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濮阳东方妇科医院做人流手术非常专业
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发布时间: 2025-05-26 07:30:47北京青年报社官方账号
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  濮阳东方妇科医院做人流手术非常专业   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A local businessman is now accused in a child porn case, several years after he managed to get off the sex offender registry.Along Tokalon Street in Bay Park, there is a sense of disbelief. A neighbor of some 7 years - Joseph Welsh - arrested in Fontana over the weekend.Police say parents confronted him and took his phone after he took photos of girls in bathing suits at a birthday party.Search warrants executed at his home and his business - a Segway rental outlet on Mission Boulevard - netted several electronic devices containing child porn, according to investigators.The neighbors' sense of shock was magnified because of what they didn't know about his past: a conviction in the 1990s in San Bernardino county for possessing child porn, and annoyance of a child.Police say in 2014, the courts deemed him not a danger to the public and removed him from the registry.It's a maneuver many can't understand.An acquaintance of Welsh, 47, told 10News those who worked near him became "creeped out" because he was always photographing surf schools and flying drones on the beach.In one instance, concerns led to an acquaintance to warn a teenager who knew Welsh to stay away from him.To search the California Megan's Law website for registry results, click here. 1308

  濮阳东方妇科医院做人流手术非常专业   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A Los Angeles area man says the San Diego County District Attorney's office charged him with a crime he didn't commit.Angel Galvan says the mistake cost him money, time and when you search his name at the courthouse a court file."For me to go through all of this, it hurt a lot," said Angel Galvan.Galvan says in July of this year, he received a letter from the San Diego County District Attorney saying he'd been charged with Grand Theft of Personal Property from Go Wireless. He thought it was a mail scam."What is PC 487," Galvan said.It was no scam.Galvan says the district attorney's office claimed he and other people were using stolen credit cards to buy merchandise from a Go Wireless location in the San Diego area."I hope you realize I live in the valley (San Fernando) like I don't live nowhere near San Diego," Galvan said.Galvan lives in Panorama City, that's in Los Angeles County, about two and a half hours from San Diego.Galvan says he did work at a Go Wireless store near his home, but for only two months, and that was back in 2017. The alleged crime happened in March of 2018."Every day I got home, I was stressed," Galvan said. "I couldn't believe it," he said.According to a claim, Galvan filed with the County of San Diego, "It turns out that another individual named Angel Galvan worked at Go Wireless, but worked in San Diego, committing crimes."Team 10 obtained an email sent by a San Diego County Deputy District Attorney in August of 2019 to Galvan's criminal attorney acknowledging he was not the correct Angel Galvan.The email stated, "HR at Go Wireless mixed him up with another Angel Galvan. I will calendar a dismissal asap. Sorry for the mix-up.""No one called him, no one looked to see if it was the right person, no one checked his address no one checked his work records," said Galvan's civil attorney Alex Ozols.Ozols claims the District Attorney's office did not do any further investigation after receiving Galvan's information from Go Wireless, and that's a problem."A lot of time, they do get it right, and we appreciate that they are representing the state of California," Ozols said. "However, when they get it wrong, the repercussions are just so bad when they do, and in this case, they did."Galvan tells 10News he had to sell his truck to pay the legal fees. He also had to drive to San Diego for an arraignment where he was order to do a book and release. He says he was fingerprinted and had his DNA taken.According to the claim, "He will/does have this listed on his Department of Justice print out, he is still in the police system, an arrest records still exists, and his DNA was taken against his 4th amendment constitutional right because he was charged with a felony."Galvan says he lived in constant fear he'd go to jail, and his son would grow up without a father."I work 50-60-hour weeks. I barely even see my son now, and the last thing I wanted to do was go to jail and not be able to see him at all," Galvan said.Galvan said when the case was finally dismissed there was a wave of emotion."It hurts a lot because of everything I went through," he said.Both the San Diego County District Attorney's office and Go Wireless said they couldn't comment on pending litigation.Galvan's attorney tells 10News the County of San Diego rejected the legal claim, and they do plan to file a lawsuit.Court records show there is an ongoing court case involving another person named Angel Galvan. 10News tried to track that person down was unable to speak with anyone. 3540

  濮阳东方妇科医院做人流手术非常专业   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A new program at the University of San Diego will give students a crash course in cybersecurity, one of the fastest-growing fields in the region.USD partnered with online education company Fullstack to offer the 26-week course. They say people who take it will be ready to apply for the thousands of available jobs that companies in San Diego are having a hard time filling."When they're done, they could go into software engineering, software development, web development, cybersecurity," says Andy Drotos, USD's Director of Professional and Public Programs. "There's a long list of jobs available in all of those areas."According to a 2019 study by the San Diego Cyber Center of Excellence, there are more than 150 cybersecurity firms across San Diego. They create 8,450 jobs -- that's an 11% jump from 2016. And the average salary in the field is around ,000 per year.RELATED: Cybersecurity jobs skyrocket in San DiegoBut, industry experts say they have a hard time finding qualified candidates to fill those jobs. Some estimate there are around 4,000 open positions in the cybersecurity field."There's a demand for staff who have previous work experience and can apply that to new roles," says Andy Haas, a Chief Engineer at Booz Allen Hamilton. He says his company is always looking for people to fill cybersecurity roles."It really is a growing need across companies, across industries here in the region," says Haas.The boot camp-style course at USD has classes that are taken online, twice a week. There's also a Saturday class that meets both in-person and online. Drotos says it's perfect for people looking to make a career change."If you have an affinity for technology, or you have an interest, you don't need a degree," he says. "You get the benefit of having a job that's going to be around for a while."The class starts in February. Anyone interested can ask for more information here. 1931

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A New York-based pastor who was placed on a government watchlist after traveling to Tijuana to work with migrants is suing the federal government. Kaji Dousa is the senior pastor at Park Avenue Christian Church in New York and a member of the New Sanctuary Coalition, which works with immigrant communities.She had also been the senior pastor at the Table United Church of Christ in La Mesa for several years until 2016.According to a federal complaint, in November, Dousa started traveling to Tijuana as migrants from caravans continued filling the churches and shelters of the border city.“What I do is I go and meet and pray with people. I listen to them. I offer all the gifts of pastoral office,” said Dousa.She traveled multiple times across the border until January, when she was stopped by border agents and taken into a secondary screening area.According to the complaint, a Customs and Border Protection officer interrogated her, at one point asking “about Pastor Dousa’s assistance to asylum seekers and whether she encouraged them to lie in asylum applications.”Dousa denied the claims, but explained “that sometimes during her ministry she assisted asylum seekers, many of whom speak no English, in explaining what caused them to flee their homes,” according to the complaint. 1316

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A new study conducted by Zillow shows that more college graduates in San Diego are living with their parents.The share of graduates living with their parents has grown from 14 percent in 2005 to 25 percent in 2016.Similarly, the study found that less graduates are living with a romantic partner. In 2005, 38 percent of college graduates were living with a romantic partner compared to 32 percent in 2016.And it’s not just in San Diego. Nationally, 28 percent of college graduated lived with their parents in 2016 compared to just 19 percent in 2005.“In the mid-2000s, lending standards and an abundant supply of homes made it easier for recent grads to move out and form their own households instead of living with their parents,” said Zillow senior economist Aaron Terrazas. “Those market conditions have changed drastically over the past decade as we went through the housing bust. Adding to that, as many millennials who recently graduated into the Great Recession can attest, underemployment or more precarious jobs make it much harder to save up enough to move out. When rents keep climbing and competition is fierce for the most affordable homes, living with mom and dad can be a good option to build up some savings.”Zillow says when the housing bubble was at its height it was easier to get a loan and the building boom meant there were more homes available. Tighter lending standards and less housing inventory today make it more difficult to break into the home-buying market.  1531

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