a report on Friday regarding a purse stolen from a vehicle parked on South Market Boulevard in Chehalis.

DRUGS

• Chehalis police called to a dispute in the Wal-Mart parking lot about 4:40 p.m. yesterday discovered an individual had an outstanding warrant and then located suspected methamphetamine. Booked into the Lewis County Jail was Kristina L. Craighead, 53, from Centralia, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• Chehalis police called to a dispute in the Wal-Mart parking lot about 7 p.m. yesterday discovered an individual had an outstanding warrant and then located suspected heroin. Booked into the Lewis County Jail was Steven M. Mullins, 33, from Centralia, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

FLAMES ESCAPE BURN PILE

• Neighbors who went to investigate found a fire that burned through grass, brush and trees and grew to about two acres on Saturday at the 900 block of Bunker Creek Road west of Chehalis. Firefighters called about 2:30 p.m. were assisted by DNR, according to the Chehalis Fire Department. It appeared the property owner had been previously burning brush, Fire Capt. Ted McCarty said.

ON AND OFF THE ROAD

• A 19-year-old driver was hospitalized with minor lacerations and her three teenage passengers were reportedly uninjured when while traveling 60 mph on a 25 mph road southwest of Randle, her car left the roadway into the trees, and landed on its top yesterday. A deputy responding about 6:40 p.m. to the 200 block of Conlay Road was told by the driver she did not know the speed limit was 25, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Skylar C. Riggs, from Packwood, was cited for second-degree negligent driving, no insurance and wheels off the roadway, according to the sheriff’ office. The other occupants of the Nissan Sentra were ages 14 and 15, from Glenoma and Packwood, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

• A 48-year-old Centralia man was injured when he lost control of his speeding car, drove up an embankment along Interstate 5 and then rolled several times coming to rest in the center lane last night in Clark County. Troopers called to the northbound lanes about two miles south of Woodland at 11:25 p.m. note Ricky Owens was transported to PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center. His Honda Passport was totaled and impounded, according to the Washington State Patrol. Owens was attempting a lane change and then overcorrected, according to state patrol. He is facing charges including driving under the influence, felony possession of marijuana, second-degree negligent driving and driving with a suspended license, according to the investigating trooper. A WSP spokesperson said he didn’t have details about how much marijuana was found.

• A 26-year-old Rochester man ended up with a scuffed knee and a night in jail after a rollover wreck on the 400 block of Independence Road west of Centralia on Friday night. His 1979 GMC Sierra was totaled, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Deputies called to the scene at 11 p.m. arrested Christopher R. Russell for for driving under the influence and booked him into the Lewis County Jail, according to the sheriff’s office.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrant, trespass, misdemeanor theft, misdemeanor assault, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license, possession of a dangerous weapon; responses for alarm, dispute, shoplifting, receipt of counterfeit bill, suspicious circumstances, misdemeanor theft, possible drugs found at Green Hill School, someone saw a homeless-looking person using a cash machine outside a bank one morning and thought he was going to try to steal from another customer, but he didn’t … and more.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Saturday, October 3rd, 2015
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•••

POT PILFERED FROM YARD

• Officers were called to the 1800 block of Juneman Street in Centralia where a resident reported seeing a guy had jumped over his fence and stole medicinal marijuana. The victim’s “kid” chased the guy but lost him him when he got into a vehicle, according to the Centralia Police Department. It happened just before 10 p.m. on Thursday.

THEFT, THEFT, THEFT

• Centralia police were called about 12:45 p.m. yesterday about a gray 2004 Yamaha 400 stolen from the 1200 block of Windsor Avenue.

• Police took a report from the 1100 block of Harrison Avenue yesterday regarding a debit card from a stolen wallet getting used locally, according to the Centralia Police Department.

KID BABYSITTING SELF INSIDE VEHICLE

• A citizen called police at 1:25 p.m. on Thursday when they saw a 5 or 6-year-old child in a vehicle in the parking lot at Safeway on Harrison Avenue in Centralia, alone and playing with the windshield wipers. The mother, 35-year-old Natalie P. Cole, was issued a criminal citation for leaving a child alone in a running vehicle,  according to the Centralia Police Department. She was then released.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called late Thursday afternoon to the 1100 block of J Street regarding a garage door that was spray painted with graffiti. A few hours later a resident on the next block reported the same thing, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrant, drugs, misdemeanor assault, probation violation, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license; responses for shoplifting, misdemeanor theft, collision on city street … and more.

Writer of threat to “kill people” at Centralia High School still unknown

Friday, October 2nd, 2015
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Seniors Jared Lee, Javier Corona and Andrew Waddell sit across the street from their school watching and waiting as fellow students are inside getting interviewed by deputies.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – Law enforcement officers don’t know if a threat a student was going to kill people at Centralia High School’s homecoming assembly this afternoon was genuine and was thwarted, or if it was something else.

A note found on a teacher’s desk this morning stated as such and prompted a lockdown that lasted all day.

Hundreds of family members descended upon the church and its parking lot across the street waiting for their children to be released.

More than two dozen deputies, police and troopers from the area responded to the 800 block of Eshom Road, after the school resource officer was informed of the message at approximately 10 a.m.

The investigation continued all day, and the last students were let go at about 4 p.m.

“We were interviewing kids, searching kids – with a wand,” Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. “Escorting them to the bathroom and giving them snacks and water.”

No weapons were found, however, there are still backpacks left at the school that have yet to be searched, according to Brown.

Without going into details, Brown said a person wrote the note, telling of what another person planned to do. Deputies don’t know who left the note, or who the other person is, she said at the end of the day.

Centralia High School sits outside the city limits and is in the sheriff’s office jurisdiction.

Centralia School District spokesperson Ed Petersen said it threatened a specific action at a specific time and place, prompting an intentionally slow and meticulous process.

The homecoming assembly didn’t take place. The homecoming football game scheduled for tonight at Tiger Stadium has been postponed, as has tomorrow’s homecoming dance.

The school district notified the public and the news media at about 11 a.m., but information was already circulating on social media.

Parents were informed they could wait at the Centralia Community Church of God at the corner of Borst Avenue and Eshom Road across from the school’s main entrance.

James Guyer was among those who rushed over, and then waited for hours. His 16-year-old daughter was keeping him somewhat informed, texting periodically and lamenting her classroom was at the back of the school and would be the last to be let out.

“She also sent me a text saying they are patting down each student,” Guyer said.

Guyer chatted with another father, Corey Williams, who sat in the back of his pickup truck with his teenage son.

A large crowd was lined up in the church lobby, signing in with school staff, so they could subsequently be matched up with their youngsters.

“We were already in there about an hour,” Williams said.

He and his 17-year-old, Eli Williams, were waiting for Eli’s 16-year-old brother to come out.

They were told the busses would be bringing students over in groups of 20, but the first one dropped off only five or six kids, he said.

Eli Williams, a senior, said he’d been up in Tumwater at his construction trades class, when the lockdown happened and then he learned about the threat.

“I don’t really know anyone that would do that,” he said. “But a lot of things happen; someone seems really nice and goes crazy.”

Some adults stayed in their cars in the lot, several of which were parked cattywampus suggesting their minds were on more pressing matters than taking up two parking spots.

The mother of one freshman boy was contemplative as she sat with her 6-year-old and their dog.

“They were saying on the news last night, national news,  that things get stirred up, like copycats,” Lori Raab said.

Raab, a radio news director, had spent yesterday coordinating coverage of the unfolding tragedy at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon, in which at least nine people were fatally shot.

Sitting on a curb, directly across from the fenced off school, were three seniors who had also been elsewhere before the campus was shut down.

Javier Corona, 17, had been at the football stadium just a few blocks to the east, doing a run through for the halftime event with his leadership class. Corona is a finalist for homecoming king.

He said he watched the police cars arriving, the first ones just driving up and the rest with lights flashing.

Jared Lee, also 17, and another student had been out shopping with his mother, a school district employee.

“We were getting scepters and flowers, and I think crowns for the king and queen,” Lee said.

Andrew Waddell, 18, said he walked into work and was told what was happening. HIs first thought was a bomb threat, he said.

“But I thought, that doesn’t make sense,” Waddell said.

Centralia School District Superintendent, Mark Davalos and Centralia High School Principal Josue Lowe periodically gave briefings, reassuring those present that everything going on was to ensure the safety of students.

At one point, a student had messaged someone a fuzzy picture rumored to be a shooter inside the building, but law enforcement figured out it actually was a snapshot of a security monitor showing one of the law enforcement officers with a rifle.

“The only weapons that have been found on Centralia High School campus today are in the hands of law enforcement officers,” Lowe told the crowd.

District spokesperson Petersen said the high school has about 1,000 students. He wasn’t certain late this afternoon exactly how many were in classes today.

Neither he nor Chief Deputy Brown knew for sure why a  Washington State Patrol bomb squad truck was on the scene. Petersen said he thought it might be part of protocol.

The state patrol did bring dogs into the school to sniff around.

They weren’t searching for bombs, they were searching for something else, Petersen said. “There was absolutely no concern for bombs or explosive devices.”

Chief Deputy Brown said although the school was cleared by about 4 p.m., she suspected the investigation would continue.

School staff would be going through the backpacks and items students left behind, she said. And there are lots of interviews to go through.

“It was a very methodical process, but it was absolutely what we needed to do to ensure their safety,” Brown said. “In light of everything that’s going on across the nation, it was imperative to handle it as we did.”

Peterson echoed her sentiments.

“Yes, it took a long time to get everyone out,” he said. “But everyone went home safe, and that’s the best we can hope for.”

To read ongoing posts and comments from the community about today’s events, go to Lewis County Sirens on Facebook.

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Corey Williams and his son Eli Williams decided they preferred to wait outside today.

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Principal Josue Lowe offers an update on Eshom Road in between the high school and the church.

Breaking news: Threat puts Centralia High School on lock down

Friday, October 2nd, 2015
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Chehalis Police Officer Warren Ayers and school staff stand along the fence at Centralia High School as parents congregate at the church across the street waiting.

Updated at 4:05 p.m.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia High School is in lock down now.

“Due to a specific type of threat of violence at the high school, I’m not going to release what that is now,” school district spokesperson Ed Petersen said at 11 a.m. today.

Nobody is hurt, he said. Law enforcement is on the scene.

They will be releasing students in the next hour or so to the nearby Church of God, he said.

Parents should not go to the school, he said. Parents should not go to the church either, until they are notified by the school to do so, he said.

Asked if they would be making notification through the school alert system, Petersen said yes and social media and every other way.

A joint news release issued at 11:37 a.m. stated students will be released as soon as appropriate.

“This morning at approximately 10 a.m. the Centralia School Resource Officer was notified of a note located in a classroom, which stated a student was planning on killing people during a school assembly, scheduled for the afternoon.”

At this time it is unknown if any weapons are actually at the school and the school remains in lockdown until further notice.

Students will be released to go home on the bus or be picked up by parents. Parents may wait at Centralia Community Church of God, located at Borst and Eshom.  Students who drove will be allowed to leave when appropriate.

As of about 2 p.m., only a few students had been released from the school back to their parents.

A Washington State Patrol bomb squad truck was seen leaving Tiger Stadium shortly after that. Tonight was supposed to be the homecoming game.

A large crowd has gathered at the church, mostly just waiting. Busses have dropped off students there, five or six at a time.

Lewis County Sheriff Rob Snaza and Centralia Police Chief Carl Nielsen made a brief appearance, standing back as announcements were made that officials hoped to speed the process up.

Before going back across the street to the school, Snaza said only, “We’re getting additional information.”

“We’ll have more information for the news when the kids are out,” he said. “Stacy (Chief Deputy Brown) put something on Facebook.”

Centralia High School on Eshom Road sits outside the city limits and is in the sheriff’s office jurisdiction.

Law enforcement has issued no updates as to its investigation into what occurred, if any weapon or weapons have been located or if they even know who is the student who may have had some plan to kill people.

A school official did include in his announcements to those gathered at one point during the day, that: “The only weapons that have been found on Centralia High School campus today are in the hands of law enforcement officers.”

More to come. To read ongoing posts and comments from the community about this, go to Lewis County Sirens on Facebook.

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Parents and others wait for students to be brought to them at a church across the street from Centralia High School.

Law enforcement finds Centralia robbery suspect in Vancouver jail

Thursday, October 1st, 2015
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Deandre J. Perry looks back toward the courtroom benches during his first appearance in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The third of three males suspected of a home invasion in north Centralia earlier this year was brought before a judge today in Lewis County Superior Court.

Deandre J. Perry, 26, is from Portland.

Centralia police and a deputy U.S. marshal have been looking for him since mid-July and found him in the Clark County Jail.

Perry was there on “an unrelated matter, I think maybe a probation violation or something,” Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor said this afternoon. He was transported to the local jail in Chehalis yesterday.

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Hennessy Turner-White

Perry is charged with first-degree robbery and first-degree assault in connection with the events on the night of Feb. 19, when a group of males kicked in a door at the 1200 block of Marion Street, demanding cash and weed.

Dustin Palermo said he and his girlfriend had just settled into bed to watch a movie when they showed up, shot up his room and killed his dog. Charging documents in the case don’t relate what was actually stolen but Palermo had a small indoor medical marijuana grow.

Meagher asked that Perry be held on the same $100,000 bail listed on the July 15 arrest warrant. Judge Nelson Hunt agreed.

Temporary defense attorney Joely O’Rourke told the judge Perry is currently unemployed and qualified for court appointed counsel.

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Brian A. Carreon

Arrested and charged in early July with one count of first-degree robbery was a 17-year-old Centralia resident, Brian A. Carreon.

Carreon’s sister from Portland, Taina Duncan, was arrested and charged with rendering criminal assistance for allegedly driving the others to the house.

Hennessy R. Turner-White, 22, from Portland, was picked up less than two weeks later and remains in the Lewis County Jail on $500,000 bail, charged with first-degree robbery and first-degree assault.

Charging documents state that Carreon told detectives Turner-White is his other Portland sister’s ex-boyfriend.

Charging documents offer the following as to how law enforcement came to focus on Perry as the third suspect:

Police were looking for the one who kicked in the door, known to Carreon only as “Dro”. A deputy U.S. marshal ran Turner-White’s name through their database, looking for his associates, and came up with Perry. Carreon identified Perry as the third person from a photo he was shown.

According to police interviews with Carreon, he had once been at Palermo’s home, and trimmed Palermo’s plants for him. He told police he’d taken a video of himself doing that, and had once shown it to Turner-White. Carreon said he received a phone call from Turner-White telling him, he knew had a connection to get weed, and was headed up.

Carreon said he felt pressured to take them there, and when one of them pulled out a gun and said they weren’t going to pay for the marijuana, he was behind them telling them to stop.

Officers found nine shell casings and two bullet jacket fragments at the scene.

Perry’s arraignment was put on the court schedule for next Thursday, when he will be represented by Jacob Clark.

Turner-White’s trial is scheduled for January.

Neither Carreon’s nor Duncan’s trials have yet taken place. The two of them have been released on unsecured bonds.

All three have pleaded not guilty.
•••

For background, read “Suspected gunman in Centralia home invasion held on $500,000 bail” from Wednesday July 22, 2015, here

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, October 1st, 2015
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•••

Updated at 3:11 p.m.

ON THE ROAD

• Two teenagers were uninjured but their pickup truck was totaled when it rear-ended a van in Onalaska yesterday morning which was carrying six children. The 62-year-old Onalaska woman driving the 2006 Honda Odyssey van was the only person hurt, taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with severe neck pain, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. She had stopped at the intersection at Leonard Road and state Route 508 when her van was hit from behind, according to the sheriff’s office. A deputy called just before 8 a.m. found that all the youngsters, from ages 2 to age 16, were buckled in, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. The 19-year-old driver of the 1987 Nissan pickup was cited for defective tires, no insurance and speed too fast for conditions, Brown said. The van was drivable, with about $3,000 worth of damage, Brown said.

• A 21-year-old motorist was reportedly not seriously hurt but was arrested for driving under the influence after his pickup truck landed in China Creek in Centralia overnight. Officers responding just before 1 a.m. to the area near the 1100 block of West Pear Street found Kody J. Foster had scratches from climbing out of the area, according to the Centralia Police Department. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

• A 22-year-old woman was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital after a car in which she was a passenger car hit a fence and came to rest in a ditch along the 2300 block of Little Hanaford Road outside Centralia lat night. Firefighters called at 11:50 p.m. report she was to be evaluated for possible shoulder and back injuries, according to Riverside Fire Authority.

PHONE FIGHT

• Police were called to an apartment complex on the 1600 block of Johnson Road in Centralia just after 11 o’clock yesterday morning where they were told by a 57-year-old woman that after an argument with a 56-year-old man, he took her cell phone away from her. Police located the suspect, Ricky M Langley, and booked him into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree robbery, according to the Centralia Police Department. Prosecutors declined to file that charge.

BREAK-IN CENTRALIA

• An officer was called about 9:50 a.m. yesterday to the 2900 block of Mount Vista Road in Centralia following the discovery by a resident that someone forced open his apartment’s front door. Nothing appeared to be missing though, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office took a report from a woman living at the 3300 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia that someone forced their way through her back door on Saturday and stole a tupperware container holding her medications. Taken between 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. that day were 45 Valium, 45, morphine and 80 oxycodone tablets, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The loss is about $75, according to the sheriff’s office.

BREAK-IN ETHEL

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning that someone walked in to an Ethel man’s motor home on Saturday and left with an Xbox 360, more than 20 games and a tablet, according to the sheriff’s office. It happened between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. while he was at his mother’s house some 50 feet away, according to the sheriff’s office. It happened at the 100 block of Oyler Road, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. He had left his door open, she said.

AFTER DARK

• Police were called just before 3 o’clock this morning after a man thought he saw someone trying to break in to a car along Southwest Chehalis Avenue in Chehalis. The individual said he heard a car door handle then saw a male looking into a vehicle, according to the Chehalis Police Department. When they both looked at each other, the possible prowler ran off, and rode away on a bicycle, police said. A responding officer didn’t locate anyone.

VANDALISM

• Someone painted the viaduct and also the tailgate belonging to a person living near there at the 800 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia, according to  report made to police yesterday afternoon.

FIRE ON PORCH

• Discarded smoking materials are suspected of causing a porch fire in Centralia yesterday afternoon. Firefighters called at 3 p.m. to the 1300 block of Harrison Avenue found individuals extinguishing the flames with a garden hose, according to Riverside Fire Authority. The residents were not at home, Fire Capt. Scott Weinert indicated. Firefighters removed decking materials from the porch to ensure the fire had not spread beneath the home, according to Weinert. The damage is estimated at about $5,000.

FIRE IN GARAGE

• The sheriff’s office is investigating to find out who was burning inside a detached garage of a vacant property in foreclosure in Centralia. A deputy was requested by the fire department yesterday afternoon to respond to the 1100 block of Pacific Avenue, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. It appeared to have been started using garbage cardboard and tin cans sometime during the previous three days and extinguished already, according to the sheriff’s office. Neighbors said they’d seen transients in the area of the house, although not in the last week, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. A door had been forced open several times in the past, Brown said. The damage to the sheetrock, framing and exterior paint is estimated to be several thousand dollars, Brown said.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrant, protection order violation, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license; responses for alarm, dispute, harassment, runaway teenager, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street … and more.