News brief: Tenino man critical after rollover wreck

July 3rd, 2011
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Michael L. Hart was ejected from the passenger side window of his truck when it rolled near Tenino. / Courtesy photo by Washington State Patrol

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 28-year-old Tenino man was in critical condition last night after he rolled his pickup truck south of Tenino, according to the Washington State Patrol.

Troopers called about 9:40 p.m. to Skookumchuck Road Southeast near Northcraft Road Southeast found Michael L. Hart had been ejected from the passenger side window of his vehicle. He was not wearing a seatbelt, according to Trooper Ma Kayla Morgan.

Hart was transported to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, according to the state patrol.

Morgan reports Hart was headed west when his truck left the right shoulder; he overcorrected sending the vehicle sideways across the eastbound lane and rolling over.

His 1985 GMC pickup as described as totaled.

Morgan reports alcohol is believed to be a contributing factor and notes the injuries could have been prevented if the motorist had been wearing a seatbelt.

Details emerge in Napavine officer-involved shooting

July 2nd, 2011
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Five holes mark the front door of Anita Mecca's mobile home in Napavine. Three pierced through to the inside.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

NAPAVINE – Thirty-nine-year-old Anita Mecca had a bad feeling after she told her new boyfriend to move out of her Napavine home.

He didn’t take it well, she said, remaining outside in her driveway for several hours with dead battery in his van waiting for someone to help him jump start it.

It was Saturday June 18, and at one point later that day, Steven V. Petersen showed all his empty pill bottles to a friend, and another friend described Petersen with some kind of fabric wrapped around his wrists, and saw blood on his arms, Mecca said.

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West Vine Street and Second Avenue, Napavine

He tried to do a guilt trip on me, she said, for ending the relationship that was only a couple weeks long.

Mecca, who was raised in Napavine, said she had a friend stay over for two nights, because she was worried what Petersen might do.

“I had a feeling something was going to happen, I put my baseball bat by the door,” Mecca said Thursday as she stood on the porch of her mobile home. “And sure as sh** … I didn’t know he was going to freak out like that.”

“Like that”, according to authorities, is the 33-year-old Napavine man less than two days later returned to her home in the night, used a knife to repeatedly puncture a truck’s steel hood and did the same to her front door, and then less than 20 minutes later charged a sheriff’s deputy who had stopped him on the street.

Petersen died of a gunshot wound to the head around 2 a.m. on June 20. Lewis County Sheriff’s Deputy Matt McKnight reportedly fired four times, hitting Petersen with three bullets.

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer this week announced he concluded McKnight’s use of deadly force was justified. The 27-year-old deputy remains on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal review.

Petersen, according to Mecca, lived in Napavine with his wife and young son.

After his wife died unexpectedly last month, Mecca and Petersen began dating and then he moved into her mobile home.

His son had been taken into foster care, she said. His next closest family member is his father, who lives in Missouri, authorities have said.

He didn’t work; he had seizures and took medication for them, Mecca said.

It’s disturbing, she said Thursday.

The holes through the front door of her home, presumably with a large knife, leave her certain Petersen was going to hurt her when he showed up that night.

Mecca said she took his display of empty pill bottle to mean Petersen had ingested all his, of what she recalled was, Prozac and seizure medicine on that Saturday.

“When he got out of his van, he was so messed up he could hardly walk,” she said.

“It’s hard to sleep at night, knowing I was so close to death,” she said. “Then hearing gunshots. One cop told me it wasn’t my fault, I did what I could.”

Prosecutor Meyer on Thursday released his findings, outlining the reasons for his decision about McKnight. The eight page document is in the form of a letter to Thurston County sheriff’s detective Dave Haller, part of the team of officers from outside nearby sheriff’s offices who conducted the shooting investigation.

Some of the information discovered may help explain Petersen’s actions, Meyer wrote, such as apparent suicide attempts, and a note left to his son.

However, the focus of the investigation was whether or not McKnight’s use of deadly force was justifiable.

Meyer said he received the report on Tuesday, and reviewed it along with photos, recordings and video taken at the scene. He had his opinion reviewed by attorneys both inside and outside his office, including Thurston County Prosecutor Jon Tunheim, according to the letter.

On Wednesday morning, Meyer met with Sheriff Steve Mansfield and McKnight and gave them a draft of his conclusions, Meyer said.

The elected prosecutor summed it up this way:

Deputy McKnight was told Petersen had used a knife at the home – on the 500 block of West Washington Street – and despite multiple commands heard by others to take his hand out of his pocket, Petersen said, “That ain’t gonna happen”.

Meyer said Petersen was pacing back and forth, and then tensed up his shoulders and started running at the deputy.

“McKnight was left with no choice,” Meyer said. “(Petersen) was intending to do him harm, and McKnight was in fear for his life.”

McKnight fired. According to Meyer, one bullet entered Petersen’s left forearm and exited between his fingers, and another entered his right forearm and his torso and went out the back. The other struck him in the head.

His left hand was still in his jacket pocket, Meyer said.

No weapon was found in the pocket or anywhere else, Meyer said.

“But realize, where the shooting occurred was approximately seven blocks from the incident,” Meyer said.

McKnight did not fire a warning shot, Meyer said; his understanding is that would be contrary to the deputy’s training.

It was just McKnight and Petersen on the street, at the intersection of West Vine Street and Second Avenue, several blocks from Mecca’s home, Meyer said.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield said this week it will take some time to conduct the internal investigation. It will include a “shooting review board”, as well as a review of policy, procedures and training, he said.

It’s like a self-critique of his office, the sheriff said on Thursday.

“To make sure everything is working like it should and there’s nothing we need to change,” Mansfield said.

McKnight, who started at the sheriff’s office a little more than four years ago was one of the younger officers they’ve hired, Mansfield said, and as best he could recall on Thursday without checking, it’s the the first law enforcement agency he’s worked at, he said.

Officers from both inside and outside his office will sit on the shooting review board, he said.

“I have no reason to believe this (for McKnight) will turn out any different than the prosecutor has said,” Mansfield said.

The following are more details from Meyer’s report, the Napavine police incident report, and Mecca, about what happened at Mecca’s home, and afterward.

Late that Sunday night, early Monday morning, Mecca and her friend, 29-year-old Jared Brockman were sitting on the couch when they heard someone tapping on a window and then heard someone on the front porch. It was Petersen. He said, “let me in”, she said. They told him to leave.

Brockman then heard Petersen hitting his truck, so he went outside and yelled at him to knock it off, Mecca said. That’s when Petersen turned and ran towards the front door.

They shut the door, locked it and Brockman leaned against it with his shoulder. Petersen was kicking the door, they thought. They called 911

At 1:57 a.m., Brockman tells 911 a guy is trying to break into the house, and it’s Steven Petersen. Brockman arms himself with a baseball bat.

Law enforcement begins to respond and “set up containment” in the area.

Napavine Police Department Officer Noel Shields is dispatched at 1:59 a.m. He walks into Mecca’s yard with his flashlight. He sees footsteps in the wet grass that lead toward Meadow Lane. He sees Mecca and Brockman on the porch.

Deputy McKnight responds and is sent to the area of Third Avenue and West Vine Street for “containment”.

Also responding are sheriff’s Sgt. Pat Smith and Deputy Kevin Anderson.

Officer Shields observes holes in the hood of the truck and five holes in the front door that appear to be caused by a knife. Three of the punctures went through the door.

Shields informs the other responding officers that Petersen is possibly armed with a large knife.

Shields, in checking the property, gets to the back door and then hears four to five gunshots.

Blocks away and moments earlier, McKnight had seen something in his rearview mirror, a couple blocks from him. He sees something again he concludes is a person near Second and Vine. He turns around and pulls his patrol vehicle to the intersection

McKnight uses his spotlight and stops on one side of the intersection, while the person later identified as Petersen is on the other side.

McKnight exits his patrol vehicle, keeping his distance, and makes contact with Petersen.

McKnight identifies himself and tells Petersen he needs to see his hands.

Petersen paces back and forth, ignoring McKnight, who then draws his weapon.

McKnight tells Petersen he just needs to talk and continues to give him verbal commands..

After being given a verbal command, Petersen told McKnight, “It ain’t gonna happen buddy.”

Petersen’s body posture changes, his shoulders come forward and he begins to advance on McKnight.

McKnight still could not see his hands.

McKnight feared for his safety, and fired his weapon.

After hearing the shots, Shields runs from the Mecca’s house toward the scene. Anderson and Smith arrive.

At 2:14 a.m., Lewis County Fire District 5 is told by a 911 dispatcher to respond.
•••

Read Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer’s findings on Deputy Matt McKnight’s officer-involved shooting from June 20, 2011, here

Read “Breaking news: Deputy shoots, kills burglary suspect in Napavine” from Monday June 20, 2011, here

Read about Green Hill School counselor of sex offenders arrested for alleged voyeurism …

July 2nd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Olympian reports a Green Hill School counselor was arrested after he allegedly used his cell phone to take a photo underneath a woman’s dress in a parking lot in Tumwater.

Read news reporter Jeremy Pawloski’s story here

News brief: Procession of emergency vehicles to honor Chief Hadaller

July 1st, 2011
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Lewis County Fire District 3 Chief Matt Hadaller. / Courtesy photo by Taryn Houghtelling

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A procession of fire trucks and law enforcement vehicles will travel east on U.S. Highway 12 tomorrow to the Mossyrock High School football stadium to attend the memorial service for Matthew M. Hadaller III, the fire chief who died unexpectedly on Monday night.

Hadaller, 47, was a member of his community’s fire department for 20 years, and spent the last seven and half years as chief.

He was at home late Monday night when he suffered what the coroner called a major cardiac event, caused by what is sometimes called arteriosclerosis, a narrowing of the arteries.

The technical term is arteriosclerotic coronary artery disease, according to Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod.

“My impression is he didn’t know he had it,” McLeod said today.

Volunteer members of his Lewis County Fire District 3 took him by ambulance to Morton General Hospital, but he suffered a cardiac arrest on the way and couldn’t be revived, Lewis County Fire District 13’s Chief Gregg Peterson said earlier this week.

The memorial service is set for 1 p.m.

The procession is set to depart about 12:15 p.m. from Avery Road at Highway 603. Motorists should expect delays in the area along Avery Road and U.S. Highway 12 until about 1 p.m., according to the area fire chiefs who are organizing the events.

The chiefs note that anyone wishing to make a donation to Hadaller’s family can do so at any branch of Twin Star Credit Union, mentioning the Chief Hadaller Fund.

Grand Mound: Training for nighttime fire calls

July 1st, 2011
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Vacant home on Carper Road Southwest, Grand Mound

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Firefighter prepares

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Members of the Rochester-area fire department were joined by other agencies yesterday as they used fire to clear some property belonging to the Rochester School District.

The live fire training exercise was to include a chance yesterday for about 30 firefighters to learn more about fire behavior, smoke conditions and nighttime operations.

West Thurston Regional Fire Authority Chief Robert Scott described the opportunity as very valuable to the department.

Personnel have been training in the structure for the past four months, on topics such as ventilation, search and rescue, fire attack, firefighter “may day” procedures and more, according to Scott.

“For us to receive this type of training for as many personnel that have participated would have cost thousands of dollars and required extensive travel in some cases – our only location for live fire training is 100 miles away at the State Fire Training Academy in North Bend,” Scott stated.

They let the fire take over the vacant house on Carper Road Southwest at about 8:30 p.m. and finished up about two hours later, according to Scott.

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Three firefighters practice their skills Thursday at a donated house next to Rochester High School.

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Personnel near the end of a live fire training exercise last night in Grand Mound.

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West Thurston Regional Fire Authority lets the fire take over.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

June 30th, 2011

THEFT

• Centralia police were called just before 7 o’clock this morning about the theft of a car trailer from the 3600 block of Galvin Road.

• Centralia police were called to a car prowl about 6:40 a.m. yesterday at the 2500 block of Kristine Court. Someone had broke a window to get inside and steal an iPod, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Somebody broke into a residence on the 1100 block of Alder Street in Centralia and took knives, tobacco and money, according to a report made to Centralia police on Tuesday.

• Somebody removed a lock and stole money from a newspaper box outside a restaurant on the 3200 block of Galvin Road in Centralia, according to a report made to the Centralia Police Department on Tuesday.

• Somebody cut the fuel lines to three vans belonging to the Adna School District sometime between June 20 and Tuesday, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday. Gasoline was stolen as well.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called just before 4 a.m. yesterday to the 800 block of Ham Hill Road where someone had thrown a flower pot through the window of a home.

• Somebody shot out several windows of a vehicle, flattened it tires and spray painted all over it with black paint on the 1800 block of North Pearl Street in Centralia. it was reported about 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Just hours earlier in the same area, the rear window of another vehicle was found shot out. Police say a BB gun may have been used. Police Sgt. Kurt Reichert said it didn’t appear random, it seemed like “somebody was mad at somebody.”

SURLY MAN GETS JAILED

• A 54-year-old man was arrested yesterday after deputies went to a trespass and civil dispute on the 3700 block of Jackson Highway outside Chehalis. He was asked to stop moving items off the property so deputies could question him, but he argued and yelled and said he didn’t have to listen to cops, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Bruce W. Norris “pushed through” a sergeant, and came at a deputy, refusing to back away when he was told to do so, Chief Civl Deputy Stacy Brown said this morning. Norris was booked into the Lewis County Jail for obstruction, Brown said.

COLLISIONS

• Chehalis police were called about 4:20 p.m. yesterday after someone watched a truck from Darigold brake one of the arms at the railroad crossing on West Main Street and keep driving. Chehalis police detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said it happens “all the time” because the trucks are long and slow and the drivers usually call in and tell Burlington Northern what happened. Technically it’s a hit and run but whenever police contact Burlington Northern, they say they’ve already spoke with Darigold and will be out to repair it, McNamara said.

• A deputy was called  to the 400 block of Toledo-Vader Road on Tuesday where a Lewis County Public Works truck hailing a chip trailer struck a guard rail damaging the trailer, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• A deputy was called after a car carrying four people attending a festival was totaled in a single-vehicle accident on Forest Road 25 outside Randle on Tuesday morning. The occupants, ages 19 through 26 – from San Francisco, California; Richmond, Virginia; Fort Lauderdale Florida and Cooper City, Florida were mostly uninjured, except one suffered minor cuts to their hand and arm, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday. The driver had lost control in a curve. He was ticketed, Chief Civl Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Onalaska fatal shooting: Brady faces sentencing next week

June 30th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Onalaska resident Ronald A. Brady will be sentenced on Wednesday morning following his conviction last week for fatally shooting a suspected burglar.

Brady, 60, argued self defense in his trial last week in Lewis County Superior Court. He avoided a first-degree murder conviction, but a jury of six men and six women found him guilty of second-degree manslaughter.

Judge Nelson Hunt did not order him into custody after the verdict on Friday evening, but had him return today to the courtroom in Chehalis to learn his sentencing date. He told Brady it would happen very soon after today.

Hunt this morning said sentencing should be next week.

Defense attorney Don Blair asked the judge if it could be held off until the end of July, as his client had his affairs to get in order before he goes to prison.

“We can do it on the sixth, or he can go into custody now,” Hunt said. “It was a big break for him not to go into custody that day.”

While the crime has a standard sentencing range of between 21 and 27 months, Brady faces an additional  mandatory minimum of three years – with no possibility of reduction for any “good” time – because it was committed with a firearm.

Brady admitted firing five or six shots with a .22 caliber rifle, three of them toward 56-year-old Thomas McKenzie of Morton who was outside the house Brady owns and died at the scene.

The retired bachelor was acquitted of assault in the case of McKenzie’s wife, Joanna McKenzie who testified she that while she took cover behind a truck in the driveway, she heard the glass in its windshield shot out and felt “air or something” graze her face.

Hunt will sentence him at 10 a.m. on Wednesday.
•••

Read “Breaking news: Onalaska murder trial: Guilty of second-degree manslaughter” from Friday June 24, 2011, here