Facebook invite clues in deputies to big party with underage drinking

November 9th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This news story was updated at 4:39 p.m. with news of TV reporter assaulted outside party house

News flash: If you’re going to throw a drinking party and invite teenagers, don’t advertise it on Facebook, unless you want a bunch of deputies joining you.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday they got wind of a Saturday night affair near Toledo and put together a team that included four extra deputies, reserve deputies, police from Winlock and Toledo and the Washington State Patrol.

When they arrived at 11 p.m. they found well in excess of 300 people, both over and under 21 years old, according to sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust.

Aust said they were able to arrest eight underage party-goers for being minors either in possession or having consumed alcohol. The individuals arrested were between the ages of 17 and 20 and came from places such as Chehalis, Toledo, Castle Rock, Vancouver and Battleground, according to the sheriff’s office.

“They just did what they could to contain it,” Aust said of the law enforcement officers.

The homeowner and his friends are being investigated for contributing alcohol to minors, the sheriff’s office reported. Aust said the man they think is the homeowner denied he was behind the gathering and said he was trying to break it up.

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield said in a news release underage drinking is a serious issue in the county and his office will deal with it aggressively.

“We have had several injuries and even a death over the past year due to adults giving or allowing juveniles to consume alcohol,” Mansfield said. “The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has a no-tolerance stance on this issue.”

The event was at a residence on the 100 block of Fluckinger Road west of Toledo.

Aust said from what he could gather on the social networking site, Facebook, it was a going away party for someone, and advertised there would be a couple of kegs of beer but otherwise, it was billed as “Bring your own bottle”.

A trooper arrested one person for driving under the influence.

A clue there might be underage drinking; a message on Facebook from one of the hosts: “If you’re under the age of 18, don’t tell your parents.”

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Update: The sheriff’s office said later this morning a television news reporter was assaulted yesterday as the homeowner tried to stop her from filming his house and field.

Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said a deputy was called at about 1:35 p.m. after the man reportedly pushed her camera twice and grabbed her arm telling her to get off private property. The reporter had a camera set up on a tri-pod on the side of the road, according to Brown.

She kept the camera rolling during the attack.

William E. Thomas, 51, of Toledo, was arrested for fourth-degree assault and booked into the Lewis County Jail, Brown said. He was released just after noon today.

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See the story from KOIN TV and their video from KOINlocal6.com here

Randle minister mistakenly sentenced to five years in prison

November 9th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The former pastor of a Randle church won his appeal for being wrongly sentenced after he was convicted of sending sexual emails to a teenage member of his congregation.

Frederick C. Haack, the minister of the Family Worship Center in Randle, was sentenced to the maximum of five years in prison for communication with a minor for immoral purposes but an appeals court found the offense was actually a gross misdemeanor, something which should have gotten him locked up for no more than a year.

The Washington State Court of Appeals in an opinion filed late last month remanded the case for resentencing in Lewis County Superior Court.

It’s not clear from the opinion if Haack was actually incarcerated or remained free during the pending appeal. A phone call yesterday to his attorney was not returned.

The 49-year-old was charged in early 2008 for exchanges that occurred in December 2005 with a then-16-year-old Randle girl. A Lewis County jury found him guilty in 2009 of all six counts of communication with a minor for immoral purposes.

In his appeal, filed May 1, 2009, Haack’s attorney pointed out the judge erred in sentencing him for class C felonies because the offenses at the time committed were gross misdemeanors, according to the opinion.

The state legislature had increased the penalty for the crime effective in June 2006.

The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office conceded the error.

Haack’s attorney also argued the conviction based on insufficient evidence but the appeals court rejected those claims.

A three-member panel of the state Court of Appeals Division Two agreed with the Oct. 26 finding of the sentencing error.

The allegations arose after the girl disclosed to her mother the events which had occurred two years earlier when she was 16. She had returned to Randle to live with her mother and contacted the pastor for soccer lessons.

By the end of the year, Haack, a married father of three, had moved away from Randle and was no longer a minister of any congregation.
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Read the Appeals Court decision here.

Search for Greenhill escapee moves into south Thurston County

November 8th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Police are checking addresses of family and friends of a Greenhill School escapee after the 16-year-old was discovered missing this morning and a hole found cut in the fence surrounding the juvenile institution in south Chehalis.

Chehalis police were called about 6:30 a.m. and a large containment set up around the area with the help of police, deputies and troopers from Centralia, Lewis County and the Washington State Patrol. A police dog tracked a scent a short way up Chehalis Avenue, according to police.

A 1992 Isuzu Trooper stolen from the 300 block of Chehalis Avenue was later found abandoned on the side of a road in Rainier, according to Chehalis police detective Sgt. Rick McNamara.

The department is getting the assistance of law officers in Pierce and Thurston county to check addresses up there, McNamara said this afternoon.

“My gut feeling is he took that rig and dumped it up there, he’s got family and friends in the Tenino area,” McNamara said.

The 16-year-old boy, whose name was not released, is locked up in the state juvenile institution for crimes such as motor vehicle theft, theft and burglary, according to McNamara.

He has previous addresses from places such as Tenino, Rainier, Olympia and Roy, McNamara said.

Greenhill School is a medium/maximum secure facility for older juvenile boys incarcerated for felonies and operated by the Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration, under the state Department of Social and Health Services. It sits between Interstate 5 and Southwest Pacific Avenue north of Southwest Parkland Street.

According to Chehalis police, they were notified after the inmate was discovered missing from his room about 6:30 a.m. and a hole was found cut in the chain link fence near Southwest Ninth Street and Chehalis Avenue.

A pair of sheers were found inside the fence, according to police. McNamara said he doesn’t know yet where the teenager got the sheers.

The Isuzu Trooper was found about 9:30 a.m.

The Chehalis Police Department will be conducting the investigation into the escape.

Read about eye doctor who died in Morton area plane crash …

November 7th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Longview) Daily News published a piece today about the eye surgeon from Woodland who died when the plane from Pacific Cataract and Laser Institute in Chehalis crashed almost two weeks ago.

Ophthalmologist Dr. Paul Shenk, technician Rod Rinta and pilot Ken Sabin lost their lives when the Cessna 340A went down northeast of Morton the morning of Oct. 25.

Shenk, 69, lived in Woodland.

Read news reporter Tony Lystra’s story here

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Read the most recent story on the crash here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

November 6th, 2010

FARM EQUIPMENT MISSING

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday that a $28,000 bailer was stolen from the 800 block of Oyler Road in Onalaska. Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said the red and yellow New Holland model 570 bailer was last seen two weeks ago. She is asking anyone with information on the piece of farm machinery to call Lewis County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-748-6422 or call 911.

BURGLARY IN CENTRALIA

• Centralia police responded to a burglary yesterday morning on the 500 block of East Main Street. Missing from a residence was a television, a computer and money, according to the Centralia Police Department.

ARREST FOR ASSAULT

• Somebody heard yelling coming from a Centralia motel room drawing police officers who arrested a 34-year-old man for allegedly choking his girlfriend on Wednesday. Jeffrey J. Lucas of Centralia, was arrested and booked for second-degree assault after the approximately 11 a.m. call to the Motel 6 on the 1300 block of Belmont Avenue, according to Centralia police. Officer John Panco said a little bindle of methamphetamine was found in Lucas’s possession. The victim, a woman in her late 30s from the local area, was seen by medics but not seriously injured enough to be hospitalized, according to Panco.

CAR PROWL

• Chehalis police were called about 1:15 p.m. on Thursday to Northwest Park Street and told a male broke a window on a vehicle and took something.

Read about Thurston County sheriff race winner, Snaza …

November 6th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Olympian is reporting sheriff’s Deputy John Snaza is talking about his plans after sheriff’s Lt. Debbie Mealy conceded the race for Thurston County sheriff.

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John Snaza

Snaza tells news reporter Jeremy Pawloski his priority will be putting more deputies on the road and corrections officers in the jail.

Read “Snaza vows he’ll be open” from The Olympian today Saturday Nov. 6, 2010 here

Trailer park seniors fought about dumping ashes, snitching before deadly shooting

November 5th, 2010
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Richard J. F. Roth speaks to defense attorney Bob Schroeter as he is charged with murder in connection with the shooting of a 66-year-old female neighbor in Winlock

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The man arrested for allegedly fatally shooting a fellow trailer park resident in Winlock after an argument was charged with first-degree murder today.

Richard Joseph Frank Roth, 65, was brought into Lewis County Superior Court in a wheelchair this afternoon. He is accused of shooting Jackie Marie Lawyer, 66, in the neck from a distance of about three feet yesterday morning in the Frost Road Trailer Park.

First-degree murder carries a possible penalty of life in prison.

Defense attorney Bob Schroeter addressed the judge as they discussed bail.

“Clearly there will be facts before the court that will put this matter in a whole different light,” Schroeter said.

Schroeter said his client recently suffered from a significant heart problem and within the past month underwent a heart procedure in a hospital.

“My client would not be a flight risk from the jail to the next street,” Schroeter said.

Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Steve Scott requested Roth be held on $2 million bail, because of the nature of the charge, circumstances of the incident, danger to the community and a 1968 conviction for escape.

Judge James Lawler set bail at $500,000.

Roth’s income amounts to about $850 a month from Social Security, Schroeter told the judge. His assets include a 1960 motor home valued at about $200 and a 1985 Ford van worth about $1,000, Schroeter said.

The judge found he qualified for a court-appointed attorney.

Charging documents in the case describe the most immediate dispute between the two as a confrontation yesterday in the trailer park laundry room where Lawyer called Roth a snitch, saying he told the park manager she was dumping ashes from her wood stove in the woods.

Roth reportedly told detective Bruce Kimsey yesterday he took his laundry soap back to his van and put his .22 revolver in his back pocket. When he was confronted by Lawyer again, he pulled it out, pointed it at her neck and squeezed the trigger, according to charging documents.

The charging documents also offer the following from the suspect’s interview with the detective:

When Kimsey asked Roth why he felt he needed to shoot her, Roth said he didn’t know. When Kimsey asked about Roth’s emotions when he pulled out the firearm, he said he just snapped, he’d just had enough of it, according to charging documents.

First-degree murder means the crime was intentional and premeditated.

Roth is expected back in court on Nov. 10.
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More later

For more details and photos from yesterday’s events in Winlock, scroll down to read “Woman, 66, fatally shot in Winlock trailer park, neighbor arrested” or click here