$1 Midweek Edition Saturday, April 19, 2014 Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online — www.chronline.com Chronicle Investigates Tasings, Betrayal and Police ‘Oversight’ An Arbitrator Will Decide if the Centralia Police Department Must Rehire Phillip Reynolds, Who Has a “Sometimes in the heat Lengthy Disciplinary Record and History of Dishonesty of the battle, you lose Editor’s Note: After an ex- lished in Thursday’s issue of By Stephanie Schendel track of things.” tensive review of hundreds of the Chronicle, and to look at
[email protected] Phillip Reynold documents associated with the the legal briefs, police reports firing of Centralia police officer and internal investigations as- The fired police officer at- Phillip Reynolds, The Chronicle sociated with the story, check tempting to get his job back at spanned several years. information he included was released a two-part series de- out Chronline.com. There is the Centralia Police Department While Phillip Reynolds often vague, incomplete and tailing the issues surrounding also a timeline that details dis- had an extensive history of ex- documented his Taser use in — as it was later determined — his termination. For part one ciplinary action taken against cessively Tasing people involved his police reports, as required dishonest. of the series, which was pub- Reynolds. in minor criminal offenses that by the department’s policy, the please see DECISION, page Main 12 Pot Retailer Threatens to Sue Hub City $100 MILLION IN ANNUAL SALES: Developer Dave Kois Said Lawsuit Is Possible if City Council Votes Down Approval By Kyle Spurr
[email protected] Dave Kois, a pot retailer from Olym- pia, envisions building a 35,000-square- foot recreational marijuana processing and retail facility in Centralia near the Greenwood Memorial Park cemetery, which would earn up to $100 million annually, he said.