News brief: Meet new fire chief, fire crew today at District 6

March 3rd, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Chehalis’s rural fire district not only has a new chief, they’ve hired five firefighter-EMTs.

It’s the first time ever Lewis County Fire District 6 has had paid staff, other than its chief, according to the Chief Tim Kinder.

Kinder, 49, took the position in mid-December and he, along with the new career firefighters are being introduced to the community at an open house at 1:15 p.m. today.

The gathering runs from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. The location is the main station at 2123 Jackson Highway, Chehalis.

Light refreshments and beverages will be served.

Kinder has been a paramedic for 27 years, and has been with the department as a firefighter-paramedic for 10 years. He replaced Bud Goodwillie who resigned a year ago.

Commissioners chose Kinder after a nationwide search.

“We’ve actually gone from a predominantly volunteer department to a “combination” department, Kinder said.

All at one time.

They currently have 25 volunteer members.

News brief: Centralia firefighters use newly acquired rescue skills on calf

March 2nd, 2012
2012.0302.calfrescuerfa_2

Firefighter-paramedic Jesse Berry, left, and Firefighter-EMT John Quade assess the calf's situation. / Courtesy photo by Riverside Fire Authority

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Firefighters rescued a calf late this afternoon that a passerby discovered had sunk up to its chest in thick mud off of Salzer Valley Road in Centralia.

Riverside Fire Authority Chief Jim Walkowski said the animal weighed more than 250 pounds and was probably about a year old.

“Definitely stuck and he was cold,” Walkowski said. “He must have been down there a couple of hours.”

The crew used techniques they recently learned on large animal rescue, according to the chief. The training helps firefighters deal with incidents involving animal trailers, trails and stables.

“The public has an expectation that when they call 9-1-1, that the fire department will send personnel with specialty training to help them with their situation,” Walkowski said in a news release.

Five firefighters answered the 5:45 p.m. call and had to dig under the calf’s belly to use straps and pull him out.

Once they got him out, they had to let him rest before he was strong enough to stand up, according to Walkowski.

“And then he walked over and started eating,” he said.

Another passerby said they knew who the owner was and would contact them, Walkowski said.

News brief: Three booked after morning visit by SWAT team in Onalaska

March 2nd, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Three people were arrested at their Onalaska home this morning following a two-month long drug investigation.

The SWAT team joined other law enforcement officers at 9:44 a.m. when a search warrant was served at the 500 block of Gish Road, according to Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputies found methamphetamine and detectives are still on the scene collecting evidence, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Scott E. Ridgley, 51, was arrested for four counts of delivery of methamphetamine based on previous so-called controlled buys, according to Brown.

His son, Larry E. Ridgley, 34, was arrested for possession of meth with intent to deliver. Misty A. Raines, 39, was arrested for possession of meth.

The father and son were also arrested for possession, Brown said. She didn’t yet know the quantity of drugs found.

The Lewis County Regional Drug Task Force made the arrests with assistance from the state Department of Corrections.

Breaking news: Handcuffed detainee who got away from deputy found this morning

March 2nd, 2012

Updated at 9:21 a.m. and 9:47 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Law enforcement spent several hours looking for a 22-year-old shirtless, shoeless and handcuffed man who slipped away from a deputy early this morning as he was being escorted to a patrol car at Providence Centralia Hospital.

2012.0302.andrew.holmgren

Andrew Holmgren

Andrew Holmgren was found just before 9 a.m. hiding in the trunk of someone’s vehicle on the 1300 block of Scammon Creek Road in Centralia, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office

The resident saw mud by their vehicle inside a carport and thought it had been prowled, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Holmgren was arrested last night after a police pursuit of a stolen vehicle that ended near state Route 6 and Curtis Hill with a deputy using his patrol car to intentionally tap the truck Holmgren was driving and spinning it out of control, according to Brown. The Winlock resident drove his truck into two patrol vehicles at slow speed before he was taken into custody, Brown said.

He was taken to the hospital because he claimed a medical emergency – he fell down and appeared unconscious – and at about 3:30 a.m. when doctors released him, Holmgren bolted from the deputy, jumping a fence and running through a swamp, according to Brown.

He was also wanted for a warrant from the state Department of Corrections, as while under their supervision he failed to report as required, according to Brown. The offense – escape from community custody – is a felony.

When deputies responded just before 9 o’clock this morning to a report of two car prowls, they saw mud inside the vehicle and when they pulled the lever to open the trunk, it kept closing back up, according to Brown.

After a few times of that, deputies removed the back seat and there he was, according to Brown.

He is on his way to the jail, Brown said. He was to be booked for eluding, possession of stolen property, the warrant, second-degree assault and vehicle prowl.

The truck was reported stolen from the 1000 block of Yakima Street in Centralia just after 7 p.m. last night and spotted by a deputy just before midnight on Harrison Avenue.

The pursuit by four law enforcement agencies went into Grand Mound and back down Interstate before heading west to state Route 6, according to Brown.

Minister, city council member shoots neighbor cat dead with pellet gun

March 1st, 2012
2012.0229.susiecat_2

Susie, a 10-year-old male cat is captured by 12-year-old Daylynn Pannette's camera phone before Monday.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia City Council member and pastor of a downtown church Bill Bates says he’s guilty of “making wrong use of judgement” when he shot and killed a neighbor cat with a pellet gun earlier this week.

Bates, 60, said he was surprised the animal died as when he used the air-powered rifle on a possum in his yard, he had to shoot it three times to kill it.

He didn’t mean for the cat to die, Bates said, he was just tired of it dropping “deposits”, messing in his beauty bark and walking on his clean cars.

Bates said he saw it walk behind the arborvitae shrubs and fired into the arborvitae shrubs. Usually he’s 30 or 40 yards away, he said.

“If I’d have done it on purpose and wanted to kill the stupid thing, I wouldn’t have told anyone,” Bates said yesterday.

Bates came across as frustrated that the news of the incident and criticism of him had, in his words, gone viral on the Internet.

It happened on Monday on the 900 block of Ham Hill Road in Centralia and he confessed right away, Bates said.

“I went to the owners, I apologized, offered retribution,” he said. “I’ll be glad to buy them a cat. I’ll bring ’em an Easter lily if I have to.”

Dusty Pannette and her family are devastated, and shocked, following the knock on their door and the news their 12-pound “Susie” was dead.

“We didn’t even know it was bothering this guy,” Pannette said.

Pannette said the neighborhood is filled with cats and dogs and Susie – who is actually a male – for the past 10 years has been an indoor and outdoor cat, one who often prowled the open pasture behind their houses for mice.

“Everyone in the neighborhood knows this cat, he’s not a stray, he’s not aggressive,” Pannette said. “We all let our animals roam freely, we never thought twice about it.”

Pannette said she was stunned and confused when Bates – who she didn’t really know – announced what he’d done and told her he usually shoots at her cat’s feet but this time he “got” him.

“The words I’m sorry never came out of his mouth,” she said. He just said he felt bad and said he’d buy a new one, she said.

It has been additionally disturbing to her children, who felt an extra bit of security knowing a minister lived on their block, she said.

Centralia police declined to comment, acknowledging they took a report, but would not discuss details since nobody had been arrested.

Officer John Panco said yesterday the case was sent to the city’s attorney to determine if any charges would be filed.

Both Pannette and Bates say police described to them it’s not criminal to shoot a nuisance animal on your own property.

Pannette and her husband have spoken with a lawyer and are considering a lawsuit. She’s shared a flyer with her neighbors to warn them there’s “someone on the hill that doesn’t appreciate animals and will fire on them if they come in his yard.”

If it’s not against the law, it should be, Pannette said.

The black and white feline has been taken to a local veterinarian to be cremated.

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.

Bates said he is sorry, what he did was stupid and he loves animals.

The police officer can attest to how remorseful, apologetic and cooperative he was, Bates said.

He realizes he should have spoken to his neighbors about his concerns or, “I should have thrown a rock at it, not shoot it. I’ll never do that again.”

Appeal dismissed: Coroner’s inquest is final word on Ronda Reynolds’ death

March 1st, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Since a coroner’s inquest has concluded former trooper Ronda Reynolds’ 1998 manner of death – homicide, the state Court of Appeals decided the civil case between her mother and former Lewis County Coroner Terry Wilson is over and done with.

pc.ronda Copying_2

Ronda Reynolds

An unprecedented judicial review of the death in 2009 found Wilson’s conclusion Reynolds took her own life was arbitrary, capricious and incorrect. Reynolds’ mother, Barb Thompson of Spokane was elated over the decision, but wanted the higher court to clarify what can happen under a judicial review of a coroner’s decision.

In the decision filed yesterday, the three-judge panel said most of the issues are now “moot”.

The judges dismissed Wilson’s appeal and Thompson’s cross-appeal.

Attorneys who continued representing Wilson after he left office had asked for his appeal to be be dismissed.

The decision and the 2009 judicial review both stemmed from a 2006 civil case filed by Thompson.

Appeals court judges Joel Penoyar, David Armstrong and Jill Johnson also agreed in yesterday’s decision Thompson is not entitled to attorney fees as she failed to “preserve the issue.”

Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod presided in October over a coroner’s inquest. He officially took office in January 2010 replacing Wilson who had been coroner some three decades.

One of McLeod’s first acts was to announce he would conduct an inquest, then he put it on hold as he learned the appeals court was looking over the issue. Then the appeals court put the appeal on hold as they learned McLeod wanted to hold an inquest.

Ronda Reynolds, 33, died with a bullet in her head in the home she shared with husband of less than a year, Toledo Elementary School Principal Ron Reynolds. She was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

An inquest jury ruled unanimously in October the manner of death was homicide and named Ron Reynolds and his son as responsible for the death. Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer declined to bring criminal charges.

Read about John A. Booth’s former counsel appointed as judge in Thurston County …

March 1st, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Olympian writes that defense attorney James Dixon was appointed yesterday to the Thurston County Superior Court vacancy created by Judge Christina Pomeroy’s retirement.

Dixon was the court-appointed attorney who initially represented John A. Booth Jr., the former Onalaska resident charged in the August 2010  triple homicide in the Salkum area.

The Olympia-based attorney had previously announced he would be running for judge, according to news reporter Brad Shannon.

Read more here