A suspect was found in this vehicle at the Klahowya Campground on Friday. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)

A suspect was found in this vehicle at the Klahowya Campground on Friday. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)

Three-hour standoff ends in arrest at Klahowya Campground

PORT ANGELES — Campers enjoying their Friday morning stay at a U.S. Forest Service campground were forced to leave their campsites during a three-hour standoff between law enforcement authorities and a Forks man that ended without incident.

Tommy Lee Cook III, 28, also known as Tommy Lee Cook Jr., was in the Clallam County jail Saturday on $450,000 bail after the standoff with authorities, including a narcotics enforcement tactical team, at Klahowya Campground about 35 miles west of Port Angeles, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office said.

Cook had two felony bench warrants against him totalling $450,000 when law enforcement officers received information he was staying at the campground, authorities said.

Campers who were staying in campsites near Cook’s recreational vehicle were evacuated during the standoff, which began at 10:15 a.m. Friday and ended at about 1 p.m. with Cook walking out of the RV, Clallam County Chief Criminal Deputy Brian King said Friday.

The warrants were issued on a Dec. 6, 2017 heroin possession and delivery charges, which included a firearms enhancement, and July 3 heroin delivery and firearms charges, on which he had recently made bail.

“The warrants involved alleged illegal drug activity within the area of Clallam County and the city of Forks,” Clallam County Sheriff’s Sgt. Ed Anderson said in a prepared statement.

When law enforcement personnel arrived, they saw Cook moving around inside the trailer.

“They attempted to engage him in conversation and he did not respond,” King said Friday while Cook was being driven back to jail.

More than a dozen law enforcement personnel arrived at the campground, King said.

They included an Olympic Peninsula Narcotics Enforcement Team tactical squad, the State Patrol, specialty teams from sheriff’s departments in Clallam and Jefferson counties, and the Port Angeles, Forks and La Push police departments, King and Anderson said.

Crisis negotiators spoke to Anderson through loudspeakers installed in the vehicles, King and Anderson said.

“In the 2017 arrest and the recent arrest, he was found to be in possession of firearms, so we were concerned, and fortunately the deputies from start to finish and actually the state troopers as well just continued and continued and continued and held him via the [public address] system,” King said.

“It was just a matter of being persistent by the show of force and amount of responders coming to the scene to let him know we were not going anywhere, that we were going to wait him out.

“Fortunately, it was a peaceful conclusion.”

Anderson said Saturday that he did not expect additional charges would be recommended against Cook as a result of the standoff.

It was unclear Saturday why the warrants were issued.

Anderson said it was likely they were for failure-to-appear violations.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

Law enforcement officers wrap up the scene at the USFS Klahowya Campground on Friday. The RV in the background was where the suspect was found. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)

Law enforcement officers wrap up the scene at the USFS Klahowya Campground on Friday. The RV in the background was where the suspect was found. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)

More in Crime

PA man gets 11 1/2 years in shooting

Jury found Lester guilty of attempted murder

Aaron Fisher, left, appears in Clallam County Superior Court on Jan. 9 with his attorney Lane Wolfley at a hearing during which his trial was confirmed to begin on Jan. 26. He has been charged with second-degree murder. (Clallam County Superior Court)
Murder trial is set for Jan. 26

Bank robbery trial to be reset for future date

Dozens of law enforcement vehicles assisted with the arrest of Justin Cox last June after he allegedly shot at officers and bystanders as he was sheltering inside a home. On Dec. 22, he received an order for civil commitment for inpatient psychiatric treatment. (Emily Matthiessen/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim man sent to state hospital

Charges could be refiled in Carlsborg standoff case

Cole Douglas, who was sentenced Thursday after he pleaded guilty to the March 2025 hit and run that seriously injured Sequim middle-schooler Colton Dufour, listens to Judge Elizabeth Stanley as Colton’s mother, Cherie Tachell, seated several rows back, smiles at her son just minutes before Douglas was taken into custody to begin serving a 12-month jail sentence. Seated beside them is victims advocate Molly Ramsey, who works in the Clallam County prosecuting attorney’s office and read a victim’s impact statement to the court during hearing. (Clallam County Superior Court)
Sequim man gets 1 year in hit-and-run

Teenager was seriously injured in March collision

Judge orders mental exam

Arraignment in murder case reset for late January

Couple investigated for identify theft, fraud

A Sequim couple has been arrested following an investigation… Continue reading

Jury selection Monday in child abuse case

Infant was found to have 11 fractures, including ribs, leg

Murder suspect returns to court

Charges refiled in his mother’s death

Montana man arrested three times in Clallam County in December

A 37-year-old Montana man was arrested three times last… Continue reading

Sheriff’s Office warns of payment requests scam related to jail

Multiple scam reports involving fraudulent payment requests have been… Continue reading

Financial scam targeting Peninsula residents, Sheriff’s Office says

North Olympic Peninsula residents have had more than $1… Continue reading

Robbery sentence set for 17 years

Reynolds pleads guilty to multiple charges