Posts Tagged ‘By Sharyn L. Decker’

“Prolific drug trafficker” from Centralia heads to federal prison

Friday, April 13th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Centralia man described as a career drug trafficker was sentenced in federal court today to 15 years in prison.

Juvenal Sanchez-Islas, 33, was arrested in early 2010 with another man at a South King County apartment and the two were in possession of four kilos of heroin, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office.

Significant amounts of cocaine and methamphetamine were found inside the apartment, and searches there and at his Centralia home turned up a firearm and ammunition bearing his finger prints, according to U.S. Attorneys Office spokesperson Emily Langlie.

Sanchez-Islas is a Mexican national who pleaded guilty during his trial in November, according to Langlie.

He had previously been convicted and deported for drug trafficking, according to a news release.

At sentencing this morning in U.S. District Court in Seattle, Judge Robert S. Lasnik said, “He is a big time drug dealer who unleashed a lot of terribly dangerous drugs on the community over a long period of time,” the news release stated.

Lewis County Coroner’s Office earns professional recognition of peers

Thursday, April 12th, 2012
2012.0412.coroner.accreditation.trim_2

Coroner Warren McLeod takes a brief break from writing a grant application at his Chehalis office

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County’s first new coroner in almost three decades has gained accreditation for his office, fourteen months into his four-year term.

Warren McLeod announced yesterday the stamp of approval by the International Association of Coroners and Medical Examiners.

“We’re excited about it, we’re accredited now,” McLeod said this afternoon.

The certification makes his one of three coroner’s offices in Washington state which are accredited. The Cowlitz County Coroner’s Office earned its accreditation on Monday and Franklin County gained partial accreditation – because it does not have an autopsy suite – before that, he said.

It means they’re conducting operations in compliance with standards set by the professional group.

The process began last summer and ended on Tuesday with an on-site inspection by a pair of auditors from the IACME, according to McLeod.

“You have to show you have a written policy to meet each standard,” McLeod said. “When I came in, there were no written policies at all.”

His office now has a 180-page policy and procedural manual.

Although reluctant to compare his office with the previous longtime administration of Lewis County Coroner Terry Wilson, McLeod said he thinks it’s a step in the right direction to restoring citizens’ faith they have a coroner’s office they can be proud of.

Wilson ended his 28-year reign with his chief deputy coroner getting arrested for driving under the influence of prescription medications, falling asleep repeatedly as she was questioned by a trooper on her way to work.

When Wilson left office in December 2010, he was still embroiled in a years-long battle over his label of suicide in the 1998 death in Toledo of former trooper Ronda Reynolds. A judicial review concluded Wilson’s finding was incorrect, arbitrary and capricious. A coroner’s inquest last October ruled it a homicide.

McLeod, who teaches forensics at South Puget Sound Community College in Olympia, said probably the most important change he has made is the “chain of custody” issue with the medications they collect from deceased individuals.

Now, all narcotics are counted and put into an evidence bag at the scene – witnessed by a second person – and then stored in the sheriff’s office evidence facility.

It hasn’t been entirely smooth sailing for the new coroner.

Earlier this year, evidence from a 2010 triple homicide turned up in the work locker of a former deputy coroner, never getting into the hands of law enforcement or attorneys in the case before the trial. McLeod said it was collected during the autopsies in 2010 before he took office.

About 14 coroners offices around the country are currently accredited by the IACME, according to its executive administrator Nicole Coleman. Medical examiners’ offices are accredited by a different association, she said.

IACME has been in existence since 1927, but only began the accreditation program in about 2005, according to Coleman. Twenty-nine more counties are currently in the process, she said.

“There are over 130 standards they have to meet, and they’re pretty strict,” Coleman said.

The certification has to be re-examined every five years.

In what Coleman said was a coincidence of scheduling, the two auditors from IACME who visited Chehalis this week are McLeod’s former bosses, the coroner and assistant coroner from the Clark County Office of the Coroner / Medical Examine in Las Vegas.

McLeod said that put more pressure on him, because he used to work for them and now he has his own office.

The Lewis County’s Coroner’s Office achieved an overall compliance rate of 94 percent, combining the categories of administration, facilities, forensics and investigative standards.

“What we were really impressed with was the “investigative” got 100 percent,” McLeod said.

McLeod said some of the areas he fell short in involve equipment he can’t afford, such as a body scale and a X-ray light box.

One of the standards however was showing he has a mass fatality plan in place.

He took delivery on Tuesday of a mass fatality trailer, something that can be pre-loaded with body bags, generators, extra lighting and other supplies should the worst happen.

The navy blue unit is about the size of a horse trailer and cost $2,500, according to McLeod. It was funded with a grant.

“There’s a lot going on here, I’m excited, very excited,” McLeod said.

He now has eight deputy coroners and two more in training.

“The staff really pulled together to get this done,” he said. “It’s not Warren McLeod, it’s the office.”

•••

Correction: This has been updated to reflect the new trailer cost $2,500 and not $11,000 as McLeod mistakenly said.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

WHAT’S THAT SMELL

• A Centralia police officer driving through town with his window rolled down smelled the “distinct odor of marijuana” last night and contacted a pedestrian who appeared to be smoking a cigarette. Evaristo V. Tanori, 30, of Centralia, handed over the marijuana cigarette and a search as he was arrested turned up a pipe with suspected methamphetamine residue, according to the Centralia Police Department. It happened just after 10 p.m. at South Tower Avenue and West Chestnut Street, according to police. Tanori was booked into the Lewis County Jail for possession of methamphetamine, according to police.

STOLEN GOODS TURN UP AT LOCAL MOTEL

• A victim of a bicycle theft seeing someone riding what he thought was his bike directed police yesterday to a motel on the 1300 block of Lakeshore Drive in Centralia where officers contacted an individual and noticed what appeared to be other stolen items in the motel room. The occupant, Solano R. Trevino, 51, was arrested for possession of stolen property, according to the Centralia Police Department. The suspicious items observed included cell phones, jewelry, coins, CDs and two Airsoft pistols, according to Officer John Panco. At least some of the valuables were found to have been stolen in a burglary earlier in the day a a residence on the 900 block of E Street, Panco said. Trevino was booked into the Lewis County Jail yesterday. He is being released without charges pending further investigation.

BURGLARY

• A Centralia woman called police about 1:30 p.m. yesterday when she discovered a burglary had occurred at her home on the 300 block of West Chestnut Street sometime in the previous hour and a half, according to police. Missing was a purse and two cameras, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Chehalis police were called about 4 p.m. yesterday to a burglary on Southwest Olympic Drive where someone had gone inside a garage converted to a bedroom and stolen an X-box and three games, according to Officer Linda Bailey. At about 6:15 p.m., an officer took a report of another burglary, that seemed to be related, on the 700 block of Southwest 20th Street, Bailey said. Someone had climbed through a bathroom window and made off with an estimated $4,000 of goods, including a flat screen television, a mini-fridge, jewelry, purses, shoes and clothing, according to Bailey.

• An unspecified type and amount of a prescription medication was reportedly stolen from a locked up home on the 1000 block of West Main Street in Centralia sometime on Sunday, according to a report made to police yesterday.

MAIL THEFT

• A deputy was called yesterday to an apparent mail theft on the on the 800 block of Independence Road west of Centralia. A black leather case which had been ordered should have arrived last Thursday, according to a check of a tracking system, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Also not received were a paycheck and a card with cash inside, according to Brown. The victims plan to get a locking mailbox, Brown said.

VEHICLE PROWL

• Police were called about 8:40 a.m. yesterday about a car prowl overnight at the 1200 block of View Avenue in Centralia. A stereo was stolen, according to the Centralia Police Department.

ASSAULT

• Chehalis police were called to Green Hill School yesterday morning after an 18-year-old inmate allegedly threw a shoe at a staff member.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

UNOFFICIAL RETIREMENT

• Police were called yesterday to a Chehalis retirement home following the discovery somebody has been sneaking in and using a vacant room to take showers, as well as sleeping in the bed. It happened twice last week at Chehalis West Assist Living Center on the 400 block of Northwest Quincy Place, according to the Chehalis Police Department. It’s a locked facility, and they have changed the locks and are considering security cameras, Officer Linda Bailey said.

ASSAULT

• Chehalis police were called to Green Hill School yesterday morning following a fight in which a 17-year-old inmate allegedly assaulted a 16-year-old inmate and then when staff tried to break it up, one was punched in the eye and the other struck in the jaw. None of the injuries were serious but the case will be referred for possible charges of custodial assault, according to police. The youth remained at the state-run juvenile lock-up facility on Southwest 11th Street, police said.

• Just before noon yesterday, police were called back to Green Hill School after two of the student-inmates got into a fight, according to the Chehalis Police Department. One of them had a cut on the top of his head that might have required stitches, according to police.

DRUGS

• Police were at Centralia High School yesterday morning for a 16-year-old student who was allegedly in possession of marijuana. The boy was not arrested, but the case will be referred for a possible misdemeanor charge, according to the Centralia Police Department.

THEFT

• A 1995 Honda Accord was stolen from the 700 block of Twin Oaks Road west of Chehalis sometime between 3:30 a.m. and about 9 a.m. yesterday, according to the  Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. It has a license plate reading 680 XPY.

• Someone went in through a window at a home on the 900 block of H Street in Centralia and stole a computer and as-yet-unspecified other items, according to the Centralia Police Department. The burglary was reported just after 7 p.m. last night.

• Somebody broke the window of a vehicle at the 1200 block of H Street in Centralia and stole a jacket, according to a report made to police yesterday morning.

VEHICLE VERUS PEDESTRIAN

• Centralia police and aid were called to a parking lot about 9:20 p.m. last night where a woman backing out of a parking space struck her boyfriend who had been standing next to the vehicle. The man was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with unspecified injuries, according to authorities. It happened at the 1100 block of Scammon Creek Road.

ASSAULT OF POLICE OFFICER: NOT GUILTY

• A 21-year-old man arrested by Centralia police last September for allegedly elbowing an officer in the face was acquitted today of third-degree assault. Ryan M. Roundtree was in Lewis County Superior Court in front of Judge Richard Brosey. Deputy Prosecutor Joely Yeager described how Officer Adam Haggerty stopped a car for running a red light on Harrison Avenue and subsequently tried to put the passenger Roundtree in handcuffs, but Roundtree raised an arm and elbowed Haggerty in the jaw. Haggerty took him to the ground, where another officer testified he saw them when he arrived, and noted a bump or red mark on Haggerty’s jaw. The driver and a 9-year-old child in the backseat both testified they did not see Roundtree elbow the officer. Roundtree denied it. Defense attorney Jacob Clark told the judge the description of what occurred wasn’t logical. At the close of the one-day bench trial, Brosey said the prosecutor failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the assault occurred. There has to be an intentional, volitional act, Brosey said. “There still has to be something other than mere resistance,” he added. Roundtree was however found guilty of violating a protection order, as the driver was his wife with whom he was prohibited from having contact with.

Minister, city council member gets chance to avoid court in cat killing case

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia Pastor Bill Bates will be able to keep his record clean if he stays out of trouble, pays restitution and refrains from shooting or killing any animals for the next six months.

2012.0229.susiecat.small

"Susie"

Bates, 60, found himself charged with two gross misdemeanors after he admitted he killed his neighbor’s cat with a pellet gun in late February.

Bates is also a Centralia city council member. One of the violations was of a city ordinance which prohibits firing of an air gun at someone else’s animal.

The outcome of the case comes not from a judge or a jury, but something called a non-judicial, non-statutory, diversionary agreement between his lawyer and the prosecutor.

Both the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office and Bates’ lawyer Peter Abbarno said they thought it was a good way to resolve the case. Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher said the owners of the pet were satisfied as well.

Bates has said it was an accident, that he was only trying to run it out of his yard because he was tired of it using his flower beds as a litter box and walking on his clean cars.

The 10-year-old cat “Susie” died in Bates’ yard on the 900 block of Ham Hill Road.

Afterward, he went knocking on the Pannette family’s door and confessed what he’d done.

It’s not an uncommon type of deal that sometimes occurs at the District Court level, Meagher said today.

Bates was originally charged in Centralia Municipal Court which had jurisdiction because it happened inside the city limits. Abbarno was granted a request to move it to Lewis County District Court because of the conflict.

Both lawyers said Bates admits the conduct, but has no criminal history and can keep it that way if he abides by the terms of the agreement.

“The statute requires intent,” Abbarno said. “In the end, I think it was a real fair agreement.”

There will be no fine, but he must pay $110 restitution to the Pannettes, according to the attorneys.

He was scheduled for his arraignment this coming Friday, but the parties went before Lewis County District Court Judge R.W. Buzzard last Friday instead.

Bates pleaded not guilty to killing a pet; the air gun charge had already been dropped.

The agreement means the prosecutor will dismiss the final charge if Bates abides by the terms.

He has apologized publicly, and told the Pannettes he usually shot at the cat’s feet, according to Dusty Pannette.

He has also said what he did was stupid, and he ought to have spoken to his neighbors about his concerns.

Bates is serving his fourth year on the city council and is minister at Destiny Christian Center, an Assemblies of God church on North Tower Avenue in Centralia.
•••

For background, read:

• “Minister, city council member shoots neighbor cat dead with pellet gun” from Thursday March 1, 2012, here

• “Centralia city council member charged for killing neighbor cat” from Tuesday March 6, 2012, here

• “Council member’s lawyer: Cat killing case needs a judge who isn’t paid by the city” from Tuesday March 27, 2012, here

News brief: Police to begin checking for unlicensed dogs in Centralia

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Centralia Police Department will begin canvassing neighborhoods on Sunday looking for unlicensed dogs and their owners.

Owners of unlicensed dogs will be given an opportunity to buy a license, but those who don’t could face a fine of $119, according to the Centralia Police Department.

The annual fee is $30 for each dog older than two months old, although it is only $10 if the animal is spayed or neutered, according to police.

However, for those not already in compliance, a $20 late fee will apply, according to officer John Panco.

Proof of current rabies vaccination (with an expiration date) is required to get the license, according to Panco.

Panco said the push is not in response to last week’s attack by a pair of dogs on a more than a dozen chickens on West Seventh Street, but an annual canvassing by the department to make sure dogs are licensed, as required by city ordinance.

For more information, visit the city’s website.

CLARIFICATION: This was updated Wednesday April 11, 2012 at 8:55 a.m. to distinguish the usual fee for licensing dogs and the added late fee if licenses are not purchased by the renewal deadline of Feb. 1.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

THEFT

• A deputy was called last night to the 3000 block of Jackson Highway after the discovery a home had been ransacked. There is a “person of interest,” according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

• The theft of a white 2002 International box truck was discovered yesterday in Chehalis. It had last been seen on Friday parked at a business on the 600 block of Northwest West Street, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning that a 36-year-old Packwood resident was arrested over the weekend for trafficking in stolen property. A deputy learned on Friday from a Randle resident who had purchased a 2004 Honda motorcycle that flyers were posted listing it as stolen, according to the sheriff’s office. A deputy contacted the named seller, K.C. Dean Mullins, and he was booked for the offense, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning a pickup truck reported stolen on Sunday from the 3000 block of Mount Vista Road in Centralia was subsequently found abandoned in south Thurston County.

• Police were called about 11:15 a.m. yesterday about tools stolen from an unlocked garage on the 600 block of Hamilton Avenue in Centralia.

• Chehalis police were called yesterday to Northeast Adams Avenue about a car prowl that occurred over the weekend.

• A security camera was stolen from a building on the 800 block of B Street in Centralia, according to a report made to police yesterday.

ARSON IN GARBAGE CAN

• Centralia police took a report yesterday morning of a fire set in a trash can overnight at the 1300 block of Lum Road. Further details were not readily available.

WRECKS

• A 44-year-old Ryderwood woman was hospitalized after a single-vehicle wreck on the 200 block of Plomondon Road near Toledo last night. A deputy responding about 8 p.m. was told by the driver she fell asleep, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The woman was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with pain in her neck, chest, back and leg, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

• The Olympian reported yesterday a 20-year-old Centralia man died following a motorcycle accident in Lacey on Saturday. News reporter Rolf Boone writes that Jordan M. Clark had been speeding through the Lacey Costco parking lot with his “front wheel off the ground.”