Prisoner accused of beating to death fellow inmate, a local man

Updated

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Lewis County man sent to prison last fall has died after sustaining serious injuries during an assault there.

Gordon C. Powell Jr., 45, was arrested in early October for breaking the glass front door at a distillery on North Tower Avenue and stealing four bottles of liquor and then hours later tussling with a police officer who tried to remove an extremely intoxicated beggar from an area store, according to court documents.

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Gordon “Casey” Powell Jr.

Powell was serving a five year sentence, for second-degree burglary and third-degree assault, at the Monroe Correctional Complex.

“I’m very disappointed,” his lawyer David Arcuri said upon hearing the news. “Gordon was not a violent person.”

Arcuri represented Powell in Lewis County Superior Court at least once, and likely other times over the years.

“He was a young man, and though he may have had issues that caused him to be taken out of society, it’s pretty sad he goes to DOC and ends up getting killed,” Arcuri said.

Court documents show Powell as transient, police reported he lived in Chehalis when he was arrested.

Prison officials say Powell was transported to the hospital on May 9 and passed away Monday morning.

He was being held at the Special Offender Unit at Monroe, according to the state Department of Corrections.

A 35-year-old fellow inmate doing time for first-degree manslaughter was being held in segregation and prison officials are working closely with local law enforcement who are investigating the incident, according to DOC.

The assault occurred in a common area, prison officials said.

The other inmate, Benjamin Price entered the prison system in August 2010 for the conviction out of Skagit County and was serving a sentence of just over 12 years. Price also had a prior conviction for second-degree assault with a firearm, according to the news release.

The (Everett) Herald reports Price has a history of mental illness and is alleged to have waited for Powell while inmates were returning from the dining room, and kicked and stomped him during an attack that lasted nine seconds; Powell never regained consciousness.

Powell’s older sister said the Centralia native who went by the nickname Casey was a victim of the system.

“They knew he was mentally ill,” Stephanie Leisure said. “He should never have been put in prison, he should have been sent to Western State.”

At least twice before he’d been to the psychiatric hospital and found not competent to assist with his defense, according to Leisure.

He lived with her family in Centralia, she said.

“He was basically an outgoing, sweet guy,” she said. “Always smiling, always happy; he loved everybody.”

Her brother started showing signs of mental illness in his 20s, she said. He was being seen at a local clinic regularly before his arrest, she said.

“The police are always arresting him,” she said. “He does things he’s not supposed to do, but he’s still a really good kid; he couldn’t help it.”

Monroe’s Special Offender Unit was opened in 1981 to provide a facility to treat and house the many seriously mentally ill offenders, according to DOC spokesperson Andrew Garber.

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5 Responses to “Prisoner accused of beating to death fellow inmate, a local man”

  1. sandy says:

    Very sad indeed. Someone needs to be held accountable. I hope his family sues the crap out of the state.

  2. Teresa Guerrero says:

    I believe Arcuri has put a few people in prison that should not have gone there.I think he herds his clients like cattle.He never has time to talk to his clients, knows nothing about the cases, and railroads innocent people into signing a plea behind the families backs, whether the people are guilty our not.I know this from an experience with a family member.Just my opinion!

  3. BobbyinLC says:

    It is sad that mentally ill folks are in prison. Both aggressor and victim seemed to have MH issues. Prison is a violent place as it is full of felons. It would be so costly though to build them to be able to segregate violent offenders from non-violent offenders. I guess if I had the answers I wold be making a lot more money as the head of some think tank.
    Tragedy all the way around. Monroe is also the prison where a CO was killed by an inmate a few years ago. Is there a systemic problem at the institution? My heart goes out to the family.

  4. Brook says:

    So sad Casey was a good guy with bad problems and some mental illness. But violent he was not. He did not deserve any of this. R.I.P Casey.

  5. Sara says:

    This is such a tragedy. I went to school with Casey. He was always a funny cheerful guy. R.I.P. Casey….