Chehalis traffic stops yield large amounts of meth

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Gloria N. Iniguez Gonzalez sits with a Spanish-English interpreter as her companion (center) waits at their hearing in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – For the second night in a row this week, Centralia police detective Chad Withrow pulled over a driver who failed to use their turn signal, and turned up a sizable amount of methamphetamine.

Like Tuesday when a pound and three quarters of meth was located in a vehicle pulled off Interstate 5 at the 13th Street exit in Chehalis, Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Rick VanWyck arrived with his drug sniffing K-9 on Wednesday night to the parking lot at McDonald’s on Median Street.

According to court documents, Withrow and a second detective saw a vehicle approach them in the hours of darkness with only one functioning headlight. They followed and soon, it made a turn without using the blinker and was stopped for the infractions, the documents relate.

A man and a woman with a 1-year-old boy were asked to exit the vehicle.

According to VanWyck, the dog “alerted” on the trunk area and a request to the occupants to search was turned down, so Withrow secured a so-called telephonic search warrant, according to charging papers.

Discovered under the seat where the woman had been sitting, were three clear plastic bags, each containing approximately one ounce of a crystal substance that field tested positive for meth, according to the documents. Six hundred thirty-three dollars were found in a pouch behind the driver’s seat.

Both were charged yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court with possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver.

The driver, named as Eduardo F. Morales Martinez, 37, of Shelton, in court documents, was additionally charged with first-degree criminal impersonation.

“We don’t know who he is,” Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told a judge yesterday afternoon. “He gave a couple different names that don’t check out in the state’s database.”

Meagher said he hoped to verify the man’s identity with fingerprints and asked for a no-bail hold.

Judge Joely O’Rourke set bail at $500,000, citing serious concerns about the identity issue.

Deputy Prosecutor Paul Masiello wrote that a more thorough check indicated Morales Martinez had prior convictions for delivery of a controlled substance and driving under the influence as well as multiple deportations and illegal entries.

Bail for the passenger, Gloria N. Iniguez Gonzalez, 38, of the Olympia area, was set at $10,000. Meagher and temporary defense attorney Rachael Tiller said she has no criminal history.

Her 16-year-old son and 19-year-old brother were on hand at the brief hearing yesterday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court.

Charging documents state that when the male driver was first contacted, he identified himself as Antonio Ortiz Hernandez and provided three Mexican ID cards that showed as such. One of them had a different birthdate than the other two, Masiello wrote in the affidavit regarding probable cause.

Upon further questioning and a look inside his wallet that turned up a bank card issued to Eduardo Morales, the driver said the card belonged to his son, according to the documents.

Masiello wrote that after the drugs were found and the two arrested, the driver said his true name was Eduardo Morales Martinez. His driver’s license was suspended.

The two were booked into the Lewis County Jail. Their arraignments are set for Thursday.

Hancel Zagal Alcaraz, 28, from Pasco, remains held in jail with bail set at $25,000, following his separate arrest on Tuesday night and a criminal charge filed on Wednesday in Lewis County Superior Court.

He was allegedly speeding, failing to signal lane changes and displaying no license plate or visible trip permit on northbound Interstate 5 when members of the Joint Narcotics Enforcement Team pulled him over and asked him to move to the AM/PM at the 13th Street exit.

Charging documents in his case indicate Deputy VanWyck’s K-9 Axel detected controlled substances that led to a search of his vehicle.

His girlfriend handed over a brown tar substance wrapped in plastic along with two pieces of a crystal substance to detective Withrow, according to court documents.

Another detective found a coffee container that seemed heavier than it should be, reached into the coffee and located three large packages of a crystal substance, according to the documents. In total, they weighed 28.5 ounces and field tested positive as meth.

There is no indication the girlfriend was arrested.

Zagal Alcaraz allegedly told detectives the auto repair business he owns in Pasco is a front he uses to distribute controlled substances in Chehalis, Olympia, Tacoma and Everett.

He was charged the next day with possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver. Zagal Alcaraz has no felony criminal history in the state.

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For background, read “Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup – JNET: PACKAGES OF CRYSTAL METH HIDDEN IN COFFEE CONTAINER from Wednesday March 8, 2017, here

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9 Responses to “Chehalis traffic stops yield large amounts of meth”

  1. Northwest Focus says:

    Agreed beenthere. These dogs are no more than trained “alerters” when convenient and desired by their handlers. Not defending the perp here, only defending our right from unlawful searches.

  2. beenthere says:

    The K9 alerted on the trunk area but the drugs were found under the seat the lady was sitting in. Good dog.

  3. Exceptionally Normal says:

    These illegals from Latin America are also – with seemingly full facilitation provided by the Washington state DNR – turning our public forest lands – specifically Capitol Forest into a garbage dump under the guise of salal harvesting. I’ve got the pictures to prove it. It’s great for them, really. They come up here, decimate natural resources. Sell the spoils for cash, so that way, it doesn’t effect their eligibility for EBT cards, Medicaid, rent subsidies etc. Leave trash all -over the place. Many food packages clearly bearing Spanish text left scattered were ever they’re vehicles are parked. All with no consequences from the DNR. But if your a legal born U.S. citizen who forgot to display your discovery pass, you find a ticket for one hundred bucks left on your wind shield.

  4. BobbyinLC says:

    So one of those arrested has multiple deportations and illegal entries.
    Let’s not arrest him, give him a monthly income and a place to live. Send him back after he has served time for his crimes here. This is not a sanctuary city. I agree local law enforcement should not be out looking to do the feds job when it comes to illegal immigrants but once they have had arrested someone for a crime and then find out they are illegal they need to turn them over to ICE for deportation.

    I am from the east coast and my father came here from another country but guess how? By filing paperwork and coming through Ellis Island.

    I agree our country is made great by all of the different people who live here but we have to have legal entry.

  5. the truth says:

    Sharon, calling it a “so-called” search warrant implies it is not a search warrant. It is a search warrant, just phoned in to a judge and read to them over the phone for their approval.

  6. James Clark says:

    Great job to the Lewis County Sheriffs Department. At least you got them before they made it to Seattle, the Harbor City. The Seattle Mayor would have, had them released.

  7. Go figure!! says:

    Mexican trash hmmmm? Go figure worthless welfare trash!!

  8. Patti Hatfield Larson says:

    Good job! Keep draining this swamp! 👍

  9. Wyatt says:

    Wow these guys are good. Pulling over hispanics who fail to turn signal. Good old fashioned police work,… good job! Give that puppers a treat!