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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Police have released photos of the man accused of badly beating a Pacific Beach bouncer Sunday night. According to police, four men tried to enter through the side door of a restaurant on the 700 block of Grand Avenue around 9:20 p.m. Sunday when a bouncer told the group they had to use the main entrance. As a confrontation escalated, police say one of the men picked up a metal crowd barrier pole, hitting the bouncer in his head. Others in the group then reportedly started fighting with other bouncers at the restaurant before all four men left, according to police. The bouncer who was hit in the head suffered a skull fracture and brain bleed. He was taken to the hospital in critical condition. Another bouncer suffered a broken nose and two other staff members suffered some bumps and bruises. The man suspected of swinging the pole was described as black, in his 30s, 6 feet tall, and 250 pounds with a muscular build. He was wearing a white T-shirt and blue jeans.Anyone with information is asked to call police at (858) 552-1714 or the Crime Stoppers anonymous tip line at (888) 580-8477. 1128
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - People who live near Mini Square Park in City Heights are fed up with what they say is a rise in crime and noise. They're calling for a curfew to be imposed at the park from 9 pm - 5 am."Every rule that's posted here is broken all day long and mostly all night long," says one woman who asked 10News not to identify her because she feels unsafe in her home next to the park. "I can get practically high from the marijuana that comes into my window cause it overlooks the park. The noise becomes just unbearable at times."The park opened in 2014, on 43rd Street in between Polk and University Avenue. Sitting between a senior center, an apartment complex and a health clinic, It was designed as a way to give adults in the community a gathering place.Instead, neighbors say it's been overrun with crime and drugs.A search of the website crimemapping.com shows 148 crimes reported within 1000 feet of the park over the last six months. That includes 21 stolen cars, 19 assaults and 16 robberies.It's gotten to the point where some people say they're afraid to walk by it, especially at night."Of course I would like to be in this park, to spend my free time there," says Isaac Musaazi, who lives in the apartment complex next door. "But I can't because of the people who are there."A community meeting to discuss a curfew and how to enforce it is scheduled for Thursday with the Community Parks Committee. It's at 2 p.m. and will take place at 3325 Zoo Drive in the War Memorial Building. 1513

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- One country that was hit especially hard early on during this coronavirus pandemic was Italy.A former San Diego resident living in Milan said things have finally started returning to normal after a strict lockdown that lasted longer than two months.“There’s a feeling of hope,” said Bea Pesenti. “Obviously now it’s in a rebuilding phase.”Pesenti and her fiancé, Wilson, moved from San Diego to Milan in August of 2019. 10News first interviewed Pesenti in March when Italy was struggling with the spread of COVID-19.“We have been in the heart of it,” she said. “When I spoke to you last, the situation felt really dramatic because we really were in ground zero.”The couple was holed up in their Milan apartment for more than two months.“We were in a very, very severe lockdown,” she explained. “You heard the sirens, and you really just felt this heavy energy.”Fast forward today, Pesenti said she finally sees a return to a sense of normalcy.“The lockdown has ended, the businesses have reopened,” she said. “We immediately saw family because that was the priority for us. Kind of enjoyed being able to take bike rides and going to the park but still limiting our contact.”She said businesses have new safety guidelines in place, and face masks are required in public.There were 70 deaths reported in the country on Thursday, a drastic drop from the 919 reported on March 27.“I think people really needed to have this easement and get back to life,” she said. “Not only from an economic standpoint but being locked in your house for 80 days is just unnatural.”Pesenti hopes things will go smoothly as more of the country begins reopening.“We haven’t had this second wave, so to speak, so hopefully it continues this way,” she said.And she has a piece of advice for San Diegans as our restrictions start to loosen, “I hope people really, really think hard and make the right decisions even as things ease up, still be mindful and considerate of other people’s comfort level.”A restriction on travel between Italian regions is expected to be lifted in early June, however, officials warn that could change if there is a spike in the number of positive COVID-19 cases. 2195
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Officials with the Sweetwater Unified High School District have released a list of locations and details for families looking for meals during the coronavirus campus closures.The district said they will provide lunch at these locations from 11 AM to 1 PM. SUHSD and several other San Diego County school districts announced campus closures to prevent the potential spread of COVID-19. Some schools are canceling face-to-face instructions but offering online coursework.RELATED: What's been canceled, postponed in San Diego, nationally due to coronavirusSchool SiteStreet Address where meals will be servedSpecific locationCastle Park Middle SchoolQuintard Street160 Quintard StreetChula Vista, CA 91911In front of SchoolCastle Park High SchoolHilltop Drive (Quintard St. drive through)1395 Hilltop DriveChula Vista, CA 91911In front of SchoolChula Vista High SchoolK Street820 Fourth AvenueChula Vista, CA 91911On side of SchoolChula Vista Middle School5th Avenue415 Fifth AvenueChula Vista, CA 91910In front of SchoolGranger Junior High SchoolParking Lot (E 20th St. & Granger Ave)2101 Granger AvenueNational City, CA 91950Front Parking LotHilltop Middle SchoolE. J Street44 East J StreetChula Vista, CA 91910Side Parking lotHilltop High SchoolClaire Avenue555 Claire AvenueChula Vista, CA 91910In front of SchoolMar Vista High SchoolElm Avenue505 Elm AvenueImperial Beach, CA 91932In front of SchoolMar Vista AcademyS. 17th Street1267 Thermal AvenueSan Diego, CA 92154In front of SchoolMontgomery Middle SchoolPicador Blvd1051 Picador Blvd.San Diego, CA 92154In front of SchoolMontgomery High SchoolPalm Avenue3250 Palm AvenueSan Diego, CA 92154In front of SchoolNational City Middle SchoolD Avenue1701 D AvenueNational City, CA 91950In front of SchoolSouthwest Middle SchoolIris Avenue2710 Iris AvenueSan Diego, CA 92154In front of SchoolSouthwest High SchoolHollister Street1685 Hollister StreetSan Diego, CA 92154In front of SchoolSweetwater High SchoolHighland Avenue2900 Highland AvenueNational City, CA 91950In front of SchoolSan Ysidro High SchoolAirway Road5353 Airway RoadSan Diego, CA 92154In front of 2148
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - On Wednesday, emotional testimony was read in a downtown courtroom by the husband and wife who were brutally attacked in an economy parking lot outside of the San Diego International Airport. The testimony was read during the sentencing hearing for Alberto Jauregui, who pleaded guilty to attempted murder. Jauregui appeared to show no remorse. He smirked and smiled at the couple and at our camera. It was last October when police say Jauregui came up to Donna Kashani and husband Robert Bobbett in the parking lot. He reportedly grabbed Kashani by her neck and demanded the keys to their SUV. “You put me in a headlock with a 10-inch knife to my neck and you were dragging me into our SUV and demanding that I get in with you,” Kashani told him and the courtroom. In a heroic move, Bobbett threw himself in front of her and charged at Jauregui. “As I rushed toward you, I truly believed I was going to die in this struggle,” Bobbett told Jauregui and the courtroom. He added, “You stabbed me in the chest nearly hitting my heart. All the while [you were] screaming ‘Die, die, die!’” Bobbett was stabbed six times and nearly died. Jauregui was caught days later. During Wednesday’s sentencing hearing, he told the courtroom, “You guys have made a big mistake by not giving me help. Instead of giving me help, you want to punish me.” He’ll spend the next 13 years in state prison. 1456
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