[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Jordan Darling

Four Inland Empire school districts have signed onto a letter to the U.S. Supreme Court to support a case seeking to ban transgender athletes from girls and women’s sports.

Advocates for Faith & Freedom, a Murrieta-based law firm, on Friday, Sept. 19, filed what’s known as an amicus brief on behalf of several districts in California. The Inland districts are the Chino Valley, Temecula Valley, Murrieta Valley and Perris Union High school districts. The brief backs a West Virginia law barring transgender athletes from girls and women’s sports that is before the high court.

RELATED: Trans teammate poses danger, 3 SRJC volleyball players allege in Title IX complaint

The brief argues that expanding “sex” under Title IX to include gender identity “ignores biological realities, endangering female students’ physical safety, psychological well-being, and equal opportunities,” a Sept. 22 news release from the law firm states.

The brief does not make the districts part of the legal case.

West Virginia is appealing a lower-court ruling that found a ban on transgender athletes in girls and women’s sports violates the rights of Becky Pepper-Jackson, who has been taking puberty-blocking medication and has identified as a girl since she was in third grade. Pepper-Jackson, a transgender athlete, sued the state during middle school because she wanted to compete on the cross country and track teams.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled for Pepper-Jackson in two areas, under the Constitution’s equal protection clause and the landmark federal law known as Title IX that forbids sex discrimination in education.

The Supreme Court is expected to hear the case later this year.

The Temecula and Murrieta school boards held special meetings Sept. 17 and Chino Valley met Monday, Sept. 8, to consider joining the effort.

Chino Valley’s board unanimously agreed to do so. In Murrieta, the vote was 3-1, with board member Nancy Young voting no and calling it a political stunt. Temecula trustees passed the action with three votes. Board member Steve Schwartz could not attend the meeting and trustee Emil Barham excused himself from the vote, saying it “smelled of corruption.”

RELATED: Justice Department sues California over transgender student athletes

Before the Temecula board went into closed session Wednesday, Sept. 17, Barham argued that the board should deliberate in public. When the board did not agree, he declined to take part in the vote and sat in the audience.

Barham called the process rushed and said the firm did not provide the brief beforehand.

“How can we have effective governance when this is just thrown at us?” he asked. “I believe that this was done purposefully so we would not have a chance to even think or look.”

In Murrieta, trustee Young said that the board was ignoring the community and following a “playbook that is being directed by outside groups.”

“You’ve launched quite a few attacks on our LGBTQ community and there is not an emergency that required we all had to give up our free evening so that you can launch yet another one,” Young said.

The brief had nothing to do with the district or its students, she said, adding that the board was failing in its obligation to be nonpartisan.

In California, several districts have launched fights over the rights of transgender students.

The Murrieta, Chino and Temecula districts have seen court battles in past years over a parent notification policy that would require schools to inform parents if their child changes their name, pronouns or looks to gender affirming sports or facilities.

Murrieta’s school board later rescinded its policy in October 2024. Temecula rescinded its original policy in December 2024 after a Public Employee Relations Board ruling said it violated California laws and then rewrote the policy in June. Chino rewrote its policy in 2024 after a judge ruled that parts of the policy were discriminatory.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law in July 2024 prohibiting districts from implementing such policies.

The same districts have also made news for banning flags other than the United States or military flags from the classroom and supporting a resolution that would support laws barring transgender athletes from participating in girls sports.

In 2013, California passed AB 1266, a law that permits students to access restrooms, sports teams and other facilities based on their gender identity.

Sonja Shaw, president of the Chino Valley school board and a candidate for California State Superintendent, said state legislators have “sat back while girls in California have been hurt.”

“We believe every girl deserves fair and safe access to athletics and private spaces,” Shaw wrote in a Monday, Sept. 22, text message.

Signing onto the brief goes beyond sports, she said. It’s about fairness, safety, opportunities and the rights of female athletes that Shaw said are being stolen.

“By joining this brief, we are standing with female athletes and families, demanding accountability, and sending a clear message: Girls matter, and their protections under federal law will not be ignored,” Shaw said.

Murrieta school board member Christine Schmidt said the goal is to protect girls and said critics were “throwing girls under the bus.”

“As far as the amicus brief, it is great way to put our views before the Supreme Court without going into litigation,” Schmidt said. “This is a way to show we want to protect Title IX.”

Temecula school board President Dr. Melinda Anderson said she was approached about the possibility of supporting the brief six weeks ago. As someone who ran on fairness in girls sports, Anderson said it was the right thing to do.

“I believe demonstrating our support for fairness is far more constructive and far more powerful than tearing each other down,” Anderson said.

Board member Joseph Komrosky said it was about turning the “social construct back into a biological reality,” and said he was sick of “this type of wokeism.”

Pepper-Jackson, the teen in the case, is being represented by the National ACLU, ACLU of West Virginia, Lambda Legal, and Cooley LLP. The legal team expects to file its brief by November, Amanda Goad, director of gender, sexuality, and reproductive justice at the ACLU of Southern California said in a Tuesday, Sept. 23, statement.

“On and off the playing fields, we all deserve the right to excel as who we are without politicians trying to police our bodies or identities,” Goad wrote.

Goad said that that California’s school boards were submitting a misinformation-laden brief and contributing to a broader coordinated effort to increase government control.

“We all want sports to be fair and student-athletes to be safe,” Goad said. “Sadly, some elected officials and school leaders are promoting bans that not only demean and harm trans students, but also expose all girls interested in sports to invasive scrutiny.”

The Redlands Unified School District board, which has been criticized for following the lead of other districts, did not hold a special meeting to consider joining the effort, though board members Candy Olson and Jeanette Wilson sought such a session.

“I desperately wanted a special meeting to be called to discuss and vote on whether to join, but it did not happen because the majority of board members did not support doing so,” Olson wrote in a Sept. 22 text message.

Board President Michelle Rendler, could not be reached for comment as of Tuesday afternoon.

Supporting the brief was a “no-risk situation,” Olson wrote.

The board had previously passed a resolution protecting girls sports, making support of the brief a “no-brainer,” she said.

The resolution, “fairness in girls’ sports”, passed April 22, parroted language in a failed state Assembly bill that would have barred transgender athletes from sports that do not align with their gender assigned at birth. The resolution was passed by the Chino, Temecula and Murrieta school boards.

“No legal risk attached and being part of something greater to support biological girls and their rights to compete in an equal/level playing field, in addition to protecting their safety,” Olson wrote.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

classicfilmex: (Default)
[personal profile] classicfilmex
All of our pinch hits are in feverishly working hands (if you have free hands and a hankering to be doing some writing, don't forget about the treats for pinch-hitters post!), so the collection is currently set to open on time. HOWEVER, due to the planned AO3 outage (thanks to everyone who pointed it out) which is scheduled to be in progress at our reveal time, we are going to delay reveals for 24 hours, until September 27.

The Gift Of Encouragement

Sep. 24th, 2025 01:00 pm
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

I remember the first time I told my Mom the publisher wanted me to go on a book tour for Cake Wrecks. She responded by telling me about an author she'd seen at a big warehouse store the previous weekend, sitting alone behind a card table and looking desperate.

"I just don't want that for you," she said.

...

Motherly concern aside, you could say my mom has a real gift for encouragement.

Kind of like these people:

"Oh, and happy engagement. I guess."

 

This is your moment. Enjoy it.

 

Q: What do you get the birthday girl who's allergic to birthday cake?

A: A birthday cake with an apology. ("More cake for us! Woot!")

 

As we get older, we look for signs from our loved ones that age is really just a number, it's about staying young at heart, etc, etc.

"Well, sure, NOW I am."

 

And there's nothing quite so encouraging as ill-concealed shock at your personal accomplishments:

"We had you guys pegged at two years, tops. Wow!"

 

And finally:

"Note that we haven't expressed any sadness over this fact, or stated whether Kyle is happy regarding his imminent departure. However, the fact that we're having cake would seem to indicate a celebration of Kyle's coming absence."

"Wow, you got all that from four words?!"

"No, I'm reading the card."

 

Thanks to Edmund H., Rachael G., Kim K., Sarah C., G.D., & Kyle C. for the encouraging words.

*****

Oh hey, this seems like a good time to remind you this exists:

Cake Wrecks, THE BOOK

It's totes hilarz, and I don't say things like "totes hilarz" in it even once.

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

Did You Make a Thing?

Sep. 24th, 2025 03:44 pm
dancing_serpent: (Actors - Hou Minghao - Wang Ye)
[personal profile] dancing_serpent posting in [community profile] c_ent
This month is almost over, so, let's hear it. *g* How did it go with your fannish creativity?

Did you manage to make a thing?

Created fanart or made vids? Wrote fic or meta? How about picspams, link collections, character mood boards, themed playlists, promo posts, or whatever else you create for fannish enjoyment?

Here's the place to share it with us! Leave a link in the comments, or elaborate on it as much as you want.
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Cats Are Hard To Train, But This Cat Took The Reins

I used to keep the account books for several small businesses, and I often worked in their houses using their dining tables as a desk.
At one such house, the family had a golden retriever and a cat who seemed to be the best of friends.

Read Cats Are Hard To Train, But This Cat Took The Reins

Knightfall: Showcase '93 #7

Sep. 24th, 2025 02:30 pm
iamrman: (Bon Clay)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Doug Moench

Pencils and inks: Klaus Janson


While Alfred tries to save the seriously injured Bruce, Tim thinks back to a previous adventure.


Read more... )

Call Me Maybe… Or Not

Sep. 24th, 2025 01:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Call Me Maybe… Or Not

Teen: "Hey, I can't buy anything, but can I log in to the store wifi?"
Me: "I mean, I guess?"
Teen: "Thanks! I gotta meet up with my friend, but I ran out of data, and I can't find them! Had to walk all the way over here to find wifi!"

Read Call Me Maybe… Or Not

(no subject)

Sep. 24th, 2025 12:45 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read

So my dad moved to Scotland up from somewhere down South, and so the majority of communication with his family comes via telephone. He has five brothers and so quite a large extended family. One day this happens. Dad: [Answering the phone] “Hello, this is (Name) Smith, who’s calling?” Caller: “…who?” Dad: “(Name) Smith…who’s this? […]

Read

senmut: Autobot symbol (Transformers: Autobots)
[personal profile] senmut posting in [community profile] no_true_pair
Title: State Union
Fandom: Transformers [G1]
Pairing/Characters: Megatron & Midnight [OC]
Content Notes: none
Prompt: September Twenty-four - 5 & 8 - sparkle and shine

Megatron strode into the chamber )

Home Office mit Exposés

Sep. 24th, 2025 02:48 pm
[syndicated profile] pr_blog_feed

Posted by Enpunkt

Am heutigen Tag arbeite ich daheim; ich mache also das, was ich früher immer als einen »Redigiertag« bezeichnete. Der Unterschied zu früher: Ich redigiere heute nicht, sondern ich arbeite an Exposés und Datenblättern.

Ben Calvin Hary hat mir einen ganzen Packen davon geschickt, digital natürlich. Die einzelnen Dateien sehe ich mir an; ich lese sie so gründlich wie möglich. An der einen oder anderen Stelle habe ich vielleicht einen kritischen Einwand, meist aber bin ich sehr zufrieden.

Ich prüfe, zu welchem Termin das ferige Manuskript bei uns im Verlag eingehen muss, und ich schaue mir an, wer den Roman schreibt und wer das Titelbild macht. Solche Eckpunkte sind schließlich elementar, wenn es darum geht, einen neuen PERRY RHODAN-Roman zu veröffentlichen.

Inhaltlich befinde ich  mich bei diesen Exposés und Datenblättern schon weit im »PEGASOS«-Zyklus. Während für die Leserinnen und Leser also gerade die Endphase des »PHOENIX«-Zyklus läuft, arbeiten wir bereits an Romanen, die in der ersten Jahreshälfte 2026 erscheinen werden.

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Jason Green

OAKLAND – An East Bay resident was sentenced Tuesday to nearly 20 years in prison for committing a series of arsons and firebombings last year at UC Berkeley and the Oakland federal building, prosecutors said.

Casey Robert Goonan, 35, of Oakland and Pleasant Hill, previously pleaded guilty to one count of maliciously damaging or destroying property used in or affecting interstate commerce by means of fire or an explosive, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

On June 1, 2024, Goonan placed a bag containing six explosive devices commonly known as Molotov cocktails underneath the fuel tank of a marked University of California Police Department patrol car parked near UC Berkeley, prosecutors said.

Goonan lit the bag on fire and the flames spread to the patrol car, according to prosecutors. The incident was caught on camera.

On June 11, 2024, Goonan also tried to firebomb the Ronald V. Dellums Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in Oakland, prosecutors said, adding that Goonan arrived at the federal building carrying a bag containing three Molotov cocktails. Goonan threw rocks at the building, hoping to break a window in order to throw the devices inside.

The plan was foiled by protective services officers, and Goonan instead placed the devices in a planter on the side of the building and lit them on fire, according to prosecutors.

Goonan set other fires at the UC Berkeley campus on June 1, June 13 and June 16, 2024.

Prosecutors said Goonan acknowledged that the arsons and firebombings were inspired by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, and that they called on others to damage property on Bay Area college campuses in support of Palestine. Goonan admitted the acts were intended to influence the conduct of the state and federal governments.

“We are all free to think what we want and express those views peacefully, but the use of violence to achieve political aims — or to silence those with whom you may disagree — has no place in our community and our country,” U.S. Attorney Craig H. Missakian said in a statement. “Anyone who crosses the line between peaceful protest and violence will be met with the full force of the law.”

The court on Tuesday referred to Goonan as a “domestic terrorist” and found that they had committed a felony offense that involved or was intended to promote a federal crime of terrorism, according to prosecutors.

In addition to the prison term, a judge ordered Goonan to serve 15 years of supervised release after they are released from custody, as well as to pay $94,267.51 in restitution.

Goonan has been in custody since their initial arrest on state charges on June 17, 2024.

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Claire Wang

For Irvine resident Ilene Feng, it’s worth paying a premium on ticket prices to fly out of John Wayne Airport.

Compared to Los Angeles International Airport, she said, the lines at Orange County airport are shorter, the terminals closer and the parking more convenient. She can park across the street and reach the terminal within minutes, she said.

“It’s the best airport, especially if you have a family,” Feng said Monday morning, on her way to Vancouver with her two young children, Skylar and Emmalie.

RELATED: San Jose, Oakland airports struggle in 2025 while SFO glides higher

For a second consecutive year, JWA ranked highest in overall passenger satisfaction among large airports in North America, according to new research from consumer data firm J.D. Power.

The firm’s 2025 North America Airport Satisfaction Study, released Sept. 17, draws on feedback from more than 30,000 U.S. or Canadian travelers between July 2024 and July 2025. The rankings are based on flyer satisfaction scores across seven broad categories.

Among large airports, defined as those that handle 10 million to 32.9 million passengers annually, JWA ranked first in five of those categories: departure and arrival experience, ease of travel through the airport, terminal facilities and level of trust with the airport. The airport, which sees about 11 million flyers in a year, finished in the Top 10 in the two other criteria: airport staff and food, beverage and retail.

“We spend a great deal of time here, as the administration, trying to engage with the passengers and upgrade our amenities,” said Charlene Reynolds, the airport director at JWA. “We’re really focused on the guest experience.”

Several other Southern California airports also performed well in the study. Ontario International Airport came second in the medium-sized category, for airports with 4.5 million to 9.9 million annual flyers. Hollywood-Burbank Airport ranked in ninth place among medium-sized airports.

Los Angeles International Airport, meanwhile, dropped two spots in the rankings for mega airports — those with 33 million or more annual flyers — coming in at No. 15 of 20. San Diego International ranked 15th among large airports.

Other Southern California airports, including Palm Springs and Long Beach, don’t have large enough passenger volumes to make the study.

“John Wayne appeals to the car culture in SoCal,” said Michael Taylor, the managing director of travel, hospitality and retail for J.D. Power. “It’s much easier to park near the terminal, and people can access terminals more easily.”

RELATED: Waymo robotaxis coming to Mineta San Jose International Airport

Taylor, who has led the study for several years, said travelers found JWA to be “very calm” and “reliable” for a large airport, which contributes to its high “reputation” score.

Nick Robertson, a traveler from Fort Collins, Colorado, said the airport’s proximity to Disneyland and the beach makes planning a visit convenient when he’s on vacation with his wife and their two children.

“It’s easy to get in and out of,” he said, while heading into one of the terminals on Monday. “Our flight is boarding in 20 minutes, and we’ll be just fine.”

The 2025 report revealed that the overall flyer satisfaction rate at airports has increased from the previous year despite widespread flight cancellations and delays.

The shift is driven largely by improvements in food, beverage and retail and ease of travel at many airports. Satisfaction meter has a strong impact on consumer spending: travelers who said they had a “perfect” airport experience spent an average of $42.39 in the terminal, $16.54 more than those who had a “just OK” time, the study found.

“The airport industry is investing hundreds of billions of dollars to improve passenger experiences,” Taylor said. “Many construction projects finished in 2024 and the positive results have shown up in the current J.D. Power data.”

Reynolds said she initially thought JWA’s ranking might slip this year because the airport has been undergoing active construction, which could disrupt the flyer experience. Instead, the airport not only retained the top spot, but widened its lead over runner-up Tampa International Airport.

“That speaks to the JWA brand and how much it’s adored by the community,” Reynolds said.

JWA is on track to spend about $700 million on major infrastructure upgrades by 2031, including modernizing restrooms, resurfacing taxiways and installing new elevators and escalators. The airport is also expanding its dining and retail offerings. Reynolds said a host of new restaurants, including local favorites such as Tacos La Piña, Sgt. Pepperoni’s Pizza and Five Vines Wine Bar, are expected to open at the end of the year.

Daniella Parker, a real estate agent in Huntington Beach, said she sometimes opts for layover flights just so she can fly out of JWA. Along with the seamless layout, she said the airport’s selection of food and retail options is a big draw. Stopping at Greenleaf Kitchen and Cocktails for her favorite street tacos has become a pre-flight ritual, she said.

“It makes going to the airport fun.”

Photographer Jeff Gritchen contributed to this report.

 

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Chase Hunter

Alameda County’s Department of Children and Family Services failed to meet state deadlines to investigate alleged child abuse, provide physical and mental health care and maintain family connections, according a report published Tuesday by State Auditor Grant Parks.

The report admonishes the Alameda County foster care system for ongoing structural deficiencies, including short staffing and poor record-keeping, while also noting that the agency’s plan to address service gaps may still not be enough to bring it up to standard.

“Without timely investigations and thorough documentation,” Parks wrote, “the department runs the risk of leaving youth in potentially unsafe circumstances or of not providing vital services that youth in its care require for their well‑being, family connections, and successful transition into adulthood.

Alameda County’s foster care system has faced significant controversy over the past decade for multiple deaths of children in their care. In 2015, 3-year-old Mariah Mustafa died from an overdose of methamphetamine in her foster home. Her older brother, just 7-years-old at the time, sued over her death, and Alameda County and a nonprofit paid a $3.5 million settlement.

An investigation by Bay Area News Group of the 2022 death of 8-year-old Sophia Mason found that social workers were alerted seven times to her abuse yet failed to adequately intervene. This news agency also published records showing the agency’s failure to remove 23-month-old Kristofer Ferreyra from her family’s home after social workers noted drug paraphernalia. Ferreyra died in Oct. 2024 of a fentanyl overdose.

State Sen. Aisha Wahab penned a letter in April 2024 to the state auditor requesting an investigation of the Alameda County Children and Family Services Department, citing, “years of issues… especially concerning foster youth.”

“There are clear systemic failures and a lack of administrative planning to support foster youth with emerging and complex needs,” Wahab added.

The state auditor’s office investigated agency’s records between July 2019 and June 2024, when the Children and Family Services Department received almost 57,000 reports of alleged child abuse and neglect. For the most serious allegations, the agency must begin an investigation within 24 hours, while less immediate concerns must be investigated within 10 days, according to state law.

“In fiscal year 2023–24, the department initiated investigations of 11 percent of immediate referrals and 48 percent of non‑immediate referrals after the required time frames. Furthermore, the department did not complete investigations within the prescribed 30 days after initiation, and it took the department an average of 105 days to complete investigations for about half of all non‑immediate referrals in fiscal year 2023–24,” according to the report.

Parks’ audit recommends a series of changes to the Children and Family Service Department to align itself with state requirements. This includes more oversight for the agency’s handling of investigations into child abuse, an overhaul of its hiring and recruitment practices, and thorough documentation of its records by Oct. 2026.

Alameda County Children and Family Services Assistant Agency Director Michelle Love responded to a draft of the report on Aug. 29, stating her department was dedicated to improving its performance and would implement the report’s recommendations.

“The Department intends to take appropriate action in collaboration with its interagency partners and contractors to implement the recommendations,” Love wrote in a response to the audit. “The Department appreciates that the Report notes that delays, both in investigations and in ensuring youth receive the services needed, are often not within the Department’s control.”

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Nate Gartrell

SAN JOSE — Maybe Jesus Salamanca-Benitez should have stayed at the Panda Express assembly line.

As an employee of the popular Chinese food chain living in Mexico, Salamanca-Benitez was “in the throes of a gambling addiction” and struggling to make ends meet, his attorney wrote in court filings. His solution was to broker several high-end methamphetamine deals over the phone, leading to a drug courier taking a total of 30 pounds of the drug to an undercover DEA agent in San Jose and Redwood City, court records show.

The 2021 undercover drug bust came with major repercussions to Salamanca-Benitez, who was sentenced to 13 years in federal prison earlier this month. Court records say he was arrested in 2022, after coming into the United States through Southern California, then brought to San Jose to face federal charges. He pleaded guilty to a federal methamphetamine trafficking offense earlier this year.

Prosecutors painted Salamanca-Benitez, 31, as a well-connected drug dealer who had worked for an organization tied to the Nueva Plaza Cartel. He has a previous conviction in Washington, stemming from “very similar” allegations, prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memo.

“This Washington conviction stemmed from an investigation into a drug trafficking organization with ties to a Mexican drug cartel that was distributing multi-kilogram quantities of heroin and methamphetamine in western Washington and from California to Washington,” the sentencing memo says. “Specifically, during one transaction, on March 20, 2014, Salamanca and others agreed to deliver six pounds of methamphetamine from the Olympia area of Washington to Vancouver, Washington.”

But Salamanca-Benitez’s lawyer rejected the notion that he is some sort of “kingpin,” describing him instead as a man who was “desperate” for money, working at Panda Express and doing home repairs on the side, and using much of the proceeds to fuel his drug and gambling addictions. He falsely painted himself as a high-roller in the methamphetamine world, organized the California drug deal, but then ran into a road block, a defense sentencing memo says.

“He was clearly no high level manager: he couldn’t find a single person willing to drive the methamphetamine to the buyer for weeks,” Assistant Federal Public Defender Gabriela Bischof wrote in court filings.

[syndicated profile] sjmerc_ca_feed

Posted by Caelyn Pender

A San Francisco man was charged with assaulting a peace officer with a deadly weapon after allegedly stabbing a Daly City officer with a pair of scissors in what he later told police was an attempt to get officers to shoot him, prosecutors said.

Anthony Sandoval Lopez, 23, also faces charges of making a false report and obstructing an officer, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office.

“This young man is obviously suffering some mental illness,” said San Mateo County District Attorney Stephen Wagstaffe.

“It was a felony act when he tried to stab the officer,” Wagstaffe added. “If the appropriate resolution is mental health treatment of some sort, the fact is a felony will have a better chance of getting the best treatment possible in terms of resources devoted to it.”

At his arraignment Monday afternoon, Sandoval Lopez pleaded not guilty to the charges, prosecutors said. Sandoval Lopez has no previous criminal record.

Sandoval Lopez called police around 9:15 p.m. Sunday to report that he had been robbed by five men armed with knives and wearing hoodies and ski masks, prosecutors said.

Police responded to the scene, but because of Sandoval Lopez’s demeanor and responses, the officers questioned whether he invented the robbery, according to prosecutors.

Sandoval Lopez then pulled out a pair of scissors and stabbed an officer twice in the chest area, prosecutors said. Because of a vest and jacket, the officer was not injured.

With guns drawn, officers told Sandoval Lopez to drop his weapon, prosecutors said. When he refused, the officers warned him that they would tase him or release a police dog on him, prompting Sandoval Lopez to drop the scissors and surrender. He later told police he thought his actions would prompt officers to shoot him, authorities said.

Sandoval Lopez will next appear in court Oct. 2 for a superior court review conference.

If you or someone you know is struggling with feelings of depression or suicidal thoughts, the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline offers free, round-the-clock support, information and resources for help. Call or text the lifeline at 988, or see the 988lifeline.org website, where chat is available.

5 Calls Dot Org

Sep. 24th, 2025 08:47 am
gingicat: the hands of Doctor Who #10, Martha Jones, and Jack Harkness clasped together with the caption "All for One" (all for one)
[personal profile] gingicat posting in [community profile] thisfinecrew
Learned about this from the weekly Indivisible email!

5 CALLS DOT ORG
Click on this tool (https://5calls.org/all/) to name and dial and/or email your federal representatives, simply following a script . As appropriate, express your gratitude and/or request increased action. Keep in mind that staffers log just one issue per call. Each one matters big time.

Massachusetts folks:
Interested in making a few key calls? Please call or write Governor Healey, urging her to act boldly, and/or tell Senators Warren and Markey to fight hard against giving Trump a blank check! https://5calls.org/issue/federal-budget-government-shutdown/
You needn't make speeches. One-line statements will make your communication count as much as - if not more than - a long explanation.
Template to contact Governor Healey, from Indivisible:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KSmFBTRj21bu-qsJAnTz4gJKk1EAnCRPSjBbRTiaXOQ/
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Teachable Moment, Just Not For The Students

I get along really well with most students and staff, but there is one assistant principal who seems to have a genuine dislike of her job as a whole, and a particular hatred toward substitute teachers. Nobody around the school likes her, and that goes double or even triple for the substitute teachers because she seems to have made it her personal mission to "keep subs in line".

Read A Teachable Moment, Just Not For The Students

(no subject)

Sep. 24th, 2025 11:45 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read

While my Dad and I have been grocery shopping, my cat has been outside. The way our street was built, the houses on our side has their front door in the back, and the garden and “back” porch facing the street. We also have a what is called a “vindfang” (Windbreak), a room between the […]

Read

Wednesday Reading Meme

Sep. 24th, 2025 08:01 am
osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I Just Finished Reading

The busy season has struck at work, so my reading has slowed down, but I’m still chugging along. I picked up Genzaburo Yoshino’s How Do You Live? (translated by Bruno Navasky) because I liked the cover, learned from the front cover flap that it’s one of Miyazaki’s favorite books, and therefore of course I had to read it. The novel was intended as a guidebook to ethics for Japanese schoolchildren, and I think would have blown my tiny mind if I read it at thirteen. I’ve missed the window for it to become a formative text for me, but I enjoyed it nonetheless, as a glimpse of a very different side of Japan in the 1930s. (Yoshino never mentions Japan’s wars of imperialist expansion, presumably because everything he would have liked to say would have gotten him thrown back in prison, where he had already languished for 18 months for his socialist beliefs.)

Mary Stolz’s Ferris Wheel, one of Stolz’s weaker books, as it ambles around without going anywhere. Our heroine Polly doesn’t get along with her little brother Rusty, is losing her best friend Kate because Kate is moving to California, meets a new girl who might be a friend but really seems like kind of a boring friend candidate… Good descriptions of life in Vermont, though.

What I’m Reading Now

I’ve reached Part III of A Sand County Almanac. The first two parts are both close observations of places that Leopold knows well, and therefore perennially fascinating as well-considered firsthand observation always is. Part III is more about the Theory of Wilderness, which is less interesting to me, but I keep on keeping on.

What I Plan to Read Next

Despite my reservations about Ferris Wheel, I still plan to read the sequel Cider Days, just because the title sounds so perfectly autumnal.

Wednesday Word: Bilo-bilo

Sep. 24th, 2025 05:45 am
calzephyr: MLP Words (MLP Words)
[personal profile] calzephyr posting in [community profile] 1word1day
Bilo-bilo - noun.

This is one of those times where I have to defer to others for the spelling--I have not had bilo-bilo, a Filipino dessert, but I'm sure it wouldn't be hard to find in my part of the world!

There are some variations, but basically it is a dessert made of glutinous rice balls in coconut milk with sugar.

Here's recipe which calls for sweet potatoes and plantains!

(no subject)

Sep. 24th, 2025 11:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read

(My parents are arguing in front of us. They’re going through a divorce because my dad is a traveling salesman who gets…lonely…on his routes. Note: My brother was named because of a religious dream my mother had.) Dad: “You threatened to leave before, but that was a lie! What’s different this time?” Mom: “I’m not […]

Read

Never Free From Complaints

Sep. 24th, 2025 11:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Never Free From Complaints

I hear a call over the PA informing that there was an aggressive customer at the front end. Basically, this means as many team members as possible should attend, in order to scare a customer who may be physically violent into backing down with a large presence there.

Read Never Free From Complaints

Page generated Sep. 30th, 2025 07:49 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios