“Real heroes” honored by local Red Cross

August 24th, 2011
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Byron Wilson, with his mother Jessica Mullins beside him, is among several local people honored for saving lives.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – Eleven individuals were honored yesterday for acts that saved a life or made a difference in someone’s life at the Red Cross Real Heroes Breakfast of Lewis County.

The event held annually at Centralia High School is a fundraiser for the American Red Cross Mount Rainier Chapter, meant also to inspire folks to prepare for the unexpected, for example by taking a course in CPR.

A huge audience heard the following stories yesterday:

Lifesaver Rescue Hero
Terry Boyet

Boyet, an off-duty firefighter-paramedic, was with his family at the Tilton River in Morton over the Fourth-of-July holiday when he noticed a teenage boy thrashing in the water as if he were drowning.

A fully clothed Boyet jumped into the river, retrieved the teenager and pushed him toward his parents.

Workplace Safety Heroes
Kristina Maxwell and Nancy Owens

Maxwell, an employee at Thorbeckes Fitlife Center in Centralia and Owens, a nurse, went to the aid of a man who collapsed while working out at the gym in June.

The women performed hands-only CPR for 10 to 15 minutes, for the man was breathing on his own when medics arrived.

Fire Rescue Hero
Byron Wilson

Byron, 4, saw flames smoldering in a crawl space and yelled to wake up eight family members who safely escaped their burning home in Ethel in January.

His shouting alerted his family even before the smoke alarm was triggered.

Spirit of Red Cross Hero
Chief Matt Hadaller

Hadaller exemplifies the award for his contributions to the citizens and the fire service he served for 26 years.

The work of the chief of Lewis County Fire District 3 in Mossyrock was cut short when he suffered a heart attack while at home, on call and died June 27.

Water Rescue Hero
Randy LeDuc

LeDuc was fishing on the Cowlitz River in July of last year when he saw a jet boat that had slammed into a stump and was taking on water.

In the strong current, he steered his boat to the two fisherman and helped free their boat.

Medical Rescue Heroes
Jordan Beaver, Mary Buzzard, Jerry Rader, Wendy Rader

The four were at work at Cardinal Glass in Winlock when a co-worker collapsed in December.

They performed CPR for nearly 10 minutes on George Ruff until paramedics arrived. Today, Ruff is back on the job.

Youth Humanitarian Hero
Nicole Beck

Seventeen-year-old Nicole, diagnosed in February with cancer, was awarded a “wish” from the Make-a-Wish foundation, and gave it away.

The W.F. West High School student is using the money from the foundation to upgrade the six tennis courts at her school.

News brief: Burn ban begins today

August 24th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – An outdoor burn ban went into effect in Lewis County at 12:01 a.m. today.

Dry conditions have created what the Lewis County fire marshall calls substantial fire danger throughout the county.

Still allowed are recreational fires in approved campfire sites or approved receptacles, according to the fire marshal. Those with questions can call Fire Marshal Fred Chapman at 360-740-1146.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

August 24th, 2011

INTOXICATED MAN ARRESTED FOR THREATS TO KILL

• A 51-year-old Chehalis man was jailed yesterday after he allegedly made threats to kill his wife – reportedly overheard by a 911 dispatcher – and also the deputy who detained him. The sheriff’s office called just after 9 p.m. yesterday to the 200 block of North Prairie Road in Chehalis arrested Thomas H. Erickson, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Because he was intoxicated, he was taken to the hospital to be medically “cleared” before he could be booked into the jail, according to Brown. Along the way, Erickson allegedly told the deputy he knew where the deputy lived and was going to kill him and his family, Brown said. Erickson was reportedly uncooperative and was physically removed from the patrol vehicle and taken into the hospital, Brown said. He was subsequently booked for felony harassment and fourth-degree assault, Brown said.

POLICE: BAND OF BURGLARS CAUGHT ON VIDEO

• Five teenagers were arrested yesterday afternoon on Main Street in Centralia as police investigated burglaries at an unoccupied home on the 1000 block of Eckerson Road in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department. The owner had set up a so-called game cam that captured images of four boys and a girl carrying boxes out yesterday and the day before, according to Officer John Panco. The stolen goods were for a garage sale, Panco said. The faces were recognizable, leading officers to a group of 14 and 15 year olds from Centralia and Chehalis, according to Panco. They were all booked into the Lewis County Juvenile Detention Center for burglary, he said.

THEFT

• Centralia police were called about 8 p.m. yesterday to a burglary at a home on the 1000 block of South Tower Avenue. Someone forced their way through the back door and stole CDs and movies, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A deputy was called yesterday morning about stolen custom tools and a remote control for a rock crusher near Scanewa Lake south of Glenoma and Randle. The victim told a deputy the Komatsu machine was parked off Forest Service 240 Road off Falls Road and the items from its toolbox vanished sometime since Thursday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The tools are steel and heavy, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown. The loss is roughly estimated at $5,000.

• Tools were taken when a shop was broken into at the 1000 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia, police were told about 8:30 p.m. yesterday.

• Chehalis police were called about 1:30 p.m. yesterday to the 300 block of South Market Boulevard about a chop saw stolen from the back of a truck.

• Police were called about 4:15 p.m. yesterday to a parking lot on the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue in Chehalis where a purse had been taken from a vehicle.

DRUGS

• A 20-year-old Rochester resident was arrested for possession of methamphetamine about 1 p.m. yesterday at the 2000 block of North Pearl Street, according to Centralia police. Jesse A. Ruege was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

CENTRALIA BUSINESS SHOT UP WITH BBs

• Police were called to a business on the 100 block of Pine Street in Centralia yesterday morning where eight windows had been shot with BBs.

BIG RIG WRECKS ON I-5 NEAR VADER

• The Washington State Patrol said a semi truck was totaled when it struck an overpass on northbound Interstate 5 near Vader yesterday. Troopers called at 3 p.m. to the scene near milepost 60 reported the driver appeared to have no injuries, but was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital as a precautionary measure. The crash was blamed on inattention.

Medical marijuana users rally in Centralia

August 24th, 2011
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Advocates for medical marijuana wave to passing motorists outside Centralia City Hall.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – A small group of medical marijuana users held a little “rally” across from Centralia City Hall yesterday hoping to gain support for making the substance easier rather than harder to obtain.

“Really, we just want to end criminal penalties for adults who use medical marijuana,” 34-year-old Ryan Shewell of Chehalis said.

Shewell, who organized the gathering, was pleasantly surprised to learn after they arrived the city council was scheduled last night to have the issue on its agenda.

Shewell prefers marijuana to the Vicodin and Percocet he takes for phantom pain; he lost his lower legs and fingers to a disease he contracted as a child.

“I take a handful pills, and they’re killing my liver,” Shewell said.

He’s been fairly active in initiative campaigns and voicing his opinion.

He was one of only two people who spoke at a public hearing last week held by the Lewis County Commissioners on the topic of collective medical marijuana gardens.

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield told the three county commissioners he thinks more harm than good will come out of the new state law went into effect on July 22, but he wants to make the best out of a bad situation as the county considers how to reconcile conflicting federal and state law on the subject.

Shewell told the commissioners collective gardens are not a problem, but a solution for those like him who can’t easily grow their own.

Yesterday, the dozen or so individuals who joined Shewell in Centralia voiced similar thoughts, but the placards they held up to passing passing motorists broadcast a variety of philosophies, such as:

“Cannabis Cures” and “Help end marijuana prohibition” and “No prison for pot”.

And not all were willing to speak quite as openly as Shewell.

“Please don’t use my last name, I have a job,” one woman from Rochester said.

“I really don’t want to tell you my last name, cause of the feds,” a 56-year-old Centralia man in a wheelchair said.

Several of them however enthusiastically spoke of what they viewed as signs of support from passing motorists on Pearl and Maple streets.

“We’ve got nothing but high-5’s, peace signs, smiles and honks,” Sarena Haskins of Rochester said. She’s an activist who focuses on Lewis County for a group called Sensible Washington.

Shewell said only “a couple” of drivers flipped them off.

The city council last night passed a six-month moratorium on collective gardens, A public hearing will be held Sept. 27 on the topic.

They are approaching it similar to the county, according to City Attorney Shannon Murphy-Olson.

Lewis County commissioners last week enacted a 60-day moratorium, while the sheriff’s office, the prosecutor’s office and likely the planning commission devise a plan.

•••

For more about the county plans, read “County leaders want your opinions on how to grow (medical) marijuana” from Tuesday Aug. 2, 2011, here

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A medical marijuana user displays her sign at the corner of Pearl and Maple streets.

Mossyrock man gets a year in jail for encounter with police chief

August 23rd, 2011
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Mossyrock Police Chief Jeremy Stamper is surrounded by police, deputies and troopers after today's sentencing of Wayne Burdette.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – More than two dozen uniformed law enforcement officers dominated the courtroom gallery, figuratively and then literally standing behind Mossyrock Police Chief Jeremy Stamper today.

They were there to observe the sentencing of Wayne Burdette, a 44-year-old man convicted last week of obstruction and acquitted of a more serious charge of felony harassment.

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Wayne Burdette

The charges stemmed from a June traffic stop in which Burdette got out of his truck with his right hand behind his back and advanced on Stamper – after being told to stay put – prompting the officer to draw his pistol and retreat behind his patrol car. Burdette was arguing he wanted to see the radar reading.

Chief Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told the judge Burdette willfully and egregiously placed the officer in fear he was going to be shot.

Meagher asked the judge to send Burdette to jail for one year, the maximum amount allowed for the crime of obstruction, saying the judge needed to send a message.

“You and I have a bad day (at work), I go home with a headache,” Meagher said. “This officer has a bad day, he may not go home.”

Meagher had argued unsuccessfully in the trial last week in Lewis County Superior Court that Burdette’s actions and manner amounted to a threat to kill.

Defense attorney Ken Johnson this morning reminded the court Burdette was convicted of a gross misdemeanor, not the other charge and suggested the punishment should fit the crime.

The delay in the speeding ticket getting issued was not extensive, Johnson said.

Normally obstruction would be dealt with in District Court and the outcome might be two days in jail with the balance suspended, he said. His client has already been held for 71 days, he said.

Since the judge agreed to consider writings found in Burdette’s home, Johnson said he needed to explain some background.

Johnson told the judge Burdette has experienced police misconduct first-hand, which colors his view of officers, and has been seeking avenues of redress.

“There is a right way to do it and a wrong way to do it,” Johnson said. “Clearly arguing on the side of the road is the wrong way.”

Stamper asked Judge Richard Brosey for a sentence of one year, telling the judge Burdette is a danger.

“This guy is gonna kill one of us, given the first opportunity,” Stamper said.

Burdette took the judge up on his offer to comment.

“This is the third time I’ve been chained and caged,” he said.

“Words just really fail me, because what do you do about incompetence? What rights do you have?” Burdette asked.

Judge Brosey offered a lengthy soliloquy, telling Burdette that whatever may have occurred in the past elsewhere had nothing to do with any officers in Lewis County.

“Just because they choose to wear a uniform doesn’t make them inherently evil or out to get you,” Brosey said.

Brosey told him if he has issues with cops, he needs to take it up in court.

“You got a fair trial, perhaps the fairest I’ve ever seen,” he said. “That doesn’t alter the fact you did in fact obstruct, and you’re darn lucky you’re not dead.”

Brosey gave him 365 days in jail, with credit for time served.

The judge and the defendant exchanged more words after a statement was read about his appeal rights.

“You can say all the pretty legal words you want but it does not make it justice,” Burdette said.

Brosey once again tried to convince Burdette the system works, although it’s not fast or easy. And then the hearing was over.

“We’re done,” Brosey said.

•••

For more background, see “Breaking news: Burdette: Acquitted of felony harassment” from Friday August 19, 2011 at 5:23 p.m., here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

August 23rd, 2011

THEFT

• A deep-fat kitchen fryer, a stereo and small amount of cash were taken when someone burglarized a Centralia restaurant, according to police. An officer called yesterday to the business on the 700 block of North Tower Avenue was told a door had been left unlocked overnight.

• Centralia police were called about 9:50 p.m. last night to the 1000 block of Harrison Avenue where someone stole two computers in a backpack from inside a vehicle. They broke the truck’s window to get in, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday morning of a catalytic converter being stolen from a vehicle on the 1000 block of Mellen Street.

• The Morton Police Department reports that tools and equipment were missing from a storage unit at the 700 block of Airport Way in Morton. An officer who took a report last Wednesday was told it happened sometime since 2009, according to police.

VANDALISM

• Chehalis police were called yesterday morning to the alley behind Southwest William Avenue about several “outbuildings” being tagged over the weekend.

• A driver reported their car was “egged” as they were traveling on the 800 block of Main Avenue in Morton last week, according to the Morton Police Department.

News brief: Semi versus car on I-5 at Chehalis

August 23rd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Winlock man escaped with a bruise on the arm but his car was totaled when a semi truck changing lanes on Interstate 5 hit him overnight.

Harry B. Allen, 61, was southbound near Chehalis’s Main Street interchange as was a 2005 Peterbilt tractor-trailer, according to the Washington State Patrol.

Allen’s 2006 Ford Fusion rotated off the front of the truck and hit the median facing backward, according to the state patrol.

A trooper called to the scene at 2:35 a.m. cited the Twin Falls, Idaho truck driver for an unsafe lane change, the state patrol reported.