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VACAVILLE, Calif. (AP) — Crews were battling wildfires in the San Francisco Bay Area and thousands of people were under orders to evacuate Wednesday as hundreds of wildfires blazed across the state amid a blistering heat wave now in its second week. Gov. Gavin Newsom blamed the extraordinary weather and thousands of lightning strikes for 367 known fires, including 23 major fires or groups of fires. He said the state has recorded nearly 11,000 lightning strikes in 72 hours. Ash and smoke filled the air over San Francisco, which is surrounded by wildfires burning in multiple counties to the north, east and south. 626
VALLEY CENTER (KGTV) - A house of horrors is what owners Brenda and Travis Fox came home to after evicting the founders of HiCaliber Horse Ranch.Stepping out of your car, you smell the manure. "This is appalling," Veterinarian Adrienne Moore said.Moore unearthed a plastic bag in a pile of horse manure with small horse bones. She believes it was a still birth. She found shoulder and rib bones, hair she postulated either from the mane or tail.The HiCaliber Horse Ranch came under scrutiny, accused of buying sickly horses at auction then killing them at the horse ranch. "As far as the eye can see and what we're walking on right now is still the manure pile," Travis Fox said there were five piles six feet deep of manure. In one of the pens, you can see the manure pushed through the fence, spilling into a river.RELATED: Questions of fraud and abuse at prominent horse rescue in San Diego CountyControversial Valley Center horse rescue facing lawsuit, evictionIn the main house, cat poop dumped on the roof, bird poop next to banisters, and windowsills. "[You can see] where the animals were tied and when they were bored chewed on the furniture," Brenda Markstein-Fox said.In the yellow guest house she said they found, "animal feces on all the rugs, and inside here you can see animals chewing up the walls, that means animals were locked into these places and left."RELATED: HiCaliber Horse Rescue receives tax report warning from Attorney General's Office"Walking through you want to cry for what happens here, you get enraged with what these animals have been put through," Moore said.The couple started the eviction in March and were finally able to come in and start the clean up last Thursday, "it smells like death and crap," Travis said."I go back to the, oh I'm sorry," Brenda said, tears welling up in her eyes, "I go back to the joy, that we actually had here, I go back to the gatherings we had here and it's really hard to watch and see this, you almost feel like, oooh, not just taken advantage of." She said they felt violated.RELATED: Controversial Valley Center horse rescue facing lawsuit, evictionShe and her husband called it the Pura Vida Ranch and lived there for 6 years before moving to Nevada. They wanted to make a difference and rented the property not to a bed and breakfast, or AirBnB, but to HiCaliber, hoping the property would be a horse rehabilitation center and special education enrichment facility.Moore opened the "medical" freezer in the horse barn and showed us a horse leg, mutilated chicken and said there used to be a dead bobcat stored in there as well. Throughout each home, alcohol bottles were strewn about. Trash litered every surface. Brenda said the property looks incredibly better compared to a week prior.The couple filed a lawsuit against the founder of HiCaliber for damages. Travis said they are inventorying all the repairs they have to make. The founder of the non-profit said on social media all the damage was normal wear and tear. 3005
TULSA, Okla. -- For the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began, President Donald Trump will hold a campaign rally Saturday night. The event is scheduled to take place in Tulsa, Oklahoma, at the BOK Center. WHO WILL ATTEND?In short, a lot of people. The Trump campaign has said over a million ticket requests have been received and overflow venues are in the works. Supporters of the president began camping outside the BOK Center on Monday to see Trump. The arena holds around 20,000. WHAT WILL BE DIFFERENT? Bob Jack, Chairman of the Tulsa County GOP, says the campaign will provide a temperature check, hand sanitizer and a mask."I feel perfectly safe going to the rally," Jack said in an interview. Wearing the mask though -- that will be up to the individual person. Jack doesn't plan on wearing his. "They're going to hand you a mask, are you going to wear it?" E.W. Scripps National Political Editor Joe St. George asked Jack. "No, I'm not going to wear it. There is a lot of controversy about masks," Jack said. DOES THE PRESIDENT KNOW THE RISKS? Yes, but the White House believes the rally is still worth it even though Tulsa's top public health official has asked for the event to be postponed over fears it will spread the virus. "Are you worried?" St. George asked Kellyanne Conway, a senior advisor to the president, in an interview this week. "You aren't worried at all?""It's my job to worry, I am a mother," Conway said. "The president has made very clear he wants to get back to doing rallies. He wants to get back to the people." WHERE WILL THE PRESIDENT GO NEXT? That is very much unclear. However, campaign officials have said Arizona, Florida and North Carolina have all been discussed. All are states, though, with cases of coronavirus on the rise, which may be why the president hasn't announced any dates yet. "Is Florida likely?" St. George asked Conway. "Sure why not, everywhere is likely," Conway added. 1947
Two suspects allegedly dismembered a missing soldier's body and attempted to burn it after she was bludgeoned to death, according to a federal criminal complaint released Thursday.Guillen went missing from Fort Hood on April 22. Human remains were found in connection with her disappearance earlier this week.The two suspects in the case have been identified as Spc. Aaron Robinson and his girlfriend, 22-year-old Cecily Anne Aguillar of Killen, Texas.The Army has confirmed that Robinson died Wednesday morning of a self-inflicted gunshot wound during an interaction with police. Aguillar is currently in custody in the Bell County Jail.According to the affidavit, on April 22, Robinson said he texted Guillen to inform her he was in the arms room at Fort Hood. The message is the last known text message Guillen received to her phone.In the message, Robinson told Guillen to read serial numbers for equipment and afterword he gave her paperwork and the serial number for a .50 caliber machine gun that needed servicing.Robinson said Guillen left the arms room, and he believed she would have gone to the motor pool. Witnesses at the motor pool prepared to receive paperwork from Guillen claimed she did not arrive with the paperwork.The affidavit says witnesses later saw Robinson pulling a large "tough box" with wheels, that appeared to be filled with a heavy object.On June 30, Aguilar told authorities that Robinson told her that he had hit a female soldier in the head with a hammer multiple times in the arms room, killing her, the affidavit says. She claimed Robinson then put Guillen in a box and moved it to a location near the Leon River.On the evening of April 22, Robinson allegedly picked up Aguilar at a gas station she worked and took her to the site near the Leon River where he had left the box.According to the affidavit, Robinson and Aguilar dismembered the female soldier’s body, using a hatchet or ax and a machete-type knife.Police say the suspects also made many attempts to burn the body.This article was written by Sydney Isenberg for KXXV in Waco, Texas. 2091
VERMILION PARISH, La. – A Louisiana sheriff’s office asked anyone who didn’t evacuate for Hurricane Laura to write their identity down, put it in a plastic bag and place it in their pocket. The Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office made the request in a Facebook post on Wednesday, before the hurricane pummeled the state as a Category 4 storm.“Please evacuate and if you choose to stay and we can’t get to you, write your name, address, social security number and next of kin and put it a Ziplock bag in your pocket,” wrote officials. “Praying that it does not come to this!”The office said those who chose to stay and face the dangerous storm should understand that rescue efforts won’t begin until after the hurricane and storm surge has passed and it is safe.“Expecting the worse but praying for the best,” wrote the office.A mandatory evacuation was ordered for the parish, which is located along the Gulf Coast, south of Lafayette. A curfew has also been put in place for the community until further notice.The hurricane made landfall along the border of Louisiana and Texas at about 1 a.m. CDT on Thursday. It had maximum sustained winds of 150 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. That makes it the most powerful hurricane to strike the U.S. so far this year.As of Thursday morning, at least one person has died as a result of the storm. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said a 14-year-old girl died when a tree fell on her home.The storm is continuing to make its way through Louisiana and into Arkansas, weakening as it goes, but strong winds and flooding still pose a threat. High water levels persist along portions of the Gulf Coast, according to the NHC. 1683