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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A 56-year-old reportedly stabbed his neighbor after the man tried to shoot him with what he believed to be a rifle late Friday night, police say.According to police, the incident happened on the 4400 block of Bermuda Avenue around 10:30 p.m. after a 56-year-old walked to his neighbor’s house to tell him there was water flowing into his yard.When the neighbor, a 50-year-old man, answered the door he was armed with what appeared to be a rifle but later turned out to be a BB gun. As the man shot the gun, his neighbor was able to bush the barrel of the weapon up to avoid being shot.As the man tried to reload, his neighbor pulled out a pocket knife and stabbed his neighbor several times “because he thought he was going to get shot,” police said.Both men returned to their homes and called police. The stabbing victim was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries. It’s unclear if any arrests will be made in the case. 965
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A billion trolley extension in San Diego just hit a roadblock that could delay the project and drive the price tag even higher.Team 10 discovered the building permit for the Nobel Drive – La Jolla Village Square parking structure was not approved. The project development is being led by the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG).According to a letter sent from the City of San Diego to SANDAG, "The City determined in October 2019 that a building permit cannot be issued because the plans do not comply with the California Building and Mechanical Codes."The letter stated that the design of the parking structure includes a natural ventilation system, and the Building and Mechanical Codes require a distance separation of 10 feet where no other structures can be built that would block that ventilation. It goes on to state that the Building Code requires a minimum fire separation distance to an assumed property line between buildings or a property line.According to the letter, "The City understands it is SANDAG's position that the language in the easement being acquired for the parking structure prohibiting the property owner from causing a hazardous condition to the structure or the easement is sufficient to provide the necessary fire separation. However, the City disagrees that this language expressly prohibits the property owner from building on its property within the ten-foot separation required for the parking structure to comply with the Building Code. The parking structure easement only covers the footprint of the structure, and no other building restricted easement was obtained over the ten-foot separation area. The easement language specifically states that SANDAG has the responsibility for ensuring that the structure meets applicable building codes and safety standards."In a statement to 10News, the City of San Diego Chief Building Official wrote, "The City of San Diego has continuously worked with SANDAG and provided it with several options to incorporate the required fire-separation distance into its proposed Nobel Drive Parking Garage project and achieve compliance with the Building Code. Once the project design meets the building code requirements, a building permit will be issued."On Wednesday, SANDAG's Chief of Capital Programs Jim Linthicum told 10News the disagreement has nothing to do with the ultimate engineering of the project."It has nothing to do with any of the technical, the engineering, the mechanical work inside this parking structure they've all approved that," Linthicum said. "It has to do with a long issue of a setback, and so what we've requested is let us keep on talking and figure this out, but concurrently, let's keep the construction going so that Mid-Coast [Trolley] stays on schedule and on budget."Linthicum said the City requested a setback from the parking structure. He said the two agencies disagree on what exactly the code says."While we're working through this disagreement, we've asked for kind of a conditional or temporary permit to let work continue."Here's why the parking structure is so important. Beyond the parking spots, it will house some of the signaling and communication hardware that's needed to operate the trolley.Team 10 investigator Adam Racusin asked Linthicum if this could de-rail the project."Absolutely not," Linthicum said. "What this could do is this could delay the opening, and whenever you delay the opening, whenever you delay any mega project like this, it increases cost, and I think most people would understand that. We don't want to delay the opening, and we don't want to have increased cost. We have been working great with all the partners on this project. You know, with the City of San Diego, UCSD, and Caltrans, we've been working great. This, in my view, is just a small hiccup where they don't feel comfortable issuing a temporary or conditional permit."Linthicum said while they continue talking to the City of San Diego, they want the work to keep progressing."SANDAG has the authority under our MOU, our memorandum of understand with the city, to take this on ourselves," Linthicum said. "So we're going to be going to our board of directors later this month asking for that permission to do so."Linthicum said he's confident the parking structure will be open on time in October, keeping the project on budget and on track.A spokesperson for SANDAG also sent 10News a statement that says in part, "Throughout the Mid-Coast Trolley project, SANDAG has worked diligently to ensure that all design and construction work complies with California Building Codes and other applicable regulations. SANDAG continues to work through the technical issues raised by City of San Diego with regard to the Nobel Drive Trolley Station parking structure and is optimistic that the requisite building permit will be issued to allow the timely completion of the structure. The Mid-Coast Trolley project will add 11 miles to the UC San Diego Blue Line Trolley, extending service from the Santa Fe Depot in Downtown San Diego north along the I-5 corridor to the University community. The project is over seventy percent complete and remains on schedule." 5204

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A 20-year-old woman died following a shooting that left three others injured at a party in La Jolla Sunday morning, according to San Diego Police. Police were called to the 7500 block of Draper Avenue near Jack in the Box around 12:39 p.m. after reports of shots fired. According to police, partygoers were standing outside a home in the area when a light-colored sedan drove into the alley and shot the victims. When officers arrived, they found a 20-year-old woman and 23-year-old man with gunshot wounds, according to police. Police say both victims were rushed to the hospital where the woman later died. The 23-year-old is in serious but stable condition, police say.Two other victims, both 19-years-old, later showed up at different hospitals with gunshot wounds and are in stable condition, police say. The suspects are still at large and police say they have no description at this time. The victims haven’t been identified. Anyone with information is asked to call police at 619-531-2293 or Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477. 1060
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — A 4-acre brush fire in Chula Vista highlighted a firefighting technique that's relatively rare throughout the state: nighttime aerial water drops.Once considered too dangerous to attempt, a handful of agencies in California now have the helicopters and equipment needed to handle night operations, including the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.San Diego Fire has been doing water drops using military-grade night vision goggles since 2005, said pilot Chris Hartnell. The agency expanded its night helicopter coverage countywide in late 2014.Only two helicopters in San Diego County have the capability to do night drops. Both were in use Wednesday when flames broke out near a riverbed just before 11 p.m. in the 2500 block of Faivre Street, near Hollister Street.CAL Fire does not currently operate firefighting helicopters at night anywhere in the state, although the agency has plans to purchase 12 new helicopters with that capability, said CAL Fire San Diego spokesman Thomas Shoots. The agency just received its first Firehawk helicopter this year and plans to put it into service in about a month, Shoots said. Two more helicopters should arrive before the end of the year, and the agency plans to acquire all 12 by 2021. 1256
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A brazen package theft — and attempt to stop it — was caught on surveillance video at a Pacific Beach home.Penny Ryan wasn't home when the scene on her porch unfolded, but it was all captured on her doorbell camera. A man walked up to the residence with a small green skateboard and bag before he lays down the board and walks up onto the porch. The man then begins stuffing his bag with packages left on the doorstep.But before he gets away, a concerned nearby resident comes across the man as he's leaving and tells him to put the bag down multiple times.MAP: Track crime in San Diego County neighborhoodsThe thief appears to be willing to put the bag down, telling the resident, "I'll put it down, sir. Sir, I'll put it down." But instead, the man runs away.Ryan said the incident highlights a rise in crime within Pacific Beach, and residents are worried. A look at CrimeMapping.com shows there have been about 30 thefts and burglaries in the Pacific Beach area in the past six months."It has escalated so much in the last 3 years that we are all quite worried about how bad it’s going to get," Ryan said. "This is not our first rodeo with brazen theft at our address."Ryan said she had submitted a police report and the video to San Diego Police Department. SDPD did not immediately return 10News's request for comment. 1381
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