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Prison breast milk; taco truck getaway; Adopt-A-Burro

  • Feb 29, 2016
  • Feb 29, 2016 Updated Feb 29, 2016

Odd and interesting news from the West.

Ruins emerge from sand on San Francisco beach

SAN FRANCISCO — Ruins have begun to emerge from the sand in San Francisco, puzzling beachgoers.

The San Francisco Chronicle reports that storms and high surf at Ocean Beach have exposed a concrete seawall, about a city block long and 3 to 4 feet tall, along with two sets of cobblestone steps and some weathered wood.

Western Neighborhoods Project executive director Stephen "Woody" LaBounty says the city tried several times to build a seawall, including a wooden one that was destroyed in a 1939 storm. Pieces of that structure, along with a concrete wall built in 1941, began to reappear last month.

LaBounty says the steps were part of a pedestrian tunnel constructed in the 1920s to allow beach access. The tunnel was dismantled about 40 years ago and became buried in sand.

___

Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com

Adoption program eyed for wild Arizona burros

KINGMAN — Officials have presented a proposal to adopt out wild burros that are overpopulating northwestern Arizona.

The Kingman Daily Miner reports that state and federal officials met with U.S. Sen. John McCain in Washington, D.C., last week to discuss the proposal.

Officials say the nonindigenous burros are causing traffic accidents on local highways. They also say the burros are limiting food and water resources for mule deer, bighorn sheep, birds and other native animals.

Mohave County supervisor Steve Moss says the adoption program is a compassionate approach to reduce the population of burros in the wild.

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management must sign off on the adoption proposal.

___

Information from: Kingman Daily Miner, http://www.kingmandailyminer.com

Former California real estate tycoon gets 14 years for fraud

SANTA ANA, Calif. — A Southern California real estate tycoon who was convicted of bilking investors out of $169 million has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.

A judge also ordered Michael J. Stewart, 68, of San Clemente to pay more than $9 million in restitution.

Stewart was convicted last August of 11 counts of mail fraud. He was sentenced Monday.

Authorities say he and a partner formed now-defunct Pacific Property Assets in 1999 to purchase, renovate and resell or refinance apartment buildings in California and Arizona.

Authorities say when the Great Recession devastated the real estate market he turned the company into a Ponzi scheme.

PPA co-owner John Packard pleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud in 2014 and cooperated with authorities.

He is to be sentenced March 28.

Inmates accuse prison officials of misplacing breast milk

PORTLAND, Ore. — Inmates at Oregon's only prison for women are accusing staff of mixing up breast milk they pumped for their infants on the outside, potentially exposing their children to risks.

The Oregonian reports that four inmates at Coffee Creek Correctional Facility in Wilsonville say prison staff mixed up their bags of milk last fall. One of the nursing mothers was diagnosed with Hepatitis C, causing the mothers to worry about their children's health.

Oregon Department of Corrections spokeswoman Betty Bernt says milk program supervisors have addressed the problem and now require inmates to check bags before they are sent to caregivers.

Inmates were notified in December that Hepatitis B and C are unlikely to be transmitted through breast milk.

___

Information from: The Oregonian, http://www.oregonlive.com

Body of missing California ski teacher found buried in snow

NORDEN, Calif.  — Authorities say rescue teams have found the body of a ski instructor who went missing in January at a Northern California ski resort.

The Placer County Sheriff's Office says the Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue team and El Dorado County Search and Rescue dog teams were training at the Sugar Bowl Ski Resort when they located Carson May's body Monday.

The office says May's body was found under 5 feet of snow near where his cell phone last "pinged."

The resort says the body was found about a quarter mile out of bounds in an avalanche-prone area.

The 23-year-old was last seen Jan. 15 while skiing off duty at Sugar Bowl near Norden.

A four-day, intensive search by dozens of volunteers and authorities was suspended due to harsh weather.

State worker on leave pending probe into elderly abuse case

PHOENIX — The Arizona Department of Economic Security says it has put one of its own employees on administrative leave pending an investigation into a case of alleged elderly abuse involving a relative of another DES employee.

The department says it took the personnel action after it learned two employees had knowledge of the case involving the hospitalization of a Mesa resident.

Details of the alleged neglect weren't released, but DES Director Timothy Jeffries called the alleged acts abusive and "deplorable and evil."

The department says it received notification of the case on its adult protective services hotline on Feb. 18 and that an investigator visited the home the next day, learning that the woman had been hospitalized.

DES officials say they can't divulge details of the case, which remains under investigation.

Army deserter pleads not guilty to gun charges

TACOMA, Wash. — An Army deserter who prosecutors say made statements supporting the Islamic State group has pleaded not guilty to weapons charges.

Daniel Seth Franey, of Montesano, appeared in U.S. District Court in Tacoma on Monday. He was charged earlier this month with illegally possessing firearms, including machine guns, and court documents said he described Osama bin Laden as "a beautiful man" and called for the death of American troops.

Investigators said the 33-year-old was banned from having guns because he was subject to a protection order taken out by his former partner in 2014, but he nevertheless joined an undercover agent in making what he believed were black-market gun deliveries.

According to charging papers, Franey served in the Army from 2002 to 2008 and was stationed in Texas and South Korea before deserting.

His trial was set for April 18.

Police chase leads to stolen taco truck hitting school bus

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — Authorities in Southern California say two men fleeing from police in a stolen taco truck sideswiped a school bus full of children, took down the lights at an intersection and smashed into a propane truck.

No one was seriously hurt in the Monday morning chase.

San Bernardino police Lt. Rich Lawhead says the men fled after officers spotted them in the stolen truck on Interstate 215.

Witnesses told the San Bernardino Sun that officers fired two shots at the men in the truck after the crash.

Motorist Jeremy Morales says the scene was so crazy that he pulled into a nearby service station to get out of the way.

Lawhead says the men in the truck were taken to a hospital as a precaution.

Other buses were called to take the children to school.

___

Information from: The Sun, http://www.sbsun.com

Appeals court lets huge polar bear habitat stand

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service followed the law when it designated more than 187,000 square miles — an area larger than California — as critical habitat for threatened polar bears in Alaska marine waters and its northern coast, an appeals court ruled Monday.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeal reversed a 2013 lower court decision that the designation was too extensive and not specific.

A spokesman for the Center for Biological Diversity, which petitioned to designate polar bears as a threatened species, called it a victory for the marine mammal.

"The polar bear gets the full protection of critical habitat to which it's entitled, it deserves and it truly needs," Brendan Cummings said.

The federal government in 2008 declared polar bears threatened under the Endangered Species Act, citing melting sea ice. Polar bears need ice for hunting, breeding and migrating.

The move made the polar bear the first species to be designated as threatened under the act because of global warming.

A designation of critical habitat is required as part of a recovery plan. The Fish and Wildlife Service set aside acreage along Alaska's northern coast but 95 percent is in the ocean waters of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas.

The Alaska Oil and Gas Association, the state of Alaska, a coalition of Alaska Native groups and other oil and gas interests sued, calling the designation an overreach.

Former Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell said the critical habitat designation included areas that account for almost half of Alaska's oil production, and petroleum exploration and production would be delayed or restricted.

U.S. District Court Judge Ralph Beistline ruled that the Fish and Wildlife Service's designation of sea ice as critical habitat was valid. However, he ruled the agency had not shown that areas on land and barrier islands had features making them appropriate for polar bear dens and he rejected the entire plan.

Appeals court judges said the lower court decision appeared to consider denning habitat but not the need by bears to have undisturbed access to and from sea ice.

The appeals court judges agreed that the agency did not have to prove that existing polar bears actually used certain designated areas, only that those areas were critical to the conservation of the species. They said the agency drew rational conclusions from the best scientific evidence available.

Cummings said specificity in designating habitat is impossible given the dynamic nature of the Arctic, where polar bears move by walking or merely resting on shifting sea ice. Polar bears, he said, are not like salmon that return to the same streams every year to spawn.

"You can't say the bear will take this specific path to its denning area, and therefore, let's only protect that narrow corridor," he said. "You need to protect on the scale of the ecosystem, which is what Fish and Wildlife did."

A spokeswoman for Gov. Bill Walker referred a request for comment to the state Department of Law, which did not respond immediately.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had not seen the decision.

Oregon's wolf population now exceeds 100

PORTLAND, Ore. — Oregon now has more than 100 wolves.

The state Department of Fish and Wildlife released its annual wolf report Monday, and it shows Oregon had 110 known wolves in 2015, a 36 percent increase over the year before.

The agency said in a news release it doesn't count a wolf without hard evidence, and biologists believe the actual population is likely higher.

ODFW wolf coordinator Russ Morgan says northeast Oregon continues to have the most wolves, but there has been additional movement into the southern part of the state.

The report says wolves killed 10 sheep, three calves and one working dog last year. That's down from 2014, when wolves killed 30 sheep and two cattle.

Seven wolves died in 2015 — three of them were illegally shot.

Inmates accuse prison officials of misplacing breast milk

PORTLAND, Ore. — Inmates at Oregon's only prison for women are accusing staff of mixing up breast milk they pumped for their infants on the outside, potentially exposing their children to risks.

Four inmates at Coffee Creek Correctional Facility in Wilsonville say prison staff mixed up their bags of milk last fall, The Oregonian reported. One of the nursing mothers was diagnosed with Hepatitis C, causing the mothers to worry about their children's health.

"I wanted to feed my baby healthy natural milk for at least a year," said Marcie Harris, 35, who gave birth to a girl in August. "...They disregarded my baby's health and well-being."

Coffee Creek offers a number of parenting programs for incarcerated mothers, including the milk program for women who give birth while in prison. The 7-year-old program allows inmates to pump milk throughout the day. That milk is stored in bags, sometimes marked with an inmates' name and sometimes not, and delivered to families, foster parents or case workers.

Oregon Department of Corrections spokeswoman Betty Bernt said milk program supervisors have addressed the problem and now require inmates to check bags before they are sent to caregivers.

Inmates were notified in December that Hepatitis B and C are unlikely to be transmitted through breast milk.

Despite the minimal health effects, affected mothers said they are frustrated the mix-up was allowed to occur. Trisha Mart, who gave birth in august, said her husband noticed someone else's name on a milk bag in October.

Caregivers of both Harris' and Mart's babies said their pediatricians told them any health consequences were unlikely, but Harris has since abandoned the program.

___

Information from: The Oregonian, http://www.oregonlive.com

Arraignment postponed in San Francisco corruption case

SAN FRANCISCO — The arraignment of a former San Francisco city commissioner and two other people charged with bribery has been postponed, as prosecutors and defense attorneys argue over disclosing evidence.

Former city commissioner Nazly Mohajer, former city employee Zula Jones and political consultant Keith Jackson are now scheduled to be arraigned on four counts of bribery each on April 6.

Prosecutors say Mohajer, Jones and Jackson accepted $20,000 from an undercover FBI agent in exchange for political access and preferential treatment in the awarding of city contracts.

Prosecutors declined to release additional details, citing a federal protective order, and are also seeking a state protective order.

Defense attorneys have objected. A San Francisco judge Monday directed both sides to first consult the judge overseeing the federal case about the federal protective order.

Hundreds walk off Tesla job in Nevada labor dispute

SPARKS, Nev. — Union organizers say hundreds of construction workers walked off the job at the Tesla Motors manufacturing plant east of Reno to protest the increased hiring of out-of-state workers for less pay.

District 16 trades council spokesman Russell James says approximately 350 plumbers, carpenters, electricians and others walked away from the construction site Monday morning.

More than 100 picketed outside the main gate against what they say is an unfair labor practice that undermines promises to hire mostly Nevada workers in exchange for more than $1 billion in state tax breaks.

James says the work is increasingly being done by crews for the non-union, New Mexico-based Bycon Corp.

Tesla said in a statement it's in compliance with requirements that Nevadans make up more than three-fourths of the entire "gigafactory" workforce and more than half of the individual contractors.

Dead body of woman found in trunk of car believed to be hers

PHOENIX — Phoenix police say the body of a woman who was a homicide victim was found in the trunk of an illegally parked car believed to be hers.

Sgt. Trent Crump says officers found the victim's body Sunday afternoon while preparing to have the car towed from a location where it had been blocked a private drive for several hours.

The vehicle was parked in location near Thomas Road and 63rd Avenue, and Crump says a residence near where the car was parked is believed to be where the woman was killed.

He says the body had obvious signs of trauma.

The woman's identity has not been released.

Police help Girl Scout troop after cookie cash theft

AURORA, Colo. — Aurora police officers helped a Girl Scout troop recoup some of their cash after a thief took their cash books full of cookie proceeds.

KMGH-TV reports that police received a call Saturday that a cash box full of $325 was snatched from a table outside a grocery store where the scouts were selling cookies.

Officer Ryan Wenke says about 20 officers scraped together some bills to either donate or buy a box of cookies so the girl scouts didn't leave without any money for their labor.

Police are still looking for whoever took the cash box.

Former police detective gets 23-year prison term in sex case

PHOENIX — A former Phoenix police detective who pleaded guilty to sexual conduct with a minor has been sentenced to 23 years in prison.

The sentence imposed Monday on 47-year-old Christopher J. Wilson by a Maricopa County Superior Court judge was part of a plea deal with prosecutors.

Wilson also faces lifetime probation.

He pleaded guilty Jan. 26 to two counts of sexual conduct with a minor and one count of attempt to commit sexual conduct with a minor.

The 13-year police veteran was charged with 10 counts of sexual conduct with a minor.

Wilson was arrested after investigators learned of an alleged sexual encounter involving underage boys.

Wilson was the Police Department's appointed outreach officer to the lesbian, gay, bi-sexual and transgender community.

Feds impose fire restrictions on western national grasslands

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Federal officials say dry conditions have prompted them to impose fire restrictions on national grasslands in eastern New Mexico, West Texas and a small portion of Oklahoma.

U.S. Forest Service officials in Albuquerque say the level-two restrictions include lands within the boundaries of the McClellan Creek National Grasslands near Amarillo and the Rita Blanca National Grasslands, which cover parts of all three states.

Officials say fire danger is increasing and the restrictions will remain in place at least through the end of the year if conditions don't improve.

The restrictions prohibit campfires, fireworks and smoking except when inside a vehicle or building. Driving off designated roads or using certain equipment with an open flame also is prohibited.

Dayton man banned from state park for hunting violations

MISSOULA, Mont. — A Dayton man has been banned from Wild Horse Island in Flathead Lake and lost his hunting privileges for three years for hunting violations.

The Missoulian reports (http://bit.ly/1WS8Rzc ) that Michael Filipek pleaded guilty to unlawfully possessing bighorn sheep horns that came from Wild Horse, and to illegally killing a bobcat and mountain lion. The killings did not take place on the island.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Game officials say Filipek picked up two bighorn ram heads and moved them out of plain view. He did not keep the horns, but it is illegal to pick up bighorn sheep horns anywhere in Montana. When investigators visited Filipek's house, they found a set of bighorn sheep horns he had previously taken from Wild Horse Island.

Washington officials prepare for massive earthquake drill

SEATTLE — Though it's still months away, officials in Washington are preparing for a massive, four-day earthquake and tsunami drill in June.

The Seattle Times reports that nearly 6,000 emergency and military personnel will pretend the ground is shaking on June 7 to test response to a massive seismic event. The simulation will test responses to an earthquake with a magnitude of 9.

During the exercise, emergency managers will try to handle the theoretical catastrophe in hopes of identifying problems and improving response if the real event occurs.

The last damaging earthquake in the Pacific Northwest was in February 2001 when the Nisqually quake measured a magnitude of 6.8.

___

Information from: The Seattle Times, http://www.seattletimes.com

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