Archive for December, 2015

Suspected cocaine supplier arrested by Lewis County detectives

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2015

Updated at 6:24 p.m.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Local drug detectives last night made their 10th arrest in an ongoing investigation into a cocaine distribution ring that stretched from Centralia to Seattle.

Over the past “couple of” months, law enforcement officers infiltrated the organization, making numerous controlled purchases of the drug and established probable cause to search several dwellings and vehicles, according to Sgt. Brian Warren who leads the Joint Narcotics Enforcement Team.

Warren said JNET was led to the larger sources in Olympia and Seattle.

Overall, they seized approximately one half pound of cocaine, one ounce of ecstasy, one half pound of psilocybin mushrooms and one loaded firearm, according to Warren. The street value of the drugs is approximately $50,000.

The three believed to be the primary individuals supplying the Lewis County area are two men from Olympia; Jacob L Gomez, 24, and Cole Johnson Kelly, 27, and then Cesar Alfonso Leiva-Licona, 30, a Honduran national residing in Seattle, according to Warren.

Leiva-Licona was arrested yesterday.

“Last night’s arrest was the head of the snake, as we say,” Warren said of Leiva-Licona. “We got him to bring a quarter pound to the Olympia area last night.”

Leiva-Licona was living here on an expired work visa, Warren said.

The three arrests occurred in Thurston and Pierce counties.

Warren said the quarter pound of cocaine confiscated would be worth $2,500 to $3,000.

The drug is not uncommon among the college crowd, he said.

The investigation was dubbed Operation Snow Patrol.

JNET is made up of a group of detectives from the Centralia Police Department, the Chehalis Police Department and the Lewis County Sheriff’ Office.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, December 21st, 2015
2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

•••

COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATOR RAID

• A 25-year-old man was arrested after he allegedly got into a Chehalis restaurant’s cooler, told an employee he was hungry and had permission from the owner to take some food. He left on his bicycle from Jeremy’s on the 500 block of West Main Street about 6 p.m. on Friday with at least one large uncooked prime rib, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Genaro M. Rivas was subsequently located and booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree burglary, according to police.

AUTO THEFT

• Centralia police were called about 9:30 a.m. yesterday about a car stolen from the 200 block of Tilley Avenue. Missing is a black 1999 Honda Civic with a license plate reading APW 3800, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A 1998 Honda Civic stolen in Monroe last month turned up yesterday evening on Forest Service Road 2304 outside of Randle. It’s owner was contacted and the loss is estimated at $500, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

CAR PROWL

• Police were called to the 200 block of Washington Avenue in Chehalis on Friday about a vehicle prowl in which a stereo, a GPS unit and various CDs were stolen overnight.

• Someone stole an iPod and a stereo from a Honda Civic parked at South Market Boulevard near Main Street in Chehalis, according to a report made to police on Friday morning.

FRAUD

• Two people were arrested yesterday for forgery in connection with the deposit of fraudulent checks into TwinStar Credit Union in Chehalis last month. The amount associated with the case is $1,342, according to the Chehalis Police Department.  Booked into the Lewis County Jail were Michael L. Hill, 27, and Raeanne M. Manners-Bell, 32, both from Chehalis according to police.

DRUGS

• A pair of Chehalis residents were arrested early this morning after police responded to the 600 block of West Main Street. One of them was at the counter purchasing Charm Blow Pops and when a deputy pulled into the lot, went back and dumped candy from their pockets, according to the Chehalis Police Department. A search incident to arrest turned up a needle and suspected drugs, according to police. Booked into the Lewis County Jail for drug violations were Carl D. Salzer, 23, and Darcie N. Negrete, 24, according to police.

• A 20-year-old Chehalis resident was arrested after police were called to the Twin City Town Center about a person inside a vehicle believed to be shooting up drugs just after 3 p.m. on Saturday. An officer contacted the individual and found a syringe and a brown substance, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Eric J. Stevens was booked into the Lewis County Jail for a drug violation, according to police.

HOT CHIMNEY PIPE IGNITES WALL

• Firefighters called at 4:10 p.m. yesterday to a fire at a home on the 900 block of Garrard Creek Road west of Centralia and south of Oakville found an individual there had sprayed a garden hose onto the wall and ceiling controlling the spread of the flames. The damage to the wall and ceiling was related to heat from a metal chimney pipe that passed through a wood wall, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Nobody was injured and the residents were able to remain in their home, according to the fire department.

NOT A FIRE

• Firefighters called to a downtown apartment building last night for smoke rolling out of a sidewalk-level window well were relieved to find it was steam from a laundry room. “It fooled me when we first pulled up,” Chehalis Fire Department Capt. Kevin Curfman said. “But we figured out pretty quickly what it was.” Curfman said the weather conditions must have been just right to make the dryer steam look like smoke at the San Juan Arms building on Cascade Avenue.

ON THE ROAD

• Nobody was injured when a 58-year-old driver could not stop in time and ran into the back of a school bus at about 12:45 p.m. on Friday at the 300 block of Rhoades Road in Winlock. The Winlock resident’s 2006 Mercury Milan sustained major damage and the rear bumper of the bus was scratched, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. He was cited for following too closely, according to the sheriff’s office.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, disorderly conduct, no-contact order violation, protection oder violation; responses for alarm, dispute, civil problems, buildings tagged, misdemeanor theft, misdemeanor assault, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street, out-of-control child, teenagers knocking over garbage cans … and more.

News brief: Feline’s fur trimmed by unknown person

Monday, December 21st, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Chehalis police were called on Saturday night by a woman who said someone in her neighborhood had shaved her cat.

She had seen the cat about 11:30 a.m. that day and then at 10:30 p.m. when she saw it again, the hair on its belly, back legs and butt area had been shaved very short, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

The woman told police the cat wouldn’t let anyone touch it. The pet resides at the 300 block of Southeast Fairview Avenue.

Chehalis police spokesperson Linda Bailey said they don’t have any leads.

News brief: Flames, water claim Morton house

Monday, December 21st, 2015
2015.1220.mortonhousefire.rochelle.ashe

Three fire departments responded to Third Street in Morton yesterday. / Courtesy photo by Rochelle Ashe

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A fire investigator is returning this morning to Morton to try to find what sparked a blaze yesterday at a two-story house.

Crews were called around 9 a.m. to the 200 block of Third Street for the fully engulfed residence; police who arrived first said they had evacuated three people, according to Lewis County Fire District 4.

Nobody was hurt, but the home is unlivable, according to Fire Chief Dan Powell.

“What didn’t burn was water damaged, so it’s a total loss,” Powell said.

His department was joined by firefighters from Mossyrock and Mineral, and then they returned about 6 a.m. to deal with a re-ignite, Powell said.

Fire investigator Jay Birley said he responded yesterday and did some digging around, but was headed back out today for a closer look.

“It looked like it may have started up on the second floor,” Birley said.

Party ends with fight, gunfire, two hospitalized

Monday, December 21st, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Two young people showed up at a local hospital reporting they’d been in an altercation at a house party south of Chehalis, a gathering where deputies and other law enforcement rushed upon hearing shots were fired and one person had possibly been hit.

It turned out the female who hunched over and fell down after hearing gunfire wasn’t hurt, but had a panic attack, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

It began with a complaint of a loud party on the 300 block of Bolduc Road at about 1:30 a.m. on Sunday, according to the sheriff’s office.

While law enforcement was enroute, several people were reporting shots had been fired, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Deputies found a large number of people at the residence, most of whom were eventually allowed to leave, although some who were underage had been drinking, Brown said.

Nobody there saw or knew anything about the shooting, other than it occurred outside and they thought the shooters had left, Brown said.

It was a 22-year-old from Centralia and a 19-year-old from Chehalis who went to Providence Centralia Hospital, according to Brown. She didn’t indicate any details about their injuries. It is still under investigation, she said.

Cases for five people under 21 are being forwarded to prosecutors for charges of minor in possession and/or consumption of alcohol, according to Brown. They are 20, 18,  17 and 14 and from Olympia, Chehalis, Mossyrock and Centralia.

Brown said most of the people at the gathering who were under 21 had not been drinking.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Sunday, December 20th, 2015
2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

•••

SKETCHY MAGAZINE SELLER

• A resident at the 200 block of Elizabeth Browning Drive who allowed a door-to-door salesman to use her bathroom discovered a computer tablet missing after he left, according to a report made to Centralia police about 10 a.m. yesterday. The victim had paid cash for a magazine subscription, according to the Centralia Police Department. The receipt was signed Josh Medarz which may or may not be his real name, according to police. The salesman was described as tall, skinny and about 19 years old, according to police.

AUTO THEFT

• Police were called about 6:30 p.m. yesterday about a white 1991 Toyota 4Runner stolen from the 1400 block of Johnson Road in Centralia. The vehicle has a license plate reading ATN1638, according to the Centralia Police Department.

FRAUD

• Centralia police were contacted about 2 p.m. on Friday by an individual who said someone got into his motor home which was stored away from his residence and took his credit card, used it and then returned it without his knowledge. The charges weren’t discovered until he checked his statement, according to the Centralia Police Department. The case associated with a location on the 200 block of North Ash Street is under investigation, according to police.

AND MORE

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

Report: Note about killing at CHS homecoming assembly was found outside portable door, then set on desk

Saturday, December 19th, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The sheriff’s office still doesn’t know who wrote the note that initiated an all-day lockdown and investigation at Centralia High School, but they know who left it on the teacher’s desk, and it turns out the folded up piece of paper was found outside on the ground by a student on his way to an adjacent classroom.

When he picked it up from under Jon Rooklidge’s door, he saw “Help us” written on the outside and thought it was someone needing help with their homework, so the student went into the classroom and placed it on Rooklidge’s desk, according to the detective investigating the case.

2015.1219.2015.1002.chs.officer.ayers7913 copy

Centralia High School, on Oct. 2, 2015

Rooklidge teaches in one of two classrooms that share a portable building, which has a ramp that leads up to the two side-by-side doors.

The Oct. 2 incident began with the discovery after second period of the message that stated a student was planning on killing people during the school assembly later that day. Rooklidge took it to the principal and the school resource officer was informed.

Law enforcement swarmed to the campus on Eshom Road and distraught parents waited at a church across the street. Some students were interviewed, and the student body of some 1,000 youngsters were searched with a metal-detector wand before being released in small groups over the course of the next several hours. No weapons were found.

It happened the day after a mass shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon. The high school’s homecoming football game and dance that weekend were cancelled.

Lewis County Sheriff’s Office detective Tom Callas in the following weeks spoke with teachers and students, viewed security footage and handwriting on homework and concluded the boy who put the note on the desk did so innocently.

In a recorded interview at the sheriff’s office, the 16-year-old said he didn’t read the inside of the note and didn’t know what it said.

The specific contents of the note are not included in Callas’s written report, and in an interview, he declined to reveal what it said.

He left copies of it with some school staff, asking them to keep an eye out for any handwriting, from a student or adult, that matches it, he said.

It was handwritten on school notebook paper, torn at the top. It had been folded up, Callas said.

The message on the inside was described that morning by a school district spokesperson as a “specific type of threat of violence at the high school.”

In a news release crafted at mid-morning that day by public information officers at the Centralia Police Department, the sheriff’s office and Public Relations Coordinator Ed Petersen for the Centralia School District, it was described as a note that stated a student was planning on killing people during a school assembly, scheduled for the afternoon.

Callas wrote in his report the note warned of a potential shooting incident to happen later that day at an assembly.

The page was taken into evidence, and partial prints have been lifted from it, for further examination by a fingerprint classification detective.

Centralia High School sits outside the city limits and is in the sheriff’s office jurisdiction, but the district has a school resource officer from the Centralia Police Department.

A somewhat similar incident occurred about five weeks later, with the discovery of writing on a student’s desk that said, “Ima shoot up the school 11/10.” The response involved officers from several agencies searching all students prior to their entry into the school the following morning.

Centralia police investigated and a 16-year-old student who said she was just doodling and forgot to erase it, was arrested for felony harassment.

Detective Callas suspended his investigation last month, unable to find a suspect for the Oct. 2 incident.

Whether someone had a genuine intention to harm others, or someone was just looking for attention, Callas said he couldn’t say or speculate what was going through their mind.

“I just know we took this very seriously, that somebody was threatening to shoot,” he said.
•••

For background, read “Writer of threat to “kill people” at Centralia High School still unknown” from Friday October 2, 2015, here