PCH Crash Driver Arrested

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PCH Crash Driver Arrested
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The 22-year-old driver arrested and released after a deadly crash along Pacific Coast Highway last week was re-arrested Tuesday on suspicion of murder.A 22-year-old driver who authorities say caused a crash along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu that killed four Pepperdine students has been rearrested on suspicion of more serious charges.

The city council is also looking into declaring a local state of emergency to prevent future collisions along the highway. Johnson will take office with just over three weeks before government funding expires on Nov. 17, and a week after President Biden requested ae for Israel, Ukraine, border security funding and other foreign policy goals. He will face the same challenge that ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., did ahead of an earlier funding deadline: how to govern a fractious conference that includes conservative hardliners and members in swing seats with a razor-thin majority.

Johnson, a Christian conservative, had the bonafides to win over the hardliners, without the baggage that tanked Jordan's candidacy. Jordan is one of the most fervently far-right members of the House Republican conference, and was a founding member of the House Freedom Caucus. He gained a national profile as one of former President Trump's biggest defenders during his two impeachments.

Congress is also set to consider supplemental funding for national security concerns, including border security funding and assistance for Ukraine and Israel. In the past, Johnson has opposed money for Ukraine.announcing his candidacy for speaker, Johnson cited the attacks on Israel and emboldened adversaries as two major challenges facing the congress, but did not provide specifics on what he would or would not bring to the floor.

In a statement, PRRI researchers say they have asked about this in"eight separate surveys since March 2021." They said that"this is the first time support for political violence has peaked above 20%" in their survey results. Currently one-third of Republicans support violence as a means to save the country, compared with 22% of independents and 13% of Democrats, the survey found. More specifically, Republicans who have favorable views of Donald Trump were found to be"nearly three times as likely as Republicans who have unfavorable views of Trump" to support political violence.

"The vast majority of Americans say they actually trust those professionals to choose appropriate books," Jones said."So, you know, we're hearing some very loud voices, I think, on this front about what's happening in public schools. For the most part, Americans trust their teachers and really are not behind these bans."Malibu Driver Arrested Again, Assistance Available For Small Landlords In LA, & R.I.P. Richard Roundtree — The A.M.

“There is a general consensus that folks do not receive quality care at Centinela Hospital,” said maternal and infant health program coordinator Gabrielle Brown. “We're looking to figure out why and find solutions to ensure that Black and brown bodies receive the quality of care that they truly deserve.”We’re here to help curious Angelenos connect with others, discover the new, navigate the confusing, and even drive some change along the way.

Sadie told me multiple times that she and her husband, Eddie Martinez, are just “everyday people.” They met young while growing up in San Francisco’s Mission District, and moved north to Petaluma to give their kids a better life. Petaluma, a small town surrounded by farmland, is almost 70% white, and the Martinezes feel like they stand out there. Still before all this, they felt lucky.

Katie, who has shoulder length blond hair, blue eyes, and is wearing a gray beanie, a black leather jacket, and tiny gold pendant, describes the couple as “not kind,” and then pauses before qualifying, “that sounds bad. But they weren't, um, they weren't clean-cut individuals.”. At the time, she had around 3,000 followers, and ran a small online business selling supplements, cosmetics and dispensing advice on “mindful mothering.

“Every 30 seconds or so, I'm, I'm wanting to yell and, and scream and be like, you know, what the eff are you talking about, lady?” he recalled. “I couldn't believe what was coming outta someone's mouth.” By the time this conversation took place, the Petaluma Police Department had already spoken to Katie Sorensen three times about her attempted kidnapping accusation.

Katie walked to her car and was buckling her 1-year old daughter into her car seat while her 4-year old son sat in the stroller. She saw the couple approach. The dispatcher told Katie to come down to the police station to speak with an officer. This time, she added a new detail about the couple’s appearance.Officer McGovern seemed stumped by the entire interaction. He told Katie it sounded like suspicious behavior, but didn’t meet the criteria of attempted kidnapping. Katie told him she didn’t want to press charges, she just wanted to “make people aware so it doesn’t happen to someone else.

Even Sadie Martinez acknowledged that this is part of why local parents took Katie Sorensen’s accusation so seriously:One of the people who saw Katie's video was Officer McGovern, who had interviewed Katie the week earlier. He noticed a new detail that Katie hadn’t mentioned when they first spoke: she now said the man had reached for her stroller.McGovern and a detective named Corie Joerger drove to Katie's house to question her about the inconsistencies in her story.

But when Joerger placed the grainy surveillance photo of Sadie and Eddie at the cash register on the table, Sorensen looked at it and said, “I’m a hundred percent sure that’s them.”“That part, without a shadow of a doubt, that is what was happening,” she said. “I will testify that is what happened.” Later that day, December 14, the police sent out their news release. Sadie’s daughter walked into her mom’s bedroom to show her a photo on her phone. And not long after that, Sadie got a Facebook message from the Petaluma police.They said they had gone to Michaels on December 7 because they needed to buy a baby Jesus for their nativity scene. Eddie had the day off from his job at UPS for his birthday, so they went to the store together. He wandered around while Sadie picked out the figurine.

Later that day, the police announced they were closing their investigation into the attempted kidnapping, and opening a new one — into whether Katie Sorensen had falsely reported a crime.That Friday, on Dec. 17, 2020, Sadie Martinez held a press conference in the Michaels parking lot. She wanted to formally clear their names.

She stood there for a minute, chin up, unsmiling as people clapped and cheered and reporters began to holler out questions. In TikToks and Instagram stories and YouTube reaction videos, people were grouping what had happened to Sadie with all the other “Karen” incidents that were going viral in 2020:People online were also making a big deal of the fact that Katie had been a mom-influencer. The theory was that Katie was trying to boost her social media following by making an emotional video positioning herself as a victim.

Late 2020 was a very weird time to be on the internet. Trump had lost the election, but hadn’t conceded. It was the deadliest period of the COVID pandemic to date, and we were all social distancing. Vaccines were about to roll out but no one had them yet. Everyone was online all the time, and conspiracy theories were rampant.

“There was a lot of misinformation on social media at the time that had led a lot of women to start to believe that child sex trafficking was a way bigger issue than statistically we know it is,” said Stephanie McNeal, a BuzzFeed News reporter who wrote about Katie's accusation. “I think people were brainwashed honestly. I think that moms were going to Michaels or Target, and they were legitimately afraid that their children were gonna be kidnapped at any moment.

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