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Rock throwers in Salt Lake; grenade lying around; Trump's a piñata

  • Feb 28, 2016
  • Feb 28, 2016 Updated Mar 10, 2016

Odd and interesting news from the West. 

Salt Lake City police shoot teen, face rock throwers

SALT LAKE CITY — A 17-year-old boy who authorities say was wielding a metal stick was shot and critically injured by Salt Lake City officers Saturday night, touching off unrest downtown as officers donned riot gear and blocked streets and bystanders threw rocks and bottles.

The teenager shot by two Salt Lake City Police officers was in critical condition at a local hospital Sunday after being struck twice in the torso, according to Detective Ken Hansen with the Unified Police Department, which is investigating the shooting.

Salt Lake City Police declined to identify the boy Sunday afternoon because he is a minor.

In a statement, the department said two Salt Lake City officers were trying to break up a fight around 8 p.m. where the teenager and another male were hitting a third male with metal objects.

The officers ordered the males to drop the metal, "stick-like objects," and one male complied. The teenager did not drop the stick and instead moved toward the victim in a threatening manner, Salt Lake City Police Detective Greg Wilking said.

One or both of the police officers then shot the teen.

Police said earlier Sunday that the teenager was shot when he tried to attack one of the officers. Wilking said Sunday afternoon that investigators were still trying to determine if that was the case. He said they had not yet interviewed the officers involved.

Wilking did not have details about how far away the teenager was from officers or the victim when police shot him.

He also did not have details about how long the sticks were or where the males got the metal. Police said earlier Sunday that the boy had been wielding a broomstick.

Police did not release the identities of the other two males involved or whether they were also minors. The male who was hit with the sticks did not require medical attention, Wilking said. He did not know what happened to the other male who had been wielding a stick or whether investigators spoke with him.

Neither officer involved in the shooting was injured, Wilking said. Police are not releasing the identity of the officers but said Sunday that both were placed administrative leave while the incident is investigated.

The officers were both wearing body cameras but police said Sunday they will not release the footage because of the ongoing investigation and the possibility that the teenager depicted could face charges.

Police did not have details about what prompted the fight in the street, which was near a downtown homeless shelter, shopping mall and movie theater.

Bystander Selam Mohammad told The Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret News that he was friends with the teenager and said the boy was shot as he turned to face police.

"He barely even turned around, then boom, boom, boom — and he just dropped," Mohammad told the Deseret News.

When asked about that account, Hansen said he did not have details to confirm or deny that information.

After the shooting, bystanders began yelling obscenities and throwing rocks and bottles at police, who called in about 100 officers to help.

Police, including officers wearing helmets and carrying riot shields, barricaded four surrounding city blocks. A light rail stop in the neighborhood was closed.

Hansen said the bystanders throwing rocks and bottles were people hanging out near the shelter. He didn't know if they were homeless, but he said they were not customers of the nearby shopping center. Hansen said the area was relatively busy, with people visiting the shopping center and restaurants and others hanging out near the shelter and homeless facilities.

"There were pockets of that disturbance for hours," Hansen said Sunday.

Wilking said police asked bystanders to leave the area and put up barricades and tape to clear streets. He said bystanders were throwing objects at police for only about 10 minutes. He said police asked people to leave but did not physically move anyone, form a riot line or spray anything such as tear gas to disperse the crowd.

"It's kind of making more of a presence with your body," he said of the tactic used to clear the streets.

Four people were arrested for civil disorder, Salt Lake City police said.

Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski said in a statement Sunday that she was saddened and that the shooting was a tragedy for everyone involved.

"The use of force by law enforcement against the public can tear at the delicate balance of trust between both sides, and must be taken extremely seriously," she said. "These incidents create a number of unanswered questions in the short term, and justice requires we work together in good faith to find answers."

2nd autopsy shows Guatemalan man shot in the back by police

SAN FRANCISCO — A second autopsy of a Guatemalan immigrant who was shot dead by San Francisco police last year appears to contradict officials' initial claims about the shooting.

The San Francisco Examiner reports (http://bit.ly/1XPQaNT) it obtained an autopsy by the Medical Examiner's Office that shows 21-year-old Amilcar Perez-Lopez was shot four times in the back, once through the arm and again through the backside of the head, mirroring the findings of an independent autopsy last April.

Police Chief Greg Suhr said soon after the Feb. 25, 2015 fatal shooting in the Mission district that Perez-Lopez was lunging at two plainclothes police officers with a knife when they shot him.

That claim was first contradicted by an April by autopsy that showed Perez Lopez had been shot on the back.

A San Francisco Police Department spokesperson declined to comment on the case because of pending litigation.

Murder charges against rehab center a first in California

MURRIETA, Calif. — A Riverside County grand jury has indicted a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center for murder after the death of a man who was seeking help to treat a drinking problem.

Attorneys for A Better Tomorrow say it is the first time in California history that a corporation has been accused of murder.

The Los Angeles Times reports Sunday the second-degree murder charges against A Better Tomorrow and four of its employees sent a jolt through California's drug and rehabilitation industry.

Prosecutors argue that the company, in its drive for profits, accepted to treat Gary Benefield, a client it was not prepared to care for and killed him by not refilling his oxygen.

Defense attorneys have asked the judge in the case to throw out the charges, saying the prosecutor failed to call as a witness the coroner who found that Benefield died of natural causes.

Inmate farm labor program to be cut 21 percent

PUEBLO, Colo. — Some Pueblo County farmers are worried they'll lose a source of workers if an inmate labor program is phased out.

The Pueblo Chieftain reports (http://bit.ly/214lsRd) local legislators joined farmers Friday in a meeting to discuss the Colorado Correctional Industries reducing its Offender Labor Program by 21 percent this year.

CCI Director Dennis Dunsmoor says the program will end eventually as workers are not learning skills that are helpful when they are released.

Farmer Don Genova says workers learn responsibility and other skills, not just how to pick pumpkins.

Farmers expressed concern that 10 out of 17 local contracts have yet to be renewed. Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Rod Slyhoff said farmers shouldn't have to wait until now to know if their contracts will be approved.

Worker finds grenade under pile of clothes

SUN CITY — Authorities say a Maricopa County employee stumbled upon a live grenade under a pile of clothes while cleaning a dead man's home near Surprise.

KPHO-TV in Phoenix reports that a public fiduciary found the live grenade on Saturday and immediately contacted Maricopa County sheriff's deputies.

Dan Livingston, who lived near the late homeowner, says the elderly man had a gun collection but he never imagined the man owned a grenade. He thinks the man probably forgot about it.

Members of a bomb squad safely removed the grenade from the home.

Lawmakers consider adding 10-cent fee to plastic, paper bags

SALT LAKE CITY — A proposal to add a 10-cent fee on all plastic and paper bags used in places like grocery stores is moving through the Utah legislature.

The bill's sponsor and backers say the bags are causing major headaches at landfills, clogging up recycling machines and adding to litter in neighborhoods. Sen. Jani Iwamoto, a Democrat from Holladay, said fewer than 3 percent of plastic bags are recycled.

"This is an incentive so consumers will hopefully reduce their use of single-use retail bags over time," Iwamoto said. "You don't have to pay anything. You can bring your own bags with you."

The measure passed by a 3-2 vote this week in a business and labor committee. Now, it goes to the Senate.

The Utah Association of Counties supports the proposal. Sen. Todd Weiler, a Republican from Woods Cross said he supports the proposal but acknowledges it could be difficult to get full support from the Senate.

"Most people who don't want to pay a few extra cents for a bag that is going to pollute the environment will bring an extra bag," Weiler said. "It is incentivizing people to do the right thing."

The American Progressive Bag Alliance opposes the bill.

"Taxes and regulations on highly reused and 100 percent recyclable plastic retail bags don't solve waste management problems, and they don't benefit local economies or the environment," said Mark Daniels, the alliance's chairman.

George Chapman, a former candidate for Salt Lake City mayor, called the plastic bag an "American success story," and argued that the fee was like a tax on food.

The fee would not apply to pharmacy bags for prescriptions, newspaper bags and bags used by nonprofits to carry food.

Standoff ends with authorities finding suspect dead

BILLINGS, Mont. — Authorities are investigating the death of a man involved in a standoff near a small community between Billings and Bozeman.

The Billings Gazette reports (http://bit.ly/1TLn7M7 ) the body of 59-year-old James Dunakin was found Saturday after a standoff lasting more than six hours.

Officers responded Saturday morning to a report that a man was shooting at a house.

Sweet Grass County Under Sheriff Alan Ronneberg said in a news release that Dunakin barricaded himself in a house and authorities evacuated the area.

More than six hours later, a Gallatin County Special Response Team found Dunakin dead inside the home.

The case is under investigation by the Sweet Grass County Sheriff's Office and Montana Division of Criminal Investigation.

2 Albuquerque Girls Scouts sell cookies near pot dispensary

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Two Albuquerque Girls Scouts have picked an unusual spot to sell Girl Scout cookies — a marijuana dispensary.

KRQE-TV in Albuquerque reports (http://goo.gl/yCEtDh) a Junior Girl Scout and a Brownie set up shop Saturday outside medical marijuana dispensary Ultra Health and sold more than 60 boxes.

Ultra Health manager James Gambling says he invited the scouts and offered to donate $1 for every box the girls sold. He says "the munchies" is a stereotype that comes with marijuana, so it was fitting to have the Girl Scouts outside.

Phil Temer, a dad of one of the girls, says he saw nothing wrong with the girls selling near the dispensary.

Girl Scouts of New Mexico Trails spokeswoman Carol Ann Short says selling outside medical marijuana dispensaries is against scout rules.

Crowded hospital means mentally-ill defendants wait in jail

JACKSON, Wyo. — Wyoming defendants with mental illnesses frequently find themselves waiting in jail for the Wyoming State Hospital to make room for them.

The Jackson Hole News and Guide reports (http://bit.ly/1WRH55W) a judge ruled Friday that Dennis Gross will wait another two weeks and Victor Ford will spend another week in jail waiting for the hospital to be able to evaluate whether they are able to participate in their cases.

Hospital and state health officials and an attorney from the Wyoming Attorney General's office argued they'd done all they could to reduce the delays.

The hospital has 13 people on a waiting list for beds and is down one examiner.

Teton County Sheriff Jim Whalen says there has to be a better place for these defendants than the jail.

Orca calf missing, presumed dead

FRIDAY HARBOR, Wash. — Amid a baby boom for Puget Sound's resident orcas, one of the new calves is missing and presumed dead.

The Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island says the calf — a member of the whale group known as J-Pod and designated J-55 — was first documented on Jan. 18, but it wasn't seen when other close family members were seen the next day.

The organization says that last week researchers had a chance to survey the entire pod, and J-55 was nowhere to be found.

Research director Deborah Giles says the loss of any orca calf is a blow, but it's not entirely surprising, since as many as 50 percent of newborn orcas fail to survive their first year.

J-55 was the ninth orca calf born since December 2014 to the endangered population of killer whales that spend time in Washington state inland waters. It would be at least the second to have died.

Proposed biorefinery in Boardman gets backing from USDA

BOARDMAN, Oregon — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved an $11 million loan for a project to build a biorefinery in Boardman that would convert farm waste into natural gas and liquid fertilizer.

The East Oregonian reports that Minnesota-based Novus Energy plans to build the $25 million facility at the Port of Morrow.

Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley and USDA Rural Development Undersecretary Lisa Mensah announced the loan Friday in Portland.

Mensah says the project will spur economic development and provide new markets for farm commodities in rural Oregon.

The facility would take 750 tons of potato peels, dairy manure and other farm waste and convert it into renewable gas. By allowing the scraps to ferment in tanks, organic material breaks down and releases methane that can be captured and stored.

The company plans to break ground this summer.

Moose, bighorn, bison holding steady in Jackson Hole

JACKSON, Wyo. — Wildlife managers say there have not been any major changes in the number of bighorn sheep, moose and bison populations in the Jackson Hole region.

The Jackson Hole News & Guide reports (http://bit.ly/1QICFzS ) that a recent Wyoming Game and Fish Department aerial survey found that the Jackson moose herd was unchanged in size compared with a year ago. The moose herd is estimated at 450 animals.

Over that span the Jackson bighorn sheep herd grew slightly to an estimated 425 animals, while the Jackson bison herd went down in size from 691 to 666 total bulls, cows and calves.

Trump piñatas becoming hot items in Albuquerque, Santa Fe

SANTA FE, N.M. — Businesses in Albuquerque and Santa Fe say a piñata of GOP presidential hopeful Donald Trump has become a hot seller.

The Santa Fe New Mexican reports (http://goo.gl/Y3Yn7v) Trump piñatas have been hard to keep in stores because of the piñata's popularity, especially among Mexican immigrants.

Jose Carlos Andre, manager of the Santa Fe Mexican butcher shop El Paisano, says after word went out the store had Trump piñatas, whites even started coming into the store to buy them.

Dulceria Puebla in Albuquerque also is selling the Trump piñatas and workers there say they go quickly.

Trump piñatas became hot items in U.S. cities with large Latino populations after Trump made comments about Mexican immigrants being rapists and criminals.

Polls have shown that Trump remains unpopular among Latino voters.

Museum of Flight to receive historic 727 after final flight

SEATTLE — The Museum of Flight expects to receive a recently restored Boeing 727 prototype on Wednesday after its final flight from Paine Field in Everett.

The plane is scheduled to take its first flight in 25 years, as long as the weather is favorable.

The flight from Paine Field to Boeing Field is expected to take less than 15 minutes.

Upon landing, the 727 will taxi directly into the Museum's parking area, where the engines will be shut down for the last time.

After welcoming ceremonies, the plane will be open to museum visitors.

The welcoming ceremony is scheduled to include dozens of retired Boeing and United Airlines employees.

Giant container ship headed to Seattle

SEATTLE — Fans of big ships might want to hang out in Seattle on Monday. That's when one of the biggest ships to ever enter American waters is set to arrive.

KING-TV reports the Benjamin Franklin container ship is over 1,300 feet long and nearly 180 feet wide and can hold 18,000 containers.

The ship recently was in Long Beach, California, where it unloaded 13,000 containers. That's more than twice the size of a typical container ship.

In Seattle, Puget Sound pilots will guide it into its berth at the Port of Seattle after boarding in Port Angeles.

The Puget Sound Pilots organization has been training pilots in a simulator to practice bringing the gigantic ship into port.

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