News brief: Newly registered level three sex offender

July 9th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office wants residents to know a level three registered sex offender is newly listed as living homeless in Lewis County.

Fauzi Bin Zain, 27, got in trouble at age 17 and served his time for the crime, according to the sheriff’s office. He had engaged in sexual intercourse with a 12-year-old girl, pleaded guilty and was convicted of second-degree rape of a child, according to sheriff’s detective Brad Borden.

In 2007, Zain was convicted for failure to register as a sex offender, and was released from prison back into Lewis County on Wednesday, according to the sheriff’s office.

Public notification of where registered sex offenders reside is intended to enhance public safety, according to the sheriff’s office.

For further details about Zain and his photo, check the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office website where he is among 22 level three sex offenders registered with addresses in the county.

News brief: Wednesday car crash caused by driver falling asleep, state patrol says

July 9th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Troopers blame a driver falling asleep for a single-car crash on Wednesday on state Route 508, about 15 miles west of Morton.

A 59-year-old Vancouver woman was eastbound when her car crossed over the oncoming lanes, hit a ditch and then struck a power pole and a fence, according to the Washington State Patrol. Troopers called to the scene at 1 p.m. found the 1999 Dodge Intrepid totaled.

A 13-year-old male passenger was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with a broken ankle, according to the state patrol.

Man fatally struck by train yesterday is from Utah

July 8th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The man hit and killed yesterday morning by a freight train in downtown Centralia has been identified as a 48-year-old resident of Hildale, Utah.

Mathew P. Johnson had been staying with a friend in Centralia since May, according to the Lewis County Coroner’s Office.

20100708.train.small_2

Police examine front of train on Wednesday

The coroner’s office has concluded Johnson intentionally allowed himself to get hit by a train. He was involved in an argument with a female friend just hours earlier and left after making statements which led her, in hindsight, to believe he may have intended to hurt himself, according to Chief Deputy Coroner Carmen Brunton and the Centralia Police Department.

Aid and police were called after the northbound train hit Johnson – who was walking on the tracks between Cherry and Plum street – at 4:41 a.m. yesterday.

The train, which was traveling 40 mph in an area posted with a maximum speed of 50 mph, sounded its whistle and went into an emergency brake application, according to Gus Melonas, a spokesperson for BNSF. It was pulling another locomotive and 78 cars loaded with freight containers from Chicago to Seattle on the double main line, Melonas said.

Police detective Pat Beall said yesterday morning it appeared the man saw the train and didn’t make any effort to move off the tracks.

Fifty passenger and freight trains travel on those tracks each day, according to Melonas.

Johnson doesn’t have any family here, but he leaves behind 18 children in Utah, Brunton said.

•••

Read yesterday’s news story, “Update: Train kills man on tracks in Centralia this morning

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

July 8th, 2010

THEFTS AND CAR PROWLS

• Chehalis police were called about 8:45 p.m. last night about a car stolen from the area of Northeast Hampe Way.

• Centralia police took a report yesterday evening of a car prowl from the 1000 block of North Washington Avenue in which possibly stereo equipment was missing. The victim told police they believe it happened sometime on Monday, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police took a report Wednesday about theft of jewelry from a residence on the 200 block of Carson Street.

• Police took a report Wednesday that a DVD player and $1 gold coin went missing sometime during the previous week from the 1500 block of Lewis Street in Centralia.

• Chehalis police took a report yesterday evening of unspecified malicious mischief to a Volkswagen Beetle on South Market Boulevard which occurred sometime between 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., according to the Chehalis Police Department.

Hair pulling, a two-by-four and one arrest end night of drinking in Mossyrock tavern, police say

July 8th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Too much alcohol and women “running off their mouths” led to a free for all brawl at a Mossyrock tavern leaving one man with broken ribs.

Donald Sampson, 46, was in court this week following Friday night’s melee at the Pioneer Tavern.

“I was at the bottom of a pile of people and getting punched in every direction,” Sampson said after the brief court hearing on Tuesday.

“There were four of us and 15 of them,” said his girlfriend, Robyn Schiefelbein.

Mossyrock Reserve Police Officer Rebecca Sutherland said yesterday it wasn’t actually quite that many people involved in the fighting but described in court documents one woman grabbing Schiefelbein by the hair and both women going to the ground, pulling each other’s hair.

Multiple other subjects attempted to pull the women apart, “with most of them ending up rolling on the ground,” Sutherland is quoted as saying in charging documents filed in Lewis County Superior Court.

Sampson was charged Tuesday with second-degree assault. Charging documents allege he struck a 40-year-old man in the head with a two-by-four. His was the only arrest Friday night.

The unemployed former natural gas line driller was released from jail Sunday on $20,000 bail.

Charging documents offer the following summary: It happened outside the back door of the bar around 11 p.m. on Friday. The bar owner and another man were escorting the couple and two of their friends out after complaints they were disorderly and picking fights. Other patrons followed the men in helping the foursome leave.

The couple, originally from Greensboro, North Carolina, described the scene in the East Lewis County drinking establishment as one that arose in part because they’re not “locals”. They moved to Mossyrock about three months ago to stay with friends, and were thinking about permanently relocating there, they said.

“I know small towns,” Schiefelbein said. “You wanna talk about small towns, I’m from a small town.”

The 44-year-old admitted they were drunk and that she was antagonizing another women at the bar.

“It started with girls, and girls running off our mouths,” she said.

Sampson, who said he has two cracked ribs, walked gingerly to and from the defense table in Judge Nelson Hunt’s Chehalis courtroom late Tuesday afternoon. He is expected to return next week for his arraignment.

Judge Hunt had noted it might be a “third-strike” case, as Sampson has two prior felonies – robbery first and assault second. Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Steve Scott said it wasn’t clear if the convictions were too far in the past to apply to the law.

That talk made Sampson nervous. He said those things happened some 20 years ago, when he was younger.

“I’ve been in trouble before, I don’t want no trouble,” he said. “I try to stay away from it.”

News brief: New dog in town

July 8th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police announced a new hire at their department; Lobo, a German Shepherd who is preparing to work with Officer Ruben Ramirez.

Lobo

Lobo, Centralia's newest police dog

The 1-year-old dog is undergoing orientation and will begin formal training in September, according to a news release from Centralia Police Department Chief Bob Berg.

Lobo’s $9,000 price tag leaves the department’s K-9 program in need of donations, according to Berg.  Anyone wishing to support the program can contact the department at 330-7680.

More on Lobo another day.

News brief: Investigators looking into possibility more than one man was behind Oakville drive-by shooting

July 7th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Bail has been set at $25,000 for an Olympia man accused in a drive by shooting in Oakville over the weekend.

Nobody was injured in the Saturday night incident on South Newton Street, but sheriff’s deputies recovered rounds that hit the home and the pickup truck parked in front of it, according to the Grays Harbor County Sheriff’s Office.

The adult female who lives there was returning home from her neighbor’s when it happened at about 9:30 p.m., said sheriff’s office Chief Criminal Deputy David Pimentel.

Pimentel said today investigators are still trying to determine the reason for the attack. They are looking into the possibility more than one person was involved, he said.

Jason C. Keller, 30, of Olympia, was picked up in Thurston County on Sunday and booked for first-degree assault, according to Pimentel.

Keller was charged with drive-by shooting yesterday in Grays Harbor County District Court for a preliminary hearing, and bail was set at $25,000, Grays Harbor County Prosecutor Steward Menefee said today. Menefee said it’s likely Keller will be charged  in Superior Court by July 29.

The woman, whose name Pimentel did not release, lives at the home with an adult male and 6-year-old child, according to the sheriff’s office.

Deputies recovered a firearm they believe was used. They’re not certain how many shots were fired.

“At this point, we’re thinking probably a half dozen,” Pimentel said.