Wednesday, 31 August 2022

Tips for keeping kids safe during high heat

(KRON) -- Limiting time outside and keeping kids hydrated are the top things schools need to keep in mind with temperatures rising around the Bay Area.

The scorching temperatures present a danger especially to those students who may suffer from chronic illnesses, so being aware is key. The temperatures are rising for everybody in Contra Costa County and that includes kids.

Mount Diablo Unified School Superintendent Dr. Adam Clark is advising his district's principals and athletic directors to take precautions over the next week.

Those recommendations for students include:

  • Drinking plenty of water or sports drinks
  • Wearing lightweight, light-colored clothing
  • Avoiding outdoor activities between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.
  • Using air conditioning and remaining in cool places during the day

“Health and well-being is a top priority,” said Ilana Samuels, Director of Communications and Community Relations with San Ramon Valley Unified School District.

Samuels said like other districts within the county, they are following guidelines from the Office of Education.

“Ensuring that students are hydrated, ensuring that you are limiting physical exertion during the hottest parts of the day. Also, ensuring that staff is checking on young children and students with chronic illnesses,” said Marcus Walton with the Office of Education.

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Superintendent Clark said there has been no district-wide directive to make any changes to the daily school schedule but strenuous activities like football practice should not be done during the heat of the day. School leaders within the county said families play an important part as well.

Families are also recommended to stay informed about what their child's school and school district is saying about the heat over the next week. “We want everybody to get through this period healthy and ready for school next week and beyond when hopefully it cools down a little bit,” said Samuels.

The California Department of Education also has information online for parents and students about excessive heat. There, you can find a list of resources on how to best mitigate any negative impact the heat may have on you or your loved ones.



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Steph Curry celebrated by Davidson in solo graduation ceremony

DAVIDSON, N.C. (KRON) -- Golden State Warriors superstar Stephen Curry is the all-time leader in 3-pointers made in NBA history. While he is known for knocking down 3,117 of them throughout his career, Curry might've celebrated the biggest three of his life on Wednesday.

Curry, 34, received his bachelor's degree in sociology, had his No. 30 jersey retired and was inducted into the Davidson College Hall of Fame Class of 2022. The university had a solo ceremony for Curry to celebrate those three milestones.

#CurryFor3 is how the Warriors and Davidson men's basketball dubbed it on Twitter. Graduation, jersey retirement and hall of fame induction -- all in one night.

The two-time NBA MVP had his wife Ayesha and three kids there to celebrate with him. Video posted by the Warriors shows at least a few hundred were also inside John M. Belk Arena at Davidson's campus in support. Curry's parents, Dell and Sonya, were also in attendance.

The school was purposely waiting for Curry to graduate before retiring his number.

Curry first enrolled at Davidson in 2006 and was expected to graduate in 2010. However, he chose to forgo his senior season and entered the NBA Draft in 2009.

He was officially awarded his degree in May after finishing his final semester -- perhaps 12 years later than he had envisioned.

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Normally, Davidson College commencement ceremonies are in May. Jersey retirements usually happen during the men's basketball season, which is from November to March.

The 8-time All-Star likely didn't have time to do two separate ceremonies as he was busy leading the Warriors to a championship during the 2021-22 season. Curry and the Warriors were successful as they won their fourth title since the team drafted the Davidson graduate in 2009.

“And the next Hall of Fame, you know where that is going to be," Dell Curry said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Fans of Princess Diana gather to mark her death 25 years ago

LONDON (AP) — Fans of the late Princess Diana placed tributes outside the gates of her Kensington Palace home on Wednesday, marking the 25th anniversary of her death in a Paris car accident.

An arrangement of white chrysanthemums spelling out “Princess Diana” sat among dozens of photos and messages left by admirers, some of whom said they make annual pilgrimages to the spot to remember the tragedy.

“We just come here, do the memorial and, you know, we just chat about things that she used to do, you know, to … let people know that we will never forget the princess, we will never forget what she’s done,’’ said Julie Cain, 59, who traveled 300 miles (480 kilometers) from Newcastle in northern England. “We just want her legacy kept, like, going as long as possible.”

Diana died on Aug. 31, 1997, at the age of 36, stunning people around the world who felt they knew the princess after seeing her successes and struggles play out on TV screens and newspaper front pages for 17 years. The tributes left outside Kensington Palace on Wednesday were a small reminder of the mountains of flowers piled there in the days after Diana’s death.

Diana was the focus of constant media attention from the moment she was engaged to marry Prince Charles until the night she died. Her fairytale wedding, ugly divorce and efforts to build a new life all made headlines.

The public watched as she blossomed from a shy teenager into an international style icon who befriended AIDS patients, charmed Nelson Mandela and walked through a minefield to promote the drive to eradicate landmines. Along the way, she showed the royal family, particularly her sons William and Harry, how to connect with people and be relevant in the 21st century.

On Wednesday morning, Cain and her friend Maria Scott, 51, paid their respects to Diana as dawn broke over the palace, just as they do every year.

“There was just something about that girl that really stood out. And of course, I watched the wedding, the fairy-tale princess,’’ Scott said. “And, you know, you see, she was like part of your life because you were seeing that every day on the television. She was in newspapers, magazines. She was all over. And you felt like she was part of your life.”



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Car riddled with bullets in overnight Oakland shooting

OAKLAND (KRON) - KRON4 News is waiting for an update from Oakland police and California Highway Patrol but video from the scene shows the aftermath of a shooting that ended with a crash. 

Video shows a black car smashed in with bullet holes in the windows. The air bags fully deployed.

Police are investigating a shooting that possibly happened on the eastbound lanes of Interstate 580 in Oakland near Park Avenue.

People on scene said it appeared the person driving drove off the freeway and crashed at 35th and Brookdale avenues.

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Witnesses who live in the neighborhood said they went up to the car that crashed with bullet holes and saw a woman seriously injured and a child that had been shot.

They also said both were taken to the hospital, but Oakland police and CHP have not confirmed any of these details. We reached out this morning but have not heard back.



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Classified docs 'likely concealed and removed' from Mar-a-Lago, feds say

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Tuesday that classified documents were “likely concealed and removed” from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate as part of an effort to obstruct the federal investigation into the discovery of the government records.

The FBI also seized 33 boxes containing more than 100 classified records during its Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago and found classified documents stashed in Trump's office, according to a filing that lays out the most detailed chronology to date of months of strained interactions between Justice Department officials and Trump representatives over the discovery of government secrets.

The filing offers yet another indication of the sheer volume of classified records retrieved from Mar-a-Lago. It shows how investigators conducting a criminal probe have focused not just on why the records were improperly stored there, but also on the question of whether the Trump team intentionally misled them about the continued, and unlawful, presence of the top secret documents.

The timeline laid out by the Justice Department made clear that the extraordinary search of Mar-a-Lago came only after other efforts to retrieve the records had failed, and that it resulted from law enforcement suspicion that additional documents remained inside the property despite assurances by Trump representatives that a “diligent search” had accounted for all of the material.

It also included a picture of some of the seized documents bearing clear classification markings, perhaps as a way to rebut suggestions that whoever packed them or was handling them could have easily failed to appreciate their sensitive nature.

The photo shows the cover pages of a smattering of paperclip-bound classified documents — some marked as “TOP SECRET//SCI” with bright yellow borders, and one marked as “SECRET//SCI” with a rust-colored border — along with whited-out pages, splayed out on a carpet at Mar-a-Lago. Beside them sits a cardboard box filled with gold-framed pictures, including a Time magazine cover.

Though it contains significant new details on the investigation, the Justice Department filing does not resolve a core question that has driven public fascination with the investigation — why Trump held onto the documents after he left the White House and why he and his team resisted repeated efforts to give them back. In fact, it suggests officials may not have received an answer.

During a June 3 visit to Mar-a-Lago by FBI and Justice Department officials, the document states, “Counsel for the former President offered no explanation as to why boxes of government records, including 38 documents with classification markings, remained at the Premises nearly five months after the production of the Fifteen Boxes and nearly one-and-a-half years after the end of the Administration."

That visit to Mar-a-Lago, which came weeks after the Justice Department issued a subpoena for the records, receives substantial attention in the document and appears to be a key investigative focus.

Though Trump has said he had declassified all of the documents at Mar-a-Lago, his lawyers did not suggest that during the visit and instead “handled them in a manner that suggested counsel believed that the documents were classified," according to the document.

FBI agents who went there to receive additional materials were given “a single Redweld envelope, double-wrapped in tape, containing the documents," the filing states.

That envelope, according to the FBI, contained 38 unique documents with classification markings, including five documents marked confidential, 16 marked secret and 17 marked top secret.

During that visit, the document says, Trump’s lawyers told investigators that all the records that had come from the White House were stored in one location — a Mar-a-Lago storage room — and that “there were no other records stored in any private office space or other location at the Premises and that all available boxes were searched.”

After that, though, the Justice Department, which had subpoenaed video footage for the property, “developed evidence that government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.” The filing does not identify the individuals who may have relocated the boxes.

In their August search, agents found classified documents both in the storage room as well as in the former president’s office — including three classified documents found not in boxes, but in office desks.

“That the FBI, in a matter of hours, recovered twice as many documents with classification markings as the ‘diligent search’ that the former President’s counsel and other representatives had weeks to perform calls into serious question the representations made in the June 3 certification and casts doubt on the extent of cooperation in this matter,” the document states.

It says, “In some instances, even the FBI counterintelligence personnel and DOJ attorneys conducting the review required additional clearances before they were permitted to review certain documents.”

The investigation began from a referral from the National Archives and Records Administration, which recovered 15 boxes from Mar-a-Lago in January that were found to contain 184 documents with classified markings, including top secret information.

The purpose of the Tuesday night filing was to oppose a request from the Trump legal team for a special master to review the documents seized during this month's search and set aside those protected by claims of legal privilege. U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon is set to hear arguments on the matter on Thursday.

Cannon on Saturday said it was her “preliminary intent” to appoint such a person but also gave the Justice Department an opportunity to respond.

On Monday, the department said it had already completed its review of potentially privileged documents and identified a “limited set of materials that potentially contain attorney-client privileged information.” It said Tuesday that a special master was therefore “unnecessary.”

In a separate development, the Trump legal team has grown with the addition of another attorney. Chris Kise, Florida's former solicitor general, has joined the team of lawyers representing Trump, according to two people familiar with the matter who were not authorized to discuss the move by name and spoke on condition of anonymity. Kise did not return messages seeking comment.



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Oakland Pride gets monkeypox vaccines ahead of events

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - Oakland Pride​ returns this weekend and it is getting major reinforcement from the White House to combat the spread of monkeypox. The Biden Administration plans to send thousands of vaccines to locations holding LGBTQI events, including right here in the Bay Area.  

Oakland Pride will be one of the first events to dispense thousands of vaccines. Ari Curry with Oakland Pride told KRON4, “I am very excited about it. I feel it is a stepping stone in the right direction.”

Curry is addressing the news announced Tuesday of a federal pilot program delivering 2,400 additional monkeypox vaccines to upcoming LGBTQI+ events in the country. Those events include Oakland Pride this coming Sunday, and Pridefest on September 11.  

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Curry tells KRON4, “We will be having booths set up for both COVID and m-pox, so this is just a great way to serve our community.” Oakland Pride is returning after a two-year pause due to the pandemic. 

“We are excited! It is a chance for us to be together, back to being normal and sharing love in our community,” Curry said. Besides Oakland Pride and Pridefest, vaccines are being sent to upcoming events in New Orleans, and Atlanta.



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Tuesday, 30 August 2022

California bill on solitary confinement passes

(KRON) - A bill moving forward in the state legislature aims to limit the use of solitary confinement in jails, prisons, and detention facilities. Solitary confinement is when an inmate is left alone in a cell, sometimes for months on end.

The bill is called the California Mandela Act. The state senate passed it with majority support yesterday.

KRON4 spoke with a woman who was confined alone in a California jail when she was 19 years old. She is applauding the decision.

"It truly increased my paranoia," Vanessa Ramos said. "It caused me to still live with post-traumatic stress. Being a young mom and not knowing where my baby was... it was really stressful. Detoxing in that environment was also extremely harsh."

Solitary confinement means being kept in a cell about the size of a parking spot for nearly 24 hours at a time. The American Journal of Public Health found that being kept alone in a cell for a long time increases the risk of self-harm and even more aggression. Nonprofit Immigrant Defense Advocates reports this is still commonly practiced in California jails, prisons, and detention facilities.

Ramos is now a prison reform advocate with Disability Rights California. The group has backed Assembly Bill 2632 to clearly define solitary confinement and stop the use for certain people.

This week the California senate voted in its favor. If signed by Governor Gavin Newsom, it would:

Ban solitary confinement for vulnerable populations including;

  • Individuals with disabilities
  • Pregnant women
  • Youth and elderly
  • Prohibit long-term solitary/segregated confinement by limiting the time spent in confinement to not more than 15 consecutive days, or 20 days total in any 60-day period
  • Require facilities to keep clear records on the use of solitary confinement in order to provide public transparency.

In 2019, many Bay Area county jails started only isolating inmates when they are violent. Before it could have been something minor, like talking back. It has instead shifted to rewarding good behavior.



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Crime-filled weekend in Santa Rosa includes random stabbing

SANTA ROSA, Calif. (KRON) - The Santa Rosa Police Department responded to many calls for assistance, including a stabbing at a motel, according to a Facebook post by the police department. SRPD made 47 arrests from Friday, August 26 to Monday, August 29.

The 901 total calls for assistance to the department, included five shootings, one stabbing, a burglary in progress, and elder abuse, among others. Multiple illegal firearms were also recovered, including one from a juvenile.

SRPD officers conducted a traffic stop on Saturday for a vehicle committing a traffic violation and discovered the passenger was suffering from a significant stab wound on one of his forearms. The victim reported that he was recently stabbed by an unknown person at a motel in Santa Rosa. The victim was transported to a local hospital.

In the Facebook post, SRPD reported multiple incidents of unintentional negligent discharge of a firearm. A few residents were transported to local hospitals after reportedly unintentionally shooting themselves, some investigations are still ongoing.

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On Sunday, officers responded to a shooting in a neighborhood on Cottonwood Drive, which led to the arrest of a 26-year-old Santa Rosa resident. It was determined that the suspect was under the influence.

Anyone with information about these incidents is encouraged to reach out to detectives through our online tip line at srcity.org/CrimeTips.



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Oracle Park light malfunction causes delay at Giants game

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- The San Francisco Giants' game against the San Diego Padres Monday night was delayed due to Oracle Park's lights malfunctioning. The game was put on hold for 40 minutes before resuming.

Fans had fun with the stoppage. Video shared to Twitter showed attendees singing along to "When the Lights Go Down in the City" by Journey.

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The delay happened between the second and third innings. Giants pitcher Carlos Rodon stayed in the game after the delay but only lasted four innings, leaving the game after allowing five runs.

The delay was the game's second. Home plate umpire Marvin Hudson was forced to leave the game after slipping while tracking a foul pop-up. Second base umpire John Tumpane took Hudson's place behind home plate.



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Monday, 29 August 2022

Oakland Police: Six killed in four days

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) -- In the past four days, the city of Oakland has lost six people to homicides.

Oakland Police Chief Leronne Armstrong addressed this weekend’s violence Monday afternoon. He said Monday follows the deadliest month and deadliest week the city has seen all year.

Armstrong added he is afraid the community is becoming numb to all the recent violence. "These press conferences are a sober reminder of how much pain that people are experiencing in Oakland,” said Armstrong.

Chief Armstrong was joined by faith leaders to update the community on the six people who were killed.

The first died in a shooting on August 25 near Avenal and 64th Avenues just after 5:30 p.m. A 19-year-old was pronounced dead on the scene and police are still looking for the suspect.

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Then there were three people killed near Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Stuart Street. Two people died from gunshot wounds, and one was on a bicycle and struck by a vehicle.

"I had an opportunity to come to this scene and what a horrific scene it was. To see an innocent person who was uninvolved in anything be struck by a vehicle as he's just riding his bicycle,” said Armstrong. Police are still investigating this incident.

On August 27 just before 9:30 a.m., police responded to a person shot near Sycamore Street and Northgate Avenue. The victim died from his injuries.

The final homicide of the weekend happened on August 28 just after 1:30 a.m. near Park Boulevard and Montclair Avenue. Officers responded to a car crash and found a man suffering from gunshot wounds.

The man died at the scene. "It's a call to put down these guns and stop this violence. It is causing us too much pain and our community is being destroyed by this level of violence,” added Armstrong.

Chief Armstrong said all the firearms are overwhelming the Oakland community.

"To date the Oakland Police Department has recovered over a thousand firearms. That is compared to last year where we had only recovered 800 at this time,” said Armstrong.

The city of Oakland has seen 83 homicides this year which is two less than this time last year.



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Monkeypox detected in student at North Bay high school

ROHNERT PARK, Calif. (KRON) – Monkeypox, or MPX, has been detected at a North Bay high school.  

Students at Rancho Cotate High School told KRON4 that school officials sent out an email informing them a student had monkeypox. “They didn't say the gender, they didn't name who it was, they just said the student had monkeypox and went home, and they cleaned and beware of your surroundings,” said Cali Ortiz, a student.

Some parents are worried about what this MPX case could mean for their kids. “It is really concerning. I have four daughters in the Cotati School District" said Melanie Collin, a parent.

Health officials said due to privacy laws they cannot disclose details, but they can offer some advice to parents. “It is through intimate contact only. We are telling parents if they notice their child sick or rash stay home, or if you have questions call your doctor,” said Dr. Marse, Sonoma County Public Health officer.

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The doctor said the county currently has 38 cases of monkeypox. She said available vaccines have been sent to health providers, but that is not something parents need to worry about. “Children are not at high risk so they are not in the category of getting the vaccine,” said Dr. Marse.

For Collin, she said this case at the high school is just one more thing for parents to worry about these days. “My kids are constantly, 'It is monkeypox',” said Collin.



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BART safety concerns after shooting, deadly stabbing

(KRON) – A violent weekend on BART is raising concerns for riders.

The weekend started off with a shooting on a BART train Friday near Lake Merritt in Oakland followed by a deadly stabbing Sunday outside a BART station in San Francisco’s Mission District.

Tweets about train station closures because of police activity are becoming more common from the BART Twitter account. “You always have to watch out behind your shoulder if someone is behind you,” said Richard Mutchie, BART rider.

Public transit should not come with fear, but that is what seems to be happening for BART riders. Many are wondering day to day what will happen during their daily commute on the train.

“Hop into BART we see homeless. We see junkies, it’s pretty unsafe pretty much,” said Mutchie. A violent attack happened Sunday afternoon outside the 24th Street Mission BART Station.

According to BART, surveillance video showed two men arguing near the station’s elevator above ground. One of them took out a knife and stabbed the other.

The victim staggered down to the station platform where he died. “Anxiety when I see say bad people coming onto my train or whatever and I get on there and there’s somebody sleeping there. You never know what they’re doing,” said Bruce Felmly, BART rider.

A train was the scene of a crime on Friday when a man was shot multiple times near the Lake Merritt station in Oakland while riding BART. He was taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries but is in stable condition.

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“We’re pretty confident that this was not a random attack. It appears to be that it was a targeted attack,” said BART Police Chief Ed Alvarez. According to BART, several safety measures are being taken to keep riders safe: including uniformed safety staff on platforms, police officers dedicated to riding trains, and a network of 4,000 security cameras.

“Luckily through our high presence and having more presence in our system we’re mitigating some of these issues from occurring,” said Chief Alvarez.

Police are still searching for the suspects in both incidents. The shooter on Friday ran from the BART train at the Fruitvale Station and the suspect in Sunday’s fatal stabbing also fled on foot from the area of 24th Street and Mission.



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Marijuana use hits record high in new Gallup poll

(The Hill) - Marijuana use reached a record high in new polling, as for the first time more Americans said they smoke marijuana than reported smoking cigarettes in the last week. 

Sixteen percent of Americans in a new Gallup poll reported smoking marijuana, up from 12 percent last year and more than double the all-time low of 7 percent. 

Fewer Americans, at 11 percent, reported smoking cigarettes in the past week, down from 16 percent last year and a far fall from a peak at 45 percent in the 1950s. 

It’s the highest percentage of reported marijuana use and the lowest percentage of past-week cigarette use since Gallup started asking those questions in 2013 and 1944, respectively. 

Nearly half of U.S. adults now report having tried marijuana, up from 4 percent when Gallup first surveyed about its use in 1969. 

Despite increasingly common use of the drug, Americans remain evenly split on whether marijuana is having a negative or positive effect on society.

Yet more than two-thirds of Americans, at 68 percent, think the drug should be legal, a record-high maintained from last year’s polling.

Six states could vote on ballot measures legalizing marijuana in the November midterm elections, and should they pass, will join 19 others in legalizing recreational marijuana.

Conducted July 5-26, the surveys on marijuana and tobacco use polled 1,013 U.S. adults and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.



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Here's how soon you could receive student loan forgiveness, Education Department says

(NEXSTAR) - Millions of Americans are soon going to have much, if not all, of their student loans forgiven. But one of the biggest questions that has remained since President Biden announced his student debt forgiveness plan last week is when borrowers will receive relief.

We have known that as many as 8 million borrowers may qualify for relief automatically based on income data the Department of Education already has access to. For the remaining 35 million borrowers the White House believes qualify for student loan forgiveness, a form will need to be submitted.

What we haven't known is when exactly that form would be available, and how long it would take for loan forgiveness to be approved and pushed through.

Miguel Cardona, Secretary of the Department of Education, has an answer.

In a post on Twitter, Cardona explained forgiveness will be "as easy as 1,2,3." He then outlined what the process will look like.

In early October, an application will be launched for borrowers that need to submit information needed by the Education Department.

After you've submitted that form (we don't know what it will look like, but officials have indicated it will be short) Cardona says you can expect relief within four to six weeks.

While you'll have until the end of 2023 to apply for loan forgiveness, you'll want to fill out the application before Nov. 15, 2022, to receive student debt relief before the payment pause ends, according to the Education Department.

In addition to announcing student loan forgiveness last week, President Biden extended the payment pause through the end of this year. This is the final time the pause, which was enacted in March 2020 by then-President Trump, will be extended, Biden said.

Until the application opens in October, there isn't much borrowers can do. You can, however, register to be notified when the application is available through the Department of Education by filling out this form.

There are a few factors that will determine how much student loan forgiveness you'll receive. You can review those here.

In addition to student loan forgiveness, the Biden administration proposed a new rule to create an income-driven repayment plan that will substantially reduce future monthly payments for lower- and middle-income borrowers, as well as long-term changes to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.



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Sunday, 28 August 2022

Ukrainian Independence Day celebrated in SF

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- Hundreds gathered at Golden Gate Park to celebrate Ukrainian Independence Day. This year's event was dedicated to Ukrainian culture and supporters who are standing by Ukraine during the war.

This year's "Ukraine Day" celebration coincides with the six-month milestone of Russia's invasion.

"Today, the event is bittersweet," said San Carlos resident Nataliya Kovalchuk.

Hundreds gathered at Golden Gate Park Sunday afternoon as performers took the stage.

Ukrainian Independence Day was on Aug. 24 - the day commemorates when Ukraine declared its sovereignty from the Soviet Union in 1991.

"We really appreciate the independence, really appreciate the freedom. We are free and brave people and we will fight until the end for our freedom and independence," Kovalchuk said.

The event was put on by the Ukrainian-American Coordinating Council.

Organizers say the event is dedicated to the Ukrainian people, and their supporters who are standing up for freedom against Russia.

"I'm just here donating some money, buying some of their pastries to support their cause," said attendee Nicholas Terlecky.

Terlecky, a first-generation Ukrainian, attended this event last year. He hopes people will not forget the sacrifices being made in Ukraine.

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"There's a lot of conflicts in the world that are happening and people just forget about those and go on to other things but the people in Ukraine," Terlecky said. "I mean it's every day they're living that same horror and horror is no easier and different than it was 6 months ago."



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Caught on Camera: Racist rant at Taco Bell in Fremont

FREMONT, Calif. (KRON) -- In the East Bay, the Fremont Police Department is investigating a racist rant caught on camera. The victim says he was waiting in line at a Taco Bell on Fremont Boulevard when the man seen in the video began randomly yelling at him.

Krishnan Jayaraman is the victim behind the camera in this video. He says he began recording after this man started yelling racist comments at him while Jayaraman was waiting for his order last Sunday.

"A few minutes later he again said hey pick up your bean burrito and leave. You're a vegetarian right? You don't eat beef. You should eat beef. You Indians should eat beef," Jayaraman said.

Jayaraman says this was their only interaction before the man went on his tirade.

"I'm not here to pick a fight with you," Jayaraman said. "What do you want, and he said you know you Hindus are a shame, disgusting. Then he spat on me."

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Jayaraman says that's when he and a restaurant employee called Fremont police. He says the man continued yelling for more than eight minutes.

Jayaraman says he waited inside the Taco Bell for officers to arrive -- worried that the man might be waiting outside for him. Fremont police are still investigating this incident.



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Petaluma police search for 7-Eleven shoplifting suspect

PETALUMA, Calif. (KRON) -- Authorities are searching for a suspect in connection to multiple shoplifting incidents at a 7-Eleven, the Petaluma Police Department announced in a Nixle alert. The suspect is linked to at least two incidents of shoplifting at the 7-Eleven at 124 Petaluma Blvd S. on Aug. 6 and 13.

The suspect is described to be approximately 40 years old and possibly a white man with a medium to large build, according to police. A surveillance photo (above) shows the suspect wearing a black t-shirt and a red hat.

On Aug. 6, the unidentified suspect stole several items of merchandise from the 7-Eleven and ran away from the scene on a bicycle. At the time, store employees chose not to press charges for the theft.

A week later on Aug. 13, the suspect entered the same store around 3 p.m. and again stole merchandise. This time, the man threatened to assault store employees in an attempt to dissuade them from calling the police. The suspect left the scene riding a light blue mountain bicycle.

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If anyone recognizes the suspect, police say they are encouraged to contact Officer Morgan Rasmason at (707)778-4372.   



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Forward progress stopped on Vacaville vegetation fire

VACAVILLE, Calif. (BCN) -- Fire crews with Cal Fire's Sonoma-Lake-Napa unit helped local firefighters control a vegetation fire in Vacaville Saturday night.

CalFire's media unit reported on its Twitter account that the fire broke out on the 250 block of Gibson Canyon Road. Forward progress was stopped by 10:29 p.m.

Firefighters remained on the scene to perform mop up duty.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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Oakland leaders on city's recent crime surge

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) – Another violent weekend has occurred in the city of Oakland.

Since Friday afternoon there have been two deadly shootings in west Oakland and a man was shot on BART. "We've had so much bad news about all the shootings and killing in our city but unfortunately it's not surprising," said Carl Chan, President of the Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce.

In less than 24 hours, four men were killed in west Oakland. Three men in a Friday night shooting and car crash on Martin Luther King Jr. Way and 27th Street.

One man was killed Saturday morning on Sycamore Street and Northgate Avenue. "We've seen dispensaries that have been robbed, we've seen smash and grabs, we've seen strong armed robberies. We've seen sideshows. We've seen so much going on in Oakland that the lawlessness is just out of hand,” said Nate Miley, Alameda County Supervisor.

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Friday afternoon a man was rushed to the hospital after he was shot on a BART train near the Fruitvale station. Nate Miley said the Oakland City Council needs to do more.  

"I don't think the city leadership is meeting this moment. Just because it doesn't seem to be diminishing, it seems to be increasing,” said Miley. Carl Chan said he agrees with Miley that the city council needs to do something.

"We cannot always focus on the problems. We have to start focusing more on the solutions,” said Chan. "So, I think what we need to do is going to be working with other police departments. Currently we just wrote a letter asking the asking the Alameda County Sheriff's Department to deploy additional officers in the area,” added Chan.

The most recent Oakland Police data showed violent crime is down 11 percent compared to 2021 but Chan said numbers can be deceiving. "Let's say crime went up a few hundred percent. And then the next year they say it's down by 15% remember it is still high up,” said Chan.

Chan said crime has been at an extremely high level for many years and small improvements are not enough to bring it down to a manageable level. He said the police department is still significantly understaffed leaving the people of Oakland in danger.

Miley is calling on the city council to hold an emergency public safety meeting and he wants to be a part of it.



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King City man sentenced to state prison for committing lewd acts on child

(BCN) -- A 20-year-old King City man will spend the next six years in state prison after pleading no contest to a single charge of committing a lewd act on a child under 14 years old.

The Monterey County District Attorney's Office announced the sentencing of Christopher Garduno, who also admitted that he was previously convicted of a serious felony offense. Garduno's current conviction qualifies as a violent strike under California's Three Strikes Law. He must register as a sex offender for no less than 20 years.

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On Aug. 28 of last year, the Monterey County Sheriff's Office responded to a report of a runaway 13-year-old girl. Before a deputy arrived, the girl had returned home. During an interview with her, Dep. Gregory Wise learned the girl had met Garduno on the social media site, SnapChat.

The girl told authorities Garduno knew she was only 13 years old when he came to her house and committed a lewd act with her. However, Garduno had led the girl to believe he was under the age of 18.

After Garduno came to her home, the girl left with him, which led her mother to report that she had run away. A forensic examination was conducted on her and Garduno's DNA was located.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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SF real estate broker convicted of bank fraud

SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- A federal grand jury in San Francisco has convicted a prominent real estate broker and investor of making false statements to a bank and of bank fraud tied to fraudulent misrepresentations made in a mortgage refinance loan application.

The announcement was made Friday. The verdict against Victor Makras follows a two-week trial before U.S. Chief District Judge Richard Seeborg.

Makras, 64, of San Francisco, was charged in a superseding indictment filed on May 31. The four criminal counts are related to a mortgage refinance loan obtained by an associate of Makras and the associate's wife.

Those four counts charged Makras with conspiring to make a false statement to a bank; making false statements to a bank; conspiring to commit bank fraud; and bank fraud. The jury convicted him of two counts: making false statements to a bank and bank fraud.

The jury was unable to reach a verdict on the other two counts: conspiracy to make false statements to a bank and conspiracy to commit bank fraud. Trial evidence showed that Makras defrauded Quicken Loans, a financial lending institution, in a $1.3 million real estate mortgage loan secured by property owned by the Makras associate, who was the borrower on the loan.

In the application for the $1.3 million loan, Makras represented to Quicken Loans a falsely inflated debt amount of $915,000 that Makras claimed the borrower owed to Makras and his investors. The falsely inflated debt allowed the borrower to conceal other debts from Quicken.

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The other outstanding debts included over $89,000 owed to a contractor for extensive remodel work on the property that was provided to the borrower without contemporaneous billing. Another debt concealed from the company was a $70,000 unsecured personal loan made by Makras to the borrower.

This case is part of a larger federal investigation targeting public corruption in the City and County of San Francisco. To date, 12 individuals have been charged, including high-ranking San Francisco public official Mohammed Nuru who was sentenced yesterday to seven years in federal prison.

Multiple city contractors and facilitators have also been charged.

Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc.



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Saturday, 27 August 2022

Air quality advisory issued in Bay Area for Sunday

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- An air quality advisory has been issued for Sunday due to wildfire smoke, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District announced. Officials say smoke from the Rum Creek Fire in southwest Oregon is expected to impact the Bay Area.

The agency said isolated pockets of elevated air pollution levels are possible. However, pollution levels are not expected to exceed the national 24-hour standard.

A Spare the Air Alert will not be in effect Sunday, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District said. Air quality is not expected to be unhealthy, although smoky and hazy skies may be visible in parts of the region.

If residents can smell smoke, officials say it is important to avoid exposure by staying inside with windows and doors closed. Elderly persons and individuals with respiratory illnesses are advised to take extra precautions.

A Spare the Air Alert is issued when air quality is "unhealthy." The alert urges residents to drive less, which officials say is the best way to improve air quality.

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Real-time air quality conditions can be viewed on the Bay Area Air Quality Management District's website HERE.



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Burning man returns this weekend

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - Burning Man is back! Thousands from the Bay Area are starting to make their way to Black Rock City for the experience that officially starts Sunday.

Gates opened today at noon, allowing work crews to get in and start setting up their camps. KRON 4 caught up with some burners excited for their week in the desert.

This will be the first Burning Man since COVID. The art, music, and sense of community will be back, as well as some new policies learned during the last two years.

“Waking Dreams” is the theme of this year’s Burning Man. Gates opened Friday for those with Workers Access Passes, like Gina Giacalone, to get in and set up camp.

Giacalone is going for her first Burning Man. Her backseat is packed to the ceiling as she and her husband get ready to leave their El Cerrito home to head to the Playa for their first Burning Man.

Giacalone tells us she is excited to celebrate, “with music, with outfits and being able to express yourself however and wherever you’d like to.” She had planned to set up camp in Black Rock City in the past, but the pandemic had other plans -- also postponing her wedding for two years -- but now she’s married.

“There’s bike wheels, lights, disco balls,” Giacalone said. “I’m excited to go in as a newbie and experience just the excitement from others that have gone.”

Others are experienced burners, like Gabe Turner from Marin County. This year will be his fifth time going to Burning Man.

Turner tells KRON4, “it’s like an experiment in living, living differently in that people just open up right away out there and there’s not this kind of layer out there that we have in what we call the 'default world.'”

There will also be some new things that organizers came up with during their two years off, such as camps led by burners of color and events on topics of diversity and radical inclusion.

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"The world has changed a lot and I think Burning Man is the place to reflect on those changes,” Turner said. He wants to enjoy the festival while also living by the popular Burning Man values of gift giving, self-expression, and leaving no trace to preserve the environment.

Organizers said that after ongoing conversations with medical experts, there will not be any health or COVID entry requirements. This means that proof of vaccination or a negative test will not be needed to get into Burning Man. 



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Vallejo wrong-way truck driver causes fatal crash in Placer County: CHP

PLACER COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- One person died after a wrong-way crash Friday afternoon on State Route 89 in Placer County, California Highway Patrol announced in a press release. The incident happened around 1:20 p.m. when a 43-year-old Vallejo man was driving a white box truck in the area north of Goose Meadows at an unknown speed.

The truck driver crossed the solid double yellow lines and drove into southbound traffic -- crashing into three vehicles. According to CHP, these were the three vehicles involved in the crash:

  • Black Ford Eco Sport driven
    • driven by 42-year-old Tempe, AZ resident
  • White Subaru Impreza
    • driven by 37-year-old Olympic Valley resident
  • Black Subaru Outback
    • driven by 42-year-old Truckee resident

The white truck sideswiped the black Ford and black Subaru and then crashed into the white Subaru head-on. The driver of the white Subaru later died from injuries.

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The driver of the black Subaru and a passenger from the white truck were taken to Tahoe Forest Hospital for "minor injuries," CHP said. As of Friday evening, drugs or alcohol do not appear to be a factor in the collision.



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Friday, 26 August 2022

San Pablo police arrest man for carjacking outside casino

SAN PABLO, Calif. (KRON) -- The San Pablo Police Department arrested a suspect accused of carjacking, kidnapping, and robbery, police said Friday. Police said the incident happened outside the San Pablo Lytton Casino at 13255 San Pablo Avenue.

The victim was sleeping in his car when two men wearing ski masks brandished a gun at him, police said. The man ordered the victim to drive away and took his car, leaving him in a nearby neighborhood.

Several local agencies worked with the San Pablo Investigations Unit to find the suspects. One suspect was arrested on Aug. 12.

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The second suspect was located in Oakland on Friday, San Pablo police said. SPPD's SWAT team was called to the residence and was found hiding in the attic after a three-hour standoff. Police found a loaded rifle along with the suspect.



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San Francisco police chief defends officers in catalytic converter controversy

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- San Francisco's police chief responded to criticism that his officers did not do enough to catch a suspected catalytic converter thief caught in the act.

The incident happened around 3 a.m. Tuesday when home surveillance video captured a Honda Accord parking in the area near 24th Street and Anza Street in San Francisco’s Richmond District. A Jeep could be seen nearby.

KRON4 spoke to a witness, Morgan Heller. “I woke up to the sound of what I thought was kind of like drilling. It sounded like a tile cutter. I thought it might be a catalytic converter being cut,” she said.

She says that is exactly what it was. Heller and her roommate called 911 and police arrived quickly. Heller says officers even pulled a man from under the car and detained him but ultimately let him go.

Heller says officers told her they did not have enough evidence to make an arrest. The owner of the car was not there and while the man carried a car jack, he had not yet taken the converter.

On Friday San Francisco Police Chief William Scott responded to the scrutiny by explaining, "Officers arrived on scene, detained a suspect, conducted a preliminary investigation, and determined probable cause did not exist to make an arrest at that time. I support their decision. This case has been the subject of public scrutiny and media attention across several platforms, which has jeopardized the public trust that the SFPD has worked hard to earn."

"In this case, a suspect was observed by a witness under a vehicle as the witness could hear metal being sawed. When officers arrived on scene, the suspect was standing next to the vehicle and was in possession of a car jack. Officers observed that the catalytic converter was damaged," Scott wrote. "When officers determine that there is not enough evidence to arrest an individual, and further investigation is needed, they may release that person pursuant to Penal Code section 849(b). We always encourage anyone who believes they are a witness or victim of a crime to call the police immediately. Here witnesses called 911, and coupled with a quick response, officers were able to disrupt a crime before it was completed."



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Three arrested after pursuit in SF

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - Two people were arrested for aggravated assault in San Francisco Tuesday after a vehicle pursuit, and a third was arrested for their participation according to a press release sent to KRON4 on Friday. The suspects were arrested after colliding with vehicles, including police vehicles, and bicycle racks. 

The vehicle driven by the suspects was determined to have been stolen from San Leandro, the release said. During the first traffic stop attempted by the police department, the suspects intentionally collided their vehicle with the occupied police vehicle, initiating a vehicle pursuit and causing minor injuries to an officer.

The suspects’ vehicle stopped in the area of Laguna Street after colliding with a bicycle rack. The driver, 29-year-old Tiara Raina Hewitt, and passenger, 33-year-old Demarco Ransom were taken into custody after the vehicle stopped.

A third suspect was identified by authorities, observed to have been participating in a transaction with Hewitt and Ransom, 54-year-old Jorge Robles from Daly City. Police said officers located stolen goods, a laptop, medications, and other items in this vehicle. 

Hewitt was taken to the San Francisco County Jail for the following counts: assault with deadly weapon, carrying concealed firearm in a vehicle, resisting/delaying arrest, possession of stolen property, hit and run involving injury, reckless evading of a police officer, disobeying traffic signals, among others. Hewitt was also discovered to have six outstanding arrest warrants.

Ransom was transported to a local hospital and was later released to the county jail. He was arrested for the following counts: carrying a concealed firearm in a vehicle, resisting/delaying arrest, felon in possession of a firearm, and conspiracy among others.

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While arrests have been made, this remains an open and active investigation.  Anyone with information is asked to call the SFPD Tip Line at 1-415-575-4444 or Text a Tip to TIP411 and begin the text message with SFPD.



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Five lingering questions on Biden's student loan forgiveness plan

(The Hill) - President Biden’s plan to forgive up to $20,000 for Pell Grant recipients and $10,000 for other student loan holders is a controversial move cheered by many Democrats but jeered by Republicans, who say it will increase inflation.  

The effort — the largest student loan forgiveness plan in U.S. history — also leaves a lot of questions.  

Here are five of the biggest. 

Will it raise inflation? 

Biden’s plan immediately came under fire for the potential negative impact it could have on the already 40-year high inflation rate, with some economists warning it will be highly inflationary. Others have said any effect is likely to be more marginal. 

While Republicans are using inflation to hammer the White House, the criticism that the plan could raise inflation is also coming from at least some political allies to Biden.  

Jason Furman, a Harvard professor and former top economic adviser to President Obama, said Wednesday that it is “reckless” to pour “roughly half [a] trillion dollars of gasoline on the inflationary fire that is already burning.” 

The White House argued any risk on inflation will be mitigated by the fact that while it is extending the years-long payment pause on federal student loans through Dec. 31, the pause will end in January 2023. Officials argued that the combination of restarting loan payments while providing some relief will basically zero out any inflationary effect. 

The pause has long been seen as a program that could be adding to inflation, though other stimulus programs and the fact that consumers saved money during the pandemic are likely bigger factors. 

“It’s pretty clear that the pause in student loan repayment has probably been a little bit inflationary, that’s money that would have been drawn down from the economy and has stayed in peoples’ pockets,” said Kevin Miller, Bipartisan Policy Center associate director for higher education policy.  

Will colleges raise tuition in response? 

Many observers have questioned whether colleges will raise tuition in response to the Biden move, under the rationale that more forgiveness could be on the way. 

“It creates this problem of once you have forgiven or have canceled loans, just broadly … that sets a precedent and it gives people going forward an expectation and a reasonable argument,” said Neal McCluskey, policy analyst at the CATO Institution. “If people don’t think their loans will ever have to be repaid or repaid in full, they have incentive to take out more loans.” 

Others doubt it will have an immediate or substantial impact on tuition.   

“Most schools are basically multilevel organizations,” said Dalié Jiménez, director of the student loan law initiative at the University of California Irvine. “The process of setting tuition prices, there are just so many inputs that I don’t know that it would have any kind of immediate effect on average or overall.”   

The Department of Education will be “vigilant” and “laser-focused” with bad actors, according to officials, and plans to publish an annual “watch list” of institutions with the worst debt levels as a way to hold accountable colleges that have contributed to the student debt crisis.

Will this stand up to court challenges? 

Court challenges to Biden’s effort are expected, though their precise nature is a bit of a mystery. 

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Thursday that the White House is confident in its legal authority and that the steps will hold up in court. 

The legal authority the White House has pointed to is through the 2003 HEROES Act, which gives the Secretary of Education authority to take certain actions believed to be necessary to ensure a borrower is not placed in a worse position financially due to a national emergency, like the COVID-19 pandemic. 

McCluskey said it’s far from clear those holding student debt were made worse off during the pandemic.   

“College graduates were sort of the most insulated from the negative impacts of the pandemic and the associated economic problems that went with it and lockdown because they were most able to continue working,” he said.  

“They have been made much better off regarding their loans as they have been frozen,” he added.  

McCluskey also raised the issue that Biden is “essentially appropriating money,” which is a power that belongs to Congress. But, he noted, the Democratic-controlled Congress is not likely to challenge that.

“To say loans, which is money from the government that has to returned, now doesn’t have to be returned, that turns the loan into a grant,” he said.

Democratic Rep. Chris Pappas (N.H.) said on Wednesday that the decision “sidesteps Congress and our oversight and fiscal responsibilities.” 

Who is in and out in terms of eligibility? 

The policy appears to leave out a very small number of borrowers— estimated to be about 5 percent of those who have loans. 

The program caps eligibility for the program by income level; $125,000 for a single person and $250,000 for couples.  

If everyone who is eligible claims the relief, 43 million federal student loan borrowers will benefit and nearly 90 percent of the benefits will go to borrowers earning less than $75,000, according to the White House.  

Who pays for it? 

Taxpayers will pick up the bill for the program, though it isn’t clear how much the price tag will be and the White House has skirted questions on the issue.

Reporters pressed Jean-Pierre for a cost estimate at the White House briefing on Thursday and she leaned on saying it’s unclear how many borrowers will take up the offer. 

The White House has insisted the loan forgiveness will be fully paid for because of other policies it says Biden has taken to reduce the deficit.

Republicans are going on the attack, raising political issues that aren’t going away.

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) said the plan is a “scheme” that “forces blue-collar workers to subsidize white-collar graduate students.” He and other Republicans have also argued the plan will help wealthy people, given the income levels are capped at $125,00 and $250,000. 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called the decision a “wildly unfair distribution” of wealth in favor of higher-earning Americans and a “slap in the face” to those in the workforce who made sacrifices to pay off their debt.  

How the arguments on both sides resonate with blue collar workers — a demographic Democrats worry they could lose to the GOP in the midterms — will be closely watched in November.

Biden is betting enough people will support the forgiveness, particular in minority communities, to ward off political hits from the GOP.



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Missing Bay Area man's car found on fire along Hwy 101

CLOVERDALE, Calif. (KRON) -- The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office is asking the public for help finding a missing man who vanished under "suspicious circumstances" more than a month ago and his car was found on fire.

Gregory Peterson, 62, of Cloverdale, has been missing since July 16.

"At around 4:00 am Gregory Peterson left his home in the 30000 block of Highway 128. Peterson was believed to have been contacted by an unknown acquaintance who had vehicle issues and needed assistance," the sheriff's office wrote.

On July 17 at 11:30 a.m., his vehicle was found burning on Highway 101 north of Cloverdale. Peterson has not been seen or heard from since, according to SCSO.

Peterson was described as 6'03" tall, weighing 200 pounds. Anyone with information about his whereabouts is encouraged to call the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office Investigations Unit at 707-565-2185.

A reward of up to $2,500 is being offered by the Sonoma County Alliance Community Engagement and Safety Rewards Fund. The reward is for information leading to Peterson's whereabouts. If foul play was behind his disappearance and a crime occurred, the reward will be given for information leading to the arrest of the person responsible.

Gregory Peterson (Image courtesy SCSO)


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