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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Woman accused of ramming car

The Spokesman-Review

An Idaho woman was in jail Wednesday night, accused of ramming a hospital security guard’s car and biting his arm while trying to abduct her 1-year-old granddaughter in Spokane.

The arrest occurred about 11 a.m. Tuesday after Sacred Heart Medical Center took custody of the infant under a state law that allows hospitals to hold children for 72 hours in cases of suspected abuse.

Pamela L. Randel, 52, of Osburn, Idaho, was booked on suspicion of first-degree assault, said Spokane police spokesman Cpl. Tom Lee.

A District Court judge found probable cause Wednesday to hold Randel and set bail at $100,000.

Sacred Heart’s chief operating officer, Elaine Couture, issued a statement saying the hospital was placed on alert when the baby disappeared after relatives were told Tuesday that the girl was being detained.

Couture said staff members were directed to block all exits, and the baby was recovered within minutes.

According to court documents, hospital security officer Phillip Connolly blocked a parking lot exit as Randel was about to leave.

Lee said the baby and her parents were in the vehicle with Randel.

Witness Alexander Fritz told police Randel nearly hit him as she sped toward the exit.

Fritz said Randel slammed into Connolly’s vehicle, then backed up and rammed it again.

Connolly told police he heard Randel yell, “Get out of my way,” just before she hit his vehicle the first time.

Court documents say Randel bit Connolly’s arm while he was handcuffing her.

Sacred Heart officials said they couldn’t comment on why the baby was being held.

Chesrown donates to river cleanup

An annual Spokane River cleanup event received $6,000 Wednesday from a developer who plans to transform 80 vacant acres of land overlooking the river’s north bank into an urban village with housing and businesses near downtown Spokane.

“The Spokane River and the Gorge area comprise the ‘front porch’ of the Kendall Yards project,” Marshall Chesrown, CEO of Black Rock Development, said in a news release.

The annual cleanup, which began in 2003, will be held Oct. 7 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at High Bridge Park. Partners in the event are Avista Utilities, Friends of the Falls, and the city parks department.

Last year, 525 volunteers removed more than 9 tons of litter from the river banks, from the T.J. Meenach Bridge to the Peaceful Valley neighborhood.

Boise

Bush appoints C. Stephen Allred

A member of former Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne’s Cabinet was appointed to serve under his old boss as a top deputy in the Department of the Interior.

President Bush appointed C. Stephen Allred as the new assistant secretary of the interior for land and minerals management. Allred was previously director of Idaho’s Department of Environmental Quality.

Allred still faces a confirmation hearing in the U.S. Senate.