Posts Tagged ‘By Sharyn L. Decker’

Onalaska shooting: Charges upped from manslaughter to first-degree murder

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Charges have been increased to first-degree murder for the man who opened fire on two suspected burglars at his Onalaska house last April killing one of them.

2010.1012.mug.ronald.brady_2

Ronald A. Brady

Ronald A. Brady, 60, was initially charged with first-degree manslaughter for the death of Thomas McKenzie, 56, of Morton and first-degree assault of McKenzie’s estranged wife Joanna McKenzie, but an amended information has been filed in Lewis County Superior Court.

“Just based on the facts of the case,” Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes said today of the thinking behind the change.

According to charging documents, Brady admitted shooting at the pair outside his house he was renovating on the 2100 block of state Route 508, describing to deputies opening his garage door and finding two flashlights shined in his face.

He told sheriff’s detectives he was staying overnight at the unoccupied house in case burglars from earlier in the day returned. Brady resides in a nearby rental home.

Elected Lewis County Prosecutor Michael Golden wasn’t in today, but Senior Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher described the reason for the the upgraded charge this way:

“This guy laid in wait, based on what the deputies said, he throws the garage door open and, bam,” Meagher said.

The change brings to six the number of homicides this year in Lewis County which have brought first-degree murder charges. No one has been charged in a seventh homicide that occurred earlier this year.

While McKenzie’s death occurred April 19, Brady was not charged until almost the end of September.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield, after his office’s investigation was finished in mid-July, announced he concluded Brady’s use of deadly force was justified and that he would not arrest the homeowner. The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office, however, passed the case on to the prosecutor for his review.

Brady remains free on a $50,000 unsecured appearance bond.

First-degree murder is a class A felony with a possible penalty of life in prison and a $50,000 fine. Its elements include intent and premeditation.

The amended charge was filed last Thursday.

Brady, a retired bachelor who used to work as an electrical engineer at The Boeing Co. according to his landlord, is represented by Centralia defense attorney Don Blair.

He’s been renting from neighbors Jack and Sharon Tipping for about 15 years, following a fire at his nearby state Route 508 house.

A trial date was set for the week of Jan. 10. It is expected to last five days.

Brady’s defense is general denial and self defense, according to documents filed in his case.

Thomas McKenzie died from a gunshot wound to his chest and leaves behind nine children and other family members.

Joanna McKenzie, 32, escaped the gunfire on April 19 without injury, but she was charged with and made a so-called Alford plea to attempted burglary, not admitting guilt.

As a first-time offender, she was sentenced last month to 15 days in Lewis County Jail.

However, she was jailed last night after police say they found methamphetamine and stolen property from a shoplifting spree during a traffic stop in Centralia.

She hasn’t yet served her 15 days, according to Deputy Prosecutor Kjell Warner. She was charged today with possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

Joanna McKenzie’s bail was set at $20,000 today.
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Other homicides in Lewis County in 2010

Morton teenager: Austin King, 16, of Morton, was found on a logging dead with a cracked skull on July 20 a month after he disappeared from his home. An acquaintance, Jack Arnold Silverthorne, 20, of Renton, was charged Nov. 10 with first-degree murder.

Frost Road Trailer Park: Jackie Marie Lawyer, 64, of Winlock, was fatally shot the morning of Nov. 4 in the Frost Road Trailer Park where she lived. A neighbor Richard Joseph Frank Roth, 65, was arrested the same day and charged Nov. 5 with first-degree murder.

Salkum-Onalaska triple slaying: David J. West Sr. 52, his son David J. West Jr., 16, and Tony E. Williams, 50, of Randle, were fatally shot at the West’s home on Aug. 21. Two men are charged in the case, that included a fourth gunshot victim who survived. John Allen Booth Jr., 31, Onalaska, was charged Aug 23 with three counts of first-degree murder but the charges were upgraded on Oct. 1 to aggravated first-degree murder for the deaths of the younger West and Williams. Ryan McCarthy, 29 of Redmond, was charged Sept 3 with three counts of first-degree felony murder.

Randle homicide: Guy LaFontaine, 58, of Federal Way, died from injuries following an assault the evening of March 13 at the 11,000 block of U.S. Highway 12 in Randle. A relative was initially arrested and booked for second-degree murder, but was released and no charges have been filed.
•••

Read previous story on Ronald Brady for more details of what prosecutor’s believe occurred:

• “Onalaska man charged in April’s fatal shooting of suspected burglar” from Sept. 24, 2010 here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

FELONY HARASSMENT

• A 32-year-old Toledo man was arrested after he reportedly jumped onto his ex-girlfriend’s vehicle, pounded on it with his fists and made threats of violence and bodily harm yesterday. A deputy called about 11:20 a.m. to the 400 block of Collins Road was told Martin J. Cossin Jr. had pulled in front of the vehicle and slammed on his brakes before attacking her vehicle, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Cossin was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony harassment, domestic violence, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

FELONY ASSAULT

• Centralia police took a report of a second-degree assault from the 2300 block of Sirkka Avenue at about noon on Friday. Police reported an individual lost two teeth and a cousin was being sought.

DRUGS AT MIDDLE SCHOOL

• Police were called to Chehalis Middle School about noon on Friday and arrested three students for possession of marijuana. Further details were not available this morning.

THEFTS

• Chehalis police were called to the community development building on the 1300 block of South Market Boulevard on Friday morning where money was missing from an unlocked safe. The amount was not disclosed.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday evening from the 300 block of North Oak Street where somebody entered through an unlocked door and took a jewelry case.

• Deputies called about 7 a.m. Sunday morning to a vacant home on the 800 block of Coal Creek Road in Chehalis about a suspicious vehicle located two individuals and arrested one of them, Nicole M. Thor, 23, of Fife, for a warrant. After a toolbox was discovered missing from the nearby barn deputies decided to refer for arrest for second-degree burglary Thor and her companion, Byron K. Sedrick, 31, of Centralia, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• Deputies are looking for a an approximately 6-foot tall male who was seen running from the side door of a home in Packwood on Friday afternoon. A door jamb and window were broken. The victim, on the 100 block of Tatoosh Trail Road, said his son saw the man after getting off the school bus around 3:15 p.m. and subsequently, three checkbooks, a $20 bill and $6 in quarters were discovered missing, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The subject was wearing a green hoodie sweatshirt along with blue and white shorts.

• Chehalis police were called Saturday night and told somebody removed the lug nuts from the tire of a Jeep and they believed it occurred at the movie theater at the Lewis County Mall.

• Chehalis police were called to Safeway on South Market Boulevard on Friday afternoon to a report somebody stole a woman’s purse from her cart while she was loading groceries into her car.

• Approximately $80 of fuel was siphoned from a vehicle on the 200 block of West Oakview Avenue in Centralia, according to a report made to police on Thursday.

VANDALISM

• Somebody broke two vehicle’s windows out during the night at the 300 block of North Gold Street, according to a report made to Centralia police just before midnight on Saturday.

• Somebody broke the window out of a parked vehicle on East Main and Diamond streets, according to a report made to Centralia police about 4:35 p.m. on Friday.

News brief: Roads are icy, more snow is expected today

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Northbound Interstate 5 near Maytown was the scene of three different two-vehicle accidents due to ice beginning about 3:30 this morning.

There were no injuries, according to Battalion Chief Jacob Yake of West Thurston Regional Fire Authority.

A winter storm warning issued this morning predicts heavy snow today affecting areas around Chehalis and Olympia and continuing into the evening.

Accumulations of 2 inches to 5 inches are expected, according to the National Weather Service.

The weather service expects:

Northerly winds of 15 to 25 mph will develop tonight in the Southwest Interior bringing overnight temperatures down into the mid-teens.

Today’s high in Chehalis is expected to reach only 32 degrees.

In Morton, the high is forecast at 26 degrees.

Seven to 12 inches of new snow are expected in the Morton area, with the higher amounts over the the Central Cascade Mountains.

Washington State Patrol Sgt. Jason Ashley said this morning while there is snow and ice on the roads in East Lewis County, motorist have been driving carefully and slowly and as of 9:30 a.m. troopers had encountered no problems.
•••

Read the winter storm warning here

Check the National Weather Service’s Forecast Office here for the forecast in your area

Note: a link for the weather forecast website can also always be found on the right-hand sidebar of Lewis County Sirens’ homepage. It’s labeled “Weather forecasts”

News brief: Joanna McKenzie arrested for drugs in Centralia

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Joanna D. McKenzie was jailed overnight after police say they found methamphetamine and stolen property from a shoplifting spree during a traffic stop in Centralia last night.

The 32-year-old Morton woman was sentenced last month for attempted burglary in connection with the night in April when an Onalaska property owner opened fire on her and her husband after he discovered them outside his house.

McKenzie escaped uninjured but her husband Thomas McKenzie, 56, was fatally shot.

Police contacted Joanna McKenzie and Patricia R. Smathers, 33, also of Morton, about 11:20 p.m. last night on the 1000 block of Harrison Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

The woman were allegedly in possession of stolen property from the Olympia area and drugs. They were arrested for possession of methamphetamine and booked into the Lewis County Jail about 2 a.m. today.

Centralia police are continuing to investigate and will be working with other agencies to return the stolen goods, police reported this morning.

A trial date is set for early next year for Ronald A. Brady, the Onalaska man charged in the death of Thomas McKenzie and assault of Joanna McKenzie.
•••

Read recent story about Ronald Brady here
Read  recent story about Joanna McKenzie here

News brief: Snow forecast for south of Olympia

Saturday, November 20th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Expect winter driving conditions on Monday.

Snow is expected in places it hasn’t already hit, according to the National Weather Service.

A special weather statement issued today for Western Washington, including the Southwest interior and the west slopes of the central Cascade Mountains says another colder surge of Canadian air is expected Monday and Tuesday.

The forecast now is for one to three inches of snow to fall on Monday south of Olympia, according to the weather service.
•••

Read the special weather statement here

Check the National Weather Service’s Forecast Office in Seattle here for the forecast in your area.

Note: a link for the weather forecast website can also always be found on the right-hand sidebar of Lewis County Sirens’ homepage. It’s labeled “Weather forecasts”

Man’s arrest for illegal firearms sales follows undercover operation at Centralia gun show

Saturday, November 20th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 68-year-old Olympia man was arrested yesterday for illegal gun sales following an investigation that began with an undercover federal agent purchasing a revolver from him at a gun show in Centralia.

David Devenny, who sometimes called himself “Handlebar Dave”, was arrested after selling firearms to a convicted felon and a second person knowing they were prohibited from possessing firearms, according to the U.S. Attorney’ Office.

Between October 2009 and this week, informants and undercover agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives have bought approximately 10 firearms from Devenny at various gun shows in the Western Washington and at his residence, according to the complaint filed in U.S. District Court.

Prosecutors allege in the 12-page document he bought and sold at shows without keeping records and in a manner that did not comport with the requirements for private collection sales.

Devenny allegedly sold a gun at a Puyallup gun show that was used a week later to kill Seattle Police Officer Timothy Brenton on Halloween 2009. He reportedly commented to the undercover agent, he didn’t know who he sold it to because he did not keep records.

The special agent in charge of the ATF Seattle field office called the alleged offenses thoughtless acts that needlessly jeopardize innocent lives in a news release yesterday.

“We stand at the front line against violence, and are wholeheartedly committed to pursuing those individuals who would disregard existing federal firearms laws and selfishly feed the illegal supply of guns that impact out streets and communities,” Special Agent in Charge Kelvin Crenshaw said in a written statement.

Devenny is not charged in connection with the sale of the gun that killed Brenton and is not charged with failing to obtain a federal firearms dealer license.

He is charged with two counts of sale of a firearm to a prohibited person.

In the first count, he allegedly sold a Glock .40 caliber pistol and a Norinko SKS rifle knowing and having reasonable cause to believe the buyer was subject to a court order restraining him from harassing, stalking and threatening an intimate partner.

In the second count, he allegedly sold a Wilkerson 9 mm pistol to a person knowing and having reasonable cause to believe the buyer had been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.

Both the felon and the person with the domestic violence conviction were working with law enforcement at the time of the purchases in February and November of this year, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. The sales were made at Devenny’s residence on the 9600 block of Highway 99 Southeast in Olympia.

ATF agents seized 42 guns and $32,000 cash when Devenny was arrested. Devenny was scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court in Tacoma yesterday afternoon.

According to the complaint, Devenny first came to the attention of law enforcement in May 2009 while officers reviewed gun sales activities at gun shows throughout Western Washington.

The forms from Devenny’s purchases from federal firearms licensed dealers showed he purchased 16 handguns in a five month period last year. Prosecutors allege the guns were then sold in private sales with no further records or background checks.

On October 17, 2009, ATF agents began an undercover operation at a gun show at the Southwest Washington Fairgrounds in Centralia.

The complaint alleges the following about Devenny:

An undercover agent approached Devenny’s display of about 15 handguns and eight long guns for sale. During the conversation, Devenny explained he had been buying and selling guns for about seven years and made “decent money” doing it.

The agent bought a Taurus .44 caliber revolver for $395. Devenny asked if the agent was a Washington resident, but did not ask to see identification.

In January of this year, the agent visited Devenny at his home, making two more purchases. The agent told Devenny about a friend who wanted to buy a gun, but couldn’t since he had a fight with his wife and indicated the friend had a domestic violence conviction.

When the agent asked if he could bring the friend by, Devenny allegedly responded with “What I don’t know, I don’t care about. Uh, I don’t want somebody coming down here on their own.” and “It’s don’t ask, don’t tell. If I don’t know, then there’s nothing wrong with it.”

On February 5, the “friend” bought two guns from Devenny and the undercover agent bought one more.

When they left, Devenny reminded the “friend” “If it comes along that someone catches you and raises hell with you, you don’t know where those came from, just keep that in mind.”

On Monday, an undercover agent brought a “buddy” he had told Devenny had problems with the law to Devenny’s residence, after Devenny allegedly told him, “Bring a lot of money and get my attention.”

They bought more firearms after the agent reminded the “buddy” he didn’t have a lot of a lot of places he could buy guns, and added, “It’s not like you can go to a gun store and do this legally.” Devenny reportedly then stated, “Then you don’t know where they came from.”

Devenny told the agent he was going out of business, as he was burned out a little.

He said his last gun show was in Centralia a couple months ago.

Six teens face felonies after Boistfort confrontation

Friday, November 19th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Three Chehalis teenagers are expected to be charged today, as were three others yesterday, with felonies in connection with a confrontation earlier this week that apparently began with concerns rumors were being spread a teen has herpes.

The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office alleges two car loads of young people showed up a the Boistfort area home of an 18-year-old male threatening to beat him up on Tuesday, even kicking in his front door while his mother was at home.

The 18-year-old, Dallas Wilkins, got them to leave by firing several shots with a rifle into the back window of their car, according to charging documents.

The suspects range in age from 14 to 19. Three of them are under 18 and expected today to face similar charges to the adult suspects, including felony harassment.

All denied the account of events given by Wilkins.

Cody J. Snider, 19; Christopher B. Arkell, 19; and Megan M. Striefel, 18, appeared in Lewis County Superior Court yesterday. Each has been bailed out of jail already.

Two 17-year-old males and a 14-year-old female are being dealt with in Lewis County Juvenile Court.

Charging documents for the adults give the following account of what the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office believes occurred:

Wilkins had been getting threatening text messages, and on Tuesday, received messages from Snider he was going to come and fight him and hurt him physically. Deputies found messages on Wilkins phone of a similar nature from three of the others.

Snider told a deputy Wilkins had spread rumors he had herpes.

Two cars with the group showed up at Wilkins’ home on Pe Ell McDonald Road and when Wilkins didn’t answer a knock from the 14-year-old girl to see if he would come outside, they drove onto the the front lawn and parked.

Arkell and two 17-year-old boys went to the front door and yelled at Wilkins to come out and fight while Snider and Striefel sat in their car with the door open jeering and yelling.

A seventh individual, a 17-year-old boy, was with them, but deputies concluded he had no involvement.

Wilkins told them to leave and closed the door, but when he opened it again as far as the locked chain allowed, Arkell kicked it open and the three continued to call Wilkins out.

Wilkins grabbed his rifle from beside the door, fired shots in the air and threatened to shoot out the windows of one of the cars. When they didn’t leave, he fired into the vehicle. They left.

Deputies, called about 1:15 p.m., stopped a silver Hyundai on Highway 6 near Chehalis, driven by Arkell and carrying four other teenagers. A blue Honda pulled up, driven by a 17-year-old, with six bullet holes in the back window.

Six of the seven were arrested after deputies conducted interviews.

The charges are: harassment – threat to kill, trespass, and first-degree burglary.

When Snider went before Lewis County Superior Court Judge James Lawler yesterday afternoon, he pleaded not guilty.

Arkell and Striefel are scheduled to make their pleas next Wednesday.

Deputy Prosecutor Shane O’Rourke, who is handling all six suspects, said he expected to charge the juveniles today.