Jail time for adult who bought alcohol for deadly teen party

May 12th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Onalaska man who allowed a teenage drinking party at his home after which a 15-year-old boy died from alcohol poisoning was sentenced yesterday to nine months in jail.

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Nickolas Barnes

James W. Taylor, 30, was taken into custody following the proceedings yesterday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court.

Taylor was initially charged with second-degree manslaughter but pleaded guilty in February to lesser charges including furnishing liquor to minors and failing to summon assistance.

Judge Nelson Hunt said the outcome might serve as a caution to adults who facilitate binge drinking.

The sentencing ends a case that began when high school sophomore Nickolas Barnes passed out in Taylor’s front yard, following a drinking game in which he and another teenage boy reportedly downed more than 11 shots of vodka.

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James W. Taylor

Prosecutors alleged Taylor told the teenagers to “let him sleep it off.”

Nickolas was found not breathing an hour or two later; his friends had removed his clothes and written on his body with a black marker.

Taylor and another man took him to a hospital, but Nickolas died two days later, on Sept. 21, 2009. His blood alcohol level was .32.

Nickolas’s grandmother Susan Patterson spoke for his family when she addressed Taylor, a father of several children.

“It’s been one year, seven months and 20 days since Nick died because you didn’t call 911,” Patterson said.

“I pray you will never ever know the empty feeling that is in our hearts over the loss of a child,” she said. “I hope the hands you put your children’s lives in know how to call 911.”

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer explained the plea agreement saying no amount of time will make up for what happened, but “we believe with the facts we have, this is the best outcome.”

Defense attorney Don Blair told the court his client made a decision he will regret the rest of his life.

Taylor apologized for everything that happened.

“I don’t expect forgiveness or anything, I know what happened and there is nothing much to say,” he said. “I’m sorry Barnes family for your loss. If I could take his place, I would.”

•••

Read more on the plea agreement in “Onalaskan offers mixed pleas in teen’s alcohol poisoning death” from Thursday Feb. 24, 2011, here

Read about the party in “Remembering Nickolas Barnes” from Thursday Sept. 23, 2010, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

May 11th, 2011

SMOKE BUT NO FIRE

• The new pizza parlor on Harrison Avenue near Interstate 5 in Centralia was evacuated briefly last night when someone smelled and saw light smoke inside the building, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Firefighters called about 8:30 p.m. determined a motor – for the blower in the heating system – on the roof has burned up, fire Capt. Tim Adolphsen said. Firefighters shut off the power and turned the building back over to the business, Adolphsen said.

THEFT

• Centralia police were called about 4 p.m. yesterday to the 700 block of South Tower Avenue about the theft of mail.

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office recovered a stolen vehicle yesterday on the 900 block of Koontz Road. A deputy was told it was purchased for $7,000 from a business in Fife. It was stolen out of Pierce County and valued at $25,000, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

• Crime Stoppers of Lewis County reports that an antique claw-foot bathtub and several thousand dollars of wire was stolen in a burglary on the 300 block of Garrard Creek Road in Rochester sometime between last Thursday evening and the following morning.

SLEDGE HAMMER VERSUS TRUCK

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning they arrested a 22-year-old Randle resident for an April 18 incident in which he allegedly took a sledge hammer to a truck being driven by a juvenile male on Silverbrook Road in Randle. Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said Blaine M. Murphy, 22, was arrested for malicious mischief. Information about when he was arrested was not reported or readily available.

Coroners inquest on Ronda Reynolds’ death postponed indefinitely

May 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS –  The coroners inquest into the controversial 1998 death in Toledo of former state trooper Ronda Reynolds is being put on hold, Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod announced this morning.

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Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod

A review by a panel of citizens was set for the end of August, but McLeod says now the outcome of a related civil case and as well as a triple-murder trial scheduled for the same time both present conflicts.

One of McLeod’s first acts after he took office in January was to change Reynolds’ death certificate from suicide to undetermined. Soon afterward, he announced that rather than review it himself behind closed doors, he preferred a coroners inquest, an open forum that would enhance public confidence in the final conclusion.

The case was the subject of a civil trial in November 2009 after which a panel of citizens concluded then-Coroner Terry Wilson’s determination that Reynolds’ died of suicide was arbitrary, capricious and incorrect. A judge ordered Wilson to change the manner of death, but Wilson instead appealed the order.

McLeod took over the coroner’s office after winning last November’s election.

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Ronda Reynolds

Today McLeod is saying the outcome of the civil case appeal – Thompson vs. Wilson – could include an order giving him 10 days to review the case and come up with the manner of death.

“I cannot in good conscious spend tens of thousands of Lewis County taxpayers’ dollars to pursue an inquest when a real possibility exists that the Court of Appeals may order me to conduct a case review to make my own determination as to the manner of Ronda’s death,” McLeod wrote in a news release.

The appeal – by both the coroner and by Barb Thompson, the mother of Reynolds – is being argued in the Court of Appeals in Tacoma in June.

The other issue, according to McLeod, is a criminal trial for John A. Booth Jr., charged with last summer’s homicides in the Salkum-Onalaska area, is scheduled to begin the same week.

Because many individuals are involved in both cases, that would place an undue burden on the resources of the Lewis County Prosecutors Office, McLeod writes. Lewis County sheriff’s detectives are involved in both cases.

Initial plans were to hold the inquest in Clark County beginning Aug. 29 with an outside coroner presiding and Lewis County Deputy Civil Prosecutor David Fine presenting the case to a panel of six citizens.

Fine has represented the coroner, along with Olympia attorney John Justice, on the civil case.

McLeod notes that he still feels a coroner’s inquest is the best format for full public disclosure of the facts in the case and his decision on whether to do so at a later date will depend on the outcome of the Appeals Court decision.
•••

Read “Details of coming coroner’s inquest in Ronda Reynolds death unfolding slowly” from Friday Feb. 18, 2011, here

Breaking news: Steck Clinic accountant arrested, accused of embezzling

May 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Chehalis police arrested the chief financial officer for Steck Medical Group yesterday for allegedly embezzling some $25,000 from the health clinic.

Keith B. Mohoric, 51, of Centralia, had worked for the business a little more than a year and a half and was fired yesterday, according to authorities.

Steck Medical Group Chief Executive Officer Chris Bredeson said this morning they recently discovered discrepancies in their bank deposits. They contacted police on Friday.

Bredeson said in a prepared statement: “While significant, the losses do not affect the clinics’ services to patients.”

Detectives went to the clinic on Bishop Road in Chehalis yesterday morning to interview Mohoric and then booked him into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree theft and forgery, police detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said.

McNamara said essentially, not all the money that was supposed to be going to the bank actually was.

McNamara said Mohoric did not say why he did it, “just that he needed it, he was having money issues.”

Steck Medical Group operates multiple clinics in Lewis County, including Steck Medical Center in Chehalis.

Bredeson said Mohoric promised restitution.

Domestic violence protection order entered against sheriff’s son

May 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Winlock woman has been granted a domestic violence protection order against Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield’s son, alleging in court that 20-year-old John C. Mansfield shoved her in a downtown Winlock beauty salon and other instances of assault.

The younger Mansfield appeared in a Chehalis courtroom yesterday where a visiting commissioner for Lewis County Superior Court left in place the order prohibiting him from contacting her or coming near her.

Kaitlyn M. Larson, 18, sought and secured a temporary court order on April 21, following an incident three weeks earlier in Winlock.

The pair have a 2-year-old child together.

John Mansfield was accompanied by Chehalis attorney Jennifer Johnson yesterday who told Court Commissioner Pro-Tem Richard Adamson there was no substantiation for the allegations made by Larson.

The entire Lewis County judiciary has recused themselves from the case because it involves the elected sheriff’s son.

Commissioner Adamson reversed the portion of the temporary order which had prohibited John Mansfield from contact with the child.

Yesterday was John Mansfield’s opportunity to dispute the conditions of the order, but Larson’s’ newly-hired attorney asked to postpone the hearing so she could prepare.

Olympia attorney Jennifer Smith –  Larson’s lawyer – and Johnson both said after the hearing they had no comment on the case.

“I still maintain I have no comment, and we’re going to move forward in the best interests of the child,” Smith said.

Larson, who lives in Winlock, wrote in her April 21 request that John Mansfield has in the past left bruises on her and nearly broken her ribs, none of which she received medical attention for.

There was no indication in her filing he was ever arrested.

Sheriff Mansfield has said he has no comment on the situation.

“It doesn’t have anything to do with me or my wife,” Mansfield said the day after the petition was filed.

“If he’d have done those things, he’d have gone to jail,” Mansfield said.

Larson wrote that she called 911 on March 30 after John Mansfield came into McKenzie’s salon and took her son out of her friend’s arms “very forcefully”.

When she told him he couldn’t take the child, he shoved her and they argued, she wrote.

John Mansfield took the toddler out to his own mother while he came back inside to get a blanket, yelled at the hair dresser and then left, she wrote.

Larson, John Mansfield and their baby were swept into the news two years ago when the state Attorney General’s office was asked to look into a complaint that Sheriff Mansfield improperly handled a runaway report the parents of the then-16-year-old Larson  attempted to file with the sheriff’s office.

Larson was at a residence on the Mansfield’s property, and was not picked up and returned home.

The Attorney General’s office review, dated Nov. 18, 2009, blamed a lapse of three days in entering the girl’s name into the relevant computer databases for runaways on Mansfield personally and on Mansfield’s decision not to ask an outside agency to handle the case; but declined to file any charge against the sheriff.

Among the instances from the past Larson cites in her April 21 handwritten request for the protection order:

John Mansfield once shoved her trying to get her phone; shoved her to the ground and sat on top of her.

One night, when she refused to give him her phone, “he shoved me off the bed, I hit my head on the ceiling and could barely breathe.”

He followed her and her boyfriend from Centralia to Adna, calling her and threatening her. “He constantly texts me even after I repeatedly asked him to stop.”

“One time John held me against the wall with his (undecipherable) gun and hit me in the face, giving me a black eye …”

Larson filed a proposed parenting plant with the court, asking that the child reside with her.

A hearing is set for June 1, when the visiting court commissioner returns, for John Mansfield to respond to the conditions currently in place in the protection order.

Read about skier dies on Mount Rainier

May 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Tacoma) News Tribune is reporting a man skiing on the Nisqually Glacier fell as much as 150 feet and died.

Read it here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

May 10th, 2011

CAR VERSUS SCHOOL BUS IN NAPAVINE

• Lewis County Fire District 5 was called about 8:25 this morning when a passenger car and a fully-loaded school bus collided at West Washington Street and Alder Avenue Northwest in Napavine. There were no injuries, fire Lt. Laura Hanson said. Hanson reported the bus was struck from behind by the car resulting in minor damage to both vehicles. The children were picked up by another bus and taken to school.

LOST HIKER SLEEPS IN SNOW NEAR ASHFORD

• The subject of yesterday’s search and rescue mission southeast of Ashford spent two nights sleeping in the snow after he lost sight of his trail because of the snow, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning. The 49-year-old Auburn man had set out from Forest Service Road 85 on Saturday, hiking toward a place called High Hut, a state-owned shelter in the forest, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Searchers on snow mobiles followed footprints in the snow and found the man yesterday afternoon, who had made his way to High Hut, according to Brown. He was warm and uninjured and had been very well equipped for his outing, she said.

THEFT

• Centralia police were called just before 6 p.m. yesterday to the Centralia Outlet mall on Lum Road after subjects took 10 to 15 purses from the Coach Factory store and fled in a vehicle. The loss from the high-end handbag store is estimated at about $3,000, according to police.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday from the 200 block of West Main Street of unauthorized withdrawals from a woman’s account. It happened in March and the loss is somewhere between $400 and $500, according to police.

• Morton police were called on Sunday morning to a burglary to a business on the 300 block of state Route 7 in which somebody went inside during the night and took a welder, wire, hand tools and acetylene and oxygen tanks, according to the Morton Police Department.

• Somebody broke into a residence on the 100 block of Collar Avenue in Morton sometime between last Wednesday and Friday and stole a VHF/UHF FM “transceiver” valued at an estimated $300, according to the Morton Police Department.

• An individual alerted by his car alarm on the 1300 block of Belmont Avenue in Centralia yesterday afternoon went out to check and discovered someone had broken out a window and stolen an iPod, a GPS unit and stereo equipment, according to the Centralia Police Department.

POLICE PURSUITS

• The Washington State Patrol reports a driver who fled a traffic stop last night in Centralia crashed into a brick flower bed near Ellsbury and Alder streets. It happened about 11:40 p.m. near Interstate 5’s Mellen Street interchange. The 2005 Hyundai Accent was totaled, according to the state patrol. The driver fled the scene. A charge of hit and run is to be referred to the Lewis County Prosecutors Office for the suspected driver, a 24-year-old Oakville man, according to the investigating trooper.

• The (Longview) Daily News reports a police pursuit that began south of Vader on Interstate 5 yesterday evening ended when the driver stopped in the parking lot of the Cowlitz County Jail in Kelso and surrendered. Read it here.