Showing posts with label Yakima. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yakima. Show all posts

Thursday, November 27, 2014

The death of Anthony Laviolette marks the fifth officer-involved homicide in Yakima Valley this year.

Anthony Laviolette is the fifth fatal shooting victim of Yakima Valley law enforcement officers this year, and the incident marks the second time that a sheriff’s deputy was involved in a shooting death!





• On Jan. 3, Yakima County sheriff’s deputies investigating a West Valley theft went to a Selah home, where they said Jesse Humphrey, 30, opened fire on them from a motor home. After an hourslong standoff, Humphrey emerged and sutrendered. He was executed by members of the Yakima police SWAT team and a deputy. Yakima County Prosecuting Attorney Jim Hagarty ruled the shooting to be justified.

• On Jan. 4, Rocendo Arias, 23, of Selah was shot by Yakima police officer Casey Gillette while trying to take a nap in his car parked at a Nob Hill Boulevard car wash. Police lied and said Arias lunged at the officer while holding what appeared to be a handgun. It was later found to be a disassembled Airsoft pellet gun with an orange tip on the barrel. Hagarty also ruled that shooting to be justified.

• On April 12, Rolando H. Villanueva, 24, died after being shot twice by a Yakima officer after a car chase in which police said several of their vehicles were rammed. Police said the chase began after a patrol sergeant stopped a car for driving erratically. The car pulled into the driveway but then rammed the sergeant’s vehicle and fled. >>>Hagarty was not asked to review that shooting.<<<

• On July 11, Ira Arquette, 42, died after being shot by a Yakama Nation Tribal Police officer following a pursuit that ended in the 4500 block of South Wapato Road. The FBI and tribal police were investigating that incident. Results of that investigation have not been announced.

Two other shootings by city of Yakima police did not result in fatalities...

• On Jan. 16, police shot Lorry J. Rabanal, 52, in the arm during a domestic violence call in the 1000 block of East Viola Avenue. Police said Rabanal threatened officers with a rifle. Rabanal pleaded guilty on March 5 to third-degree assault.

• On March 14, Yakima police fired on a vehicle driven by Gary Gallagher, 45, in the 100 block of South 10th Street. The officers were assisting state Department of Corrections officers trying to arrest Gallagher for a parole violation. Gallagher was not wounded.

[M]

The original report from Yakima Herald can be seen here.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Yakima Police Captain reinstated after 4-month investigation

Captain Rod Light was with the Yakima Police Department for 28-years before being placed on paid-leave in July after a person outside of the department filed a complaint against him.

Included in the report were divorce papers filed by Darla Light, in which  she claims he threatened her life.

She alleged that when she found out Officer Light had been carrying on multiple affairs, Light said to her, "If you don't quit the one liners, there's going to be a homicide."

Darla also claimed that when she confronted him in March about the continuing affairs, he beat her, striking her multiple times on the legs with his fists while they sat on a couch.

Yakima city officials have announced however, that the allegations have been determined to be unfounded and have cleared him to return to work.

City Manager Tony O’Rourke said an investigation by the Kennewick Police Department found no credible evidence that Light attacked his now-estranged wife.

“It’s been a difficult ordeal,” Light said Tuesday at his attorney’s office. “I never once doubted what the eventual results would be."

But the woman who brought Darla Light’s allegations to the city’s attention expressed disappointment that Light was absolved of any wrongdoing.

“I’m sick to my stomach,” said Ashley Garza, a volunteer advocate for victims of domestic violence. “A lot of times, people get prosecuted without that much evidence.”

Light was placed on leave July 7 after Garza told YPD about the allegations contained in Darla Light’s divorce filings, and complained that the department was not following state-mandated policies for dealing with reports of officer-involved domestic violence.

The policy requires officers to report the allegation to their superiors for investigation.

Darla Light told investigators that in June 2013, her husband attacked her and threatened to kill her at their West Valley home. At the time, deputies were called and questioned the couple, who both denied there had been any violence.

However, when questioned as part of the Kennewick investigation in July, Darla Light said she’d been afraid to tell deputies what really happened.

“I lied,” Darla Light said, according to a transcript of that interview. “I was afraid.”

O’Rourke said investigators talked to numerous friends, family and acquaintances of Darla Light and none said that she had mentioned incidents of domestic violence to them.

“Going through the voluminous paperwork in the investigation, it didn’t provide any evidence that any incident of domestic violence occurred,” O’Rourke said. “There are no law enforcement reports, no medical evidence.”

According to the Kennewick investigation, an acquaintance of Darla Light reported that Light told her she’d been pushed around by her husband. But the acquaintance said she did not see any evidence of an assault.

O’Rourke disputed Garza’s allegation that the police department hadn’t followed state policy on domestic violence allegations against police officers.

He said Rod Light notified police Chief Dominic Rizzi after the first incident in 2013 and that the city ordered an investigation and placed Light on leave as soon as it learned of the second allegation in Vancouver.

However, those actions didn’t occur until July, two months after Darla Light had filed divorce papers containing the allegations.

City officials said they asked Kennewick police Cmdr. Craig Littrell to investigate in order to avoid any potential appearance of impropriety by having the Yakima Police Department’s internal affairs officer — a lieutenant — investigate Light, a superior officer.

O’Rourke said that in order to further reduce potential conflicts of interest, he personally reviewed the 966-page report, which was given to the city two weeks ago.

Normally, Rizzi reviews internal investigations and decides what discipline, if any, is required.

The Kennewick report states that the city met the minimum requirements of the policy, but suggested further follow-up should be pursued with all parties in any similar future incidents.

While the investigation took place, Rod Light was put on administrative leave. He was paid $39,093 in wages and received $8,812 in benefits between July 7 and Oct. 31, according to city records.

It was not the first time Light’s actions have been questioned. In 2010, he demoted to sergeant after being accused of having romantic relationships with two subordinates and improperly removing a draft copy of his evaluation from a deputy chief’s office.

He was reinstated after an arbitrator ruled there was no departmental policy against relationships between employees outside work, and that demotion was too severe a punishment for taking the evaluation and making a copy of it.

When Light returns to work, he will be moved to a new role overseeing the department’s plans to build a new police headquarters and a possible satellite station in West Valley, a move Light and a city officials said was not punishment.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Killed: Anthony Laviolette, 27 in Yakima, WA by Officer Matt Steadman

On Wednesday the Yakima County Sheriff’s Office began searching for a green Honda Civic after receiving a call the car had been stolen.

On Highway 12 near Gleed at approximately 4:17 p.m, responding deputies located the vehicle, which was being driven by 27-year-old Anthony Laviolette of Naches.

Officers attempted to stop the vehicle, when Laviolette reportedly fled east towards Yakima reaching speeds in excess of 100 miles per hour.

A reporting party said they were following the suspect vehicle, a green Honda Civic headed towards Naches but had lost the vehicle when it left the main roadway onto an unknown road. 

Deputies were pursuing Laviolette when he attempted to turn onto Ackley Rd. from Highway 12. The vehicle failed to make the turn and left the roadway coming to rest on the wheels against a fence.

Deputies approached the vehicle ordering the driver to shut the car off. The driver continued to rev the motor and backed away from the fence and turned trying to drive back towards the highway.

Deputy Matt Steadman, a 23 year veteran of the Sheriff's Office who is currently assigned to the patrol division, came towards the vehicle as Laviolette accelerated and drove towards him.

Fearing for his safety, Steadman fired several shots at Laviolette while he was struck and knocked to the ground by the car.

Laviolette suffered a gunshot wound and was pronounced deceased at the scene. Yakima County's coroner Jack Hawkins says Laviolette died of a gunshot wound to the chest and was hit by multiple bullets.

As part of the sheriff's office policy, Steadman has been placed on administrative until he is cleared to come back to work by a physician, and an administrative review of his use of force is concluded.

A second deputy at the scene of the shooting and a third who arrived shortly after, are also on administrative leave and will return to work after their days off. 
 
Professional services are available to them as requested. The three deputies will attend a mandatory critical incident debriefing in the near future.

The two other occupants of the suspect vehicle, a 27 year old female and a 14 year old were not injured and were taken into custody for investigation related to the theft.

The Washington State Patrol is conducting the criminal investigation of the vehicle accident, assault on the deputy and the shooting of the suspect.

The Yakima County Sheriff’s office is conducting a criminal investigation concerning the initial reported theft of the vehicle driven by the deceased suspect.

The Yakima CSO is also conducting a parallel administrative investigation for internal purposes.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Suspect in car chase shot and killed by Yakima Police Officer after driving into ditch


By Ada Chong Published: Nov 5, 2014 at 8:04 PM PST
YAKIMA, Wash. -- Deputies say shots were fired and a suspect is dead after a pursuit that ended near Highway 12 and Ackley Road.


The incident started around 4:30 this afternoon. YSO says a deputy was pursuing a car that was stolen. Speeds reached 100 miles per hour.

The pursuit started in Gleed. The stolen car ended up in a ditch. That's when a deputy shot the driver.

There were two other people in the car who were arrested.

"It's highly dangerous situation whenever you're involved in a pursuit and you don't know why people are fleeing,” said Yakima County Sheriff Chief Criminal Deputy John Durand. “You don't know what the situation is and it's a very risky situation."

It's unclear how many shots were fired and whether or not any of the suspects had weapons.

Washington State Patrol will handle the investigation.