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Thursday, November 30, 2017

Poll: Lt. Gov. Newsom, Former L.A. Mayor Villaraigosa Lead Pack in California Governor’s Race

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa top the field in California’s race for governor, according to a new poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.

Gavin Newsom, left, attends the Breakthrough Prize Awards Ceremony at NASA Ames Research Center on Nov. 9, 2014 in Mountain View, California. Antonio Villaraigosa, right, arrives for The Human Rights Campaign Los Angeles Gala on March 18, 2017.

Gavin Newsom, left, attends the Breakthrough Prize Awards Ceremony at NASA Ames Research Center on Nov. 9, 2014 in Mountain View, California. Antonio Villaraigosa, right, arrives for The Human Rights Campaign Los Angeles Gala on March 18, 2017.

Meanwhile, Sen. Dianne Feinstein has a dominate lead in her bid for re-election.

But a third of likely voters polled in California don’t know who they will vote for in either race, meaning there’s plenty of room for jockeying among the candidates as the June primary election approaches.

PPIC President Mark Baldassare said he was surprised about the number of undecided voters given that these races are for California’s two most coveted political posts.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.



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Trump Slams Acquittal of Undocumented Immigrant in Kate Steinle Case

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President Donald Trump, who often brought up the death of Kate Steinle during his campaign, tweeted Thursday night that the acquittal of the undocumented immigrant who shot her was a “disgraceful verdict.”

“No wonder the people of our Country are so angry with Illegal Immigration,” the President tweeted hours after a jury acquitted Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, who had been deported five times before the killing of Steinle in 2015.

Trump often cited Steinle’s death on a San Francisco pier during his presidential run as an example of the dangers of sanctuary cities.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions condemned San Francisco’s sanctuary city policy in the wake of a not-guilty verdict.

Sessions has been critical of sanctuary cities during his tenure as attorney general, and several cities have pursed legal action against the Department of Justice in response.

A jury acquitted Garcia Zarate of murder and involuntary manslaughter charges, as well as assault with a firearm. Garcia Zarate was convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm, however. His attorneys claimed the shooting was accidental.

The US attorney general pushed back after the acquittal, calling Steinle’s death “preventable” and blaming the sanctuary city policy.

“San Francisco’s decision to protect criminal aliens led to the preventable and heartbreaking death of Kate Steinle,” Sessions said in a statement.

“While the State of California sought a murder charge for the man who caused Ms. Steinle’s death — a man who would not have been on the streets of San Francisco if the city simply honored an ICE detainer — the people ultimately convicted him of being a felon in possession of a firearm,” Sessions said.

Steinle’s story has been prominent in Republicans’ push for immigration reform — including a bill passed by the House this summer titled “Kate’s Law,” which creates harsher punishments for illegal re-entry into the US.

“The Department of Justice will continue to ensure that all jurisdictions place the safety and security of their communities above the convenience of criminal aliens,” Sessions said in Thursday’s statement. “I urge the leaders of the nation’s communities to reflect on the outcome of this case and consider carefully the harm they are doing to their citizens by refusing to cooperate with federal law enforcement officers.”

Speaking after the verdict, Garcia Zarate’s chief defense attorney, Matt Gonzalez, noted not only Sessions’ previous comments on the case but also sharply warned Trump and others in his administration against commenting on the outcome, equating the case to the investigations into Russian meddling in the 2016 elections and possible ties between the Trump campaign and Russians.

“For those who might criticize the verdict, there are a number of people that have commented on this case in the last couple years, the attorney general of the United States, the President and the Vice President of the United States (Mike Pence),” Gonzalez said, “let me just remind them that they are themselves under investigation by a special prosecutor in Washington DC, and they may themselves, soon avail themselves of the presumptions of innocence and the beyond a reasonable doubt standard and so I would ask them to reflect on that before they comment or disparage the result in this case.”

In June, the House of Representatives passed “Kate’s Law,” a measure named for the victim that would increase maximum prison penalties for immigrants caught repeatedly entering the United States illegally. But it’s unlikely to have enough votes to pass the Senate, which struggled with Kate’s Law last year.



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Richard Spencer’s White-Nationalist Nonprofit Fails to File Paperwork to Keep Fundraising

Richard Spencer is one of the country’s most prominent white nationalists. He’s also a terrible bookkeeper.

White nationalist Richard Spencer speaks during a press conference at the Curtis M. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts on Oct. 19, 2017 in Gainesville, Florida. (Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

White nationalist Richard Spencer speaks during a press conference at the Curtis M. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts on Oct. 19, 2017 in Gainesville, Florida. (Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

For the second time this year, the state officials in Virginia who regulate nonprofits have rebuked Spencer’s far-right think tank for failing to register to solicit donations.

Fundraising without such registration is illegal in Virginia. As of Thursday, Spencer’s National Policy Institute website continued to solicit donations, asking they be sent to a P.O. box in Alexandria, Va., where the tiny organization is based.

Like other white nationalists, Spencer uses the mail because over the last year Silicon Valley tech companies have denied far-right figures access to popular crowdfunding websites.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.



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Japan Emperor Akihito to Abdicate in April 2019

Japan’s much-loved Emperor Akihito will stand down on April 30, 2019, becoming the first Japanese monarch to abdicate his post in two centuries.

Japan's Emperor Akihito delivers his opening address for the 195th parliament session at the upper house of parliament in Tokyo on Nov. 8, 2017. (Credit: KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images)

Japan’s Emperor Akihito delivers his opening address for the 195th parliament session at the upper house of parliament in Tokyo on Nov. 8, 2017. (Credit: KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images)

The decision was made at a meeting of the Imperial House Council, and announced by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday.

Earlier this year, the Japanese parliament passed into law a historic bill to allow 83-year-old Akihito to abdicate the throne if he chose.

It came after Akihito gave a rare televised address in August 2016, where he said his age and fitness level could make it “difficult” to carry out his duties in the future, a plea many took as a request to step aside.



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Senate Ethics Committee Looking Into Sexual Misconduct Allegations Against Al Franken

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The Senate Ethics Committee has begun looking into the allegations against Sen. Al Franken, according to a statement from the committee issued Thursday.

Sen. Al Franken speaks to the media after returning back to work in the Senate on Capitol Hill on Nov. 27, 2017 in Washington, D.C. (Credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Sen. Al Franken speaks to the media after returning back to work in the Senate on Capitol Hill on Nov. 27, 2017 in Washington, D.C. (Credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

“While the committee does not generally comment on pending matters or matters that may come before it, in this instance, the Committee is publicly confirming that it has opened a preliminary inquiry into Senator Franken’s alleged misconduct,” according to a statement jointly released by Sens. Johnny Isakson, Chris Coons, Pat Roberts, Jim Risch, Brian Schatz and Jeanne Shaheen.

Franken faces numerous allegations of sexual misconduct, including one incident shared by an accuser who came forward earlier Thursday. Stephanie Kemplin, a 41-year-old Army veteran, told CNN that Franken cupped her breast during a photo op while she was deployed in Kuwait.

Prior to Kemplin coming forward, multiple other women had shared experiences in which they say the Democratic senator from Minnesota groped them.

The accusations began when morning news anchor Leeann Tweeden said Franken groped and kissed her during a USO tour in 2006.

Regarding the accusation by Kemplin, a Franken spokesperson told CNN Wednesday night, “As Sen. Franken made clear this week, he takes thousands of photos and has met tens of thousands of people and he has never intentionally engaged in this kind of conduct. He remains fully committed to cooperating with the ethics investigation.”

In a news conference on Capitol Hill this week, CNN asked Franken why he was unable to answer the question of whether more women could come forward with allegations of sexual harassment.

“If you had asked me two weeks ago, would any woman come forward with an allegation like this, I would have said no,” Franken said. “And so I cannot speculate. This has been a shock, and it’s been extremely humbling. I am embarrassed. I feel ashamed.”



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Robbery Suspect Shot After Police Pursuit Ends in North Hollywood: LAPD

A suspected robber was wound after being shot by police following a chase that ended in North Hollywood late Wednesday afternoon. Steve Kuzj reports from North Hollywood for the KTLA 5 News at 6 on Nov. 30, 2017.



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People Demanding Answers as LA Weekly’s New Owners Remain a Mystery

LA Weekly was sold Wednesday, with all of its top editors and all but one of its writers laid off as the deal closed. A day later, the alternative newsweekly’s buyers are still shrouded in secrecy.

An image shows LA Weekly's October 2017 issue. (Credit: Los Angeles Times)

An image shows LA Weekly’s October 2017 issue. (Credit: Los Angeles Times)

That secrecy is “appalling and offensive,” the president of the Society for Professional Journalists said Thursday, demanding public disclosure of the owners’ names.

Semanal Media Group — a company that a group of investors created six weeks ago for the purpose of buying LA Weekly — is the publication’s official new owner.

According to documents filed with the California secretary of state’s office, Semanal is helmed by David Welch, a Los Angeles attorney known for representing members of the cannabis industry. Brian Calle, who was hired to manage LA Weekly’s operations, has said Welch also invested in Semanal.

Ready the full story on LATimes.com



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Baby Drowns After Getting Into Bucket in Sun Valley; Death Ruled Accidental: LAPD

A baby drowned Wednesday after managing to get into a maintenance worker’s bucket while his mother was at a fitness class in Sun Valley, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

The incident occurred in the 12000 block of Saticoy Street earlier in the day, according to LAPD Officer Tony Im, who did not provide an exact time.

The infant’s mother, who was at a Zumba class, had placed her child down on the crown. The baby crawled away and climbed into the bucket, which contained a little bit of water and led to the infant drowning, Im said.

He couldn’t confirm the age, name or gender of the baby, but the Los Angeles Times reported the child was a 1-year-old boy.

His death has been ruled an accident, according to Im. 

No further details were immediately released by LAPD.

KTLA’s Matt Phillips contributed to this story. 



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Treasury’s Tax Analysis Still Missing Ahead of Key Senate Vote

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Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren is demanding answers from Treasury about why Secretary Steven Mnuchin has yet to release an economic analysis of the GOP’s tax overhaul plan, despite repeated promises that he would.

The missing analysis, highlighted in a New York Times story Thursday, has prompted Warren to call for an investigation before the Senate prepares to vote on its sweeping tax reform plan Friday.

In a letter to the Treasury Department’s inspector general, Warren questioned whether Mnuchin had “misled the public about the extent of the Treasury Department’s analysis, “despite his repeated public assurances that an analysis existed and the tax plan would “pay for itself.”

“Either the Treasury Department has used extensive taxpayer funds to conduct economic analyses that it refuses to release because those analyses would contradict the Treasury Secretary’s claims, or Secretary Mnuchin has grossly misled the public about the extent of the Treasury Department’s analysis,” Warren wrote in the letter.

“I am deeply concerned about either possibility,” she added.

A Treasury spokeswoman was not immediately available to comment.

Mnuchin has repeatedly pledged that more than 100 career staff members were “working around the clock on running scenarios” to show how the costs of the $1.5 trillion GOP proposal would be covered by economic growth. He even noted in September that an in-house analysis showed the bill would reduce the deficit by $1 trillion rather than increase it.

At The Wall Street CEO Council conference earlier this month, Mnuchin reaffirmed that Treasury had completed an analysis and pledged “complete transparency” in its accounting for the growth benefits of the tax plans.

But hours before the Senate had planned to begin voting on the measure, the agency has yet to release anything.

In her letter, Warren asked the inspector general to find out whether Treasury’s staff were directed to analyze the Republican tax proposal at all and if so, why the results weren’t publicly released or given to Congress. She also asked the inspector to look into whether there was any political interference that would have impacted the outcome of the analysis or who participated in the efforts.



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San Diego Mother Arrested After Viral Facebook Video Appears to Show Crying Baby Being Abused

A Facebook video that purportedly showed an act of child abuse has sparked outrage online and led to the arrest of the infant’s mother on Thursday.

The video was posted to the social media site about 11:35 p.m. Wednesday, according to San Diego television station KGTV.  By the next day, it had garnered more than 25,000 views.

In the post, a video clip shows a person’s hand striking a baby’s head three times, leading to the child crying. The post also included two images showing a child holding a knife.

Shortly after the video was posted, police said they received multiple calls from people concerned about the post and the suicidal threats made by the child’s mother.

Police have arrested the 6-month-old baby’s mother, identified as 18-year-old Jowi Victoria Morales, according to KTLA sister station KSWB in San Diego. She was booked at the Las Colina Women’s Facility, San Diego Police Department Lt. Scott Wahl told the station.

The infant is in protective custody after being found safe, Wahl said.

The case is under investigation.

 



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Man Found With Cache of Weapons at Sierra Madre Gold Line Station Sentenced to 4 Years in Prison

A Georgia man who was caught in June with a cache of weapons at the Sierra Madre Gold Line Station in Pasadena was sentenced to four years in state prison, officials announced Thursday.

Christopher Goodine is seen in a booking photo from the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said Christopher Harrison Goodine, 28, was found guilty on Oct. 20 of six felonies: two counts of possession of a silencer; two counts of manufacturing, importing, keeping for sale, giving or receiving a large capacity magazine; one count of possession of an assault weapon; and one count of having a concealed firearm.

Two L.A. County deputies apprehended Goodine on June 21 after seeing him urinate in a planter at the station, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

After giving the deputies a false name, Goodine told them that his ID was in his duffle bag. The deputies then searched the bag and discovered a rifle, handgun, silencers and several gun magazines, according to a statement from the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

The deputies’ actions might have saved many lives, Sheriff Jim McDonnell said in June after announcing Goodine’s arrest.

“When you have someone walking around with this type of weaponry, this much ammunition the outcome would not have been good no matter what he was going to do,” McDonnell said.



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Undocumented Immigrant Accused of Fatally Shooting Woman on San Francisco Pier Found Not Guilty of Murder

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Breaking News Update: 

A jury has found Jose Ines Garcia Zarate not guilty in the July 2015 death of Kate Steinle in San Francisco. He was convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Original Story:

The jury has reached a verdict in the trial of Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, a Mexican citizen and undocumented immigrant charged in the 2015 killing of Kate Steinle in San Francisco. The case became a political lightning rod in the debate over immigration policy.

Garcia Zarate had been deported from the US five times prior to Steinle’s 2015 death in San Francisco.

Garcia Zarate, 45, faced a charge of second-degree murder, but jurors were also allowed to consider first-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter convictions.

Garcia Zarate was accused of fatally shooting Steinle, 32, with a Sig Sauer .40-caliber handgun as she and her father walked on San Francisco’s Pier 14.

Jurors had to decide whether Garcia Zarate shot Steinle unintentionally or committed murder.

What happened

Steinle, her father and a friend were at the San Francisco pier when a bullet struck Steinle’s lower back and tore through her abdominal aorta, authorities said.

Surveillance video showed Garcia Zarate running away. After his arrest, investigators found gunshot residue on his right hand, prosecutor Diana Garcia told jurors.

Prosecutors said Garcia Zarate was playing his own “secret version of Russian roulette” and deliberately fired into an unsuspecting crowd on the pier, killing Steinle.

Defense attorney Matt Gonzalez said Garcia Zarate found the gun at the pier. He said it was wrapped in cloth, and when Garcia Zarate unwrapped it, the gun accidentally discharged.

But in a police interrogation, Garcia Zarate admitted to firing the gun, saying he was aiming at a seal.

He also told police that he stepped on the gun, causing it to fire.

Prosecutors said Garcia Zarate immediately tried to cover his tracks by throwing the gun into the San Francisco Bay, then fleeing the scene.

Garcia Zarate was formerly known as Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, one of several aliases he is known to have used. CNN and other media outlets previously identified him as Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez.

Sanctuary cities and ‘Kate’s Law’

Garcia Zarate’s undocumented status and San Francisco’s status as a “sanctuary city” prompted widespread debate over immigration policies.

Garcia Zarate had been deported from the United States back to Mexico five times. Before the shooting, officials in San Francisco released him from custody instead of turning him over to immigration authorities.

Steinle’s death became a rallying cry for President Donald Trump and others, who have invoked the case in decrying sanctuary cities and promoting the construction of a border wall between the US and Mexico.

“This senseless and totally preventable act of violence committed by an illegal immigrant is yet another example of why we must secure our border immediately,” Trump said in July 2015. “This is an absolutely disgraceful situation and I am the only one that can fix it. Nobody else has the guts to even talk about it. That won’t happen if I become President.”

Trump also mentioned Steinle in his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention after winning the Republican presidential nomination.

In June, the House of Representatives passed “Kate’s Law,” a bill that would create harsher penalties for repeat illegal entry to the US. The bill would also expand US law to pressure local cities to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement.

This summer, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 3004, dubbed “Kate’s Law” — a measure named for Steinle. The legislation would increase maximum prison penalties for immigrants caught repeatedly entering the US illegally.

The measure was introduced in the Senate but failed to get the 60 votes needed to pass.



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Evidence of Assault in Border Patrol Agent Death Remains Scant, Despite Official Statements

Circumstances around the death of Border Patrol Agent Rogelio “Roger” Martinez in Texas remain a mystery, Department of Homeland Security acting Secretary Elaine Duke said Thursday.

Less than a day after Martinez died and another was badly injured in a Nov. 18 incident, President Donald Trump tweeted that “We will seek out and bring to justice those responsible. We will, and must, build the Wall!”

Rogelio Martinez is seen in his official U.S. Customs and Border Patrol portrait.

Rogelio Martinez is seen in his official U.S. Customs and Border Patrol portrait.

The next day, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott offered a $20,000 reward for information in “this murder of”  the 36-year-old agent. “Help us catch this killer,” he wrote on Twitter.

But 10 days into the FBI’s investigation, facts to back up claims of an assault by a unknown assailant remain thin.

The FBI has released no information to support the idea that Martinez was murdered, or that he and the surviving agent were attacked. (CNN has confirmed the identity of the second agent, but Customs and Border Protection requested that he not be named, citing “security concerns.”) A person familiar with the investigation said that as of late Tuesday the agency had not ruled out any possibilities.

That includes the possibility that the two men simply fell into a concrete-lined culvert adjacent to Interstate 10, about 12 miles east of their base in the small town of Van Horn. That is the area where they were found about 11:20 p.m. on that dark night, several hours after the moon had set. Martinez was alive, but had traumatic head injuries and broken bones. The other agent had a contusion to the back of his head requiring stitches, among other injuries, according to local Border Patrol union representative Lee Smith. Both men were taken first to a hospital in Van Horn, then airlifted to a trauma center in El Paso. Martinez died on Nov. 19; the second agent was released from the hospital on Nov. 22, walking with the help of a cane.

On Nov. 21, the FBI’s special agent in charge of the El Paso Division, Emmerson Buie Jr., said at a press conference that the FBI was investigating the incident as “a potential assault of a federal officer.” The bureau announced a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of anyone involved.

FBI spokeswoman Jeanette Harper said Wednesday that the bureau is investigating “a few responses to the combined reward of $45,000.” But she said the FBI had no further information to share.

“We’re in fact-finding mode. We’re trying to answer all those questions everybody has,” she said.

Gov. Abbott’s office said the reward offer had resulted in tips which were passed along to the FBI. They had not responded as of late Thursday to repeated queries about what led Abbott to describe the incident as a murder.

In the meantime, friends and family have little to go on.

“They haven’t told us anything more about what happened,” said Elvia Martinez, the mother of Roger Martinez, at her home in El Paso on Tuesday.

“It does look weird” that there’s so little information, said Israel Velasquez, a close friend of Martinez who flew in from Cincinnati to serve as a pallbearer at his funeral. “And what I’ve heard is weird,” he added, declining to elaborate.

Chris Cabrera, a spokesman for the National Border Patrol Council, the agents’ union, was one early voice just after the incident calling it “a brutal attack.” “This was something well-thought out and planned,” he said.

Cabrera said Tuesday evening that he remained convinced the agents were ambushed, based on his experience as an agent, on evidence he said he wasn’t at liberty to discuss, and on that $25,000 FBI reward. If it had merely been a fall, he said, surely the FBI could have confirmed that within a week and a half.

“It bugs me they say they’re investigating this as a potential assault,” he said. “If someone dies, shouldn’t it be a homicide? I hope they can get moving on this thing. A lot of agents want answers.”

The area where Martinez and the other agent were injured is known to be a drop-off point for bundles of marijuana carried through the desert from the Mexican border, about 30 miles south. On Nov. 10, in one of two such seizures that day, agents found six 50-pound backpacks of marijuana stuffed into a culvert under I-10, near where the two agents were found on Nov. 18.

Border Patrol spokesman Rush Carter said he couldn’t confirm whether it was precisely the same culvert. But he said such traffic is common enough for agents on the night shift from the Van Horn station to make it a regular part of their duties to check the culverts for contraband.

That may have been what Martinez was doing. According to the Border Patrol, Martinez and the second agent were patrolling in separate vehicles. It’s unclear why both ended up at the culvert. The Border Patrol does not have a record of a radio transmission from either agent asking for help, though given the remote location, it is possible either would have radioed only agents who were close by — something that would not have been recorded.

At some point that night — neither the Border Patrol nor the FBI have released the time frame — the second agent called his wife, disoriented, telling her he didn’t know where he was. She then called the Van Horn station to tell them something was wrong, according to a Border Patrol agent who spoke directly with her.

According to Lee Smith, the local union rep who met with the surviving agent, that officer said he doesn’t remember what happened that night. The last thing he remembers is arriving at work that day, Smith said. Contacted at his home, the agent declined a request for an interview.

The bottom of the culvert where the two agents were found is about an 8- to 10-foot drop from a narrow, rocky verge along the highway. Six square tunnels run beneath the highway, each just over 6 feet high. Four days after the incident, police tape attached to a rock marked the spot.

Culberson County Sheriff Oscar Carrillo, one of the responders that night, told CNN “it did not look like the scene of an attack or an ambush,” and that to suggest that it was would be “very premature.”

Then, too, neither the Border Patrol nor the local sheriff that night put out an all-points bulletin known as a BOLO, for “be on the lookout” for possible assailants, to other law-enforcement agencies.

“There wasn’t enough information to put a BOLO together,” said Carter, the Border Patrol spokesman. “But we definitely did reach out to law enforcement partners.”

Carter also said that, since the incident, the Border Patrol has beefed up enforcement activity in the area, borrowing agents from other stations to the east and west.

The Van Horn station normally has about four dozen agents. The Border Patrol declined to say how many more agents have been brought in.

Historically, the Big Bend Sector, which includes the Van Horn Station where Martinez and the other agent worked, has been relatively safe. For the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, the 511 agents in that sector reported a total of seven incidents in which 11 agents were assaulted, the fewest of any of the nine sectors along the U.S.-Mexico border, according to CBP data. By contrast, the Rio Grande Valley Sector reported 357 assaults against agents last fiscal year.

But it remains unclear whether the two agents were, in fact, assaulted. The FBI hasn’t excluded any alternatives, according to spokeswoman Harper, including some sort of accident or an altercation between the agents.

Whatever happened, Israel Velasquez said that he knows that his friend Roger Martinez loved his work and “had total trust in his job and his training.”

And he said that while Martinez’s family and friends want to know how and why he died, “at the end of the day, he’s gone. That’s all I know.”



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La Habra Student With Autism to Help Light California Capitol Christmas Tree

A 7-year-old girl with autism who attends elementary school in La Habra has been chosen to help California Gov. Jerry Brown and the state's first lady light the Capitol Christmas Tree in Sacramento next week. Chip Yost reports from La Habra for the KTLA 5 News at 3 on Nov. 30, 2017.



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DOJ Handling of Case Against American Accused of Fighting for ISIS Has Been ‘Frightening,’ Federal Judge Says

A federal judge in Washington demanded the Trump administration explain the circumstances surrounding the detention of a US citizen in Iraq for allegedly fighting on behalf of ISIS in Syria, calling the arguments made by the Justice Department “frightening.”

Judge Tayna Chutkan repeatedly pressed a lawyer for the Justice Department to answer basic questions about whether the American has been advised of his right to counsel and whether he has asserted that right.

Justice Department attorney Kathryn Wyer demurred repeatedly, leading Chutkan to say she was “growing impatient.”

The individual, whose identity has not been released, was turned over to US forces by a US-backed Kurdish-led group fighting ISIS in Syria, and he’s been in US military custody since September, according to court documents.

“It’s been two and a half months. I’d like to know how long you think you get to do this to a US citizen,” Chutkan said. “Basically, it’s just, ‘trust us, we know what we’re doing.'”

Last month, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit requesting the man be given access to counsel and demanding that the Trump administration justify his continued detention without charges. The Justice Department says the ACLU has no standing to sue because the group has not proved the individual wants it to sue on his behalf.

Chutkan suggested that the logical conclusion of the Trump administration’s arguments in this case would be “the government could snatch a US citizen off the street … for as long as it took to come to some ‘final disposition.'”

“That kind of unchecked power is frankly frightening,” Chutkan said.

The judge gave the Justice Department until 5 p.m. Thursday to report back to the court in writing with answers about whether the man has been advised of his right to counsel and if he’s asserted that right.



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Caught on Video: Convicted Child Sex Offender Being Attacked by Another Prisoner in New Hampshire Courtroom

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Moments after being sentenced for sexually assault a 4-year-old girl, a convicted sex offender was captured on video being attacked by another prisoner in the back of a Dover, New Hampshire, courtroom on Thursday.

Christopher Elwell, 29, had just received a prison sentence 7 1/2 to 15 years and went to sit down in the back of the court when he was head-butted multiple times by Josiah Davies, according to television station WMUR in Manchester, New Hampshire. Davies, who was in shackles at the time, was awaiting a hearing on a probation violation.

The two men were unknown to each other, but a Strafford County Attorney’s Office official told the station Davies may have been set off by Elwell’s case.

Elwell sexually assaulted a 4-year-old girl this past June in Dover, when the victim came over to the home where the defendant was staying, according to WMUR.

His 9-year-old daughter witnessed the assault, which occurred at a children’s sleepover, according to an affidavit obtained by NH1 News in New Hampshire. Police said Elwell had been prohibited from being on the property.

After initially denying the allegations, Elwell admitted they were true when he appeared in court Thursday, according to WMUR. He also pleaded guilty to failing to register as a sex offender.

Elwell was convicted of felony sexual assault on a teen younger than 16 back in 2008, according to NH1 News.

“The defendant was required to register as a sex offender he had been living at 12 Mineral Park Drive off and on but more than five times a month and had not changed his registration with the Somersworth Police Department,” Assistant Strafford County Attorney Emily Conant said.

She also told the judge she would have liked him to serve more time for the sexual assault, KMUR reported. But the judge accepted the plea bargain, in part because it would spare the child from having to testify.

The Strafford County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the courtroom incident, saying Davies could face 3 1/2 to seven years in prison.

 



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Preliminary Magnitude-4.4 Earthquake Hits Delaware, Is Felt in Multiple States Along the East Coast

A preliminary magnitude-4.4 earthquake struck Thursday afternoon near Dover, Delaware, the US Geological Survey reported.

An earthquake with preliminary magnitude 4.4 struck Delaware on Nov. 30, 2017. (Credit: USGS)

An earthquake with preliminary magnitude 4.4 struck Delaware on Nov. 30, 2017. (Credit: USGS)

The earthquake was about 6 miles east-northeast of Dover and was registered at a depth of 4 miles.

The epicenter was about 50 miles from Philadelphia, 90 miles from Washington and 125 miles from New York City.

 

Check back for updates on this developing story. 



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Rape Investigation of Harvey Weinstein Stalled Despite Sufficient Evidence, Accuser’s Attorney Says

New York prosecutors looking into Paz de la Huerta’s rape allegation against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein appear to have hit a wall despite receiving ample evidence to bring before a grand jury, the actress’s attorney said Thursday.

Carrie Goldberg, who has represented the actress for the past month, told CNN in an interview that the case has failed to move forward even though police investigators believe there is sufficient evidence to present to a grand jury and prosecutors have met with her client twice and subpoenaed hundreds of financial, phone and therapy records.

New York police investigators and prosecutors last met with de la Huerta in Paris earlier this month.

“It takes a huge emotional toll on a rape victim to have to rehash this,” Goldberg said. “My client has put so much into this and if the case just gets dropped … that’s a real problem.”

An NYPD source familiar with the investigation told CNN there is enough evidence in the case for the Manhattan District Attorney to present to a grand jury.

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office said the investigation is still active but declined further comment.

Weinstein’s lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, also declined comment on Thursday.

Through a spokesman, Weinstein has repeatedly denied all allegations of non-consensual sex.

“There’s a paralysis in this case,” Goldberg said.

De la Huerta’s claim that Weinstein raped her twice in 2010 represented “the strongest case we’ve had that fits within the statute of limitations,” an NYPD source familiar with the investigation told CNN earlier this month.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce told reporters earlier this month that de la Huerta’s case was credible because of her “ability to articulate each movement of the crime, where she was, where this happened.”

It is unclear what may be causing the delay in keeping the criminal case from moving forward.

De la Huerta, who has appeared in “A Walk to Remember” and the HBO drama “Boardwalk Empire,” alleges Weinstein raped her in her apartment on two separate occasions in 2010.

De la Huerta, 33, had told CNN that she called the NYPD rape hotline in late October to report the alleged assaults. De la Huerta and her attorney have worked with detectives from the NYPD’s special victim’s unit and the district attorney’s office, she said.

In October 2010, twelve years after first meeting Weinstein on the set of the film “Cider House Rules,” de la Huerta said she ran into the producer at a club in Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood, where both she and Weinstein lived.

She accepted a ride home from Weinstein and when they arrived at her apartment, de la Huerta said he insisted on joining her for a drink.

That’s when the first alleged assault occurred.

“He pulled my dress up and unzipped his pants and raped me,” de la Huerta said.

In an interview with CNN, de la Huerta recalled being in a state of shock, traumatized and in disbelief following the alleged rape.

“He finished what he did, and he told me he’d be calling me,” she said.

Nearly two months later, de la Huerta said Weinstein showed up in the lobby of her apartment one night. She said she reluctantly let him upstairs and he raped her again.

“The first time I was in complete shock and it happened so quickly. The second time, I was terrified of him,” she said. “In a million ways I knew how to say no, I said ‘no.'”

More than 60 women have come forward with allegations of sexual harassment or assault against Weinstein. New York police have told CNN they’ve fielded dozens of calls about Weinstein. Police in London and Los Angeles have also opened investigations

By the end of 2010, de la Huerta said she started drinking heavily and fell into depression. She said she shared what happened with her best friend and her therapist.

De la Huerta said she was hesitant to go public with her story, but hopes her word, along with the evidence she said she’s helped investigators collect, is enough to put Weinstein in jail.

“I think he’s done it to too many women, and he’s gotten away with it for too many years,” she said. “It would be nice to know justice exists.”



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Caught on Video: Employee Tied up as Thieves Steal High-End Hair Extensions From Montclair Store

Individuals posing as customers made off with thousands of dollars worth of high-end hair extensions after tying up an employee of Baby Doll Luxury Hair in Montclair, the store's owners say. Kareen Wynter reports for the KTLA 5 News at 1 on Nov. 30, 2017.



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Police Investigating Whether LAPD Captain Was Involved With Alleged Marijuana Warehouse

Los Angeles police captain is on paid leave as the department investigates whether he is involved with an alleged marijuana warehouse in Sun Valley.

The warehouse came to the LAPD’s attention on Oct. 31 after someone called to report a burglary there.

Phillip A. Smith, a captain in Rampart Division, told The Times on Thursday that he was the caller.

Smith, who was off-duty at the time, said he did not know there was a marijuana business at the location.

Read the full story on LATimes.com

 



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GOP Senate Tax Bill Would Increase Deficit by $1 Trillion Even With Economic Growth, Analysis Says

The Senate Republican tax bill would increase the federal budget deficit by $1 trillion over the next decade even when taking into account increased economic growth, according to a congressional analysis released Thursday.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, speaks about tax reform on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, November 30, 2017.(Credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, speaks about tax reform on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, November 30, 2017.(Credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

The so-called dynamic score from the Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that the tax cuts and other changes in the bill would boost the nation’s economic output by an average of 0.8% over the 10-year period.

That would reduce the bill’s earlier estimated $1.5-billion deficit impact, which was calculated without taking into account potential economic growth, by about $408 billion.

But the bill still would add $1 trillion to the deficit, undercutting assertions by Republican leaders and Trump administration officials that the additional growth spurred by the bill’s large tax cuts would pay for themselves over time.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.



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Justin Pugh returns to practice | Giants-Raiders Thursday injury report

Sterling Shepard is a full participant for second straight day.

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Colin Kaepernick Honored With Sports Illustrated’s Muhammad Ali Legacy Award

Colin Kaepernick is carrying on the legacy of Muhammed Ali, according to the Ali family and Sports Illustrated.

Colin Kaepernick speaks to the media after a the San Francisco 49ers preseason win over the San Diego Chargers on Sept. 1, 2016, in San Diego. (Credit: Harry How / Getty Images)

Colin Kaepernick speaks to the media after a the San Francisco 49ers preseason win over the San Diego Chargers on Sept. 1, 2016, in San Diego. (Credit: Harry How / Getty Images)

The quarterback has received the 2017 Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award, an honor awarded annually to athletes who demonstrate “the ideals of sportsmanship, leadership and philanthropy” and who use “sports as a platform for changing the world.”

“There will never be another Ali, but few athletes have followed his example as fully as Colin Kaepernick,” said SI Executive Editor Stephen Cannella.

Kaepernick, who hasn’t played in 2017, famously kneeled during the singing of the National Anthem before a 2016 pre-season game as a form of protest for the treatment of black Americans, particularly by police. While his decision to protest has brought more awareness to racial inequality in the U.S. and gained support from many NFL players, he’s received a heavy dose of criticism from people who believe he’s disrespecting the flag, military and police.

President Trump in September fanned the flames by stoking criticism of the protests, saying that any player who kneels should be fired.

Ali, who died in June 2016 at the age of 74, is still one of the most notable and popular U.S. athletes.

But, he wasn’t always a favorite.

In 1967, Ali was a conscientious objector to the Vietnam War and refused to serve in the army. He was stripped of his world title, and lost his license to box. He was also fined $10,000 and sentenced to five years in prison.

He was heavily criticized and seen by many as a draft dodger. He famously defended his decision by saying he couldn’t fight against a people who had never wronged him.

Like Ali, Kaepernick has been severely criticized. He’s also faced consequences for his actions.

Ali didn’t return to professional boxing until 1970 — missing out on three years during a peak time in his career. Kaepernick has lost nearly a year of playing time — he has yet to be signed by a team since opting out of his contract with the 49ers in March.

In bestowing the honor, Sports Illustrated praised Kaepernick’s “steadfastness in the fight for social justice” and his “adherence to his beliefs no matter the cost.”

The article noted that both Ali and Kaepernick “sacrificed for the greater good at a time when many Americans could not see it was a greater good.”

Sports Illustrated consults with Ali’s widow, Lonnie Ali, to pick the recipient.

She said she was “proud” to present Kaepernick with the award.

“Like Muhammad, Colin is a man who stands on his convictions with confidence and courage, undaunted by the personal sacrifices he has had to make to have his message heard. And he has used his celebrity and philanthropy to benefit some of our most vulnerable community members.”

The legacy award has been handed out since 2008 but was renamed after Ali in 2015.

Past recipients include Eunice Kennedy Shriver, who founded the Special Olympics, Magic Johnson and Jack Nicklaus. Last year’s award was shared by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Jim Brown and Bill Russell.

Kaepernick was also recently named GQ’s “Citizen of the Year.”



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Opponents of California Gas Tax Hike Launch TV Ads Seeking Repeal Initiative

Republican opponents of a recent increase to the state gas tax have launched a television ad campaign aimed at getting California voters to sign petitions for an initiative that would repeal the new levies.

The ads have started running on broadcast and cable television stations in the San Diego area and on YouTube. They are part of a $400,000 first-week launch for a drive to collect more than 587,000 signatures to qualify a measure for the November 2018 ballot that would repeal the increase in gas taxes and vehicle fees approved by the Legislature in April.

“Sacramento politicians did it again,” one of the ads says. “They forced a massive hike on our car and gas taxes while raiding our road funds.”

Carl DeMaio, chairman of Reform California and a former San Diego City Council member, said the group’s petitions are in circulation throughout the state.

Read the full story on LATimes.com



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Will Beatty in 'disbelief' over Giants' decision to bench Eli Manning

Beatty, who played with Manning from 2009 to 2014, joined the Eagles earlier this month after being released by the Giants last offseason.

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Tennessee Man Brutally Beat Ex-Girlfriend, Stripped Her Naked and Urinated on Her as Others Watched: Police

A Tennessee man is behind bars after police say he kidnapped and attacked his ex-girlfriend, stripped her naked, then urinated on her as other men watched in his Memphis home.

Austin Guinn was taken into custody Tuesday and charged with aggravated assault and aggravated kidnapping for the Tuesday incident, according to KTLA sister station WREG in Memphis.

The victim told authorities she was at a nearby liquor store when Guinn kidnapped her and took her to his home on West Burdock Avenue. He allegedly forced her into the bathtub where he pulled off her clothes and began urinating on her as other men stood by and watched. She said he then beat her both with his fist and a pistol, according to the station.

She somehow ended up at a safe location where she called for help. When officers arrived they said the victim's eyes and face were severely swollen and she had abrasions on her arm, torso and leg.

The victim is expected to be OK.

It appears this is not the first time Guinn has been in trouble with the law. According to court documents, a warrant was issued for Guinn's arrested on November 26 for another domestic violence incident.

It's unclear if the two cases are connected.

He was also arrested in 2015 on drug-related charges, according to WREG.



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‘Penny-Pincher Bandit’ Pockets Spare Change After Stealing $800 in Cash From Canoga Park Gas Station: LAPD

Police requested the public’s help Thursday in identifying an armed man who stole more than $800 in cash and cigarettes from a gas station in Canoga Park.

LAPD released this photo of a suspect in a Canoga Park gas station robbery as they sought the public's help in locating him.

LAPD released this photo of a suspect in a Canoga Park gas station robbery as they sought the public’s help in locating him.

The robbery occurred just before midnight Saturday, when a man walked into the store wearing a black Monster brand hoodie, said LAPD Det. Fernando Avila. The suspect took out money and pretended to buy cigarettes to distract the clerk, then pulled out a gun, Avila said.

“We noticed the guy stole one thing, even before he pulled the gun,” Avila said. “You can see him reach into the take-a-penny-leave-a-penny tray when the clerk turns to retrieve the packs of cigarettes the robber feigned to buy.”

Authorities described the suspect as a man in his 40s with a shaved head and a goatee. His left ear is pierced and he was wearing an earring.

Read the full story on LATimes.com



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Street Art Collective Installs Al Franken Groping Photo on Billboard in Palms

The leering likeness of Sen. Al Franken grabbing at a woman loomed over morning commuters on the 10 Freeway through Palms on Thursday.

Street art collective UnsavoryAgents is behind the addition of Al Franken's likeness to a film billboard near the 10 Freeway in Palms. (Credit: KTLA)

Street art collective UnsavoryAgents is behind the addition of Al Franken’s likeness to a film billboard near the 10 Freeway in Palms. (Credit: KTLA)

A conservative street art collective transposed the image over an existing billboard for the film “The Greatest Showman” that stands outside a Mobile gas station at the intersection of Overland Avenue and National Boulevard, just off the freeway.

Franken appears to emerge from the right side of the billboard, leaning across to grab a trapeze artist suspended in mid-air portrayed by the actress Zendaya. (On the other side of the road, a billboard features her costar Zac Efron reaching out to catch her, photos obtained by the Hollywood Reporter show.)

The Franken photo was captured as he groped the breasts of a sleeping Leeann Tweeden while the two were on a USO tour in Iraq in 2006, but surfaced only two weeks ago after it was publicly released by Tweeden.

At least four other women have come forward to accuse Franken of sexual misconduct. Most recently, on Thursday, Army veteran Stephanie Kemplin said the Minnesota Democrat cupped her breast during a 2003 photo op, also while he was on a USO tour.

UnsavoryAgents, the group of “libertarian, constitutionalist, conservative street artists” behind the Palms billboard, hopes the installation will inspire passersby to question those in leadership positions, according to a member of the collective who spoke to KTLA on the condition of anonymity.

“We want them to laugh, we want them to think, and we just don’t want these elitists — these people in their ivory towers — to be constantly looking down their nose at the working class,” the man said.

The original billboard remained intact underneath its new addition, he added.

CNN Wire contributed to this report.



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‘Only a Few Hundred’ December Flights Remain Without Pilots Following Glitch, American Airlines Says

American Airlines is scrambling to make sure you'll get home for the holidays after a scheduling glitch left thousands of December flights without pilots.

The carrier said Thursday that "only a few hundred" December flights remain without a pilot.

American Airlines planes are viewed at Philadelphia International Airport on July 7, 2017 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.(Credit: DANIEL SLIM/AFP/Getty Images)

American Airlines planes are viewed at Philadelphia International Airport on July 7, 2017 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.(Credit: DANIEL SLIM/AFP/Getty Images)

"Out of the 200,000 flights American will operate in December, only a few hundred are currently unassigned," American said in a statement. "That number of open flights continues to decrease thanks to our pilots who are stepping up to the plate and picking up trips to ensure customers are taken care of."

So far, the carrier hasn't canceled any flights.

Related: American Airlines doesn't have enough pilots scheduled for holiday travel

American Airlines is offering pilots who pick up certain open trips 150% of their hourly pay to help address the issue.

The Allied Pilots Association has been advising pilots not to take the open flights, saying the airline's solution was in violation of the union contract. The union did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

The union announced Wednesday that the glitch had left thousands of December flights unassigned. The scheduling problems mostly affect the busy holiday period in the second half of December, and occurred after a computer system accidentally let too many pilots take time off, according to American.

American says it also has a system of reserve pilots who can help out as needed.

"We have more reserve pilots on hand in December than normal months and they provide us with the ability to fly many of the trips that are currently uncovered," American said Thursday.

Reserve pilots have on-call schedules, and are still fully qualified to man a plane and fly regularly.

 



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Harvest Festival Original Art & Craft Show in Pomona



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In-N-Out Announces Expansion to Colorado, Marking 7th State to Server Burgers From Beloved SoCal Chain

Beloved California fast-food chain In-N-Out Burger announced Thursday it plans to expand to Colorado.

A "patty production facility" and distribution site is planned in Colorado Springs to support future restaurants in the state, the Irvine-based company announced.

It will be the first time the chain – known for its messy Animal-Style burgers and fries as well as shakes – will open a restaurant in Colorado, KTLA sister station KDVR in Denver reported.

"At In-N-Out, we have always been thoughtful about expansion into new markets because it is very important that we are able to maintain the high quality and service standards established by our founders almost 70 years ago," In-N-Out said in a statement. "We are extremely fortunate to have a number of loyal customers in Colorado and they have been encouraging us to open locations there for some time."

The first Colorado restaurant will be near the planned distribution facility in a mixed-use development called Victory Ridge in Colorado Springs, KDVR reported, saying there is no timeline for the opening date of the first restaurant.

No other restaurant sites have been determined. The Orange County Register reported the Colorado Springs facility will serve up to 50 In-N-Out locations in Colorado, and that a restaurant site will open in Denver shortly after the first outlet begins serving.

Victory Ridge, which will include more than 500 residences and up to 1.6 million square feet of commercial development, is about 45 minutes south of Denver and 15 minutes north of Colorado Springs.

In-N-Out started in Baldwin Park in 1948 and gained a loyal following. It has restaurants in Southern and Northern California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Texas and Oregon.

Its simple menu consists of a hamburger, cheeseburger, Double-Double (two patties with two slices of cheese), french fries, drinks, shakes, milk and coffee.

A reason for a long-awaited expansion into Colorado is because In-N-Out did not have a distribution center nearby, KDVR reported.

In-N-Out delivers food fresh daily to its restaurants instead of freezing it, making its food comparatively fresher. In turn, its legion of fans swarm the restaurants, especially when they open in new markets.

When the first restaurants opened in Texas in 2011, there were long lines of people waiting to get their hands on the burgers.

KTLA's Melissa Pamer contributed to this article.



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Giants' Sterling Shepard feeling better after prolonged bout with migraines

Shepard will return on Sunday after missing the past two games.

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Holiday Knit Gifts and Decor With The Knit Show’s Vickie Howell

Knitting, Crochet and Craft Designer Vickie Howell joined us live with holiday knit projects. Vicki is also the host of the web series “The Knit Show with Vickie Howell” For more information, click HERE or follow her on social media.



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Man Arrested in Fatal Stabbing of Teen in Temecula Walmart Parking Lot ID’d

The man accused of fatally stabbing another man in the parking lot of a Temecula Walmart was identified by authorities on Thursday as a 40-year-old local resident.

James Fortney, 40, is seen in a booking photo released Nov. 30, 2017, by the Riverside County Sheriff's Dept.

James Fortney, 40, is seen in a booking photo released Nov. 30, 2017, by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Dept.

James Fortney was arrested on suspicion of voluntary manslaughter in connection with the death of 19-year-old Kevin Rodriguez, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office. It was unclear whether Fortney was formally arrested Wednesday, when the killing occurred, or Thursday.

Sheriff’s officials have only confirmed that some sort of “altercation” took place between the two men before Fortney stabbed Rodriguez to death around 12:15 p.m. outside the store in the 32200 block of Temecula Parkway.

But in an interview with KTLA Wednesday, Rodriguez’s parents say his girlfriend witnessed the entire ordeal and claims it was an incidence of road rage.

Kevin Rodriguez is seen in a photo posted to a GoFundMe page.

Kevin Rodriguez is seen in a photo posted to a GoFundMe page.

“They saw the guy first honking at a lady going through the crosswalk. She said there was a lot of traffic and this guy looked like he was getting really bad anxiety,” said Atticus Rodriguez, the victim’s father.

After nearly hitting Kevin’s car, Fortney got out of his vehicle and attacked the victim while filming the grisly death, Atticus said.

Rodriguez died after being transported to the hospital for treatment, according to the sheriff’s department.

The Murrieta 19-year-old worked as a freelance videographer and was a “loving” boyfriend, son, brother and cousin, who was “full of life and adventure,” according to a GoFundMe page set up to help pay for his funeral costs.

Officials are continuing to investigate the incident, but have released little information.



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Consumer Confidential: Toys R Us Trustee Blasts Bonus Plan, Sears Loses $558 Million in 3Q



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Jim Nabors, Famous for Role as Gomer Pyle, Dies at 87, Report

Jim Nabors, who was perhaps most famous for his role as Gomer Pyle in the hit television shows “Andy Griffith” and “Gomer Pyle, USMC” has died at the age of 87, according to a Hollywood Reporter report.

Check back for updates on this developing story.



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State Dept. Warned White House About Possible Increased Threats After Trump’s Anti-Muslim Tweets

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After President Donald Trump retweeted anti-Muslims videos on Wednesday, multiple State Department officials said the department communicated to the White House that there was concern that protests could happen at US embassies.

Officials feared that the tweets, which appeared to depict Muslims engaged in different acts of violence, would spark a reprise of the violent protests at US embassies in the Middle East which are already on high security alert. Protests erupted in September 2012 following the publication of an anti-Muslim video on the internet.

Embassies were on alert throughout the day, although no incidents have been reported thus far, the State Department officials said.

President Donald Trump is seen on Nov. 30, 2017, in the Oval Office at the White House. (Credit: Al Drago / Getty Images)

President Donald Trump is seen on Nov. 30, 2017, in the Oval Office at the White House. (Credit: Al Drago / Getty Images)

A White House official confirmed that the White House was alerted to those concerns by the State Department. The official said that there is still discussion in the White House about whether the administration should issue a stronger statement addressing concerns that the tweets might raise tensions with the Muslim world, but this official cautioned that it is not clear that any action will be taken.

“It didn’t manifest in anything actionable, but it was a big concern,” one State Department official said. “We saw in Cairo and other places that simply posting something on the internet, even if nothing was intended by it, could have real consequences.”

Trump retweeted three videos sent from far-right British activist Jayda Fransen that claimed to depict Muslims assaulting people and desecrating a statue of the Virgin Mary.

The tweets prompted condemnation both among US and British officials, including Prime Minister Theresa May.

The White House refused to say if it had vetted the videos and confirmed their authenticity before the President tweeted them out to his more than 43 million followers.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders defended the President’s decision to tweet the video, saying that he was highlighting a real “threat.”

“Whether it is a real video, the threat is real,” Sanders told reporters Wednesday morning. “That is what the President is talking about, that is what the President is focused on is dealing with those real threats, and those are real no matter how you look at it.”



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Firefighters Find Gunshot Victim in Vehicle Parked Outside Burning South L.A. Building

Firefighters responding to an apartment fire in the Manchester Square neighborhood of South Los Angeles Thursday morning found a man suffering from a gunshot wound inside a parked vehicle.

The 8400 block of South Western Avenue is seen in this image from Google Maps.

The 8400 block of South Western Avenue is seen in this image from Google Maps.

Crews responded to the 8400 block of South Western Avenue shortly after a fire was reported at an apartment building about 8:42 a.m., Los Angeles Fire Department spokeswoman Amy Bastman said.

The fire was doused quickly and was contained to one unit, Bastman said.

No patients were found inside the building, but crews found a man with an apparent gunshot outside the building.

The unidentified man was transported after being found inside a parked vehicle, Los Angeles Police Department Officer Mota said.

The gunshot victim, who was not conscious or breathing, is not believed to be connected with the fire, Mota said.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.



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5 Women Accuse San Diego County Sheriff’s Deputy of Sexual Misconduct When on Patrol

Two additional women have filed claims against the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department alleging sexual misconduct by a deputy who officials confirmed this week was already under criminal investigation.

Deputy Richard Fischer, right, is seen in a photo posted to Sheriff Bill Gore's Twitter account in September 2016. (Credit: @SDSheriff / Twitter)

Deputy Richard Fischer, right, is seen in a photo posted to Sheriff Bill Gore’s Twitter account in September 2016. (Credit: @SDSheriff / Twitter)

The latest allegations raise to five the number of accusers who have filed legal claims involving Deputy Richard Fischer, 31. County officials are conducting both criminal and administrative investigations into Fischer’s conduct while on patrol.

Sheriff’s spokesman Ryan Keim issued a brief statement Wednesday, saying: “The investigation is continuing.”

Fischer, who has not responded to multiple interview requests, has been on administrative leave from the sheriff’s department since early this month.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.



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Cutting the High Cost of Ambulance Rides With Nurse Alice



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Amazon Delivery Driver Arrested After Taking Package Off Washington Couple’s Porch

A Washington state couple says they were baffled when their home surveillance cameras captured an Amazon delivery driver dropping off a package and then stealing a package that had been delivered by UPS earlier in the day, according to KCPQ.

At first glance, it starts off like any other package theft. A home surveillance camera capturing video of a man removing a parcel off an Everett front porch.

But it’s what happened just before he took the package that has homeowners Matt and Amanda Buxton so baffled.

The stolen package was delivered just before 4 p.m. Tuesday by a UPS driver.

Thirty minutes later—the suspect arrives.

Except, the man who appears to steal the package first made his own Amazon Prime delivery.

All of it caught on the homeowners Samsung SmartCam with large "Smile You're On Camera" signs posted near the front door.

"It's surprising when things happen with people that you're supposed to trust with your packages," said Amanda.

The thief appears to have worked for Amazon, seen on camera snapping a picture notice of delivery before driving off.

"They take a picture then it sends it automatically, showing that it was delivered," Amanda said holding a delivery receipt, with the picture snapped by the suspect, on her phone.

The whole thing is infuriating, for Matt and Amanda who use Amazon Prime constantly.

"It was almost more frustrating to see that happen than some random person walk off the street and grab a package," said Matt.

The package removed was worth less than $3.

"I would pay anything to see the look on his face and opened up and found out that it was a baby teether," Matt laughed.

But for the couple, monetary value wasn't the point.

They still contacted Everett Police who acted quickly. The officer took the surveillance video right to the Everett distribution center to identify the driver, telling the homeowners he was worried the driver might strike again.

Amazon is investigating the matter but says they have a zero-tolerance policy for drivers. And that drivers in plain clothes and unmarked vehicles are contracted for anytime delivery through the Amazon Flex Program. It sounds similar to Lyft or Uber -- expect instead of delivering people, they're dropping off a package.

In an email to Amanda the company apologized for this experience, saying in part:

"At Amazon, we pride ourselves in being the world’s most customer-centric company. Regrettably, our delivery partner couldn’t meet our high standards in this instance. We expect our delivery partners to conduct themselves in a professional manner, and we handle this type of situation seriously. I’m personally collaborating with the team to investigate this matter further and take the appropriate actions."

Amazon reviewed the surveillance video and compensated the victims for their hassle.

In a statement issued to KCPQ, Amazon said:

“This does not reflect the high standards we have for delivery partners. This individual is no longer delivering Amazon packages and we are engaged with the customer to ensure this situation is fully resolved.”

According to their website, drivers who work for Amazon's Flex Program can make between $18-25. But must first pass a comprehensive, multi-state background check as well as a check of their driving record.

Police were able to identify that driver Wednesday and arrested him for misdemeanor theft.



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House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi Calls on John Conyers to Resign

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on Thursday called on Rep. John Conyers to resign following allegations of sexual harassment against the Michigan Democrat.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi answers questions during her weekly press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 14, 2017. (Credit: Win McNamee / Getty Images)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi answers questions during her weekly press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 14, 2017. (Credit: Win McNamee / Getty Images)

“The allegations against Congressman Conyers, as we have learned more since Sunday are serious, disappointing and very credible,” Pelosi said at her weekly news conference. “It’s very sad and the brave women who came forward are owed justice. I will pray for Congressman Conyers and his family, and wish them well. However Congressman Conyers should resign.”

The California Democrat added, “No matter how great a legacy there’s no license to harass or discriminate. In fact it makes it even more disappointing.”

Conyers, 88, is the longest currently serving member of the US House of Representatives.

Conyers’ attorney, Arnold Reed, responded to Pelosi’s comments by comparing the accusations against Conyers with those against Democratic Sen. Al Fraken of Minnesota, who has been accused by five women in the past two weeks of inappropriate touching.

“She’s gotta explain what the discernible difference between Congressman Conyers and Sen. Al Franken is,” he said, noting that Franken has multiple accusers and photos.

“That’s certainly her right,” he added. “But she doesn’t elect the Congressman and it won’t be up to her.”

Conyers is facing several allegations of sexual harassment. The House Ethics Committee announced last week it has opened an investigation into allegations against Conyers after BuzzFeed reported that he settled a wrongful dismissal complaint in 2015 after allegedly sexually harassing a staffer. Conyers denied wrongdoing in that case, but acknowledged that there had been a financial settlement to that complaint. Another former staffer, Deanna Maher, told CNN that Conyers made three sexual advances toward her when she worked for him in his district office in Detroit from 1997 to 2005. Through his lawyer, Conyers also denied wrongdoing in that case.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, also called on Conyers to resign.

Conyers stepped down from his post as the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee on Sunday. Aides told reporters that Conyers was hospitalized for stress earlier Thursday.



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College Graduate Students Rally Against GOP Tax Plan

Graduate students across the country rallied Wednesday in opposition of the current House Republican tax plan. Lauren Lyster reports for the KTLA 5 Morning News on Nov. 30, 2017.



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Authorities Probe Security Breach That Allowed Bosnian War Criminal to Commit Courtroom Suicide

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As the judge at The Hague read out a verdict confirming Slobodan Praljak’s 20-year prison term for war crimes, the white-bearded former Bosnian Croat general rose to his feet.

“Slobodan Praljak is not a war criminal. I am rejecting your verdict with contempt,” Praljak shouted defiantly.

He then tilted his head back and drank from a small vial. As the judge appealed for him to sit down, Praljak declared: “I have taken poison.”

The judge, looking disconcerted, suspended proceedings. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia confirmed later Wednesday that Praljak had been given immediate medical help in the courtroom before being taken to the hospital, where he died.

Authorities in the Netherlands were on Thursday urgently investigating what the substance was and how Praljak was able to obtain it while being held in UN detention.

The dramatic courtroom scene unfolded as the work of the UN tribunal, set up to prosecute crimes committed during conflicts in the Balkans in the 1990s, came to a close after more than 20 years.

Wednesday’s appeal hearing, which reaffirmed the sentences imposed in 2013 on Praljak and five other former Bosnian Croat leaders for crimes against humanity and war crimes and almost all their convictions, was the tribunal’s final ruling and it will formally close at the end of the year.

Significantly, the appeal judges upheld the earlier trial’s findings that implicated the Croatian regime under then-President Franjo Tudjman in a criminal conspiracy with the goal of “ethnic cleansing of the Muslim population” of parts of Bosnia to ensure Croatian domination.

The Bosnian Croat leadership, along with Croat leaders, wanted to make this territory part of a “Greater Croatia,” the ICTY said when the case first went through the court.

How did Praljak obtain poison?

Dutch authorities are now investigating the apparent security breach which allowed Praljak to take his own life. The ICTY said only that he had drunk “a liquid” and quickly fallen ill.

Croatian lawyer Goran Mikuličić told CNN’s local affiliate N1 that “anyone could have brought him a bottle of poison easily.” He said family, friends, journalists and lawyers were allowed to visit Praljak but that only lawyers were allowed to take bags into the detention facility.

Praljak isn’t the first war criminal or suspect to kill himself while being held in the ICTY detention units.

Milan Babić, the president of the self-proclaimed “Serb Republic of Krajina” in Croatia, killed himself in 2006 after being convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes against Croat civilians during the war in Croatia.

War crimes suspect Slavko Dokmanovic was found hanged in his cell in 1998 as he awaited the verdict in his trial.

Former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milošević, who faced charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and other war crimes for his role in the conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Kosovo, died in 2006 while on trial at The Hague.

The official investigation into his death confirmed that non-prescribed pills were found in his cell, but couldn’t prove his intent to take his own life.

Edo Batlak, a former prisoner at one of the concentration camps the former Bosnian Croat leaders were convicted of creating, told N1 he believed Praljak’s action was influenced by his pre-war role as a theater director.

“Praljak is a director by profession. So this aligns with his profession, he wants to be remembered by it,” he said.

Praljak, who was detained in 2004, had already served two-thirds of his 20-year sentence, for offenses committed between 1992 and 1994, and would have been eligible for release in the coming months.

What’s the response in Croatia and Bosnia?

Despite being a convicted war criminal, Praljak still commands significant support in Croatia, in an indication of how the scars of the 1990s conflicts are yet to heal fully.

The Parliament of Croatia, or Sabor, began Thursday’s session with a moment of silence to honor Praljak and all war victims.

The Parliament’s President, Goran Jandroković, read a statement in which he said all parties represented in the chamber agreed that the verdict “does not honor historical truth, facts and proof” and as such was “unjust and unacceptable.”

Representatives of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia and the liberal GLAS party, were not present for the minute of silence.

Croatia’s Prime Minister, Andrej Plenkovic, had already offered his condolences and those of his government following news of Praljak’s death.

Other Croat politicians also rejected the verdict.

Croatia’s President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, who spoke Thursday after cutting short a state visit to Iceland, said: “His act struck the heart of the Croatian nation. Croatia was not the aggressor, but, along with the United States, did most for the unity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Croatia and Bosnia were attacked by Milošević’s Serbia and the Yugoslav National Army and those are facts. Croatia didn’t attack anyone.”

Dragan Čović, a Croat member of the Presidency of Bosnia, said: “We consider this (the verdict) primarily a crime against all honorable representatives of the Croat military forces and the Croat nation in Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

About 1,000 Bosnian Croats gathered in a square in the southern Bosnian town of Mostar — where some of the fiercest fighting occurred in the 1990s — late on Wednesday to light candles in support of Praljak, Reuters news agency reported.

‘Take responsibility’

The other former Bosnian Croat leaders whose sentences were affirmed by the Appeals Chamber include Jadranko Prlić, prime minister of the self-proclaimed “Croat Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia,” who was given 25 years in prison. Prlić led Croat separatists within Bosnia who wanted a part of Bosnia to be annexed to Croatia in collusion with Tudjman.

His niece, Lana Prlić, who is vice president of the Social Democratic Party of Bosnia, notably spoke out in support of the Hague tribunal in a statement on Facebook Wednesday morning.

“I respect and accept the verdict of the Court in the Hague,” she wrote. “In our life, we have several families — the one we choose and the one we are born into. The Social Democratic Party of Bosnia is my family that I chose as an activist in 2010. At the same time, I can’t and don’t want to escape the family whose surname I’ve carried since my birth in 1993. Everyone has to take responsibility for their crimes.”

She called on politicians in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in Croatia to respect the court and also the victims of war crimes and their families, who had suffered for years.

Croat politician Goran Beus Richembergh, of GLAS, wrote on Facebook that he had received a number of death threats, including threats to kill his wife, after an earlier post in which he welcomed the verdict and called Praljak a lawfully convicted war criminal. Beus Richembergh said he had alerted the police.

He told Croatian TV channel Nova TV: “In the mass of insults I get every day for publicly taking a stand, I got threats that can be considered serious. Now the police have to solve it.”

CNN has sought comment from the police in Zagreb.

According to the GLAS Facebook page, fellow party member Vesna Pusić, a former foreign minister of Croatia who also welcomed the verdict, has also received a death threat.



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New Bill Proposes Extending Bar Hours to 4 a.m. in 6 California Cities

A new bill is proposing to extend bar hours in six California cities to 4 a.m. Those cities include Los Angeles, Long Beach, West Hollywood, San Francisco, Oakland and Sacramento. Christina Pascucci reports for the KTLA 5 Morning News on Nov. 30, 2017.



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Thursday Forecast: Above Average Temps Through Saturday

Look for above average temperatures to continue through Saturday. Henry DiCarlo has KTLA’s forecast on Nov. 30, 2017.



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Russell Simmons Steps Down From His Companies After Being Accused of Sexual Assault

Russell Simmons is stepping down from his companies in the wake of an accusation of harassment and sexual assault.

Russell Simmons speaks at the Environmental Media Association's 27th Annual EMA Awards at Barkar Hangar in Santa Monica on Sept. 23, 2017. (Credit: Jerod Harris / Getty Images)

Russell Simmons speaks at the Environmental Media Association’s 27th Annual EMA Awards at Barkar Hangar in Santa Monica on Sept. 23, 2017. (Credit: Jerod Harris / Getty Images)

Simmons, the founder of hip-hop music label Def Jam Recordings and CEO of Rush Communications, released a statement on Thursday after screenwriter Jenny Lumet accused him of forcing her to have sex with him in 1991. She detailed the encounter in a guest column published by The Hollywood Reporter on Thursday.

“I have been informed with great anguish of Jenny Lumet’s recollection about our night together in 1991,” Simmons said in a statement. “I know Jenny and her family and have seen her several times over the years since the evening she described. While her memory of that evening is very different from mine, it is now clear to me that her feelings of fear and intimidation are real. While I have never been violent, I have been thoughtless and insensitive in some of my relationships over many decades and I sincerely and humbly apologize.”

The statement continued: “This is a time of great transition. The voices of the voiceless, those who have been hurt or shamed, deserve and need to be heard. As the corridors of power inevitably make way for a new generation, I don’t want to be a distraction so I am removing myself from the businesses that I founded. The companies will now be run by a new and diverse generation of extraordinary executives who are moving the culture and consciousness forward. I will convert the studio for yogic science into a not-for-profit center of learning and healing. As for me, I will step aside and commit myself to continuing my personal growth, spiritual learning and above all to listening.”

On November 19, the Los Angeles Times published a report that detailed allegations of sexual misconduct made against director Brett Ratner and Simmons. A woman quoted in the story said Ratner and Simmons, 60, were “in it together.”

Ratner and Simmons denied the allegations, with Simmons adding that, “abusing women in any way shape or form violates the very core of my being.”

CNN has reached out to Simmons’ representatives for comment.



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White House Considering Replacing Rex Tillerson With CIA Chief Pompeo

The White House is contemplating a scenario to replace Secretary of State Rex Tillerson with CIA Director Mike Pompeo within the next few months, multiple government officials tell CNN.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson ahead of a bilateral meeting with Germany's Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel at the State Department on Nov. 30, 2017. (Credit: Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images)

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson ahead of a bilateral meeting with Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel at the State Department on Nov. 30, 2017. (Credit: Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images)

The vacancy at the CIA would likely be filled, according to the tentative plan, by Sen. Tom Cotton, a hawkish Arkansas Republican, the sources said.

There’s no decision yet on the timing of Tillerson’s departure, which has been expected for months. But multiple sources close to the White House and across government said Pompeo is the leading candidate to take over at the State Department.

The New York Times reported Thursday morning that the plan has been developed by White House chief of staff John Kelly and is likely to be triggered late this year or early next year.

The expected shake-up would take the role of top US diplomat out of the hands of an official whose relationship with the President has grown increasingly fractured and put it into the hands of another whose bond with Trump has only strengthened this year.

Pompeo, a former Republican congressman from Kansas, has grown increasingly close to the President in recent months. Their bond has largely formed over the President’s free-wheeling daily intelligence briefings, which one White House official said Pompeo delivers in person three to four times a week. After the briefings, Trump frequently asks Pompeo to stick around to speak more one-on-one, the official said.

Tillerson’s exit would follow months of strain in his relationship with Trump, friction that has sometimes boiled into public view with Trump undercutting his secretary of state’s diplomatic efforts on the North Korean crisis.



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10-Year-Old Colorado Girl Commits Suicide After Alleged Bullying Incident Caught on Camera

A mother and father in Aurora, Colorado, say their 10-year-old daughter committed suicide over video of a fight with an alleged bully. Ashawnty Davis, was only in fifth grade.

She was a happy girl until everything changed at the end of October when she was involved in a fight after school, her parents told KDVR.

They say it was her first fight and it was recorded by another student and posted on an app called Musical.ly.

The video shows Ashawnty and another student fighting, while other kids watched. Ashawnty's mother, Latoshia Harris,  says her daughter had been confronting the girl who had been bullying her.

"I saw my daughter was scared," she said.

The video is difficult to watch. But Ashawnty's parents are sharing it to help other parents.

"She was devastated when she found out that it had made it to Musical.ly," said her father, Anthony Davis.

"My daughter came home two weeks later and hanged herself in the closet," said Harris.

She was on life support for two weeks before passing away Wednesday.

Her parents say she was the victim of "bullycide." The term is used when someone takes his or her own life because of bullying.

"We have to stop it, and we have to stop it within our kids," said Davis.

"I want other parents to know it's happening," Harris said. "That was my baby, and I love my baby, and I just want mothers to listen."

The school district issued the following statement regarding the incident:

“This is a heartbreaking loss for the school community. Mental health supports will be made available for any students who need help processing the loss.

We do not tolerate bullying of any kind in our schools and we have a comprehensive bullying prevention program in place at all of our schools. The safety and wellbeing of students is our highest priority and we strive every today to ensure schools are safe, welcoming and supportive places that support learning.

We were made aware of that video when a media outlet approached us with it. We took immediate action in response, turning the video over to police and addressing the matter with students.

It should also be noted that the video did not take place during school hours.”



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