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Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
April 5, 2007     Shelton Mason County Journal
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April 5, 2007
 
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i_ Sentencings: t T00Drugs played part in 16 felonies Long-term inpatient treatment offending," Mercer said. on the first and 25 months on the the court and the community and the case was pending, a request in a drug rehabilitation facility will take the place of an even em" longer prison term for a young Nibe, :: Shelton woman who pled guilty mint° : to a total of 16 felony charges cuter d the amassed in a spree of forgeries , not-i earlier this year. Aimee Patricia Stallman, icipalLS ar- 21 ': of 21 East Willow Place, 3 and: Shelton, appeared for sentenc- ing in three cases before Judge g. bail', Toni Sheldon on Monday. Stall- .,.. man' who has also used the sur- ar- .: name Lund, earlier pled guilty to charges in all three cases: five : Counts of forgery and one count first-degree theft in each of two t cases and two counts of forgery and two counts of second-degree theft in the third. --  It was the first sentencing on the recently approved variation filed on the Drug Offender Sentencing seau, 'ested j: Alternative, or DOSA, handed down by Sheldon, who noted that ,drug i patient space in the programs ap for has only recently become avail- ainst able to the courts. _ Kevin Mercer, who met with was i tallman and performed a chemi- when cal-dependency assessment, told nday. i the court that Stallman would tt the benefit from an intensive treat- h has les in :i ment program because of a long history of metham hetamine use il "to address the rePlving door as- '! pect of her situation. t "TREATMENT WOULD pro- vide her with some coping mech- !: anisms and prevent her from re- Deputy Prosecutor Mike Dor- cy said the state concurred, and observed that Stallman had ar- ranged to start the program the next day, "coincidentally her 21st birthday," he added. "She says she has been addicted to drugs since she was 14." "I would hope the volume of crimes she has committed does not preclude the potential for a DOSA sentence," said defense attorney Andrew Rubenstein. "I would hope the court would give her an opportunity to heal her addiction." Stallman told the court she was truly sorry and that she needs help with her addiction, which lay behind the forgeries she committed. "That is really what this al- ternative is meant to address, to stop the revolving door," the judge said, observing that prison gets an individual "no closer to being able to address the addic- tion." THE JUDGE said the special sentencing provides for a term of community custody of half the standard range for the crime. She ordered Stallman into a residen- tial chemical-dependency treat- ment program for six months, with a progress hearing on July 2, and a termination hearing set for December 2008. The commu- nity custody aspect of the three sentences would be 24 months other two. Sheldon also signed an order for Stallman's release for trans- portation to the drug treatment facility by her mother, Kim Lund. Stallman will be responsible for paying court costs, attorney-fee recoupment, testing fees and fines of $1,413, $1,250 and $1,250 in the three cases. A restitution hearing is set for July 2. If she fails to complete the treatment program and meet the requirements of the community custody component, she could face a standard prison sentence for the crimes. Sentenced in the wake of a fam- ily dispute, Christopher San- daine, 26, of 2553 108th Street SW, Kent, was ordered to serve a mid-range six-month sentence for residential burglary which occurred in October 2006 at the Shelton home of Sandaine's girl- friend's parents. Sandaine ear- lier pled guilty to the charge, and to two counts of fourth-degree as- sault involving Monty and Karen Willy. Sheldon imposed sentences of 365 days with 305 suspended on each of those charges. DEPUTY PROSECUTOR Mike Dorcy opposed a request from Sandaine's attorney, An- drew Rubenstein, for a first-time offender waiver for Sandaine, who had no previous criminal history. Sandaine read a statement to the court in which he apologized to d Court gives secon00J chance ,ut of three felony, defc:ndants ! One defendant in a Mason Coun- an absence of years was readmit- months in the Mason County Jail ty Superior Court case entered a diversion program after a hear- eard ing on Monday, another saw the red charge against him dropped after after: COmpleting a diversion program, lost : and a third was found guilty at a , but i _oencl trial after he was removed 3uck- l?ora the diversion program. away i Diversion gives defendants the waS chance to avoid a conviction by ne at ::!i making restitution for their crimes ' and doing other things stipulated m an agreement with the court. jury Judge Toni Sheldon dismissed was : charges of theft in the first degree ht he and false verification f welfare m } filed in 1998 against troy Lee g, :I: Simpson Jr. of Bremerton. Simp- , "he I! on, 43, was initially charged af-  ! er records indicated he failed to met :! reveal Wages and other income ation : when h -- -. • • "e-o  .-u ms wife appdea mr : ;;yreCelved welfare benefits in that Simpson entered the diversion t fall i  program, be if i: was dropped, and after ted to the program, which he suc- cessfully completed. He was con- gratulated in court on Monday. Tricia L. Johnson, 37, of 1418 Jefferson Street, Shelton, commit- ted herself to a year's program with Friendship, the county's diversion program provider, and the court concurred. If she successfully com- pletes the program, she will see a second-degree burglary charge filed late in December dropped. Richard Eliot York, 28, of 2720 West Highland Road, Shel- ton, appeared for proceedings after his diversion program was terminated when he was arrested and charged with another crime. The arresting agency affidavit al- leging possession of stolen proper- ty in the second degree by means of fencing materials and a gate be- longing to Ders Farm Supply, was read into the record, and Judge Sheldon found him guilty. York was sentenced to five on that charge and ordered to pay court costs of $272, a $100 test- ing fee, and a $500 contribution to the crime victims' fund. Sheldon declined a request from York's at- torney that his client be allowed to serve what remains of that sen- tence on electronic home monitor- ing. York was also sentenced on a Sex offender didn't register; gets 43 months behind bars A reluctant Judge James Saw- yer on Friday followed recommen- dations from the prosecution and defense when he sentenced a Shel- ton man to the low end of the stan- dard range for failing to register as a sex offender. Presiding in Mason County Su- perior Court, the judge said he was inclined to give Davey K. Newby raore time in prison for a repeat offense. The standard range for failing to register has recently ris- en from what the judge termed "a i slap on the wrist" to a significant !i period of incarceration. °n He imposed a 43-month pris- sentence on Newby, who pled a week earlier, shortly be- d. Newby, 24, indi- '.ated at the time of his arrest that was transient. He was picked up in January at the home of a friend on Passage View Drive on allegations that he had failed to register his current address with the Washington State Department of Corrections from December 29 through January 21. Defense attorney John Stanislay and Deputy Prosecutor Rebecca Jones Garcia asked the court for a low-end sentence. Newby was con- victed of third-degree assault with sexual motivation in September of 2000 in Thurston County Superior Court. He pled guilty to an earlier charge of failure to register in No- vember of 2005. Sawyer told Newby, whose wife and young son were in the court- room, that it was time he took re- sponsibility for the impact he was having on the lives of others. M,,X",;()N ( () NTY By RUss Denney ISN'T IT A LITTLE SCARY THAT WALTER REED HOSPITAL IS AN EXAMPLE OF GOVERNMENT HEALTH CARE? WILL THE WASHINGTON GOVERNOR'S OR NEW YORK SENATOR'S PLAN BE ANY BETTER? PANTORIUM CLEANERS & TAILORS Serving Shelton and Mason County for 82 years Monday-Friday 6:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. 215 South Second 426-3371 2006 charge of possession of meth- amphetamine and possession of stolen property. In that case, Shel- don agreed that the final month of a six-month sentence could be served on electronic home moni- toring at York's expense. He was assigned court costs of $778.50, a $1,000 drug fund contribution, crime lab and test- ing fees of $100 each, and a $500 contribution to the crime victims' fund. Additional costs and restitu- tion in both cases will be se'c at a hearing May 21. Sheldon required that when York is released to a period of community custody he must ob- tain certified evaluation for drug and alcohol issues and follow any recommendations for programs or treatment. She also imposed other standard drug conditions includ- ing drug testing and the moral reconation therapy program. said he had made specific plans which include returning to college for training as a nurse, returning to his job and his family in Kent, and returning to church. "I have learned discipline'and patience, and to respond instead of react," he said. "I realize self- worth is based on responsible, de- pendable behavior." Sheldon told Sandaine: "I have a picture of what went on in essen- tially a family dispute," remind- ing him, "Your behavior has an impact on your child." She made allowance for the final month of his sentence to be served on elec- tronic home monitoring, and im- posed conditions that include a drug-alcohol evaluation and an anger-management evaluation, with follow-up as indicated, and required attendance at parenting classes during the course of his two years of community supervi- sion. She imposed court costs, fines, fees and attorney-fee recoupment amounting to $2,000.10, and res- titution is to be determined at a hearing on July 9. Also sentenced in Judge Shel- don's court Monday were: * Wenona Lee Thomas, 28, formerly of 208 North First Street, Shelton, was sentenced to 365 days in the Mason Coun- ty Jail with 335 days suspended for theft in the third degree and the same sentence on escape in the third degree. The court noted Thomas was serving a sentence on electronic home monitoring for another court in the county when she absconded from the area for a significant period of time with the monitoring equipment, which she has since returned. Deputy Prosecutor Dorcy said Thomas is serving a significant amount of time on a municipal court conviction. Defense attor- ney Eric Valley asked that her sentence in superior court be con- current with that time. Judge Sheldon said her two sentences could run concurrently but must be consecutive to that of Shelton Municipal Court. Thom- as is to be on 24 months of bench probation following her release from jail, "which means she must have absolute law-abiding behav- ior and pay legal financial obliga- tions," the judge said. Her legal financial obligations amount to $800, with a hearing May 14 to impose additional costs. • Edna L. Johnston, 43, of 41 East Sea Vista Lane, Grapeview, was given a suspended sentence of one year in jail for malicious mischief in the third degree com- mitted in the context of a domes- tic dispute. The victim in the case, David Johnston, said his wife had been working two jobs to help him through school. The incident, he said, was out of character. "I am as guilty as she," he said. "We both were under stress and both have learned a lot from the incident." He asked the court to remove the restraining order imposed while seconded by defense attorney Valley, who said no assaultive behavior was involved, only dam- age to a vehicle's windshield. Judge Sheldon declined, how- ever, imposing a no-contact order that can be lifted after a counsel- or employed by the Washington State Department of Corrections has completed the assessment and lifts the order. Sheldon as- signed two years of supervision, and ordered an alcohol evalua- tion with follow-up and a domes- tic-violence program. The judge imposed $898 in costs and fees. No restitution was requested. • Ralph Bariekman, 76, of 62 SE Cook Plant Farm Road, Shel- ton, was sentenced to 24 months of community custody but no jail time on an amended charge of third-degree domestic-violence assault. Judge Sheldon accepted a rec- ommendation for a first-time offender waiver, noting that Bariekman had no criminal his- tory, and incorporating a domes- tic-violence assessment and no contact with the victim, Bariek- man's estranged wife, Mar- gie, whose foot was run over by Bariekman's truck in the course of an argument. "I didn't mean anything like that to ever happen," Bariekman told the court Monday. Sheldon told him he must have a psychiatric evaluation and a domestic-violence evaluation and follow up with any counseling or treatment recommended. He may have no weapons or firearms, must maintain contact with the Department of Corrections, and have no contact with Margie Bariekman. He must pay costs and fees totaling $1,105.50, plus restitution if it is requested. • Kahil Marie Marshall, 35, of 4404 Sixth Avenue, Olympia, was ordered to begin serving a sentence imposed on a 2004 con- viction. Marshall had appealed that case, but had lost her ap- peals. She will be returned from prison to the court for a bench trial on a more recent charge. 10'2" BASS Tender boat with 43 lb. thrust electric motor guide, two seats, oars, aerator pump, navigation light. Also E-Z-Loader trailer to be assembled, $950. (360) 432-9581. L4/5-12 3 BEDROOMS, 11/2 baths. Open beam ceiling, Natural Gas. Started remodeling. Illness forces sale. Hillcrest area, near school and stores. $159,000. (360) 868- 2161. G4/5-26 YARD SALE - Santa's Den, 1800 E. Island Lake Drive, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday, April 6. T4/5 ENERGETIC STORE clerk for fast- paced seasonal position. Apply in person at Lake Cushman Resort. Must be able to pass drug screen and background check, (360) 877-9630 for more info. L4/5-12 ----S HE RIFF PUBLIC NOTICE Casey Salisbury ~ Sheriff WANTED SEX OFFENDER INFORMATION BULLETIN LEVEL 3 SEX OFFENDER WHEREABOUTS UNKNOWN If you have any information regarding current criminal activity_ of this or any other offender, please call 911. For other information on sex offenders, http://so.co.masofi.wa.us/ SEAN PHILIP STOLL WHITE MALE - DUB: 10/25/80 5'-10" TALL - 145 LBS. BLOND HAIR & BLUE EYES Seen Stoll is wanted by the Mason County Sheriff's Office for not living at his registered address, and for having an outstanding Bench Warrant for his arrest for Possession of a Dangerous Weapon. He is required to register as a sex offender due to pleading guilty on I 1/17/98 to Communication with a Minor for Immoral Purposes, Mason County Superior Court cause #98-8-00114-9. This conviction was due to when Stoll was 17 years old, he started having sexual relations with a 12 year old girl that eventually led to the girl becoming pregnant. The young girl, who was a neighborhood friend, later miscarried Stoll's child. This was not Stoll's only sex crime. On 01/23/96, Stoll was given a diversion sentence for sexually assaulting a female classmate in Jr. High; Kitsap County Juvenile Court cause #CNV36124, case #96PO207. Stoll said he "just hugged the girl," but he was accused of touching the girl's private areas over her clothing. His diversion sentence was completed before he committed the sex crime in Mason County. Due to all of the above factors, Stoll is considered a HIGH RISK. Stoll is assessed by the Mason County Sheriff's Office as a Level 3 Sex Offender. This is the highest level assessment given to a Sex Offender, meaning that the subject is at a HIGH RISK to re-offend. THIS SEX OFFENDER'S WHEREABOUTS ARE UNKNOWN Paid for by the Mason County Sheriffs Office I Thursday, April 5, 2007 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 31 i_ Sentencings: t T00Drugs played part in 16 felonies Long-term inpatient treatment offending," Mercer said. on the first and 25 months on the the court and the community and the case was pending, a request in a drug rehabilitation facility will take the place of an even em" longer prison term for a young Nibe, :: Shelton woman who pled guilty mint° : to a total of 16 felony charges cuter d the amassed in a spree of forgeries , not-i earlier this year. Aimee Patricia Stallman, icipalLS ar- 21 ': of 21 East Willow Place, 3 and: Shelton, appeared for sentenc- ing in three cases before Judge g. bail', Toni Sheldon on Monday. Stall- .,.. man' who has also used the sur- ar- .: name Lund, earlier pled guilty to charges in all three cases: five : Counts of forgery and one count first-degree theft in each of two t cases and two counts of forgery and two counts of second-degree theft in the third. --  It was the first sentencing on the recently approved variation filed on the Drug Offender Sentencing seau, 'ested j: Alternative, or DOSA, handed down by Sheldon, who noted that ,drug i patient space in the programs ap for has only recently become avail- ainst able to the courts. _ Kevin Mercer, who met with was i tallman and performed a chemi- when cal-dependency assessment, told nday. i the court that Stallman would tt the benefit from an intensive treat- h has les in :i ment program because of a long history of metham hetamine use il "to address the rePlving door as- '! pect of her situation. t "TREATMENT WOULD pro- vide her with some coping mech- !: anisms and prevent her from re- Deputy Prosecutor Mike Dor- cy said the state concurred, and observed that Stallman had ar- ranged to start the program the next day, "coincidentally her 21st birthday," he added. "She says she has been addicted to drugs since she was 14." "I would hope the volume of crimes she has committed does not preclude the potential for a DOSA sentence," said defense attorney Andrew Rubenstein. "I would hope the court would give her an opportunity to heal her addiction." Stallman told the court she was truly sorry and that she needs help with her addiction, which lay behind the forgeries she committed. "That is really what this al- ternative is meant to address, to stop the revolving door," the judge said, observing that prison gets an individual "no closer to being able to address the addic- tion." THE JUDGE said the special sentencing provides for a term of community custody of half the standard range for the crime. She ordered Stallman into a residen- tial chemical-dependency treat- ment program for six months, with a progress hearing on July 2, and a termination hearing set for December 2008. The commu- nity custody aspect of the three sentences would be 24 months other two. Sheldon also signed an order for Stallman's release for trans- portation to the drug treatment facility by her mother, Kim Lund. Stallman will be responsible for paying court costs, attorney-fee recoupment, testing fees and fines of $1,413, $1,250 and $1,250 in the three cases. A restitution hearing is set for July 2. If she fails to complete the treatment program and meet the requirements of the community custody component, she could face a standard prison sentence for the crimes. Sentenced in the wake of a fam- ily dispute, Christopher San- daine, 26, of 2553 108th Street SW, Kent, was ordered to serve a mid-range six-month sentence for residential burglary which occurred in October 2006 at the Shelton home of Sandaine's girl- friend's parents. Sandaine ear- lier pled guilty to the charge, and to two counts of fourth-degree as- sault involving Monty and Karen Willy. Sheldon imposed sentences of 365 days with 305 suspended on each of those charges. DEPUTY PROSECUTOR Mike Dorcy opposed a request from Sandaine's attorney, An- drew Rubenstein, for a first-time offender waiver for Sandaine, who had no previous criminal history. Sandaine read a statement to the court in which he apologized to d Court gives secon00J chance ,ut of three felony, defc:ndants ! One defendant in a Mason Coun- an absence of years was readmit- months in the Mason County Jail ty Superior Court case entered a diversion program after a hear- eard ing on Monday, another saw the red charge against him dropped after after: COmpleting a diversion program, lost : and a third was found guilty at a , but i _oencl trial after he was removed 3uck- l?ora the diversion program. away i Diversion gives defendants the waS chance to avoid a conviction by ne at ::!i making restitution for their crimes ' and doing other things stipulated m an agreement with the court. jury Judge Toni Sheldon dismissed was : charges of theft in the first degree ht he and false verification f welfare m } filed in 1998 against troy Lee g, :I: Simpson Jr. of Bremerton. Simp- , "he I! on, 43, was initially charged af-  ! er records indicated he failed to met :! reveal Wages and other income ation : when h -- -. • • "e-o  .-u ms wife appdea mr : ;;yreCelved welfare benefits in that Simpson entered the diversion t fall i  program, be if i: was dropped, and after ted to the program, which he suc- cessfully completed. He was con- gratulated in court on Monday. Tricia L. Johnson, 37, of 1418 Jefferson Street, Shelton, commit- ted herself to a year's program with Friendship, the county's diversion program provider, and the court concurred. If she successfully com- pletes the program, she will see a second-degree burglary charge filed late in December dropped. Richard Eliot York, 28, of 2720 West Highland Road, Shel- ton, appeared for proceedings after his diversion program was terminated when he was arrested and charged with another crime. The arresting agency affidavit al- leging possession of stolen proper- ty in the second degree by means of fencing materials and a gate be- longing to Ders Farm Supply, was read into the record, and Judge Sheldon found him guilty. York was sentenced to five on that charge and ordered to pay court costs of $272, a $100 test- ing fee, and a $500 contribution to the crime victims' fund. Sheldon declined a request from York's at- torney that his client be allowed to serve what remains of that sen- tence on electronic home monitor- ing. York was also sentenced on a Sex offender didn't register; gets 43 months behind bars A reluctant Judge James Saw- yer on Friday followed recommen- dations from the prosecution and defense when he sentenced a Shel- ton man to the low end of the stan- dard range for failing to register as a sex offender. Presiding in Mason County Su- perior Court, the judge said he was inclined to give Davey K. Newby raore time in prison for a repeat offense. The standard range for failing to register has recently ris- en from what the judge termed "a i slap on the wrist" to a significant !i period of incarceration. °n He imposed a 43-month pris- sentence on Newby, who pled a week earlier, shortly be- d. Newby, 24, indi- '.ated at the time of his arrest that was transient. He was picked up in January at the home of a friend on Passage View Drive on allegations that he had failed to register his current address with the Washington State Department of Corrections from December 29 through January 21. Defense attorney John Stanislay and Deputy Prosecutor Rebecca Jones Garcia asked the court for a low-end sentence. Newby was con- victed of third-degree assault with sexual motivation in September of 2000 in Thurston County Superior Court. He pled guilty to an earlier charge of failure to register in No- vember of 2005. Sawyer told Newby, whose wife and young son were in the court- room, that it was time he took re- sponsibility for the impact he was having on the lives of others. M,,X",;()N ( () NTY By RUss Denney ISN'T IT A LITTLE SCARY THAT WALTER REED HOSPITAL IS AN EXAMPLE OF GOVERNMENT HEALTH CARE? WILL THE WASHINGTON GOVERNOR'S OR NEW YORK SENATOR'S PLAN BE ANY BETTER? PANTORIUM CLEANERS & TAILORS Serving Shelton and Mason County for 82 years Monday-Friday 6:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. 215 South Second 426-3371 2006 charge of possession of meth- amphetamine and possession of stolen property. In that case, Shel- don agreed that the final month of a six-month sentence could be served on electronic home moni- toring at York's expense. He was assigned court costs of $778.50, a $1,000 drug fund contribution, crime lab and test- ing fees of $100 each, and a $500 contribution to the crime victims' fund. Additional costs and restitu- tion in both cases will be se'c at a hearing May 21. Sheldon required that when York is released to a period of community custody he must ob- tain certified evaluation for drug and alcohol issues and follow any recommendations for programs or treatment. She also imposed other standard drug conditions includ- ing drug testing and the moral reconation therapy program. said he had made specific plans which include returning to college for training as a nurse, returning to his job and his family in Kent, and returning to church. "I have learned discipline'and patience, and to respond instead of react," he said. "I realize self- worth is based on responsible, de- pendable behavior." Sheldon told Sandaine: "I have a picture of what went on in essen- tially a family dispute," remind- ing him, "Your behavior has an impact on your child." She made allowance for the final month of his sentence to be served on elec- tronic home monitoring, and im- posed conditions that include a drug-alcohol evaluation and an anger-management evaluation, with follow-up as indicated, and required attendance at parenting classes during the course of his two years of community supervi- sion. She imposed court costs, fines, fees and attorney-fee recoupment amounting to $2,000.10, and res- titution is to be determined at a hearing on July 9. Also sentenced in Judge Shel- don's court Monday were: * Wenona Lee Thomas, 28, formerly of 208 North First Street, Shelton, was sentenced to 365 days in the Mason Coun- ty Jail with 335 days suspended for theft in the third degree and the same sentence on escape in the third degree. The court noted Thomas was serving a sentence on electronic home monitoring for another court in the county when she absconded from the area for a significant period of time with the monitoring equipment, which she has since returned. Deputy Prosecutor Dorcy said Thomas is serving a significant amount of time on a municipal court conviction. Defense attor- ney Eric Valley asked that her sentence in superior court be con- current with that time. Judge Sheldon said her two sentences could run concurrently but must be consecutive to that of Shelton Municipal Court. Thom- as is to be on 24 months of bench probation following her release from jail, "which means she must have absolute law-abiding behav- ior and pay legal financial obliga- tions," the judge said. Her legal financial obligations amount to $800, with a hearing May 14 to impose additional costs. • Edna L. Johnston, 43, of 41 East Sea Vista Lane, Grapeview, was given a suspended sentence of one year in jail for malicious mischief in the third degree com- mitted in the context of a domes- tic dispute. The victim in the case, David Johnston, said his wife had been working two jobs to help him through school. The incident, he said, was out of character. "I am as guilty as she," he said. "We both were under stress and both have learned a lot from the incident." He asked the court to remove the restraining order imposed while seconded by defense attorney Valley, who said no assaultive behavior was involved, only dam- age to a vehicle's windshield. Judge Sheldon declined, how- ever, imposing a no-contact order that can be lifted after a counsel- or employed by the Washington State Department of Corrections has completed the assessment and lifts the order. Sheldon as- signed two years of supervision, and ordered an alcohol evalua- tion with follow-up and a domes- tic-violence program. The judge imposed $898 in costs and fees. No restitution was requested. • Ralph Bariekman, 76, of 62 SE Cook Plant Farm Road, Shel- ton, was sentenced to 24 months of community custody but no jail time on an amended charge of third-degree domestic-violence assault. Judge Sheldon accepted a rec- ommendation for a first-time offender waiver, noting that Bariekman had no criminal his- tory, and incorporating a domes- tic-violence assessment and no contact with the victim, Bariek- man's estranged wife, Mar- gie, whose foot was run over by Bariekman's truck in the course of an argument. "I didn't mean anything like that to ever happen," Bariekman told the court Monday. Sheldon told him he must have a psychiatric evaluation and a domestic-violence evaluation and follow up with any counseling or treatment recommended. He may have no weapons or firearms, must maintain contact with the Department of Corrections, and have no contact with Margie Bariekman. He must pay costs and fees totaling $1,105.50, plus restitution if it is requested. • Kahil Marie Marshall, 35, of 4404 Sixth Avenue, Olympia, was ordered to begin serving a sentence imposed on a 2004 con- viction. Marshall had appealed that case, but had lost her ap- peals. She will be returned from prison to the court for a bench trial on a more recent charge. 10'2" BASS Tender boat with 43 lb. thrust electric motor guide, two seats, oars, aerator pump, navigation light. Also E-Z-Loader trailer to be assembled, $950. (360) 432-9581. L4/5-12 3 BEDROOMS, 11/2 baths. Open beam ceiling, Natural Gas. Started remodeling. Illness forces sale. Hillcrest area, near school and stores. $159,000. (360) 868- 2161. G4/5-26 YARD SALE - Santa's Den, 1800 E. Island Lake Drive, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday, April 6. T4/5 ENERGETIC STORE clerk for fast- paced seasonal position. Apply in person at Lake Cushman Resort. Must be able to pass drug screen and background check, (360) 877-9630 for more info. L4/5-12 ----S HE RIFF PUBLIC NOTICE Casey Salisbury ~ Sheriff WANTED SEX OFFENDER INFORMATION BULLETIN LEVEL 3 SEX OFFENDER WHEREABOUTS UNKNOWN If you have any information regarding current criminal activity_ of this or any other offender, please call 911. For other information on sex offenders, http://so.co.masofi.wa.us/ SEAN PHILIP STOLL WHITE MALE - DUB: 10/25/80 5'-10" TALL - 145 LBS. BLOND HAIR & BLUE EYES Seen Stoll is wanted by the Mason County Sheriff's Office for not living at his registered address, and for having an outstanding Bench Warrant for his arrest for Possession of a Dangerous Weapon. He is required to register as a sex offender due to pleading guilty on I 1/17/98 to Communication with a Minor for Immoral Purposes, Mason County Superior Court cause #98-8-00114-9. This conviction was due to when Stoll was 17 years old, he started having sexual relations with a 12 year old girl that eventually led to the girl becoming pregnant. The young girl, who was a neighborhood friend, later miscarried Stoll's child. This was not Stoll's only sex crime. On 01/23/96, Stoll was given a diversion sentence for sexually assaulting a female classmate in Jr. High; Kitsap County Juvenile Court cause #CNV36124, case #96PO207. Stoll said he "just hugged the girl," but he was accused of touching the girl's private areas over her clothing. His diversion sentence was completed before he committed the sex crime in Mason County. Due to all of the above factors, Stoll is considered a HIGH RISK. Stoll is assessed by the Mason County Sheriff's Office as a Level 3 Sex Offender. This is the highest level assessment given to a Sex Offender, meaning that the subject is at a HIGH RISK to re-offend. THIS SEX OFFENDER'S WHEREABOUTS ARE UNKNOWN Paid for by the Mason County Sheriffs Office I Thursday, April 5, 2007 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 31