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拉萨锥体外系(皮质-脑桥-小脑系)
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发布时间: 2025-05-24 01:45:25北京青年报社官方账号
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  拉萨锥体外系(皮质-脑桥-小脑系)   

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A 21-year-old woman who allegedly was drunk last weekend when she crashed her Lexus into a Lyft car at high speed on state Route 163 in Balboa Park -- killing a passenger in the Lyft vehicle and injuring the other two occupants -- was charged Friday with gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and DUI causing injury.Alondra Selena Marquez of San Diego was headed south on the freeway about 2:30 a.m. Saturday when she rear-ended the Mazda sedan near Laurel Street, according to the California Highway Patrol.One of two passengers in the Mazda, 40-year-old Giao Pham of San Francisco, died at the scene of the collision.ORIGINAL STORY: 1 dead, 3 injured in crash along SR-163A 33-year-old San Leandro resident remains hospitalized with a traumatic brain injury, while the 27-year-old Lyft driver is hospitalized with injuries of unknown severity, according to Deputy District Attorney Laura Evans.Marquez, who faces 13 years and four months in prison if convicted, had a .19 blood alcohol content at the time of the crash, Evans said.Marquez also sustained injuries in the crash, and was jailed Wednesday upon her release from a hospital. She is being held on million bail and is due in court April 10 for a readiness conference.According to a GoFundMe site created for Pham's family, he was in San Diego on vacation with friends. He is survived by his parents, eight brothers and sisters, eight nieces and nephews, his partner John, and his dog Matty, according to the page, which has exceeded its ,000 goal. 1549

  拉萨锥体外系(皮质-脑桥-小脑系)   

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (KGTV) -- Three Camp Pendleton Marines were stabbed during a fight Saturday in San Clemente, a sheriff’s official confirms.The fight happened around 1 a.m. Saturday in a parking lot on the 200 block of El Camino Real.The three Marines, two aged 21 and the other a 23-year-old were involved in a fight with two men and a woman.RELATED: Woman finds Marine Corps ring on Florida's Siesta Key, hopes to find ownerDuring the fight, one of the men pulled out a knife and stabbed all three Marines. All three of the men were taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.The Marines were all assigned to the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines at Camp Pendleton.Deputies arrested 24-year-old Alexis Moreno-Aguirre on suspicion of attempted murder. He was booked into the Orange County jail.RELATED: Wife of Marine veteran self-deports to Mexico, leaving behind husband and daughter 925

  拉萨锥体外系(皮质-脑桥-小脑系)   

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KGTV) -- Governor Gavin Newsom's new proposal would make California the first state to establish its own generic drug label in hopes of lowering the cost of medications, CalMatters reports. The proposal is part of the state budget expected to be sent to the legislature on Friday. Newsom released a summary of the proposal Thursday, although the exact cost of the plan is unclear. “It’s time to take the power out of the hands of greedy pharmaceutical companies,” the Governor said in Tweet Thursday. According to a Kaiser Family Foundation report, roughly six in 1 Americans report taking at lease on prescription medication. RELATED: Gov. Gavin Newsom: 'Know your rights' over threat of ICE raidsMeanwhile, 79 percent of Americans say the cost of prescription drugs is unreasonable.While those in favor of the idea are supportive, some are skeptical. “If California enters the market itself, it will face the same market dynamics that have led to generic prescription drug price deflation in the past three years, as well as certain cases of patent abuse that have led to longer monopolies by select brand-name drugs,” the Association of Accessible Medicines said in a statement sent to 10News. Read the full statement below: 1256

  

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A group of civic leaders will gather Monday to announce a proposed outreach program intended to help people experiencing homelessness with a rapid response team.Mayor Kevin Faulconer, City Council President Georgette Gomez, City Councilmembers Chris Ward and Monica Montgomery Steppe and San Diego Housing Commission President and CEO Richard Gentry will meet at Officer Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park in City Heights to discuss the program, which will be presented to the City Council on Tuesday.The Coordinated Street Outreach Program marks a new approach to conducting homelessness outreach in the City of San Diego and addresses gaps in the existing system, while leveraging and enhancing outreach resources citywide.It builds on a 2018 pilot effort started in the Mid-City area by Gomez and Ward in partnership with the nonprofit service provider People Assisting the Homeless. The new program will incorporate a neighborhood- specific approach with proactive contacts with residents, business owners and civic organizations that is modeled after the pilot initiative.The Coordinated Street Outreach Program will consist of two main service elements: a Rapid Response Team and a Mobile Homelessness Response Team.The Rapid Response Team is intended to focus on areas with known concentrations of individuals experiencing unsheltered homelessness and provide immediate intervention and problem-solving resources while working to improve the person's sense of safety and helping to meet their basic needs.The Mobile Homelessness Response Team will provide street-based case management and prioritize interactions with individuals who are among the city's most vulnerable. The plan is for this team to work to identify individuals who may already be connected to a housing resource and are on a localized list developed in collaboration with the Regional Task Force on the Homeless. This team's efforts are intended to help individuals address barriers to getting housing -- such as obtaining identification, accessing primary care and seeking employment resources.PATH would operate the proposed program through a contract with the San Diego Housing Commission on behalf of the city.The program will attempt to support the city's community action plan on homelessness and work toward achieving the goal of reducing unsheltered homelessness in San Diego by 50% over the next three years. 2413

  

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A former San Diego County sheriff's deputy who fatally shot a fleeing detainee outside the downtown San Diego jail pleaded not guilty Tuesday to a second-degree murder charge.Aaron Russell, 23, is charged in the May 1 death of 36-year-old Nicholas Bils, who was unarmed and running away from officers when he was shot just outside the San Diego Central Jail, according to the San Diego County District Attorney's Office.The former deputy, who had been with the department for 18 months at the time of the shooting, surrendered to authorities on Monday, according to his attorney, Richard Pinckard.Russell, who resigned from the sheriff's department shortly after the shooting, faces 15 years to life in state prison if convicted of second-degree murder, and up to an additional 10 years if convicted of a firearm allegation.RELATED: Suspect who escaped park rangers' vehicle shot, killed by deputyBils had been arrested by rangers with the California Department of Parks and Recreation for allegedly threatening a ranger with a golf club at Old Town San Diego State Park. He was being transported to the downtown detention facility when he managed to escape from a California State Park Officer's car, according to San Diego police.Deputy District Attorney Stephen Marquardt said Russell fired five times as Bils was running away, striking him in the back, arm and thigh. Iredale said the fatal shot went through Bils' back, lung and heart.Among the officers present during the shooting, Russell was the only one who discharged his weapon, the prosecutor said. In fact, Marquardt said, "No other officer on scene so much as unholstered a firearm to stop Bils from running."The Bils family's attorney, Eugene Iredale, said Bils was at the park that day hitting golf balls for his dog to chase. He said "it appears that when the park rangers approached him," Bills "brandished his golf club and ran away."Iredale alleged that Russell opened fire "with what appears to be calmness and relaxation" as he "began to take target practice on a man who was fleeing."Exactly what prompted the deputy to open fire remains unclear. The DA's Office said there is surveillance footage of the shooting, but it will not be released to the public at this time as it is now evidence in a pending criminal case.RELATED: Deputy who fatally shot escaped detainee resigns from departmentMarquardt said Russell was unjustified in shooting Bils under a recently enacted state law that changed the standard governing when law enforcement officers are justified in using deadly force. Since the beginning of this year, peace officers may only use deadly force "when necessary in defense of human life."Iredale said: "Five years ago or 10 years ago, such a prosecution, no matter how clear the facts were, and no matter how appropriate the prosecution, would have been hard to conceive."District Attorney Summer Stephan, in statement Monday, said her office "reached the decision to file criminal charges following a thorough review of all the objective facts and evidence in this case by specialized prosecutors and investigators in our Special Operations Division.""When a life is taken, we must make decisions based in facts and law, and not ones that are influenced by the status of the accused as a peace officer nor the status of the victim," Stephan said. "These decisions must be made solely in the interest of justice and not based on favoritism nor public opinion. Every person must be accountable under the law."The victim's mother, Kathleen Bils made a statement following Russell's arraignment, in which she said her son "should be alive and be here with us. But he's dead, and my heart cries out that this is not right."She said the months since his death "have been agonizing for my sons, their families, and for me."Bils' older brother, Benjamin Bils, said his sibling "was not a saint, (but) he was not a bad person."He said his brother had run-ins with the police in the past, but "it did not mean he deserved to be shot in the back."Russell was initially held on million bail, but a judge cut the amount in half, agreeing with Russell's attorney that his client was not a flight risk or a danger to the community. Russell was released on bail Tuesday night. "He has based his entire life on the principles of honor and integrity," said Pinckard, who said law enforcement shootings "occur in tense, uncertain, rapidly evolving incidents, where decisions are literally being made in fractions of seconds."Russell is due back in court July 24 for a status conference.An attorney for the family issued the below statement: 4640

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