Editorial: California’s shameful delays probing police killings of unarmed civilians
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
Another troubling deadly shooting by Bay Area police. Another promise by California Attorney General Rob Bonta to investigate. And, if history is an indicator, another case that his office will take years to resolve.This time the shooting is in Martinez. Video shows officers firing at a car as it drives away. One man, Tommy Wilson Jr., 22, was critically injured but is recovering. He had been shot twice in the back. His brother, Tahmon Wilson, 20, is dead. He had been shot in the back of the head.It’s hard to understand how firing into a moving vehicle as suspects are trying to flee can be justified. It’s hard to understand how it’s OK for an officer to shoot someone from behind. That’s why an independent investigation is so badly needed.Hours after the killings, Bonta announced that his office would conduct a probe as required by state law. The law stems from legislation that Bonta, when he was an assemblymember, and more than 40 other legislators introduced just three weeks ...Hobby Lobby arts and crafts retailer seals deal for big San Jose store
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
SAN JOSE — Hobby Lobby has sealed a deal to lease a big chunk of store space in San Jose, a rental agreement that hints at some green shoots of economic hope in a forbidding landscape for Bay Area retail.The arts and crafts retailer has successfully capped off a wide-ranging hunt for a new location by leasing space within Almaden Plaza, a high-profile shop and restaurant complex in south San Jose.Oklahoma-based Hobby Lobby has leased 62,000 square feet of “improved retail space” within Almaden Plaza, which is located at 5353 Almaden Expressway in San Jose, documents on file with the Santa Clara County Recorder’s Office show.It wasn’t clear which specific space in Almaden Plaza that Hobby Lobby leased. Some big sites in the shopping center could be promising possibilities, however.Related ArticlesReal Estate | Global biotech firm buys big San Jose building Real Estate | Google preps new “visitor experience” in Mount...Bay Area woman raises the curtain on the father she didn’t know, founder of Berkeley Repertory Theatre
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
Meighan Leibert and her younger brother once were fixtures at Berkeley Repertory Theatre.They weren’t actors, stagehands, directors or set designers. They were the young children of Michael Leibert, the UC Berkeley graduate student who founded the East Bay’s first resident professional theater in 1968, two years after she was born, that grew from a small storefront neighborhood company into a celebrated Tony award-winning institution known for staging innovative and edgy new work.“Growing up, we were there all the time when we were with our dad. We were in the theater, we were a part of it,” says Leibert.All of that went away when her father died at age 44 of alcoholism when she was just 17. But much more than that disappeared years before his death in 1984, which the longtime San Rafael resident details in her memoir, “The Man I Didn’t Know.”Leibert’s parents divorced when she was just 5 years old and her father disappeared from her life. Researching and writing her book was a way ...Dead gray whale washed ashore at Seacliff State Beach
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
APTOS — A dead 1-year-old gray whale washed ashore at Seacliff State Beach this week and local experts are fighting the tumbling tide to try to better understand what may have happened to the sea creature.California State Parks spokesperson Gabe McKenna said reports of a whale washed up on the beach almost directly in line with the famous S.S. Palo Alto, or Cement Ship, came in around 5 p.m. Monday. With help from officials at the UC Santa Cruz Long Marine Lab Marine Mammal Stranding Network, skin and blubber samples were collected from the whale, which was estimated to be about 22-24 feet long.However, when researchers came back down to the beach early Tuesday, the rising tide had taken the carcass back out to sea where it was pulled southward toward Rio Del Mar. As of Wednesday morning, the whale was still rolling in the surfline at Rio Del Mar near where waves were breaking, according to McKenna.“It’s not common, but it’s definitely not unprecedented,” said McKenna. A dead 36-foo...Backlog of deaths weighs down Santa Cruz County coroner’s unit
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
SANTA CRUZ — As countywide efforts to increase the availability of overdose remedies ramp up, the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office Coroner’s Unit has been weighed down by a growing backlog of deaths, many related to drug overdoses.The coroner’s unit saw a 3,150% increase in fentanyl overdose-related deaths in a four-year period, a startling statistic reported to the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday when the Sheriff’s Office came seeking authorization to hire a new coroner’s investigator to assist the chief forensic pathologist.“The fentanyl crisis, we read about it day in and day out and it’s hit home,” Supervisor Bruce McPherson said before voting with the board to approve the new hire as a consent agenda item. “This is a catastrophe and we need to address it as quickly as we can, with the cooperative effort through every law enforcement agency that we have.”As opioid overdoses have skyrocketed, affecting the Santa Cruz County Coroner’s Unit, countywide efforts t...SNAP recipients expected to get boosted benefits from DC funding
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
District residents who receive government assistance to buy groceries will see a boost in benefits after the D.C. Council said it expects to spend $40 million in excess revenue in 2024 to help low-income families.D.C. will boost SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) benefits by 10% between January and September of 2024 to help the city’s more than 145,000 recipients feed their families.At-Large Council member Christina Henderson spearheaded the proposed legislation — Give SNAP A Raise — and brought it before the Council in 2022. The bill became law in March and will go into effect next year.The boost is temporary but it will add another $20 million in direct cash assistance to workers who were unable to qualify for federal unemployment and were not given federal pandemic aid.“The question then is: Are we going to be able to find permanent funding to be able to maintain this increase in perpetuity?” Henderson told WTOP.She noted that the good news came as...With bond-yields near 2-decade high, Wall Street’s strong 2023 starts to deflate
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Treasury yields surged in September and sapped the energy from a strong stock market as investors came to terms with the likelihood that interest rates will remain high well into 2024.The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which influences rates for mortgages and other loans, jumped past 4.50% in September and continues rising. It is at its highest level in nearly two decades. The yield on the 2-year Treasury, which tracks expectations for the Fed’s interest rate policy, jumped above 5.00% in September and also continues edging higher.“Once again, the move in rates has proven to be too much too fast for equity markets to handle,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial, in a note to investors.High bond yields make it less likely that investors will invest in riskier stocks, especially pricey technology companies. The early autumn slump in bond prices that jolted yields higher tripped up what had been a solid recovery for the S&P 500 and other...DC-area couple gets married 180 feet over the Potomac River
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
One D.C.-area couple recently began their marriage on a high note — literally.Marcos Martinez and Karen Chavez tied the knot Tuesday on the Capital Wheel at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland. The couple soared 180 feet above the Potomac River in a private gondola, according to a news release from the Capital Wheel.One year to the date before the wedding, Martinez had proposed to Chavez at the same spot. The pair are big fans of Ferris wheels and have traveled around the U.S. to check out different attractions.They decided the Capital Wheel in their hometown was the perfect place to kick off their marriage, the news release said.“This was a first for us at The Capital Wheel,” said Derek Lovato, vice president and general manager for the Capital Wheel. “We have lots of people who get engaged here, but this is the first time we’ve had a couple get engaged and then come back exactly one year later to get married inside a gondola.”The ceremony was small — just Martinez, Chavez...You won't be fined for crossing into the express lane in these cases
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) — At the beginning of October, the Colorado Department of Transportation began fining drivers who were caught weaving in and out of the express lanes. However, crossing the line isn't always black and white. There are exceptions to this new rule.It's a $75 ticket if the roadway technology tracks you weaving through the solid white lines on C-470 from Interstate 25 to Wadsworth Boulevard, and I-25 from U.S. 36 to E-470. During the grace period in September, the roadway sensors issued over 40,000 violations in just 20 days. No more warnings: Drive over the line, pay the fine While the system tracks thousands of drivers crossing the line, it can be adjusted. The system also allows CDOT to account for traffic crashes that force people into the express lanes, according to Tim Hoover, CDOT's communications integration lead.For example, when a crash occurs and law enforcement closes a lane and diverts people to the express lane, CDOT’s traffic operations center notifies the...How much snow could Denver get in October?
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 10:23:37 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) — When you think of October, you might think of Halloween or falling leaves. But if you haven't lived in Denver for very long, you might want to add snow to the list.This is because October is usually when Denver sees snow for the first time, though you might not know this if you arrived in 2021 or 2022 given it didn't snow until after October both years.But how much snow could you expect?Average snowfall for OctoberOn average, Denver gets around 4.1 inches of snow in October, according to Pinpoint Weather Meteorologist Travis Michels.While Denver did not see any measurable snow in October 2022 and 2021, that is by no means the norm. When will Denver see the first snow of the season? With the exception of 2021 and 2022, over the last five years, Denver has seen a decent amount of snow in October:2022 - Only trace amounts2021 - Only trace amounts2020 - 4 inches2019 - 12.5 inches2018 - 3.5 inchesMichels pinned the first day of snow this season to come a few days after ...Latest news
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