Kelso man detained after Chehalis bank robbed

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 54-year-old man was picked up on Interstate 5 just north of Kelso following a bank robbery in Chehalis this afternoon.

Police were called just before 3:30 p.m. to Chase Bank on the 600 block of South Market Boulevard. An employee told officers a man in his 50s handed a teller a note demanding money and left in a gold colored PT Cruiser, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

No weapon was displayed and nobody was injured, according to police.

Shortly after the 911 call, a Lewis County sheriff’s detective spotted a vehicle and driver matching the given description traveling southbound on the freeway, police stated in a news release. The car was stopped near milepost 42 and police concluded he was their suspect.

The suspect is identified by police as Jerrell S. Redmill, 54, of Kelso, according to police. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree robbery.

How much money was stolen or if it was recovered was not reported by police.

The same bank was robbed in March of last year, by a pair of local men who got away briefly with less than $2,500 from Chase, moments after a failed attempt at the nearby Twin Star Credit Union – which keeps no cash in its drawers.

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2 Responses to “Kelso man detained after Chehalis bank robbed”

  1. Examples?? says:

    In a more recent entry, Sharyn mentioned the bank says it was around $1000, which is about what they caught him with. You make it sound like this is an ongoing issue. Did this happen to you, or do you have examples of when this has happened?

    Just curious if this is a comment based on reality or just to get people riled up.

  2. lewiscountysocietysucks says:

    HAHAHA, SO DUMBEST CRIMINALS. COPS INCLUDED. So, why do you think that the cops have not yet reported how much money was stolen from the bank, to match with the amount that they recovered from the robber, if any was recovered? Or maybe the cops will say they did not recover any of the money and just seize (pocket) it as they often do. They seem to have taken the definition of “to seize property” and ran with it.