Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

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Updated

GUN THREATS ON THE ROAD

• A 22-year-old Ethel resident was arrested after he allegedly pointed a firearm from inside a vehicle at someone else traveling along the 1100 block of North National Avenue on Saturday night. Officers called about 7:30 p.m. were told it happened when the vehicle pulled alongside the victim vehicle, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Zakery P.F. Frizzell was contacted out in the county by deputies and booked into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree assault, according to police. He is to be released without charges pending further investigation.

• A 24-year-old man who allegedly pointed what appeared to a revolver at an individual who was in a vehicle directly behind the suspect at the 900 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia around 3:45 p.m. on Saturday was subsequently located in his vehicle in Grand Mound and arrested. Austin C. Poeschel, of Centralia, was was booked into the Lewis County Jail for attempted first-degree assault, according to the Centralia Police Department. He is to be released without charges pending further investigation.

GREEN HILL SCHOOL

• Chehalis police arrested a student-inmate at Green Hill School for custodial assault after he allegedly threw a game controller at a staff member, hitting the adult in the knee. An officer was called just before 10 a.m. on Wednesday to the 300 block of Southwest 11th Street to investigate the incident that occurred earlier, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

BIG THEFT

• Centralia police yesterday morning arrested a 39-year-old Tenino woman who allegedly tried to steal more than $3,000 worth of merchandise from a store on the 1100 block of Harrison Avenue. Officers called about 6:40 a.m. indicate that  Virginia M. Barrett provided a false name so she was booked into the Lewis County Jail for both identity theft and second-degree attempted theft. Charges are being referred to prosecutors of second-degree attempted theft for a 39-year-old Tenino man suspected of conspiring with Barrett to steal the items, according to the Centralia Police Department. The male suspect fled in a U-Haul rental box truck and was pursued by Centralia to the Scatter Creek Rest Area, where he lost police by driving into a wooded area, according to police. The box truck had been stolen from the 1200 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue in Chehalis, according to police. Barrett is to be released without charges pending further investigation.

CAR PROWL

• An individual reported about 1:10 p.m. yesterday that three juvenile males entered her unlocked vehicle and stole $20 at the 1300 block of Rose Street in Centralia.

ON THE ROAD, OFF THE ROAD

• A 32-year-old man suffered severe head trauma when his ATV struck a dog and rolled along the 1400 block of Brown Road West outside of Chehalis on Saturday afternoon.  Firefighters were called at about 4:30 p.m. said the patient was unconscious and bleeding when they arrived. He was treated and then airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, according to Lewis County Fire District 6. The man and a female had been traveling downhill and were both ejected, according to fire department spokesperson DJ Hammer. The female patient was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital with non-life threatening injuries, according to Hammer. Neither of them were wearing a helmet.

AND MORE

• And, as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, trespassing, resisting arrest, driving under the influence, fourth-degree domestic assault; responses for alarm, dispute, hit and run, trespassing, civil issue, vandalism, vehicle collision, suspicious circumstances, misdemeanor theft, protection order violation and more among 135 calls for local law enforcement and / or fire-emergency medical services in the 24-hour period ending about 7 a.m. today.

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One Response to “Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup”

  1. Dr. Gringo says:

    When I saw the term “student-inmate” used in the story originating from Green Hill School, it took me back to when I moved to Lewis County from north of Seattle years ago and passed Green Hill School on I-5. I’d never heard of it and wondered, “Is this a private school?”

    Once I learned what Green Hill really is (the barbed-wire fence started making a little more sense), it occurred to me that it really IS a private school of sorts, one where you don’t want to pass the entrance exam.