News brief: Missing Lacey man found wandering in Nisqually Valley area

January 22nd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Thurston County Sheriff’s Office said the 45-year-old Lacey man who went missing on Wednesday has been found and is safe and back with his family.

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Marcos A. Sanchez

Marcos A. Sanchez was discovered walking along a road in the Nisqually Valley area about 10:30 last night, sheriff’s Lt. Greg Elwin said.

“He was wandering around lost, he was under the influence of something, we don’t know what,” Elwin said.

The lieutenant called it very bizarre.

“He’s physically okay, but he was not real cognizant of where he was,” he said.

Sanchez, a construction contractor, left his home on Wednesday morning and had a job site that day on the Tacoma waterfront.

He was reported missing Thursday night and his truck was found abandoned in a shopping center parking lot in the Hawks Prairie area.

Elwin said he was transported home last night.

Man who took over after meth ring leader from Toledo was arrested gets 10 years, feds announce

January 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A second member of a drug ring accused of distributing highly pure methamphetamine in Cowlitz and Lewis counties got a 10-year sentence today.

Randy Scott Chalupa, 47, of Kelso, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Tacoma for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine.

Michael J. Waddington, 24, of Silver Lake, received a similar sentence on a similar charge in late December.

Toledo resident Anthony Wayne Reisbeck, described by the U.S. Attorney’s Office as the leader of the trafficking organization, is set to be sentenced later this month.

In his request for a sentence of more than 12 years for Chalupa, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Backhus noted Chalupa took over the operation after Reisbeck’s arrest and played a significant role, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office for Western Washington.

Read about Chalupa in The (Longview) Daily News here

News brief: Thurston County Sheriff’s Office asks for help finding missing Lacey man

January 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Thurston County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help in locating a 45-year-old Lacey area man who hasn’t been seen since Wednesday.

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Marcos A. Sanchez

Marcos A. Sanchez’s Chevrolet Silverado was found last night in a shopping center parking lot off Martin Road in the Hawks Prairie area, according to the sheriff’s office.

He left home about 7 a.m. Wednesday and was last seen about 11:30 a.m. that day in Lacey, according to Lt. Greg Elwin said. Sanchez was reported missing last night.

Sanchez is a construction contractor and his job site on Wednesday was on the Tacoma waterfront, Elwin said.

The truck offered no obvious indications of any foul play, but it has been impounded and detectives were to examine its interior this afternoon, according to Elwin.

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Sanchez's Chevrolet Silverado

“We haven’t found anything odd or peculiar about him or his background,” Elwin said. “He seems like a regular guy with a job and a family, and he just didn’t come home. That in itself makes it kind of concerning.”

Anyone with any information about his whereabouts is asked to call Lt. Elwin at the sheriff’s office at 360-786-5530.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

January 21st, 2011

“GRANDPARENT” SCAM

• Chehalis police were called after a Chehalis resident took a phone call from a female who said she was her granddaughter and needed money on Wednesday. Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said he didn’t have further details on this incident, but said officers have gotten a few similar reports. The state Attorney General’s Office just this week distributed a caution for what they call the “grandparent scam” and other similar ruses to convince someone they need money wired immediately. Kaut said usually the calls are from Canada and the caller is claiming to have been in an accident. The state Attorney General’s Office urges citizens to warn the seniors in their lives and offers a list of red flags to watch out for.

METH SALES ARRESTS AT CHEHALIS APARTMENTS

• A pair of Chehalis residents were arrested for delivery of methamphetamine and their apartment searched after a 6:30 a.m. visit by police yesterday. About a dozen officers converged on the Chehalis Avenue Apartments, at Third Street and Southwest Chehalis Avenue, to serve a search warrant, according to the Chehalis Police Department. The arrests are the result of an ongoing investigation into drug sales, according to police. Jeffrey W. Hixon, 39, was booked for three counts and Marjorie P. Turvey, 27, was booked for two counts of delivery of a controlled substance, police stated in a news release. Hixon’s 15-year-old son was in the apartment at the time and police made a referral to Child Protective Services, police said. Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said he wasn’t sure yet if any drugs were discovered in the home, but said officers did find a set of scales.

THEFTS IN CHEHALIS

• Chehalis police took a report yesterday of the theft of expensive items from outside a business on the 1100 block of State Avenue. Among the items stolen were A steel cable choker, metal plates and something called a percolator valued at about $5,000, according to Deputy Chief Randy Kaut.

• Chehalis police were called to Southwest Ninth Street yesterday about the theft of video games and an iPod from a home.

• A 2003 Toyota MR2 reported stolen Wednesday morning from Northeast Coal Creek Road in Chehalis was found later the same day on the side of a road in Thurston County, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Another vehicle at the same Chehalis location had been prowled, police said.

OUTLET STORE WORKER ARRESTED FOR TAPING VIDEO IN DRESSING ROOM

• Centralia police say they plan to get a warrant to examine a cell phone after an Outlet store employee was allegedly caught taking a video of a woman trying on bras in a dressing room. Demetrius S. Alford, 20, was arrested at his Centralia home on Wednesday after the incident at the VF Outlet on West High Street, according to police. Police Sgt. Stacy Denham said officers were shown the video and are checking to see if it’s not the first time he’s done it. The Olympia woman, in her 40s, told police the employee showed her to a dressing room and then lingered. Then she spotted him pointing a camera in her direction through the louvered dressing room door and saw his head, according to Denham. The woman yelled for her daughter and subsequently the store manager and police were contacted, he said. Alford was booked into the Lewis County Jail for voyeurism, according to the Centralia Police Department.

THEFTS IN CENTRALIA

• A Centralia city parks department vehicle was stolen from the 900 block of Johnson Road in Centralia on Wednesday, according to police. The dark blue 1993 Buick Lasabre went missing sometime between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. It has city emblems on the doors and a license plate that reads 19486D, according to police.

• The case of an 18-year-old Centralia man was referred for potential charges of first-degree burglary yesterday after he allegedly broke into an ex-girlfriend’s Centralia apartment and took several unspecified items, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police arrested Noelle I. Straggi, a 43-year-old Chehalis woman, for identity theft after taking a report Wednesday she used another name and address to fraudulently order cellular phones.  She was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

• Centralia police took a report on Wednesday at the 1100 block of Johnson Road that a male came into the store and signed a false name when purchasing items on a charge account.

DRUGS

• Centralia police during a traffic stop last night found and confiscated an item suspected to be illegal drugs but will have to have it lab tested to confirm that, according to the Centralia Police Department. Police Sgt. Stacy Denham said what the officer found was a liquid, but he didn’t have further details about its packaging or quantity. Other items at the scene such as marijuana led to the officer’s suspicions, he said. Nobody was arrested. The traffic stop came about 9 p.m. on M and West First streets, according to police.

• A 23-year-old Napavine man was arrested for possession of methamphetamine and a warrant after contact with a Centralia police officer yesterday evening at the 1200 block of Alder Street. Edward E. Jerns was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

TEENAGER THREATENED OTHER TEENS WITH RIFLE, SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said this morning a 16-year-old Chehalis boy may be charged with second-degree assault after a report he pulled a rifle from the cab of his truck and pointed it at three high school students. The incident occurred on Jan. 8 at the Chevron station on the 1100 block of state Route 6 following an unspecified verbal exchange, according to the sheriff’s office. A deputy was called yesterday to take a report about it at W.F. West High School, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. All involved are from Chehalis, according to Brown.

Coroners inquest to be held in Ronda Reynolds’ death

January 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Warren McLeod is calling for a coroner’s inquest into the controversial 1998 death in Toledo of former state trooper Ronda Reynolds.

McLeod, the first new Lewis County coroner in almost three decades, said today it’s time.

“I believe after 12 years, this case needs a resolution,” McLeod said.

The purpose of a coroner’s inquest is to obtain an objective, non-partisan and independent opinion on the cause and manner of death in a public forum, according to McLeod.

McLeod has appointed Franklin County Coroner Dan Blasdel to facilitate the process.

Reynolds was found with a bullet in her head in a closet in her Toledo home in December 1998.

The case was closed by the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office as suicide despite protests by the lead detective, within a week after the attorney for her husband Ron Reynolds threatened to file a lawsuit if they didn’t cease the investigation.

Coroner Terry Wilson changed his determination three times in the following years as the sheriff’s office case was reopened and then closed again.

The case was the subject of a civil trial in November 2009 after which a panel of citizens concluded Coroner Wilson’s determination that Reynolds’ died of suicide was arbitrary, capricious and incorrect. Thurston County Superior Court Judge Richard Hicks ordered Wilson to change the manner of death, but Wilson instead appealed the order.

McLeod, elected in November, changed the death certificate to undetermined in his first days in the office.

He said a coroner’s inquest can be heard by a jury of as many as six and as few as four individuals. As coroner, he will preside over the proceedings.

The Lewis County Prosecutors Office will present the facts and circumstances of the case. McLeod said the prosecutor has agreed to participate.

McLeod said he will abide by the finding of the inquest jury.

The community college forensics instructor said he had two choices; either conduct the review himself behind closed doors or have it done in a public way.

He chose the latter as part of his objective of bringing more transparency to the coroner’ office, he said.

Huge transformer catches fire at Chehalis Power Plant

January 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Four fire departments responding to a report of an explosion and fire at at the Chehalis Power Plant early this morning discovered one of three huge transformers burning.

The fire in the Chehalis Industrial Park at 1813 Bishop Road involved only the transformer at the gas-powered plant, Lewis County Fire District 6 Chief Bud Goodwill said this morning.

There were no injuries.

The 4:18 a.m. call drew assistance from the Chehalis Fire Department, Lewis County Fire District 5 and Riverside Fire Authority from Centralia.

Burning was one of three 20-foot tall transformers, Goodwillie said.

After they confirmed the high-voltage area was de-energized, they moved in and extinguished the blaze, Goodwillie said.

Read about police protest “sacking” of Thurston County deputy prosecutor …

January 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Olympian reports police unions in Thurston County have sent a letter to the newly elected prosecutor protesting his decision to let go Deputy Prosecutor David Bruneau.

Bruneau is in the midst of prosecuting Robert Maddaus Jr. in the Nov. 2009 fatal shooting of Shaun Peterson, 40, of Olympia.

Read news reporter Jeremy Pawloski’s story here