Unsealed document: More details on Salkum slayings

September 6th, 2010
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Image of John A. Booth Jr., left, and Ryan J. McCarthy included in court file

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The unsealed document in the Aug. 21 triple homicide case offers a lot of details about what detectives think happened inside the Lewis County house that night.

The information comes primarily from a man who described himself as a friend of the slain David West Sr. and from West’s live-in girlfriend, both of whom were at the home off Gore Road and survived.

John C. Lindberg said he went to visit the West family about 11:30 p.m. or midnight on Aug. 20 at the Salkum-Onalaska area home. As Lindberg pulled into the driveway, a small, dark-colored vehicle arrived, Lindberg told sheriff’s deputies.

Detectives concluded the second set of visitors were John Booth Jr., who is also known by the nickname “Six” and Ryan J. McCarthy, according to the document.

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John A. Booth Jr.

After a few minutes, West and Booth came back inside the house and West seemed extremely stressed, Lindberg said. Lindberg followed West down the hallway to the master bedroom and said he only had about $100 when his friend asked if he had any money on him.

“West told him that wasn’t going to work and it wasn’t enough,” Lindberg told detectives according to the allegations in the document.

West grabbed a shotgun and walked back out to the kitchen. Lindberg stayed in the bedroom. After Lindberg saw West level the shotgun, point it at Booth and tell the two men to leave, Lindberg heard gunshots and ran to hide in a bathroom for what he thought was about a half an hour, the document alleges. He then left and sped away in his white Camaro.

West Sr.’s girlfriend, Denise Salts, was interviewed later at Madigan Hospital.

Salts told detectives that after the two men arrived, she went out to feed her goats. When she heard gunshots, she ran in the backdoor and saw “Six” standing in her kitchen. He asked, “How are you doing” and shot her in the face, according to the allegations.

She fell to the floor and heard other gunshots, she said.

Neighbors reported they heard five to six gunshots that sounded as if they were small caliber and said they saw two vehicles leave the residence.

At 2:18 a.m., a deputy contacted the driver in a Camaro, Lindberg, who was crying and shaking and told the deputy there were people dying at the residence.

Two other deputies arrived at the house on the short street called Wings Way just off of Gore Road and assisted arriving medics with Salts. Three males also inside the house were dead.

Sheriff’s detective Bruce Kimsey described what he found when he entered the rambler later with crime scene specialists from the Washington State Patrol.

Sixteen-year-old David J. West Jr. was in the living room near the front door. Tony E. Williams, 50, of Randle, was across the hallway.

West Sr. was laying on the living room floor next to the kitchen with a single-barrel shotgun near his side with the hammer cocked back, Kimsey wrote in the now unsealed declaration of probable case.

Kimsey saw a projectile near the front door and a 9 mm casing near Williams.

The Lewis County Coroner’s Office has reported each died from a gunshot to the head.

WHY

Lewis County sheriff’s detectives interviewed several other people in the week following the shootings.

The declaration of probable cause caused filed with McCarthy’s charges shed light on what the the sheriff’s office believes was behind the two men’s visit to the West home that night: extortion.

The assistant manager at Booth’s workplace called detective Kimsey the Monday after the deaths. Ryan Miller said he last time he saw his co-worker about 3 p.m. the Friday before.

“Miller said Booth was talking about going to collect a $20,000 debt and the debt had something to do with bail money that was owed to him,” Kimsey wrote.

Also that week, Kimsey received a statement from an acquaintance of McCarthy’s. Angie Hoff said she got a call from McCarthy on Aug. 21 and met him in a park in Grays Harbor County.

He was with others, including someone she referred to as JB and she picked out from a photo montage as Booth.

“Hoff said McCarthy told her he ‘had a job to do’, that it was going to be ‘in and out’,” Kimsey wrote.

Early that week, Kimsey spoke with West Sr.’s step-daughter. Jessica Porter described a day in early August and her step-father got a visit from three men. She said they were “Robbie”, Booth, whose name she now knew from seeing pictures in the news and third person, a “buff” tan man with tattoos on his arms.

Porter told the detective “Robbie” went into the bedroom with her father, and when he came out, he winked at Booth and they left.

The document goes on to allege she said when she asked her dad why they were there, the only thing he said was he had to pay “Robbie” $1,000 to get him to leave. Porter told detectives her father said he was being blackmailed.

GOING AFTER THE SUSPECTS

Detectives Kimsey and Dan Riordan met with McCarthy’s wife in the couple’s home in Redmond, according to the declaration of probable cause.

Crystal McCarthy told the two she got a call from Booth around 2:30 that morning telling her to pick up her husband in Centralia. She found him sitting on a curb drinking from a bottle of water.

He wouldn’t talk about what was going on and he vomited out the window as they drove home, she said.

She told them that later on the 21st, her husband showed up at her workplace with a bag containing the clothes he had been wearing. She said she threw it into a dumpster.

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Ryan J. McCarthy

Ryan J. McCarthy, 28, was picked up in Redmond about 1 a.m. on Sunday Aug. 22 by Department of Corrections officers on a DOC warrant for a violation of his community supervision. The warrant was issued the morning of Aug. 21 on information from the sheriff’s office.

McCarthy was charged on Friday with three counts of first-degree felony murder and extortion.

The particular murder charge alleges that while he was attempting to commit a felony – burglary – he or another participant caused the death of another person.

Olympia defense attorney Rick Cordes was appointed to represent him.

Booth, 31, was captured the night of Aug. 25 by federal marshals at a Spokane home. He was wanted on a a $10 million warrant for murder out of Lewis County Superior Court and also a DOC warrant issued the morning of the shootings.

The Onalaska man has been charged with three murders, extortion and attempted murder. James Dixon, of Olympia, is his court-appointed attorney.

THE ‘PERSON OF INTEREST’

Robbie Russell was named a person of interest a few days after the shooting but he has not been charged in the case.

A no-bail bench warrant was issued Aug. 24, when a deputy prosecutor told a judge he had information Russell had violated his conditions of release in another case by having contact with one of the witnesses. Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher said authorities had knowledge Russell had earlier in August visited West Sr.’s home.

Russell and West are co-defendants in a case set for trial next month related to them allegedly ambushing a group of teenagers camping in Winlock in the summer of 2009.

Meagher also told the judge he wanted a hearing to increase Russell’s bail from $50,000 in the case to $500,000.

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Robert "Robbie" Shawn Russell

The Centralia man’s last felony conviction in Lewis County was from 1998. It was for possession of methamphetamine and at that time, all his criminal history was for non-violent offenses, according to court documents.

However, during the last 14 months Russell has been charged in four different felony cases in Lewis County Superior Court.

One is the 2009 Winlock incident and another is set for trial in a little more than a week.

It involves his arrest for possession of a stolen vehicle that Lewis County deputies happened upon when they went to a Jackson Highway property in late 2009 on another matter, according to a court file.

Another is from May of this year when Centralia police, acting on a tip, went to Russell’s South Buckner Street home and found enough methamphetamine and other items such as ledgers that he was charged with possession with intent to deliver drugs, according to a court file. The trial is scheduled for the week of Sept. 20.

The fourth pending case was filed on June 23, but the charge is unclear because the court file has been repeatedly unavailable at the county clerk’s office. However, it followed Russell’s June 22 arrest in Centralia for unlawful possession of a firearm. Police Sgt. Pat Fitzgerald said a the time he also found in the car an amount of methamphetamine large enough it could be moulded into a clump the size of a tennis ball.

Russell, according to information in one of his court files, learned to be a welder in prison in the mid-1990s. After his release, he worked and lived in Snohomish County for almost a year. By late 1998, he had returned to his home, Lewis County, to take care of his father’s estate. He is married and in the late 90s had two children, one of which he wrote – in a court file – he lost because of drugs.

He has pleaded not guilty in all four pending cases.

According to his court files, in early 2010 his attorney asked to be removed from representing Russell because Russell wasn’t paying his fees. Centralia attorney Don Blair now represents Russell.

During the week after the shootings, not only was there a warrant for Russell’s arrest, but the Chehalis bondsman who put up bail in the four current cases decided he didn’t want to be involved with Russell any longer.

John Wickert, owner of Jail Sucks Bail Bond Co., had posted $10,000, $50,000, $100,000 and an unknown amount after the June charge.

“Based on what’s going on, we just decided we needed to revoke his bond,” Wickert said last week.

Wickert said Russell called him the week before last and said he was going to turn himself in and he told his attorney he was going to come in, but he didn’t.

Wickert, a former police officer in several Lewis County towns, said deputies had gotten a tip Russell had been calling around and telling everyone goodbye.

So on Thursday Aug. 26, Wickert and two of his recovery agents, along with some Lewis County law enforcement officers went looking for Russell.

At a location in south Tumwater, they found Russell’s wife and a couple of his friends loading up his belongings on a flatbed trailer, Wickert said. He wasn’t there.

Wickert learned Russell had been driving around in another motor home and he and his agents went to a Tumwater business property where they thought he might be. He was.

He saw them coming, according to Wickert. One man exited the motor home and Russell stood in the doorway when they advised him to come out, he said. Russell had shaved his head and his mustache, Wickert said.

“He stepped out and said, ‘I’m not running, I’m not’,” Wickert said.

The bondsman took Russell to the Lewis County Jail. They seized a couple of vehicles Russell had put up as collateral.

Russell remains in the Lewis County Jail.

“He’s always gone to court and said and done what he said he was gonna do, until this time,” Wickert said.

WHAT NEXT?

The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office has said during both Booth and McCarthy’s court appearances it is considering upgrading the charges to aggravated first-degree murder, a move which means a decision would have to be made about whether to seek the death penalty.

Lewis County commissioners, who are responsible for the budgets for all county operations have already pondered the potential costs if that should happen.

“I’ve been told it could cost anywhere from $1 million to $3 million,” Commissioner Bill Schulte said last week.

The number came from a  quick “penciling out” of expenses if the prosecutor sought the death penalty for three suspects, each of whom would need to have two court-appointed and qualified defense lawyers and if each filed two appeals, Schulte said.

“If it becomes an aggravated murder, death penalty case, we go from being the being the budget Lords to being the budget servants,” he said.

Prosecutor Michael Golden is an elected official and the decision will be his alone how to prosecute the case, Schulte said.

“It’s more than the prosecutor has in his budget,” Schulte said, noting it would likely be spread out over more than one year and there is also a special state fund they can apply to for such cases.

The prosecutor’s annual spending for this year is just over $2.85 million, although more than $1 million of that comes from outside grants and is required to be dedicated to specific activities.

The bulk of money spent however would be on the defense side and be paid from the county budget set aside for indigent defendants, according to Golden.

News brief: Wanted Longview man arrested at Centralia motel

September 5th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police yesterday arrested a 32-year-old man wanted for questioning in a Longview house fire last weekend at his ex-girlfriend’s home.

Longview police detectives passed along a tip Marcus Lapree Aldridge was at a Centralia motel. Officers arrested Aldridge about 9 a.m. yesterday at the Rodeway Inn on the 700 block of Harrison Avenue,  the Centralia Police Department reported this morning.

Centralia police reported Aldridge is a person of interest in the suspected arson and was wanted on an outstanding warrant for second-degree assault, domestic violence. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail on the warrant, according to police.
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Read The (Longview) Daily News story about the assault and fire here.

West Sr. pointed shotgun telling pair of ex-cons to leave his house, triggering triple homicide, unsealed court documents allege

September 4th, 2010
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Ryan Joseph McCarthy consults with defense attorney Bob Schroeter in court on Friday after he is charged in connection with the triple homicide.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Authorities say the fatal shooting of three people inside a Lewis County home was sparked when the 52-year-old resident picked up a shotgun trying to get two men to leave, a pair of ex-convicts detectives suggest were attempting to extort thousands of dollars.

A visitor to David J. West Sr.’s Salkum-Onalaska area house told detectives he saw West point the gun at John Allen Booth Jr. in the kitchen and heard West say something to the effect of “You two m****** f****** get up and get out of here.”

John C. Lindberg said he then heard gunshots though he could not tell who was firing, and he ran into a bathroom and hid.

By 2:30 a.m. that morning two weeks ago, West, his 16-year-old son and a 50-year-old friend from Randle were laying dead inside the rental house off Gore Road. West’s girlfriend Denise Salts lay bleeding on the kitchen floor with a gunshot wound to her face.

The details of what Lewis County Sheriff’s Office detectives believe happened on Aug. 21 are described in a declaration of probable cause filed yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court when a second person was charged in the triple homicide.

Ryan Joseph McCarthy, a 28-year-old Redmond man went before a judge late yesterday in a Chehalis courtroom. He was charged with three counts of first-degree felony murder and extortion.

Judge James Lawler set bail at $2 million and appointed a public defender to represent McCarthy.

The Redmond man is described as a recent cell mate and best friend of the 31-year-old Onalaska man Booth who was charged with similar counts last week, as well as attempted murder.

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John Allen Booth Jr.

Charging documents filed yesterday suggest the two men went to West’s house to collect $20,000 Booth allegedly told someone was related to bail money owed to him. West had also told his step-daughter he was being blackmailed, according to charging documents.

A primary document in the case – outlining what detectives uncovered about the case – was unsealed yesterday. The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office had requested it remain unavailable as sheriff’s deputies continued their investigation and in part because prosecutors were contemplating upgrading the charges to aggravated first-degree murder.

They have not done that, but elected Lewis County Prosecutor Michael Golden told Judge Lawler in court yesterday his office expects to make a decision in the next couple of weeks.

Golden said after the hearing yesterday he’s charged both men in the same three deaths without particularly describing who fired a weapon.

“Frankly it doesn’t matter which one held the gun or if they both held the gun,” Golden said.

McCarthy was just released from prison the end of July, where he had spent four years for a drug conviction out of Grays Harbor County Superior Court. He had been convicted for possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, according to the Washington State Department of Corrections.

He was also incarcerated for a little over a year ending in late 2005 for residential burglary in Grays Harbor County. McCarthy’s temporary defense attorney yesterday noted to the judge his client had seven previous felony convictions.

The 28-year-old is known by his friend Robert “Robbie” Shawn Russell, 46, of Centralia as “White Folk”, according to charging documents. His forearms are tattooed with those words, according to charging documents and a photograph in the court file.

Russell, 46, of Centralia, is locked up in the Lewis County Jail as a person of interest in the homicides. He has not been charged.

McCarthy and Booth are scheduled for arraignment next Thursday.
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More on this later.

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Read the last news story on the case here.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

September 3rd, 2010

LITTLE MARIJUANA FARM IN THE CITY

• Chehalis police got a search warrant yesterday to investigate a tip about marijuana being grown on a hillside above National Avenue and arrested a 34-year-old woman when they found nine plants. They were growing both on the property where Julie M. Shorey lives on Northeast North End Avenue and a neighbor’s, according to Deputy Police Chief Randy Kaut. Shorey was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony possession of marijuana and officers are looking for her male house mate, Kaut said. He didn’t have details about the size of the plants this morning.

TRACTOR ACCIDENT IN CURTIS

• A man was airlifted to a hospital after a tractor accident yesterday in Curtis. Lewis County Fire District 13 responded about 1 p.m. to the farm on Kahout Road. The patient, who was described as a a male about 30 years old, had a severely broken leg after it was run over by a tractor he was operating, according to Fire Chief Gregg Peterson. Apparently he was getting down from the tractor and knocked it into gear, according to the chief.

HORSE VERSUS CAR IN THE CITY

• Police were called to a collision between a horse and a car in Chehalis on Wednesday afternoon. Detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said yesterday it sounded like the horse ran into a Hyundai and neither was seriously hurt. It happened near Northwest Georgia Avenue on the west side of Interstate 5.

TEENAGE GIRL ARRESTED WITH METH AFTER COMPANION’S TRAFFIC STOP

• A 15-year-old girl was arrested for possession of methamphetamine after the vehicle in which she was a passenger was pulled over in Centralia on Wednesday night. The 20-year-old male driver was cited for driving with a suspended license and jailed on a misdemeanor warrant, according to the Centralia Police Department. It happened about 11:30 p.m. on the 500 block of North Tower Avenue.

STOLEN STUFF

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday on the theft of a green 1999 Kawasaki quad. A deputy called Wednesday to the 300 block of Coulson Road south of Chehalis learned somebody had cut through two fences to get into an open storage shed where the ATV was kept. The loss was estimated at $1,500.

• Centralia police took a report of a vehicle prowl Thursday at the 1200 block of North Washington Avenue. A stereo and a dash-mounted tachometer were stolen, along with a watch and sunglasses, according to the Centralia Police Department.

TRAFFIC INCIDENTS

• Centralia police reported yesterday they will refer a case of two adult males for possible charges of reckless driving involving what was described as a road rage incident. It reportedly occurred on Old 99 between Grand Mound and Centralia on Wednesday.

• Lewis County Fire District 5 responded to a vehicle accident on Wednesday night near milepost 72 on Interstate 5. An adult male was treated and taken to Providence Centralia Hospital, according to fire Lt. Laura Hanson.

News brief: Dunk-a-cop at Home Depot

September 3rd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Chehalis-based state trooper is organizing a dunk-a-cop event for tomorrow at Home Depot.

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Trooper Mike Anderson

Trooper Mike Anderson is raising money for research to help find a cure to blood cancers.

The Saturday event in Chehalis runs from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.

Anderson said visitors can buy a chance to drop local law enforcement officers into a dunk tank. He plans a car wash there at the same time.

Anderson is also training to run a marathon for his fundraising.

The money will go to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Anderson’s efforts to raise $5,000 are on behalf of a local Home Depot employee who has a form of leukemia.

Fore more information on how to help Anderson’s cause, go to his web site http://pages.teamintraining.org/wa/wdw11/manderswgr

Prosecutor to charge second man with murder in triple homicide

September 2nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County Prosecutor Michael Golden announced late this afternoon he intends to charge Ryan Joseph McCarthy with three counts of first-degree murder for his role in the fatal shootings on Aug. 21 in the Salkum-Onalaska area.

The 28-year-old Redmond resident was picked up as a person of interest in the case within 24 hours of the deaths, based on information the from the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Authorities have not said publicly what they believe McCarthy’s part to be.

Golden said in a news release just before 5 p.m. he will charge McCarthy in the deaths of David J. West III, 16, his father David J. West Sr. 52, and Tony E. Williams, 50, of Randle. He also said he will charge McCarthy with extortion.

Golden couldn’t be reached for further comment.

John Allen Booth Jr., 31, of Onalaska, is already charged with first-degree murder of those victims, extortion and attempted first-degree murder in the instance of the senior West’s live-in girlfriend, Denise Salts, 51, who survived a gunshot wound to her face, and other lesser charges.

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John A. Booth Jr.

The details of what authorities suspect happened at the house off Gore Road remain scarce, as a primary document in Booth’s court file was ordered sealed by a judge until next week.

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield has said he believes the shootings were connected to a drug-related debt collection and described what deputies found as “a very sad and brutal scene.”

Several hours after the 2 a.m. call, as detectives were processing the scene Mansfield told news reporters they did find weapons in the house, but he didn’t know if a murder weapon was found.

The sheriff wouldn’t say if it appeared there was an exchange of gunfire.

Mansfield also said they knew there were other people at the house who left before deputies arrived at 2:30 a.m. It was a neighbor who had called 911 about shots fired, he said.

Golden also announced this afternoon additional suspects may be named and additional charges may be filed based on the results of the ongoing criminal investigation.

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Robert "Robbie" Shawn Russell

Robert Shawn Russell, 46, of Centralia, was named a person of interest in the case last week and picked up in Tumwater by a bail bondsman who decided to revoke bonds he had posted on Russell’s four pending felony cases in Lewis County Superior Court.

On Monday, prosecutors filed notice they will seek exceptionally high sentences in each of Russell’s four cases.

The sheriff’s office is still gathering facts and some other evidence has been sent out for forensic testing, according to Golden.

McCarthy was just released from prison on July 29. Like Booth, he was under the supervision of a community corrections officer with the state Department of Corrections.

His most recent of six felony chargings in Washington was in Grays Harbor County Superior Court in May 2006, according to information available online from Washington State Courts.

Golden’s news release also addressed the decision his office is contemplating to increase the charges to aggravated murder, a move which would give him the option of seeking the death penalty.

The decision won’t be made until additional evidence is gathered and considered, Golden noted.

He included a lengthy quote: “With multiple victims, multiple suspects and a complex crime scene, this case will consume significant resources,” the elected prosecutor wrote. “However, over the past three years I have built a solid team of trial attorneys, and we are quite capable of exacting justice in this case.

“Whether that will include a request for the death penalty will depend on all the available evidence, including that which is still being gathered by the sheriff’s office.”

While Booth has been charged, his opportunity to make his plea won’t come until next week.

Golden did not note when he expected he would file charges against McCarthy.

All three men remain in the Lewis County Jail.

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This news story was updated at 7:15 p.m.

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Read the last story on the case here.

News brief: Morton teacher suspended for incidents from two years ago

September 2nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Morton School District teacher Michael Moulton’s teaching certificate will be suspended, the state Superintendent of Public Instruction Randy Dorn announced yesterday.

The East County Journal first reported in June that Moulton had won his job back after appealing his firing in connection with his arrest for allegedly assaulting students by touching them.

In June, the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction told an East County Journal reporter Moulton’s certification status had been under review for nearly a year and its investigation measuring his alleged conduct against the rules regarding teacher behavior was still open.

Dorn in a written statement yesterday said he wanted to make his decision known as soon as possible because of the intense public interest in the matter.

“The investigation is done and the paperwork is being completed,” Dorn said in his statement. “The evidence clearly shows Mr. Moulton violated our code of professional conduct.”

Online readers can most easily find more about the latest on this by checking out The Olympian’s news story here or in The Seattle Times here.