
Attorneys review an order allowing analysis of trace evidence, a spot so small the entire sample will be consumed. Counterclockwise beginning in front are Brad Meagher, James Dixon, Rick Cordes and Roger Hunko.
By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter
CHEHALIS – The state crime lab found a spot of what might be blood on clothing believed to belong to murder suspect Ryan J. McCarthy, but it’s so small that if they test it, there won’t be anything left for a defense expert to conduct its own analysis.

Ryan J. McCarthy
Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher filed a motion last week asking a judge to allow the DNA test, and allow the defense to have its own expert present when it’s done.
McCarthy, 29, and John Allen Booth Jr., 31, are former prison cell mates charged in the August 21 shootings inside a Salkum-Onalaska area home that left three people dead and one woman seriously wounded.
The pair are charged with murder and extortion in connection with the deaths of David J. West Sr. 52, his son David J. West Jr., 16, and Tony E. Williams, 50, of Randle, at the West’s home. Booth is also charged with the attempted murder of 51-year-old Denise Salts who lived there.
McCarthy’s wife, according to charging documents, told detectives that on Aug. 21, her husband showed up at her workplace with a bag containing the clothes he had been wearing when she picked him up in Centralia about 2:30 that morning. She said she threw it into a dumpster. It was recovered by law enforcement, according to charging documents.

John A. Booth Jr.
Meagher and lawyers for the defendants went before Judge Richard Brosey this week to discuss the proposed DNA test.
Six jail officers guarded the two defendants in the small fourth-floor courtroom in Chehalis during the proceedings on Wednesday afternoon.
The test will essentially consume all the trace evidence, Meagher told the judge.
McCarthy’s attorney, Rick Cordes, said he could bring in his own expert while it’s done. Brosey agreed with the arrangement.
Brosey also signed an order Wednesday allowing Booth’s fiancee Shawna Trent to get back her computer and an iPod seized by detectives.
Booth’s attorney, James Dixon, then asked the judge to lift a prohibition against any contact between Booth and Trent. She is listed as a witness in the case.
She is a longtime girlfriend of Booth, he told the judge. They consider themselves married, he said.
The couple underwent a religious marriage ceremony in June and had a date set for this month to do a civil ceremony.
Dixon noted a similar allowance was made for McCarthy and his wife, although she too is a witness.
Meagher opposed the request for visitation at the jail.
Brosey said he would allow telephone contact, as all phone calls from the jail are recorded. And he said he would allow visits, which are conducted through a video system in which inmates and their visitors are not ever in the same room.
The visits will have to be recorded and there can be no conversation about the case, the judge said.
A trial date has not yet been set for Booth, a former Onalaska resident.
Attorneys have a deadline at the end of March to file a “notice for special proceedings”. Defense attorneys are compiling a collection of information looking to show why the death penalty should not be sought for Booth.
McCarthy’s trial is scheduled for the week of April 18.
Both men have pleaded not guilty.
•••
Read recent stories on the case:
“News brief: Springtime trial set for one defendant in triple homicide” from Thursday Nov. 18, 2010
“Attorneys ask for more time on decision about seeking death penalty” from Wednesday Oct. 20, 2010

John A. Booth Jr. next to his attorney in Lewis County Superior Court on Wednesday afternoon as participants wait for the judge to enter.

Ryan J. McCarthy, in the jury box, talks with his lawyer before proceedings begin on Wednesday.
Notes from behind the news: What readers wanted to know in 2010
January 2nd, 2011A vigil drew more than 200 mourners to Morton after the body of 16-year-old Austin King was found almost a month following his disappearance last summer
By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter
I realize 2010 has been over for a couple of days, but I’m going to take a look back briefly and tell you about the top stories of last year here on Lewis County Sirens.
Well since I started in June anyhow.
I can’t say for sure exactly what the most read news stories were, because if they are ranked somewhere in my web sites statistics, I haven’t found that part.
Austin King, found dead
But I can see the numbers for when people Google (or use other search engines) looking for something, and then come to Lewis County Sirens to read about it.
It’s sort of a toss up between the August fatal shootings that left 16-year-old David West Jr., his father and his father’s friend dead and the summer time saga of the missing 16-year-old Austin King of Morton who eventually was found dead.
More people were looking for news about “Austin King Morton” and “Jack Arnold Silverthorne” – the young man charged in his homicide – and related search terms than for stories about the Salkum-Onalaska area triple homicide. That is, if you leave out searches for Robbie Russell and variations on his name.
Three fatally shot, Salkum
I say it’s a toss up because who knows if people wanted to read about Russell a so-called person of interest in the slayings, or if they wanted to read about his (many) other reasons for being in the news; such as confessing he brought methamphetamine into the jail hidden in his “keister”, trying to outrun deputies in his red Corvette through the Chehalis Industrial Park, getting pulled over with a tennis ball sized clump of methamphetamine in his car or … you see what I mean.
The third most widely read story seems to be October crash of the Cessna from the Chehalis-based Pacific Cataract and Laser Institute that killed pilot Ken Sabin and his passengers Rod Rinta and Dr. Paul Shenk.
Chehalis Cessna crashes
After that, news on July 2 that 21-year-old Ivy M. Dolowy was killed when her car crashed into a tree on state Route 6 was near the top of the list.
The name of the young woman from Chehalis shows up as the most searched for name of all.
More specifically, key phrases searched for are ranked. The most searched for terms are “Lewis County Sirens” and its variations, and next comes “Ivy Dolowy”.
However, there are so many ways to look for John Allen Booth Jr. – the former Onalaska man charged with aggravated first-degree murder in the triple homicide – that when I add those all up, a handful of people were more interested in him than her.
Ronda Reynolds case
The next most popular story is Ronda Reynolds, the Toledo woman whose death more than a decade ago resulted in an unprecedented judicial review of a coroner’s decision last year. And then of course, author Ann Rule published her book in October renewing the public’s interest in the case.
Finally, an awful lot of people wanted to read about Donato Valle Vega, the man indicted in September after federal agents found nearly 10 pounds of cocaine in the attic of his Centralia Auto Sales business.
So those are the top six or seven stories readers were looking for when they came to Lewis County Sirens.
However, all that doesn’t really tell me what people have read the most or enjoyed reading the best, because the majority of visitors have bookmarked Lewis County Sirens and presumably just look over whatever news appears on the homepage.
I’d be very interested in hearing what readers liked, didn’t like or would hope to see written about in 2011. Feel free to send me a note or comment.
And hopefully by the end of this coming December, I will have found a statistics program that simply ranks each story by number of readers.
Tags: By Sharyn L. Decker, news reporter
Posted in Columns and commentary | 2 Comments »