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EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) - The pandemic created a surge in food insecurity in San Diego and the purple tier restrictions are making it worse. Neighbors are stepping in to fill the bellies of those in need.In El Cajon a bright yellow wooden box is perched next to the sidewalk. On it a sign reads, "Blessing Box".Inside it's stocked like a mini grocery store, with grains like rice and pasta, beans, canned vegetables and protein. Single serving hot chocolate, tea and oatmeal line the second shelf. On the top shelf, snacks, drinks, and items to round out a meal are ready for the taking.Andrea Roberts heard of a Blessing Box in 2018 on social media and immediately knew she needed one.Her friend had the same intuition and had her husband craft the wooden box. They surprised Roberts by dropping it off on her porch.Roberts painted the box, affixed a stand to it, and cemented the stand in the grass next to her sidewalk in September 2018.Momentum has been growing through social media and the urge to help during the pandemic."Yesterday was jam packed, I had several people come and bring stuff, so much stuff they left the excess on the porch," Roberts said.She lifted her garage door to unveil piles of food and shelves of canned food, illustrating the willingness to give by the community."I'm overwhelmed, really overwhelmed." Roberts said when she put up the box she thought it would be self sustaining, 'take what you need and give what you can.'Since the pandemic, she said, there's been a surge in need and donations.According to the San Diego Hunger Coalition, more than 1,000,000 San Diegans are food insecure.That translates to three out of every ten people in the county don't know where they'll get their next meal."My hope is just that people find a resource where there is no shame no timeline, if you're working and you're barely making it. Maybe you can't get to a food distribution or a pantry, where this is available 24 hours a day."There are Blessing Boxes around San Diego, at churches, one in La Mesa, Santee, Escondido and Julian. Here is a list of some Super Pantry Locations:Jewish Family Service of San Diego 8804 Balboa Avenue San Diego, CA 92123 Near Coleman University. Distribution is at the building on your left as you enter parking lot.Food Distribution Days & Hours: Monday – Friday 11:00 am – 1:00 pm Helpful Tips: this site can provide diapers upon request Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26-27 (Thanksgiving); December 25 (Christmas); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Location: Old Town Community Church 2444 Congress Street San Diego, CA 92112 Between San Diego Avenue and Conde Street Food Distribution Days & Hours: Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm Location: St Paul United Methodist Church of San Diego 3094 L Street San Diego, CA 92102 Cross street is 31st St. Distribution takes place in back of the Church, go up the alley way; entrance will be on your left. Food Distribution Days & Hours: Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26 (Thanksgiving); December 24 (Christmas Eve); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Location: Father Joe’s Village 3350 E Street San Diego, CA 92102 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Monday, Thursday, & Friday 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm Helpful Tips: this site can provide diapers upon request Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26-27 (Thanksgiving); December 24-25 (Christmas)La Maestra 4060 Fairmount Avenue San Diego, CA 92015 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Monday and Wednesday 9:00 am - 2:00 pm; Friday 10:00 am - 3:00 pm Helpful Tips: this site can provide diapers upon request Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 27 (Thanksgiving); December 25 (Christmas) Location: Special Delivery San Diego 4021 Goldfinch Street San Diego, CA 92103 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Monday-Thursday 11:00 am - 1:30 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26 (Thanksgiving) Location: Ministerio Tiempo Nuevo at Bethel Baptist Church 1962 Euclid Avenue San Diego, CA 92105 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Friday from 9:45 am - 12:00 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 27 (Thanksgiving); December 25 (Christmas) Location: Paving Great Futures at Jacobs Center for Neighborhood Innovation 404 Euclid Avenue San Diego, CA 92114 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Tuesdays 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm Location: Paving Great Futures at I Am My Brothers Keeper 6601 Imperial Avenue San Diego, CA 92102 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Fridays 11:00 am - 2:00 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 27 (Thanksgiving); December 25 (Christmas) Location: Ascension Lutheran Church 5106 Zion Avenue San Diego, CA 92120 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays 8:00 am – 11:00 am Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26-28 (Thanksgiving); December 24-26 (Christmas); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Location: North Park Apostolic Church 2515 Lemon Grove Avenue Lemon Grove, CA 91945 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm Updated 11/13/2020 Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26 (Thanksgiving); December 24 (Christmas); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Location: Somali Bantu Association of America 4975 University Avenue San Diego, CA 92015 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 27 (Thanksgiving); December 25 (Christmas) Location: Uptown Community Service & St Luke’s Episcopal Church 3725 30th Street San Diego, CA Food Distribution Days & Hours: Drive-thru hours: Mondays and Wednesdays 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm at the corner of Landis and 30th Street Walk up Distribution: Thursdays 11 am – 1:45 pm at St Luke’s Episcopal Church Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26 (Thanksgiving); December 24 (Christmas Eve); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Location: USO San Diego 2790 Truxtun Rd Suite 110 San Diego, CA 92106 Food Distribution Days & Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Upcoming 2020 holiday closures: November 26 (Thanksgiving); December 24 (Christmas Eve); December 31 (New Year’s Eve) Drive-thru hours: 1 st and 3rd Friday of each month, view USO’s Facebook page for rotating location facebook.com/usosandiego Helpful Tips: this site is for military families only 6349
EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) - A husband pleaded guilty Tuesday to trying to poison his wife with a heavy metal at their East County home, court officials said.Race Uto, 27, admitted to three counts of premeditated attempted murder in an El Cajon courtroom, according to San Diego County District Attorney's office spokesperson Tanya Sierra.Prosecutors said Uto gave his wife thallium, a metal found in rat poison and ant killers.RELATED: Warrant reveals troubled marriage in poisoning case10News obtained a search warrant indicating Brigida Uto became mysteriously ill in September 2017. She suffered weakness and hair loss, and was eventually near death, according to the warrant. Friends also indicated in a GoFundMe account she suffered nerve and organ damage.Investigators with the FBI, NCIS and San Diego County HazMat determined Brigida had been poisoned by someone with access to her food and drinks. The warrant also showed that Race had an affair while he was deployed in the Navy, and that the couple had gone through counseling.Race Uto was arrested in March 2018. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Mar. 14.Brigida Uto is a special education teacher in the Mountain Empire School District and the mother of a young boy, according to the GoFundMepage. She met her husband at her high school prom when she was 18 and the couple married at 25. 1357

During this pandemic, people aren’t interacting like they used to.Many schools have moved online, restaurants have moved outdoors, and public transportation is spacing out its seating.With less face-to-face interaction in the real world, scientists are now turning to artificial intelligence.“Robots are our friends,” said Jeffrey Krichmar, Ph.D., a professor of cognitive sciences at the University of California, Irvine (UCI).Recently, Krichmar’s team started testing socially assistive robots with the goal of helping people perform household chores, accomplish health care tasks and even offer them emotional support.“That could be very helpful if a person is impaired and can’t get help in the home because they’re locked down or quarantined,” he said.Krichmar says there’s a lot of societal benefits with this technology, too, like helping people cope with their feelings during isolation.“If I’m not able to get to you, but you have a robot there I can log on through the robot, have a conversation with you and then maybe do tasks around the house with a robot,” he said.Many of UCI’s robotic projects involve the Toyota Human Support Robot.“When you think about the social interaction, I think we’re all feeling this right now,” said Douglas Moore, Toyota’s director of technology for human support.Moore says working with UCI during the COVID-19 crisis could help many people both physically and emotionally.“One of the silver linings that I think we’re going to get out of this pandemic that we’re currently in, we’re going to develop a little bit more sympathy and empathy for the communities that idea with this on a day-to-day basis that have no real light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.Project leaders hope to get more of these robots in people’s homes“The ones that we’re doing with Toyota, they’re not commercially available yet and the ones that are a little pricey,” Krichmar said. “They’re like an expensive luxury car right now.”Krichmar believes more interest could help lower the cost of these robots and that more attention could create future innovation.“This pandemic is our Fukushima moment in a way,” Krichmar said of the COVID-19 crisis.“If this drags on a lot longer, it might be actually useful for this particular crisis,” he said. “But I’m almost thinking like the next crisis down the road.” 2338
DNA researchers are making a big prediction. In just a few years, they'll have enough DNA samples to match every person in the country. That's even if you've never taken one of those ancestry DNA tests.This is all thanks to those ancestry test kits. If someone’s relative takes the test, enough information is provided for scientists to link to you."Yes, eventually everyone's going to be traceable through DNA," says Itsik Pe’er, an associate professor at Columbia University.It also means solving crimes could get a lot easier. Police have already started taking DNA from unknown suspects and comparing it to DNA databases.That information can lead to a match to a suspect’s relative."People want to connect to their long-lost second, third, fourth cousins and find those matches,” says Pe’er. “The flip side of that is that, yeah, investigators can find those matches due to DNA that have been sitting in these warehouses for decades."Pe'er is the co-author of a study at Columbia University that says scientists only need a 2 percent sample from the roughly 326 million people in the United States to be able to match anyone's DNA.Privacy experts worry that even people who have never committed a crime might not want to be matched to relatives.But it's a fact of science as the DNA sample continues to grow."It's just still incredible to think about, you know, like we live in such a big world, but it's really, really small," Pe’er says.Private companies are working to protect their databases, including places like My Heritage and 23andMe that prohibit forensic use of their databases in their user agreements. 1632
EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) -- Jurors Wednesday found that an officer in El Cajon acted reasonably when he fatally shot Ugandan Immigrant Alfred Olango. The jury found Richard Gonsalves' actions not negligent 12-0. On September 27, 2016, Olango’s sister called 911 to report that her 38-year-old brother was displaying erratic behavior and walking out into traffic. Two officers arrived and spotted Olango in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant on the 800 block of Broadway, ordering him to remove his hands from his pockets. Olango pulled something out of his pocket officers believed was a gun and, according to police, he assumed “what appeared to be a shooting stance” and made some kind of movement. RELATED: Alfred Olango: Call for justice continues on two-year anniversary of deadly El Cajon police shootingAt that moment, one of the officers deployed a stun gun on Olango, but Officer Richard Gonsalves fired his gun at least four times Olango.Olango was pronounced dead, and police later determined that the object in Olango’s hand was an e-cigarette device.El Cajon police eventually released two videos that showed the shooting, but Gonsalves was never relieved of his duties.Less than four months after the shooting, the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office determined police were legally justified in firing at Olango and no criminal charges were filed against Gonsalves. 1401
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