Update: Names of triple homicide victims released

August 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Two of the three people slain in the early Saturday morning shooting in the Onalaska area are a father and his 16-year-old son who lived in the house, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said this afternoon.

David J. West Sr. 52, and David J. West Jr., 16, were dead at the scene when deputies arrived about 2:30 a.m. yesterday.

The third individual who died is named as Tony E. Williams, 50, of Mineral, according to the sheriff’s office.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield is still not identifying the fourth person shot and wounded but said that person is in good enough condition they can talk and be interviewed by his detectives this afternoon. The individual was taken by Life Flight helicopter to an undisclosed hospital.

David West Jr. would have been a junior at Onalaska High School this fall, according to Forrest Moore, 16, who identified the young man who went by D.J. yesterday as his best friend.

Moore and two of his other friends yesterday said D.J. lived with his father and his father’s girlfriend at the house.

They also said a couple lived in a trailer on the property. Sheriff Mansfield said this afternoon there were other people who lived on the property who were not involved in any way.

John Allen Booth Jr.

John Allen Booth Jr.

The sheriff’s office is still searching for their suspect, John Allen Booth Jr., 31.

Mansfield said his office continues to work around the clock following up on dozens of leads. They are being assisted by several agencies across the state, he said.

Mansfield said in a news release he wants to remind the public Booth is armed and considered extremely dangerous.

The blue or teal Dodge Diplomat they thought Booth might driving has been found, Mansfield said. Now they are looking for another car he may be driving. It is a turquoise 1995 Saturn Coupe, with a license plate of 319 UEB.

“We need to get a hold of him,” Mansfield said. “My goal is to make that happen without anyone else getting hurt.”

Autopsies on the dead are scheduled for Monday, according to the sheriff’s office.
•••
For more details on the fatal shootings, either scroll down or click here.

Manhunt spreads to Spokane and beyond after three fatally shot in Onalaska

August 21st, 2010
2010.0821.triple.hom.second_2

Detectives process the scene this afternoon in Onalaska where four people were shot, three of them fatally.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

ONALASKA – The state Department of Corrections has issued a nationwide arrest warrant for John Allen Booth Jr., the man suspected in the overnight slaying of three people inside an Onalaska-area home in connection with a drug debt collection.

Booth, who is from Onalaska, was just released from prison in December after serving five and a half years for second-assault, first-degree burglary and witness tampering, according to a DOC spokesperson. Booth is being supervised by the DOC and a special unit has been assigned to find him.

John Allen Booth Jr.

John Allen Booth Jr.

“We have specialists on the scene there, in Tacoma and at DOC headquarters in Olympia working this case,” DOC spokesperson Chad Lewis said late this afternoon.

Booth, 31, is considered armed and extremely dangerous.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has only said four individuals were shot, three fatally. One survivor was airlifted to an undisclosed hospital. Sheriff Steve Mansfield today would not release the ages or the genders of the victims.

“They’re people who either lived in the house or were visiting,” Mansfield said this afternoon. “We think a couple of them are related.”

Yellow police tape about a quarter mile up a gravel road kept news media away from the sand-colored rambler where detectives were collecting evidence. The rental house on the 100 block of Wings Way, off of Gore Road, is about two and half miles northeast of the Ethel Post Office.

“What they found was a very sad and brutal scene,” Mansfield said.

There could very well have some innocent “third-party” people in the house, he said, although he didn’t know that for sure.

Deputies were called about 2 o’clock this morning when neighbors reported shots fired inside a residence. They arrived at 2:24 a.m. The Salkum-area fire department was dispatched at 2:36 a.m.

The fourth person was taken by ambulance to Lewis County Fire District 8’s main fire station in Salkum on U.S. Highway 12 where a Life Flight helicopter met them.

At about 9 a.m. this morning, the hospital told sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust the patient was in critical condition but expected to live, Aust said.

A trio of teenagers were among the many wondering today who was dead and who survived.

Sixteen-year-old Forrest Moore said he has been calling and texting his best friend who lives in the house, and getting no answer.

“We’ve been trying to put it together, but we don’t know,” said Tiffany L’Italien who showed up with Moore and another friend.

The 15-year-old said she trains the couple’s horses and was at the house the day before and “everything seemed fine.” Moore was comforted somewhat because he didn’t see his fellow Onalaska High School student’s red Chevrolet parked at the house, so he was pretty sure he wasn’t there when it happened, he said.

Sheriff Mansfield said his detectives were either at the scene or out chasing down leads. They’re working closely with the Centralia Police Department, he said.

The sheriff’s office has put out a teletype and the suspect’s photo and description to other law enforcement agencies. Mansfield was expecting a Washington State Patrol crime scene van anytime, he said this afternoon.

Spokane law enforcement authorities were enlisted to help after the sheriff’s office “pinged” Booth’s cell phone and discovered he had made a phone call from the Spokane area to a friend in Lewis County about noontime, according to the sheriff’s office.

“We have a lot of other evidence and people associated on the fringe that have helped us on this,” Mansfield said.

The sheriff’s office is looking for blue or teal four-door 1998 Dodge Diplomat, which doesn’t belong to Booth, but he has been known to drive.

The sheriff’s office is asking anyone with information to call 911 immediately. Lewis County Crime Stoppers is offering $1,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

The last multiple homicide Cmdr. Aust could remember since he’s been a deputy was when two people were slain in the early 1990s out toward Pe Ell.

“I can’t recall any triple homicides in my time,” Aust said.

Booth works in Tacoma and is being supervised by a community corrections officer in DOC’s Tacoma office.

He’s been in Washington prisons three times. He spent about seven months in prison in 1998 and almost four years beginning in late 1999, according to the Department of Corrections.

“This guy needs to be back in prison, we need to get him; this is a real sad thing folks,” Mansfield said this afternoon. “If you look at the drug culture, it’s not (just) Lewis County, when you’re doing drugs, selling drugs, this is what you can get.”
•••

Note: The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported the home is in Salkum. It is about three miles west of the heart of Salkum but has an Onalaska address.

Authorities looking in Spokane for Onalaska triple homicide suspect

August 21st, 2010
2010.0821.triple.hom_2

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield speaks with deputies at the scene today of last night's triple homicide in Onalaska.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

ONALASKA – The sheriff’s office believes the Onalaska man suspected in last night’s triple homicide is in the Spokane area after they got word he made a cell phone call from there about noon today.

John Allen Booth Jr., 31, is being sought in connection with the shooting deaths of three people around 2 o’clock this morning at a home on Wings Way, just off Gore Road in Onalaska.

A fourth person was shot but airlifted to an unidentified hospital. Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield said detectives think the shooting is related to a drug debt collection.

Three people found dead after shots fired report in Salkum

August 21st, 2010
John Allen Booth

John Allen Booth

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office is looking for a 31-year-old man they say is armed and extremely dangerous after discovering a triple homicide overnight in Salkum.

Deputies were called about 2 o’clock this morning to a report of shots fired inside a Salkum  home and found three people dead inside and one person critically wounded, according to a news release.

John Allen Booth Jr., 31, from Onalaska may be driving a blue or teal 1988 Dodge Diplomat. Its license plate reads 550 YFA.

The injured person, whose age and sex were not released, was flown by helicopter an undisclosed place or hospital.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield said they think this is a drug-related homicide and they need to get Booth’s picture out to the public.

“He’s armed, he’s dangerous, it’s an ugly deal,” Mansfield said.

The sheriff’s office is asking anyone with information to call 911 immediately or call Lewis County Crime Stoppers. A $1,000 reward is being offered.

Chehalis National Guardsman charged with assault of 7-year-old boy

August 21st, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A 39-year-old National Guardsman from Chehalis was ordered held on $25,000 bail when he was charged yesterday with second-degree assault of a child.

Steven Grant Williams was arrested by Chehalis police after a Snoqualmie police officer reported the 7-year-old boy’s body was covered in bruises when the child was returned to his grandparents on Tuesday.

Deputy Police Chief Randy Kaut said after the arrest it was one of the most extensive child abuse cases he’s seen in his career.

Authorities describe the injuries to Williams’ girlfriend’s son as two black eyes and including bruises on his back and buttocks. The child told the police officer on Tuesday his mother’s boyfriend had bound him with black tape, covered his eyes and mouth and beat him with a belt, according to charging documents.

The boy, who lives with his paternal grandparents in another county, had been visiting for two or three weeks with his 27-year-old mother and Williams who live in Chehalis.

In Lewis County Superior Court on Friday afternoon, Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes told a judge the photographs paint “quite a different picture” than the words in the charging documents convey.

The whites of the child’s eyes were substantially red and somebody had written in black pen on his buttocks, “stop staring”, Hayes said.

Second-degree assault of a child is a felony with a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. The class “B” felony involves an adult recklessly or intentionally inflicting substantial bodily harm, or knowingly inflicting harm which by design causes pain or agony equivalent to that produced by torture upon someone younger than age 13.

Defense attorney Bob Schroeter when he argued for lower bail on Friday suggested perhaps his client shouldn’t be charged with a crime.

“These charges only came up when he went back to stay with his grandmother,” Schroeter said.

The Chehalis Police Department on Friday morning said they are investigating the mother as well.

The couple moved to Chehalis about five months ago, after Williams was discharged from the Army, according to Schroeter. The 39-year-old now serves in the Washington National Guard with a unit based in Kent, Schroeter said.

Charging documents say this was the first time the boy had come to visit the pair since they moved to Washington.

The mother works at night and Williams who is otherwise unemployed spent more time with the boy because his mother sleeps during the day, Williams told detectives.

Both the mother and Williams suggested the child’s black eyes might have come from him hitting his head on a lamp in the night or could be related to a bug bite, according to charging documents.

Charging documents offer Williams’ account he gave for some of the bruises as told to Chehalis police detectives.

Williams said he was trying to teach the boy about personal hygiene and when they would have him take a shower before bedtime, and Williams tried to wash the boy’s hair, he had to hold him because the boy would thrash around, scream and yell. The child would bang his shin, elbow or back against the bathtub, he said.

Williams said the bruises on the boy’s wrists and shoulders were from holding him in the shower. During the washings, he never really hit his head that hard, Williams told detectives.

Williams also said he spanked the boy on his bare bottom for lying, and the child bruises easily.

His arraignment is set for Thursday with a court-appointed attorney.

Breaking news: Morton area body confirmed as missing teenager Austin King, sheriff’s office says

August 20th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Authorities have confirmed the body found off a logging road some 10 miles from 16-year-old Austin King’s Morton area home is that of the teenager.

Austin King

Austin King

The remains were identified through DNA analysis by the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab.

The cause of death has still not been determined, according to a news release from the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Detectives are still working several leads in the case, the sheriff’s office said. The death is being investigated as suspicious.

The teenager was last seen by his mother Christy Harper at about 12:15 a.m. on June 23 when he said goodnight to her and went off to his detached bedroom outside of their mobile home with two buddies to watch television.

Austin was initially classified by the sheriff’s office as a runaway, and two or three weeks later re-labeled endangered-missing. Searchers organized by a Morton woman following up on information from a Portland-area spiritual psychic discovered the remains the afternoon of July 20.

The teenager did not have a car and detectives are investigating how he may have gotten to the place his body was found, Sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust said.
•••

To read previous coverage of Austin King’s case, see below:

• “Park filled with mourners for missing Morton teenager Austin King” from Saturday July 24, 2010

• “News brief: Specialist to help examine body found near Morton” from Thursday July 22, 2010

• “Vigil for Morton teen still on; body found yesterday not identified” from Wednesday July 21, 2010

• “News brief: Body of male found near logging road outside of Morton” from Tuesday July 20, 2010

• “News brief: Sheriff’ office seeks tips to find missing teen” from Thursday July 1, 2010

• “Morton teenager remains missing” from Thursday July 1, 2010

• Also, Roy Stemman, a writer in the United Kingdom, published a story, “Psychic guides searchers to teens body” in his Paranormal Review on July 27, 2010 after interviewing psychic Sonya Grace and Morton resident and search organizer Jennifer Mau, founder of the local chapter of Guardians of the Children.

News brief: Overnight fire in Toledo destroys shed

August 20th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A shed was destroyed by fire overnight in Toledo.

Lewis County Fire District 2 was called just before 4 o’clock this morning to the blaze on the 300 block of North Second Street, just two blocks away from the fire department.

The 10-foot by 10-foot wood structure was heavily involved with flames which were threatening some trees, according to Fire Chief Grant Wiltbank.

They arrived in less than seven minutes and pretty much got it knocked down in just a couple of minutes, Wiltbank said.

Firefighters prevented the trees from burning and had to take extra care as the building was just a few feet away from a roughly 40-foot drop off into the Cowlitz River, according to the chief.

The cause isn’t yet known, he said.