Friday, 20 September 2024

News

"The bluebird carries the sky on his back." – Henry David Thoreau

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Rodman Slough County Park is located on the shores of Clear Lake, at 1005 Nice-Lucerne Cutoff in Nice.

This is a good spot to launch a kayak or even a small boat.

It is, as all of Clear Lake is, a bird-watching heaven.

Look for osprey, grebes, mud swallows, herons, double crested cormorants and more.

The osprey which inhabit the tall nest at the pinnacle of a pole gifted to the great birds by Pacific Gas and Electric saves the birds from an untimely death by electrocution.

The park is 40 acres and is the perfect picnic, fishing or swimming site. Not to be confused with the Lake County Land Trust's more than 400-acre Rodman Preserve on Westlake Road in Upper Lake, Rodman Slough County Park is open year-round.

Take some time in your busy week to sit still here near a sentinel boulder, to “see better.”

Listen to the delicate patter of a late spring rain on the ancient  waters of the lake, then breathe in nature's perfume that languidly fills the air.

scavoneosprey

The breezes ruffle reeds, creating a symphony of delicate sounds and cool currents of fresh air.

When you open your eyes you may be treated to a parade of grebes floating by in their regal style, replete with a newly hatched baby bird or two in tow, on its back.

The greenery that fringes  each shoreline seems to yield secrets like 3-D poetry, if you pay attention, with care.

Each new bud protrudes, proclaiming emphatic facts of themselves wherever you look.

Lapping waters announce the laws of physics – action and reaction all around.

The light sparkling and playing on the lake originated from our star, the sun, more than 93 million miles from us.

There is nothing like the great outdoors to view the wildlife, woods and wetlands of Clear Lake to put things into perspective!

For more information see the Konocti Regional Trails Web site, which contains maps and information on pathways, land and water trails in Lake County.

Kathleen Scavone, M.A., is a retired educator, potter, writer and author of “Anderson Marsh State Historic Park: A Walking History, Prehistory, Flora, and Fauna Tour of a California State Park” and “Native Americans of Lake County.” She also formerly wrote for NASA and JPL as one of their “Solar System Ambassadors.” She was selected “Lake County Teacher of the Year, 1998-99” by the Lake County Office of Education, and chosen as one of 10 state finalists the same year by the California Department of Education.

scavonerodmangrebesign

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The shelter at Lake County Animal Care and Control is once again filled up with dogs in need of new homes, including a new group of puppies.

This week’s dogs include mixes of Chihuahua, German Shepherd, golden retriever, pit bull, shepherd and wirehaired terrier.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

If you're looking for a new companion, visit the shelter. There are many great pets hoping you'll choose them.

In addition to the animals featured here, all adoptable animals in Lake County can be seen here: http://bit.ly/Z6xHMb .

The following dogs at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (additional dogs on the animal control Web site not listed are still “on hold”).

7678shepherdmix

Shepherd mix

This female shepherd mix has a short red and black coat with white markings.

She’s in kennel No. 6, ID No. 7678.

7627pitbullterrier

‘Luna’

“Luna” is a pit bull terrier mix with a short black coat and white markings.

She has already been spayed.

She’s in kennel No. 20, ID No. 7627.

7666scoobydoo

‘Scooby Doo’

“Scooby Doo” is a male German Shepherd mix with a short tan coat.

Shelter staff said he is good with other dogs but has high energy so will need guidance. He knows basic commands.

He’s in kennel No. 21, ID No. 7666.

7701pitbull

‘Ayla’

“Ayla” is a female pit bull terrier.

She has a short white coat with black markings.

She is in kennel No. 22, ID No. 7701.

7690wirehairterrier

Wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy

This female wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy has a short black and white coat.

She’s in kennel No. 23a, ID No. 7690.

23bwirehairterrier

Wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy

This male wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy has a short black and white coat.

He’s in kennel No. 23b, ID No. 7691.

7682whirehairterrier

Wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy

This female wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy has a short black and white coat.

She’s in kennel No. 23c, ID No. 7692.

7693wirehairterrier

Wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy

This male wirehaired terrier-Chihuahua puppy has a short black and tan coat.

He’s in kennel No. 23d, ID No. 7693.

25achihuahua

‘Nana’

“Nana” is an older female Chihuahua with a black coat.

She already has been spayed.

She’s in kennel No. 25a, ID No. 7710.

7711goldenretmix

‘Wrinkle’

“Wrinkle” is a male golden retriever mix.

He has a short brown coat and has been neutered.

He’s in kennel No. 25b, ID No. 7711.

7605germanshepherd

‘Charley’

“Charley” is a female German Shepherd.

She has a classic medium-length black and tan coat.

Charley already has been spayed. Shelter staff said she is good with other dogs her size, but not good with small dogs and cats due to her high prey drive.

She’s in kennel No. 26, ID No. 7605.

7722pitbull

Pit bull terrier

This male pit bull terrier has a short white coat.

He’s in kennel No. 29, ID No. 7722.

6713pitmix

‘Kane’

“Kane” is a male pit bull terrier with a short gray coat and white markings.

He already has been neutered.

He’s in kennel No. 30, ID No. 6713.

7723pitbull

Pit bull terrier

This male pit bull terrier has a short brown and white coat.

He’s in kennel No. 31, ID No. 7723.

To fill out an adoption application online visit http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control/Adopt/Dog___Cat_Adoption_Application.htm .

Lake County Animal Care and Control is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport, next to the Hill Road Correctional Facility.

Office hours are Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. The shelter is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Visit the shelter online at http://www.co.lake.ca.us/Government/Directory/Animal_Care_And_Control.htm .

For more information call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

The California Department of Public Health and the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services are reminding everyone to stay cool and hydrated as temperatures across the state continue to climb.

For the next several days, temperatures are expected to be 10 to 15 degrees above normal with many places topping 100 degrees.

“It’s going to be a hot week, and we would like everyone to protect themselves from the dangers of excessive heat,” said CDPH Director and State Health Officer Dr. Karen Smith. “It is important that everyone stay cool, stay hydrated, stay inside and take other precautions to prevent heat-related illness.”

Extreme heat poses a substantial health risk, especially for vulnerable populations including young children, the elderly, those with chronic diseases or disabilities, pregnant women and people who are socially isolated.

“Simple actions can avoid tragic situations when we know weather changes like these are in the forecast,” said Cal OES Director Mark Ghilarducci. “Err on the side of caution if you’re going to be outside these coming days.”

Heat-related illness includes: cramps, heat exhaustion, heat stroke and death. Warning signs of heat-related illnesses may include heavy sweating, muscle cramps, weakness, headache and nausea. Vomiting, paleness, tiredness and dizziness can also be indicators of heat-related illness.

In areas where air quality is poor, people with heart disease, asthma or other respiratory diseases should reduce or eliminate their outdoor activities.

Summer schools and programs with children who have sensitive conditions, including heart disease, asthma and other respiratory diseases, should conduct activities indoors as much as possible.

CDPH offers the following tips to stay safe during this period of excessive heat:

• Never leave infants, children, elderly or pets in a parked car. It can take as little as 10 minutes for the temperature inside a car to rise to levels that can kill.

• Drink plenty of water or juice, even if you are not thirsty. Avoid alcohol.

• If you don’t have air conditioning, visit a cooling center or a public place with air conditioning (such as a shopping mall or library) to cool off for a few hours each day.

• Avoid outdoor physical exertion during the hottest parts of the day. Reduce exposure to the sun from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. when UV rays are strongest, and keep physical activities to a minimum during that time.

• Wear a wide-brimmed hat to cover the face and neck, wear loose-fitting clothing to keep cool and to protect your skin from the sun.

• Regularly check on any elderly relatives or friends who live alone. Many may be on medications which increase likelihood of dehydration.

• To prevent overheating, use cool compresses, misting, showers and baths. Get medical attention if you experience a rapid, strong pulse, you feel delirious or have a body temperature above 102 degrees.

• Liberally apply sunscreen (at least SPF 15) 15 minutes before venturing outdoors and re-apply at least every two hours – sunscreen may reduce the risk of skin cancer, the number one cancer affecting Californians.

Visit CDPH’s Web site for more tips for preventing heat-related illness and tips for treating heat-related illness. You can also find more information about summer heat on Cal OES’ Web site.

nasastarsborninpairs

Did our sun have a twin when it was born 4.5 billion years ago?

Almost certainly yes – though not an identical twin. And so did every other sunlike star in the universe, according to a new analysis by a theoretical physicist from the University of California, Berkeley, and a radio astronomer from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard University.

Many stars have companions, including our nearest neighbor, Alpha Centauri, a triplet system. Astronomers have long sought an explanation. Are binary and triplet star systems born that way? Did one star capture another? Do binary stars sometimes split up and become single stars?

Astonomers have even searched for a companion to our sun, a star dubbed Nemesis because it was supposed to have kicked an asteroid into Earth's orbit that collided with our planet and exterminated the dinosaurs. It has never been found.

The new assertion is based on a radio survey of a giant molecular cloud filled with recently formed stars in the constellation Perseus, and a mathematical model that can explain the Perseus observations only if all sunlike stars are born with a companion.

"We are saying, yes, there probably was a Nemesis, a long time ago," said co-author Steven Stahler, a UC Berkeley research astronomer.

"We ran a series of statistical models to see if we could account for the relative populations of young single stars and binaries of all separations in the Perseus molecular cloud, and the only model that could reproduce the data was one in which all stars form initially as wide binaries. These systems then either shrink or break apart within a million years."

In this study, "wide" means that the two stars are separated by more than 500 astronomical units, or AU, where one astronomical unit is the average distance between the sun and Earth. A wide binary companion to our sun would have been 17 times farther from the sun than its most distant planet today, Neptune.

Based on this model, the sun's sibling most likely escaped and mixed with all the other stars in our region of the Milky Way galaxy, never to be seen again.

"The idea that many stars form with a companion has been suggested before, but the question is: how many?" said first author Sarah Sadavoy, a NASA Hubble fellow at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. "Based on our simple model, we say that nearly all stars form with a companion. The Perseus cloud is generally considered a typical low-mass star-forming region, but our model needs to be checked in other clouds."

The idea that all stars are born in a litter has implications beyond star formation, including the very origins of galaxies, Stahler said.

Stahler and Sadavoy posted their findings in April on the arXiv server. Their paper has been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Stars birthed in 'dense cores'

Astronomers have speculated about the origins of binary and multiple star systems for hundreds of years, and in recent years have created computer simulations of collapsing masses of gas to understand how they condense under gravity into stars. They have also simulated the interaction of many young stars recently freed from their gas clouds.

Several years ago, one such computer simulation by Pavel Kroupa of the University of Bonn led him to conclude that all stars are born as binaries.

Yet direct evidence from observations has been scarce. As astronomers look at younger and younger stars, they find a greater proportion of binaries, but why is still a mystery.

“The key here is that no one looked before in a systematic way at the relation of real young stars to the clouds that spawn them," Stahler said. "Our work is a step forward in understanding both how binaries form and also the role that binaries play in early stellar evolution.  We now believe that most stars, which are quite similar to our own sun, form as binaries. I think we have the strongest evidence to date for such an assertion.”

According to Stahler, astronomers have known for several decades that stars are born inside egg-shaped cocoons called dense cores, which are sprinkled throughout immense clouds of cold, molecular hydrogen that are the nurseries for young stars.

Through an optical telescope, these clouds look like holes in the starry sky, because the dust accompanying the gas blocks light from both the stars forming inside and the stars behind.

The clouds can, however, be probed by radio telescopes, since the cold dust grains in them emit at these radio wavelengths, and radio waves are not blocked by the dust.

The Perseus molecular cloud is one such stellar nursery, about 600 light-years from Earth and about 50 light-years long. Last year, a team of astronomers completed a survey that used the Very Large Array, a collection of radio dishes in New Mexico, to look at star formation inside the cloud.

Called VANDAM, it was the first complete survey of all young stars in a molecular cloud, that is, stars less than about 4 million years old, including both single and mulitple stars down to separations of about 15 astronomical units.

This captured all multiple stars with a separation of more than about the radius of Uranus' orbit – 19 AU – in our solar system.

Stahler heard about the survey after approaching Sadavoy, a member of the VANDAM team, and asking for her help in observing young stars inside dense cores.

The VANDAM survey produced a census of all Class 0 stars – those less than about 500,000 years old – and Class I stars – those between about 500,000 and 1 million years old. 

Both types of stars are so young that they are not yet burning hydrogen to produce energy.

Sadavoy took the results from VANDAM and combined them with additional observations that reveal the egg-shaped cocoons around the young stars.

These additional observations come from the Gould Belt Survey with SCUBA-2 on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in Hawaii.

By combining these two data sets, Sadavoy was able to produce a robust census of the binary and single-star populations in Perseus, turning up 55 young stars in 24 multiple-star systems, all but five of them binary, and 45 single-star systems.

Using these data, Sadavoy and Stahler discovered that all of the widely separated binary systems – those with stars separated by more than 500 AU - were very young systems, containing two Class 0 stars. These systems also tended to be aligned with the long axis of the egg-shaped dense core.

The slightly older Class I binary stars were closer together, many separated by about 200 AU, and showed no tendency to align along the egg's axis.

"This has not been seen before or tested, and is super interesting," Sadavoy said. "We don't yet know quite what it means, but it isn't random and must say something about the way wide binaries form."

Egg-shaped cores collapse into two centers

Stahler and Sadavoy mathematically modeled various scenarios to explain this distribution of stars, assuming typical formation, breakup and orbital shrinking times.

They concluded that the only way to explain the observations is to assume that all stars of masses around that of the sun start off as wide Class 0 binaries in egg-shaped dense cores, after which some 60 percent split up over time. The rest shrink to form tight binaries.

"As the egg contracts, the densest part of the egg will be toward the middle, and that forms two concentrations of density along the middle axis," he said. "These centers of higher density at some point collapse in on themselves because of their self-gravity to form Class 0 stars."

"Within our picture, single low-mass, sunlike stars are not primordial," Stahler added. "They are the result of the breakup of binaries. "

Their theory implies that each dense core, which typically comprises a few solar masses, converts twice as much material into stars as was previously thought.

Stahler said that he has been asking radio astronomers to compare dense cores with their embedded young stars for more than 20 years, in order to test theories of binary star formation.

The new data and model are a start, he says, but more work needs to be done to understand the physics behind the rule.

Such studies may come along soon, because the capabilities of a now-upgraded VLA and the ALMA telescope in Chile, plus the SCUBA-2 survey in Hawaii, "are finally giving us the data and statistics we need. This is going to change our understanding of dense cores and the embedded stars within them," Sadavoy said.

Robert Sanders writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.

dennisfordhamheadshot

Some people, quite naturally, do not want their family to know the contents of their revocable living trust until after they die. 

So just who gets to see a copy of a person's living trust, and when do they get to see it? 

Initially the settlor and his or her attorney are the only ones who see the revocable living trust; presuming that the settlors is also the initial trustee.

While the trust is revocable the trustee has no duty to provide a copy of the trust to any beneficiaries because the beneficiaries' rights can still be taken away by the settlor.

Is a trust recorded? No, transferring real property into the trust only requires that a trust transfer deed is recorded; the trust is not recorded. A trust transfer deed only discloses the existence of the trust and the identity of the trustee.

If the real property being transferred is subject to a deed of trust (security interest) then the secured lender may sometimes ask to see a copy of certain portions of the trust or a trustee's certification of trust.

Because transferring real property into one's living trust is now so commonplace this is often ignored. Nonetheless, the gifts under the trust do not have to be disclosed.

When transferring title to a financial account (e.g., a brokerage or bank account) into a trust the financial institution will want to see who are the authorized current and possible future trustees; whether the trust is revocable (or irrevocable); and are the trustee's powers.

If and when the settlor becomes incapacitated the trust typically becomes irrevocable because the settlor, who can amend or revoke the trust while competent, is then unable to revoke or amend their trust. The beneficiaries then have vested interests in the trust.

Accordingly, the beneficiaries are entitled to a complete copy of the trust and may request information regarding the assets, liabilities and administration of the trust.

Sometimes, however, the incapacity of a settlor does not make the trust irrevocable. The trust may allow someone else – such as a power holder or trust protector – the power to amend or revoke the trust when a living settlor becomes incapacitated.

When the settlor dies not only the beneficiaries but the deceased settlor's heirs, even those who are disinherited, are each entitled to a complete copy of the trust. The trustee is required to provide them with a notice of such right.

Because all beneficiaries are entitled to a complete copy of the trust, settlors may choose to make small gifts to friends and family (who are not also heirs) outside of the trust so they do not later become entitled to request a copy of the trust.

A will may be used to make gifts to such beneficiaries. So long as less than a total of $150,000 in gross values passes under the will no probate is required.

A trust becomes open to the public when the trustee petitions the court for an order regarding the trust. A copy of the trust must be attached to the petition and served on all persons who receive notice of the proceedings. Moreover, the Trust becomes part of a court file and open to inspection by the public.

While a trust is a confidential document it is not a private document. Beneficiaries and heirs (even disinherited heirs) are entitled to a complete copy of the trust when the settlor dies.

Others, such as banks and creditors may have an interest in seeing a copy of the trust. They typically only require seeing limited portions of the trust as relevant to their interests. A trustee's certification of trust, which does not disclose any gifts, should suffice.

Dennis A. Fordham, Attorney, is a State Bar-Certified Specialist in estate planning, probate and trust law. His office is at 870 S. Main St., Lakeport, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235. His Web site is www.DennisFordhamLaw.com .

historyalbanycongress

This week in history takes a look at the proposal that likely would have delayed, if not prevented the American Revolution: the Albany Congress of 1754.

June 19, 1754

No single episode in our nation’s history is more idealized than the revolution that created it, and rightfully so, to some extent.

Hindsight reveals a remarkable list of instances when the outcome of the struggle could have – indeed should have if you were a gambling person – gone differently.

The number of narrow escapes George Washington achieved throughout the war alone is beyond the pale. His army should have been crushed more times than not and yet time and again he escaped with a sufficiently large force to prolong the war until eventual success.

Those religiously inclined among us see the providential hand of God in these seemingly random acts of luck. Books have even been written on the subject (I’m thinking in particular of “America’s Providential History” by Stephen McDowell and Mark Beliles).

However you choose to explain them to yourself, there is no denying that the near-misses and small turns of fate played a major role in America’s success.

If we were to expand our lens outwards, beyond the confines of the war itself, we would actually see that these twists of luck happened well before hostilities even began.

An important event that, in hindsight, can be added to the list of providential (or lucky) turns for our country actually happened a quarter century before the Declaration of Independence. I’m thinking of the 1754 Albany Congress.

The backdrop to the Albany Congress was the growing tension between the French and British colonies in North America.

By the early 1750s the British colonies were increasingly threatened by the French-backed Indians and their raiding parties.

War between England and France had not yet officially broken out, but in North America there was no doubt that something would have to be done to curb the deteriorating relationship between the colonists and the neighboring Indian tribes to the west – and no reconciliation could be achieved so long as the French continued to incite the Indians to violence.

You see, by the middle of that century, the entire continent of North America was still up for grabs – the board lay open, waiting for each party to make its move.

By the 1750s the French had strongholds in Louisiana and to the north along the Mississippi River. They had a firm hold over Montreal and the region of Quebec and now looked to complete the chain of forts and settlements into the Ohio River Valley, joining their northern holdings with their southern ones in the Gulf.

The English, fearful of the stranglehold this would place on their colonies – essentially preventing them from expanding west of the Appalachians – looked to stop the French from accomplishing this maneuver.

This, in addition to the centuries-long animosity between the two kingdoms, guaranteed the conflict that was to come: the French and Indian War, just one theater of the larger Seven Years War.

The ensuing conflict would pit for the first significant time the resources of the colonies against another nation, a prelude to the Revolutionary War.

Operating nearly autonomously from each other, the British colonies had struggled to adequately address the increasing hostility of the French and their native allies.

To make matters more complicated, the colonists were proud of their individuality. It was to “King and Colony” as much as “King and Country” that each colonist toasted heartily.

As hostilities increased on the continent, some colonial leaders recognized that the very object of their pride would be their downfall should the small territorial conflict flare up into open war.

It would be easy for the French (and later the British) to divide the colonies and conquer them piecemeal.

Although definitely to a lesser extent, the same sentiment was felt back in London and so in June of 1754 a meeting was called in Albany, New York for representatives of 7 of the 13 colonies.

historyfrenchindianwar

The central object of the meeting was actually just to renew negotiations between the northeast colonies and the strategically important Mohawk Nation, a tribe of natives who were part of the larger Iroquois Confederation.

But the ulterior motive behind convening the meeting was to bring these colonies together to foster inter-colonial cooperation.

At the head of the Albany Congress was a Pennsylvanian man named Benjamin Franklin. Having started his career as a newspaperman, Franklin was quick to recognize the importance of currying public opinion, a tactic that would later prove vital in starting the Revolution.

In order to drum up support for the meeting and to highlight the imperative nature of cooperation, he designed a now-famous cartoon: the image of a snake, divided into parts, each labelled with the abbreviation for the individual colonies and, below, the words “Join or Die.”

On this day in 1754 the Albany Congress convened for the first time. By June 18, having discussed the matter of the Mohawks, all commissioners voted to convene again to discuss a proposal for creating a more centralized governing structure among the colonies.

They created a committee, with Franklin playing a major role, and it submitted a draft Plan for Union on June 28.

After several days of arguments and several drafts later, the committee approved the Albany Plan for Union on July 10.

The plan stipulated the following: the colonial governments of all but Delaware and Georgia were to select members to a “Grand Council,” while the British would select a “President General” to preside over the council; together these two branches of government would regulate colonial-Indian relations and resolve any territorial disputes.

Despite passing the Congress itself, both the colonies themselves and the British proved too stubborn for the proposal to take effect.

The colonies didn’t want any curbing of their power over their own territory and the British believed that directives from London were sufficient to govern.

In essence, the proposal had attempted to reconcile the colonies’ growing desire to reform colonial-imperial relations with England’s own desire to keep her colonies in their place in the hierarchy of Empire (hence the President General would be selected directly by London).

We sometimes forget that right up until the height of the hostilities between Great Britain and her former colonies, those same colonists proudly proclaimed themselves British subjects.

The Albany Plan was very much a middle-of-the-road proposal that would have kept both parties happy – at least for a while.

In the end, the failure of the proposal made the future War for Independence far more likely than it had been before. It ensured that the colonies would remain far subordinate to the dictates of London, a tyrannical rule of law that would eventually drive many of the same men who proposed the Albany Plan to develop a far more radical form of government – one of self-rule.

For men like Benjamin Franklin, the process of devising a form of government where individual, semi-autonomous colonies were controlled by centralized branches of power would be good practice for the decades ahead.

Antone Pierucci is the former curator of the Lake County Museum in Lake County, Calif., and a freelance writer whose work has been featured in such magazines as Archaeology and Wild West as well as regional California newspapers.

benfranklinjoinordie

LAKEPORT, Calif. – After numerous delays, the trial is under way for a Clearlake man charged with first-degree murder for a September 2013 shooting that left one man dead and wounded two others.

Joshua Robert Beavers, 28, is on trial for shooting 29-year-old David Ferrell to death at his home in Clearlake on Sept. 8, 2013, and for wounding Ferrell’s friends, Rachel Patterson and Paul Cressy.

Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff, who is prosecuting the case, charged Beavers with murder; assault with a firearm on Ferrell, Patterson and Cressy; the attempted murder of Patterson and Cressy; discharge of a firearm in a grossly negligent manner; unlawfully carrying a loaded firearm on one’s person or in a vehicle; unlawfully possessing a short-barreled shotgun; and numerous special allegations for firearm use and inflicting great bodily injury.

Beavers pleaded not guilty to all of the charges in 2013.

On the day of the shooting, Beavers confronted a former friend, Cameron Fallis, at Ray’s Food Place over issues that arose between Fallis and his mother, Angel Esquivel, and her husband Orlando Esquivel Sr. Beavers had become a friend of the Esquivels, thought of them as parents and also dated their daughter.

The Esquivels said that confrontation occurred when they were on their way to Walmart. When they returned to their home Beavers retrieved two weapons that belonged to the couple, a .22-caliber semiautomatic Ruger handgun and a sawed-off .410-caliber shotgun. Beavers then got the Esquivels to drive him in their van – along with Brenden Alicea and Daniel Cunningham – to Ferrell’s home at 19th and Gardner, where Fallis was staying.

Parking on a nearby street, Beavers, Orlando Esquivel Sr., Alicea and Cunningham walked down to Ferrell’s home, finding him outside with Fallis nearby. Witnesses testified that Ferrell – a friendly man who wasn’t being confrontational – was unarmed, shirtless and wearing a pair of shorts.

After a brief exchange, Beavers is said to have pulled the handgun from his waistband, shooting Ferrell at point-blank range in the face. A single bullet struck him in the corner of his eye, killing him instantly.

Beavers and the men with him then fled, with Beavers reportedly firing two to three more shots, striking Cressy in the elbow and Patterson in the side.

When they got to the van where Angel Esquivel was waiting, the men piled in and directed her to drive off. She drove a short distance before several of the men got out of the vehicle and Orlando Esquivel buried the handgun. He later led police to the gun’s location.

Clearlake Police officers would track the group to the Esquivels’ home on 21st Avenue a short time later, taking them into custody.

Alicea and the Esquivels eventually were sentenced for acting as accessories. The Esquivels each received a year and Alicea 280 days, which they served in the Lake County Jail.

Cunningham – who also goes by the last name of Miller – evaded arrest until December 2013. In March 2014 he pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and was sentenced to six years in state prison.

Testimony in the case finally began on June 7, after a series of delays that ranged from Judge Andrew Blum being unavailable due to illness to issues with contaminated water at the courthouse as the result of a water main leak.

Then there was the matter of witnesses – in particular, Cressy and Alicea – reluctant to continuing to cooperate due to the time that has passed since the case began.

In a brief discussion held out of the jury’s presence at the end of the first day of testimony on June 7, Cressy objected to having to return, saying he “had a life.” Blum told Cressy he could expect to spend part of that life in custody if he continued to defy court orders and refuse to cooperate.

Hinchcliff acknowledged that it’s an old case and that Cressy had been cooperative for the first two and a half years.

Then on Thursday, District Attorney’s Office investigators tracked down Alicea, who they said had defied a subpoena and not reported to court to testify, and brought him from Clearlake to court in Lakeport in wrist and ankle cuffs.

Due to concerns he would leave the county and return to the Stockton area where he now lives without testifying, Blum ordered Alicea be kept in jail until he is due to return to court next week.

Beavers is represented by lead counsel Edward Savin and co-counsel, Andrea Sullivan, who is a partner in Lake Indigent Defense, the new organization heading up the county’s public defender contract.

Sullivan told Lake County News on Friday that it’s been decided that Beavers will take the stand and testify in his defense. While she said that could change later in the proceedings, at this point it’s anticipated to go forward.

Initial time estimates have the trial – which runs Wednesdays through Fridays – continuing through the end of July.

The testimony so far

In brief opening arguments, Hinchcliff laid out the sequence of the crime and the complex web of those who were involved.

In her opening, Sullivan said that the shooting didn’t come out of the blue, that it was the product of family issues that went back nearly 20 years combined with the involvement of the principal figures in growing and selling marijuana.

“There will be evidence that the marijuana business in Lake County can be violent,” she said.

First to take the stand in the trial on June 7 was Fallis, who the prosecution argues was the intended target of the shooting.

Fallis said he met Beavers when they were both boys and being cared for in a group home. Beavers later would meet Fallis’ mother at another group home in Ukiah where she worked and he was staying.

Both young men would gravitate to the Clearlake area when they reached their majority and left their group homes. According to testimony both would end up working in various capacities – Fallis as a seller and grower, and Beavers as a grower, overseer and “jack of all trades” – in the area’s illicit marijuana trade.

Fallis – who spent most of his childhood out of his mother’s custody – said he remembered his mother and stepfather growing marijuana from the time he was a small child.

The relationship between Fallis and his mother was troubled, and he was at various times homeless. He became friends with Ferrell, who allowed him to stay in a trailer on his property. Fallis said he sold marijuana, tended a nearby marijuana garden and also panhandled at Walmart in order to help bring money to the Ferrell family.

“David Ferrell was my best friend but I called him my brother,” Fallis said.

He recalled being assaulted by Beavers at Ray’s Food Place on the morning of the shooting. Fallis said Beavers told him he wasn’t working for the right people – in reference to selling marijuana for someone other than his parents – and Fallis had to give them an ounce of marijuana he had in his backpack. Evidence presented at court included surveillance video of the assault.

Fallis went back to Ferrell’s property, where a birthday party was supposed to take place later that day for Patterson and one of Ferrell’s daughters. He said Beavers and the others arrived, and Ferrell had told him he needed to fight Beavers – without weapons.

Fallis – who insisted that neither he nor Ferrell had any weapons during the confrontation – said Beavers reached up under his shirt and then extended his arm toward Ferrell, holding the handgun. At that point, Fallis said he was shoved from behind and then he heard the crack of the .22-caliber pistol.

“I remember David dropping in front of me,” Fallis said, crying and clutching his head with both hands. “I heard the sound of gurgling when David hit the ground.”

This week Cunningham, the Esquivels, Patterson and a doctor all took the stand.

Cunningham was returned from state prison, where he continues to serve his sentence, in order to testify. When he appeared on Wednesday in a green and white jumpsuit, he also had a blackened right eye, the result of an assault the previous week by assailants at the jail who called him a snitch.

Hinchcliff would attempt to introduce that assault into testimony before the jury in an effort to rehabilitate the credibility of Cunningham, a longtime friend of Beavers who originally had told police that Ferrell had a weapon but has since stated that Ferrell was unarmed.

Hinchcliff said the assault underscored the danger faced by Cunningham – who works as an inmate firefighter with Cal Fire – in testifying. However, Blum agreed with the defense objections that the testimony could be highly prejudicial to Beavers’ case and lead jurors to believe that Beavers – also in custody at the jail – had something to do with the assault.

Cunningham testified to witnessing Beavers assault Fallis on the morning of the shooting, and then going back to the Esquivels’ home where Beavers handed him the .410 shotgun.

Having previous felony burglary and stolen vehicle convictions, Cunningham said it was his mistake to agree to take the weapon, believing that he would have violated a “brother’s code” had he refused.

Cunningham now maintains that he saw no weapons during the confrontation other than the one handled by Beavers, who he didn’t want to get off on self-defense based on his past statements.

He said the shooting happened suddenly. “I literally heard my own heartbeat at that point,” Cunningham said, noting he “zoned out” afterward. “That shot kind of canceled everything out.”

After the shooting, Beavers shaved off his long hair to help change his appearance, Cunningham said. He said Beavers appeared to be anything but remorseful or regretful afterward, calling Ferrell a “fool.”

During cross-examination Cunningham also would testify that he had been involved in helping Beavers in the marijuana trade, and that Fallis and the Esquivels also were in the marijuana business.

During the course of the Esquivels’ testimony, it was revealed that Angel Esquivel owned the gun Beavers used to kill Ferrell. She had bought both the handgun and shotgun a week apart, from different individuals, about a month before the shooting, trading Norco, a prescription painkiller, for the handgun.

While Angel Esquivel said she couldn’t identify the handgun presented to her in court as hers, her husband confirmed that it was her gun.

They both also discussed their personal issues with Fallis, who Orlando Esquivel said had often stolen items from them so he could quickly sell them. He said that, days before the shooting, Fallis had stolen three of his eight surveillance cameras.

Orlando Esquivel said Beavers – who had started calling him “Pops” a few days before Ferrell’s shooting” – wanted to confront Fallis and “slap him up” over the family issues that had developed.

Asked why he didn’t stop the confrontation that turned fatal, Orlando Esquivel said of his stepson, “I wanted to watch Cameron get beat up, to be honest.”

Also testifying on Friday was Dr. David Racker, a diagnostic and intervention radiologist who reviewed the x-rays of Cressy’s damaged elbow.

His brief testimony was followed by that of Cressy, who said he had known Ferrell for about a year before the shooting occurred. Cressy was at the Ferrell home that afternoon, ahead of the birthday party, when he heard loud voices and a gunshot.

“I went around the corner and he was down,” Cressy said of Ferrell, who he tried to help by applying pressure to his wound. He said Ferrell stopped breathing within 30 seconds of him arriving at his side.

While he was sitting on the ground trying to help Ferrell, Cressy said he heard at least two more gunshots, and was struck in the elbow by a bullet. He subsequently was flown to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital for treatment.

During her turn on the stand, Patterson said she had never known Ferrell to have a gun, and that Ferrell listened to Fallis about his assault by Beavers and tried to calm him down.

She said she was inside Ferrell’s home with his wife and children when she saw him, through the window, talking with individuals who came to the property. Then she heard a gunshot and yelling.

Another man blocked the front door to try to keep her from going out, but she said she jumped through a window to go out to help Ferrell, who she found on the ground, not breathing.

While she was outside she was struck by a bullet in the side. She said she looked up the driveway and saw the face of the man with the gun in his hand, pointed in her direction. At that time she had never seen him before.

A juror submitted a written question about whether Patterson saw the shooter in the courtroom. She said yes, referring to Beavers.

She also was asked by a juror if she had identified Beavers during an in-field lineup. At that time, he had shaved off his hair, and Patterson said she had told police that he looked familiar.
 
Testimony in the case will resume on Wednesday, June 21.
 
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

nasamaven

On June 17, NASA's MAVEN, or Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission, will celebrate 1,000 Earth days in orbit around the Red Planet.

Since its launch in November 2013 and its orbit insertion in September 2014, MAVEN has been exploring the upper atmosphere of Mars. MAVEN is bringing insight to how the sun stripped Mars of most of its atmosphere, turning a planet once possibly habitable to microbial life into a barren desert world.

"MAVEN has made tremendous discoveries about the Mars upper atmosphere and how it interacts with the sun and the solar wind," said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN principal investigator from the University of Colorado, Boulder. "These are allowing us to understand not just the behavior of the atmosphere today, but how the atmosphere has changed through time."

During its 1,000 days in orbit, MAVEN has made a multitude of exciting discoveries. Here is a countdown of the top 10 discoveries from the mission:

10. Imaging of the distribution of gaseous nitric oxide and ozone in the atmosphere shows complex behavior that was not expected, indicating that there are dynamical processes of exchange of gas between the lower and upper atmosphere that are not understood at present.

9. Some particles from the solar wind are able to penetrate unexpectedly deep into the upper atmosphere, rather than being diverted around the planet by the Martian ionosphere; this penetration is allowed by chemical reactions in the ionosphere that turn the charged particles of the solar wind into neutral atoms that are then able to penetrate deeply.

8. MAVEN made the first direct observations of a layer of metal ions in the Martian ionosphere, resulting from incoming interplanetary dust hitting the atmosphere. This layer is always present, but was enhanced dramatically by the close passage to Mars of Comet Siding Spring in October 2014.

7. MAVEN has identified two new types of aurora, termed "diffuse" and "proton" aurora; unlike how we think of most aurorae on Earth, these aurorae are unrelated to either a global or local magnetic field.

6. These aurorae are caused by an influx of particles from the sun ejected by different types of solar storms. When particles from these storms hit the Martian atmosphere, they also can increase the rate of loss of gas to space, by a factor of ten or more.

5. The interactions between the solar wind and the planet are unexpectedly complex. This results due to the lack of an intrinsic Martian magnetic field and the occurrence of small regions of magnetized crust that can affect the incoming solar wind on local and regional scales. The magnetosphere that results from the interactions varies on short timescales and is remarkably "lumpy" as a result.

4. MAVEN observed the full seasonal variation of hydrogen in the upper atmosphere, confirming that it varies by a factor of 10 throughout the year. The source of the hydrogen ultimately is water in the lower atmosphere, broken apart into hydrogen and oxygen by sunlight. This variation is unexpected and, as yet, not well understood.

3. MAVEN has used measurements of the isotopes in the upper atmosphere (atoms of the same composition but having different mass) to determine how much gas has been lost through time. These measurements suggest that 2/3 or more of the gas has been lost to space.

2. MAVEN has measured the rate at which the sun and the solar wind are stripping gas from the top of the atmosphere to space today, along with the details of the removal processes. Extrapolation of the loss rates into the ancient past -- when the solar ultraviolet light and the solar wind were more intense -- indicates that large amounts of gas have been lost to space through time.

1. The Mars atmosphere has been stripped away by the sun and the solar wind over time, changing the climate from a warmer and wetter environment early in history to the cold, dry climate that we see today.

"We're excited that MAVEN is continuing its observations," said Gina DiBraccio, MAVEN project scientist from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "It's now observing a second Martian year, and looking at the ways that the seasonal cycles and the solar cycle affect the system."

MAVEN began its primary science mission on November 2014, and is the first spacecraft dedicated to understanding Mars' upper atmosphere.

The goal of the mission is to determine the role that loss of atmospheric gas to space played in changing the Martian climate through time.

MAVEN is studying the entire region from the top of the upper atmosphere all the way down to the lower atmosphere so that the connections between these regions can be understood.

Upcoming Calendar

21Sep
09.21.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Passion Play fundraiser
21Sep
09.21.2024 4:30 pm - 10:00 pm
Lake County Wine Auction
23Sep
09.23.2024 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Lakeport City Council candidates' forum
24Sep
09.24.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at Library Park
28Sep
09.28.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
5Oct
10.05.2024 7:00 am - 11:00 am
Sponsoring Survivorship
5Oct
10.05.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
12Oct
10.12.2024 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Farmers' Market at the Mercantile
14Oct
10.14.2024
Columbus Day

Mini Calendar

loader

LCNews

Award winning journalism on the shores of Clear Lake. 

 

Newsletter

Enter your email here to make sure you get the daily headlines.

You'll receive one daily headline email and breaking news alerts.
No spam.