Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

March 28th, 2011

RECYCLING THIEF ARRESTED, SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS

• A 22-year-old Centralia man who reportedly stole several bags of aluminum cans and recycled them for money ($35.20) for food and cigarettes was arrested  for second-degree trafficking in stolen property, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning. The theft was reported Friday from in front of a garage on the 2100 block of Taylor Street in Centralia, according to the sheriff’s office. The victim called a local recycler and described the pickup truck she saw leaving with her cans and a deputy contacted the man, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. William G. Fultz Valenta was booked into the Lewis County Jail for trafficking and also third-degree theft, Brown said. The case of his 20-year-old female companion was referred to the prosecutor’s office for similar charges, according to Brown.

BEER RUN ENDS

• Morton police were called to the 400 block of Second Street where a subject reportedly stole an 18-pack of beer and ran to a waiting vehicle about 4 a.m. on Saturday. Twenty-six-year-old Ryan M. Pittman was arrested for misdemeanor theft and the driver, Geoffrey M. Whittall, also 26, was arrested for the same offense as well as possession of marijuana, according to the Morton Police Department.

CAR WINDOW BROKE OUT FOR SMOKES, LOOSE CHANGE

• Centralia police took a report on Friday morning of a window being smashed out of a vehicle on the 800 block of H Street in Centralia. Taken were cigarettes and about $5 in change, police reported.

DISAGREEMENT ENDS WITH ARREST

• A 23-year-old Centralia man was arrested yesterday morning after he got into a dispute with his estranged fiance at the 1100 block of South Pearl Street in Centralia, according to police. Juan Vega-Allen allegedly shut a door and wouldn’t allow her to leave as they argued about her new boyfriend, police reported. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail for unlawful imprisonment.

ELUDING POLICE

• Police on Saturday were looking for a subject after he reportedly sped away from a traffic stop in Centralia around 4 o’clock on Saturday morning. The officer didn’t catch up to the driver, but recognized the driver, according to Centralia police. The vehicle was found abandoned. The incident occurred at West Pear and South Rock streets.

JAIL INMATE ARRESTED

• A 24-year-old jail inmate was arrested for setting off the fire alarm in the Lewis County Jail on Saturday and also several times the day before. Timothy J. Chapek, of Portland and/or Beaverton, Ore., reportedly intentionally created a cloud of dust particles by repeatedly banging on the wire cage surrounding the fire alarm in his cell, activating the alarm.

THEFT

• Two rifles, two tail lamps from classic cars and a Snap-on tool chest were stolen in a burglary to a garage on the 100 block of East Roanake Street in Centralia, reported yesterday evening.

• A 1991 Madza pickup, four wheels and tires along with a  battery were among the items missing after a burglary to a garage on the 2000 block of U.S. Highway 12 in Ethel, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported today. The break-in occurred sometime between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Friday, according to the sheriff’s office. The loss is estimated at $1,550.

• A black 1997 Pontiac TransAm stolen out of Centralia was found on Saturday on the 900 block of Davis Lake Road outside Morton, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• Police were called about 10:30 p.m. last night when a neighbor heard someone break out the driver’s side window of a vehicle parked on the 600 block of East Summa Street in Centralia, according to police. The window-breaker drove away in a dark-colored car, according to police.

• Somebody stole a stereo from an unlocked vehicle at the 1000 block of Scammon Creek Road in Centralia, according to a report made to police on Sunday morning.

News brief: Toledo man hurt in Friday night wreck

March 28th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Toledo man was seriously injured after a Friday night single-vehicle collision on the 400 block of South Jackson Highway.

Frances M. Wharton, 48, suffered facial trauma when his sport utility vehicle struck a utility pole, according to the Washington State Patrol.

A trooper called to the scene about 9:30 p.m. reported the 1994 Ford explorer was northbound when it ran along a ditch about 100 feet and hit the pole.

The Washington State Patrol said Wharton was flown by helicopter to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. However, a hospital spokesperson said they had no record of him being admitted.

His vehicle as described as totaled.

News brief: Rochester man critical after weekend crash near Castle Rock

March 28th, 2011
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Photo shared by Kari Johnson

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Rochester man was listed in critical condition yesterday after a Saturday afternoon collision on Interstate 5 north of Castle Rock.

Michael T. Burleson, 27, of Rochester was a passenger in a northbound car about 2:15 p.m. on Saturday which lost control and ran into the rear of a disabled vehicle on the right shoulder near milepost 53, according to the Washington State Patrol.

Burleson suffered a cracked skull, a broken neck and five broken ribs, according to the state patrol. He was flown to Southwest Washington Medical Center in Vancouver, the patrol reported.

The driver of the 1996 Nissan 2SX he was traveling in, Guy B. Rostan, 26, also of Rochester, was taken to St. John Medical Center in Longview with head and chest injuries. A  hospital spokesperson said yesterday Rostan was treated and released.

The state patrol blamed the hydroplaning on driving too fast.

A 50-year-old Portland woman in the 2005 Mitsubishi Montero that they hit – Maria O’Brien – was admitted to St. John Medical Center and in stable condition yesterday.

Bystander hurt when 50 caliber round explodes at Centralia shooting range

March 27th, 2011
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Mark Rieker target shoots from a shack built some 30 years ago by nearby neighbor Dick Teitzel and friends off Big Hanaford Road. His younger brother Justin Rieker waits his turn late Sunday afternoon.

This was updated 11:30 a.m. on Monday March 28, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – A 43-year-old man was seriously injured today when a 50 caliber rifle malfunctioned while some friends were target shooting northeast of Centralia.

Lewis County sheriff’s deputies and aid responded to the 2:30 p.m. call to a shack and spread of remote rural property used as a shooting range off Big Hanaford Road at Tono Road.

“The guy pulling the trigger didn’t get hurt, it was the guy standing next to him,” sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust said.

Aust said it appeared the firing pin struck the round before it was properly seated and it basically exploded inside the gun, with the force of it moving sideways.

The victim, who is from Point Roberts, Wash., sustained injuries to his upper body, taking pieces of casing in his chest and eyes, along with possibly puncturing a lung, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. His name was not released.

Riverside Fire Authority Capt. Scott Weinert said the patient was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital and then airlifted to a hospital up north, but he wasn’t sure which one.

He had serious injuries, Weinert said.

The sheriff’s office said the victim had put the gun together himself and was using it for the first time.

After shooting four rounds, a friend of his was getting ready to fire it. When the bolt would not close, the gun’s owner knelt next to it not realizing the firing pin had not retracted on the previous shot, according to the sheriff’s office.

It happened when he forced the bolt closed.

“You’re talking about a bullet casing that is several inches long and you have all that pressure in there,” detective Sgt. Dusty Breen said.

A 50 caliber rifle is about as big as an ordinary person can legally possess and use, according to Breen.

The lower portion of the gun is a AR15-style and the upper portion manufactured by Bohica, Breen said.

The National Rifle Association describes 50 caliber rifles as among the most expensive made and primarily used by long-range target shooting experts.

Point Roberts is a small piece of Whatcom County on a peninsula accessed only by water or through Canada.

Nearby neighbor Dick Teitzel said it’s only the second accident he can recall at the make-shift range he and friends built some 30 years ago.

Kayla Croft-Payne: Missing Lewis County teen’s parents still seeking answers

March 25th, 2011
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Teenager Kayla Croft-Payne hasn't been heard from since last April 28

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

VADER – When 18-year-old Kayla Croft-Payne first went missing, the little store in Vader displayed a flyer at their counter and handed out copies of the appeal for information about the teenager’s whereabouts.

Now, almost a year later, the small poster has moved, tacked to a wall by the door and surrounded by others offering items for sale, chimney cleaning services and even tutoring.

Still, not much more than a week goes by without a customer asking if anyone’s heard anything about her, according to clerk Kelli Gammel.

“It’s a sad story. A very sad story,” Gammel said.

While Croft-Payne moved away from Vader at least twice in her late teens, she would always come back. Her mother, Michelle Croft, lives in the small south Lewis County town.

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Kayla Croft-Payne on Facebook

The teen would pop into J and G’s Grocery periodically, Gammel said.

“A very pretty girl, she could have been a model,” Gammel said. “Tall, slender. She was popular with a lot of people.”

Gammel, who’s known the teen’s parents since before Croft-Payne was born, describes her as somewhat “street-smart” but also gullible.

When Croft-Payne turned 18, she got several thousand dollars from a trust fund and moved into an apartment in Chehalis. That was September 2009. Neither the money or the new place lasted long, according to her family.

That’s when things spiraled out of control, Gammel said.

“The last time she came into the store, she was with an older man who kind of gave me the creeps,” she said.

Gammel says she’s picked up plenty of rumors about what happened to the young woman, but she had begun to bounce around and “we didn’t really know who she was hanging out with.”

“Somebody knows something,” she said. “But when Kayla disappeared, she wasn’t hanging out in Vader.”

Late last spring, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office put out a public request for any information on Croft-Payne, saying she was reported missing on May 5 by a friend who had not seen or heard from her for several days.

She hadn’t logged on to her MySpace internet account since April 28.

At the time, she was living in a trailer behind a place on the 200 block of Newaukum Valley Road, between Chehalis and Napavine.

She was very social, talking to friends online daily, sheriff’s detective Jamey McGinty said.

“Then it just stopped,” he said. “No contact with her attorney, her MySpace, Facebook. It just stops.

It was the sort of disappearance that prompted the sheriff’s office to put every available detective on it to track down leads for at least two weeks, according to McGinty.

But now, without new tips coming in, the case work is mostly routinely checking her Internet accounts and a nationwide database in case she were to get arrested, detective’s Sgt. Dusty Breen said earlier this week.

Croft-Payne has friends all over, some – who like she did – used drugs, according to those who know her.

She was raised by her mother in Centralia and Chehalis and then for about three years during middle school – when she got put into foster care – lived in the area around Toledo.

She spent six months in a drug and alcohol treatment program for pregnant women in Tacoma.

By March of 2009, she was clean, but wanted to get away from the drugs in Vader. She and the baby moved in with a married friend in Winlock.

At first, it went fine, said Cassandra Sines the friend who is now 24. Croft-Payne attended an alternative high school program, she said.

But then she was partying and not coming home to take care of her baby, Sines said. Methamphetamine was her drug of choice then, though later she used heroin, according to Sines.

By June, Child Protective Services put the child in foster care.

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Kayla Croft-Payne on MySpace

The last time Sines saw Croft-Payne in person was in January 2010.

“I don’t know if she was on drugs or what that day,” she said. “She was kind of being bitchy, and we told her to leave.”

Still, they “talked” online almost daily. Croft-Payne was sort of addicted to social media, she said.

“The last couple of times I (messaged) with Kayla, she wanted to get clean,” Sines said.

It was Sines who gave the missing person information to the sheriff’s office. But the initial phone call on May 5, was made by Croft-Payne’s close friend Ashley Smith, who used Sine’s phone, Sines said.

“Ashley asked me to give her a ride to go find Kayla,” she said. “We drove to Onalaska, to Vader, she wasn’t there.”

Smith got panicky, called 911, and gave Sines’ name instead of her own, Sines said.

Neither Croft-Payne’s father or her mother  know a lot about the friends their daughter was hanging out with in the months before she vanished.

“The drug scene’s been sucking her back for years,” said her father, Thomas Payne.

Payne, who’s 46 and lives in Longview, said even though his daughter was sometimes rebellious, she would always call.

He last spoke with her a month or two before she disappeared.

“She wanted to get away from all the people she was doing drugs with, get a fresh start, get her life together,” Payne said.

She wanted to see her younger sister, and asked if she could move in with him, he said. He told her only if she went into drug treatment first. She said she’d be down but didn’t make it, he said.

Not knowing, and not getting much information from the sheriff’s office has been agonizing for the union construction worker who is also father to a 10-year-old girl.

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Kayla Croft-Payne, Department of Licensing photo

“I’ve got lots and lots of friends that would love to go out and look for her,” he said. “But we’ve got no idea where to start in the world.”

Late last year, detective McGinty asked Payne and his daughter to come in and give DNA samples, just in case they were needed, he said.

Payne tells Jada her big sister is just being a butt head and not calling, he said.

“All she knew is we were giving DNA to help find sissy,” he said. “She’s 10, she hasn’t put two and two together yet. Thank God.”

The part of the conversation with McGinty that has stayed him with the most, is the idea his daughter may have died from an accidental drug overdose and her body hidden by friends afraid of getting in trouble.

Payne hopes renewed attention to the case will bring someone forward with information.

“I don’t care, I just want to find out where she’s at one way or the other,” he said. “To put her to rest or get her help.”

Lewis County detectives say the last place they can verify Croft-Payne being seen is in Cowlitz County. She stayed at least one evening in a trailer park in the Toutle area, according to detective Sgt. Breen.

The theory she died from a drug overdose did come through the investigation, McGinty said.

Late last July, they had a cadaver dog search around a river in the Toutle area, but they did not get any definite “alerts” from the dog, according to Breen.

If Croft-Payne did succumb to drugs and anyone knows where she can be found, the sheriff’s office would like to hear about it.

Hiding a body is not a felony, it’s only a misdemeanor, according to Breen.

The teenager’s mother last spoke with her in April.

“She called, said she was on her way down and didn’t show up,” Michelle Croft said.

Last weekend, as she spoke about her missing oldest child, her 4-year-old grabbed a helium ballon from the living room wall of their home and ran outside, announcing she would “send it to Kayla.”

“We usually write messages on them,” Croft said. “We’ve had a rough time. At first she thought it was her fault sissy didn’t come home.”

Croft learned her daughter was reported missing by reading a newspaper article about it, she said. At first, she thought her daughter’s father was hiding her, she said.

The 44-year-old mother didn’t like seeing the sheriff’s office label her daughter transient. She wasn’t, Croft said.

“When she didn’t get her way, she’d stay with friends,” she said. “And when she didn’t get her way there, she’d be back.”

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Kayla Croft-Payne

Croft said she doesn’t have much money because she doesn’t work, but she’s gotten help from Gammel in making missing person flyers. She driven from Tacoma to Portland, posting them in convenience stores, she said.

“The not knowing, it’s killing me, it’s killing me inside,” she said. “It’s hard to take care of Shelbie, sometimes I just want to lay down.

“But I feel like if I’m not out there putting pictures up, I feel like I’m giving up.”

Croft, who said she’s in recovery from meth addiction, has also been spending time with people in the drug world, hoping to learn something about her daughter’s whereabouts, she said.

“Kayla, she ran with people in their 30s and 40s,” she said. “She grew up fast because she got put into the system.”

She’s heard her daughter was hanging out with gang members from the Mexican Mafia in Longview, she said.

“I was told she was being trafficked for sex,” she said. “I was told she had a pretty high drug bill.”

But that’s just one rumor the mother of two has come across.

Sheriff’s detectives say Croft-Payne spent time in places such as Lewis County, Kitsap County and Grays Harbor County.

They’ve followed tips into Pierce County and even tracked down a wood chipper after they heard someone made comments she’d been put through one. It was covered with cobwebs, Breen said.

In June, they went to a court hearing where Croft-Payne was expected, in connection with getting custody of her baby.

“She was trying to get her child back, trying really hard,” McGinty said. “For her to not show up, it wasn’t like her.”

They checked with her grandmother in Montana, wondering if she left the state. She wasn’t there.

“There’s been tips she was alive,” McGinty said.

After hearing a rumor she was on the east Coast, Breen sent for a license photo, but it was another woman, he said.

Last October, it appeared Croft-Payne posted a message on someone’s else’s MySpace page, the detectives said.

But when McGinty contacted technicians at MySpace, he learned  her comment was labeled with the date when the recipient opened it, not when she sent it, he said.

Croft-Payne’s MySpace page also appears as though she logged on in July, but it wasn’t her, that’s when the company logged in to check her account, he said.

The detectives don’t know what happened to her, but they’d like to find her.

“Our minds aren’t settled whatsoever,” Breen said. “However, the more time goes by … it doesn’t look good.”

The sheriff’s office has shared a copy of her case file with law enforcement officers in Cowlitz County.

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Kayla Croft-Payne

For McGinty, who estimates he investigated some 150 missing or runaway person cases during his four years as a detective, this one is different.

“I’d get runaways, at least four a month,” he said. “Sometimes they’d come back that night, sometimes the next day.”

She is the first who has not surfaced, he said.

Croft-Payne is a white female with blue eyes and brown hair. Detectives say now she is probably about 5-feet 9-inches tall and 130 pounds.

Anyone with any information on her whereabouts is asked to contact the sheriff’s office at 360-748-9286.

Anonymous tips can be left at: Crime Stoppers of Lewis County 1-800-748-6422 or the sheriff’s office online crime tips page.

•••

A vigil is planned for Kayla Croft-Payne at 6:30 p.m. on April 28 at Penny Playground in Chehalis, at Southwest 13th Street, off Interstate 5 exit 76.

Organizers are looking for donations of purple and green helium balloons. For information, contact Jerome Painter at jeremy@zebracomputers.com

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

March 25th, 2011

DOMESTIC MALICIOUS MISCHIEF

• Deputies arrested a Winlock-area man yesterday evening after he reportedly went into a rage and destroyed several items in and around a home where he lives with his grandfather. Steven R. Luurs Jr., 30, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for third-degree malicious mischief, domestic violence after the 5:40 p.m. call to the residence on the 200 block of Tennessee Road, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Luurs reportedly damaged a flower pot, a rain gutter, a bicycle and a cable.

THEFT

• Centralia police were called to a business on the 200 block of South Pearl Street just before noon yesterday about theft of six rings.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

March 24th, 2011

DRUGS

• A 24-year-old Cinebar resident was arrested yesterday evening in Chehalis with about an ounce of suspected marijuana, according to Chehalis police. The arrest, which occurred following a traffic stop on the 100 block of Southwest Interstate Avenue, grew out of an investigation by a drug detective, police said. Steven C. Ippisch was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to detective Sgt. Rick McNamara.

EXPLOSION

• Centralia police referred a case to the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office yesterday for possible charges in connection with two male juveniles who reportedly set off a “large home made firecracker type of device” in Riverside Rotary Park on Harrison Avenue.

THEFT

• A deputy was called yesterday morning about the theft of a motorcycle from the 200 block of state Route 131 in Randle. The Kawasaki KLX 110 went missing sometime between March 9 and yesterday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The loss is estimated at $2,100.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police reported they were called to two locations yesterday about gang-style graffiti on the sides of buildings. One was at the 900 block of West Main Street and the other at Marion Street and Royal Avenue, according to police.