Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

March 2nd, 2011

WINDOW SHOT IN CENTRALIA

• Centralia police were called about 11:30 p.m. yesterday to window apparently shot at with a BB gun on the 1000 block of North Tower Avenue.

MICKEY MOUSE RELEASED FROM JAIL

• For anyone wondering who is this Mickey Mouse who was held at the Lewis County Jail over the past two days, he’s not real. The Lewis County Jail online roster yesterday showed that Mickey Tiny Mouse was released from the Chehalis facility about 4:30 yesterday afternoon. Carrie Breen, administrative assistant to Jail Chief Kevin Hanson, said despite his occasional appearance as an inmate, at least online, they do not really have a Mickey Mouse in the jail. The name is one used by jails statewide when conducting tests of their computer systems, Breen said. They were having issues with their system and they, actually the county’s computer specialists, had to book him, she said.

News brief: “Remains” found under sink after apparent miscarriage to be examined by coroner

March 2nd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police detectives are investigating if any criminal circumstances are involved in an overnight incident in which a young woman was hospitalized after suffering an apparent miscarriage.

The 25-year-old woman was taken by ambulance to Providence Centralia Hospital, and staff there asked police to check the welfare of a possible fetus she said had expired and was at her home, according to police.

Neighbors had called 911 after hearing calls for help coming from her residence, according to police.

Officers responded about 2:15 a.m. to the home where they found “the remains” in a container under a sink.

Centralia Police Department spokesperson John Panco indicated that was the primary unusual circumstance that prompted detectives to investigate.

He declined to comment if the size of the “remains” were of a size to be expected.

“Anytime we go to a residence and find remains in a container under a sink in a residence, we have to keep it open for the possibility of a crime,” Panco said.

The woman said she was about 21-weeks along, police reported. She said she spontaneously aborted the fetus during the night, Panco said.

Panco said he wasn’t aware if anyone had been with the woman at her home.

The police department did not reveal the woman’s identity, or even the location of her home except to say it was in the city of Centralia.

The remains have been turned over the the Lewis County Coroner’s Office.

Detectives are still in the early stages of their investigation, working in conjunction with the prosecutor’s office,  according to police.

Breaking news: Missing 10-year-old Silver Creek girl found safe at bottom of steep bank

March 2nd, 2011

This news story was updated at 9:57 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A search that began last night for a 10-year-old girl in Silver Creek ended early this morning when deputies discovered she had fallen down a steep bank near her home on Mayfield Lake.

The child, whose name was not released, was cold but suffered only minor scratches and has been reunited with her family, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

She was found about 5:30 a.m. at the edge of the lake, where she had spent the night, according to a news release. She was lucky, as she was wearing two coats and the weather overnight was mild, Sheriff Steve Mansfield said in the news release.

Deputies called just before 9 o’clock last night to the Silver Creek home were told the child had last been seen about 7 p.m. outside in her yard, according to the news release.

A search of the neighborhood and a wooded area around the home, into the night, which including using two search dogs, was unsuccessful, according to the sheriff’s office.

The home is on the 100 block of Crater View Drive, just west of Mayfield Lake.

Additional deputies arrived about 5 a.m. to continue looking and a noise was heard, leading to voice contact with the girl at about 5:30 a.m., the news release stated.

The news release continues on to say:

Deputies climbed down an extremely steep bank and a local fishing guide brought his boat to pick her up.

The girl said she had been walking too close to the bank and slipped and fell over the edge. She couldn’t climb back up, so she continued approximately 300 yards to the edge of the lake.

“This is one of those incidents where time and the weather are working against you and the intense coordinated search effort paid off,” Mansfield said in the news release.

Read about emergency ban on fake marijuana goes into effect …

March 2nd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Longview) Daily News reports an expected temporary measure to ban synthetic marijuana products like those which sent teenagers to emergency rooms last summer in Longview was put into place yesterday by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Over the past two years or so, smokable herbal blends marketed as being “legal” and providing a marijuana-like high have become increasingly popular especially among teens and young adults and the DEA has received an increasing number of reports from poison centers, hospitals and law enforcement regarding the products, according to a news release from the federal agency.

The active ingredients in brands such as “Spice”, “K2”, “Blaze” and “Red X Dawn” will be controlled for at least a year with the possibility of a six month extension, according to the DEA.

Read The (Longview) Daily News story here

Manslaughter trial: Karr said he was unloading girlfriend’s gun and it went off

March 1st, 2011
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Jesse P. Karr right, sits next to his defense attorney as Chehalis Police Chief Glenn Schaffer testifies about the September 2009 fatal shooting of Sara M. Whitson

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A jury of eight women and four men began hearing a case yesterday of a fatal shooting in Chehalis the deputy prosecutor suggests comes down to this:

“An accident is when someone gets hurt accidentally, but (if it’s ) the result of someone else’s reckless behavior, that’s a crime.”

Jesse P. Karr, now 31, is charged with first-degree manslaughter in the September 2009 death of 28-year-old Sara M. Whitson. He said it happened while he was cleaning her .22 caliber handgun, according to attorneys and police.

The National Guardsman had just returned home from Iraq about a month earlier and the couple was living together in an apartment on the 1700 block of South Market Boulevard.

Centralia defense attorney Don McConnell told jurors it is probably one of the saddest cases ever; and the two were very much in love.

McConnell hinted testimony would show Whitson walked past the barrel of the weapon at the same time it accidentally discharged.

It took only 10 minutes for both McConnell and Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes to make their opening statements yesterday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court. Each described a series of events on Sept. 3, 2009, that were mostly similar, as were the details offered by Chehalis police officers and a firefighter.

Karr had been sharpening knives for Whitson and offered to clean her .22 caliber Walther Smith and Wesson pistol since he was going to clean his.

Police Chief Glenn Schaffer and detective Steve Nikander were the first to go inside, with medics right behind them, after the approximately 4 p.m. call to 911.

Karr opened the door and led them to the upstairs master bedroom where Whitson lay on the floor, her breathing labored, her eyes wide; she was holding a towel on her abdomen.

Emergency responders picked her up and carried to an ambulance, and she was airlifted to a trauma center.

There was an empty gun case on the bed, a pistol on the floor next to the right corner of the bed, another pistol in the night stand and a couple knives on the dresser, Nikander said.

Detective Rick Silva found a .22 shell casing in the bedroom.

“What he said was he was unloading Ms. Whitson’s firearm and it went off,” Schaffer told the jury.

“He (said) he was standing at the right corner of the bed facing the window with the gun pointed toward the closet,” Schaffer said.

Officer Bruce Thompson described two holes and a gunpowder burn on the little finger of Karr’s left hand. Officer Jason Roberts interviewed Karr downstairs.

Roberts said he asked Karr if he’d gotten in touch with Whitson’s family.

“I think he said, no, he couldn’t,” Roberts said. “Something like he couldn’t tell (her father) he’d shot his daughter.”

Karr put his head in his hands and cried, Roberts said.

“What exactly did he say?” Hayes asked as Roberts reviewed a transcript of his interview.

“I shouldn’t of shot her, I’m so stupid,” Roberts read.

A Chehalis police detective learned the following morning Whitson had died during emergency surgery, according to charging documents.

The trial is expected to last into Friday.

Four-year-old found unharmed with father in Bonney Lake

March 1st, 2011

This news story was updated at 6:40 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Amber Alert for 4-year-old Jacek Reed who was taken this morning from Chehalis by his father has been cancelled.

Chehalis police say Dustin Reed was taken into custody about 2:30 p.m. by the Bonney Lake Police Department.

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Dustin Reed

The child was with him and is unharmed, according to Chehalis Police Chief Glenn Schaffer.

Chehalis detectives located the pair by tracing Reed’s cell phone.

Police began looking for the 34-year-old Army soldier home on leave after he took the child out of his mother’s arms by force on the sidewalk outside a family counseling center about 9:15 a.m. today, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

Police were told Reed put the boy in his car in such a way the child bumped his head and then Reed’s vehicle struck the mother’s friend who stood behind the car as it backed out.

The mother had gone to the Human Response Network on the 100 block of Northwest Chehalis Avenue this morning to get a protection order in place against the father following an incident overnight in Napavine, according to Schaffer.

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Jacek Reed

Napavine police were called about 1:30 a.m. to the mother’ home in Napavine, where she was with her boyfriend and the child, according to Schaffer. Reed arrived and pushed his way in, insisting on seeing his son, Schaffer said.

Reed, who lives in Fort Knox, Kentucky, is believed to have other family who live in Centralia.

Police today said Reed is on antidepressants and has access to weapons, although no weapon was seen at the time of the abduction.

Schaffer said officers “pinged” Reed’s cell phone and then fed the results to the  Bonney Lake Police Department. He was taken into custody by Bonney Lake police without incident this afternoon.

Police don’t know where Reed was headed with the child.

“We don’t know what his plans were,” Schaffer said. “When they interviewed him, he was not very forthcoming.”

The chief said Reed was to be booked for the assault with the car. The friend sustained what Schaffer thought was a minor injury to his leg.

Further potential charges will be evaluated by the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office, according to police.

•••

See this morning’s news story about the Amber Alert by scrolling down, or here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

March 1st, 2011
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This photo was taken after a snow plow came through following a two-vehicle wreck on Hawkins Road on Monday. / Courtesy photo by Lewis County Fire District 15

TWO HURT IN HEAD-ON CRASH, BABY OKAY

• An 11-month-old baby was reportedly uninjured after a head-on collision yesterday in Winlock. The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported a 60-year-old Winlock woman was traveling northbound near the 300 block of Hawkins Road about 11:30 a.m. when she lost control of her vehicle and it slid across both lanes. An oncoming car driven by a 23-year-old Winlock woman had stopped to avoid a wreck and her car was hit, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. The infant boy was secured in a car seat but his mother was not seat-belted, Brown said. She was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with a possibly broken or dislocated left arm, according to Brown. The 60-year-old was taken to the hospital with injuries which were not reported. She was cited for driving too fast for conditions, Brown said.

SHOPLIFTING PLUS ASSAULT

• A 42-year-old Centralia man was arrested for misdemeanor assault and shoplifting about 9 a.m. yesterday at the 200 block of North Tower Avenue in Centralia. Keith A. Obrist was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

NORTH PEARL STREET HOUSE FIRE

• A house fire in Centralia yesterday apparently originated in an area near a furnace, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Firefighters were called just after 1 p.m. to the single-story home on the 2100 block of North Pearl Street after passersby and a neighbor saw smoke coming from the roof, fire Capt. Ken Colombo said. Nobody was home at the time, he said. A woman who lives there fortunately has renters insurance, as some of her belongings were ruined, he aid. Colombo estimated the damage to the house at $15,000 to $20,000. The worst of the damage was in an area between the kitchen, living room and dining room, he said.