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南昌精神失常的医院哪里有
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发布时间: 2025-05-26 07:42:36北京青年报社官方账号
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  南昌精神失常的医院哪里有   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The attorney for Rebecca Zahau’s family spoke Friday about the San Diego County Sheriff Department’s new review of her death at the Spreckels Mansion in Coronado.Earlier in the day, Sheriff Bill Gore announced that investigators found no evidence that she “died at the hands of another”. The department will not reopen the case.Zahau’s body was found hanging a the Spreckels Mansion in Coronado in 2011. Her wrists and feet were bound. For years, there has been speculation about the nature of her death, which was originally determined to be a suicide.Zahau family attorney Keith Greer suggested Friday afternoon that the Sheriff’s investigators are corrupt. “It’s not a logical decision. There’s something here that’s motivating these folks to do the wrong thing,” he told 10News. “I don’t know how they look at themselves in the mirror,” he added. Greer said that a rational person would not look at the evidence and believe that Zahau’s death was a suicide. The Zahau family lives in Missouri and did not want to be involved in Friday’s briefing at the Sheriff’s Department. They did release a recent photo of Zahau’s gravesite, surrounded by snow and flowers.Greer said he and the family are disappointed in the Sheriff’s Department, especially after a jury recently ruled in the family’s favor during the civil case. The Zahaus plan to fight the Shacknai family in their request to have the civil verdict reversed and request a new trial. 1471

  南昌精神失常的医院哪里有   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The magic of Dr. Seuss’s How The Grinch Stole Christmas returns to the Old Globe Theatre for the holidays.This is the 20th year of the family favorite in Balboa Park.The running time is 1 hour, 25 minutes with no intermission. Families with children under age three will be admitted to the 11 a.m. performances only.Get ticket information here. 371

  南昌精神失常的医院哪里有   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The Coronado Police Department released an image Monday of a vehicle that may be related to BB gun incidents in Coronado Sunday. 10news has learned five people were struck in the downtown area. Police spent the morning scouring the ground near State Street and West Broadway. An officer told 10news four people were crossing State Street late Saturday night or early Sunday evening when three of them were hit. The extent of their injuries are unknown. At the corner of L Street and Sixth Avenue in the East Village, a woman was shot in the arm early Sunday morning, according to San Diego Police. She was walking in a small group and one of the men was an exhibitor at Comic Con, staying at the Omni Hotel, where they were headed before the shooting. The early morning shooting was not the only one that occurred overnight. In National City and Paradise Hills, at least a dozen cars were hit, and in Coronado, police said at least 23 businesses, homes an cars were struck by BBs.10news brought the image of a white sedan released by Coronado Police to Roman Beck, who has worked as an accident reconstruction expert for two decades."I believe it's a 2005 to 2010 Chrysler 300 sedan. It has the front, passenger and rear windows scrunched and a flattened roofline, along with similar roof structures and a flare around the wheelwell," said Beck.Coronado Police are asking anyone with surveillance cameras to check Sunday, July 21 from 1:30 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. Anyone with any information is asked to call (619) 522-7350.The rash of crimes comes after 10News reported more than a dozen businesses and car windows busted by BBs in the past month:June 24th – Numerous vehicle windows were vandalized in the Point Loma, Ocean Beach and Mission Hills neighborhoods.July 1st and July 2nd - Three businesses in the Hillcrest neighborhood were vandalized.July 2nd - Two businesses in the Park West neighborhood were vandalized.July 2nd and July 3rd – Numerous vehicle windows were vandalized in the Clairemont neighborhood.July 6th - Three businesses and one vehicle were vandalized in the Midway area. A dark colored SUV is suspected in these cases.July 7th - Five businesses in the College area were vandalized.July 8th - One home in the Lake Murray neighborhood was vandalized.July 21 - A woman was shot in the arm with a BB gun L Street and Sixth AvenueJuly 21 - Nearly two dozen businesses, homes and cars hit throughout CoronadoJuly 21 - Eight cars damaged on the 5800 block of Altamont DriveJuly 21 - Four cars damaged near East Plaza Blvd and Olive in National CityAccording to California law, negligent discharge of a BB gun resulting in injury could mean up to a year in jail.Police from the corresponding agencies are working on these cases. If you have any information or surveillance video, please contact your local department. 2862

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Tens of thousands of San Diego Gas & Electric customers in San Diego’s East County were without power Tuesday morning as strong Santa Ana winds continue to swirl in the region.As of 1 p.m., 10,982 customers were without service in communities including as Alpine, Campo, Julian, Ramona, and Valley Center. SDG&E said another 35,431 customers in areas including Chula Vista, El Cajon, Poway, and San Marcos could potentially have power turned off.LATEST PINPOINT WEATHER FORECASTCiting the region's Red Flag warning and the power shutoffs, the San Diego County Office of Education said schools in the following districts would be closed on Dec. 8:Alpine UnionValley Center-Pauma UnifiedWarner UnifiedMountain Empire Unified School District: schools will offer asynchronous learning, where students may work independently reading, watching pre-recorded lessons, or doing assignments, projects, or online activities (where power is available)SDG&E will open one resource center each in Descanso, Julian, Potrero, Ramona and Valley Center. Those centers will remain open until 10 p.m. and offer access to water, Wi-Fi, ice, snacks, phone and medical device charging, water trucks for livestock and up-to-date information on outages. All five centers also have a drive-thru option.For an updated list of communities affected by the Public Safety Power Shutoff or to find a resource center, visit sdge.com/public-safety-power-shutoff.Residents brace for high windsOn Monday, in Valley Center’s Hellhole Canyon, wind gusts reached 82 MPH, according to the National Weather Service.Some business owners across San Diego County prepared for the possibility of losing power.“If the café does lose power, we do have a generator at home, so we’d probably prioritize the business over the home,” said Anamaria Kent, who runs Cleveland Café in Alpine with her mother.“We don’t panic; we’ve been through a few power outages,” said Kent. “When we get any sort of notification that the power will go out, we do everything possible that we need with the power.”“Living where we live up here in the mountains, you’re kind of used to this stuff,” said Larry McNamer, who owns Major’s Diner in Pine Valley.McNamer lost power at his Pine Valley home around 5 p.m. Monday. The diner also lost power after just going through a round of shutoffs days ago.“Fortunately for us, we’re closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays anyway, so this time it works out,” he said.Cal Fire officials continue to remind everyone that fire season is still here in San Diego County. Last week, the Willow Fire, fueled by Santa Ana Winds, destroyed one home in Rancho San Diego and damaged several more.On Dec. 7, three years ago, what started as a small fire just east of Bonsall, quickly grew and spread into the Lilac Fire, burning thousands of across and destroying more than 100 homes.“Is it something that we all have in the back of our minds? Yes. And we do everything and have done everything that we could possibly do to make sure that we’re ready and prepared,” said McNamer. 3075

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The City Attorney's Office has obtained gun violence restraining orders against 10 San Diegans they say "posed a serious danger to themselves and others."The orders require the gun owners to surrender or sell all their firearms and not to acquire or possess any firearms or ammunition for one year, which is the maximum length of time allowable by law."Our federal government is inexcusably ignoring the growing problem of gun violence in our schools and communities. The City of San Diego will not tolerate federal inaction," City Attorney Mara Elliott said in a release. "We’re doing everything in our power to respond to this epidemic of senseless killing by removing guns from the hands of unstable and irresponsible gun owners."RELATED: San Diegans demand stricter gun laws from legislatorsThe cases presented by the office include individuals believed to be suffering from mental health problems:"A 23-year-old ex-marine who had developed a paranoia that all males wanted to harm him. He had walked into a Kearny Mesa auto parts store with a loaded handgun, but called police before shooting anyone.A 39-year-old San Carlos man who, while intoxicated (at three times the legal limit), believed he was shooting at raccoons and rats in his backyard. Terrified neighbors called police as bullets flew into their backyards.A 60-year-old otay mesa man who grabbed a .38 revolver and fled his home after his family discovered he was molesting his grandchild. The man was arrested with the gun in his vehicle.An 81-year-old man from Carmel Mountain who threatened to shoot his 75-year-old wife and a neighbor because he believed they were having an affair. His wife escaped the house, barefoot, by climbing a fence and running through cactus. His family reported him to be in the early stages of dementia.A 53-year-old Allied Gardens man with significant mental health issues who used a firecracker to damage a neighbor’s front door. Neighbors called police after hearing what they thought were gun shots coming from his apartment. Officers seized a bayonetted rifle and two illegal high-capacity magazines from his apartment.A 38-year-old Allied Gardens man who threatened to kill himself, his wife, and their young child if she left him. His wife had overheard him distraught and crying in the bathroom, and cocking his .40 caliber pistol.A 28-year-old Mission Valley man who grabbed a gun case and threatened suicide. When his exgirlfriend tried to call for help, he grabbed her by her hair, threw her on the ground, and pushed her head into a wall. Police seized two handguns, two rifles, and a shotgun.A 33-year-old Mid-City man who locked his wife in a car with him, threatening her with a loaded firearm. When the San Diego Police Department arrived on the scene and searched the car, they found a meth pipe along with two loaded firearms that did not belong to him. He later surrendered a Glock 9mm and a .380 handgun.A 35-year-old Allied Gardens man with a small arsenal and a history of domestic violence, whose wife suffered a serious laceration to her forehead and feared he might kill her. The man owned a 9mm pistol, a mosquito semi-automatic pistol, a Ruger .22, a Springfield .40 caliber pistol, a Ruger rifle, a Mossberg shotgun, and an unmarked handgun.A 40-year-old La Jolla man who told his fiancé by text message that he wanted to shoot her in the head, then visited his fiancé’s ex-boyfriend and threatened to kill him while holding a knife behind his back. The man surrendered a handgun and an AR-15, the semi-automatic rifle." 3601

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