News Brief: Specialist to help examine body found near Morton

July 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

An autopsy was scheduled for this morning on the body found off a logging road outside of Morton on Tuesday.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office and Lewis County Coroner’s Office have still not said if they’ve concluded the body is that of missing Morton 16-year-old Austin King.

After the autopsy, the remains will be taken to the King County Medical Examiner’s Office, where additional test will be conducted by a forensic anthropologist, according to sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust.

Austin was last seen by his mother early on the morning of June 23.

•••

Previous news stories on the Morton teenager can be found below:

• “Vigil for Morton teen still on; body found yesterday not identified” – click here – Wednesday July 21, 2010 at 12:06 p.m.

• News brief: “Body of a male found near logging road outside of Morton” –  click here – Tuesday July 20, 2010 at 11:55 p.m.

• News brief: “Sheriff’s office seeks tips to find missing teen” –  click here – Thursday July 1, 2010 at 5 p.m.

• “Morton teenager remains missing” –  click here – Thursday July 1, 2010 at 7:52 a.m.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

July 22nd, 2010

TEEN MOTORIST OUTRUNS DEPUTIES FOR MORE THAN HALF AN HOUR, THEN WRECKS

• A 16-year-old driver is in the hospital this morning after a police chase that began in Pierce County and continued for another 30 minutes through Thurston County and ended with the late model Ford Escort on its side in a field off Tilley Road, according to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff’s Lt. Chris Mealy said he didn’t know why the Olympia resident was being pursued by a Pierce County sheriff’s deputy but but two Thurston deputies caught up to him in Yelm about 3:30 yesterday morning. The teenage driver reached speeds of 95 mph although he slowed to about 60 mph in Tenino, according to Mealy. He drove with no lights on, sometimes on the wrong side of the road and at one point nearly rear-ended a flat-bed tow truck, Mealy said. He avoided spike strips on Old 99 and jumped on Interstate 5 northbound up to the Maytown exit, Mealy said. A Thurston deputy on Tilley Road performed what Mealy called a “technical vehicle intervention” which spun the Escort off the road and into the field. The teen was ordered out of the car and taken by ambulance to Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia. The driver, whose name was not released because he is a juvenile, was arrested for eluding, Mealy said. The lieutenant said he didn’t know details about the teen’s injuries.

GRASS BURNS

• Firefighters in Winlock extinguished a grass fire yesterday afternoon along Kakela Road east of town that had grown to about 200 feet by 50 feet. Lewis County Fire District 15 Lt. Kevin Anderson said they suspected a cigarette may have ignited it but could not find an offending butt.

MAN DEMANDS MILLIONS FROM LAYWER

• A 48-year-old man was arrested at the Motel 6 in Centralia yesterday after he reportedly called 911 and made threats to kill a local attorney, according to the Centralia Police Department. It happened about 6:30 p.m. at the 1300 block of Belmont Avenue. Police Sgt. Kurt Reichert said Steve Fullerton, of Morton, called the lawyer a “jack-booted Nazi pig” and said he needed millions of dollars a day for his pain and suffering from the lawyer or he would kill him. Fullerton was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony harassment. The identity of the attorney was not disclosed.

WANTED SUBJECT HIDES ON PORCH

• After a police officer during a traffic stop in Centralia yesterday recognized a passenger with an outstanding warrant, the passenger fled on foot but was found a short time later hiding on a porch, according to the Centralia Police Department. It happened around 2:25 p.m. near the 900 block of Marion Street. Richard R. Dahl, 26, of Centralia, was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

CUTTING AND BREAKING LOCKS

• Somebody stole a red and black Honda generator after they cut the padlock on a shed on the 13,400 block of Tilley Road South outside Tenino, according to a report made to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office yesterday. The victim told a deputy it must have happened while she was away between June 22 and July 7, the sheriff’s office said this morning. The loss was estimated at $3,500.

• The sheriff’s office took a report yesterday that a laptop was missing after a Rochester business was burglarized. Somebody broke through a deadbolt lock at “Uncle Howard’s” on the 18,200 block of Pendleton Street Southwest sometime between the evening of July 13 and the morning of July 20, according to sheriff’s Lt. Chris Mealy. Computer, tools and other items of value were left behind, Mealy said.

• Somebody cut a chain to get inside a Department of Fish and Wildlife barn on the 17,900 block of Guava Street in Rochester and took a weed trimmer, the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office reported today. The report made yesterday noted it occurred sometime between 8 p.m. on July 13 and 9 a.m. on July 20.

• Centralia police reported yesterday forced entry was made to a residence on the 1000 block of Elm Street. Tools were taken in the theft that was reported to police Tuesday morning.

OPIUM POPPIES SEIZED

• The Olympian reported yesterday the Tenino Police Department found a variety of natural and made made drugs – including 52 opium poppies – when it served a search warrant at a local residence. Read news reporter Jeremy Pawloski’s story here.

Firefighter hospitalized for heat exhaustion during Chehalis house fire

July 22nd, 2010

2010.0721.house.fire.chehalis.folo_2

Firefighters prepare to put more water into the second story of a house on the 600 block of Northwest Folsom Street in Chehalis yesterday afternoon.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

One firefighter was hospitalized and another narrowly escaped a falling air conditioner unit during a fire in Chehalis yesterday that destroyed a two-story house.

Chehalis Fire Department Acting Capt. Pat Gilligan said this morning a volunteer from Lewis County Fire District 6 suffered heat exhaustion as five departments worked the blaze on Northwest Folsom Street.

Chehalis Fire Chief Kelvin Johnson said he could see the smoke as he left the station to answer the 2:10 p.m. call, and when he arrived, flames were shooting out the back of the wood-frame home.

It was vacant.

Investigators are returning today to figure out what sparked the blaze, according to Gilligan.

The 28-year-old volunteer was released from the hospital after spending about four hours there yesterday, District 6 Chief Bud Goodwillie said this morning.

He was among those spraying water on the adjoining structures to prevent them from catching fire, Gilligan said.

One one side, a garage housed a 1960 Corvette belonging to Chehalis Fire Capt. Casey Beck, who resides across the street. On the other side, the plastic clips melted from an air conditioning unit in a second-story window and it dropped to the ground, nearly striking Chehalis Assistant Chief Larry Allen, according to Gilligan.

The Chehalis Fire Department was joined by crews from Centralia, Rochester and Lewis County Fire districts 5 and 6, according to the chief.

Gilligan said the upstairs of the house was completely burned and the downstairs damaged by smoke and water. He said the $175,000 structure was likely a total loss.

Firefighters douse blaze in Chehalis today

July 21st, 2010
2010.0721.fire.folsom_2

Five fire departments responded just after 2 p.m. today to the blaze on Northwest Folsom Street in Chehalis. Chehalis Fire Chief Kelvin Johnson said he could see smoke from the fire station and when he arrived, flames were shooting out the back of the vacant house.

News brief: Firefighters will party to “help a brother”

July 21st, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Firefighters are rallying the troops to help a Winlock firefighter who was seriously hurt last month when a a pickup truck he was working on rolled over him and dragged him 25 to 35 yards.

Responders from Greg D’Adda’s own department, Lewis County Fire District 15, answered the evening call on Father’s Day to the scene at the 200 block of Burnett Road, off of Jones Road.

2010.0717.greg.dadda.trim_3

Greg D'Adda benefit

D’Adda, 37, was flown by helicopter to a Seattle hospital after the accident.

Firefighter-EMT Patrick Jacobson is organizing a gathering next Wednesday night in Chehalis to raise money for the family’s mounting expenses.

“Just trying to help a brother out,” Jacobson said. “That’s what it comes down to.”

They’re calling it Pipes and Pints, because Chehalis firefighters Jay Birley and Rob Gebhart will entertain with their bagpipes and it will be held at the Market Street Pub.

Jacobson, 21, has known D’Adda for years, but said he has no idea if the firefighter has health insurance.

“I’m not sure if he does or doesn’t,” Jacobson said. “Being that we flew him to Harborview, that’s $15,000 or $20,000 and his wife has been driving back and forth to Harborview.”

They expect to put out a bucket – or a boot – for people to drop donations into, according to Jacobson. They’ve also been selling tickets for $10 pitchers of beer.

The benefit is set for 7 p.m. next Wednesday, at 523 N. Market Blvd.

Jacobson said D’Adda came down to watch firefighter training on Monday night and it seemed like he was doing “pretty good.” He’s not sure if D’Adda will attend the fundraiser.

•••
The (Longview) Daily News posted a story late Wednesday night about D’Adda. Read it here.

News brief: Napavine and Rochester firefighters may return from Yakima wildfire today

July 21st, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Three Rochester-area firefighters are among those helping with the huge Yakima-area wildfire and are expected to be demobilized today.

Firefighters Rob Smith, Jed Neumeier and Jennifer Belcher of the West  Thurston Regional Fire Authority took a brush truck to the east side of the mountains, according to Lt. Eric Smith. They were part of a group which responded on Monday with two volunteer firefighters from Lewis County Fire District 5, he said.

The majority of the Cowiche Mill fire, which spread across some nine square miles west of Yakima, is contained, according to the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center. It started on Sunday.

The Washington state Fire Marshals Office announced today the demobilization of extra resources is set for 2 p.m.

The Yakima Herald-Republic published a news story on the blaze late last night which can be found here.

Vigil for Morton teen still on; body found yesterday not identified

July 21st, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

While the sheriff’s office says it won’t speculate if the body found outside of Morton is missing teenager Austin King, the woman who has headed up the search spoke this morning as though it is Austin.

“I can’t say much because of the integrity of the investigation, but I know law enforcement spoke with Christy last night and she has accepted the fact and come to terms with it,” said Jennifer Mau of Morton.

Austin King

Austin King

About 25 individuals, mostly family, are gathered in Morton’s Gus Backstrom Park this morning including Mau and the 16-year-old boy’s mother Christy Harper. Harper and others have been staying day and night at the park which has been serving as a central point for the search.

Austin was last seen by his mother almost a month ago, when he said goodnight early in the morning of June 23. He was classified by the sheriff’s office as a runaway, and since been labeled endangered-missing.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office sent out a short news release last night, saying they got word at 2 p.m. yesterday the body of a male was found near a logging road outside Morton.

“There’s no way we can put a positive identification until we get dental records or even DNA,” sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust said this morning.

Aust said he doesn’t have an idea of the age of the person found. The Lewis County Corner’s Office described the individual as a young adult.

Detectives were at the scene about 10 miles from the boys’ Chapman Road home until 9:30 or 10 p.m. last night. Aust said they are in Morton again today and hope to have some more answers by the end of the day.

“We’re treating it as a suspicious death until we know otherwise,” Aust said.

Aust said the remains were found on the ground, but not in plain sight. He declined to say how far off the logging road the find was made.

Mau, a 30-year-old Centralia College student, who organized searches for Austin, said the candle light vigil scheduled for 6 p.m. Friday in the park is still on. Anyone who wants to come is welcome, she said.

Austin, who his mother said is home schooled, is one of four children who live with her  in the Tilton River Mobile Home Park. His mother has described him as a boy who never took off without telling family where he was going, didn’t go out after dark or often even alone, and liked to spend time playing video games, listening to music and watching movies.

He slept in a small detached building he called his apartment, and that’s where he went off with two buddies to watch television a month ago after he said goodnight to his mom.

Mau said she wasn’t part of the search party of five who discovered the body, and attributed the find to the fact the search was moving to increasingly farther away areas, as well as a Portland woman she called a medium, or “an intuitive” named Sonya Grace.

“She worked with me on a map and came up with that point, that road.” Mau said. “She said that’s the road where we should send searchers.”

Mau got involved with the case because she is founder of the Mount St. Helens chapter of a Texas-based group called Guardians of the Children, an organization she says help with abused and missing kids.

“I really have a hard time because law enforcement stereotypes kids as runaways” she said this morning. “I don’t have any reason to think Austin ran away.”

The Camas-native, who moved to Morton 10 years ago, said she founded the local group in the fall of 2008 with her boyfriend.

“I have two children of my own,” she said. “I would be completely devastated if this was my kid, that’s why I’m out here.”
•••
Proceeds from T-shirts available Friday night will be used for funeral expenses, according to Mau.

Accounts had already been set up at Sterling Savings Bank in Austin’s and his mother’s names for a reward fund and to help pay for food for the people who have been searching.