The year in review: What topped the local “sirens” news

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

JANUARY

The year 2012 began with a 49-year-old Rochester woman being treated for serious injuries following a New Year’s Eve wreck on Brooklyn Road southwest of Oakville that fatally injured three of her companions.

Colleen L. Stuart was in the intensive care unit at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle while deputies investigated the single-vehicle collision that killed her boyfriend Gregory D. Martin, 52, of Rochester, as well as Travis W. Bennett, 26, and Jessica L. Brick, 22, both of Centralia.

Stuart died less than 11 months later after her truck ran into off the road into a fence on Old Highway 99 near Tenino.

FEBRUARY

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Matz building

An early morning fire on Valentines Day ravaged the Dr. Matz building in downtown Centralia displacing the residents of 12 upstairs apartments, Centralia Perk, an antique store, a tattoo shop, a barber shop, a hair salon and Curious Betty’s clothing boutique.

Linda Hamilton, owner of the oldest masonry structure in town, credited Jacob Dow for saving lives by pounding on doors to wake up the occupants. The fire marshal said a plausible possible cause was a candle burning on a desk inside Curious Betty’s, but the structure had to be demolished before a fire investigation was completed.

MARCH

Twenty-five-year-old Joshua Vance was jailed for fatally attacking his father with a knife while he was asleep in bed in their Onalaska home.

Terry Vance, 58, was popular baseball coach. His son suffered from psychotic disorder and was said by his grandmother to have gone off his medication for a few days while his doctors were changing his prescription.

Joshua Vance was sentenced in October to 30 years in prison for first-degree murder.

Less than a week after Terry Vance’s death, Centralia police were investigating a homicide.

Weston G. Miller, a 29-year-old former welder, allegedly shot a houseguest twice, fleeing his B Street home while 43-year-old David Wayne Carson was dying.

Carson, who grew up in Centralia, had previously worked at Hardel Plywood and before that took care of expensive show dogs in California.

Miller has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and remains in jail awaiting a trial which is set for February.

Centralia City Council member and pastor of a downtown church Bill Bates was charged criminally for fatally shooting his neighbor’s cat with a pellet rifle, saying he was tired of the animal walking on his clean cars and messing in his beauty bark.

A deal was made so the 60-year-old – who said he was surprised the pet died as when he used the rifle on a possum in his yard, he had to shoot it three times to kill it – could keep his record clean if he paid restitution and refrained from shooting animals for six months.

APRIL

After a trial that stretched over nearly two weeks, former Pe Ell High School softball coach Todd Phelps was convicted of third-degree rape involving a 16-year-old team member.

The attorney for the 52-year-old log truck driver painted a picture of a coach who became close to the girl because he was worried she was cutting on herself and might commit suicide. The prosecution told jurors of a man who gradually seduced a teen already troubled with low self esteem and depression.

Phelps was given a prison sentence two days shy of six years.

A 24-year-old member of the local National Guard drowned during the Pe Ell River run in mid-April.

Daniel Kuhn, of Olympia, wasn’t reported missing until two days after the annual event on the Chehalis River, but his body was found within days near the area he had last been seen in his small rubber raft between Doty and Dryad.

MAY

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Nicholas Matchett

Tragic drownings on the Chehalis River continued with the early May loss of 8-year-old Nicholas Matchett when he apparently slipped off the steep bank behind his Boistfort area home.

Less than two weeks later, 16-year-old Christopher Puentes-Garay died while swimming southwest of Rochester.

The spring of 2012 was a deadly one for young people.

Another 16-year-old, Tyler S. Gonzalez, was killed when during an underage party, he drunkenly wandered onto Brockway Road and either laid down, passed out or went to sleep before he was run over by a full-sized SUV.

Well over 200 people came together in a Centralia park to raise candles for 2-year-old Koralynn Fister who died from head trauma and drowning while in the care of her mother’s boyfriend.

James M. Reeder, 25, claimed he found her face down in the bathtub and carried child to neighbors across the street from her house asking them to call 911 while he attempted CPR.

Prosecutors allege Reeder tortured and raped the toddler.

The lifelong Lewis County resident is charged with homicide by abuse and other related offenses. He remains held in the Lewis County Jail on $5 million bail awaiting a January trial.

JUNE

An elderly retired businessman relocating to Arizona found a new friend – one that he called a hero – in Lewis County after his 31-foot travel trailer caught fire alongside Interstate 5 south of Chehalis.

Antonio Martinez of Napavine stopped to help the 79-year-old traveler rescue his dog from the far back of his SUV while numerous bystanders took photos and video. Firefighters miraculously found Ken Schumann’s cash savings among the ashes, but fortunately for Schumann, Martinez stuck around during the wait for the a tow truck.

When Schumann fell from the wreckage and gouged his wrist, Martinez was there to put pressure on the wound. Martinez took the dog to his home, and then went to the hospital to wait until Schumann was released.

JULY

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Ed and Wilhelmina Maurin

News of an arrest from the 1985 slaying of an elderly Ethel couple took many by surprise.

Rick Riffe, 53, was brought from his home in Alaska to the Lewis County Jail and charged with the murder, kidnapping and robbery of Ed and Wilhelmina Maurin.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield described to a well-attended press conference how the sheriff’s office felt it had a strong case back in the early 1990s, but for whatever reason wasn’t able to persuade a prosecutor to file charges.

The Maurins were reported missing Dec. 19, 1985 after guests arriving for a Christmas party found nobody at their home. The following day, their car was found abandoned in the Yard Birds parking lot in Chehalis. Their bodies were discovered on Christmas Eve dumped near Adna.

Riffe has pleaded not guilty, but remains held in the Lewis County Jail on $5 million bail. His trial is scheduled for May.

AUGUST

It was so hot and dry, a red flag warning was put in place because of the potential for “explosive” fire growth.

While firefighters battled a blaze near Cle Elum that charred thousands of acres and carried a smokey haze over Lewis County, local crews were on edge with grass and brush fires from Toledo to Rochester.

In Mineral on Aug. 14, members of a half dozen fire departments spent six hours extinguishing fire that spread from a vacant building, to three outbuildings as well as brush and trees.

SEPTEMBER

Two Lewis County men survived a deadly boat wreck near the entrance to Willapa Bay that took the life of 70-year-old rural Chehalis resident Robert “Tony” F. Garrity.

A Coast Guard helicopter from Astoria located the 24-foot vessel the morning of Sept. 5, after the trio didn’t return home the night before from a fishing trip.

Charlie Garrity, 26, of Chehalis, and Shad Hail, 30, from Centralia, were hoisted into the helicopter and taken to a nearby hospital. The Pacific County Sheriff’s Office said somehow the men strapped themselves to the overturned boat but sometime during the night the straps broke.

OCTOBER

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Simmons’ horses

The month began with news of authorities seizing nine malnourished horses from a couple near Morton.

Joanne M. Simmons, 65, and Terry L. Simmons, 58, who live off of state Route 7, said they were in the process of giving the Kiger Mustangs away because they had too many. They were charged with animal cruelty.

Before the month ended, dozens of fox hounds were rounded up and confiscated from a 79-year-old Dryad woman’s property.

Nancy Punches was charged with animal cruelty as well as a violation of another state law regarding dog breeding.

Her 65 dogs were living in conditions described as deplorable, overrun with feces. Punches said she didn’t intend for them to multiply, but their fencing had deteriorated.

NOVEMBER

Sheriff’s Deputy Matt Wallace shot and killed an apparently suicidal motorist he stopped to help during the night at a gravel turnout along state Route 6 near Boistfort.

Sixty-four-year-old Gregory S. Kaufman of Napavine had superficial cuts to his neck and wrist and instead of laying his knife on the dashboard as asked, he got out of his car and advanced upon the deputy, according to authorities.

The Lewis County prosecutor concluded the shooting was justified.

Voters decriminalized recreational use of marijuana, leaving many dazed and confused about the historic changes.

While statewide the initiative passed by a little more than 55 percent, about that same proportion of Lewis County said no to the measure that still leaves no place to legally acquire weed.

DECEMBER

After an approximately six-week long trial in Lewis County Superior Court, jurors returned a verdict in favor of Menasha Forest Products, saying it’s clear-cutting of trees above Glenoma  was not to blame for mudslides that damaged properties belonging to 11 families.

The lawyer representing the plaintiffs said the timber company harvested on a steep, unstable slope causing the January 2009 destruction below. Menasha’s attorney said the company followed the logging rules set by the Department of Natural Resources.

A similar lawsuit involving seven other Glenoma property owners against Port Blakely is scheduled to go to trial in April.

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9 Responses to “The year in review: What topped the local “sirens” news”

  1. The other PC says:

    DCE, maybe you ought to contact the lawyer of those two women who were strip- and body cavity searched while on a Texas highway. The lady cop even used the same glove to check both women. Caught all on the dash cam. Women are suing for violation of rights. Not that any violation of rights is okay, but those women definately have a lawsuit!

  2. I guess having your Camera shut off 3 different times, is a Lawful act without a warrant now in America. In other big Citys, the police end up losing their jobs or they are punished for Civil Rights violations like they have committed against me, but I guess here in Centralia Civil Rights mean nothing. Just remember I can prove that my rights were violated. Shutting off a camera without a warrant is illegal. So if it is happening to me, what is happening to others that have no way to record the police? A Big Stiff Federal Law Suit will bring the Centralia City Hall to it’s knees. Seems like they have given me no choice. The Centralia Police claim to be an accredited agency, but I claim these are just words of Bull Shit. I am not a proffessional victim, but I did stand up the police and my video’s prove something illegal is going on. Happy New Year, and always pack your video camera.

  3. OldLongJohnson says:

    “DCE has always proven to be the victim in every situation reported.”

    I’m not sure if you’re being facetious or otherwise sarcastic, but I’ve seen the video where DCE is picking up garbage from the streets free of charge when he is approached by a couple of idiot police officers.

    It’s clear in the video that DCE was doing nothing wrong. Plus, the cops could have just driven by and determined such just by looking. But, they decided to stop and fuck with DCE for NO REASON other than the cops were bored or too scared to pursue real criminal threats.

    Who knows, while the cops were trying to be movie stars in DCE’s films, they could have prevented another robbery, assault, or rape. But that would be real police work and we know how the officers feel about that.

  4. truth-to-power says:

    OLJ is correct. DCE has always proven to be the victim in every situation reported. It’s astonishing. Thats what makes his perpetual optimism so inspiring.

  5. Excellent summary of the years stories.

  6. OldLongJohnson says:

    “You can’t be a professional victim of “The System” if you’re an active member in it.”

    Constantly complaining about DCE makes YOU a professional victim of his. Yet, I don’t recall him ever doing anything to you physically.

    DCE has been, as his videos show, a victim of narrow minded and unprofessional police conduct. But yet every time he tries to bring awareness to the issue, people like you scream “foul” and claim to be the “true victim”.

  7. Free Air says:

    It is us says:

    …How about approaching law enforcement as a partner, an entity that is not perfect and could use some help?…

    No way that’s going to happen. You can’t be a professional victim of “The System” if you’re an active member in it.

  8. It is us says:

    DCE…. society isn’t some foreign construct, it is us. We are government, we are society, we are the culture. What you see is a reflection of who we are. If we want that to change – we have to change.

    How about approaching law enforcement as a partner, an entity that is not perfect and could use some help? Volunteer, become part of and change from within. It isn’t fast, it isn’t glorious, but it does work.

    I know you want the best, and I wish that for you in the New Year.

  9. A new year, a new crime spree. This new year will bring many challenges, I would like to think Centralia is going to be a safer place but some how I doubt it. The cost of Made in China has thrown America in the Crapper. Lets Pray for a safe new year Centralia. May Community and Family save America.
    Happy New Year Lewis County….