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EL CAJON (KGTV) - After 50 years of service, the well-known San Diego Highway Man is retiring. Thomas Weller has been helping thousands of people stuck on the side of the road since 1966. He tells 10News he started helping after a man helped him in a blizzard when he was a teenager living in Illinois.“I was on my way home about one or two in the morning and the blizzard put me off the road into a snow bank," said Weller.Weller says he never forgot that moment and hoped to be that saving grace for many others. Turns out he tells us he’s lost track of how many people he’s helped.“More than ten thousand, it's just I never keep track.” Weller had a stroke back in March and since then decided it’s best given his limited capabilities to retire.“I’ve lost my strength and my agility, not my judgment yet because I’m still driving.” He tells 10News it’s for the best that he retires because of how increasingly dangerous distracted driving has made the roads."It’s just extremely dangerous out there, more so now than it used to be.”While he is giving up one of his favorite passions in life, he isn’t giving up his outlook on life, “the most beautiful compensations of this life you cannot sincerely help another without helping yourself in the bargain.” 1266
EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) - Renovations are underway at the East County Performing Arts Center to turn the nearly 50-year-old performance hall into a rock and roll concert venue."We have to change the vibe, the feel of what this building is," said Dirk Epperson, El Cajon's Director of Public Works.The venue closed in 2009 when the recession forced cuts in the city budget. Now, the renovations come as tour promoter Live Nation prepares to take over the venue. The City of El Cajon entered into a five year deal with the concert company to manage the building. As part of the agreement, Live Nation will bring 50 events to the venue in 2019, and as many as 70 events by 2023. Live Nation also manages the House of Blues in San Diego and Mattress Firm Amphitheater in Chula Vista."We're not sure what it will be like," said Mayor Bill Wells. "We've never had this regular, steady diet of top name acts that are coming in. So nobody's quite sure how much this is going to have a ripple effect around El Cajon. But everybody thinks it will be positive."The city is now spending .3 million to upgrade the facility. Improvements include new amenities like modern concessions, a more open entrance, and lobby area and new plush seating in the first few rows. The seating capacity for the main hall will also increase to 1,300. Part of the plan also calls for a brand new VIP Lounge at the back of the venue. The money for the project comes from the sale of the old police headquarters.As for what kind of acts will fill the venue, Epperson said it's entirely up to Live Nation."It can pretty much be any type of act or band," he said, adding the city will let the experts decide. "But you can imagine the ones that are on their way up or on their way down will be coming to this size venue."Smaller, local performances like school concerts and recitals will still be held at the venue, which Wells says is part of the community. With the upgrades, he said it should stay that way for a long time."We're in it to win it," said Wells. "We'll be successful with this." 2120

Dr. Anthony Fauci said Wednesday that he thought that a fellow White House staffer's attempt to discredit him in a USA Today op-ed was "bizarre" and urged others in the administration to stop public partisan bickering about the pandemic.In an interview with The Atlantic, Fauci called the infighting "nonsense" and urged the administration to "reset.""When you look at the numbers, obviously, we've got to do better. We've got to almost reset this and say, 'Okay, let's stop this nonsense,'" Fauci said.Fauci's comments were published a day after the White House's top trade expert, Peter Navarro, published an op-ed in USA Today in which Navarro claimed that Fauci had been "wrong about everything." On Wednesday, both President Donald Trump and the White House said that Navarro did not receive clearance to publish the column. Trump said in an interview on Wednesday that Navarro "shouldn't be doing that.""Well, that is a bit bizarre. And I have to tell you, I think if I sit here and just shrug my shoulders and say, "Well, you know, that's life in the fast lane ..." Fauci said, according to The Atlantic.Fauci later said that he "can't explain Peter Navarro," adding that "he's in a world by himself."Fauci also told The Atlantic that he had spoken to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows about Navarro's column and told him that he felt it was detrimental to the president. Fauci added that he did not receive an apology from Meadows.Once a fixture at daily Coronavirus Task Force Briefings and on cable news, Fauci has been notably absent from national television in recent weeks — though he appears to make regular media appearances on internet streams and podcasts. When asked if the Trump administration was limiting his media appearances, Fauci told The Atlantic that he couldn't comment, "but I think you know what the answer to that is."Fauci also said in the interview that he and Trump haven't had a one-on-one talk "in a while," and that his input goes "through the vice president."Earlier this week, Trump told reporters that he continues to have a "good relationship" with Fauci.Polling shows that Fauci, who has served as the head of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases since 1984, has become one of the most trusted administration officials when it comes to giving advice amid the pandemic. He's broken with Trump on several aspects of the administration's response, including school reopenings and testing. 2464
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Saudi Arabia’s state television says final verdicts have been issued in the case of slain Washington Post columnist and Saudi critic Jamal Khashoggi after his family announced pardons that spared five from execution.The Riyadh Criminal Court issued final verdicts Monday against eight people.The court ordered a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison for five, with one receiving a 10-year sentence and two others being ordered to serve seven years in prison.The trial was widely criticized by rights groups and an independent U.N. investigator, who noted that no senior officials nor anyone suspected of ordering the killing was found guilty.The independence of the court was also brought into question. 747
EL CAJON, Calif. (KGTV) - A woman charged with a DUI crash that killed her passenger and seriously injured a young man changed her plea to guilty Tuesday in El Cajon court.Prosecutors said Tania Molinar was drunk when she drove her Mazda into the path of James Dotson’s Ford Ranger on Avocado Blvd. in May. The impact split the truck in two.Molinar’s passenger, David Sarabia Lopez, was killed. Dotson testified about the details of the violent crash during the preliminary hearing.Dotson has not recovered from his injuries. He said his medical bills total 0,000 and he has another surgery scheduled.“I don't do anything I do before. I was kind of the kid that rode dirt bikes, had a race truck, I like to go to the desert, go climbing, I can't do any of that. Can't pick things up, I don't see that being in my near future,” he said.Molinar could get up to 11 years, eight months in prison, and she will also have to pay restitution. She’s scheduled to be sentenced in June. 997
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