Officer Silva gets local recognition as anniversary of death nears

June 16th, 2016
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Chehalis Police Officer Rick Silva

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Chehalis Police Department invites the public to join them this afternoon for the unveiling of Officer Rick Silva’s name on the Lewis County Law Enforcement Memorial.

Silva died last year on June 18 due to complications during surgery he was undergoing related to an on the job injury, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

His memory will be honored in a ceremony at 5:30 p.m. in front of the Lewis County Law and Justice Center in Chehalis, at 345 W. Main Street.

Silva’s name has been engraved at the state capitol in Olympia on the Washington State Law Enforcement Memorial as well as  in Washington D.C. at the National Law Enforcement Memorial.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

June 16th, 2016
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DOMESTIC PHYSICAL DISPUTE

• Centralia police were called about 5:10 p.m. yesterday to the 1000 block of Scammon Creek Road where they were told a former roommate entered the residence and assaulted the occupant. Both victim and suspect are women in their early 50s, according to the Centralia Police Department. Minor injuries resulted, but officers are investigating the incident as a first-degree burglary, according to police.

FIREARMS AMONG $10,000 PROPERTY STOLEN

• Eight rifles and two handguns were among the belongings a 52-year-old Chehalis are resident discovered missing when he got home to find his home had been broken into yesterday. Deputies responding to the 400 block of Coal Creek Road yesterday evening report they found forced entry, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Also stolen was ammunition, cash and sports memorabilia, according to the sheriff’s office. It happened sometime after 5 a.m. and before 6:50 p.m., Cmdr. Dusty Breen said. The loss is more than $10,000, according to Breen.

CAR PROWL

• A vehicle prowl was reported at about 7:50 a.m. today at the 500 block of Jefferson Street in Centralia. Personal identification was stolen and the interior of the vehicle was damaged, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police were called yesterday afternoon regarding an overnight vehicle prowl at the 700 block of Harrison Avenue. Tools were taken, according to the Centralia Police Department.

FUEL THEFT

• Someone stole gasoline from a vehicle during the night at the 2400 block of West Reynolds Avenue in Centralia, according to a report made to police yesterday.

LOST AND FOUND

• A blood sugar test kit was found yesterday at the 600 block of Southwest Cascade Avenue and turned in to the Chehalis Police Department.

AND MORE

• And, as usual, other incidents such as arrests for drugs, warrants, misdemeanor assault, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license; responses for alarm, dispute, hit and run, third-degree theft, vehicle egged, civil issue, suicide threat, runaway juvenile, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street, sick raccoon in backyard … and more, among 132 calls for local law enforcement and / or fire-emergency medical services in the 24-hour period ending about 6:30 a.m. today.

Coroner: Person discovered by kids hanging near tracks killed himself

June 15th, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Coroner’s Office today said the dead man found by children, hanged near the railroad tracks in north Centralia is 58-year-old Dale Glenn DeHaven.

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Dale Glenn DeHaven

DeHaven moved to the 1300 block of North Pearl Street in Centralia in December.

Coroner Warren McLeod said his death was determined to be a suicide.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office was contacted late Sunday afternoon and directed to a trestle over the Skookumchuck River south of Reynolds Avenue and east of Interstate 5.

McLeod said DeHaven’s three siblings were notified last night.

DeHaven has lived in a variety of places around Lewis County since he was released from prison in 2005, including the areas of Mossyrock, Silver Creek and Onalaska.

He served more than 11 years for the sexual assault of an 8-year-old girl that was the daughter of a casual acquaintance, according to the sheriff’s office. He was a level three registered sex offender.

Before that, he spent time in prison for a 1980 conviction in connection with a sexual assault of his 76-year-old neighbor woman in Lewis County.

Last year in Lewis County, there were 11 deaths by suicide. The year before there were 21, according to the coroner’s annual report.

McLeod said hanging is the second most common method of suicide he sees. The most frequent way is by use of a firearm, he said.

Centralia woman gets 12 years for break-in to prosecutor’s house and other crimes

June 15th, 2016
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Janet L. Gleason looks back to supporters in the courtroom after the judge indicates disagreement with her lawyer’s recommendation.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Intentionally skipping her court hearing got Janet L. Gleason five extra years in prison.

Gleason, 43, pleaded guilty today to bail jumping and then officials got on with the business of her sentencing hearing that was supposed to take place last month.

The Centralia woman was already convicted of several felonies pursuant to a plea agreement. She admitted to participating in a burglary early last year at the home of Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer.

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Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer

Pacific County Prosecutor Mark McClain who handled the case  told the judge this morning in Lewis County Superior Court they’d had an agreement about how much time he would recommend if she cooperated by trying to retrieve the stolen valuables.

She previously brought a bag of jewelry to court, but none of it was from Meyer’s home, McClain said.

Prosecutors believe Gleason targeted Meyer in retaliation for him prosecuting her teenage son, because a Thurston County Jail inmate who said he was with her told them so.

Gleason apologized, but stuck with her story she gave a friend a ride, the break-in was his idea and she was unaware of whose house it was.

The convictions include residential burglary, first-degree trafficking in stolen property and second-degree malicious mischief as well as a separate possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver.

McClain and Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Paul Masiello recommended she get 84 months for those offenses.

Defense attorney Michael Underwood asked Judge Richard Brosey to give her a prison drug offender sentencing alternative.

He said his client has a drug problem, a serious drug problem.

Elected Prosecutor Meyer spoke of being victimized, calling the crime an attack on his family and an attack on the entire system.

“I had never though the sanctity of my home would be violated simply because I was doing my job,” Meyer said.

Attorneys on both sides agreed Gleason owed restitution of $27,717.74.

Judge Brosey said he wasn’t inclined toward the defense suggestion, given the what he also believed to be the reason Meyer was targeted. He told those present in the courtroom he had the discretion to order her sentences to be served concurrently or consecutively.

Brosey imposed seven years for the burglary case and seven years for the drug case, and said they could be served at the same time as each other.

But then he imposed the maximum of five years for bail jumping and said it had to be served separate from the other crimes, putting her away for 12 years.
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For background, read “Role reversal: Lewis County prosecutor reflects on becoming a burglary victim” from Friday November 6, 2015, here

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

June 15th, 2016
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Updated

MISSING CHAINSAW, LEAF BLOWER, TRIMMER

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reports this morning the theft of $2,000 worth of yard equipment from a 31-year-old male at the 100 block of Holgate Lane southeast of Chehalis. The individual has multiple roommates and had been away for about six weeks working in Onalaska, according to the sheriff’s office. Missing are a Stihl chainsaw, a Stihl string trimmer and two Stihl leaf blowers, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

BAD CHECKS

• Chehalis police responded to a retail business on the 1700 block of North National Avenue yesterday to take reports on checks written by different people which had been returned for various reasons. Cases are being referred to prosecutors for possible charges such as forgery and unlawful issuance of a bank check, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

CAR PROWL

• Centralia police were called to the 1100 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia about 1:30 p.m. yesterday for a vehicle prowl. An unknown suspect reached through a partially open window and unlocked a door to steal medication, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And, as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants; responses for alarm, dispute, civil issue, hit and run, trespassing, disorderly person, suspected scam, suicide threat, protection order violation, suspicious circumstances … and more, among 114 calls for local law enforcement and / or fire-emergency medical services in the 24-hour period ending about 7 a.m. today.

News brief: Tractor accident kills Onalaska resident

June 15th, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A sheriff’s deputy sent to check on a man who didn’t show up for work on Friday or since then, found him dead beneath his rolled over tractor east of Onalaska yesterday.

The 63-year-old was located on a trail in a wooded area behind the residence at the 3500 block of state Route 508, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

“From the investigation, it appears that he was driving the tractor down the hill and began to skid, and hit a small embankment which caused the tractor to roll over onto him,” Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

The piece of equipment was an International Harvester with a brush hog attached, Brown said.

The sheriff’s office indicated the coroner would be releasing the victim’s identity.

John Booth loses another attempt to undo life sentence for 2010 murders

June 14th, 2016
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John A. Booth Jr. testifies at his motion hearing before Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Convicted triple murderer John A. Booth Jr.’s motion to vacate his judgement and sentence because of alleged eavesdropping by employees of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office before and during his trial has been denied.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey concluded that anything overheard was inadvertent and said he found no evidence it was passed along to prosecutors or used against him.

“The long and the short of it, Mr. Booth was not denied due process,” Brosey said yesterday afternoon.

Booth is serving a life sentence for the August 2010 slayings at the Onalaska-Salkum area home of 52-year-old David West Sr., from whom prosecutors contended Booth was seeking payment of a debt for a local drug dealer.

According to testimony and evidence from the eight-day trial in Lewis County Superior Court, when West brought out a shotgun to get Booth and his companion to leave, Booth shot West with a 9 mm handgun. Prosecutors said the shootings that followed were executions to eliminate witnesses. Booth continues to deny he was the shooter.

Losing their lives that day, along with West Sr., were 16-year-old David “D.J.” West Jr. and 50-year-old Tony Williams of Randle. West Sr.’s girlfriend, Denise Salts, was shot in the face but lived.

The former Onalaska man has already lost an appeal and a personal restraint petition. The motion Judge Brosey ruled on yesterday was based on court rule 7.8.

Brosey was the judge for the December 2011 trial in Lewis County Superior Court.

His finding came after three days of hearings and testimony from 27 individuals who took the witness stand. The first two days of hearings were held on May 2 and May 3. The final day was yesterday, for the witnesses who were unavailable earlier.

The complaint that occupied much of the proceedings was corrections officers standing outside the jail’s row of visiting rooms while Booth consulted with his attorneys and their investigators. Several testified conversations of others could be heard, including former inmates Robert J. Maddaus Jr., Robbie Russell, Centralia attorney Don Blair and corrections officers.

Vernon West Jr. was a transport officer during Booth’s trial.

He said initially they would have two officers stand outside the door while Booth met with his lawyer, and while he was never instructed to listen in, he could hear the conversations.

He said he didn’t repeat what he heard, but after hearing too much, moved farther down the hall during future visits.

“We never stood that close to the door again,” West said.

Another aspect of what Booth called “ear hustling” in the motion he typed from the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla, was a corrections officer who admitted he heard a recorded phone conversations Booth had with his lawyer.

Now retired Corrections Officer Jack Haskins testified that his primary job for his last eight years was to listen to the recordings made of inmate phone calls. While calls with lawyers were not supposed to be recorded, as part of an automated system, he said he found himself listening once to Booth and his lawyer.

He said he stopped listening to it, looked up the phone number and verified it belonged to an attorney.

Aberdeen attorney Erik Kupka represented Booth, and for closing arguments yesterday afternoon, advised the court he was reading from material prepared by his client.

Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Brad Meagher argued for the state.

After Judge Brosey announced his conclusion, he was informed Booth would be appealing the decision.
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For background, read “Ear hustling”: Convicted murderer John Booth tells judge about problems at Lewis County Jail”, from Friday July 5, 2013, here