Breaking news: Inquest jurors: Ronda Reynolds was murdered

October 19th, 2011
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Barb Thompson is held by a friend in the courthouse after the inquest jurors' decision about her daughter's death was announced. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

This was updated at 8 p.m., 9:30 p.m. and 11:59 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – An arrest warrant will be issued within the next 24 hours for Toledo Elementary School Principal Ronald A. Reynolds and his son, Jonathan A. Reynolds, the coroner said late this afternoon.

The pair were named today as responsible for the homicide of former trooper Ronda Elizabeth Reynolds in the family’s Toledo home almost 13 years ago.

The announcement came at the end of a coroner’s inquest that began a week ago Monday in the courthouse in Chehalis.

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Ronda Reynolds

Barb Thompson, who has been working since the end of 1998 to uncover the truth about her daughter’s death, was overwhelmed with the decision.

“What more could I ask for?” Thompson said. “It’s beyond any hope I had.”

The inquest jury of four women and one man were unanimous in their conclusions.

Thompson’s attorney shared a similar sentiment.

“Way back when, Barb said it’s a homicide, Marty (Hayes) said it’s homicide and it sounded convincing, but there were always these kinds of obstacles,” Royce Ferguson said. “I think the bungling of the sheriff’s office and their efforts to save face muddied the waters.”

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer is at his office tonight, reviewing not only the sheriff’s office case file, but the evidence the inquest jurors saw and heard.

Meyer said he will be making a decision as soon as possible as to what action his office takes, meaning what, if any, criminal charges might be filed.

He has to be ready whenever the two are brought before a judge, he said.

“(I’ve talked with) all necessary parties and discussed all possible steps that could be taken from here,” he said.

What Meyer does know for sure, he said, is Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod must issue an arrest warrant and the accused must be brought before a magistrate, or judge, in Lewis County.

Calls for comment to Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield and his public information officer have not been returned tonight.

But Mansfield wrote on the sheriff’s office website the day the inquest began that the inquest’s outcome would not cause him to reopen their case or change its disposition in his office – suicide – unless clear and compelling new information arose.

Lewis County sheriff’s detective Sgt. Dusty Breen testified yesterday he felt the best determination the inquest jurors could make was an “undetermined” manner of death.

Breen also said although he leaned toward suicide, he was taking notes on items to follow up on.

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

Ron Reynolds called 911 about 6:20 a.m. on Dec. 16, 1998 to say his wife committed suicide. His three young sons – including teenager Jonathan Reynolds – were allowed to leave as deputies arrived without being interviewed.

The sheriff’s office admitted to some mistakes, including the .32 caliber Rossi handgun being moved at the scene before photos were taken, although some testimony suggested they were lost. Jurors heard about evidence being destroyed or returned too soon.

Over the years, Ronda Reynolds manner of death was changed repeatedly by then-Lewis County Coroner Terry Wilson back and forth between suicide and undetermined as it was reinvestigated and then more recently underwent a judicial review.

Lewis County Coroner McLeod, elected last November, wanted to settle the matter on the controversial death by holding an inquest, something he doesn’t think has happened in Lewis County in the last 50 years.

Prosecutor Meyer, sat through the six and a half days of testimony, as did representatives from the sheriff’s office.

They were joined by even more of their co-workers when the verdict was read just after 4 p.m. by McLeod.

The inquest jurors findings noted Ronda Reynolds died of a contact gunshot wound to her right temple in the home at 114 Twin Peaks Drive on Dec. 16, 1998 between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., of homicide.

Less than a half hour later, the jurors returned with the conclusion she died at the hands of Ron Reynolds and his teenage son.

The outcome was exactly as it should be, said Sharon Mitchell of Morton who sat in on the proceedings.

“It should have happened years ago,” Mitchell said.

It wasn’t long before Thompson was surrounded by news cameras and reporters outside the courthouse doors.

The Spokane woman alternately teared up and smiled.

She said she was satisfied enough with the death certificate getting changed to homicide. She hopes the sheriff’s office follows through, although she has continued to be disappointed by them, except for Breen, she said.

“I don’t think that’s my job, and I have to move on with my life,” Thompson said. “That’s what you do.”

Asked about a motive, Thompson asked: “How much time do you have?”

She testified last week she believed Jonathan had a deep hatred for his step-mother, after an incident in which she was told he peeked at Ronda Reynolds in the shower, and she jumped out and tackled him.

Thompson said her faith in the system has been restored.

“It’s our peers, that’s why we have the jury system,” she said.

Ron Reynolds did not return a phone call made to his home for comment. Neither his or his son’s attorneys could be reached this evening.

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Members of the news media swarm around Barb Thompson as she exits the courthouse. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

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For background, read the following:

Intro to Ronda Reynolds coroners inquest

“Coroners inquest into Ronda Reynolds death: Selection of jurors starts Monday”, here

Day one, Monday Oct. 10, 2011

“Coroners inquest into Ronda Reynolds death: Responders ponder, suicide or homicide”, here

Day two, Tuesday Oct. 11, 2011

“Coroners inquest: Detective reveals staged “suicide” statement from Ronda Reynolds”, here

Day three, Wednesday Oct. 12, 2011

“Coroners inquest: New investigation points to murder”, here

Day four, Thursday Oct. 13, 2011

“Coroners inquest: What the forensic experts say”, here

“Coroners inquest: Homicide experts disagree about Ronda Reynolds’ death”, here

Day five, Friday Oct. 14, 2011

Coroners inquest: Lie detector examiners testify”, here

“Coroners inquest: Mother of former trooper says it was murder”, here

“Coroners inquest: Crime scene reconstruction expert saw “earmarks” of suicide”, here

Day six, Monday Oct. 17, 2011

“Coroners inquest: What the sheriff’s office believes today”, here

Day seven, Tuesday Oct. 18, 2011

“Coroner’s inquest: Images inside the courtroom”, here

“Coroner’s inquest: Clues still coming in”, here

Day eight, Wednesday Oct. 19, 2011

“Breaking news: Decision reached in coroners inquest”, here

Background, Appeals Court on the judicial review

“Coroner’s appeal in Ronda Reynolds’ case heard by three-judge panel” from  Friday June 17, 2011 at 7:53 a.m., here

“Breaking news: Coroner’s inquest for Ronda Reynolds’ death to move forward” posted Thursday July 7 2011 at 8:22 a.m., here

Background, the 2009 judicial review

“Jury finds coroner erred in ruling former trooper’s death a suicide”, here

Notes from behind the news: Coroner’s inquest; homicide and Facebook

October 19th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Greetings readers.

If you have gone to Lewis County Sirens Facebook group page this afternoon, you’ve gotten bits and pieces from me, from the courthouse via Brittany Voie, about the outcome of the coroner’s inquest.

There is still conversation going on there, so you might want to check that out while I write some news here.

Photos will be coming as well, here.

(Also, if you have not seen them, there is a whole series of photos from inside the courtroom posted here on Lewis County Sirens yesterday. Scroll down)

Your news reporter, Sharyn L. Decker
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More to come

Coroner’s inquest: Clues still coming in

October 19th, 2011
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Current Lewis County Sheriff's Office detective Sgt. Dusty Breen

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Even as the coroner’s inquest in Ronda Reynolds’ death has unfolded, the current detective’s supervisor at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has been taking notes on “things to follow up on.”

Detective Sgt. Dusty Breen said learning the name of the first arriving emergency medical technician to the Toledo home almost 13 years ago was new to him and just last week he talked with her.

When Breen testified yesterday, he spoke of he and his people looking at possible new leads and the frustration of learning all the physical evidence was gone.

It’s like a puzzle with a lot of pieces missing, he said.

“A lot of it came down to the initial investigation,” Breen said.

Belle Williams, the longtime director of evidence at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office, said yesterday evidence was destroyed or returned in the year following the death, after the request of the then-detective sergeant. More evidence was cleaned out again in 2002, she said.

She was in the midst of implementing a new procedure requiring written authorization.

“At that point, all we could do was stop it,” Williams said.

The seven-day inquest in Chehalis into the former trooper’s December 1998 death is concluding, with jurors scheduled to return to the courtroom with their decision at 4 p.m. today.

The four women and one man who deliberated yesterday afternoon and again this morning were asked to determine if the death was suicide, homicide or something else.

They are using the standard of a preponderance of evidence or “basically 51 percent, according to Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod.

McLeod told jurors he’d like it to be unanimous, but a majority agreeing would be sufficient.

If they return with a conclusion of homicide, he has said he would send them back to decide who they believe killed Reynolds. Under state law, if the jury names someone, the coroner is required to issue an arrest warrant.

What Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer would do in the situation, he has said he doesn’t know.

The inquest jurors have heard testimony from those who believe Reynolds’ death was suicide and those who think murder.

The 33-year-old was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, with a bullet in her head and covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

A new story inquest jurors heard yesterday was from a man Reynolds’ mother, Barb Thompson, had learned might have been at the Reynolds’ house the night before the death.

He lived with Joshua Williams, an individual who claimed one of the teenage friends of the Reynolds boys shot Reynolds, but later recanted his story.

Richard Melton told Breen of a time Williams borrowed his truck and then returned it spotlessly clean, Breen recounted. Melton denied ever being inside the Toledo house, according to Breen.

Breaking news: Decision reached in coroners inquest

October 19th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Jurors for the coroner’s inquest into the  death of former state trooper Ronda Reynolds have reached a decision.

They will reconvene at 4 p.m. in the courtroom.

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FYI: You may learn what the verdict is first on Lewis County Sirens’ Facebook group page, before you read it here.

News brief: Sketch released in case of Morton skeletal remains

October 19th, 2011

This was updated at 11:30 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office confirmed today they believe foul play was involved in the case of the woman whose skeletal remains were found near Morton this past spring.

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Artists rendering

A motorist who pulled off U.S. Highway 12 to take a break spotted the remains off the side of a logging road about 5:30 p.m. on April 7.

The sheriff’s office has revealed very little about the case, but today released an artist’s sketch they hope will help them identify the woman.

“Obviously we’re at a standstill in the case until we find out who she is,” Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

An image was made by studying the facial bones of the female they say is believed to have been between 20 and 35 years old when she died.

She is described as small in stature and possibly of mixed ethnicity.

An examination by a specialist at the King County Medical Examiner’s Office could not determine the cause of death, according to Brown.

The discovery was made 100 yards up a logging road just outside Morton, according to the sheriff’ office. They still won’t specify where, even if that was east or west of town.

“We’re not giving the exact location because whoever killed her knows those details,” Brown said.

The sheriff’s office is not commenting on whether they believe the woman died there or elsewhere but have previously said it was doubtful the remains had been there very long, because it was a well-used logging road.

The sheriff’s office isn’t yet saying what they were told by the expert for an estimate of how long ago the woman had died, in part because they have not yet received the report, according to Brown.

Dental records and DNA from the deceased have been entered into databases with no matches found.

Anyone with any information about this female or the case is asked to call the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office at 360-748-9286 or Lewis County Crime Stoppers – if the person wishes to remain anonymous –  at 1-800-748-6422.

•••

Read previous story: “New lead in possible identity of Morton skeletal remains” from Thursday Sept. 22, 2011, here

Coroner’s inquest: Images inside the courtroom

October 18th, 2011

Photos by Bradd Reynolds
For Lewis County Sirens

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Jurors for the coroner’s inquest into the 1998 death of former trooper Ronda Reynolds adjourned for the night after beginning deliberations about 11 o’clock today.

They are scheduled to return to the courtroom in Chehalis at 9 a.m. tomorrow morning.

The five jurors are tasked with determining if Reynolds death in her Toledo home was due to suicide, homicide or something else.

Some 40 witnesses have testified in the inquest which began last week.

Chehalis-area resident Bradd Reynolds (no relation) has been following the proceedings with his camera.

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Retired Lewis County Sheriff's Office detective Dave Neiser testifies.

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Barb Thompson, mother of Ronda Reynolds, with sheriff's Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown to the right.

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Retired sheriff's Chief Criminal Deputy Joe Doench testifies.

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True crime author Ann Rule

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Juanita Vaughn, who worked with Reynolds at Wal-Mart in Aberdeen, testifies.

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Royce Ferguson, Everett attorney working with Thompson.

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Isabelle Williams, director of evidence for the Lewis County Sheriff's Office, testifies.

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Lewis County Coroner's Office Chief Deputy Dawn Harris, with Thurston County Coroner Gary Warnock.

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Nason Weller, Reynolds' supervisor at The Bon in Olympia, testifies.

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Current sheriff's detective Sgt. Dusty Breen, left, speaks with Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer.

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Retired sheriff's Deputy Gary Holt testifies.

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Sheriff's detective Jamey McGinty leaves the courtroom

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Sherri Murphy, who worked as a debt collector and then a state trooper, testifies.

News brief: Napavine shooter gets 15 years

October 18th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A judge yesterday sentenced a Chehalis man to a little more than 15 years in prison for shooting a woman outside a Napavine apartment in early June.

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Javier Jimenez Villalavazo

Javier Jimenez Villalavazo, 23, reportedly called the 24-year-old and her family a snitch before firing several rounds at her as she got back inside a car. Eloisa Cruz-Garcia was struck twice in her right leg and survived.

Sheriff’s deputies said he went by the nickname “The Joker”.

Villalavazo initially pleaded not guilty to first-degree assault, but following a plea deal, he admitted in Lewis County Superior Court on Monday that he shot her, according to court documents.

Prosecutors dropped the firearms enhancement part of the charge which would have automatically tacked five years onto his prison time.

Villalavazo faced a standard sentencing range between 138 months and 184 months.

Judge Richard Brosey gave him 15 years and four months.

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Read related stories:

• “Motive: Alleged shooter thought Centralia woman “snitched”” from Thursday June 9, 2011, here

• “News brief: Four booked as detectives seek suspected Napavine shooter” from Wednesday June 8, 2011 at 7:28 p.m., here

• “News brief: Law enforcement searching for Napavine shooting suspect” from Monday June 6, 2011 at 3:39 p.m., here