Suspected drug dealer wants to admit guilt less than a week after arrest by Centralia police

December 1st, 2012
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Enrique Orozco-Cabrera sits between his lawyer and an interpreter in Lewis County Superior Court, facing a drug charge.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – As soon as Enrique Orozco-Cabrera pleaded not guilty to attempting to sell more than two pounds of methamphetamine, his attorney told the Lewis County Superior Court judge he’d a like a court date as quickly as possible so his client could  plead guilty.

Orozco-Cabrera was in court on Thursday following his arrest the previous Friday morning by Centralia police who were accompanied by two special agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“I don’t know very much English,” Orozco-Cabrera responded through a Spanish interpreter when the judge asked if he spoke English.

Orozco-Cabrera is 36 years old and from Seattle, according to the Centralia Police Department. Charging documents in his case indicate his city of residence is unknown, although when he was taken into custody on Nov. 23, he had Mexican identification in his wallet bearing a different name.

His defense attorney J.P. Enbody didn’t elaborate on why the man was so eager to plead guilty to the felony that could get him as much as 10 years in prison. But Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Shane O’Rourke had an idea about his drug case.

“There is some interest by federal prosecutors to take it, because of how much methamphetamine he had,” O’Rourke said after the court hearing.

A lot of times, a person faces much stiffer penalties in federal court, O’Rourke said.

Orozco-Cabrera, originally identified in an incident summary from police as Orozco-Caberra after the arrest, is being held in the Lewis County Jail on $200,000 bail.

Court documents describe his arrest at the unspecified “target location” after Centralia police got a tip a man called Lewis would be delivering two pounds of meth in exchange for $21,000.

Officer Adam Haggerty, Sgt. Jim Shannon and two federal agents made a plan early on the morning of Nov. 23 and before 8 o’clock that day, Haggerty was watching a house, according to charging documents.

The documents offer the following account and allegations:

A black Ford pickup truck drove slowly past Haggerty and moments later drove past him again and pulled far down a driveway. A few minutes after that, a man – later identified as Orozco-Cabrera – was seen walking from the back of the house wearing a dark stocking cap and subsequently went up to the front door and went inside.

Concerned, Haggerty phoned his confidential informant and asked if that was the drug dealer; the informant indicated yes and asked Haggerty to move in and apprehend him.

When officers entered the house, Orozco-Cabrera was holding a plastic shopping bag with what turned out to be two pounds plus 5.8 ounces of what field tested positive for methamphetamine. He had $6,000 cash with him.

The suspect was arrested and first gave his name as Andreas, but later gave his real name to jail staff and the identification was confirmed through his finger prints.

Customs and Immigration has a “hold” on him. O’Rourke said that usually means there is some indication a person might be in the country illegally.

Orozco-Cabrera is currently scheduled to plead guilty to possession with intent to deliver and be sentenced on Wednesday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court.

Train plows Olympia family’s SUV driven onto Chehalis tracks; nobody injured

November 30th, 2012
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A family of seven bailed out of their white Dodge Durango as a freight train approached from behind them in Chehalis.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – An out-of-town family that took a wrong turn in the dark tonight in Chehalis found their SUV traveling on railroad tracks as a freight train approached, bailed out and watched the train shove their vehicle more than a block.

Nobody was hurt.

Chehalis Police Department Office Steve Nikander said it was dark, it was rainy and they briefly lost their way.

“Thankfully they all got out,” Nikander said.

It happened about 7:30 p.m. near West Street by the Lewis County Historical Museum.

The mother, father and five children, ages 3 to 23, from Olympia, were westbound on West Street; on their way to ride the Chehalis steam train.

It’s the Polar Express, a holiday ride, said Nickolas Howzeshell, one of the grown sons.

Howzeshell, his wife and their baby were in a second vehicle behind his mother’s Dodge Durango and made the same wrong right-hand turn behind her, he said. He was able to pull his vehicle off the tracks.

“My dad’s like, get ’em out, get ’em out,” Howzeshell said. “I saw the light about a quarter mile away. We saw it happen.”

The northbound freight train was still stopped and blocking several crossings after 8 p.m. while authorities waited for a tow truck to arrive.

Instead of cocoa, singing and riding a steam train with Santa Claus, they stepped into the Ocean Sky restaurant for Chinese food while they waited for officers to collect their information.

“We were running late. We didn’t want to miss the train,” Howzeshell, said. “Instead, we … caught the train.”

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CORRECTION: This news story has been updated to correct the name of the city police department for which Officer Nikander works.

Dryad woman files suit to get some of her foxhounds back, pleads not guilty to animal cruelty

November 30th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Nancy Punches pleaded not guilty today to keeping too many dogs in too poor of conditions on her property west of Chehalis and is working with a lawyer to get four of her foxhounds returned to her.

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Nancy Punches

The 79-year-old Dryad woman was in Lewis County District Court this morning where she faces 65 counts of second-degree animal cruelty and one count of violating a state law regarding dog breeding.

Her 65 dogs were confiscated by county officials last month; animals which were living in an area overrun with feces, according to authorities. One puppy was dead when the sheriff’s office served their search warrant and at least three puppies have since been euthanized because of positive tests for Parvo Virus. Others were sick with a parasite, according to charging documents.

Punches has said in an interview she didn’t intend for the foxhounds to multiply, but their fencing had deteriorated. She has also said she knew the situation got away from her.

Three of the foxhounds are survivors of the December 2007 flood when Punches lost her home and 16 champion show dogs to the Chehalis River.

Punches has agreed to give up ownership of all but those three dogs plus one other, a 9-year-old male named Rythem, according to court documents.

Her lawyer Bart Ricks of Chehalis noted in a petition to the court that Lewis County Animal Shelter Amy Hanson had offered to return three of the dogs – spayed and neutered – if Punches relinquished the rest.

The civil action filed on Nov. 2 says Punches wants the four foxhounds returned to her immediately, subject to certain conditions which aren’t specified.

Court hearings are set for Dec. 6 and Dec. 20. when the lawyers and judge can begin addressing the issues involved.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Kevin Nelson asked the judge the consolidate the civil and criminal cases.

In a court document filed today, Nelson asks for answers from Punches about how she will prove her property is free of the diseases, how she will provide kennels fit for habitation and how she will not neglect or abuse the dogs if she gets them back.

Nelson said he didn’t ask Judge Michael Roewe to set bail for Punches, as he doesn’t consider her a flight risk or a danger to the community.

The crimes she’s accused of are misdemeanors, all with a maximum penalty of 364 days in jail or a $5,000 fine or both.

One of the conditions set today however allows her to keep only two pets, which Judge Roewe said were a cat and a bird.

When county code enforcement employees, animal shelter workers and volunteers descended upon the River Road property on Oct. 19, a deputy said he could not see the floor of some kennels because the water, mud and feces was so deep.

Two of the 65 seized animals are fox terriers – the rest foxhounds.

Some were taken to the Lewis County Animal Shelter, some to other municipal shelters and some to Pasado’s Safe Haven in Snohomish County.

Besides Rythem, Punches wants back Hawk, a 7-year-old male; along with 6-year-olds Spirit, a female, and Noah, a male who were pups that shared a 36-hour ordeal trapped in Punches’ mobile home as flood waters rose to within inches of her ceiling.

Punches floated upon a tipped-over antique bookcase after placing her five-week-old dogs inside a styrofoam shipping container.
•••

For background, read:

• “Lewis County owner of seized foxhounds charged with 66 misdemeanors” from Monday November 12, 2012, here

• “Aged flood survivor loses her stock of prize-winning canines for the second time” from Sunday October 21, 2012, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

November 30th, 2012

POLICE: PRESCRIPTION FRAUD UNCOVERED

• A Centralia couple was arrested last night in Chehalis after allegedly attempting to trick a pharmacist into filling a prescription for 60 hydrocodone pills.  Police were called about  4 p.m. by an employee at Rite Aid who had checked with the supposed prescribing clinic and learned no prescription had been written in the name they were given, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Officers were told the woman’s son was going to pick up the pills and waited outside the South Market Boulevard store, Sgt. Brian Hickey said. The couple was stopped after leaving and the officer recognized the driver, Carrie J. Powell, as someone who had been in trouble before for similar activity, Hickey said. Powell, 27, and Mitchell T. Kimbrel, 28, were booked into the Lewis County Jail for a violation of the legend drug act, according to police.

60-INCH TV STOLEN FROM HOME

• Centralia police were called to an apartment on the 500 block of Woodland Avenue about 1:20 p.m. yesterday when a resident returned home from lunch to discover his 60-inch television was missing. A neighbor had seen a blond woman carrying a TV in the area about an hour earlier, according to the Centralia Police Department.

CALL ABOUT SUSPICIOUS CHARACTER IN PARKING LOT LEADS TO ARREST

• Chehalis police were called to the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue about 3:30 p.m. yesterday regarding someone wandering around and looking in windows of cars in Wal-Mart’s parking lot. Officers contacted the suspect sitting in a car and discovered the 1985 Saab 900 was stolen out of Seattle, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Shane R. Ferkovich, 31, of Missoula, Montana, was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail for possession of a stolen vehicle, Sgt. brian Hickey said.

ALLEGED DEATH THREAT

• Centralia police contacted a 31-year-old man yesterday evening for allegedly making death threats to an individual. The suspect, a Centralia man, was not arrested but the case is being referred to prosecutors for a possible charge of felony harassment, according to the Centralia Police Department. The case involved a phone call in which he told the victim he would kill them, although he didn’t say how or why, Sgt. Brian Warren said. Further details were not readily available.

News brief: Lawyers agree Centralia B Street murder suspect is now competent for trial

November 29th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Finally Weston G. Miller will be arraigned next week, following his March arrest and filing of charges in the shooting death of a house guest in his Centralia home on B Street.

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David Wayne Carson

Miller, 30, has been held in the Lewis County Jail on $1 million bail, unable to make his pleas to first-degree murder because of a question whether he was competent.

Prosecutors say it was unprovoked attack when he shot 43-year-old David Wayne Carson twice in the chest area. Miller told police he acted in self-defense.

One expert said previously Miller was competent but another said he was not. However, today, lawyers on both sides signed an order agreeing Miller is now competent to stand trial.

The former welder is also charged with several counts of unlawful possession of a firearm, as when police searched the home they found five guns, a silencer, a laser site for a gun and a bullet-proof vest.

Miller is scheduled to return to Lewis County Superior Court next Thursday to make his pleas and get a trial date scheduled.

His attorney J.P. Enbody said the issue of insanity – at the time of the incident – could still come up.

Carson, a Centralia resident, died on March 13.
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For background, read “B Street homicide: Defendant says self defense” from Wednesday March 14, 2012, here

News brief: Centralia toddler death case still moving slowly through court system

November 29th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – James M. Reeder, 26, appeared briefly in court today for a review of the progress of the case in the death of 2-year-old Koralynn Fister.

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Koralynn Fister

The Centralia man is charged with homicide by abuse and other related offenses regarding the May death of his live-in girlfriend’s toddler. Prosecutors allege Reeder tortured and raped the child.

Attorneys in the case told a judge they were postponing the review until Dec. 13. The trial in Lewis County Superior Court is still on the schedule for the end of January.

Reeder remains held in the Lewis County Jail on $5 million bail.
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For background, read “Defendant in Centralia toddler death by abuse case pleads not guilty” from Thursday July 12, 2012, here

News brief: Father pleads not guilty to smacking baby boy in face

November 29th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Centralia man arrested two weeks ago for allegedly giving his 6-month-old baby a cut lip when he struck him in the head for crying pleaded not guilty today.

Jon M. Parker, 28, is charged with second-degree assault of a child and remains held in the Lewis County Jail.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office says Parker was upset and hit the child three times while holding him.

When he went before a judge today in Lewis County Superior Court, a trial was scheduled for the week of Jan. 14, according to his attorney David Arcuri.
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For background, read “News brief: Sheriff’s Office: Centralia father gives baby boy cut lip, nose” from  Thursday November 15, 2012 at 10:03 a.m., here