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Wanted man arrested near Seattle

by Richard Hanners For Pilot
| July 27, 2011 8:44 AM

The fourth man wanted in connection

with an armed home-invasion in Happy Valley on July 6 was arrested

July 19 in Renton, Wash., south of Seattle.

When the U.S. Marshall Service arrested

Stephen Acton, 27, of Whitefish, he was allegedly found in a home

with an illegal marijuana grow and had an assault rifle. He is

currently being held in the King County jail. A $75,000 felony

warrant for Acton was issued by Flathead County July 8.

In addition to the Happy Valley robbery

charges, Acton is also wanted for running a heroin and

methamphetamine drug ring and for making counterfeit money. He is

facing charges in Washington and could be extradited to Montana to

face charges here.

Flathead County Sheriff Chuck Curry

said Acton had some prior criminal history in Lincoln County. He

was on the department’s radar as a player in drug trafficking, but

wouldn’t call him a “kingpin.”

“He was as involved as any of the other

players,” Curry said. “Any time a heroin dealer gets off the

street, it’s a good thing.”

Whitefish Police Chief Bill Dial said

Acton had an insignificant criminal history locally.

The three men arrested and charged

earlier in connection with the Happy Valley robbery remain in the

Flathead County Detention Center and face felony charges.

Kelly Campbell, 22, of Columbia Falls,

was initially charged with accountability to robbery, possession of

stolen property and violating his parole conditions. Bradley

Thompson, 25, of Kalispell, was initially charged with robbery,

theft, obstructing a peace officer and resisting arrest. Kevin

Gaethle, 29, also of Kalispell, was initially charged with robbery,

criminal contempt and violating his parole conditions.

According to sheriff’s deputy reports

in court records, 911 dispatchers received a report of an armed

invasion at 261 Hare Trail from a man who lived there at about 4:45

p.m. He told dispatchers his 16-year-old daughter had been held at

gunpoint when two armed men assisted by a third stole a gun safe

from the house.

The daughter told the three deputies

who arrived that she was working at a computer in the kitchen when

the two men entered. When she tried to call her father, they took

her cell phone away.

They then asked her where her father

stored his guns, and she told them they were in a safe in an

upstairs bedroom closet. While one man held a laser-sighted handgun

on her, the other searched the bedroom, located the safe and used a

cell phone to contact the get-away driver.

While the daughter was unable to

describe the driver, she later identified the man who held the gun

on her from a photo line-up as Acton. She said she could see the

light from the laser sight move across her body during the robbery.

She identified the second armed man as Gaethle.

The armed men wore “white mitten-type

gloves” and one had tattoos, the daughter said, and one of the

armed men told her they were taking the guns because her uncle

“Mike” owed them money and that the guns would be returned

later.

According to the father, the safe

contained a Ruger Mini-14 rifle, three AR-15 rifles, an FN .308

rifle, two 30-30 rifles, a World War II-era Luger pistol and

numerous loaded magazines. He also noted that two Burlington

Northern Railway rings were missing from the bedroom.

A next-door neighbor reported seeing a

gray Volkswagen pull up with three males and seeing two males

leave. A neighbor down the road reported seeing a vehicle drive

past with one door open and a large boxy object sticking out.

Apparently the gun safe would not fit into the Volkswagen Jetta the

suspects used to drive away.

The next day, Kalispell police arrested

a man for shoplifting at Wal-Mart who identified himself as “John

Hale” but turned out to be Thompson and was driving a Volkswagen

Jetta. During an interview, Thompson allegedly identified Acton and

Gaethle as the other two men involved in the armed robbery.

Gaethle along with the gun safe was

located in Columbia Falls. He allegedly told officers he had heard

of the robbery from others and knew the Happy Valley family because

he helped them move. He also said he knew Acton but didn’t know

Thompson. Then, saying he felt wrongly charged, he stopped the

interview by asking for an attorney.

A woman who was Thompson’s girlfriend

agreed to talk to officers about the robbery. She said she was

present at the Columbia Falls residence when Acton, Thompson and

Gaethle divided up the guns from the safe.

That same day, officers learned that

Campbell had been arrested during a traffic stop. During his

interview, Campbell allegedly said he knew about the robbery from

Acton and had made plans with Acton to take the stolen guns to

Portland, Ore., to sell or trade for heroin that would be brought

back to the Flathead. He said he was on his way to meet Acton when

he was stopped, and the missing guns were found in his vehicle, but

he denied any involvement in the robbery.

In a later interview, Thompson

allegedly told officers he, Acton and Gaethle stole the guns and

that Acton had pointed the laser-sighted handgun at the 16-year-old

girl in the Happy Valley residence.