Chase bank robbery suspect facing possible third strike, pleads not guilty

January 29th, 2015
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Larry “Skip” Bailey appears in Lewis County Superior Court today for his arraignment.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The suspected bicycling bank robber pleaded not guilty today in connection with a seemingly quiet holdup in Chehalis, that took a stocking-capped man dressed in numerous layers of clothing inside a bank vault with two employees.

Larry Gene Bailey is charged in Lewis County Superior Court with first-degree robbery and possession of methamphetamine.

Exactly how much the robber nearly got away with is unclear. Charging documents say he was handed roughly $40,000 but police were waiting for Chase Bank to do an inventory. When Bailey was apprehended about 45 minutes later less than a mile from the bank, officers say they found $36,000 tucked inside a pinkish-purple floral print cloth bag in his backpack.

Police say the 52-year-old ditched a BMX-style bicycle on the West Street overpass and tried to get through two fences adjacent to Interstate 5 but was grabbed by a pursuing sheriff’s deputy.

That was on Monday. On Tuesday, authorities told a judge he was suicidal  and wouldn’t willingly be brought up to a courtroom for his first appearance.

“Skip” Bailey’s bail was set yesterday at $250,000, with prosecutors noting no apparent ties to the community and his history.

Prosecutors say they believe he has four federal convictions for bank robbery, in Kansas, Eastern Washington and Western Washington.

Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead said today they are still trying to confirm those. The earliest one is 1991.

According to Halstead, he also has two first-degree theft convictions from 2005, for which he was sentenced to 10 years.

Bailey’s federal probation officer has informed them he is in violation of his probation, according to court documents.

Chehalis police say Bailey only arrived to the area a few months ago. Police Department spokesperson Linda Bailey said he shows an address on the 1500 block of Bishop Road.

The address is for a church, not far from an encampment next to Interstate 5 at LaBree Road that somehow caught fire in November, destroying a tent and all the belongings of a 52-year-old homeless person named Larry G. Bailey.

Chehalis police’s Bailey, no relation, said she thinks it is the same man.

Defense attorney Joely O’Rourke who represented Bailey initially yesterday said he is not employed and has no stable residence.

First-degree robbery has a maximum penalty of life in prison. If convicted and the state can confirm the prior robbery convictions, that would classify Bailey as a persistent offender – be a third strike – making him subject to mandatory life imprisonment without parole, according to O’Rourke.

According to charging documents, when police arrived to Chase Bank following the 10:47 a.m. call, the robber was gone.

The manger told officers he implied he had a gun, reaching into his coat pocket, telling her he had two strikes and had nothing to lose, so she needed to follow his instructions. A second teller was summoned because it takes two employees to get inside the vault, according to documents.

The charging documents offer the following details:

Officers were given photos uploaded from the bank security system, to use as they searched the immediate area.

A police dog brought to the scene led them to the nearby Rite Aid store where some discarded clothing was found that fit the description provided by bank employees. Police located more clothing in an alley between Southwest Fourth and Fifth streets.

Law enforcement officers from Chehalis, Centralia and the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office had set up containment and continued to search, while three nearby schools were alerted for lockdowns.

It was about 11:30 a.m. when an individual matching the suspect’s description was seen traveling on a bicycle near the West Street overpass by a helpful witness, who pointed a deputy in his direction, according to police.

Bailey had a meth pipe in his possession, leading to the drug charge, according to police.

Bailey qualified for a court appointed attorney, who sat with him in the courtroom this morning as he entered his pleas.

Chehalis lawyer Chris Baum said he doesn’t know much about the man he is representing, and what he does know is protected by professional confidentiality.

“I just got the case yesterday afternoon, and I saw him and spoke with him this morning,” Baum said. “I will sort it out after I get the police reports.”

An Associated Press news story from The Seattle Times in 1991 reports upon a 28-year-old Everett man named Larry Gene Bailey who was indicted for allegedly holding up three Spokane banks that summer, and was wanted in Kansas for another bank robbery.

He was arrested by a trooper for a traffic violation, and a large amount of cash was found stuffed in his clothing, according to the news story.

In that case, the man was riding a motorcycle.

Bailey’s trial was put on the court’s schedule for the week of March 23.
•••

For background, read “Suspected Chase Bank robber believed to have numerous similar convictions” from Tuesday January 27, 2015 at 8:59 p.m., here

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

January 29th, 2015

DOMESTIC DISPUTES

• Centralia police arrested a Portland man yesterday for unlawful imprisonment after he allegedly refused to let his passenger out of the vehicle as they were traveling in through Centralia. Officers were called just before noon to the area of South Gold and Floral streets about a couple walking down the street arguing, according to the Centralia Police Department. They were in town shopping and began to argue and at one point, he locked the vehicle’s door, Officer John Panco said. “Finally when he slowed almost to a stop, she was able to jump out,” Panco said. The man, 38-year-old Derek Gannon, parked and followed her, according to Panco. Gannon was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

• A 27-year-old Toledo man who called 911 to say during an argument after he told his girlfriend to leave, she began knocking things over in the home, was subsequently arrested for second-degree assault. Deputies responding about 1 p.m. on Tuesday to the 200 block of Kangas Road however were told he slapped the 19-year-old, dragged her by her hair knocking items off the counter, choked her and even broke down a bathroom door when she locked herself in, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Her injuries and other evidence suggested Marcello Ruiz-Zueger was the primary aggressor, according to the sheriff’s office. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

• A 33-year-old Chehalis area man was arrested for second-degree assault following the events that transpired after his girlfriend told him to move out, including him allegedly putting her in a chokehold as well as wrapping her in a mattress and jumping on it as hard as he could. The pair are both mixed martial arts fighters, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. A deputy called on Tuesday to the 29-year-old woman’s father’s home where she went for help learned  there were children in the house when it happened and the woman was able to get them outside and into a car, according to the sheriff’s office. Chief Deputy Brown Stacy Brown said the deputy was told that Joseph R. Whearty at one point laid down on the ground behind her car tires, and as she managed to maneuver around him, he jumped on the car and punched its windshield, cracking it. Whearty was contacted and booked into the Lewis County Jail Brown said.

PURSE SNATCHING FOILED

• A 48-year-old Seattle man was arrested after he allegedly tried to steal an employee’s purse from a downtown Chehalis restaurant and pushed the cook who confronted him as he went out the back door. Officers called about 7:45 p.m. on Tuesday to the Royal Buffet on the 500 block of North Market had help from a police dog who tracked a suspect to an area off Prindle Street where he was hiding in or under a piece of equipment, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Shelton L. Hayes was booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree robbery, according to police.

BURGLARY AND THEFT

• Centralia police yesterday said they were investigating a report of a burglary at the 3200 block of Galvin Road in which cash, a debit card and gaming system were taken.

• Centralia police were called just before 11 a.m. yesterday to the 1000 block of Swanson Drive regarding fraud on an individual’s bank account, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Police took a report of the theft of a door mat from the 1200 block of Mellen Street in Centralia on Tuesday morning.

CAR PROWL

• Someone smashed a vehicle’s window and stole a CD while it was parked at Steck Clinic on the 1200 block of Bishop Road in Chehalis sometime shortly after 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

VANDALISM

• Someone threw an egg at a vehicle parked on the 600 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia, according to a report made to police last night.

• Chehalis police said yesterday they couldn’t place a value on a homemade lighted SeaHawks sign that someone smashed when they came onto a porch on Southwest Fifth Street the day before.

DRUGS

• An individual detained for shoplifting merchandise – including a cell phone cover and tweezers – from Wal-Mart overnight was arrested for possession of drugs. An officer responding about 1:50 a.m. to the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue found suspected heroin, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Jeremy W. Schrader, 36, of Centralia, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

• An officer was called to the 1800 block of Taylor Street yesterday about the theft of three pills, narcotics, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A traffic stop on U.S. Highway 12 in Glenoma for expired tabs on a camping trailer led to the seizure of 14 marijuana plants yesterday afternoon, and the vehicle, according to the Washington State Patrol. Troopers and deputies observed the potted plants, ranging in size from one to two feet tall and were granted a search warrant, according to the state patrol. Patrol spokesperson Trooper Will Finn said the driver, Shawn Adam Dickinson, 33, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony possession of marijuana and intent to manufacture marijuana after the approximately 2:40 p.m. stop. An individual with the same name was released from the jail a couple of hours later, according to online jail roster. Under the state’s ever changing laws, recreational pot users may not grow their own, according to Finn. At the same time, a qualified medical marijuana patient may grow a limited amount for medicinal use, under certain conditions, according to Finn. Those patients may grow up to 15 plants and possess up to 24 ounces of medical marijuana, Finn says.

OTHER

• Chehalis police were called about midnight on Tuesday to Southwest Newaukum Avenue to a report of a hysterical naked woman who ran through someone’s yard. Officers and a police dog that was brought out to help search the area could not locate the woman, according to the Chehalis Police Department. They were able to get a pretty good idea of where she may belong, but their knock on the door of that residence went unanswered, according to police.

• A 40-year-old motorist was hospitalized with minor injuries after she took out a steel gate, clipped a garage and came to rest in the front yard of a residence at one of the 90 degree turns on Rice Road outside of Chehalis yesterday morning. Deputies and a police dog responded after the approximately 4:15 a.m. wreck, as the woman said she was driving fast because she’d just discovered there were two males behind her inside her vehicle, but they ran off, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. She said she was headed from home to get gas at Interstate Avenue and when she exited the freeway, she saw two bald heads behind her, according to the sheriff’s office. The woman was unable to provide more of a description and said they didn’t say anything to her the entire time, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. A search of the area, an examination of the rear of her BMW sport utility vehicle and a track by the K-9 turned up nothing to indicate there had been any passengers, Brown said. The deputy found inconsistencies in the situation that led to calling off the search. The Chehalis woman was cited for wheels off the roadway, according to Brown.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, trespass, shoplifting, driving under the influence; responses for alarm, misdemeanor theft, unruly bar patron, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street, collision on county road … and more.

Phillip Pinotti admits to heroin delivery, possession

January 28th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The 22-year-old Adna resident whose high profile escape from an attempted misdemeanor arrest at Centralia Municipal Court in December was followed by a drug arrest pleaded guilty today to two felonies.

Phillip A. Pinotti was out on bail from his escape incident when Centralia police arrested him two and a half weeks ago for twice having heroin and once selling it.

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Phillip Pinotti

One case was from last August that was brought to the attention of prosecutors after the escape. The other involved newer incidents.

Lewis County prosecutors in a plea deal they said got both sides something they wanted, reduced the charge from August and dropped one of two counts in the more recent case.

“It seems like the quantity alone is not enough for possession with intent (to deliver),” Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told the judge this morning.

Meagher was referring to mid-August when police had him and Zachary J. Maurer under surveillance as they went to Longview to allegedly purchase heroin and subsequently impounded their vehicle finding drugs.

Pinotti’s responses were simply “Guilty, your honor,” when queried by the judge on each count.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt said he found Pinotti guilty as charged, of possession of heroin in August and of delivery of heroin on Dec. 20.

Pinotti, whose lives with his parents in Adna, drew gunfire from a court security officer on Dec. 16 when he ran away as he was being taken into custody and jumped in his car.

He was there for arraignment on a charge of driving under the influence, and the judge saw he was wanted on a misdemeanor warrant for failing to appear in Chehalis Municipal Court, in connection with a third-degree theft.

Two weeks ago, Pinotti pleaded guilty to three misdemeanors for the incidents of that day; obstructing, third-degree escape and tampering with evidence. He was given a sentence of 364 days, with all but six days suspended, getting credit for time already served.

Court Security Officer Steve Howard said he fired one shot because Pinotti tried to hit him with his car, but the Lewis County prosecutor concluded Pinotti wasn’t trying to run him run down.

Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer cleared Howard of criminal wrongdoing in the shooting, but Centralia Police Department Chief Bob Berg’s decision if Howard’s actions were in line with department policies is still pending.

Defense attorney Don Blair told the judge today he wanted to set the sentencing hearing for later, because his client has a misdemeanor sentencing coming up, and if he gets sent to prison, he would miss that.

Pinotti’s sentencing for the drug cases is scheduled for Feb. 11. He faces a standard sentencing range of between 12 and 20 months, according to Meagher.

Before the events of Dec. 16, Pinotti had one misdemeanor on his record, from 2009.
•••

For background, read:

• “Summertime heroin case proceeds for two defendants” from Tuesday January 20, 2015, here

• “Sentence: Six days in jail for escape that led to gunfire in Centralia” from Wednesday January 14, 2015, here

Former jail sergeant admits three felonies, gets immunity regarding inmate treatment

January 28th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A fired Lewis County Jail guard was given a 90-day jail sentence today following a plea deal in which local prosecutors agreed not to file any charges of assault that could have occurred during his time as a corrections officer.

Trevor S. Smith was terminated last summer for mistreatment of two inmates, conduct his superiors wrote “shocks the conscience and could be viewed as violating basic civil rights possessed by all human beings regardless of status.”

Smith was arrested about two weeks later at his home in Chehalis for something unrelated however, for allegedly snooping into secure jail computer records. Computer trespass is a class C felony with a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Smith was hired at the sheriff’s office in 2004 and promoted to jail sergeant in 2011. The inmate issues were investigated internally.

His June 27, 2014 termination letter and related documents show Smith was disciplined for directing that an inmate be kept in a restraint chair for approximately twelve hours without food, water or restroom breaks.

Also, after Smith directed the discharge of pepper spray into the closed cell of an inmate with mental health issues, the inmate was not offered a wet towel, a shower or any decontamination for more than five hours; the cell had no running water, according to the sheriff’s office.

Mark McClain is a former Lewis County deputy prosecutor who was elected in November as Pacific County prosecutor, and returned today for Smith’s hearing.

As part of the deal, prosecutors dropped two of the five counts of computer trespass, McClain said.

McClain said the sheriff was involved in the resolution of the case, and went along with it, acknowledging “the good things Mr. Smith did for the sheriff’s office.”

McClain and Defense attorney Shane O’Rourke said the state agreed not to pursue any collateral investigations as part of the plea agreement.

McClain asked the judge to lock Smith up for 90 days.

O’Rourke recommended his client be allowed to serve his time on electronic home monitoring.

O’Rourke said Smith qualified for several reasons. He’s working, for UPS; he’s going to school, getting an online MBA; and has partial custody of his children.

O’Rourke said his client doesn’t believe there was excessive force even in the civil context or the context of his profession.

As to the reason prosecutors would agree to not pursue criminal charges:

“If I was going to speculate, it would be because it doesn’t amount to criminal assault,” O’Rourke said.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt ordered Smith to begin 90 days on home monitoring by Feb. 17.  He was given credit for one day, for the roughly 28 hours he spent in jail when he was arrested, according to his lawyer.

Smith declined a request by a reporter for comment after the hearing.
•••

For background, read:

• “Lewis County Jail sergeant let go for mistreating inmates, then arrested for computer snooping at work ” from Wednesday July 16, 2014, here

• “Sheriff’s Office: Fired corrections officer allowed inmates to suffer” from Friday July 18, 2014, here

Napavine dad will go to prison for shaking, injuring his baby

January 28th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Napavine area father who gave his 4-month-old daughter a bruised brain was sentenced today to 16 months in prison.

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Tyler C. Abair

Attorneys on both sides recommended 14 months, but Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt chose the top of the standard range.

Tyler C. Abair was convicted earlier this month of third-degree assault following a plea agreement.

Abair was arrested last spring, a month after an incident in which he said the infant choked on formula and stopped breathing. The 23-year-old father acknowledged that he shook her, but also said that he was terrified and didn’t know CPR, according to court documents.

The baby’s mother, in a letter read aloud to the judge today by the baby’s grandmother, asked that Abair be given the maximum amount of time.

“I fear for my children,” she said. “She nearly died and suffered a great amount of pain.”

Before his arrest, Abair stayed home and cared for their twins while the mother worked.

The grandmother told the judge the family is struggling to understand why Abair didn’t call 911 and didn’t take infant CPR classes as the mother had.

Court documents referenced a doctor who indicated the child exhibited classic but not severe signs of Shaken Baby Syndrome. Prosecutors have said the child has recovered.

Prosecutors initially charged Abair with first-degree assault  but as the case progressed, decided the evidence didn’t show first-degree assault.

He was also given eight months for an unrelated second-degree theft, with his time to be served concurrently, according to Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead.

Abair has already been locked up for eight months in the Lewis County Jail.
•••

For background, read “Father admits he shook his infant child, didn’t know CPR ” from Thursday January 15, 2015, here

Centralia logger killed near Oakville leaves behind close-knit crew

January 28th, 2015
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Erin L. VanBrocklin doing a “super hero” pose out in the woods in an undated photo.

Updated

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Erin L. VanBrocklin grew up in Bellingham.

“He’s always worked, he’s always been in the logging industry,” his younger sister said.

He was in his late 20s, or maybe early 30s, when he moved away from his family and down to Centralia to start a new life for himself, she said.

He was locked up for about six years, after he robbed or tried to rob a man in Rochester, until his release two years ago in February, Tori Banek said.

“He had an addiction, but he got cleaned up in prison,” Banek said. “And we learned so much about him in the week before his funeral.”

VanBrocklin, 41, was killed in a logging accident outside Oakville earlier this month. His funeral was held in Chehalis last Saturday.

Banek, a middle school teacher who lives in northeast Oregon, said she came to learn that her brother was very close to the three crew members who tried to save his life.

“These men lived with Erin,” she said. “They called him dad, and Erin called these three men his kids, because Erin mentored them.”

One of them told her they met in prison, when VanBrocklin gave him a cup of coffee – something unexpected from fellow inmates – and told him, that if he wanted to change his life, he would give him a place to live and a job, she said.

“Erin made him want to change, something his parents couldn’t do for him,” Banek said.

Banek so cherishes a text message sent to her by the co-worker nicknamed Spider, that spoke of how inspiring her brother was, that a longtime drug dealer who thought he would return to that life, decided not to.

VanBrocklin was the second in a line of six children, a large family that is so grateful to the logging company owners who were willing to give him a second chance.

His family has now recently gotten to know how loved he was by his crew, his pastor and many others in the Centralia area, his sister said.

“That gave us so much peace,” she said. “Because his life wasn’t always on the straight and narrow.”

VanBrocklin was working with a B and M Logging crew the morning of January 10. He was bucking a log. Others were rigging up a yarder, according to the Grays Harbor County Sheriff’s Office

A log that broke loose and rolled down the hill crushed him.

His fellow workers had to cut him out, and they placed him a stretcher and drove six miles to where they met an ambulance. Medics tried to save him but he was pronounced dead.

“Erin’s crew was one of the top crews in the company,” Banek said. “They were all the underdogs, and these three men were with him.”

Another funeral will be held next month in Bellingham, on his birthday which is Feb. 14.

There were seven work-related logging deaths in Washington state last year.

Four of them occurred in Lewis County.
•••

For background, read “Centralia resident dies in logging accident in Grays Harbor County” from Tuesday January 13, 2015, here

Suspected Chase Bank robber believed to have numerous similar convictions

January 27th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – He may have used a bicycle for a getaway vehicle but the man arrested yesterday may have quite a bit of experience holding up banks.

Prosecutors say it appears Larry G. Bailey has three, maybe four, federal convictions for bank robbery, going all the way back to 1988 in Washington and Kansas.

Bailey, 52, is accused of being the man who walked into Chase Bank in Chehalis yesterday, implied to the manager he had a gun as he reached into his coat pocket and got into the bank’s vault where he was handed $36,000 to $40,000 cash.

Bailey was apprehended about 45 minutes later less than a mile from the bank, leaving his BMX-style bicycle and scaling one fence and nearly a second one ending up on the shoulder of Interstate 5 at the West Street overpass.

Police say Bailey just arrived in the area few months ago, and shows an address on the 1500 block of Bishop Road.

His federal probation officer informed prosecutors they would be placing a detainer on him, as he is in violation of his probation, according to court documents.

He was charged in Lewis County Superior Court today with first-degree robbery and possession of methamphetamine.

Prosecutors planned to ask a judge to hold Bailey on $1 million bail, given no apparent ties to the community and his history.

But he refused to be brought up from the jail.

A corrections officer told the judge this afternoon that Bailey was suicidal and not agreeing to talk to anyone.

Judge Nelson Hunt said he didn’t like to do it, but Bailey would have to be forced to come to the court room tomorrow afternoon.

“Tomorrow, if he won’t come up, we’ll need to have him brought up in the chair,” Hunt said.

The chair, according to both lawyers in the courtroom, is something they haven’t themselves seen used in Lewis County, but is something a defendant can be restrained in and moved in.

According to charging documents, Bailey made no secret of his past.

After his arrest, he was taken to see a doctor for injuries prior to being booked.

Firefighters said he hurt his forehead when he crashed his bicycle. Charging documents mention he ran through barbed wire while trying to evade authorities.

While being treated, Bailey told officers this was his fourth strike, although one of them was before the new law took effect, but he knew he would be going away forever, charging documents state.

He talked about how he had done time in prison, and how this was the first time he’d gotten a teller to take him inside the vault, the documents state.

“Bailey spoke about methamphetamine and how it was the devil,” the documents state.
•••

Meanwhile, for background, read “Thirty-six thousand dollars retrieved from accused bicycle bandit after robbery” from Tuesday January 27, 2015 at 10:40 p.m., here