Posts Tagged ‘By Sharyn L. Decker’

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, February 11th, 2011

COUNTERFEIT BILLS TO PAY UTILITY BILL

• An individual attempting to pay their utility bill in Centralia with three phony $20 bills was questioned yesterday by police. The Centralia Police Department reports the person was released after an officer concluded they did not know the money was counterfeit.

STOLEN HONDA

• A 1992 Honda Accord reported stolen from the 200 block of West Hanson Street in Centralia yesterday morning was later found with the wheels, tires and stereo missing at the 200 block of Jones Road, according to the Centralia Police Department.

PILLS PILFERED

• Centralia police took a report of the theft of medication from a home on the 500 block of West Fourth Street yesterday evening.

• An officer took a report yesterday afternoon of the theft of medication from a vehicle on the 1600 block of South Gold Street in Centralia.

STOLEN FIREARM FOUND

• Centralia police report a stolen gun was recovered yesterday after a pawn shop on the 800 block of West Main Street discovered and reported they had a stolen weapon. Sgt. Stacy Denham said it is a firearm that has apparently been stolen multiple times. An investigation is ongoing.

Frost Road Trailer Park homicide: Lawyers still waiting for defendant’s mental health evaluation

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Attorneys continue to wait for a report from Western State Hospital to find if 65-year-old Richard Joseph Frank Roth is competent to stand trial for first-degree murder in the November fatal shooting of his trailer park neighbor.

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Jackie Marie Lawyer

Roth was arrested and subsequently charged in the Nov. 4 death of 64-year-old Jackie Marie Lawyer in Winlock.

Prosecutor’s alleged Roth retrieved a handgun from his property and confronted Lawyer near the trailer park mailboxes after an argument between the two about him “snitching” on her for her dumping wood stove ashes in the woods.

A trial date has not been set because, at the request of his attorney Mike Underwood, Roth was sent first to the state mental hospital to be evaluated. Underwood said at the time it was his standard protocol for a case of this seriousness.

Roth is back in the Lewis County Jail, but was not brought to the courtroom today for a scheduled review hearing.

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told the judge the report was being typed up as he spoke and asked that they reconvene next Thursday on the matter.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

TRUCK RUNS OVER FARM PLOWS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office will be tracking down the driver of an 18-wheeler who left the scene after damaging two antique ornamental farm plows as it tried to turn around in a Chehalis driveway last night. The big rig, belonging to Swift Trucking, also drove across landscaping at the 100 block of Taylor Road, according to Chief Deputy Stacy Brown.

MOTORCYCLE STOLEN

• Centralia police took a report yesterday evening that a 50cc Honda motorcycle went missing from the 2400 block of Seward Avenue sometime since Sunday.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were told yesterday a building on the 1100 block of West First Street had been “egged”.

IGNORE SCAM EMAIL FROM “FBI” AGENT, SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office this week said it is beginning to get a few citizen reports of receiving emails which Chief Stacy Brown calls the “Agent John Edwards FBI scam”. Brown is hoping to get the word out to prevent any recipients from being victimized. A copy of one of them, in a sample Brown distributed to the news media, reads in part: “Urgent attention: beneficiary” The attachment, purportedly from an FBI agent, describes trunks confiscated at JFK Airport in New York which contain $4.1 million and a document “which bears your name as the receiver of the money …” The message continues that the sender will assist in procuring a necessary certificate in order for you to avoid being arrested, interrogated and prosecuted for evading the taxes. Brown calls the people behind the email “yahoos”.

Benefit concert will help Lewis County Chaplaincy Services

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The volunteer chaplains who respond to assist in traumatic events around Lewis County need new pagers and jackets.

Kevin Curfman, president of Lewis County Chaplaincy Services, said they secured those items years ago through a grant and since, have basically been funded by donations from churches and businesses.

2011.0205.chaplain.benefitA benefit concert for the group featuring the Voetberg Family of stringed instrument musicians is set for the evening of Saturday Feb. 19.

The chaplaincy services started in 1989 to respond with police, firefighters and the coroner’s office to support family members and emergency workers, according to Curfman.

The 16 men and women are trained to, for example, be with the family of a cardiac arrest victim or at a house fire and explain what’s going on. They help put those in need in touch with the Red Cross.

“If a spouse needs a ride to the hospital, they can do that,” Curfman said. “Basically, they’re just there to support the family.”

They do the majority of death notifications with the Lewis County Coroner’s Office.

The fundraising event will be held at 6 p.m. at Bethel Church of the Assemblies of God, just east of Interstate 5 at exit 72 in Napavine. There’s no admission fee, but donations will be accepted.

Proceeds will benefit the group with needed equipment and ongoing expenses.

Curfman says more information can be found on the organization’s web site or their Facebook page.

Chehalis bus versus house collision a mystery

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011
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Sabrina Kostick snapped this photo with her phone this morning of the bus and house at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue in Chehalis.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This was updated at 7 p.m.

CHEHALIS – Police say they don’t know what caused a Twin Transit bus to crash into a Chehalis house this morning.

No passengers were onboard and nobody was injured, but the bus and the home sustained significant damage, according to authorities.

However, it was a close call for Mei Liu, who had gotten up very early and gone upstairs to stay up with her colicky grandchild, according to a family friend. Her bed is in the downstairs corner that was struck, he said.

“Luckily she wasn’t sleeping in her bed, she would have been under all that debris,” Matt Howard said.

Aid and police called at about 7:30 a.m. to Southwest 13th Street near William Avenue said the bus had been traveling eastward. It plowed through a fence and the yard before striking the split-level home.

Chehalis Police Department detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said initial indications are it was probably a medical issue with the driver and not anything mechanical with the vehicle.

“He said he was turning left and the next thing he knows is he was hitting the house,” McNamara said. “Something happened. He can’t explain it and we can’t explain it.”

Brickwork was knocked off the building and the wall pushed in, a little bit, McNamara said.

Twin Transit General Manager Ernie Graichen said the driver is a 15-veteran with an “excellent record.”

The driver was checked out and appeared to be fine, Chehalis Fire Department Capt. Kevin Curfman said.

However, he was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital to be checked out and for a post-accident drug test, according to Graichen. The driver’s name was not released.

Forty-four-year-old Hieu Duong said he was brushing his teeth when he felt a jolt.

“Suddenly the house moved, like somebody put a bomb outside,” he said.

It scared his children, he said, but the main thing is no one was injured, especially his mother-in-law.

“She’s lucky,” his wife Liu Li said.

“She might not (have made) it,” he said.

The couple, who own the South Pacific Bistro nearby, were expecting a contractor tomorrow to estimate the damage.

The 15-seat bus was towed to a repair facility.

Twin Transit will conduct an investigation, Graichen said.

McNamara said he didn’t know if the driver would be cited.

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Plywood now covers the corner of the Hieu Duong and Liu Li's home in Chehalis.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

STOLEN STUFF

• Centralia police were called yesterday afternoon to Kentucky Fried Chicken where somebody had stolen a caddy for their grease container from behind the building. Officer Chris Fitzgerald said the wheeled cart from the business on the 600 block of West Main Street very well could have seemed like a useful item for one of the many homeless people who go there looking for discarded food.

• A black 1993 Honda Accord was reported stolen from the Wal-Mart parking lot in Chehalis on Monday afternoon, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said the owner said they were in the store on the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue for about an hour and came out and it was gone. Its license plate reads AAT 1215.

• A deputy was called early Tuesday to a break-in on the 100 block of Carroll Way in Adna, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. A door had been forced open.

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday a generator was reported stolen from a home under construction on the 100 block of Davis View Drive in Centralia.

• A real estate employee reported a break-in to an unoccupied home for sale on the 2000 block of Bishop Road in Chehalis, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Somebody had gone into the attic and cut wiring, according to a report made to the sheriff’s office on Monday morning.

• Deputies called to a temporarily unoccupied residence in Randle discovered two individuals who had loaded a propane tank stolen from the mobile home into a truck on Sunday night. Two women were arrested at the mobile home on the 700 block of Silverbrook Road.

• Somebody stole a stereo from car on the 1100 block of South Pearl Street, according to a report made to Centralia police on Monday morning.

ASSAULT

• A 37-year-old Centralia man was arrested for misdemeanor assault after allegedly slapping another man on the side of the head at the Lewis County Mall on Monday morning. John S. Youngbrandt was arrested for fourth-degree assault after an officer was called about 9:35 a.m. to the shopping center on Northeast Hampe Way, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said they got two different stories. One man told the officer he was just sitting there when a guy came along and slapped him on the head. The other man said he was bugging him for money and he told him to go away, Kaut said.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called yesterday afternoon about two tires being slashed on a vehicle at the 3300 block of Fords Prairie Avenue.

DRUGS

• Centralia police arrested a 38-year-old man early yesterday morning for possession of methamphetamine. Calvin C. Reece, a Centralia resident, was booked into the Lewis County Jail after a contact with an officer about 2:40 a.m. near Mellen Street and Marsh Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

Randle taxidermist to face murder charge

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Randle taxidermist is expected in court this week to face charges in the March homicide of a 58-year-old welder from Federal Way.

Erik R. Massa, 43, of Randle, was charged yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court with second-degree murder, according to the prosecutor’s office.

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Guy LaFontaine

A relative, Guy W. LaFontaine, had gone to Randle to go fishing but ended up on March 13 at Morton General Hospital with two broken eye sockets and other injuries. LaFontaine died the following morning.

Deputies arrested Massa later that day, but he was released from jail three days later, with prosecutors telling a judge they did not yet have enough evidence to charge him.

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher initially charged Massa last week with first-degree assault, but said today a review of the forensic evidence prompted him to upgrade the charge.

LaFontaine died from blunt force injuries to his head, torso and extremities, according to information from his autopsy. He had a shoe print on his head, according to charging documents.

Detectives found a broken shotgun with blood on it in an empty silo next to Massa’s shop, according to charging documents.

LaFontaine worked at Todd Shipyards in Seattle as a welder.

Charging documents give the following account of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office investigation:

A deputy interviewed LaFontaine’s wife Gail on March 13. Her husband said he was going to go fishing near River Ranch Road in Randle.

She got a call from him, in which he said he had been beat up and he thought he was going to die. She found him on a road, picked him up and took him to Morton General Hospital.

Deputy Matt McKnight who responded to the hospital, was told LaFontaine had substantial wounds about his face and arm and told a nurse he was in extreme pain. He also had a broken arm and a bullet in his arm with an apparent fresh entry wound. (Meagher said today it turned out to be a wound from years earlier)

He was not cooperative with law enforcement.

At 3:45 a.m., the hospital advised McKnight they couldn’t keep LaFontaine in his bed and they were releasing him.

LaFontaine’s wife took him to St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way. He was pronounced dead there. Deputies learned of his death from the Federal Way Police Department.

At 8 a.m. that morning, sheriff’s detective Matt Wallace went to the 1,100 block of U.S. Highway 12 where Massa has a home and taxidermy shop. Wallace was looking for LaFontaine’s car.

He found what appeared to be blood on the car’s right door and then a dent on the right passenger door of a Nissan pickup there. Also, on the Nissan’s door, Wallace found “red liquid” with what appeared to be hair matted in it.

Meagher said he believed the two men were related by marriage, but isn’t sure exactly the details.

The King County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled LaFontaine’s death a homicide.

Detectives spoke with a man who said he spoke with Massa that morning.

Massa’s father-in-law, Don Roberts who is also Gail’s ex-husband, said to a detective Massa told him LaFontaine had been walking around the taxidermy shop with a shotgun, according to charging documents.

Massa has been summoned to the courthouse in Chehalis at 4 p.m. on Friday.

Meagher said he hasn’t been arrested, but his lawyer Joseph Mano will bring him in.