Port Angeles man pleads guilty to stolen car possession

PORT ANGELES — A Port Angeles man has been sentenced to just less than four years in prison after he pleaded guilty last week to possessing two stolen cars.

Joshua Michael Wilson, 31, pleaded guilty Tuesday to two counts of possession of a stolen motor vehicle and one count of second-degree identity theft.

He was sentenced to 3.75 months in prison, with 12 months of community service.

Wilson also will pay $1,300 in court fees and victim restitution, with further restitution to be determined at a court hearing in December, according to documents filed in Clallam County Superior Court.

The charges stem from Wilson’s involvement in the theft of two cars reported stolen in August.

Seeking second man

The Clallam County Sheriff’s Office is still seeking a second man thought to be involved in the thefts who fled from a deputy when Wilson was arrested Aug. 26, said Sgt. John Keegan with the Sheriff’s Office.

“I don’t think that we’ve identified who that individual is yet,” Keegan said Saturday.

“We’ve narrowed it down to a couple of different people.”

Sheriff’s investigators believe the first stolen car, a 1992 red Honda sedan, was driven to Graysmarsh Farm in Sequim and abandoned in the early morning hours of Aug. 26.

The Honda had been reported stolen the morning of Aug. 25 from a home on Crescent Beach Road about 37 miles to the west.

The Honda was found wrecked along Holland Road about a mile from Graysmarsh Farm.

That same morning, a Ford Windstar minivan was stolen from a farm employee living near the farm and later found in the parking lot of the Walmart Supercenter at 2411 Kolonels Way, Port Angeles, according to sheriff’s deputies.

Wilson was arrested in the parking lot after a brief foot chase in which a second man, described as a “person of interest” in the car thefts, escaped.

Newly purchased socks, the credit card stolen from the Graysmarsh Farm employee and a receipt for the socks with a matching credit card number were found in the van after Wilson was arrested, deputies said.

________

Reporter Jeremy Schwartz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jschwartz@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Lower Elwha Klallm Tribal Chairwoman Frances Charles, left, speaks about the Paddle to Elwha 2025 canoe journey as Carmen Watson-Charles, the tribe’s cultural manager, holds an informational pamphlet during a presentation to the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Thousands expected for canoe journey this month

Tribe anticipates speeches, songs and traditional dance

Glass recycling returns to Jeffco

Port Townsend, Quilcene locations available

Port of Port Townsend OKs update to its strategic plan

Commissioners discuss economic development

Reservoir project to start this weekend

Lower water pressure expected through Aug. 1

Forks institutes voluntary water conservation measures

The city of Forks is requesting residents to follow voluntary… Continue reading

Resurfacing project begins on Priest Road

Work crews contracted by the city of Sequim have begun… Continue reading

Mandy Miller of Port Angeles and other members of her family spent some time over the Fourth of July weekend picking eight pounds of strawberries at the Graysmarsh Farms north of Sequim. Raspberries will soon though reach their peak picking season, and both are available at Graysmarsh. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Berry picking

Mandy Miller of Port Angeles and other members of her family spent… Continue reading

Peninsula counties awarded $5M in grants

Funding to cover easements, equipment

Port of Port Angeles to forge ahead with terminal upgrade plans

Design phase would help envision future opportunities

The Northwest Watershed Institute purchased 81 acres for conservation and stewardship in the Tarboo Valley for inclusion in its 500-acre Tarboo Wildlife Preserve. (John Gussman)
Tarboo valley land set aside for preservation

Nearly 500 acres now part of wildlife preserve

Emily Simmons of Port Angeles, a member of the Surfriders Foundation, collects fireworks debris from along Ediz Hook Road in Port Angeles on Saturday. Although fireworks have been banned in the city of Port Angeles, many people used them illegally, leaving behind trash and spent casings and tasking volunteers to pick up the remains. A group from 4PA performed similar cleanup duty on another portion of the hook. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Cleanup efforts

Emily Simmons of Port Angeles, a member of the Surfriders Foundation, collects… Continue reading

Stage 3 water alert issued for Clallam Bay system

Clallam County Public Utility District No. 1 has declared a… Continue reading