The Chronicle

default avatar
Welcome to the site! Register or log in below.
   |   
Not you?  |   | 
Logout  |  My Dashboard

Detective Says 21 'Red Flags' Should Have Prevented Suicide Ruling

Share
Send this page to your friends
Print
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

Brandon Swanson Detective Says 21 'Red Flags' Should Have Prevented Suicide Ruling

Posted: Tuesday, November 3, 2009 12:00 am

    Twenty one oddities went unanswered in the 1998 death of former Washington State Patrol trooper Ronda Reynolds. So said former Lewis County Sheriff’s detective Jerry Berry, who testified Tuesday in day two of a jury trial that will decide if the coroner’s ruling that Reynolds committed suicide is accurate.

    Reynolds’ mother, Barbara Thompson, filed a lawsuit against Lewis County Coroner Terry Wilson to dispute the ruling, years after police found the woman fatally shot on the floor of her walk-in closet with a blanket over her on Dec. 16, 1998.

    A jury of eight women and four men looked on as Reynolds’ close friend and Des Moines Police Officer David Bell was first called to the stand. Bell said he was one of the last people to see Reynolds before her death, and testified that she never used the word “suicide” in their conversations leading up to the incident in question.

    Bell told the jury he’d been helping Reynolds pack to move away from her husband Ron Reynolds, whom multiple witnesses said she was in the process of divorcing.

    “I was there to help her get out of there,” Bell said. “She made arrangements to fly to Spokane the next morning, and asked if she could get a ride to the airport.”

    She asked bell to call her the morning of Dec. 16 to make sure she woke up in time for the ride, Bell said. When he called, he learned from Ron that Reynolds was dead.

    Bell and other witnesses who were called to the stand compared Ron’s demeanor that morning to “discussing the weather,” with no apparent emotion or grief.

    Next, former Lewis County Sheriff’s Deputy Robert Bishop took the stand. He was on the scene on the morning of Reynolds’ death, and said he also saw red flags that brought the suicide into question.

    Bishop said it appeared the right side of the couple’s bed was made that morning – the side Ron said Reynolds was sleeping on until about 6 a.m. when she got up and pulled the trigger in a nearby room. Ron’s side of the bed was disheveled and consistent with his story, Bishop said.

    Ron told officers he didn’t hear the shot from the room about 10 feet from the bed because two doors and a pillow separated the noise from Ron, who was sleeping, Bishop said.

    Bishop said he saw Reynolds’ body with the hand that held the gun underneath a blanket that was over her. He also said moisture and humidity in the air led him to believe someone had taken a shower that morning in the bathroom adjacent to the closet.

    The closet door, Bishop said, couldn’t have been opened like Ron said because the body was right in front of the open door.

    Wilson’s attorney John Justice cross examined Bishop, leading him to add that he didn’t take photos or administer measurements or tests on the door. Bishop also said he didn’t find signs of a struggle and left the scene as detectives took over.

    The next witness was former sheriff’s detective Jerry Berry, who was once the lead detective on Reynolds’ case. He said he raised 21 questions that should have kept the case undetermined until they were answered, and alleged that bullying and haste from the department led to the suicide ruling and his eventual resignation.

    Berry said one of those oddities, lipstick scrawled on the mirror in Reynolds’ bathroom, read “I love you, call me…” and gave an Eastern Washington phone number.

    “Clearly not a suicide note,” Berry said. “Any one of those things in and of itself wouldn’t have been an issue, but things were starting to add up.”

    He later added he thinks it was a staged suicide, and actions were taken to cover up a murder.

    Justice questioned Berry’s motives when he entered the scene that day. He also asked Berry about various life problems Reynolds was facing prior to her death, including financial struggles and depression medication.

    Justice said Monday that Wilson stands by his determination, which has changed three times since it was originally made.

Welcome to the discussion.

1 comment:

  • Sam Spade PI

    Sam Spade PI Posts: 0

    This story should concern every reader in Lewis County. This story should raise questions about the past leadership in the sheriff's department. Are the same policies in effect today, or did the department make improvments? Do we have a murderer out there going free? How can a sheriff tell deputies which deaths to investigate and which to ignore?We demand answers. We demand better performance from our elected officials. Thanks to the Chronicle for making this information public.

     

Online poll

Do you believe in Bigfoot?

Loading…