Chehalis assistant fire chief takes new job in Colorado

August 11th, 2011
2011.0811.larry.allen_2

Assistant Fire Chief Larry Allen is saying goodbye tomorrow to Chehalis

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – “Please check your smoke detectors. Preventing fires, it’s your job.”

As 43-year-old Larry Allen prepares to leave the Chehalis Fire Department after almost 20 years of service, those are the words he wants folks to remember from him.

The long time Chehalis area resident, but a transplant from Mossyrock and Seattle before that, has said yes to what he calls a phenomenal career opportunity in Colorado.

He starts later this month at Castle Rock Fire and Rescue, in a 70-person department in a town about halfway to Colorado Springs from Denver. Castle Rock is home to about 46,000 people, he said.

Allen will be doing more of what he says is his passion: fire prevention.

Fire Chief Kelvin Johnson says that passion is what makes a difference.

It takes a person who really likes that part of the fire service to do it well, Johnson said yesterday.

“Like I say, he really enjoyed it, that’s why he was good at it,” Johnson said. “We’re happy for him in that direction.”

Allen’s last day of work is tomorrow.

Chief Johnson said yesterday he has no current plans to fill the position.

The public is invited to stop by the fire station on Park Street to say goodbye, and for cake and conversation, between 3 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. tomorrow.

Allen’s new position is called a fire prevention officer. He will be dealing with inspections, codes and plan review. He will also be conducting fire investigations, in a capacity in which he and other investigators can arrest violators.

Prevention is why he does what he does, he said.

“This is why I’m here; codes are written, they come from tragedies,” Allen said. “The codes are minimum standards for citizens’ and responders’ safety.”

Allen was a volunteer at the Chehalis Fire Department for about a year and a half before getting hired full time in January 1994.

He made captain in 2006 and was named assistant chief in February 2008. He’s a second generation firefighter, following in his father’s foot steps.

His work in Chehalis has included fire education and prevention. Helping youngsters learn about fire safety is something he speaks of fondly and likes to think has saved lives.

From sending kids crawling through “smoke houses” and demonstrating “mock crashes” for teens to the annual children’s fire poster contest:

“If just one person took anything away from any of those activities …,” he said without finishing his sentence. Then Allen said, “Say this:”

“Please check your smoke detectors. Preventing fires, it’s your job.”

Off-duty EMT and friend rescue driver from burning truck in Oakville

August 11th, 2011

Updated at 6:16 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A pair of passing motorists kicked out a window and pulled an unconscious man from a truck that wrecked and burst into flames near Oakville this afternoon.

The Washington State Patrol said a Ford Cargo van was eastbound on U.S. Highway 12 when it crossed the centerline, climbed an embankment and rolled over onto its top. A fire started in the engine, according to the state patrol.

The driver, Ben W. Thomas, 51, of Olympia, was taken to Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia for evaluation, according to responders.

Grays Harbor County Fire District 1 was called at 1 p.m. to the wreck near Ross Road, a mile west of Oakville, according to Fire Capt. Ryan Graham.

When firefighters arrived seven minutes later, 25 foot high flames were coming off the truck, Graham said.

“I congratulated the guy and said you guys saved the day,” Graham said.

He didn’t have their names but thought the couple were from out of state, maybe New York, and had just moved to Vancouver. The woman said she was an EMT, he said.

It was a mobile slaughter truck full of meat, according to Trooper Krista Hedstrom. The cab of the truck was destroyed, but they were able to recover the undamaged load, she said.

Graham said the driver was unconscious, but just waking up as the couple pulled him to safety. He didn’t really have any visible injuries, Graham said. Hedstrom said his injuries were described to her as minor cuts to his face.

Highway 12 was closed in both directions for about two hours and only partially opened for the third hour, according to Graham.

The cause is under investigation.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

August 11th, 2011

THEFT, THEFT AND MORE THEFT

• A 32-year-old Centralia man was arrested near Interstate 5 and milepost 63 shortly after Centralia police spread the word of a vehicle stolen from the 400 block of Yew Street in Centralia yesterday, according to police. Officers were called just before 4 p.m. and it wasn’t long before a Vader police officer spotted the missing vehicle traveling southbound on the freeway near milepost 69, according to the Centralia Police Department. The state patrol and sheriff’s deputies also responded to the off ramp where Stephen A. Dembrowicz was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police. He was also allegedly in possession of the victim’s wallet, police reported.

• Police and an extortion victim lured a 26-year-old Tacoma woman to Centralia last night where she was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail. Officer John Panco said Jillian M. Emrick had claimed she was pregnant and needed money for medical expenses, tires and other things, threatening possible harm to the 41-year-old man, his family and his career. He gave her upwards of $1,000, Panco said. The two only met about four days earlier on an Internet web site, according to Panco. Emrick was arrested at the 600 block of Harrison Avenue around midnight for extortion, according to Panco. “As far as we know, she isn’t pregnant,” Panco said.

• Chehalis police were called about 8:15 a.m. yesterday to an address on Jackson Highway where someone had taken the tire off a trailer, but left it there. Three hours later an officer was called to a business a few blocks away on South Market Boulevard, where someone had cut through a fence to get a car and stolen a wheel and tire, according to Deputy Chief Randy Kaut.

• Chehalis police were summoned to Shop and Kart on North National Avenue yesterday afternoon when a tried to use what turned out to be a counterfeit $50 bill. Police said there was a good chance the woman didn’t know what she had.

ASSAULT

• Centralia police were called just before 6 o’clock this morning to the 500 block of West Main Street where they arrested a 29-year-old Centralia man for unlawful imprisonment and fourth-degree assault – domestic violence. Antone G. Reynolds allegedly assaulted his wife and prevented her from leaving the residence during a dispute. Further details were not readily available.

VANDALISM

• Chehalis police took a report yesterday of somebody tagging a garage on Southwest Third Street with green paint.

Read about feds conduct drug raids at White Pass, central Yakima County …

August 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Yakima Herald-Republic reports of a drug raid yesterday in the White Pass area, along with another in Yakima County.

Read about it here

And read an update from 10:53 p.m. Thursday August 11, 2011, here

Breaking news: Alleged Centralia meth ring busted

August 11th, 2011

This was updated at 11:59 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Officers arrested three people yesterday evening following an investigation into what the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office calls a “mid-scale” methamphetamine distribution ring being operated out of the Peppertree RV Park in Centralia.

Deputies had coordinated several undercover drug buys from two separate trailers in the park on Alder Street since last month, according to the sheriff’s office.

A little more than one ounce of methamphetamine was seized yesterday, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said this morning.

Booked into the Lewis County Jail were Edward A. Parnel, 38, Theresa M. Clark, 40, and Pattilyn D. Murphy, 29, all from Centralia, according to Brown.

The investigation was conducted by the sheriff’s Lewis Regional Crime Task Force and Centralia Police Department’s Street Crimes Unit, Brown said.

Brown said officers made a half dozen so-called controlled purchases in July and this month from Parnel and Clark who lived in two separate RVs at the park. A total of about two ounces was bought, according to Brown.

The street value is around $1,400 an ounce, she said.

Authorities decided to take down the operation yesterday and discovered the couple had moved to a residence on the 900 block of West Pear Street, she said.

Clark and Murphy were arrested about 5:20 p.m. while they were on their way to the Peppertree from Chehalis, according to Brown. Murphy’s 1996 Jeep Cherokee was seized.

Parnel was picked up at the Pear Street home less than an hour later, Brown said.

Officers learned the women had just bought the meth they were found with from a couple staying at a Chehalis motel. Those two were not arrested, but are “on our radar” now, Brown said.

The three are scheduled to go before a judge in Lewis County Superior Court at 4:15 p.m. today.
•••

Update at 6:30 p.m.: Defense attorney Bob Schroeter reciting the various charges in court this afternoon said:

Clark was charged with two counts of delivery of a controlled substance, methamphetamine and one count of possession with intent to deliver; Murphy was charged with one count of delivery and one count of possession with intent to deliver; and Parnel was charged with one count of delivery and one count of attempted delivery.

The women were allowed to be released on $10,000 signature bonds. Parnel was ordered held on $10,000 cash or bond bail.

•••

CORRECTIONS: This story has been updated to reflect correctly when the two amounts of methamphetamine were taken into possession of law enforcement and to correct the spelling of Edward Parnel’s last name.

Drive-by shooting suspect held on $5 million bail

August 10th, 2011
2011.0810.salmeron.bail_2

Colbert A. Salmeron waits to go before a judge in Chehalis this afternoon

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter


CHEHALIS – A handcuffed Colbert A. Salmeron, 24, was chained around his waist and ankles when he saw a judge in Lewis County Superior Court today.

Judge James Lawler set bail for the drive-by shooting suspect at $5 million.

Salmeron – a former resident of Centralia according to the Centralia Police Department – was free on $150,000 bail when he failed to show up for his trial in May 2007.

Authorities got him deported this past May and back to the U.S. after learning he was in El Salvador. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail last night.

Salmeron faces charges of first-degree assault and drive-by shooting for an incident at the 500 block of North Tower Avenue on August 26, 2006.

A group of four individuals were standing next to a pickup truck in a parking lot when someone – allegedly Salmeron – fired several shots shattering its window and striking a nearby car and another truck, according to charging documents.

The owner of the pickup told police he had a brief relationship with Salmeron’s ex-girlfriend, and he believed that is why they were targeted, according to charging documents.

Centralia police were told Salmeron lived in Texas and was visiting town for the month at that time, charging documents state.

When Centralia police got word in May that Salmeron was back in the U.S., they said shooting was believed to be gang-related and that Salmeron was associated with the Little Valley Lokotes.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes asked the judge this afternoon to hold Salmeron on $5 million bail.

Defense attorney Bob Schroeter asked for bail of $1 million.

Judge Lawler acknowledged it was an unusually high amount, but said $5 million, cash or bond, was appropriate given the flight risk and the charges.

None of four individuals in the courtroom, seemingly to observe Salmeron’s brief hearing, wanted to comment.

He will be represented by defense attorney Don Blair, the lawyers said today. He is set to return to court on August 18 to set a new date for a trial.
•••

Read background on the case, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

August 10th, 2011

EQUIPMENT IN INDUSTRIAL PARK CATCHES FIRE

• Lewis County Fire District 6 and the Chehalis Fire Department responded to a small fire in the Chehalis Industrial Park yesterday morning. District 6 Firefighter Mike Goodwillie said workers at Mohawk Industries on Downie Road had mostly doused the flames that were inside a piece of equipment at the foam manufacturing business. The damage seemed minimal as the machine was turned on and being tested by the time firefighters left the scene, Goodwillie said.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called three times yesterday to reports of eggs thrown at vehicles and a building. Struck were a building on the 200 block of South Tower Avenue and vehicles on the 2800 block of Russell Road, according to the Centralia Police Department. The incidents follow several from the day before in the Logan District. Police Sgt. Carl Buster says it appears to be random.

• Centralia police took reports of graffiti on buildings yesterday at the 600 block of Centralia College Boulevard and the 2800 block of Russell Road.

THEFT

• Police were called just before 11 a.m. yesterday about a vehicle prowl on the 1300 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia. Taken was the registration, according to Centralia police.

DUI WRECK

• Centralia police arrested a 55-woman woman for driving under the influence following a minor accident around 5 p.m. yesterday near North Railroad and East Maple avenues. Elizabeth Draskovich was cited and then released, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DRIVE-BY SHOOTING SUSPECT FROM 2006 BACK IN LEWIS COUNTY JAIL

• A former Centralia man is expected to go before a local judge this afternoon in connection with a drive-by shooting case from August 2006. Colbert A. Salmeron, 24, was found El Salvador following a tip that came from an airing of America’s Most Wanted earlier this year. He was arrested by U.S. marshals at the airport in Houston, Texas, shortly after he arrived in the country in May. Salmeron faces charges of first-degree assault and drive-by shooting for an incident at the 500 block of North Tower Avenue in which several shots were fired from a red Ford Mustang striking two vehicles in a parking lot where several individuals were standing around. It’s the second time Salmeron has been extradited back to Washington for the same case. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail last night with a no-bail hold.

•••

Read background on Salmeron, here