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SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (KGTV) -- Three Camp Pendleton Marines were stabbed during a fight Saturday in San Clemente, a sheriff’s official confirms.The fight happened around 1 a.m. Saturday in a parking lot on the 200 block of El Camino Real.The three Marines, two aged 21 and the other a 23-year-old were involved in a fight with two men and a woman.RELATED: Woman finds Marine Corps ring on Florida's Siesta Key, hopes to find ownerDuring the fight, one of the men pulled out a knife and stabbed all three Marines. All three of the men were taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.The Marines were all assigned to the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines at Camp Pendleton.Deputies arrested 24-year-old Alexis Moreno-Aguirre on suspicion of attempted murder. He was booked into the Orange County jail.RELATED: Wife of Marine veteran self-deports to Mexico, leaving behind husband and daughter 925
SALT LAKE CITY — A 15-year-old boy has died from his injuries after he became trapped in a car that flipped into the Jordan River Canal late Saturday night.The 20-year-old driver and two kids escaped the car before emergency crews arrived, but the 15-year-old and a two-year-old remained trapped in the vehicle.Family identified the victim as Justin Bates. His uncle says the teen made it out of the car safely before going back into the water in an attempt to rescue the little girl.“He was good hearted. He’d help people that needed help,” said Brian Bates. “He died the person he was -- someone who would jump in and try to do something for somebody else.”On Monday, the Salt Lake City Police Department shared tense body-worn camera footage from the rescue effort: 776
SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A buyer for a large grocery store chain who lives in San Diego will be among the contestants on tonight's episode of ``Supermarket Sweep,'' which will air at 8 p.m. on ABC.Elizabeth ``EZ'' Tan and teammate Angelique Munoz will compete on the Halloween episode of the game show hosted by former ``Saturday Night Live'' cast member Leslie Jones. Munoz is a Bellingham, Washington resident who is also a buyer for the chain.``A friend at work applied for my friend Angelique and I because she thought our crazy humor, competitiveness and passion for all things grocery- related would make for good TV. She was not wrong,'' Tan said.Tan and Munoz ``did a number of Zoom calls with casting directors and producers selling our awesome selves and playing grocery-themed games to show them that we got what it takes,'' Tan said.``There were hundreds of other teams trying to get on the show and luckily they chose us,'' Tan said.On the show, two-player teams race around what ABC described as a ``whimsical grocery store'' built for the series at The Barker Hangar at Santa Monica Air Center, hoping to get the highest cart total value so they can play for 0,000.``Supermarket Sweep'' begins with the ``Mini Sweep'' in which, upon solving a riddle, a player selected from each team runs through the supermarket to find a correlating product. The first person to grab the specially marked item wins some extra time and cash for the ``Big Sweep.''Three minigames follow, testing contestants' knowledge of a variety of grocery items.The next round is the ``Big Sweep'' where one player from each team races through the aisles trying to grab as many high-priced items as he or she can, seeking the biggest total to be able to advance to the ``Super Sweep.''Contestants can take a maximum of three of any item in the store except for items over 0, where there is a limit of one.In the ``Super Sweep'' a team races against the clock to find five designated products that will earn them 0,000.Each ``Supermarket Sweep'' episode honors a grocery store employee who has been on the frontlines of the coronavirus pandemic. Sunday's ``Employee of the Week'' is Betty Henry, who works at a supermarket in Miami Beach, Florida.Ninety-five pallets of perishable and non-perishable food used on ``Supermarket Sweep'' were donated to Los Angeles-area charities including the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, the Los Angeles Mission and Downtown Women's Shelter.The majority of the show's meats went to the Rancho Wildlife Foundation which operates a wildlife sanctuary in Silverado, an unincorporated area located in the Santa Ana Mountains in eastern Orange County.A large assortment of the show's pet food and pet supplies were donated to the Toluca Lake-based pet adoption service, The Rescue Train. Sunday's episode can be viewed on demand and on Hulu beginning Monday. 2883
SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A drunken driver who went the wrong way and crashed head-on into another car in 4S Ranch, killing the other driver, was convicted Wednesday of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and DUI causing injury.Jurors deadlocked on a second-degree murder count against Alexandria Bayne, but will return Thursday to resume deliberations in hopes of reaching a consensus. The 37-year-old defendant was charged with murder due to two previous DUI convictions from 2005 and 2008.The panel deliberated two days before returning the vehicular manslaughter and DUI verdicts, and acquitted Bayne of four child endangerment counts involving allegations that she drove drunk earlier in the day while her children were riding in her minivan.RELATED: Fatal 4S Ranch DUI suspect breaks down in tears when husband testifies in hearingOn Thursday, the jury will hear a read-back of closing arguments and receive clarifications on the legal definitions of certain terms such as "intentionally" and "deliberately," which were cited as a source of contention in jury notes submitted to San Diego County Superior Court Judge Robert F. O'Neill.Sarita Shakya, a 38-year-old Scripps Mercy Hospital nurse, was heading home from work the afternoon of Dec. 17, 2016, on Camino Del Norte when her car was struck head-on by the defendant's vehicle.Deputy District Attorney Cally Bright told jurors in her opening statement that Bayne had been drinking alcoholic beverages throughout the day, starting that morning. The defendant and her attorney conceded she'd been drinking but was not drunk when she was behind the wheel. Though she testified that she had eight drinks throughout that day, she told the jury she simply made a mistake when she turned into opposing traffic lanes on Camino Del Norte.RELATED: Tears at preliminary hearing in suspected DUI fatal crashBayne's attorney, Michelle Hunsaker, contended that Bayne made that mistake because she was distracted by family issues, as well as her cell phone.Prosecutors said her blood alcohol content was measured at between .32 and .33% -- the legal limit is .08% -- after the crash.Hunsaker disputed that testing result, saying Bayne's alcohol consumption "just doesn't line up" with the .33% BAC alleged by the prosecution. She also said Bayne had encountered several people throughout the day and did not appear intoxicated.RELATED: Woman killed by suspected drunk driver in 4S Ranch identified"We are not discounting the magnitude of the loss of Ms. Shakya and take full responsibility for that collision. But distraction does not equal murder," Hunsaker said.Shakya's husband, Peter Chen, testified that his wife typically returned home sometime after midnight each night following her shift at the hospital. When she didn't show up, he called her supervisor, who didn't know why Shakya might be late.Hours later, he received the bad news."I couldn't believe what had happened," Chen said, calling it "the worst day of my life." 2990
SAN DIEGO — It’s almost time for kids to head back to school, and for parents, that means safety is top-of-mind.Luckily, there are a ton of apps to help your child stay safe.Whether you need to monitor their online activity or give them peace of mind by being able to report suspicious activity at school, there is something for every need. Here's a list of safety apps below: 389