Breaking news: Cause of Mayfield cabin fire not accidental, investigator says

November 30th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This news story was updated at 10:26 a.m.

A blaze that gutted a small vacation cabin at Mayfield Lake earlier this month is “very suspicious”, according to the fire investigator.

Fire broke out the evening of Nov. 12, destroying the 600-square-foot unoccupied  structure on the 100 block of Tanglewood Drive.

The owner, who resides nearby, was out of town when it happened; no injuries were reported.

Fire investigator Ted McCarty said he is working with the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office and the homeowner’s insurance company and they are still interviewing people so he couldn’t say too much.

However, among the reasons for suspicion, he said, were no other other sources of ignition in the room of origin, nothing electrical was plugged in, nothing was left turned on and nobody had been there.

“There’s just no reason why a fire would start in the bedroom on the floor,” McCarty said this morning.

He estimated the loss at about $75,000. The owner had remodeled after a a big freeze broke water pipes and flooded the cabin about two years earlier, he said.

It was originally a hunting cabin and used mainly for friends and family, according to McCarty.

The cabin had been for sale for some time, according to McCarty.

Read about state won’t agree to share jail fingerprints with immigration enforcement agency …

November 30th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Seattle Times reports Washington state has declined to sign an agreement that would allow the fingerprints of people booked into local jails to be checked against a national immigration database.

Read news reporter Lornet Turnbull’s story here

Onalaska dairy fire: No cows lost, tons of hay replaced

November 29th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The largest dairy farm in Lewis County lost 80 tons of hay and a $100,000 tractor in a Thanksgiving night fire but owner Leo Zylstra was calmly practical when he spoke of the damage today.

“It’s very inconvenient but we’ll pull through it,” Zylstra said. “It’s part of life I guess.”

The Misty Morning Dairy in Onalaska was able to get organized quickly and by 10 o’clock the next morning had replaced the hay, Zylstra said.

They milk 1,300 animals, so it was about four days of feed that were destroyed, he said.

He has insurance, he said.

Fifteen to 20 firefighters from Salkum, Onalaska and Mossyrock responded to the approximately 6:30 p.m. call on Thursday.

The original information was a tractor was on fire but when the first unit arrived, flames were rolling across the top of the commodities shed, a large three-sided building where the feed is stored, according to Lewis County Fire District 8 Assistant Chief Don Taylor.

They had to fight to keep it contained to the portion of the barn that was farthest away from the adjacent cows’ quarters, according to Taylor.

Zylstra said he didn’t lose any animals.

Crews were on the scene until 5:30 a.m. the next day pulling out and extinguishing the smoldering feed, most of it expensive alfalfa, according to Taylor.

Zylstra, who was in Arizona for the holiday but has returned home, was so appreciative for the all-night effort by the fire departments.

“That would have been really bad if it got into the loafing shed, that would have been a disaster,” he said.

Zylstra said the hay costs $200 per ton.

He said the large field tractor that burned was a 290 HP machine, probably valued at about $100,000. Somehow the grain grinder attached to it was undamaged, Zylstra said. Workers were grinding grain when the fire broke out, he said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Misty Morning Dairy sits on 700 acres on the 800 block of Jorgensen Road.

It’s an operation that milks 24 hours a day with 20 employees. The Zylstras bought the dairy in 1980.
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Note from news reporter Sharyn Decker: Zylstra purchased the dairy in 1980 from Floyd and Vi Decker. Floyd Decker was a cousin of my father’s.

Read about Oregon crash kills woman, injures Chehalis resident …

November 29th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The East Oregonian reports a 39-year-old Chehalis man was hospitalized after a single-vehicle crash early yesterday morning in northeast Oregon in which a 36-year-old Pendleton woman was killed.

Read the East Oregonian’s story here

2010.1129.crash.oregon

The 2008 Ford 350 that wrecked on Highway 395 near Pilot Rock, Ore. / Courtesy photo from Oregon State Police

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

November 29th, 2010

METAL PIPE TO HEAD

• Centralia police responded to an incident about 10 p.m. last night on the 1700 block of Harrison Avenue in which a male was reportedly struck in the head with a pipe by a family member. Further details were not noted in a summary from the Centralia Police Department.

HIT AND RUN DRIVER LEAVES BEHIND BUMPER

• Responders were called to a hit and run collision just after 9 p.m. last night in which a bumper from the offending vehicle was left behind, according to authorities. A woman was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries after the incident at North Tower and East Main Street, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Officers subsequently arrested and booked for felony hit and run Yaney Rodriguez Serrano, 37, of Mexico, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DRUGS

• Police responding about 12:30 a.m. on Sunday to a location on the 1700 block of Cooks Hill Road arrested a homeless man from Longview for first-degree criminal trespass, third-degree malicious mischief and possession of methamphetamine. Micheal S. Cabe, 28, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to Centralia police.

• A 30-year-old Chehalis man, Mark A. Silva, was arrested for possession of methamphetamine following a traffic stop about 12:10 a.m. on Saturday on the 100 block of East Sixth Street in Centralia. The 58-year-old female driver from Centralia and a 37-yea-old Rochester man were booked for felony warrants, according to the Centralia Police Department.

LOADED FIREARM MISSING FROM UNLOCKED VEHICLE

•The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning a loaded 9 mm Smith and Wesson pistol was reportedly stolen from under the seat of an unlocked vehicle when it was parked on Forest Service Road 23 outside Randle. The victim, a 40-year-old man from Tacoma, reported the theft on Wednesday but said it occurred sometime on Nov. 10 and 11 when he was hunting. Its serial number is 206304, according to the sheriff’s office.

BURGLARIES

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning a digital camera was stolen in a residential burglary on the 4900 block of state Route 6 outside Chehalis. A deputy called on Friday was told it happened sometime between 9 a.m. and noon, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

• Four Black Hills gold rings were discovered missing from a home on the 200 block of Falls Road in Randle, according to a report made on Thursday morning to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The victim told a deputy she realized they were gone that day but suspected they might have been taken around the same time a neighbor’s residence was burglarized a few weeks earlier, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The loss was estimated at $2,600.

CAR PROWLS

• A stereo was stolen from a vehicle on the 1400 block of Johnson Road, according to a report made to Centralia police about noon yesterday.

• Chehalis police early Saturday took a report of a car prowl on the 100 block of Northeast Washington Avenue. A distributor was missing from the glove box of an unlocked vehicle, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• Somebody stole a stereo and tools from a vehicle on the 1000 block of Southeast Washington Avenue, according to a report made to Chehalis police early Saturday.

SLASHING AND SMASHING

• Police were called about 1:30 a.m. on Saturday after the rear window was found smashed in a vehicle outside the movie theater at the Lewis County Mall on Northeast Hampe Way.

• Centralia police took a report early Saturday of a vehicle’s tire being slashed sometime overnight on the 1000 block of L Street.

• On Friday morning, an officer took a report of a tire being slashed on the 1000 block of Scammon Creek Road in Centralia.

GRAFFITI TO BUSINESS

• Centralia police reported gang-style graffiti was found at a business on the 1400 block of Lum Road.

SPACE HEATER BLAMED FOR SHED FIRE

• A green house was destroyed in a fire that appeared to have been started from a space heater on Centralia-Alpha Road on Wednesday morning, according to Riverside Fire Authority.

Read about little change in police responses since officers died in line of duty last year …

November 29th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Tacoma) News Tribune conducted an analysis of police use of force in the year that has passed since four Lakewood officers were gunned down and concluded local agency procedures and behavior have changed little in response.

Read news reporter Stacey Mulick’s story here

Former chief deputy coroner dozed off during DUI arrest, court documents allege

November 27th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County’s now-former chief deputy coroner fell asleep repeatedly during her contact with a state trooper this summer when she was arrested for suspicion of driving under the influence of depressants, according to charging documents.

Carmen Brunton’s arraignment is set for Tuesday in Lewis County District Court. She was charged Nov. 12 after the results of blood tests came back.

Brunton was let go from her job after the July traffic stop on Interstate 5 south of Chehalis; it was just before 8 a.m. on her way to work.

The Winlock resident told a sheriff’s deputy she was on numerous prescription medications and had taken Oxycodone about an hour earlier, according to charging documents. Oxycodone is a synthetic narcotic prescribed for pain.

Brunton, 56, was the coroner’s office only full time employee and was responsible for its day to day operations. She had been a county employee since 1993.

Driving while under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs is a gross misdemeanor with a maximum penalty of one year in jail and a $5,000 fine.

Charging documents give a similar account to a Lewis County Sheriff’s Office incident report, which was available soon after Brunton’s arrest.

Deputy Jason Mauermann wrote that he responded to a citizen report in Napavine that a Black Expedition was “all over the road” and had pulled into the Chevron station on Rush Road. He followed it onto Interstate 5 where he described the vehicle as repeatedly drifting between lanes.

When he contacted Brunton near the Labree Road interchange, the deputy wrote, she had very slow speech and heavy, sleepy eyes but he didn’t detect any odor of liquor. When asked, she said she was on numerous prescription medications, including muscle relaxers, heart pills and pain medication, according to Mauermann.

Upon further questioning, she told him she had taken Oxycodone for pain that morning, but not a muscle relaxer, according to Mauermann’s report.

Deputies requested a trooper take over the investigation to avoid a conflict because they worked closely with her.

Charging documents say Trooper Weaver responded and conducted an evaluation, noting Brunton also had slurred speech and was unsteady when she walked.

“Weaver observed that Brunton was lethargic and drowsy and fell asleep multiple times during his contact with her,” charging documents state.

Weaver, a drug recognition expert, concluded she was under the influence of a central nervous system depressant.

Brunton was put on administrative leave that day, July 15. Her boss, elected Coroner Terry Wilson, said her leave ended and she wouldn’t be returning on Aug. 3, the same day a front page news story was published about the arrest.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Sara Beigh said the drugs found with the blood test are Oxycodone, a pain pill; lorazepam which is often used for anxiety; as well as citalopram, amitriptyline and nortiptyline

Beigh said the last three can be used as antidepressants and one of them was a component of one of the others.

There’s no allegation Brunton was taking any medication not legally prescribed to her.

Beigh said she didn’t know if they were all prescribed, but it doesn’t matter.

“What matters is if a drug of some sort has impaired your driving,” Beigh said.

Brunton’s duties for about the previous 12 years included managing the office, assisting in death investigations, arranging autopsies and notifying the next of kin when deaths occur that are under the jurisdiction of the coroner’s office.

Coroner Wilson said in early August he had not seen anything breaking the protocol for safe storage and eventual destruction of the wide variety of medications his office confiscates, something it is required to do by state law.

Last month, however, in a meeting with Lewis County commissioners, the newly appointed chief deputy coroner Dawn Harris described a new policy she said was established last May.

The coroner’s office still collects any medications they find belonging to the deceased individuals they are responsible for, but all narcotics are counted and put into an evidence bag at the scene, which is witnessed by a law enforcement officer, according to Harris.

The coroners office also has put into writing a policy that deputy coroners don’t take possession of weapons at death scenes, Harris said at the same meeting.

Come January, Wilson will end 28 years of his job as elected coroner.

Community college forensics instructor Warren McLeod of Chehalis won the office in this month’s election with 54.5 percent of the vote running against retired DEA agent Micheal Hurley of Mossyrock.
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Read “Coroner’s top employee out after arrest for driving under the influence of pain pills” from Wednesday Aug. 4, 2010 here