Southbound 880 reopens following CHP investigation

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Southbound 880 reopens following CHP investigation (KRON) -- Southbound I-880 at Auto Mall Parkway in Fremont has reopened after being shut down Tuesday due to a California Highway Patrol investigation, KRON4 has confirmed. The investigation was related to the fatal shooting of a 5-year-old girl on the 880 on Saturday night.All southbound lanes are now open. Police shut down the first section of freeway at 10:55 a.m. and moved on to a second location. Residual delays are expected. Video shows ex-SF fire commissioner assaulted with pipe in Marina District A severe traffic alert was in effect earlier, according to the California Highway Patrol. Traffic was being diverted at Fremont Boulevard. Motorists were advised to expect delays and use alternate routes to avoid the area.Video from a Caltrans camera of the scene showed what appeared to be a line of CHP officers walking down the empty section of freeway looking for clues.The area of the 880 that was shut down is in the same vicinity as the area where 5-year-old Eliyanah Crisostomo...

Pedestrian dies after Tenderloin crash

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Pedestrian dies after Tenderloin crash (KRON) -- A pedestrian has died following a crash in the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco on Tuesday afternoon, according to the San Francisco Police Department. I-880 reopens following CHP investigation in Fremont Police received a report of a vehicle collision with a pedestrian around 12:13 p.m. Officers found a man on scene with injuries near Jones and Geary streets. The pedestrian was taken to a local hospital where he later died. Officers are still on the scene investigating. Drivers are told to expect traffic delays and consider alternate routes.Citizen video from the scene shows what appear to be a FedEx and U-Haul truck after a collision. The U-Haul truck is resting in the crosswalk on Geary Street. San Francisco has seen about 30 pedestrians die in collisions since each year, according to the city. The city's Vision Zero program adopted in 2014 aims to eliminate traffic deaths in the city altogether.This is a developing story. Please stick with KRON for updates.

SF Board of Supervisors meeting rescheduled after cable connection reportedly vandalized

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

SF Board of Supervisors meeting rescheduled after cable connection reportedly vandalized SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- The San Francisco Board of Supervisors meeting originally scheduled for Tuesday had to be rescheduled for Wednesday after the fiber connection the board uses to broadcast meetings was vandalized, according to Supervisor Aaron Peskin. As a result of the apparent vandalism, the board is unable to broadcast the meeting through SFGovTV, the cable channel the city government utilizes. ‘Death of Downtown’ study: San Francisco ranks last "We are currently experiencing a service interruption on the Comcast cable TV system and both SFGovTV channel 26 and channel 78 are down," SFGovTV tweeted.The cable provider makes no mention of vandalism but according to Peskin, that's the reason board will recess today's meeting until Wednesday."Sorry for those folks who were planning on turning out for general public comment," Peskin said in his tweet. Agenda items on Tuesday's meeting included recommendations of the government audit and oversight committee, recommendations of t...

Los Angeles Tries to Claw Back Public Records After Police Invent New Definition of “Undercover”

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Los Angeles Tries to Claw Back Public Records After Police Invent New Definition of “Undercover” Last week, the city of Los Angeles filed a lawsuit against Ben Camacho, a local journalist, as well as the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, a community watchdog group that opposes police surveillance, in an attempt to censor a database of Los Angeles Police Department officer headshot photos. The lawsuit alleges that Camacho and the watchdog group are in “wrongful possession” of 9,310 headshots, which the city itself released to Camacho as part of a settlement in response to a public records lawsuit.The city’s lawsuit was denounced as meritless by First Amendment experts. “Once the government gives you information in good faith, you have the right to publish it under the First Amendment,” David Loy, legal director of the First Amendment Coalition, told The Intercept. “This is not even a close case.”The Stop LAPD Spying Coalition launched a website called Watch the Watchers that includes the LAPD headshots. The dataset has also been published by Distributed Denial of Secrets, or DDoSecret...

Confident Rays not surprised by excellent start to season

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Confident Rays not surprised by excellent start to season ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — The streaking Tampa Bay Rays are running out of superlatives to describe baseball’s best start in more than three decades.Remarkable, incredible, unbelievable — even crazy — are words players have used to describe the dominant, all-around team effort that’s carried them to a 10-0 record that’s the toast of the big leagues two weeks into the season.The Rays, who have made the playoffs each of the past four years, expected to be good.But no one could have envisioned them joining the 1987 Milwaukee Brewers, 1982 Atlanta Braves, 1981 Oakland Athletics, 1966 Cleveland Indians, 1962 Pittsburgh Pirates and 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers as the only clubs to begin seasons with double-digit winning streaks. Of those teams, only the Dodgers won the World Series.“Pretty exciting. Doing it the way we have, every facet of our game is really performing, producing and contributing,” manager Kevin Cash said. “Normally it doesn’t work out that way.”Entering Tuesday night’s home ga...

Virginia lawmakers to weigh Youngkin’s changes to hemp bill

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Virginia lawmakers to weigh Youngkin’s changes to hemp bill RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has proposed a rewrite of a bill that aimed to ban the recreational sales of intoxicating hemp-derived products, seeking to ensure the continued availability of certain therapeutic CBD formulations. Youngkin’s proposed changes came after hemp industry advocates and parents of patients who benefit from nonintoxicating CBD products pressed him to reconsider the impact of the legislation as it recently passed. Lawmakers will weigh the Republican governor’s proposals to amend that measure and dozens of other bills during a one-day session Wednesday. Youngkin’s substitute hemp bill continues “his efforts to crack down on dangerous THC intoxicants, including synthetic products” such as delta-8 THC, a psychoactive chemical often synthesized from hemp-derived CBD, his spokeswoman Macaulay Porter said in a statement, noting it contains “a narrowly tailored exemption” for therapeutic CBD products. “Governor Youngkin’s substit...

Guards at burned Mexican detention center didn’t have keys

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Guards at burned Mexican detention center didn’t have keys MEXICO CITY (AP) — Two guards who fled a fire that killed 40 migrants in a locked Mexican detention center did not have keys to the cell door, Mexico’s president said Tuesday.The comments by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador came on the same day that the bodies of 17 Guatemala migrants killed in the fire were scheduled to be flown back to their home country. It was unclear what effect López Obrador’s comments might have on the trial of the guards.“The door was closed, because the person who had the keys wasn’t there,” López Obrador said.A video from a security camera inside the facility shows guards walking away when the fire started in late March inside the cell holding migrants. The guards are seen hurrying away as smoke fills the facility, and they did not appear to make any effort to release the migrants.Three Mexican immigration officials, a guard and a Venezuelan migrant are being held for investigation in connection with the fire. They face homicide charges.Th...

Colorado schools see hundreds of suicide threats each month

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Colorado schools see hundreds of suicide threats each month DENVER (KDVR) -- Suicide threats are inching up in Colorado schools, according to the state's anonymous reporting system, Safe2Tell. There were 2,630 reports sent to Safe2Tell's system in March, 11% more than in February and the most reported in the last two years. Threats of planned school attacks common in Colorado, most recently in Loveland About one in every eight of these reports, 11.5%, were reports of suicide threats. Historically, suicide threats are the most common report to Safe2Tell, next to bullying or complaints about the school itself. Suicide threats have not been consistently this high since before the pandemic. There have been around 300 such threats per month reported to Safe2Tell this winter. Prior to school closures beginning in March 2020, there were closer to 400 per month.Most of these reports were judged valid, meaning they required some kind of real-life response and intended to protect, help or prevent harm.

Should you turn on your sprinkler in the spring heat?

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

Should you turn on your sprinkler in the spring heat? DENVER (KDVR) --Record-high heat in Denver may be tempting many people to turn on their sprinkler systems.Mark Overton with NationScapes sprinkler repair service in Denver says the safest choice is to wait until May. "It's a little early in the year here in Colorado. We can get freezing weather all the way up until Mother's Day," Overton said.However, if residents choose to turn it on, Overton says to wrap the exposed pipes and pay close attention to the weather. "If it's going to get cold enough to freeze that backflow preventer, your best bet is to shut the water off and drain your backflow preventer," he said. April heat wave: Denver breaks temperature record from 41 years ago If a backflow preventer freezes and breaks, it can cost more than a thousand dollars to repair.Experts agree that heat and wind can affect grass. "It will dry out a little bit more and you may even see some death of the grass," said David Rhine, an arborist with SavATree, tree, shrub and la...

FWC officials caught on camera mistakenly killing pet boa at reptile breeders’ warehouse

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 03:08:01 GMT

FWC officials caught on camera mistakenly killing pet boa at reptile breeders’ warehouse WARNING: Video and audio in this story may be disturbing to some viewers.Wildlife officers euthanize dozens of invasive snakes, but the owner of a snake at a reptile warehouse said some of those officers made a “snake mistake.”Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers went to the warehouse last week to euthanize 30 illegal pythons.A bang caught on camera is the sound the owner of these snakes could not bear to hear, so he left the room without his cellphone so it could capture the officers on video as they went to work.On the video, you can hear a penetrating bolt gun used to kill pythons with a shot to the head.“I really didn’t know what to expect,” said snake breeder Chris Coffee.Coffee is a partner in a reptile breeding company, and after a long legal battle with the FWC, he agreed to allow officers to visit his Broward County facility.“So I basically had to do whatever they said,” he said. “I just wanted to comply ...