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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diego Police arrested a woman last week for reportedly sex trafficking two young girls. According to police, the woman, identified as Desiree Morton, called officers on July 17 to report that she was a victim of domestic violence and that her boyfriend stole her vehicle. When officers responded to the unspecified location, they found Morton, along with two other girls police say appeared to be younger than 18 and had no identification cards. Police say the girls also had tattoos along their jaws. The two girls later told investigators they were 14 and 15-years-old. Officers arrested Morton after she reportedly admitted to prostituting the girls. The girls were taken into protective custody. 732
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diego Police are investigating after a body was found near a Starbucks in Clairemont Tuesday afternoon. Authorities say the incident happened at the intersection of Clairemont Mesa Boulevard and Diane Avenue. Police say the body was found between an ice machine an several electric car charging stations. At this time, police say there is nothing suspicious about the incident. According to an employee of the Starbucks, a tarp was seen near the drive-thru and police were outside. At this time, the circumstances surrounding the death are unknown.10News will continue to keep you updated as soon as we receive more information. 690
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diegans across the county witnessing a row of fluttering lights in the night sky were left pondering possibilities, including the existence of aliens and, well, Santa.SpaceX launched 60 new Starlink satellites into orbit Monday night. The Starlink satellites are part of Elon Musk's mission to create a space-based broadband internet system. "With performance that far surpasses that of traditional satellite internet, and a global network unbounded by ground infrastructure limitations, Starlink will deliver high speed broadband internet to locations where access has been unreliable, expensive, or completely unavailable," Starlink said on its website.RELATED NEWS: Mysterious lights in San Diego sky: Navy says lights were flares from training exerciseThe sky was clear enough for people to catch the lights streaming into space. "Wtf is in the sky rn," wrote Angel Clark on Twitter. "I saw it. My whole family did. From San Diego. Heading south. It was about 9 or so lights. All on a line," wrote Bill the Butcher.The glow from the satellites were visible across San Diego ... all the way to infinity and beyond.RELATED NEWS: Cornfields or not, UFO sightings aren't as common in Indiana as you might think - but they do happen"Moon directly behind me, lights moving right to left. In Thousand Oaks, CA on a night hike. Many witnesses. #ufosighting #lineoflights huge through the entire night sky. Took minutes to pass through," wrote filmmaker Megan Lee Joy along with a photo she posted on her verified Twitter account.This station received calls and emails from several viewers that witnessed the spectacle in the sky. 1658
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Researchers at UC San Diego and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography are noticing a welcome side effect to the Coronavirus. Social isolation and quarantines may be helping to reverse climate change."This isn't the right reason to be changing the environment," says Professor Ralph Keeling. "We should be doing it because we want to do it, not because we're forced to do it."Recent studies by the European Space Agency showed significantly less Nitrogen Dioxide in the air over Spain, France, and Italy during March of 2020, compared to March of 2019. All three of those countries are under heavy lockdowns because of the Coronavirus.Meanwhile, a report in the New York Times showed similar changes over New York City, Los Angeles, and Seattle.Keeling says it's good to see the short-term gains. But there's no way to know if this will lead to long term changes in the environment. He compares it to a bathtub. As Keeling describes it, the pollutants we put into the atmosphere are like the water flowing into the tub. "If you turn down the tap on a bathtub, and you look at the spigot, you can tell there's less water flowing in," he says. "But if you look at the level of a tub. You don't see immediately that the levels are rising more slowly."Meanwhile, the oceans may also see a benefit from the economic slowdown. Scripps Professor Jeremy Jackson says shipping will slow down, and fisheries that may rely on government subsidies will have to halt operations. That could help fish populations rebound."That very tragic loss of jobs is definitely going to be good for the state of marine resources," Jackson says. "We are going to be preying upon fish and shellfish at a much lower level."But he adds that it's a balancing act. The worse things get for the economy and industries, the better it will be for the environment. But we have to make sure people's livelihoods are protected as well."If we go into a depression, then industrial output and activity are going to take a long time to recover," he says. "But that very grim news will make a big dent on environmental damage."Still, both professors say this could be short-lived. Jackson worries that governments may turn to higher-polluting industries like oil and gas to help pull the world out of economic recessions. And Keeling says none of these gains will last unless people change their habits long-term."I think how we come out of this will make a difference. You know people are learning how to live with less," says Keeling. "We'd like to bend the curve for co2 as well as bending the curve for the Coronavirus. That will take sustained changes, not just short term changes.""What this tells us is that environments can spring back very quickly in terms of animal and plant life if we stop stressing it," says Jackson. "I'm cautiously hopeful this whole business will give us a slightly increased sense of humility about what we can get away with, and this will help towards getting us to think more sustainably." 3012
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego lawmakers responded Friday to President Donald Trump’s comments about border wall construction and funding as the government shutdown stretched into day 13. Trump declared he could keep parts of the government closed for "months or even years" as he and Democratic leaders failed in a second closed-door meeting to resolve his demand for billions of dollars for a border wall with Mexico. “We did a lot of wall in San Diego,” Trump said at a White House news conference. “They wanted it very badly.” Trump cited concerns about the U.S.-Mexico border, including entry by terrorists, drug smuggling, and human trafficking. San Diego County’s congressional representatives emailed comments to 10News regarding the president’s statements. “San Diegans view our proximity to Mexico as an opportunity, not a threat, and we recently celebrated building a bridge between our two countries – not a wall – a bridge with adequate customs staffing so people can travel back and forth easily, and legally,” wrote Rep. Scott Peters. “San Diegans want smart, innovative border security – not the wasteful wall that President Trump wants to build as a monument to himself.” Congressman Duncan Hunter, San Diego County’s lone Republican representative, issued a statement through his public information officer. “Congressman Hunter believes President Trump needs to stand strong on the issue of border security and his description of it as a ‘national emergency’ means he has a firm grasp of its importance. A border barrier is absolutely necessary, some of which is already in existence which many in Congress initially supported. What the President is asking for in terms of funding is not unreasonable and holding Congress accountable is exactly what he was elected to do.” 10News is awaiting responses from Rep. Juan Vargas, whose district includes the South Bay, and Rep. Susan Davis.The Associated Press contributed to this report. 1957