The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Old NEWS: Melania Trump hasn't appeared in public for 19 days

Melania Trump hasn't appeared in public for 19 days

Ready, Set, Go
by
Peter Bennett

Jill Shrader

Washington (CNN)It's been 19 days since the public has laid eyes on first lady Melania Trump. In the early hours of May 10, Trump welcomed home three American hostages from North Korea, accompanying President Donald Trump to greet them on arrival at Joint Base Andrews; it would be the last time public appearance by the first lady for more than two weeks. Four days later, Trump was checked in to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for what her spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham in a press release described as, "an embolization procedure to treat a benign kidney condition." That statement was released post-procedure, allowing Grisham to add that it was "successful and there were no complications." Yet 15 days later, the most anyone has heard from Trump has come via Twitter, with just one addressing her medical procedure. Melania Trump ✔ @FLOTUS A sincere thank you to Walter Reed Medical Unit @WRBethesda & to all who have send good wishes & prayers! I am feeling great & look forward to getting back home @WhiteHouse soon. 1:01 PM - May 16, 2018 111K 24.5K people are talking about this Twitter Ads info and privacy "A sincere thank you to Walter Reed Medical Unit @WRBethesda & to all who have send good wishes & prayers! I am feeling great & look forward to getting back home @WhiteHouse soon. Since her almost week-long hospital stay, Trump has also tweeted about the school shooting in Santa Fe, Texas; the Navy SEAL who was awarded the Medal of Honor at a White House ceremony, which she did not attend, on May 24; and most recently, a tweet supporting the military in honor of Memorial Day.

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Allison Bayliss / missing person 2011 Danville CA

Note: One day the FBI Arrested Private Investigator Christopher Butler known to Pete Bennett since the 1980s.  Just after the attempted murder of Gary Vinson Collins of Pete Bennett a few days later PI Butler arrived at Bennett's Danville residence.
What connects Pete Bennett, Allison Bayliss, the Dr. Kim Fang Murder, Fang v. TEAC, The United States v. Christopher Butler is the Public Law Firm of Gagen, McCoy is William Gagen. His customer Dr. Kim Fang was murdered in 2000, his pharmacist commits
suicide in 2002, his truck explodes in 2004, his Attorney Beaten in Walnut Creek but his witness was murdered in 1989. The Bayliss Family is a victim linked to common litigation between many parties and one big Federal Case.  Boy Scouts, Contra
Costa Grand Jury, Golden Gate Bridge, Missing Persons, Obituaries, Suicides, Town of Danville, Silverado Council, Mark Peterson, The Dirty DUI, William Gagen, Bennett v. Fang, Fang v. TEAC Engineering, Dead Litigants,
Cnetscandal.blogspot.com Living With a Terrible Grief






An East Bay mother, whose son was never found after his suicide at the Golden Gate Bridge, counsels compassion for the family of Danville teen Alliy Bayliss.

By Martha Ross, Patch Staff | | Updated




For the family of Allison Bayliss, it is possible that their grief will be complicated by the fact she has not been found.




Sadly, that is a reality that many families of Golden Gate Bridge suicide victims endure for days, months and years. Compounding the tragedy of losing a loved one to a suicide on the Golden Gate Bridge is the fact that the bodies of many who jump are
never recovered, according to a Hercules mother whose 20-year-old son probably jumped from the bridge on the morning of Nov. 15, 2007. Matthew Whitmer is still officially "missing," as are others whose bodies have not been found.
"If no one saw them jump, there is going to be an even bigger hope that they walked off the other end of the bridge," said Dayna Whitmer, whose son would have turned 24 Saturday. Nearly four years later, he is not officially dead
but is listed as a "missing person." "You can't let go of the hope. It's almost impossible to let go of the hope." Bayliss, a 15-year-old student, was seen walking onto the bridge at about 10 a.m. Monday but wasn't seen leaving
it, Her locked bicycle, with her helmet beside it, was found in the parking lot of Fort Point, right below the bridge. The CHP and Danville Police say their investigation found she ended her life by jumping from the bridge — something
that even many people who didn't know her find hard to believe, based on comments they're posting on Patch. Even Saturday morning, after the family announced a Monday public celebration of Bayliss' life, one Danville resident posted:
"I still continue to have hope. How do you know she didn't get in a car and that's why you didn't see her come off the bridge? I'm still hoping and praying for a miracle." Patch has repeatedly questioned authorities about the evidence
they have of Bayliss' suicide, and they've assured us that their information is accurate. "She walked onto the bridge and didn't come back," said Danville Police Chief Steve Simpkins. In their announcement, released Friday, the
Bayliss family extended their thanks to the Danville community and invited people to attend a at 2 p.m. Monday at Danville's. "Alliy was a caring and compassionate young woman and an avid learner who was always interested in helping
others," the statement said. Whitmer has become an advocate for families and for erecting a suicide prevention barrier at the bridge. She also has created a website, goldengatebridgesuicides.com , that offers practical resources for
families who are coping with this unique tragedy. "It's so difficult when you can't get them home," said Whitmer. "It's not unlike all the MIAs in Vietnam, you never know for sure until you get them home." John Bateson, the executive
director of the Contra Costa Crisis Center and the author of a forthcoming book on suicides at the Golden Gate Bridge, said
that a number of the 1,550 confirmed suicides are not officially recorded as "suicides" because the bodies were never found. He can't say what percentage of bridge suicides are classified as missing person's cases, just as no one
can say for sure how many people have died. He and Whitmer said the currents of San Francisco Bay push the bodies in various directions, over to Marin County, down to San Mateo County or out into the Pacific Ocean. Both Bateson
and Whitmer said the bodies of people believed to have jumped from the bridge have been carried out and turned up as far as away as Santa Cruz, the Farallon Islands, even Mendocino County. Ken Holmes, the former longtime coroner
of Marin County, whose office has conducted the majority of autopsies on bridge suicide victims, told Whitmer that some bodies don't resurface. After Matthew disappeared, Holmes advised her to keep calling his office. But after
six months, she was told to expect his body probably would not be recovered after being in the water for so long. Whitmer said her son, who had been in Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts, had a mental illness. At the age of 12, he told
his mother he had tried to kill himself. After a hospitalization, he was given a diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder, an illness that has components of schizophrenia and a mood disorder. Matthew received treatment, stayed very
active in sports, completed high school, and traveled to the United Kingdom and Ireland as a student ambassador for People to People, a program for young adults to travel around the world. When he died, he was going to school to
become a massage therapist. In the past, he had always been very open with his family about whether he was becoming depressed or hearing voices. The family also talked openly about suicide and what he should do if he was having
those kinds of ideas. The night before his death, he had gone out with his older brother David. The two returned home at about 10 p.m. and stayed up playing video games. Matthew was last seen by his brother at home about 1:30 a.m.
Whitmer woke up at 6:25 a.m. "I just sat up right in bed, feeling that something is terribly wrong." She got up and looked for Matthew, knew he had an 8 a.m. class and tried to reach him by texting him. Through the Hercules police,
the family learned later that morning that his car had been found in the south parking lot of the Golden Gate Bridge. According to what they were told by the California Highway Patrol, joggers had reported seeing a young man wearing
a hooded sweatshirt leap over the side of bridge at about 6:25 a.m. They also saw a splash. The U.S. Coast Guard searched the waters but didn't find anyone. Matthew Whitmer had texted a friend at 6:23 a.m. the words "Peace Out."
He had also printed out directions to the Golden Gate Bridge, which were found in his car. Other information came in later: that Matthew had apparently attempted suicide three days earlier and that he had started to hear voices
again. The first days and nights, Whitmer and her husband, Mark, contacted every hospital in the Bay Area, looking for a John Doe. They also called and called the Coroner's Office in Marin County. "We just kept calling and waiting
and hoping it wasn't him [who had been seeing jumping]." Three weeks after Matthew Whitmer apparently committed suicide, family and friends held a sunset vigil at Point Isabel. Over the years, Dayna Whitmer learned more than she
ever wanted to about the Golden Bridge and its history as a No. 1 suicide site in the world. She has provided DNA to the coroner's office in case her son's body is ever found. And, every day, Whitmer has moments of thinking that
Matthew will still walk through the door. A CHP officer told Whitmer about the particularly sad case of a family whose religion required the burial of body in order for them to begin grieving. For any family with someone missing
from the bridge, that sense of "closure"— a stage important for emotional healing — becomes ever more elusive, she said. Whitmer said she and other relatives "feel it all over again" when they hear about another Golden Gate Bridge
suicide. That's how it was Tuesday, when she first saw a tweet about Bayliss going missing, then read that Bayliss had left a suicide note and her bicycle was found near the bridge. Bayliss reminded Whitmer of Matthew in that she
was reported to be smart, physically active and fun to be around. Whitmer was heartened to see that 2,000 people turned out for Bayliss' vigil Wednesday evening . "That's the kind of support you don't often get when someone commits suicide," she said. That's because suicide often is seen as a "choice," or because of the fear friends and family will be judged for not noticing that their
loved one was in such deep distress and intervening, Whitmer said. "Her family should get the utmost care and compassion, " she added. "They shouldn't be stigmatized because of it." In their statement, the Bayliss family said that
the tremendous support they have received from people around the Bay Area "has been overwhelming." The Danville Community Presbyterian Church is at 222 West El Pintado Road. The family asks that people wear blue and bring any photos
and other memorabilia of Alliy to add to their scrapbook. The family has established the "Allison Bayliss Donation Fund Account" to further her interests. Donations can be made at any Wells Fargo bank. Expressions of sympathy may
be delivered in care of the Danville Police Department at: Bayliss Family c/o Danville Police Department 510 La Gonda Way Danville, CA 94526
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Police open murder probe as 1 of 2 nerve agent victims dies

 

FILE - In this file photo dated Thursday, July 5, 2018, an unidentified British police officer guards a cordon in Salisbury, England. Officials say Saturday July 7, 2018, that a police officer is being tested for possible medical problems related to the recent Novichok nerve agent poisoning of two individuals in southwest England. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, FILE)

FILE - In this file photo dated Thursday, July 5, 2018, an unidentified British police officer guards a cordon in Salisbury, England. Officials say Saturday July 7, 2018, that a police officer is being tested for possible medical problems related to the recent Novichok nerve agent poisoning of two individuals in southwest England. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, FILE)


LONDON (AP) — A woman who was poisoned by a military-grade nerve agent in southwest England died Sunday, eight days after police think she touched a contaminated item that has not been found.
London's Metropolitan Police force said the case had become a homicide investigation now that 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess had died in a hospital in Salisbury. She and her boyfriend, Charlie Rowley, 45, were admitted June 30 and remained in critical condition.
Police said tests showed the pair was exposed to Novichok, the same type of nerve agent used to poison former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in Salisbury in March. Police suspect Rowley and Sturgess handled an item from the first attack, which Britain blames on Russia.
Moscow denies involvement.
Prime Minister Theresa May said she was "appalled and shocked" by Sturgess's death.
"Police and security officials are working urgently to establish the facts of this incident, which is now being treated as murder," May said.
Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu, Britain's top anti-terrorism police officer, said the death "has only served to strengthen our resolve" to find those responsible.
More than 100 police officers have been working to locate a small vial or other container thought to have held the nerve agent that sickened the two. Officials say the search and cleanup operation will take weeks or even month.
Counterterrorism police are also studying roughly 1,300 hours of closed circuit television footage in hopes of finding clues about the couple's activities in the hours before they became violently ill.
Detectives want to know where the couple was to get new leads on where the contamination might have occurred.
Britain maintains the March attack on the Skripals had been ordered by the Russian government, a charge denied by representatives of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The case led to the expulsion of Russian diplomats from Britain, the United States, and other countries, and tit-for-tat retaliation by Moscow.
The new poisoning has frightened some residents who thought an extensive cleanup had removed the threat of any further Novichok exposure.
Hospital officials said late Saturday that a number of people including a police officer had sought medical advice in the last week but had been found not to need any treatment.
John Glen, the Conservative Party legislator for the region, said the new poisoning has threatened an economic rebound from the slowdown caused by the attack on the Skripals.
"We need to establish quickly what they came into contact with and where," he said. "The sentiment in the city is frustration, we want to get back to normal."
Britain's interior minister visited Salisbury and nearby Amesbury, where the couple fell ill, on Sunday to reassure residents that the risk to the public remains low.
Home Secretary Sajid Javid said the area is open for business and urged people to visit what he called one of the most beautiful parts of the country.
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The Pamela Vitale Murder - an out of tune riddle played on a fiddle




Horowitz recounts finding wife's body

Friend says TV legal analyst 'pretty sure' who bludgeoned wife

Wednesday, October 19, 2005; Posted: 9:40 a.m. EDT (13:40 GMT)

Horowitz: "I just told her, 'I love you, and you're beautiful.' "
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Daniel Horowitz
San Francisco (California)
LAFAYETTE, California (CNN) -- High-profile defense attorney and TV legal analyst Daniel Horowitz said Tuesday he knew his wife, Pamela Vitale, was dead as soon as he saw her lying inside their temporary home Saturday evening.
"I took it all in, and I knew she was dead," Horowitz told CNN's Nancy Grace in an exclusive interview.
"You scream, you cry. But I just basically sat with her, and I just told her, 'I love you, and you're beautiful,'" Horowitz said.
"It didn't matter any more what was around her, or the horror," he said. "I had just so much time with Pamela, so I just looked at her face, and it was beautiful." (Watch Horowitz describe his last minutes with his wife's body -- 4:50)
After reporting her death to police, Horowitz said he was put in the back of a squad car and not allowed to return to the trailer to see his wife.
He was later taken to the police station, where he was placed in a room normally used for juveniles.
Horowitz, 50, said police monitored him as a person who might commit suicide, but he said he had no intention of killing himself.
Horowitz said he found Vitale, 52, when he returned from San Francisco to the mobile home where the couple was living while their dream house was being built nearby on a remote hilltop near Lafayette in Contra Costa County east of Oakland.
Medical examiners concluded Monday that Vitale died from blunt trauma to the head, said a spokesman for the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department.
Investigators were still on the property Tuesday looking for evidence.
Horowitz said he had been in San Francisco preparing for the trial of Susan Polk, accused of stabbing to death her millionaire husband in 2002.
The judge declared a mistrial Monday in the high-profile Polk case because of Vitale's slaying.
On Tuesday, Joseph Lynch, a tenant on Horowitz's property, dismissed as "ridiculous" the suggestion that police were focusing on him as a suspect, telling CNN he had nothing to do with Vitale's death.
"I am innocent. I have not been on the premises up there," Lynch said.
Officials have described Lynch as cooperative and said he is one of many people they have spoken with about the case.
Four months ago, Horowitz and Vitale petitioned for a restraining order against Lynch, charging that he was dangerous. But Horowitz told CNN they never had the order served because they feared inflaming the situation.
Lynch acknowledged he has had trouble with alcohol and drugs, including methamphetamines, for more than 20 years, but he said he has put those troubles behind him.
He said Horowitz had been supportive, even writing a letter on his behalf to the judge after he was charged with driving while under the influence.
"I've been a real jerk over the years, but now I'm clean, sober and trying to concentrate on the present and the future," Lynch said. He would not say how long he had been off drugs, only that he was "currently clean."
Jimmy Lee, a spokesman for the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department, said Monday that the case remains "wide open."
"We're looking at all possible theories and motives. We're not focused in one area," Lee said.
Ivan Golde, a fellow attorney and friend of Horowitz, said Tuesday on CNN's "Larry King Live" that Horowitz "is pretty sure who did this crime" but cannot identify the person publicly.
Golde had earlier said police were "zeroing in" on Lynch as a potential suspect.
In response, Lynch said, "It doesn't matter what he says. I didn't do it."
Golde, who is Horowitz's co-counsel in the Polk trial, said he was "confident" there was no connection between that case and Vitale's slaying.
Horowitz and Vitale had been building a 7,000-square-foot Italian-style mansion for the past two years. It was primarily her dream house and she supervised the project down to the last detail, Horowitz told CNN.
He said he is aware that media attention will "probably" turn to him as a suspect in his wife's death.
"I don't care," he said. "My wife is gone. ... It doesn't matter. What's the difference?"
Horowitz has represented numerous high-profile defendants and appears frequently as a legal analyst on cable television networks, including CNN.
Golde said Horowitz carried a gun because "he received threats from time-to-time."
"Dan had to protect himself," he said
CNN's Rusty Dornin and Ted Rowlands contributed to this report.
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The McDonalds Take Down

The Anatomy of a Commercial Real Estate Transaction


Identify Site Location: Walnut Creek McDonalds
Identify Jurisdiction: Local Friendly Officers (Pre-Chaplin) 
DA Friendly No Prosecution: Contra Costa DA Mark Peterson 


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AFL-CIO Building Investment Trust (BIT)

By Jon Peterson

Washington, D.C.-based AFL-CIO Building Investment Trust (BIT) and San Mateo-based Sares Regis Group of Northern California are planning to start development in May on the 260-unit Cadence apartment project in South San Francisco. The address of the project is 398, 400 and 405 Cypress Avenue.
The BIT has made an equity investment into the project of $143 million, as stated on the investor’s Web site. The project is being done in a partnership with the BIT and Sares Regis Group, and it has an official groundbreaking planned for May 17th. The projection is that the development will take 20 months to complete once it gets started.
Sares Regis feels that the site is a very strong location. “I think that the renters in the project will like that our project will be only a quarter mile walk to the Caltrain station. This will allow them to have public transportation either to San Francisco or Silicon Valley. The renters could also walk to downtown South San Francisco to get to shopping and entertainment locations,” says Ken Busch, senior vice president with Sares Regis Group of Northern California.
All of the apartments in the development will be market rate units. Some of the amenities in the project will include a rooftop lounge, fitness center and club rooms. The project will have five stories over two levels of parking.
“We are very excited to have this new project coming to our city. It will help with the demand for housing that we have. It will be part of our downtown specific plan that we approved in 2015 where at least 1,450 units could be added to our city going forward. Cadence will also replace a site that has been a vacant site for several years and was the home of an old Ford car dealership,” said Alex Greenwood, director of economic and community development for the city of South San Francisco.
The BIT has a significant presence in the San Francisco Bay Area. According to its 2016 fourth quarter report on its Web site, it has a portfolio in the region with a net asset value of $700 million. This region amounts to 15.3 percent of its $4.67 billion total net asset portfolio. Four of its top 10 holdings are based in the region. These are the San Pedro Square Apartments in San Jose, Hacienda Crossings shopping center in Dublin, the Alameda Landing Shopping Center in Alameda and an office building in Fremont. The trust has also invested $88 million of equity into the development of the 395-unit MacArthur Commons apartment development in Oakland, which broke ground earlier this year. This development is being done with the Trust and Houston-based Hines.

BIT’s long-term investment strategy is to build and maintain a stable and diversified pool of assets through the acquisition and development of core properties in target markets throughout the United States. Its major markets besides the San Francisco region include Seattle, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Miami and Philadelphia.
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OBIT: Susan Kennedy - Friend from Danville




bill kennedy - retired so good - Bay Alarm Company | LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/bill-kennedy-356aa345
Clayton, California - ‎retired so good - ‎Bay Alarm Company
View bill kennedy's profile on LinkedIn, the world's largest professional community. bill has 1 job job listed on their profile. See the complete profile on LinkedIn 
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Ken Salazar

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OBIT: Kadeem Hodge

Man Arrested Saturday for Theft at Concord’s Sunvalley Mall Killed in Shooting on Sunday in Antioch

DECEMBER 4, 2017 15:21 PM · 38 COMMENTS
A murder victim has been identified by the Contra Costa County coroner’s office today as 19-year-old Antioch resident Kadeem Hodge, who was shot and killed early Sunday morning in his hometown, police said.
An Antioch resident with the same name was arrested a day earlier for allegedly shoplifting at the Sunvalley Shopping Center in Concord, but Concord police did not immediately confirm whether it is the same person, however, friends of the victim have confirmed he is the same man.
Antioch police found Hodge on Empire Mine Road at 2:27 a.m. Sunday with what appeared to be gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead where police found him.
Concord police on Saturday were patrolling the Sunvalley Shopping Center when shoppers alerted them to an alleged shoplifting case.
Witnesses provided a description of the suspect vehicle, which police found quickly as the vehicle entered the highway.
Officers pulled the vehicle over and found stolen merchandise from several stores.
Police said besides Hodge, they also arrested Tiana Mayberry of Antioch.
Hodge and Mayberry were arrested on suspicion of shoplifting, conspiracy and possessing burglary tools.
Town December 4, 2017 at 3:38 PM
Arrested and killed in one day? Didn’t even spend one day in jail? Good job California.
Chicken Little December 4, 2017 at 3:38 PM
Prop 47 cost him his life.
Oh boy... December 4, 2017 at 3:39 PM
I see a lawsuit coming from his family. This will somehow be the police’s fault for releasing him back into the public.
Cellophane December 4, 2017 at 3:43 PM
Arrested one day, back on the street the same day, killed the next…
When will the bleeding hearts wake up? I’m not holding my breath…
Anon December 4, 2017 at 4:26 PM
Cellophane you are so right and I’m not holding my breath either.
L December 4, 2017 at 4:31 PM
Wow, don’t understand people thinking these days….
So he was caught shoplifting, someone didn’t like the fact he didn’t get away with it so they killed him, what a POS!!
Original G December 4, 2017 at 4:36 PM
Was reported this makes TEN killings for antioch so far this year.
Maybe December 4, 2017 at 4:40 PM
Paul Blart is going vigilante on us.
Pony December 4, 2017 at 4:40 PM
Arrested on Saturday, dead at 2:30am Sunday. How do you even make bail that quick. Oh well, saves the county money. Now only if this catch, release, eliminate could become standard procedure.
Always Right December 4, 2017 at 5:00 PM
The body count grows as the Democrat war against the poor continues.
In the long term, weak laws and poor enforcement hurt the poor the most. This young man would be alive today if we had elected a Republican governor or had a Republican legislature.
JD December 9, 2017 at 3:59 PM
So, he wouldn’t have enemies based off an election?!?
In The Ozone December 4, 2017 at 5:02 PM
Perhaps Mr.Hodge had one of those off-street “Pay Day Loans” come due, And the botched Sunvalley heist was an attempt to reconcile that debt. Maybe Claycord / Antioch police can provide some insight as this evolves…
Lambie December 4, 2017 at 5:11 PM
He was released hours after being arrested? Unbelievable.
Mr Big December 4, 2017 at 5:23 PM
Aw, too bad.
Fed up December 4, 2017 at 5:24 PM
The new “bring your own bag” law is really working (for thieves).
Amy December 4, 2017 at 5:32 PM
“Live by the sword, die by the sword “.
JD December 9, 2017 at 4:00 PM
What sword are you claiming he lived by? Are you saying stealing is a crime people should die for?
Fred December 4, 2017 at 6:51 PM
Lambie-It’s called proposition 47-no one goes to jail-deal with it
Your liberal friends voted for it
Fritzhugh Ludlow December 4, 2017 at 6:59 PM
…….about 2002 Empire Mine Road was known as “The Shadow Lands” due to Ghosts and other Supernatural events….It was also gated in later years so the involved subjects are also guilty of trespassing.
Jeff December 4, 2017 at 7:40 PM
Wonder what happens to people like this? I see he went to st Ignacius for 5-8th grade, so someone had to love him to pay that much money for his education. Crazy.
Acc December 4, 2017 at 7:48 PM
@Pony, haven’t you heard? Bail is racist
SmileWC December 4, 2017 at 8:32 PM
Where are the parents? Son, you were arrested for shoplifting today – no, you can’t go out tonight!
At @ 2:00 a.m., son, where are you? – You need to be home in bed, it’s late
Yes, we;re talking about a 19 year old, I have one too – they are accountable if they are living at home!
JD December 9, 2017 at 4:04 PM
19 year olds make their own decisions. Do you think someone on the street at 2 in the morning follows directions? If your teen found a way outside at that time and was murdered that you’d be accountable?
Dr. Jellyfinger December 4, 2017 at 9:37 PM
Geez! …….. Lavar Ball said it was no big deal.
MeCrazyWoman December 4, 2017 at 10:27 PM
My first reaction doesn’t jive with any of these comments. My thoughts are that this is so sad. I don’t like crime but we are talking about someone’s life. It could be your kid that messes up.
Elwood December 4, 2017 at 10:59 PM
Kadeem definitely did not have a good weekend!
tita December 5, 2017 at 1:08 AM
Only one life What will you do with the time you have? Where will you spend eternity? No “do overs”…Such a waste…Apparently stealing was easier than working..If his parents could afford a good education they probably could afford his Bail…Sometimes its better to let the kid experience some Jail and hopefully it will scare them straight…
JD December 9, 2017 at 4:06 PM
He was cited and released.
Sign from Above December 5, 2017 at 7:45 AM
@ Pony
He was most likely out before the officer left the jail! Welcome to California! This is how the voters want it!
Sign from Above December 5, 2017 at 7:51 AM
@ MeCrazyWoman
This “kid” didn’t just mess up. Given the fact that he was arrested just hours before “should” show you that this was more of a pattern. The criminal/thug life can be dangerous. All of our life decisions have consequences. He made his choice on what direction he wanted to go.
G. December 5, 2017 at 8:28 AM
Wow, it’s really surprising what the anonymity of the Internet has done to our community. I will pray for each and everyone of you who have fallen off of the path, to be led into such hateful and judgemental thoughts.
Toxic emotions spread like wildfire, I implore you to get a handle on it before it’s too late. Bless you all.
Kyle H December 5, 2017 at 9:38 AM
We use to party out on that road 15 years ago and now sec.8 made it all bad.
My poor hometown.
anon December 5, 2017 at 10:18 AM
“I see he went to st Ignacius for 5-8th grade, so someone had to love him to pay that much money for his education. ”
total waste of good money
JD December 9, 2017 at 4:08 PM
Says you. What if his soul was saved over those years?
Michael December 5, 2017 at 1:28 PM
Young life tragically cut short? Great time to dust off some prejudices and stereotypes and drag the poor boy through the mud.
Rollo Tomasi December 5, 2017 at 5:54 PM
@ MeCrazyWoman:
“Messing up” is forgetting a homework assignment, or failing to put the garbage cans back in the yard, or getting ticketed for rolling through a stop sign. This scumbag committed a CRIME. Your attitude is unfortunately reflective of our elected state representatives.
hmmmm December 8, 2017 at 8:24 AM

@L
Conjecture much?
Where in the article did it say the murder was committed by those who tried catching him for shoplifting?
Silva December 9, 2017 at 5:29 PM
Some of our children are damaged.
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