Local Honor Stepping Down Guard Centralia Girls’ Coach Resigns After Two Years / Sports Pays Final Respects / Life 1 $1 Midweek Edition Thursday, April 17, 2014 Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online — www.chronline.com Skepticism Abounds at Hoof Rot Meeting The Chronicle / File Photo In this 2008 ile photograph, former oicer Phillip Reynolds is seen making an arrest in Centralia. ‘excessive Use of Force’ Dishonesty, Overuse of Taser and an Officer’s Quest to Regain His Job in Centralia DECISION Arbitrator Will Decide Fate of Phillip Reynolds After 2012 Firing By Stephanie Schendel Pete Caster /
[email protected] [email protected] A woman speaks out about the elk hoof disease problem during the question and answer portion of a Washington Department of The Centralia Police Department might be forced to Fish and Wildlife meeting on the hoof rot situation in the area at the V.R. Lee Community Building in Chehalis on Wednesday evening. rehire a police officer with a history of excessive use of force if an arbitrator rules in favor of Phillip Reynolds, who the agency fired in 2012. WDFW Officials Cite A panel of five state wildlife started coming in from Pacific, officials were on hand to explain A review of hundreds of documents from internal Possible Link to 2007 Lewis and Clark counties. Over the investigations, police reports, civilian complaints, de- that researchers now believe that next several years, researchers har- partment policies, as well as Reynolds’ personnel records, Boistfort Valley Flooding hoof rot — a disease that causes elk vested 43 elk ranging in age from hooves to become deformed with fetuses to adulthood and shared reveal an apparent pattern of dishonesty, excessive force By Dameon Pesanti and reckless behavior throughout his six-year stint as a lesions and eventually fall off — is tissue samples with several labora- police officer.