Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

2015.0518.2013.1113.sirenslights5860.secondone

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Updated at 7:37 p.m.

‘PEEK-A-BOO, WE FOUND YOU’

• Deputies who got a tip on the whereabouts of 21-year-old Steven N. Romero who allegedly was the driver chased down Cascade Avenue by Chehalis police on Thursday responded to the 100 block of Nix Lane in Centralia yesterday, underwent door-to-door canvassing and eventually found him hiding in a trailer, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail for warrants and violating a protection order, according to the sheriff’s office. Deputies also contacted Halli A. Hoey, 31, from Rochester and arrested her for second-degree possession of stolen property and being in possession of approximately one half pound of marijuana, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. Hoey was also booked into jail.

• Three people were arrested for third-degree rendering criminal assistance in Vader on Saturday night after deputies found a person they were looking for hiding under a blanket in a bedroom. Deputies arrived about 8:30 p.m. to the residence on the 100 block of Enchanted Valley Drive and were told Robert D. Hyatt Jr., 45, stayed there but they did not know where he was, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Deputies were given consent to look inside and located him, the sheriff’s office reports. Hyatt allegedly stood up and instead of putting his hands behind his back, elbowed a deputy in the cheekbone, according to Chief Deputy Stacy Brown. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail for third-degree assault and his warrant, and also booked were Sherri R. Hyatt, 50; John F. Cooke, 68; and Dianne Cooke, 47, according to Brown. Because of a large glass pipe found next to a 14-year-old’s bed, a case for the teen was referred to prosecutors for a charge of possession of paraphernalia, Brown said. He was turned over to a relative.

BURGLARY SENIOR CENTER

• Chehalis police were called regarding a break-in to the senior center at the 2500 block of North National Avenue on Saturday morning. Someone had rummaged through cupboards and drawers and a deposit box was pried open, according to the Chehalis Police Department. A small amount of cash was missing and an entry door was damaged, according to police.

COMPUTER GAME SYSTEM STOLEN

• Someone got into a rural Chehalis residence on the 1600 block of Bishop Road through an unsecured door and stole a Playstation 3 with an external hard drive sometime between 2:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

SCORES OF PIPES STOLEN IN CENTRALIA

• Centralia police were called on Saturday evening for a burglary to a garage on the 1200 block of Plum Street. Taken were 80 glass smoking devices, according to the Centralia Police Department.

TRESPASSING FOR SLEEP

• A 61-year-old Centralia man said he was just looking for a place to sleep after police were called to a house which was supposed to be vacant at the 700 block of Southwest McFadden just before 8 a.m. yesterday, according to the Chehalis Police Department. The owner had arrived and heard noises, and responding officers arrested Richard K. Bowman for first-degree criminal trespass, according to police. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

DOMESTIC ASSAULT

• A 40-year-old Pe Ell man was arrested after he called 911 and said his girlfriend had threatened to break the windows out of his vehicle with an ax but a responding deputy concluded he assaulted her on Friday afternoon. Shane Pedersen was arrested for second-degree assault, as the deputy found abrasions on top of his knuckles and found marks bruises and scrapes on the girlfriend consistent with struggling on the ground, according to charging documents. He allegedly punched her, bit her and began to strangle her using both hands after throwing her to the ground, according to court documents. Pedersen was booked into the Lewis County Jail and ordered held on $20,000 bail, but was released over the weekend. He appeared before  a Lewis County Superior Court judge this afternoon on the charge for that same offense and was ordered to have no contact with the alleged victim. His arraignment is May 19.

ON THE ROAD, OFF THE ROAD

• A 24-year-old driver ended up with cuts and scratches when his 1995 Honda Civic failed to negotiate a curve along Oppelt Road and collided with a tree at about 1:40 a.m. yesterday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Donovin E. Dual was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital to be checked and then booked into the Lewis County Jail for driving under the influence and third-degree driving with suspended license and was cited for not having insurance and for wheels off the roadway, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said. The car had major damage and was towed, Brown said.

ZOOM, ZOOM

• A 26-year-old man who said he’d only been riding his motorcycle for a month was arrested after a high speed pursuit that began near Ethel and reached speeds of 128 mph on Friday night. Angel Chavira-Hernandez was spotted about 10:20 p.m. traveling west bound on U.S. Highway 12 near Oyler Road at 72 mph in a 55 mph zone, according to the Washington State Patrol. When he saw a trooper, he accelerated and headed south on Interstate 5, allegedly passing cars on the right and the left and sometimes “splitting traffic” passing near the center line, with two troopers in pursuit, according to the state patrol. Charging documents state that at milepost 57, the black sport motorcycle exited and when he found the northbound onramp blocked by a trooper, Chavira-Hernandez sped southbound on the northbound freeway offramp. The motorcycle then headed north at about 100 mph until the bike ran out of gas at milepost 77 in Chehalis, the documents relate. He was arrested at gunpoint. The defendant reportedly asked if the trooper was driving a “special” patrol car because it was faster than a normal police car. The Kent resident was arrested, booked into jail and today charged with attempting to elude a pursuing police car. Bail for the Kent resident was set at $5,000.

• A 20-year-old Winlock resident was arrested for attempting to elude following a police pursuit that began about 5:30 p.m. on Friday on U.S. Highway 12 near Mayfield Lake and ended near Mary’s Corner. Dakota S. Duel was reportedly speeding, westbound, and when a trooper tried to pull him  over, he sped up passing several vehicles in a no-passing zone. The chase continued at speeds in excess of 90 mph and spike strips deflated at least one of the passenger side tires at Ethel Hill and another spike strip near Jackson Highway got the other tire, according to the  Washington State Patrol. The rubber came completely off both tires and Duel, along with his passenger, was taken into custody, charging documents state. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail and charged today in Lewis County Superior Court with attempting to elude a pursuing police car. His bail was set at $10,000.

AND MORE

• And, as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, disorderly conduct,  urinating in public, misdemeanor domestic assault, driving with suspended license, driving with no license; responses for alarm, hit and run, vandalism, civil issue, unfounded report, misdemeanor theft, suspicious circumstances, collision on city street, little grass fire along Interstate 5, secondhand report of bear in Wal-Mart parking lot, numerous reports from people calling 911 because they saw what they thought was someone smoking what they think was marijuana while driving or out in public; complaint someone wrote in lipstick all over some else’s truck, complaint that one motorist took a picture of another motorist before the other pulled front of the 911 caller and slammed on his brakes  … and more, among 398 calls for local law enforcement and / or fire-emergency medical services in the 72-hour period ending about 6:50 a.m. today.

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7 Responses to “Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup”

  1. TwoWrongsMake a what says:

    Just saying….Bail is set according to NOT only the offense/crime committed- and the severity of circumstances- but also in relevance to prior history/record……. Not race at all

  2. TwoWrongsMake a what says:

    Bail is set according to NOT only the offense/crime committed- and the severity of circumstances- but also in relevance to prior history/record……. Not race.

  3. Pea body slim. says:

    I smoke Pot and love it……. no bears here,…

  4. GottaLoveit says:

    One of the people helping deploy the spike strips was in custody moments before hand and decided to be cool enough to help them out in a pinch. It was a wise move on their part. Conrgrats.

  5. Mad momma says:

    Was it the person smoking pot that saw the bear in Wal Mart parking lot? 🙂

  6. CrazyOldMan says:

    Angel, I guess because you have only been riding for a month you didn’t know rule #1 when you think you might have to run from the cops.

    Rule #1: Keep your vehicle fully gassed at all times.

    An Automobile which might get 20 mpg at normal speeds will only get about 5 mpg over 100 mph. Same goes for a crotch rocket. A normal 40mpg might only be 8 or 10 under the demands of a police pursuit.

  7. still waiting for justice says:

    so the guy on a motorcycle with a Hispanic name goes 128 mph and his bail is set at 5000 dollars, but a guy with a white name only goes 90 mph and his bail is set at 10,000-so just curious if this is racial profiling by me for assuming the race of a person by their name or is this fair play by our police and courts system? just wondering