Sunday, 05 May 2024

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Aaron Bassler, 35, of Fort Bragg, Calif., is being sought in connection with two August murders on the Mendocino County. Courtesy photo.

 



MENDOCINO COUNTY, Calif. – As the search for a suspect in the murder of two North Coast men continues, authorities have announced a reward for the suspect's capture.

The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office reported Tuesday that it has been contacted by private citizens as well as the U.S. Marshals' Service and the Mendocino Land Trust to provide reward funds for
information leading to the capture and arrest of 35-year-old Aaron Bassler.

The reward amount as of Tuesday morning was $30,000, the sheriff's office reported.

Aaron Bassler is the lead suspect in the August homicides of Mendocino Land Trust employee Matthew Coleman and Fort Bragg City Councilman Jere Melo, both of whom were shot while conducting management activities on forest lands near Fort Bragg.

The sheriff's office said residents of Fort Bragg and surrounding areas should remain vigilant and conscientious of their surroundings as Bassler – who is believed to still be in the area – is considered armed and dangerous.

Authorities also warn that Bassler should not be approached. Law enforcement is looking for information, not active participation in the search.

Please notify authorities at 707-463-4086 or by emailing This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with
any information you may think would be helpful.

Anonymous information can be sent via email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

The Mendocino County Sheriff's Office thanked the many individuals and local, state and federal agencies assisting in the search and the effort to safely apprehend Bassler.

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Aaron Bassler Wanted Posted 2011

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Gerald W. Galaway Jr., 38, of Santa Cruz, Calif., was placed under arrest on Friday, September 2, 2011, for the murder of Celestial Summer Dove Cassman, 35, also of Santa Cruz. Galaway is alleged to have killed Cassman while the two were visiting Maui, Hawaii, on Thursday, September 1, 2011. Photo courtesy of the Maui Police Department.




 



LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Santa Cruz man has been arrested for the murder of a former Lake County woman.


Gerald W. Galaway Jr., 38, was arrested on Friday, Sept. 9, for the murder of 35-year-old Santa Cruz attorney Celestial Summer Dove Cassman, according to Maui Police Lt. Wayne Ibarra.


Cassman, who grew up in Lake County and graduated in 1994 from Clear Lake High School, was found dead near Maui's Nakalele Point on the night of Thursday, Sept. 1, as Lake County News has reported.


Ibarra said Galaway – who has been hospitalized since the day after the murder because he was injured while jumping from a cliff to escape police – was transported on Monday afternoon from the Maui Memorial Medical Center to the Wailuku Police Station for processing without incident.


Cassman and Galaway had arrived in Maui for a visit on Wednesday, Aug. 31. The following night police said witnesses saw Cassman and Galaway arguing before he allegedly threw her body on the ground repeatedly and then drug her by the head into some bushes. Her body was found later that evening.


When police arrived on the scene in response to a report of a domestic dispute, they spotted a man, later identified as Galaway, who was wearing a t-shirt and nude from the waist down, according to a police statement.


Maui Police reported that when they tried to apprehend Galaway, he jumped down a 100-foot cliff and into the ocean.


Galaway was rescued the following morning and had been hospitalized, under armed guard, until Monday, delaying his formal arrest and booking, officials reported.


Last week the Maui County Prosecutor's Office charged Galaway with second-degree murder and kidnapping, Maui County Prosecuting Attorney John Kim said.


Ibarra reported on Monday that Galaway also was arrested on a charge of first-degree attempted sexual assault. The charging documents had indicated that Cassman's clothing had been torn and her body's orientation suggested she had been sexually assaulted.


Galaway is being held without bail. Ibarra said Galaway is scheduled to appear in court at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 13.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

 

 

 

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Celestial Summer Dove Cassman, 35, of Santa Cruz, Calif., was found dead in Maui, Hawaii, on Thursday, September 1, 2011. Her male companion, Gerald W. Galaway Jr., 38, also of Santa Cruz, Calif., has been arrested for her murder. Courtesy photo.
 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The 12th annual Lake County Wine Auction on Saturday, Sept. 17, at Ceago Vinegarden will be a showcase for the bounty of Lake County, featuring wine, food, music, local products and personalities to benefit local nonprofit organizations and programs.

 

The sponsoring Lake County Wine Alliance has announced that a limited number of tickets for the afternoon portion of the event will be sold at the door.


The Grand Tasting ticket, $75 per person, will include an afternoon of wine and food tasting, the silent auction, music, and escorted tours of the Ceago gardens by members of the host Fetzer family.


This part of the event will begin at 3 p.m. and conclude at 6 p.m.


Several Lake County growers will display their products and offer tastings, including Lake County Grown, the Lake County Community Co-op, Villa Barone, Moon Essence, and the LAVA Center Popular keyboard artist David Neft will provide music and his sparkling wit during the afternoon.


The Grand Tasting and Auction Reserve ticket for $150 per person will include all of the afternoon activities as well as a gift tote, reserved seating for the served, three-course dinner, the live auction, and dancing. These tickets must be purchased in advance at www.winealliance.org. This portion of the event will start at 3 p.m. and end at 9 p.m.


Preparing the dinner will be Park Place Restaurant, Saw Shop Gallery Bistro, Chef Nicholas, and Studebakers Coffeehouse and Delicatessen. This is the first year that a served dinner has been offered to Wine Auction attendees.


Twice as Good, the popular blues and rock and roll father-and-son duo of Richard and Paul Steward, well-known for their energetic beat, will provide danceable music to conclude the evening’s festivities. Awarded the “Best New Blues Band” in 2010 by the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame, their guitar and vocal talents are widely recognized.


The attire is Wine Country chic. Attendees must be 21 years and older.


All proceeds from the Wine Auction benefit nonprofit organizations and programs that meet local needs in Lake County. Beneficiaries are, by category: in the arts, the fine arts programs at five high schools; in health services, Any Positive Change, Catholic Charities-Rural Food Program, and Meals on Wheels nutrition programs at five senior centers; and in the community, Lake County Council of Church Women United, Lake County Literacy Coalition, Military Funeral Honors Team, Northshore Fire Protection District, Operation Tango Mike, and People Services, Inc.


The Lake County Wine Alliance, a nonprofit organization of Lake County wineries, wine grape growers, and allied businesses whose mission is to foster the arts, benefit health services, and support the community while promoting Lake County as a premier grape growing and fine wine region, has contributed over $831,700 to local agencies and programs in the past eleven years.


Major sponsors contributing to the 2011 Wine Auction include Alienor/Bella Vista Farming Company, Calpine, Konocti Vista Casino, Mendo Lake Credit Union, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, and Sutter Lakeside Hospital.


Additional sponsors include American AgCredit, Beckstoffer Vineyards, Brassfield Estate Winery, Bruno’s Property Management, Ceago Vinegarden, Chacewater Wine Company, Kelseyville Pharmacy, Lake County Winegrape Commission, Shannon Ridge Vineyards & Winery, Specialty Care & Surgery Center, and Umpqua Bank.


Twenty-nine Lake County wineries will pour their award-winning wines. Participating will be Beaver Creek Vineyards, Bell Hill Vineyards, Big Valley Wine Company, Brassfield Estate Winery, Cache Creek Vineyards, Ceago Vinegarden, Chacewater Wine Company, Dusinberre Cellars, Gregory Graham, Hawk and Horse Vineyards, High Valley Vineyards, Langtry Estate & Vineyards, and Lavender Blue.

 

Also present will be Moore Family Winery, Mt. Konocti Growers Winery, Noggle Vineyards and Winery, Ployez Winery, Robinson Lake Vineyard, Robledo Family Winery, Rosa d’Oro Vineyards, Shannon Ridge Vineyards & Winery, Shed Horn Cellars, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, Snows Lake Vineyard, Sol Rouge Vineyard, Steele Wines, Tulip Hill Winery, Vigilance Winery, and Wildhurst Vineyards.


Fifteen of Lake County’s finest restaurants and caterers will offer tasty food pairings to complement the fine wines. Participants include Aromas at Yuba College, Biggs 155 Diner, The Boathouse, Cache Creek Catering, Chic Le Chef, Ciao Thyme Catering, Konocti Vista Resort and Casino, Lindy’s Quality Catering at Lakeview Super Market and Deli, Lyndall’s Sports Stop Grill, Main Street Bakery, Molly Brennan, Richardson’s Ribs, Riviera Hills Restaurant and Lounge, Rob Roy Creekside Restaurant, and The Blue Wing Saloon at the Tallman Hotel.


Others offering products and support are Braito’s Riviera Foods, Bruno’s Shop Smart, Foods Etc., Hardester’s Market, North Shore Sentry Market, and Ray’s Food Place.

 

Bill Brunetti, Lakeport businessman and property manager, has been spearheading an all-volunteer committee for many months as this year’s honorary chair. While he was the owner of Bruno’s Foods, the buying, selling and displaying of wines became one of his passions.


After selling the market in 2006, Brunetti and his wife Patty have expanded their passion for wine and food by growing wine grapes and developing their homestead winery, Quattro Fratelli (Four Brothers), named in honor of his grandfather and grand-uncles. He is an active member of the Lake County Winegrape Commission and chairs its Industry Relations committee.


Congressman Mike Thompson represents Lake County in the U.S. Congress and has been an active contributor to the annual Wine Auction since its inception, believing that the wine industry is a major force in Lake County’s economy, providing employment and protecting agricultural lands. He and his wife Janet, a former member of the Wine Alliance board of directors, will be recognized for their support of the many nonprofit organizations that will receive proceeds from this year’s event.


Shaun Hornby, owner of Hornby’s Furniture Restoration in Lakeport and vocalist and guitarist of the popular band, the LC Diamonds, will be the auctioneer for the live auction. He has conducted auctions in England and in Upper Lake for Vintage Antiques, where his dynamic and enthusiastic banter energizes the bidders.


Stephanie Green, owner of Focused on Wine, a wine bar and tasting room in downtown Kelseyville, will assist with the auctioneering and provide detailed information about the wine lots in the live auction. She is a certified sommelier, wine educator, private wine consultant, and a noted cellar master of wines. Her engaging personality will encourage competition amongst the bidders.


Barney Fetzer, vineyard manager and winemaker for Ceago Vinegarden, is this year’s cuvee winemaker. A third generation grape grower and winemaker, he is following in the footsteps of his grandfather, Bernard Fetzer, who originated Fetzer Vineyards, and his father, Jim Fetzer, owner and developer of Ceago Vinegarden. He moved to Lake County in 2001 when Ceago planted its first vineyards on the north shore of Clear Lake.


The 2008 Cabernet Sauvignon cuvee will be crafted of donations from Shannon Ridge Vineyards & Winery, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, Steele Wines, and Wildhurst Vineyards. The 2010 Sauvignon Blanc cuvee will be composed of donations from Ceago Vinegarden, Langtry Estate & Vineyards, Shed Horn Cellars, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, Steele Wines, and Vigilance Winery.


Bottles of the red and white cuvees will be served with the three-course dinner while additional fine wines from Lake County vintners will be available for purchase to accompany dinner.

 

The live and silent auctions will feature special wine packages, large format wine bottles, weekend and extended vacation getaways, fine art, and a variety of goods and services for wine and travel interests.


The original watercolor on silk painting by Lake County artist John R. Clarke, “Thankful in Lake County,” will be auctioned during the evening. Original art donated by Clarke has been reproduced every year by the sponsoring Wine Alliance as a fine art poster to promote the event.


A limited number of posters, at $20 each, are available for sale through the Saw Shop Gallery Bistro and Inspirations Gallery, and the tasting rooms of Wildhurst Vineyards, Steele Wines, Six Sigma Ranch & Winery, Ceago Vinegarden, and the Lake County Wine Studio.


Members of the Wine Alliance board of directors are Margaret Walker, president; Marie Beery, vice president; Sharron Zoller, secretary; Rob Roumiguiere, treasurer; and directors Kaj Ahlmann, Judy Luchsinger and Wilda Shock.


More information about the Wine Auction and ticket availability may be obtained by calling 1-866-279-WINE.


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Daniel Ray Loyd, 50, of Nice, Calif., was arrested on Tuesday, September 13, 2011, for the murder earlier that day of 48-year-old Cindy Yvette Quiett of Upper Lake, Calif. Lake County Jail photo.
 

 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Northshore man has been arrested for the Tuesday morning shooting of an Upper Lake woman that allegedly resulted after a robbery attempt.


Daniel Ray Loyd, 50, of Nice was arrested and booked for murder, attempted robbery and assault with a deadly weapon, according to a Tuesday evening report from Michelle Gonzalez of the Lake County Sheriff's Office.


Loyd is alleged to have fatally shot 48-year-old Cindy Yvette Quiett of Upper Lake, according to the sheriff's office.


Also arrested was 35-year-old Angel Dusty Spring of Lakeport, who was alleged to have been with Loyd at the time of the shooting. Spring was arrested and booked for violation of probation and being under the influence of a controlled substance, Gonzalez said.


At 3:30 a.m. Tuesday Lake County Sheriff’s deputies responded to the area of Sherwood Court and Kensington Way in Lucerne on a report that a woman had been shot in the stomach during an apparent robbery attempt, according to Gonzalez.


She said rescue personnel with the Northshore Fire Protection District were staged in the area and a patrolman with the Lakeport Police Department also responded to assist in locating the suspect’s vehicle.


When deputies arrived in the area, they located several people tending to a woman lying unconscious near the roadway on Sherwood Court, Gonzalez said.


Deputies identified the shooting victim as Quiett, who Gonzalez said had sustained a gunshot wound to the abdomen.


Quiett was initially transported by medics to Lucerne Harbor Park to be flown out of county by a REACH helicopter, but due to her declining condition, she was instead rushed to Sutter Lakeside Hospital where Gonzalez said that Quiett ultimately succumbed to her injuries.


One of the people tending to Quiett when deputies arrived at the scene was 47-year-old Patrick Joseph Ryden of Lucerne. Gonzalez reported that Ryden told deputies that, prior to the shooting, he and Quiett had gotten a phone call from Spring, who said she was going to the Robinson Rancheria Casino. She told them to meet her on the corner of Sherwood Court and Country Club where she would pick them up to go along.


As Quiett and Ryden were walking to meet Spring, a van pulled up next to them and the driver, later identified as Loyd, got out, Gonzalez said.


Loyd allegedly walked up to Ryden, put a gun to Ryden’s head, and told him to “give him all of his shit.” Gonzalez said Ryden reportedly knocked the gun away from his head and as he was running away, he heard a gunshot.


When Ryden turned back to look, he saw Quiett lying on the ground and the van was speeding away, Gonzalez said.


Sheriff’s Major Crimes Detectives were called out to conduct an investigation, which Gonzalez said continued throughout the morning.


As the investigation unfolded detectives began developing information, including that Spring was in fact with Loyd in the van during the apparent robbery attempt and shooting, Gonzalez said.


Gonzalez said additional patrol deputies were called out to help detectives with the manhunt for Loyd and Spring.


By mid-morning, detectives were able to contact Loyd by telephone and arrange for both him and Spring to turn themselves in for questioning, Gonzalez said.


At approximately 10:15 a.m., Loyd and Spring were met by Lake County Sheriff's Narcotics Task Force Detectives on Reclamation Road in Upper Lake and detained. Gonzalez said a .357 magnum revolver was recovered at the scene.


After further investigation, Loyd and Spring were arrested.


Gonzalez said the investigation is continuing Tuesday evening.


Anyone with information concerning Quiett's homicide is encouraged to call Lake County Sheriff’s Major Crimes Detectives at 707-263-2690. Calls may be placed at any time.


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Angel Dusty Spring, 35, of Lakeport, Calif., was arrested on Tuesday, September 13, 2011, for violation of probation and being under the influence of a controlled substance. She was believed to have been with Daniel Ray Loyd, 50, of Nice, Calif., when he allegedly shot 48-year-old Cindy Yvette Quiett of Upper Lake, Calif., earlier that day. Lake County Jail photo.
 

 

 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Six Central Valley men who allegedly used a vehicle and spotlight in an organized effort to kill deer in the Scotts Valley area west of Lakeport have been convicted and sentenced for poaching.


Lodi resident Vincente Munoz, 19; and Stockton residents Daniel Charco Molina, 30; Jose Luis Suarez, 25; Eloy Perez Echeverria, 33; Lorenzo Diaz Juarez, 26; and Hector Ocampo, 29 all were charged with misdemeanor poaching violations, according to Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.


Hinchcliff, who is the county's fish and game poaching prosecutor, charged the men with spotlighting violations and use of an illegal weapon for deer hunting.


He said they were convicted last Thursday, Sept. 8, following their acceptance of a plea deal.


Hinchcliff said the convictions resulted from an investigation by Lake County Game Warden John Holley and Mendocino County Game Warden Matt Manes.


Wardens had recently received reports from concerned citizens who lived on Hendricks Road in Scotts Valley that people were killing deer at night with the use of spotlights, and that several deer had recently been killed illegally at night in the area, Hinchcliff said.


The area residents also had given the wardens descriptions of vehicles being used by the poachers, including a white- or tan-colored van, according to Hinchcliff.


He said witnesses reported groups of people engaged in organized poaching activity, with a person driving the vehicle, a person shining a spotlight, a person shooting and several people quickly running from the vehicle, grabbing the poached animal, dragging it back to the vehicle, and speeding off.


Residents also were concerned with their safety because the poaching and shooting was reportedly close to houses, Hinchcliff said.


At least one of the residents found butchered carcasses of deer around pear orchards in the area with garbage used in butchering the deer left behind on the ground. Hinchcliff said the deer reportedly being killed included bucks, does and fawns.


Wardens had also received reports that last year poachers in the area were herding deer into fences and when fawns got stuck in fences the poachers were clubbing the deer to death, he said.


As a result of the reports, Holley and Manes set up surveillance in the Hendricks road area on Monday, Sept. 5, Hinchcliff said.


At approximately 9:30 p.m. Sept. 5, well after dark, the wardens observed a tan and white passenger van driving slowly on Hendricks Road with a spotlight being shined out of the passenger side of the van and onto private property on the south side of Hendricks road, according to Hinchcliff.


The wardens then detained the vehicle and the seven occupants of the vehicle. In addition to the driver and the front seat passenger, Hinchcliff said there were five individuals in the rear seats.


On the front seat of the vehicle wardens found a small amount of methamphetamine, a meth pipe, a box of .22 caliber ammunition and a spotlight that was still warm. Hinchcliff said that underneath the rear seat wardens found a loaded Marlin .22 caliber rifle.


All seven of the vehicle's occupants were arrested. Hinchcliff said it was discovered that all seven individuals did not speak English and were staying at an immigrant labor camp located in Scotts Valley with a large number of other agricultural workers.


Hinchcliff charged Munoz, Molina, Suarez, Juarez, Ocampo and Echeverria, and also charged the seventh man, 23-year-old Eugenio Munoz Gomez of Lodi was additional counts for being a felon in possession of a firearm, providing false identification to a peace officer, and four misdemeanor poaching violations including spotlighting and hunting deer with an illegal weapon.


Gomez is scheduled to appear in court with his attorney on Tuesday, Sept. 13, Hinchcliff said.


At their arraignment on Sept. 8, Munoz, Molina, Suarez, Juarez, Ocampo and Echeverria were represented by defense counsel and assisted by a Spanish interpreter, Hinchcliff said.


In an effort to get an early disposition and prevent significant costs to the court later for the cost of interpreters, Hinchcliff offered a plea that was agreed to by all six defendants, their attorney and Judge Andrew Blum.


Hinchcliff said all six of the misdemeanor defendants pleaded no contest to a violation of Fish and Game Code section 2005(b), use of an artificial light to assist in the taking or attempted taking of a game animal.


He said Judge Blum then sentenced them, placing each on three years of probation and revoking their hunting privileges for three years. Judge Blum also ordered the firearm, spotlight and ammunition to be forfeited and ordered each of the men to serve 45 days in jail.


Hinchcliff said all six individuals have Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) holds and could face deportation proceedings at the end of their jail term if federal officials pursue the cases.


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NORTH COAST, Calif. – The American Red Cross is sheltering and feeding people in 10 states who are being forced to leave their homes as major flooding hits the East Coast and fires tear through Texas.


Seven local Red Cross volunteers from Sonoma and Lake counties have joined the response, and have been deployed to locations in New York and New Jersey.


The volunteers will feed clients, provide physical and mental health services, and offer other assistance to help meet clients’ immediate disaster-caused or disaster-aggravated needs.


“We appreciate the willingness of our dedicated and skilled volunteers who are willing to drop everything here at home so that they can help others,” said Tim Miller, chief executive officer of the American Red Cross in Sonoma, Mendocino and Lake Counties. “It’s truly inspiring, knowing that Red Cross volunteers and donors will be here for us, too, if we ever need them.”


Days of steady rain have compounded the serious problems caused by Hurricane Irene and causing new flooding. Thousands of people are being forced from their homes. The Red Cross has shelters open all over the region and is sending additional disaster workers and supplies into the area.


More than 650 people spent the night of Sept. 7 in Red Cross shelters in New York. Disaster workers are ready to help throughout Pennsylvania, where approximately 125 residents have already sought refuge in more than 20 Red Cross shelters.


Red Cross relief operations are continuing in Texas where wildfires are still burning. More than 230 people there spent Sept. 7 in Red Cross shelters, escaping the smoke and flames of the fires. Officials report more than 880 homes have already been destroyed. The Red Cross is also supporting emergency responders and people forced from their homes by serving drinks and snacks.


Relief operations are also ongoing in North Carolina, New Jersey and throughout New England where Hurricane Irene destroyed thousands of homes at the end of August. Approximately 319 people spent Sept. 7 in Red Cross shelters in those areas.


Red Cross costs for this multi-disaster response are growing by the hour. It is estimated the response to Hurricane Irene alone will cost between $10 million and $15 million.


Flood operations in Pennsylvania and New York, in addition to the large wildfire response in Texas, will add to that estimate.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

Lucerne shooting
Investigators study scene of shooting Tuesday morning. Photo by John Jensen

LUCERNE, Calif. – Authorities are investigating an early morning shooting in Lucerne.
 

A sheriff's deputy, two crime scene investigators and a detective were at the scene, located at 4094 Sherwood Court, early Tuesday morning.
 

Several shots were reported to have been fired in the area at about 3:30 a.m. Tuesday. Minutes later sirens could be heard throughout the Northshore town.
 

A female victim was reported to be down, based on 911 calls.

A deputy securing the area declined to comment on any circumstances of the shooting to a Lake County News reporter, only saying that he had only recently arrived.
 

The crime scene was cordoned off with yellow tape. Crime scene investigators had labeled several items of evidence, including what appeared to be items of clothing left lying in the street.
 

There was no word on a suspect. No suspect had been shown as being booked into the Lake County Jail, according to the sheriff's Web site by 9:30 a.m.
 

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

NORTH COAST, Calif. – The California Fish and Game Commission will consider emergency action on Thursday, Sept. 15, to possibly close the abalone fishery along the Northern California coast.


This action is being considered in the wake of confirmed reports of dead red abalone and other invertebrates on beaches and inside coves along the coast in Sonoma County.


The Department of Fish and Game is currently attempting to assess the impact of the situation and will provide the commission with information at this Thursday's meeting.


Based on the Department of Fish and Game report, the commission may take emergency action to close the abalone season along all or parts of the Sonoma coast.


There was an abalone die-off along the Sonoma coast beginning Aug. 27 as a result of a red tide-induced poisoning and/or lack of oxygen.


According to Fish and Game biologists, these abalone deaths coincided with a local red tide bloom and calm ocean conditions.


Although the exact reasons for the abalone deaths are not known, invertebrate die-offs have occurred in the past along the Northern California coast when similar weather and bloom conditions existed.


The number of dead and dying abalone is not known but Fish and Game divers are assessing the damage this week via underwater transect surveys.


Reports of dead abalone and a variety of invertebrates have come from Bodega Bay, Russian Gulch, Fort Ross, Timber Cove and Salt Point State Park.


Other Department of Fish and Game biologists and game wardens have collected abalone, mussels and water samples since the beginning and are continuing to document reports from the public.


Abalone fishermen are advised to contact a physician immediately if they feel sick, and to report symptoms to the local county health department (www.sonoma-county.org/health/about/publichealth.asp).


The latest red tide updates from the California Department of Public Health are also posted online at www.cdph.ca.gov/programs/Pages/DDWEM.aspx.


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A worker stands at Ground Zero in New York City on October 3, 2001. Photo courtesy of the George W. Bush Library.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Ten years later, the memories of the events of Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001, are finding voice in commemorations, retrospectives and memorials around the United States, as both the victims of that day and the heroes are honored.

Terrorists crashed planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and crashed a fourth plane in Shanksville, Penn., when the passengers rushed the cockpit of the plane, which was headed to another target in Washington, DC.

An estimated 3,000 people died in the attacks, which touched off a ripple effect of terror, anger and grief that spread across the country, touching people in every state.

In a Saturday address, President Barack Obama noted, “Ten years ago, ordinary Americans showed us the true meaning of courage when they rushed up those stairwells, into those flames, into that cockpit.”

Since then, the country's leaders have ratcheted up the strength of the country's intelligence agencies and its military.

President Obama said the United States has “taken the fight to al Qaeda like never before,” eliminating senior al Qaeda leaders, including Osama bin Laden, killed earlier this year.

Five years ago, Congressman Mike Thompson, who represents Lake County in the US House of Representatives, joined the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

“These terrorists are here to stay,” said Congressman Mike Thompson. “Our lives have been changed forever.”

In looking back, Thompson said it's important to remember the 3,000 victims and their families. “We also give our deep thanks to the brave members of our armed forces, first responders and members of the intelligence community who each day perform their sworn duty to keep us safe and to recognize the sacrifices they and their families have made.”

The major impacts on life in Lake County have included the many young men and women going off to service in the military, and the loss of Lance Corporal Ivan Wilson and Sgt. David Hartman during their service overseas.

In the wake of the attacks, there have been other, more subtle impacts. In the area of law enforcement, Sept. 11's legacy has led to greater preparedness, awareness and even connectedness.

“It's become clear that we need to be part of the bigger picture and think nationally and globally,” Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen said of small local agencies like his.

Rasmussen pointed out that everyone needs to be on the lookout at all times.

His own staff has more training requirements in the area of homeland security and terrorism, recognition and preparedness. A staffer recently was sent to training regarding protecting local infrastructure.

The city of Lakeport also is in the process training city management staff and council members in emergency preparedness, which includes responding to terrorism incidents, said Rasmussen.

In addition, the Lakeport Police Department has a terror liaison officer to keep the rest of the staff up to date on terrorism activities in the country, he said.

Terrorism has been around forever,” said Rasmussen, but the events of Sept. 11, 2001, made it clear that local law enforcement has an important role in keeping their communities – and the country – safe.

Called to action

Here on the West Coast, thousands of miles away from the attacks, men and women watched the events of Sept. 11 unfold, and some of them would be called to action to respond and lend a hand in ravaged New York city.

Among those who would travel from California to New York were Lake County residents Pat Brown of Clearlake Oaks, who today is the deputy chief of the Northshore Fire Protection District, and Pam Plank of Kelseyville, the Red Cross' Lake County disaster chair.

Pat Brown worked as a firefighter in Santa Clara County for 25 years, rising to the rank of captain before his retirement. He had worked for what was to become Northshore Fire Protection District before getting the job in Santa Clara, and continued to work locally as a battalion chief when not in Silicon Valley.

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Northshore Fire Deputy Chief Pat Brown took part in the recovery effort in New York City in the weeks following the attack on September 11, 2011. File photo.
 

The route that took him to Ground Zero, the ravaged site of the destroyed World Trade Center, actually began two years before he was chosen to join a rescue team that spent two and a half weeks in New York immediately following Sept. 11.

It was two years earlier that he took part in a Urban Search and Rescue deployment in Montgomery, Maryland.

The Maryland training lasted two weeks, and there he met the Fire Department of New York's US&R team, whose members he worked with and got to know. Brown said it was FDNY's Chief Ray Downey who started the US&R concept.

On Sept. 12, 2001, Brown got the call to come to New York. For the next two and a half weeks he and his 78-member team would work at Ground Zero.

Engineers, rescue specialists – of which Brown was one – search dogs and a doctor were part of the team, flying in to New York with 78,000 pounds of equipment because they needed to be self-sufficient during their stay, he said.

Brown was a member of US&R California Task Force Three, one of eight such teams in California and 28 nationwide, he said. “I think almost all the teams rotated through there,” he said of Ground Zero.

Brown said he and his team members soon noticed that New York's firefighters didn't have the equipment that their California counterparts did. He also remembered swapping items with a Seattle team member to get items he didn't have.

They worked hand-in-hand with FDNY, not just in recovery but also in answering regular calls, as FDNY's ranks had been devastated by Sept. 11, losing approximately 343 members.

Among the dead were all but one of the members of the US&R team Brown had worked with two years earlier, including Chief Downey, who at age 63 was last seen in the Marriott Hotel lobby on Sept. 11, directing rescue efforts. A Web site devoted to a scholarship fund in his memory, www.chiefraydowney.com, said Downey's body was never found.

Brown worked on the day shift, with most of his work done “out in the pile” that was the South Tower, the second of the towers to be hit by a plane. It collapsed at 9:59 a.m. Sept. 11, after the North Tower fell.

For two weeks they would search the rubble for survivors. They never found any, Brown said.

Brown spent the first week on the site going underground, rappelling into elevator shafts or going up through the subway to look for survivors. Using a gas-powered circular saw, they would cut through elevator doors.

“We found people but we never removed any,” he said, explaining that FDNY and the New York Police Department were in charge of removal.

In most of the areas they worked, they had to cut through huge beams and use a crane to pull them off before they could move on with recovery, he said.

Brown said the night crew on his team worked a lot in Building 7, a high security government building near the World Trade Center that also collapsed, although it wasn't hit by a plane. He said Building 7 was more intact that the other buildings.

Brown's team used listening devices and search dogs as they looked for victims. Most of the team's dogs were trained to find live people, and only two were trained as cadaver dogs.

The cadaver dogs were constantly getting hits on bodies, in part because body parts were throughout the rubble, Brown said.

Down in the subway areas, he called the work of the dogs “amazing,” with the dogs and their handlers quickly helping clear areas in search of survivors or bodies. “And then we saw rats as big as our dogs,” he added.

The signs of fatigue began to show within the two and a half weeks at Ground Zero. Brown said all of the US&R teams were staying at the Javits Convention Center. With people constantly coming and going, and forklifts and other equipment moving through the building, “Sleep was really hard.”

Brown said he remembered being angry on his seventh day on the site when, just after finally getting to sleep, he was awakened and told to put on his uniform. The reason? President George W. Bush was paying a visit to the convention center.

An exhausted Brown got up and got dressed, and watched as President Bush arrived. “He was just walking through,” he said.

During his stay, Brown said U.S. Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein would pay a visit and speak to his team. One night when he sat down to eat, actress Loretta Swit of “MASH” fame served him his dinner.

Brown said that what stands out in his experience in New York was the friends he made there, and their generosity.

When his team got ready to leave, he said his FDNY counterparts gave him the chief's shirt and radio.

“I still have it,” he said of the shirt.

He said his team members prided themselves on the fact that none of them later became sick. They believe that's because they diligently wore their breathing filters.

However, their canine team members weren't so lucky. Within three years of the recovery effort, “every dog that was in our team died,” Brown said.

A major contributing factor, he said, was believed to be the silicon dust the animals breathed as they worked the site.

Offering help and compassion

Pam Plank had been with the Red Cross for five years before she found herself heading to New York.

Following a retirement hastened by a medical condition, Plank said, “I knew that I had something to give other than just sitting at home,” and went in search of a way to serve. The Red Cross welcomed her.

She began working as a volunteer in the nonprofit's local office, then started taking classes, and quickly discovered she had an affinity for disaster-related work and helping people, which was put to work during local flooding in 1998.

While she had taken classes, Plank said she I realized that you can learn everything in a book but you're not smart. “That is where my life started to turn.”

She went into Disaster Services Human Resources, where she directly helped connect people with the services they needed. When she went to New York – she arrived on Sept. 14, 2001 – she went as a family services supervisor.

Plank was there for three weeks. “That was the only length of time they would allow anyone because of the mass destruction,” she said.

She was about three miles from Ground Zero, where she could still see smoke billowing up from the site of the collapsed buildings.

She has no pictures of her time there. “We were not allowed to take pictures at all,” she said, noting that they also were not allowed at the disaster site.

Her first two weeks were spent doing basic outreach to help locate those in need. Plank and her team – which also included people equipped to offer mental and physical health assistance – traveled to the city's affected areas and went door to door, asking people if they needed assistance.

She estimated she saw 30 clients a day. “You had to wait for them to go through their tears,” she said.

Families would suddenly find themselves in danger of losing their homes because the breadwinner had died, she said.

Red Cross also worked to connect with New York groups that could assist with helping people, she said.

Eventually the Red Cross was located on a pier in New York next to the Intrepid museum complex. There, they worked alongside many other agencies, including the FBI and CIA.

“The one memory that really sticks out is that everyone came together,” she said.

Plank said she remembered that one day a man of Middle Eastern descent came into the center and sat at the back. She said she saw the anger others displayed toward him because of the Arab hijackers who had run the planes into the towers.

“Something told me to just go and say hello to the man,” she said.

Plank said she shook his hand, a gesture which she said surprised him. He asked why she was willing to touch his hand. She jokingly asked if he forgot to wash it.

He said people wouldn't look at him because of their anger. “That has got to change” she said to him. “You didn't do it.”

She made a point of saying, loudly, that everyone there was seeking help, and it didn't matter where they came from, a remark that seemed to loosen people up. “I guess maybe I did make a difference.”

In another case, a woman came to the center asking for assistance. In her apartment she had heard a loud crash in the living room area, but was able to get out without going into that room. The woman kept saying how scared she was.

Plank and some of her team returned to the woman's apartment with her. A mental health worker went into the front room while Plank took the woman into another part of the apartment to pack clothes and other items.

In the front room was found the body of an airplane passenger, strapped into the seat, where it had crashed through the apartment's plate glass front window, Plank said.

She said that, to this day, she tears up when Sept. 11 is mentioned. Plank said the new monument is beautiful, noting that she finds water to be healing.

Last week, she sent her husband off to Albany, New York, where he is going to work with the Red Cross to help victims of Hurricane Irene.

Plank said she told him to go to Manhattan if he gets the chance, and asked him to take pictures of the site. “I need that for closure,” she said.

Plank said she becomes upset when people allege that Sept. 11 was staged. “It's nothing that I really want to see again, but it has happened.”

 

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Congressman Mike Thompson, a member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, says terrorists are here to stay, and the work of the intelligence community and the military is more important now than ever. File photo.
 

Looking back

Thompson told Lake County News in an interview late last week that many of the changes that resulted from Sept. 11 are very evident – airline screenings, the increased emphasis on awareness and public safety, and more metal detectors in public places.

He said the intelligence community and the military are working harder than ever to keep the country safe.

Now a senior intelligence committee member, Thompson attends three to four meetings and briefings a week on sensitive matters relating to the United States' safety, and travels around the world on committee business five to six times a year.

Most of that intelligence committee's work is done in closed session, he said, and he can't talk much about his service on the committee or the trips he takes.

He said he finds his work with the intelligence committee both rewarding and “very tough emotionally,” noting that a recent briefing had to deal with the deaths of numerous Navy SEALs in a crash in Afghanistan in August.

Thompson said after Sept. 11, he saw the country coming together, and the different political parties working together.

“That was very, very short-lived,” he said, asking that it also was exploited by some.

Now the country is showing incredible divisiveness, Thompson said.

There also was incredible goodwill from around the world. “We squandered a lot of that goodwill,” he said.

“We need to remember the tragedy and remember that there are people who want to harm us,” Thompson said.

In looking back, Plank – who has been to Missouri, North Carolina and San Diego on Red Cross support missions since then – said that her experiences in New York made her a better person. “I have more compassion for the people of other races now.”

On a community basis, Plank said she believes that there has been an increased emphasis on preparedness since Sept. 11 for all communities.

More recently, she's undergone treatment for renal cancer and lost a kidney, but she's on the mend.

She's not been back to New York since 2001. “If I have have a chance to go back there, I probably will,” she said.

As for Brown, he said his visit to New York changed his whole career. From there he was promoted and began higher levels of training.

He believes the main reason why so many firefighters and police officers died on Sept. 11 was related to a communication breakdown. “It always goes back to that.”

He said he also doesn't think a lot of people really understand the brotherhood of firefighters, who put their lives on the line every day.

“I think people have really forgotten that in this 10 years,” he said.

E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

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From left, Andrew Serrano, 38, of Kelseyville, Calif., is accused of shooting William Turner, 41, also of Kelseyville, Calif., in a confrontation on Saturday, September 10, 2011. Serrano is being held on $1 million bail at the Lake County Jail; Turner is in care at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital in Santa Rosa, Calif. Lake County Jail and Facebook photos.



 

 



LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A man alleged to have shot his estranged wife's companion before severely beating the woman has had a bail enhancement placed on him, while doctors are working to prepare the shooting victim for surgery.


The Lake County Sheriff's Office reported on Monday that detectives succeeded in having the bail for 38-year-old Andrew James Serrano raised to $1 million.


Andrew Serrano is accused of shooting 41-year-old Kelseyville resident William Turner and assaulting his estranged wife Lesa Serrano during a confrontation on the afternoon of Saturday, Sept. 10, as Lake County News has reported.


A sheriff's office report on the shooting released Monday said that the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Dispatch received a 911 call just before 12:30 p.m. Saturday from Turner, who told the dispatcher he had been shot in the chest.


Information that law enforcement received in the initial calls to 911 indicated that Andrew Serrano allegedly had beaten Lesa Serrano, and had her by the hair, holding a gun to her head.


Sheriff's deputies and a Lakeport Police officer immediately responded to the Serranos' residence at 3050 Big Valley Road in Kelseyville, where they encountered Andrew Serrano with a gun in his hand, the sheriff's office reported.


At the deputies' order Serrano dropped the gun and was detained on site, the sheriff's office reported.


Turner was located just inside the garage with an apparent gunshot wound to his chest, according to the sheriff's report. A REACH helicopter was called in and arrived within minutes, landing in a field near the home and transporting Turner to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.


The sheriff's report said deputies found Lesa Serrano bruised and bleeding, but able to speak to deputies.


She told deputies that she had come to the residence with Turner to pick up some personal items when Andrew Serrano showed up at the residence and an argument ensued, according to the report.


Sheriff's detectives obtained a search warrant for the Big Valley Road property and arrived on site to secure the area, the report stated.


Serrano is being held at the Lake County Jail on felony charges of attempted murder, inflicting corporal punishment, assault with a firearm, committing a felony while armed, terrorizing and battery with serious bodily injury, and misdemeanor counts of violation of a domestic violence restraining order and false imprisonment.


Serrano was arrested in July after ramming his pickup into Lesa Serrano's SUV in an incident that occurred in Lakeport, as Lake County News has reported. At that point he also violated a domestic violence restraining order.


On Monday Turner was reported to be in stable condition and slowly recovering after having spent a day in Santa Rosa Memorial's intensive care unit, according to a Facebook page his family set up on Sunday in his honor, “Pray for Willy Turner,” https://www.facebook.com/pages/Pray-for-Willy-Turner/274420952585517?sk=wall.


By Monday evening nearly 650 people had “liked” the new page.

Doctors have been working to stop internal bleeding in Turner's chest before conducting surgery to remove the bullet. Family members reported that Sunday was particularly difficult for Turner due to the pain.


According to the page, on Monday Turner was doing better. He was awake, talking and joking.


Turner could possibly undergo surgery on Tuesday, the Facebook page said.


The sheriff's office asks that anyone with information on the case contact Det. Mike Curran at 707-262- 4232.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The California Department of Justice has released the annual “Crime in California” report, which shows that the crime rate in every category of violent or property offenses decreased in California in 2010, although several crime categories rose during the same time period in Lake County.


This is the fourth year in a row violent crime has decreased in California, according to the report.


In total, the violent crime rate decreased 6.9 percent, reaching its lowest level since 1968, and homicide and forcible rape rates are the lowest since 1966.


For Lake County, from 2009 to 2010 there were increases in most crimes.


Violent crimes increased by 5.4 percent; aggravated assault, 15.4 percent; property crimes increased 3.3 percent overall, with burglaries increasing by 6.2 percent and larceny (theft over $400) by 12.9 percent, while motor vehicle thefts dropped by 16.7 percent. Total larcenies were up by 13 percent.


The rate of homicides, forcible rapes, arsons and robberies remained flat in Lake County, the report showed.


The Crime in California report is compiled by the California Department of Justice and is based on data reported by police and sheriff's departments in all of California's 58 counties. It presents an overview of the state's criminal justice system through statistics for reported crimes, arrests and dispositions of adult felony arrests, and law enforcement officers killed or assaulted.


Crime rates have dropped from last year in several category measures, including homicide (-7.8 percent), robbery (-10 percent) and motor vehicle theft (-7.6 percent). Since peaking in 1989, the motor vehicle theft rate has decreased 62 percent.


The total arrest rate is 6 percent lower than last year; both adult and juvenile total arrest rates declined from last year.


The number of juvenile felony arrests has decreased by 11.2 percent in the past year, indicating that efforts to prevent crime at a young age have been successful. Adolescents involved in crime are at a greater risk of becoming offenders and victims as adults.


Continuing with the downward trend statewide, there has also been a decrease in arrests for all types of property offenses across the board, including burglary, theft, and forgery for the third consecutive year.


The one area of increase came in the rate of dangerous drug arrests. Dangerous drugs are methamphetamine, phencyclidine and barbiturates. That number increased for the first time in five years by 12.2 percent over last year. Arrests for narcotics, marijuana and other drug offenses continued to decline.


The Crime in California 2010 report and data broken down by county can be found at www.oag.ca.gov or viewed below.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews.




2010 Crime in California - Attorney General Report




2010 California County Crime Stats

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In commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the founding of Lake County this year, Lake County News is publishing a series of historical stories about the county, its people and places. This week's story about the Jagos is written by Lake County Museum staffer Camisha Knowlton.


Most of you are familiar with Jago Bay, Jago Resort, Jago Grade and what used to be the Jago Store. The Jagos were early pioneers of Lake County. They not only established their business and family here, but they diligently worked hard at what they wanted to achieve. This is their story …


Louis Jago’s father was born in the Gibraltar area, of English parentage. He acquired large holdings in the shipping industry. The house, on the island of Malta, in which he lived and where Louis was more than likely raised, was considered one of the two or three most remarkable structures of that time.


In the beginning, Louis’ grandfather wished him to be a navigator and boat officer. Louis, a young man at the time, complied and signed on to a ship as an apprentice and put to sea.


While in Liverpool, England, Louis met a British man named Beakbane who persuaded him to come to California where he would find big opportunities. After his assignment at sea came to an end, Louis and Mr. Beakbane came to California traveling together by coach to Lake County and setteling in the Burns Valley area.


Louis worked hard in the orchards. During his residence in Burns Valley he met and fell in love with Emma Strothoff a young woman of German descent and they were soon married. They had one son, John.


Dr. Baylis was the first major landowner in the Lower Lake area and he built a home on what became known as Baylis Point.


Dr. Baylis and his wife came to Lake County in the 1860s. The two had nine children.


One of them was Percy Cecil Baylis, Louis Jago’s brother-in-law, who in the 1900s developed the Point Lakeview Subdivision.


In time, Louis lost interest in farming and he bought the first lot and built the first house in the Point Lakeview Subdivision. He went on to accumulate additional lots and founded Jago’s Resort.


The first telephone line in the area was built by Louis Jago and it was first owned and operated by the Jagos, Bob Beale, the Fryes of Thurston Lake and Walter Reichert. Pacific Telephone took it over in the 1940s.


Louis Jago was one of the most civic-minded men among the early settlers around the lake and was nicknamed “Mr. Lake County.”


Jago’s Resort was later owned and operated for many years by his son John and his wife Irene (Miller) Jago.


The road to Jago Bay was constructed in 1912-13 by a young man and his sisters. But that, my friends, is another story.


Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

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