Posts Tagged ‘By Sharyn L. Decker’

Maurin murders: Amount of new evidence overwhelming the defense

Friday, October 5th, 2012
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Ricky Riffe listens to his attorney John Crowley in court this morning.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The trial in the 1985 Maurin kidnap and murder case was pushed out once again as the defense voiced concerns about slowness of information being turned over to him while the prosecutor worries about witnesses who could die before they ever get called to the stand.

Ricky Allen Riffe, 53, appeared in Lewis County Superior Court this morning as attorneys reviewed the status of the case with Judge Richard Brosey.

It was scheduled for the week of Nov. 5.

Seattle-based defense attorney John Crowley said he won’t be prepared by then.

Crowley told the judge he just received a witness statement from Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead; a witness he still needs to interview.

“It was typed August 30, I got it two days ago,” Crowley said.

Crowley noted his client was arraigned in August, but the state just last week collected DNA from his client, which is presumably now being tested at the state crime lab.

He also pointed out the prosecutor turned over 6,000 emails as recently as Tuesday collected from his client’s computer.

“The point is, we can’t be ready, given the rate of production of discovery by the state,” Crowley said.

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Ed and Minnie Maurin

Halstead objected to the request for a postponement until March, and being accused of “dribbling” the required documents to the defense.

“This is a case that’s recently re-emerged,” Halstead said. “As you can imagine, people have come forward.”

Halstead said the state has serious concerns about witnesses being available given the case is 27 years old, noting one who had a heart attack last week.

“He’s not the only one who might not be around in six months,” Halstead said.

Riffe, a former Lewis County resident, was a long time suspect but was just arrested in July at his home in Alaska.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has investigated and reinvestigated the case since December 1985 when Ed and Wilhelmina Maurin vanished from their home in Ethel and their bodies turned up days later off a logging road outside Adna.

Prosecutors believe Riffe and his now-deceased brother John Gregory Riffe got into the Maurin’s home, uncovered bank records and forced the couple to go with them to the bank and withdraw $8,500 before shooting them in the backs with a shotgun inside their car, according to charging documents.

Ed Maurin was 81 years old. His wife, who went by Minnie, was 83.

The prosecution has in excess of 100 witnesses, some from out of state. Halstead today said the trial could last as long as four weeks. Last month, he estimated it could take two or possibly three weeks.

Judge Brosey said he would reschedule the trial for the week of Feb. 4 and proposed setting aside the whole month. He wants the attorneys to meet with him again in mid-November to review their progress.

“I don’t think I can be ready,” Crowley told him. “Given the computer and biological evidence floating out there.”

Halstead is preparing to take a formal deposition of one of his witnesses, Donald Burgess of Centralia, just in case his health prevents him from being present at the trial.

The parties will be back in court next Friday morning to address the details of the deposition with the judge.

Riffe is charged with two counts each of first-degree murder, first-degree kidnapping and first-degree robbery, as well as one count of burglary.

He has pleaded not guilty. His attorney continues to claim they got the wrong man.

Today in court he expressed optimism about the results of the DNA tests, which he’s still waiting to see.

“This was a bloody scene,” he said. “Hopefully the perpetrator left behind some evidence.”
•••

For background, read “Maurin homicide: Accused murderer’s lawyer says no new evidence in old case” from Thursday July 26, 2012, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, October 5th, 2012

‘I SEE YOU’

• A sheriff’s detective driving by the Handi Mart on Kerron Avenue in Winlock yesterday morning stopped when he spotted an individual on a mountain bike making repeated brief contacts with people in cars in the parking lot. The detective observed for awhile because numerous complaints have been received over the past few months about suspected drug dealing there, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. When the man motioned for one motorist to follow him up the street and the detective saw some kind of exchange, he contacted the bicyclist, Christopher W. Shope, 47, Winlock, and arrested him for possession of methamphetamine, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Shope denied selling drugs but admitted he had about $20 worth of meth with him, Brown said. Shope was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

ASSAULT WITH WOODEN ROD

• A 49-year-old Centralia man was arrested for second degree assault yesterday morning after he allegedly threatened to strike family members with a wooden closet rod. Keith A. Smith was booked into the Lewis County Jail after contact with an officer about 8:20 p.m. at the 1400 block of Johnson Road in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department.

ONE DOWN, ONE TO GO

• A woman wanted for hit and run for allegedly colliding with some mailboxes on the 1400 block of Centralia-Alpha Road as her boyfriend fled an alleged assault on Tuesday was arrested when she was spotted at Dennys in Chehalis last night. Raelynn D. Gonzales said she didn’t know where Mitchell W. Sinclair was, Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. She was booked into the Lewis County Jail. He is wanted for allegedly striking a woman in the head and face with a steel bar.

THE GOOD STUFF IS GONE

• An empty purse found on a piece of equipment at a business on the 600 block of Northwest State Street in Chehalis was turned into the police department yesterday. The brown handbag discovered with an empty blue cloth lunch bag had no name or anything inside of it, according to police.

DEER WRECK

• A 37-year-old Castle Rock woman escaped serious injury when she swerved to miss a deer, crossed over the center lane and hit a guard rail before heading down an embankment. It happened about 8 p.m. yesterday on the 1000 block of Jackson Highway South near Toledo, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Her vehicle sustained major damage and she was cited for wheels off the roadway because her attempt to avoid the deer was unsafe, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

CHIMNEY FIRE

• Firefighters were called just before 7 p.m. yesterday to a fire on Vine Street in Napavine found five-foot high flames coming from a chimney. It was extinguished before it spread to the structure, according to Lewis County Fire District 5. Firefighter Brad Bozarth said its a good time for folks to get their chimneys cleaned if they haven’t already done so. This one was cleaned last year, but not very well, he said.

NEIGHBORS HELPING NEIGHBORS

• Four firefighters from West Thurston Regional Fire Authority traveled to Mason County last night to assist with a wild fire that  has burned about 150 acres. Fire Chief Robert Scott reminds folks there is a red flag alert in place in parts of Western Washington because weather conditions are ripe for fires. The (Tacoma) News Tribune reports the blaze near Shelton threatened about 100 structures when it began yesterday but 100 firefighters who worked through the night have it 30 percent contained.

Joshua Vance admits to killing his father

Thursday, October 4th, 2012
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Joshua Vance sits with defense attorney David Arcuri as he pleads guilty to murder in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Going to trial is a gamble and both sides in the Onalaska murder case in which a 25-year-old mentally disturbed man stabbed to death his sleeping father chose to cut their losses with a plea agreement.

Joshua Leroy Vance previously pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity but this morning told a judge he was guilty.

His father, 58-year-old Terry Vance, was stabbed at least 11 times and his throat was cut the morning of March 7.

Lawyers crafted a modified set of charges so they could secure a sentence of between 25 and 30 years.

Vance, 25 years old and shackled at the waist and ankles said very little in court today, only answering Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt’s several questions.

Vance pleaded guilty to first-degree murder.

“That means you thought about it for awhile and decided that’s what you were going to do?” Hunt asked.

“Yes,” Vance replied.

Instead of three counts of attempted murder, because Vance had told deputies and hospital personnel he had intended to kill the rest of his family, Vance pleaded guilty to third-degree assault.

The plea to the second count was pursuant to a doctrine referred to as “In re Barr”.

As the judge put it, he pleaded guilty to a crime he may not have committed or did not commit as part of an agreement.

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher explained he knew he could not get a conviction on those charges because of a rule that prevents him from relying on the defendant’s confessions alone.

Had the case moved toward trial, Vance’s admissions would not have been heard by a jury and Meagher would be left with no evidence of attempted murders, Meagher said.

But Meagher wanted Vance to be held accountable for them, so offered the “In re Barr” option with third-degree assault, he said.

Meagher will be asking for 30 years in prison when Vance is sentenced the week after next.

Defense attorney David Arcuri will be asking for 25 years, he said.

A psychiatric evaluation by a doctor for the defense supported the not guilty by reason of insanity, but an examination by a doctor hired by prosecutors indicated differently, according to Arcuri.

“If both experts had agreed, we would not be doing this,” Arcuri said.

It’s all about weighing the probabilities and the potential amounts of time, Arcuri said.

His client would have been facing close to 100 years in prison if they’d gone to trial and lost, he said.

Vance was attending Centralia College in the months before the attack. He was being treated for mental health issues; his family said he’d gone off his medications because he couldn’t afford them.

His diagnosis’s in the Western State Hospital doctors’ report included psychotic disorder, major depression, amphetamine dependence and alcohol abuse.

He has been hospitalized in the past for command hallucinations to kill himself and harm others. He also has been treated for substance induced hallucinations, according to the report.

Meagher said he took that into consideration.

“Let’s face it, the guy does have psychotic tendencies,” Meagher said.

Sentencing is set for Oct. 17.
•••

For background, read “Breaking news: Plea agreement made in Onalaska murder case” from Monday October 1, 2012, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, October 4th, 2012

NINTENDO STOLEN

• Centralia police were called to  home on the 500 block of Prairie Rose Street just after 6 p.m. yesterday about a Nintendo which had been stolen.

PAPER RACK VANISHES

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning a deputy was called about the theft of a newspaper dispenser from a gas station on the 2900 block of U.S. Highway 12 in Silver Creek. It is believed to have been taken sometime between Sunday and Monday and is valued at $600, according to the sheriff’s office.

ANGRY GRANDMA INVESTIGATED

• Police were called to Chehalis Middle School about 3:40 p.m. yesterday when a staff member said they witnessed a grandmother pull her granddaughter by the hair and slap her repeatedly. An officer requested security video footage and is following up, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

DRUGS, DRUGS AND MORE DRUGS

• A 20-year-old Centralia woman arrested yesterday for a garage burglary that occurred in Centralia last year was found with a variety of suspected drugs including heroin, methamphetamine and pills, according to police. An officer spotted Chelsea R. Hensley walking along the 1500 block of North Pearl Street about 3 p.m. and took her into custody, according to the Centralia Police Department. She was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

Sheriff’s Office: Adna-area husband attacked by wife with knife

Thursday, October 4th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 56-year-old man who arrived home to find numerous stab marks in the wall of his home escaped serious injury when his wife allegedly pulled a knife from the wall during an ensuing argument, stabbed him in the stomach and held the knife to his neck yesterday evening west of Adna.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said he wrestled the knife away and hid outside until deputies arrived.

Peggy Lee McCoy, 52, was arrested without incident, according to the sheriff’ office. She had armed herself with another knife, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Deputies called at 5:24 p.m. to the home on the 800 block of Ceres Hill Road were told the husband got home and found items in disarray, and noticed the knife sticking out of the wall and the other marks.

Brown did not yet know details of the cause of the dispute or what the woman was upset about. McCoy refused to give a statement, she said.

Brown said the husband declined aid for a puncture wound in the left side of his stomach.

McCoy was booked in to the Lewis County Jail for first-degree assault, Brown said.

She is expected to go before a judge this afternoon.

Last suspect from summer 2010 drive-by shooting in Chehalis now accounted for

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Police aren’t looking any longer for Andrew Morales-Loberg, a 19-year-old wanted but never captured in connection with a Chehalis drive-by shooting two years ago.

The Chehalis resident is one of four gang members sentenced Monday to more than 100 years in prison for a quasi-drive-by shooting in Yakima County, according to authorities.

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Andrew Morales-Loberg

Jaime Lopez, now 20, is the name Andrew Morales-Loberg gave police when he was arrested, Yakima County Deputy Prosecutor Gary Hintze said yesterday.

He and three other men – all LVL members, according to Hintze – were convicted in what was described as a retaliatory shooting after the sister of one of their group was shot in Sunnyside early last year.

A few hours later, gunfire erupted outside a Norteno-related home in the nearby town of Outlook, Hintze said.

“They rolled up, stopped the car, got out and lined up outside and shot up the trailer, narrowly missing seven people sleeping,” Hintze said.

That was March 14, 2011 and the suspects were jailed shortly after, he said.

Morales-Loberg had been implicated in the summer of 2010 in a Chehalis incident in which someone in a red Chevrolet Blazer fired a round from a pistol that missed several people but struck a parked vehicle on Southwest William Street.

At first police said an unknown number of individuals were inside the Blazer, but soon filed charges against four local residents, claiming they were all in the SUV, including Morales-Loberg.

He was never apprehended.

Authorities here described the suspects as LVL members and the shooting as related to a debt owed to somebody called “Candy man”.

Witnesses implicated two different men as the shooter.

The alleged target Rolando Carrillo Cruz told a police detective he was certain it was Morales-Loberg; and Christina Palomares – at one point believed to be the driver – pointed to her husband as the shooter, according to court documents.

Drive-by shooting charges were subsequently dismissed against all three.

Palomares, a 24-year-old Tenino woman, pleaded guilty last summer to two counts of malicious prosecution. The deputy prosecutor said she lied about who was in the vehicle, and there was some question if she was even there.

Juan Valentino Vasquez was released three months earlier, because of insufficient evidence.

Charges against Ruben Alberto Palomares were dropped six months before that.

A $500,000 bench warrant remains for Morales-Loberg in the Chehalis case.

Chehalis police said they learned their wanted subject was locked up in Yakima and aren’t sure if he’ll be brought back to Lewis County.

Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher said today he hasn’t decided if he’ll pursue it, given Morales-Loberg’s lengthy Yakima County sentence.

“He got life, that’s good news,” Meagher said.

Hintze said he doesn’t know a whole lot about Morales-Loberg, although he said he also goes by the street name “Loki”.

The Yakima Herald-Republic quotes the father of Morales-Loberg, also known as Jaime Morales, as telling the judge on Monday that God would judge his son and the others fairly.

He was given 160 year sentence for his role in the Outlook shooting. With three guns and seven victims, the first-degree assault charges, plus mandatory firearm enhancement time added up, according to Hintze.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

THAT’S A FUNNY LOOKING BABY

• Two women were arrested after they were discovered with a small amount of stolen scrap metal tucked inside a baby stroller at the old Mickelsen Dairy Farm on the 200 block of Military Road in Winlock yesterday. A man staying at the property told a deputy he arrived to a pick up a tractor and saw one woman standing there who immediately got onto her cell phone, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. He asked the other woman what was beneath the blanket in the stroller and she removed the blanket confessing she had taken the steel pipe, wire fence clips and a battery, according to the sheriff’s office. The women fled before a deputy arrived, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. One was locate hiding in brush behind Winlock High School and the other was found walking along the roadway, Brown said. Alicia J. Gullickson, 39, of Napavine and Tamar Adamson, 36, of Toledo, both had warrants and were booked into the Lewis County Jail for misdemeanor theft and trespassing, according to Brown. The scrap was valued at $20.

DOG SAVES WOMAN FROM ATTACKER

• Deputies were called to the 1400 block of Centralia-Alpha Road east of Chehalis about 5 p.m. yesterday where a man allegedly threatened to kill a 37-year-old woman and hit her in the face with a steel bar before her dog attacked him ending the assault.

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Mitchell W. Sinclair

The sheriff’s office is looking for Mitchell W. Sinclair, 44, of Chehalis. Deputies were told Sinclair was returning a van to her home when she told him her boyfriend didn’t want him on the property anymore. Sinclair allegedly got angry struck her, knocking her into some panes of glass propped against a car and struck her again as she was on the ground, according to the sheriff’s office. The Blue Heeler-Labrador-Dalmatian-mix canine intervened and Sinclair fled in the van, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. A 46-year-old woman driving the man struck a neighbor’s mailbox as they left, Brown said. Sinclair is wanted for first-degree assault and harassment. The sheriff’s office is asking anyone with information about the whereabouts of Sinclair or his girlfriend – Raelynn D. Gonzales – to call Lewis County Crime Stoppers.

ANGRY GIRLFRIEND BOOKED FOR BASEBALL BAT ASSAULT

• A 48-year-old woman was arrested yesterday after she allegedly went to the home of a woman she thought was “making moves on her boyfriend” and assaulted her with a baseball bat. A deputy called about 9 p.m. was told Kimberly A. Kaleta, of Chehalis, arrived at the residence on the 100 block of Katula Road west of Chehalis uninvited and shoved the 35-year-old woman against a wall, grabbed her hair and hit her with the bat, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Kaleta was contacted at her home on Beam Road and booked into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree assault, as well as misdemeanor theft for taking the bat, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

THREAT WITH KNIFE LANDS MAN IN JAIL

• A 22-year-old Centralia man was arrested yesterday afternoon after he allegedly threw a drinking glass at his younger sister and then threatened her and her boyfriend with a knife. Officers called about 3:30 p.m. to their home on the 1100 block of South Tower Avenue took Aaron R. Gange into custody and booked him into the Lewis County Jail for two counts of second-degree assault, according to the Centralia Police Department.

VEHICLE VANDALIZED

• Chehalis police were called about 9:35 a.m. yesterday to the 100 block of Northeast Division Street where a woman said someone tagged her 22-year-old son’s vehicle with blue paint and broke out its windows.

WOMAN TAKEN FOR $175 “REPAIR”

• A woman called Centralia police yesterday after she paid $175 to a stranger who approached her in the parking lot of of a grocery store and offered to repair a dent in her car. The man who said his name was Al “kind of scuffed the paint and then sprayed it with spray paint,”  Centralia Police Department Sgt. Kurt Reichert said. He had told the woman she only needed to later wipe off the “protective spray” but it was paint, according to Reichert.

CAR PROWL

• Chehalis police took a report just after 5 p.m. yesterday of a car prowl in the park and ride lot near Main Street and Interstate 5. A window was smashed out and a purse stolen, according to police. The victim later got a call from someone who said they found her credit card and driver’s permit in the area of Southwest McFadden Avenue and 10th Street, Officer Linda Bailey said.

OOPS

• Police were called about 5:15 p.m. yesterday to a business on the 400 block of North Market Boulevard after a 39-year-old woman horsing around with friends on the sidewalk stumbled and fell through the back window. They left but an officer contacted the woman at the hospital who had cut her arm and she agreed to pay for the window, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

FRAUD INVESTIGATION

• Chehalis police are attempting to contact an out-of-state man after his grandson called on Monday and said the grandfather had sent a Chehalis woman $21,000, worrying about a possible scam.