Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Brian Coddington

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

All Stories

News >  Idaho

Men Using $50 Bills Fleece Restaurants

Employees at two Coeur d'Alene restaurants have told police they were ripped off by a man who faked payment with a $50 bill. In the most recent incident, a man in his late 30s ordered $25.68 worth of food late Tuesday at the International House of Pancakes. He then put a $50 bill on the counter and the 18-year-old cashier made change for him.
News >  Idaho

Door-To-Door Vacuum Salesman Fined $30,000, Banned

A judge has ordered a Coeur d'Alene door-to-door salesman to repay customers to whom he sold overpriced vacuum cleaners. First District Court Judge Gary Haman also banned Frederal Lopez from door-to-door sales in Idaho and fined him $30,000.
News >  Idaho

Driver Jailed After Man Hit In Parking Lot Dispute Outside Backdoor Tavern

A dispute outside a Coeur d'Alene bar sent one man to the hospital early Wednesday and another to jail, accused of running down the injured man with his car. Michael Lee Baysinger, 25, was booked into the Kootenai County Jail on a charge of aggravated battery. Witnesses told police Baysinger revved his gray Ford Thunderbird about 2:05 a.m., pulled it onto Appleway Avenue, raced back into the Backdoor Tavern parking lot and hit 36-year-old Edward Castleton. Both had been drinking, police said. Castleton, of Coeur d'Alene, was treated at Kootenai Medical Center for several severe scrapes on his back and legs and a large cut on his head. He refused further treatment and was released. Coeur d'Alene police arrested Baysinger at his home at 2119 N. 12th. Baysinger admitted running over Castleton and told officers he wanted to turn himself in, according to a police report. "Is the guy I hit OK?" Baysinger reportedly asked officers. According to the report, Baysinger also admitted drinking three beers, but passed a field sobriety test. Castleton's attempt to intervene in an argument between Anthony Blass, a friend, and Baysinger, apparently provoked the attack. It was not known what the men were arguing about, but several witnesses told police Baysinger threatened to run them over before getting into his car. Moments later, Baysinger drove through the Motel 6 parking lot, jumped a curb separating it from the bar property and slammed into Castleton, knocking him back several feet. Baysinger then sped east on Appleway Avenue, the police report said. About a half-dozen other people in the parking lot when the incident occurred were not injured.
News >  Nation/World

Emergency Services Advised To Merge Study Says Consolidating Would Save $74,000 A Year, Improve Efficiency

In just three years, a single agency may provide firefighting and ambulance service to all of Kootenai County. A consultant has recommended that Post Falls Fire Protection District, Kootenai County Fire Protection District No. 1, Coeur d'Alene Fire Department and Post Falls Ambulance and Rescue merge to form a single agency. A second proposal would join Kootenai County fire, Post Falls fire and Post Falls ambulance. Combining all four agencies would save nearly $74,000 annually and improve efficiency, according to a consultant's study.
News >  Idaho

Man Attacked By Pair Who Called Him Skinhead

Two men beat a 29-year-old Coeur d'Alene man while he walked to a city restaurant early Sunday, apparently mistaking him for a neo-Nazi skinhead. Robert DePaulis told Coeur d'Alene Police he encountered five men in the 700 block of north Fourth Street about 1:30 a.m. who were walking on the opposite side of the street. Two of the men - one black, the other white - crossed the street and punched him several times in the head and face, according to a police report.
News >  Idaho

Snake In The Grass Pet Python Slithers Into Park, Charms Kids

Gary Thomas, in life jacket, inspects Boots, a 14-foot Burmese python, along with several other kids at Independence Point on Friday. Mike Crothers brought the snake down the park for a swim in the lake and a roam in the grass. Photo by Craig Buck/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Washington Voices

Storm Debris, Weather Cause Fire Concern

Spokane Valley fire officials worry that debris left behind by last November's ice storm and a wet spring could fuel a massive wildfire as hot, dry summer weather hits its stride. Tall grass and a healthy bed of pine needles, broken branches, and fallen trees remain in several areas where homes sit among tall ponderosa pines.
News >  Nation/World

Boy Had Knowledge About Fatal Fire Adam Crane Was Working With Fire Investigators Before He Died

Shortly before he disappeared, the 16-year-old boy whose body was found in Latah Creek this month told investigators a fire that killed another youth last year had been set intentionally. Adam Crane's account of the events leading up to the shed fire gave Spokane Valley Fire District investigators a "person of interest" in the blaze, authorities said Monday. Deputy Fire Marshal Eric Olson described that person only as a teenage boy who was at the shed the night of the blaze Jan. 29, 1996.
News >  Washington Voices

Bridge Footings To Be Reinforced

State transportation workers plan to reinforce footings on a bridge along state Highway 27 south of Rockford. The footings were exposed by heavy flooding earlier this year, and the work will help protect them from future flooding, said James Prudente, state Department of Transportation regional environmental manager.