Onalaska murder trial: Defendant says he doesn’t know why he fired his gun

June 23rd, 2011
2011.0622.brady.standing

Ronald Brady stands next to a diagram of his house and its driveway.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Ronald Brady spoke to a detective soon after he fired as many as six shots – one fatal – at a pair of suspected burglars outside his Onalaska house.

Lewis County Sheriff’s Office detective Bruce Kimsey: “What, why did you feel you had to shoot at these people?”

Brady: “I have no idea … I’d already shot at their front tires, and they were still pointing their flashlights at me.”

Brady, 60, is on trial for first-degree murder in the death of Thomas McKenzie of Morton and first-degree assault regarding McKenzie’s wife, Joanna McKenzie, on the night of April 19, 2010.

The retired bachelor called 911 himself, telling deputies he stayed overnight at his under-construction house on the 2100 block of state Route 508, because he thought someone had broken into the garage earlier and had arranged items for later retrieval, according to evidence heard in the trial this week in Lewis County Superior Court.

Deputies found fifty-six year-old Thomas McKenzie dead on the ground outside the house.

The father of nine died of a gunshot that passed through his chest, and through the pulmonary artery that goes to the lung, pathologist, Dr. Gina Fino told the jury yesterday.

Detectives recovered a Remington .22 caliber rifle and four spent casings, according to witness testimony.

Brady hasn’t testified; his words were heard in a taped statement played yesterday for the jury of six men and six women.

In the statement, Brady tells Kimsey it was about 9 p.m. when he got up to stretch his legs; he saw a light shining underneath the garage door, from a vehicle that arrived. The lights went out, he said.

“I decided, I got my .22 with me, so I would just wait and see what happened here,” Brady told Kimsey.

He said he heard a loud knocking on the door, but nobody called out to him to say anything.

“I thought, oh, I’m gonna open the garage door and shoot out the tires,” Brady said.

Brady described he was positioned “pretty much” in the garage, shooting from the hip and crouching.

He thought he fired two or three times at the truck’s tires and may have put one or two rounds through the windshield of the truck that was in his driveway, he said.

One person (later determined to be Thomas McKenzie with a flashlight) was to his left near the garage and the other at the back end of the truck, he said.

Kimsey: “The man is moving in the direction of where the woman is?”

“Brady: “Yeah”

Brady: “I think I shot a total of three in his direction”

Brady: “I might have shot once again at the windshield of the pickup. I might have shot at the cab of the pickup, or I might have shot at the tires.”

Brady told Kimsey he wasn’t taking any chances, they might be high on meth.

Kimsey: “Did you say anything to them this entire time?”

Brady: “No”

He put the rifle down and called 911.

The trial resumes this morning.
•••

Read about the opening day of the trial here

News brief: “Big” drug dealers in court tomorrow

June 22nd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Denise R. Salts is expected in Lewis County Superior Court tomorrow to make her plea on a charge of delivery of methamphetamine.

Salts, 52, and a Morton woman were labeled two of the main narcotics distributors in East Lewis County after they were arrested when sheriff’s deputies and their SWAT team served a search warrant last Thursday.

When she went before a judge the next day, her attorney said she only one previous interaction with “the system”; Salts was a successful graduate of drug a number of years ago, defense attorney Bob Schroeter said.

Salts is the same woman who was shot in the face when her boyfriend and two others were slain last August inside a Salkum-Onalaska area home.

She and  Venus D. Hamilton, 47, of Morton, were both charged with the same offense and both released on $5,000 bail on Friday.

The arrests followed undercover drug buys earlier this month, according to charging documents.

An informant was given $40 to purchase two “quarters” and allegedly bought them from Hamilton near Riffe Lake, according to charging documents.

The same day, an informant was given a $20 bill to buy methamphetamine from Salts.

The informant went to the Glenoma home where Salts lives and was “surveilled” as they went inside, according to charging documents.

Afterward, the informant said told the detective they asked the man who also lives there if they could purchase “a twenty” and he replied, “You know how it works”, according to the documents.

The man turned to Salts, inquired if they had “a twenty”, and left the room while Salts handed over a small baggie of a substance that field-tested positive for meth, the documents allege.

Salts survived the August 21 shootings that left her live-in boyfriend David J. West Sr, his 16-year-old son and a friend from Mineral dead in a house off Gore Road.

John Allen Booth Jr. is charged with her attempted murder, murder, attempted extortion and unlawful possession of a firearm. His trial is scheduled for the end of August. His former cell mate Ryan J. McCarthy, 29, is also charged in the case.

Salts’s arraignment is scheduled for tomorrow morning. Hamilton’s is set in the afternoon.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

June 22nd, 2011

STRANGE COMMENT CONCERNS KID, PARENTS

• Centralia police were called about 12:40 p.m. yesterday after an 8-year-old girl said a pair of older males approached her and said something to effect of “come to our house, we’ve got some great toys”. It happened near the child’s residence and her parent called 911, according to Sgt. Kurt Reichert. Officers checked the area, around the 1400 block of Delware Avenue, and conducted a K-9 track but didn’t find potential suspects, Reichert said. They will be following up further, he said.

THEFT

• A pistol was stolen from a home on the 1300 block of West Main Street in Centralia, according to a report made to the Centralia Police Department yesterday.

• Police were called yesterday morning to a burglary on the 1400 block of Oxford Avenue in Centralia. Missing were an Xbox and a computer, according to police.

• Somebody went through a bedroom window of a residence on the 100 block of West First Street in Centralia and stole unspecified medications, according to a report made yesterday to the Centralia Police Department.

Breaking news: Napavine man fatally shot in head; name released

June 22nd, 2011

This news story was updated at 7:39 p.m. on Wednesday June 22, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The coroner’s office said today the man shot by a sheriff’s deputy early Monday is 33-year-old Steven V. Petersen, of Napavine.

Petersen died of a penetrating gunshot wound to the head, according to the Lewis County Coroner’s Office.

Petersen was shot during a confrontation with Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Matt McKnight in Napavine. The sheriff’s office says Petersen refused to take his hands out of his pockets and then charged McKnight.

Deputies had responded around 2 o’clock in the morning on Monday to assist Napavine police with a call about an individual with a knife trying to break into an occupied home.

The Lewis County Coroner’s Office today said they positively identified the dead man through fingerprints. Chief Deputy Coroner Dawn Harris said they did it that way because his next-of-kin, his father, lives out of state; in Missouri, she said.

Petersen’s wife just died a few weeks ago, Harris said.

His autopsy was completed yesterday.

The coroner’s office would not reveal the number of gunshot wounds they found.

The manner of death is homicide, meaning the killing of one human being by another, according to the coroner’s office. Whether it is found to be justifiable something for other agencies to decide, Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod said.

A team of outside law enforcement officers is investigating the shooting. McKnight, 27, remains on administrative leave.

•••

Read Monday’s news story here

Onalaska murder trial: Prosecutor: Home owner said he “planned to shoot” burglars

June 22nd, 2011
010.0621.brady.orourke_2

Deputy Prosecutor Shane O'Rourke addresses jurors as Ronald Brady's murder trial begins in Lewis County Superior Court

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Prosecutors told jurors yesterday that murder defendant Ronald Brady believed burglars would return to his Onalaska house the night of April 19, 2010 and told his neighbor if they did come back, he planned to shoot them.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Shane O’Rourke told the jury in opening statements it was not a case of self defense; that nobody came through Brady’s garage, broke down a door or crawled through a window.

“Lying in wait in almost total darkness, waiting to trap and kill whoever showed up at his residence that night,” O’Rourke said in his opening statements yesterday morning. “The defendant shot and killed Thomas McKenzie and almost did the same to Joanna McKenzie.”

011.0621.ronald.brady

Ronald Brady

Brady, 60, a retired bachelor, is on trial in Lewis County Superior Court for first-degree murder and first-degree assault.

Fifty-six-year-old Thomas McKenzie of Morton died outside the house Brady owns on the the 2100 block of state Route 508 with a gunshot through his chest.

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield didn’t arrest Brady, announcing he believed the shooting was justified. His office arrested Joanna McKenzie, wife of Thomas McKenzie, for burglary in connection with their visit to the property that night.

But last autumn, prosecutors filed manslaughter charges against Brady and then upgraded them to murder soon thereafter.

A jury of six men and six women heard from attorneys from both sides yesterday morning and then a handful of witnesses for the prosecution before adjourning at 5 p.m.

Defense attorney Don Blair followed O’Rourke yesterday morning with nearly 30 minutes of an entirely different view of what happened that night.

“A number of things the prosecutor just outlined for you are not true, and, he didn’t tell you the whole story,” Blair said.

Brady, a former computer analyst, was described as beginning that day by doing chores like chopping wood and then leaving to play bridge at a  local church.

He returned in the late afternoon and found not that he may have been burglarized, but he found evidence he had been burglarized, Blair said. And it had happened some five occasions prior, Blair told the jury.

Brady has owned the property for years, but after a fire there, moved into the house next-door, and goes to the property regularly, according to Blair.

A deputy came and took a report and Brady did go home and get his shotgun, but the .22 rifle was already at the house, Blair said.

The Centralia defense attorney went on to say:

It was around 10 p.m. and pitch black out.

“So the burglars returned. They shut their lights out and get their flashlights out,” he said.

His client didn’t know who it was and he didn’t know what their intentions were, Blair said.

“What the prosecutor left out is when Ron opened the garage door, the first thing he did, he wanted to shoot out the tires,” Blair said. “He didn’t want the burglars to get away. It wasn’t he wanted to kill someone.”

Brady just saw two lights shining in his face; he feared for his life, Blair said. It’s not clear how many shots he fired, according to Blair.

“I would say it’s a tragedy Tom died and Ron does feel bad about that,” Blair said. “But looking back, I can’t tell you Ron would do it different today”

Joanna McKenzie took the stand at mid-day, answering questions from Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes and Blair.

2011.0621.brady.joanna_2

Joanna McKenzie

Under questioning, the 33-year-old Morton woman said she and husband pulled into the driveway with their headlights turned off and her husband went to knock on the front door.

He returned to the truck, she got out, she said. They both started knocking on the garage door then she went back to the truck and Thomas McKenzie went to the side of the house, she testified.

“A noise, the garage door, got my attention, and then a guy started firing,” she said.

Joanna McKenzie said she heard her husband yell he was shot and saw a person kneeling in the garage.

Nothing was said by the shooter, but “I was screaming something along the lines of ‘stop, what are you doing’,” she testified.

Joanna McKenzie testified that when she took cover behind their truck, she heard the glass in its windshield shot out.

“I believe I was standing at the time, I felt air or something graze my face,” she said.

She said she ran to the road, flagged a vehicle down and called 911.

Not discussed yesterday in any detail was the fact that Joanna McKenzie was convicted last October for attempted burglary from that night. She made a so-called Alford plea, not admitting guilt

The trial resumes this morning and is expected to last all week.

Prosecutors did not say when the neighbor would testify about his or her conversation with Brady.

2011.0621.brady.blair_2

Defense attorney Don Blair makes opening statements in Ronald Brady's murder trial in Lewis County Superior Court.

2011.0619.son.mckenzie.trim_2

Robert McKenzie, 14, spreads some of his father's ashes on Sunday in a rose garden at the church he attends where he lives in Wichita, Kansas. / Courtesy photo by Larry Lane

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

June 21st, 2011

THEFT

• Centralia police were called yesterday to the 300 block of Rose Street about a  vehicle prowl in which a side window was broken out. It happened between 3 a.m. and 8:30 a.m., according to the Centralia Police Department. Among the missing items were a red, gray and yellow Craftsman tool box and tools, many of which have the initials “HC” or “HRC” engraved on them, according to police.

• Chehalis police were called yesterday morning about a theft of fishing gear and power tools from a vehicle which had been parked at a business on the 1000 block of Northwest State Street since last Wednesday.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday of a counterfeit money order a woman asked a woman friend to cash at a bank on the 100 block of South Pearl Street. Sgt. Kurt Reichert said it’s not clear who the suspect is and he believed the amount was less than $1,000.

• Chehalis police were called to Starbucks on the 1500 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue after they discovered they had received a a counterfeit $50 bill. Detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said officers would have taken the bad bill and will send it to the U.S. Secret Service.

• Lewis County Crime Stoppers is looking for information about an incident in Morton in which several storage units were burglarized and ransacked. It was discovered on May 20 at the business on the 700 block of Airport Way. Crime Stoppers pays for information leading to the clearance of crimes and takes tips anonymously at 1-800-748-6422 or online at www.lewsicountycrimestoppers.org

News brief: Deputy who shot Napavine man is four-year-employee of LCSO

June 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said this morning the deputy involved in yesterday’s early morning fatal shooting of a Napavine man is Deputy Matt McKnight, a four-plus year employee of the sheriff’s office.

McKnight, 27, remains on administrative leave as is standard protocol for deputies involved in shootings, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said in a news release.

The sheriff’s office says the 33-year-old Napavine man refused to take his hands out of his pockets and then charged McKnight around 2 a.m. when deputies responded to assist with a call about an individual who left stab holes in the door of a Napavine home trying to get inside.

An autopsy was set for today on the deceased, whose name is expected to be released later by the Lewis County Coroner’s Office.