Posts Tagged ‘By Sharyn L. Decker’

Lewis County detective meets with Green River killer, probes for links to local cases

Thursday, October 22nd, 2015
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Gary Leon Ridgway’s mugshot is among the materials inside three unsolved case files at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Finally, more than a decade after his convictions for the murders of dozens of women in King County, serial killer Gary Ridgway was interviewed about three homicide victims whose bodies turned up along the Interstate 5 corridor in Lewis County.

Longtime Lewis County Sheriff’s Office detective Bruce Kimsey isn’t writing him off as a viable suspect, but Ridgway didn’t confess.

“When I asked him an hour’s worth of questions on the victims, he denied it and said, why would I take someone to Lewis County,” Kimsey said. “I’m not saying I believe him; I’m just saying what he said.”

Kimsey traveled to the U.S. Penitentiary in Florence, Colorado at the end of September. He was joined by Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead for the two-day visit.

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Chief Criminal Deputy Bruce Kimsey

They were only allowed to bring a pen and paper into the room. The serial killer had handcuffs chained to his waist. On the first day he wore leg irons as well, Meyer said.

“We spent several hours both days, four to six hours each day,” Meyer said. “There wasn’t a clock in the room, I didn’t have my watch.”

Meyer said they’ve been trying for several years to meet with Ridgway, and the answer before from his attorney had alway been no. When he got a yes answer, they jumped at the opportunity right away, he said.

The victimology in the three local cases is such that Ridgway has been a suspect, alluding to patterns in who Ridgway targeted.

Both Kimsey and Meyer took note of how short the infamous killer was.

“I expected him to be more physically imposing,” Meyer said. “He’s kind of meek, mild-mannered. He doesn’t have, ‘this guy’s gonna attack me’ vibe.”

It’s easy to see how someone would get into a truck with him, Meyer said.

The Auburn resident was convicted of murdering 49 women, but has admitted to killing 80, Meyer said. He was arrested in December 2001, at age 52.

There’s no physical evidence tying him to the Lewis County cases, and Ridgway didn’t have any particular facts about the three, the prosecutor said.

And at one point, he suggested he wouldn’t mind taking credit to “get his numbers up.”

“He understands what he’s done, and I think he likes the notoriety,” Meyer said. “He told us, there’s more written about me than Jack the Ripper.”

Much of their time was spent building rapport, talking about his work, marriage and hobbies and then after that, learning details about the crimes he committed in King County.

Ridgway worked at Kenworth for 30 years. He was married three times.

He became known as the Green River Killer, because that’s where some of the first bodies were discovered, Kimsey said.

That’s one of the similarities between the women he’s admitted to killing, and the women whose bodies were discovered locally starting in 1984, according to the detective.

Two of the bodies in Lewis County were found near waterways, he said. Two of the three had ties to prostitution, like Ridgway’s victims, according to Kimsey. And some of the known Green River victims went missing from the same area as did the women found in Lewis County.

What they do know for sure, is the three women were murdered and their bodies were discovered in Lewis County, Meyer said.

On August 12, 1984, Monica Anderson, 32, of Tacoma, was found by a fisherman in the Chehalis River west of Centralia below the Galvin Road bridge. She was last seen June 25 in Tacoma, getting into a brown van on Commerce Way. She died of asphyxiation, Kimsey said.

On May 5 1985, Susan L. Krueger, 42, was found along Lacamas Creek at Drews Prairie Road near Interstate 5 west of Toledo. She was last seen March 11 after she was released from the Pierce County Jail. She died of  blows to the head.

On August 5, 1991, Mignon S. Hensley, 21, was found in a brushy area about a mile east of Interstate 5 along U.S. Highway 12. She was last seen June 19 leaving a Deja Vu strip club in Federal Way. She was about eight months pregnant at the time. She died from homicidal violence.

Kimsey, who was promoted to chief criminal deputy when newly elected Sheriff Rob Snaza took office in January has studied the three case files.

“I would say a reasonable person would say there was sexual assault, or sexual motivation on these crimes,” Kimsey said of the evidence.

Ridgeway indicated to his interviewers he had nothing to do with the three deaths and that it wouldn’t make sense for him dump a body in Lewis County.

Part of Ridgway’s crimes involved returning to the dump sites to visit the bodies, and engage them sexually again, according to Kimsey.

He knew King County like the back of his hand, and said, he wouldn’t go to Lewis County and screw it up, Meyer said.

But, Ridgway did take some of his victims from King County all the way to Oregon, Kimsey said. He told his three interviewers he took bones down there after digging them up, to get the FBI involved and throw off the Green River Task Force.

They three men spent some of their time orienting Ridgway to the boundaries of Lewis County, and learned he’d been to Yard Birds and the the Centralia Outlets.

When the conversation turned to Ridgway’s time in the Navy, overseas, Ridgway’s comment was, “that would open up a can of worms,” Meyer said. A person could speculate about what that means, he said.

“Ridgway will say every one of his victims, he strangled,” Kimsey said.

The takeaway for Kimsey, is what he learned about what Ridgway did to his victims, for example, details of how he left the bodies, Kimsey said.

“I’m going to go back and look again at our cases to see if they match up, if there’s some matchup,” he said.

Meyer said he left feeling like Ridgway would readily admit if he’d killed the women, but then wonders, if he says there’s 80 victims, does he remember every one?

Kimsey has the same question.

“The problem, is he doesn’t remember names and faces,” Kimsey said. “He said he lost count after like two dozen.”

The detective asked one of the most infamous serial killers ever why he did what he did.

“He told us he felt a sense of power over women, and why he didn’t like these women,” Kimsey said. “He saw prostitutes as basically trash.”

He knew the women he victimized weren’t likely to be reported missing, at least not right away, and, he didn’t have to pay them, Kimsey said.

It was almost like a game, where he could take out his negative energy, Kimsey said.

“The things that he’s saying, no normal person could understand,” Kimsey said. “It’s pure evil and horrific, the things he’s done to women.”

Kimsey, Meyer and Halstead also spoke with Ridgway about the unsolved homicides of two other women during the same time period. Kimsey said he doesn’t think he was involved in their deaths.

Roberta D. Strasbaugh, 18, was found October 18, 1985 on the north side of Lincoln Creek Road at its junction with Manner’s Road, about three weeks after her truck ran out of gas along Old Highway 99.

Diana Robertson’s body was found in 1986, about three miles south of Elbe.

It’s obvious there’s been more than one serial killer operating in the region, Kimsey said.

One of them, Robert L. Yates is also on Kimsey’s list to talk with, although he’s a serial killer with limited activity in Western Washington, and Kimsey said he believes his victims were shot with a firearm.

The goal is to get answers, for families who don’t know what happened to their loved ones, according to Meyer.

For Kimsey, continuing to work the cases is a duty owed to their families. He’ll keep going through the files, trying to match some evidence to a suspect, he said.

Ridgway is not eliminated as a suspect, and certainly not based on his denials, according to the detective.

“I’m not convinced he has nothing to do with these, I’m not convinced he does,” Kimsey said. “I’m going to take the information and keep working these cases.” “Maybe the technology one day will be there.”

News brief: Centralia resident jailed after samurai sword attack

Thursday, October 22nd, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 46-year-old Centralia man was arrested overnight for allegedly thrusting a samurai sword through the side of a trailer nearly stabbing a woman inside.

Police say Norman R. Pedigo also used the 28-inch long weapon in an attempt to stab the victim through an open window.

Officers called about 12:15 a.m. to a gas station on the 1200 block of Mellen Street learned Pedigo and his brother had been involved in a dispute at the nearby trailer park. They spoke with Pedigo there and then spoke to the brother, according to the Centralia Police Department.

According to police, the two men who reside together were arguing and the brother went next door to get away from the situation. That’s when Pedigo became so enraged, he attacked the neighbor woman’s trailer, according to police.

The woman was not injured, but the brother was allegedly punched in the face by Pedigo, according to police.

The suspect was arrested first-degree assault and fourth-degree assault, and booked into the Lewis County Jail.

News brief: Bicyclist saved from oncoming train in Centralia

Thursday, October 22nd, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A woman who crashed her bicycle on the tracks in front of an approaching train was rescued by bystanders overnight in downtown Centralia.

Police were called at 2 a.m. to the 200 block of North Railroad Avenue where they found the woman with a small cut on her head from the fall, according to the Centralia Police Department.

While the woman was helped to safety, there wasn’t enough time to move her bike and belongings from the tracks before the train passed, according to police.

She was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital where she was treated and given stitches in her forehead, according to police.

It wasn’t that long ago when a Centralia man wrecked his bike on the tracks in the same area, and was fatally struck by a train.

Victor J. Bonagofski, 72, lost his life when he fell off his bicycle on the railroad tracks at Locust Street and was hit by a freight train the night of Aug. 12.

Cowlitz Tale: Rogue fisherman sent to prison

Wednesday, October 21st, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A 56-year-old man caught fishing when he shouldn’t have been on the Cowlitz River was sentenced yesterday to almost two years in prison.

Robert L. Niquette was on the water near the Blue Creek boat launch out of Salkum at about 10 o’clock one night this past December when a Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife officer on patrol recognized the lone vehicle in the parking lot.

The officer heard a motorboat and watched for awhile as two individuals fished in the dark.

Yesterday, in Lewis County Superior Court, a judge imposed a 22-month sentence on the Vancouver, Washington resident.

“It’s not just fishing without a license,” Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Eric Eisenberg said today. “But fishing when his right to fish had been revoked for life.

“This is his third conviction for that.”

Eisenberg said Niquette pleaded guilty on the morning his trial was to begin last month.

When they went before a judge yesterday, even Eisenberg thought the potential penalty was awfully high.

The standard sentencing range, given Niquette’s number of previous convictions, was 22 to 29 months, Eisenberg said.

“My recommendation was 15, cause that’s really a lot,” he said. “And in fact, he did not catch anything.”

Judge James Lawler gave the defendant five days credit for time already served in the jail

Dallas man gets 66 months for virtual relationship with teen

Wednesday, October 21st, 2015
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Lavon S. Sellers and his lawyer Jacob Clark face the judge for Sellers’ sentencing hearing in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Texas man who engaged in an online sexual relationship with a Lewis County boy who initially said he was 16 will be off to prison to serve a five and a half year sentence.

Lavon S. Sellers and the teen met on a website called “Hot or Not” in the summer of 2014 and eventually the boy confessed he was only 14 years old, according to lawyers handling the case.

There’s no indication the two met, but they made a plan where Sellers would come to Washington and they would spend time in Seattle together, according to court documents and the boy’s mother.

“When Mr. Sellers found out he was 14, that’s when things should have stopped, and it didn’t,” defense attorney Jacob Clark said. “Mr. Sellers and this teen believed they loved each other.”

The boy attempted suicide after the relationship came to light and then he was caught Skyping with Sellers after being ordered by his father not to.

Sellers, now 32, was brought to the Lewis County at the beginning of last month and held on $100,000 bail.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor and two counts of luring four weeks ago and yesterday was back in Lewis County Superior Court.

Under the plea deal, both sides agreed to recommend to the judge he get 66 months in prison.

“I know Mr. Sellers never meant to hurt anyone by these actions,” Clark told the judge. “He’s been a law abiding citizen all his life.”

The boy’s mother told the judge her son is about two years behind his peers, and has always been vulnerable and trusting. And now, the mother said, he’s a young boy with no spirit, no excitement for life, no self-esteem and remains confused by what Sellers taught him.

Lewis County Sirens.com is not naming the mother, to avoid identifying the victim.

Judge Nelson Hunt agreed with the sentence recommended by Clark and Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead.

“Well, it wasn’t the intention, but it did, it did hurt a whole lot of people,” Hunt said.

Sellers was ordered to have no contact with the boy, and to pay about $3,200 in fines and fees including the extradition costs.

Outside the courtroom, Clark said the people and businesses who make the sort of online applications where the two communicated are immune to prosecution, even though they are made accessible to both adults and children.

“That is the travesty,” Clark said.
•••

For background, read “Lewis County Sheriff’s Office arrests man in Dallas for long-distance sexploitation of local teen” from Sunday September 6, 2015, here

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, October 21st, 2015
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•••

CAR PROWL

• Centralia police were called at 7:10 p.m. yesterday to the 500 block of Harrison Avenue where an individual reported someone broke into their vehicle an stole “items,” according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, misdemeanor assault; responses for alarm, dispute, misdemeanor theft, suicidal person, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street … and more.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, October 20th, 2015
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•••

Updated at 6:40 p.m.

MYSTERY CRASH

• Authorities are hoping someone can help them find the driver of a pickup truck found wrecked overnight, since there was blood in the truck but nobody around. There is suspected injury, however, the registration for the vehicle is expired and its owner unknown, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. A deputy responded about 1 a.m. to the 4300 block of Jackson Highway south of U.S. Highway 12 and found the 1980 Ford F250 flatbed that appeared to be totaled, according to the sheriff’s office. Anyone who has information about its owner or the driver is asked to contact the sheriff’s office, Cmdr. Dusty Breen said this morning.

BLOOD AND DAMAGED VEHICLES

• A deputy called about 10:10 p.m. yesterday regarding a possible vehicle prowl at the 3300 block of Harrison Avenue outside Centralia found the windows broken on two vehicles and blood smeared on the vehicles. The owner said she’d been having problems with her ex, and that he might be responsible, leading to an unsuccessful search of the area, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. However, a short time later, a deputy was advised of a possible burglary in progress in the same area and suspecting the ex may be involved, a police dog was called in, Cmdr. Dusty Breen said. Centralia Police Department Officer Ruben Ramirez and his partner Lobo tracked down George F. Jones, 49, of Rochester, in a briar patch along the 2900 block of Harrison Avenue, according to police. Jones was apprehended by the dog and subsequently booked into the Lewis County Jail for two counts of second-degree malicious mischief, according to Breen. Breen said the victim of the possible burglary could not be located. The damage to the windows is listed at about $1,000.

K-9 APPREHENDS SHOPLIFTING SUSPECT

• A 16-year-old Chehalis boy was pulled out from under a recreational vehicle in a backyard by a police dog after he bolted as he was being placed in the back of a patrol car for allegedly shoplifting beef jerky. Police called about 4:25 a.m. on Sunday about the incident at a convenience store on the 600 block of West Main Street detained the teen, but he took off running, handcuffed, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Citizens pointed officers in the direction of the suspect and he was found hiding at the 300 block of Southwest Chehalis Avenue, according to police. The youngster was arrested for third-degree theft, escape and for minor in possession and/or consumption of alcohol because he had allegedly been drinking, police said. He was taken to the hospital to be treated for the dog bite, detective Sgt. Gary Wilson said.

ELECTRICIAN’S WORK DESTROYED

• Someone raided an Interstate 5 construction site and made off with about $1,200 worth of copper wiring. Centralia police called about 11:30 a.m. yesterday to the area of the exit 81 northbound offramp found someone had unscrewed the top of an electrical box and pulled out about 2500 feet of eight-gauge wire, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DRUGS

• Centralia police reported this morning that a 37-year-old man was arrested yesterday afternoon for a warrant from the state Department of Corrections and possession of methamphetamine.  Lance J. Myhre was contacted by police after 4 p.m. at the 1000 block of Roosevelt Avenue, according to police. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

HUFFING SPREE INTERRUPTED

• Chehalis police were called this morning to Walgreens on Louisiana Avenue for a woman found unconscious in the restroom who had apparently taken something off a shelf and was inhaling it. The same woman was arrested yesterday afternoon after an officer responded to a report a woman was “huffing” a can of aerosol at a bus stop near Wal-Mart, according to the Chehalis Police Department. And on Saturday morning, the same individual, 31-year-old Maria E. Hazzard, was found in the woman’s bathroom at Rite Aid on South Market Boulevard allegedly sniffing on something similar, police said. Each time, aid was called and the Chehalis woman was transported to Providence Centralia Hospital, issued her citations for inhaling toxic fumes, given a court date and then released, detective Sgt. Gary Wilson said.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, misdemeanor assault, protection order violation, driving under the influence, driving with suspended license; responses for alarm, dispute, tagging, hit and run, possible assault, parking complaint, telephone harassment, misdemeanor theft, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street, concern that as the weather changes people might begin taking up camp inside old busses and motorhomes parked behind a storage business … and more.