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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego Police are investigating what led to the death of a man while in police custody last week in Paradise Hills.Police said 39-year-old Guillermo Corrales was arrested on April 16 in the 6300 block of Clyde Ave. after reports of a relative becoming violent. Corrales had possibly used narcotics, according to police.Corrales was placed in handcuffs and medically evaluated by first responders.During the evaluation, Corrales went into cardiac arrest, according to police, and he was taken to a nearby hospital and placed on life support.He died from his injuries on Thursday.San Diego Police homicide detectives are investigating the incident as a possible custody death. 724
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego County health officials are focusing their efforts to reduce COVID-19 cases in hard-hit disadvantaged communities.Since the state released its tiered reopening system, County officials have closely monitored case rates and positivity rates, the two metrics that move counties between restrictive and less restrictive tiers.Now, the state has added a new metric relating to equity. It focuses on disadvantaged communities. The state looked at several factors that influence health in communities, including economics, education, transportation, social, neighborhood/environment, and housing conditions. The metric is meant to focus on those communities and their risk to COVID-19.At a news conference Wednesday, County officials say they are working to create a plan to address equity and submit to the state next Thursday. They also say the state will release additional guidelines on Monday.The county's health equity rate is at 6.2, which falls under the red tier. That number needs to drop below 5.2 to meet the orange tier criteria.San Diego County is currently already operating in the red tier based on the other two metrics. The county's positivity rate is at 3.5, Which meets the criteria for the orange tier. But the county's state calculated adjusted case rate is 6.5 new daily infections per 100-thousand people, which falls in the red tier. The red tier allows many businesses to reopen their indoor operations, though at a limited capacity.County officials said the new health equity metric does not play a factor in moving San Diego back into a restrictive tier. But it does play a role in moving to a less restrictive tier.County health officials have been working to reduce COVID-19 cases in disadvantaged communities through outreach and education, testing, and contact tracing, but feel more could be done."Undoubtedly, there's more we can do," Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said. "So even though we've done all of those things and continue to do those things, we will continue to search out more opportunities to address the inequity issues in trying to help those communities who are most impacted." 2153

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Recent changes at the border are being felt as President Trump considers a total border shutdown to combat the immigration crisis. Customs and Border Protection officials announced the reduction of the commercial lanes at Otay Mesa from 10 lanes to 8 Tuesday. “4 to 5 hours,” said one driver who added another man in his fleet took more than 6 hours to make it across Wednesday. Companies say drivers are missing deadlines or just skipping the day altogether to avoid the delays. “They lose millions,” said driver Benjamin Alfaro on the already cumbersome process taking even longer, “so if they don’t do that in the normal time of course they lose money. It’s a lot of pressure on everybody.” The President is expected visit the Southwestern border on Friday. 788
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego City Council members approved Tuesday a new state of emergency resolution linked to sewage in the Tijuana River Valley. District Eight Councilmember Vivian Moreno, whose region includes the Tijuana River Valley, authored the resolution. Moreno cited significant amounts of plastic, tires and sediment flowing from Mexico into the United States. “This has been going on for far too long and South Bay is not a dumping ground,” Moreno said. “To solve this international crisis, we must stop pointing fingers. This is a regional issue that calls for a regional solution.” The crisis, which was first recognized with a resolution in 1993, has since worsened, council members agreed. The City of San Diego’s new resolution was designed to raise awareness about the public health impact. “District Eight residents frequently experience a foul smell, and people who have been exposed to the toxic waste have reported skin rashes, headaches and respiratory issues,” said Moreno. “The sewage, sediment and trash occurring in the Tijuana River Valley is an environmental crisis and we’re going to keep fighting until it’s fixed once and for all,” said Mayor Kevin Faulconer. “We’ve seen some positive movement recently after decades of advocating as a region to our leaders in Washington and Mexico City. They’ve identified the problem and the projects needed to fix it, and now we must push for them to take action.” 1444
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego Police Chief David Nisleit gave an order for an internal investigation Thursday into a program email that reports to reward officers for making more narcotics arrests.Team 10 investigative reporter Jennifer Kastner spoke to a San Diego Police officer who blew the whistle on what he called an “unethical” program email sent out last Friday.“It’s a reward system. A bounty system for officers seeking rewards for their arrests,” he said in an interview that aired on 10News Wednesday.RELATED: Team 10: San Diego Police officer blows whistle on 'rewards for arrests' programOn Thursday, the SDPD told 10News: 643
来源:资阳报