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EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) -- New video from a nearby business shows the moments before a driver plunged into a sinkhole in El Cajon.The images seeming to tell a different story than was released by El Cajon police earlier in the week.The incident happened late Monday night on Vernon Way and Johnson Avenue. A white car became almost completely submerged in a deep sinkhole after a water main break earlier in the evening. RELATED: Sinkhole forms at El Cajon intersection, swallows car At the time police said the driver, who wasn't injured, ended up there after going around a barricade.Ken Wingert's office has surveillance cameras pointed right at the street where it happened, so out of curiosity, he took a look and says the video paints a different story than the one he first heard. "I saw the video...no that's not true," Wingert told 10News. "The police officer actually went to her window, talked to her and the car pulled a u-turn and went into the sinkhole."After the car goes down, Wingert says the video gets even more interesting. The officers can be seen walking over, but it's how they did it that has him confused. "Why were the police not reacting so fast once the car went into the pothole? All of a sudden when the car started sinking more everybody started running towards it," he said. "To me that was a little slow on that part."On Thursday 10News made multiple attempts to talk to El Cajon police about the video. We were told that there was no one available to comment. 1537
DETROIT, Michigan — At his annual State of the City address last year, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan applauded his police department for continuing to drop the average response time for 911 calls inside the city."It's a far cry from the days when 911 calls averaged 30 minutes," Duggan said to applause. Now, according to police officials, officers arrive on the scene in about 12 minutes, sometimes sooner.But don't tell that to the mother of a young woman who called 911 again and again last month, only to have police show up days later."It failed for us," she said through tears.The mother asked that we conceal her face to protect the identity of her daughter, who she says is the victim of a crime.The trouble started on the afternoon of September 15. The mother, who we'll call Sandra, was visiting her young adult daughter on Detroit's west side when she heard screaming as she stepped out of her car."I run up to the door because I realized it was my daughter," she said. "She comes to the door and he's behind her, he's attacking her."Her daughter's boyfriend, who she said has been abusive in the past, was pounding her with his fists. Sandra ran up to the door and called 911. It was 1:29 PM."Detroit 911, what's the address of your emergency?" asked a dispatcher, according to recordings obtained by WXYZ television station."My daughter's boyfriend was beating the (expletive) out of her," she said breathlessly into the phone before providing her address.The dispatcher said she'd send a car that way, but 40 minutes went by and no one showed up.Sandra called again, but this time she received an automated message. She hung up and dialed 911 once more."Another automated message," she said.At 2:17 p.m., she made her fourth call, this time reaching a dispatcher."I already called it in 45 minutes ago and I still haven't had a police officer come yet," she told the woman on the other end of the line. Again she was told officers would be dispatched, and again she waited. No one came.Finally, at 3:01 p.m., she called once more. This time, she asked to speak to a supervisor."I already called it in twice now," she said, "It's been an hour and a half and nobody shows up."The dispatcher responded: "Hold on, let me see what's going on here," before transferring Sandra to a supervisor.No one from DPD, according to the family, showed up on Saturday.Around 5 p.m. that same day, Sandra said, her daughter's boyfriend returned."He had climbed back through her window and attacked her again," she said.Detroit police didn't arrive at the west side home until the following Wednesday afternoon, a full four days and 34 minutes after the first call to 911.Assistant Chief James White made no excuses when he spoke with WXYZ television station about the delay last week."It absolutely disturbs me, if that's actually what happened," White said, adding that the department is still investigating the incident.White said the investigation has "has already found some failures and there will be accountability for those failures."A police spokeswoman tells WXYZ that officers were, in fact, nearby on the Saturday Sandra called 911 and should have been directed to the home. Assistant Chief White says an internal investigation is still ongoing but said everyone deserved a prompt response from 911 in Detroit."She's already been contacted. She was issued an apology from the commander, and I will personally talk to her if she would like to talk to me," White said.An apology is something, says the young woman's mother, but it won't solve what she now says is her biggest fear: the next time her daughter needs 911, she won't bother to call."She's not feeling protected," Sandra said. "Not in the city of Detroit, that's for sure." 3776
EAST FREEHOLD, N.J. — A 3.1 magnitude earthquake was detected Wednesday morning in the Central New Jersey town of Freehold, according to the United States Geological Survey.The USGS detected the quake around 2 a.m. while the National Weather Service referred to the quake as a "small tremor" despite that it was felt in much of Central Jersey.The depth of the quake was reported as about 3.1 miles. There are no reports yet of any damage or injuries due to the earthquake.Hundreds of reports were coming in from as far as Philadelphia and Long Island, New York on the USGS' "Did You Feel It?" map.Monmouth County Sheriff Shaun Golden said that about 125 non-emergency and 911 calls came in from residents who reported feeling and hearing the quake.Twitter user @BWf34, in Freehold, said it "felt like an explosion, then shaking. No obvious damage to house. Woke up the entire family."Twitter user @arorasa, in East Windsor, said the "whole house shook. It's been an hour now, but still feeling rattled."Geophysicist Robert Sanders from the USGS said that a 3.1 quake is unlikely to have caused anything more than damaged shelves or falling picture frames.He said there had been just two other quakes over 3.0 magnitude in the area since 1970.The last recorded earthquake in New Jersey before Wednesday was a 1.7 magnitude quake on Aug. 17 in Milford, New Jersey, according to the Northeast States Emergency Consortium.The strongest quake with an epicenter in New Jersey was a magnitude 4.8 earthquake back on Aug. 23, 1938, near Trenton.This story was originally published by Stephen M. Lepore and Katie Corrado on WPIX in New York. 1640
EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) — The Dehesa School District Board voted 4-0 Friday afternoon to place their superintendent on paid administrative leave amid a fraud investigation.Earlier this week, the San Diego District Attorney’s Office charged Superintendent Nancy Hauer with one count of misappropriating public funds.She was one of 11 people charged in a statewide scheme, in which the DA says two men siphoned more than million in state money through a network of 19 charter schools.“The defendants sought out small school districts with limited experience in oversight and proposed they authorize online charter schools to earn additional public funds in the form of oversight fees,” the DA’s Office wrote in a summary of the charges.At Friday’s special Dehesa School District Board meeting, the board spent an hour and a half in closed session with legal counsel discussing Hauer’s employment.Board President, Cindy White refused an interview with 10News.On the dais, Board Vice President Karl Backer told the audience, “we have initiated new legal council to peel apart the charter operations to make sure sound practices and legal compliance is met.” 1165
During the initial onset of the coronavirus pandemic, pediatric hospital visits dropped 42%, but in the months following, mental health visits by school-aged children jumped, according to new CDC data.According to data released by the CDC, the proportion of mental health–related visits for children aged 5–11 and 12–17 years increased approximately 24%. and 31%, respectively since March.“These findings provide initial insight into children’s mental health in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and highlight the importance of continued monitoring of children’s mental health throughout the pandemic, ensuring access to care during public health crises, and improving healthy coping strategies and resiliency among children and families,” the CDC said.The CDC said that many children receive mental health services through schools and community services. Many of these services were forced to close during the height of the pandemic.“The increase in the proportion of ED visits for children’s mental health concerns might reflect increased pandemic-related stress and unintended consequences of mitigation measures, which reduced or modified access to children’s mental health services, and could result in increased reliance on ED services for both routine and crisis treatment,” the CDC said. 1306