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(KGTV) - Was Michael the actual first name of MLK?Yes.Michael Lewis King was born on January 15, 1929 and family members called him Mike.There are conflicting accounts as to when MLK started going by Martin.Some biographers say it happened in 1934 when his father became inspired by reformer Martin Luther and changed both their names. Others say King Junior changed his name as a teenager.Either way, it was never officially changed, so legally he lived his entire life with the name of Michael. 504
(KGTV) - San Diego Congressman Duncan D. Hunter used campaign funds for personal expenses “to satisfy his desire for intimacy,” U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of California David Leshner alleged in an evidence motion filed Monday. The court document details how and when Hunter spent thousands of dollars on relationships with five women who worked as congressional staffers or lobbyists, prosecutors said. “Carrying out all these affairs did not come cheap,” the U.S. Attorney’s office said. A woman, identified as Individual 14 [I-14] in the motion, started a relationship with Hunter in April 2009, four months after he became the Representative for the 50th District of California, according to the motion. RELATED: Prosecutors: How Rep. Duncan Hunter misused campaign fundsHunter used campaign funds to pay for for vacations with I-14 including trips to Reno, Lake Tahoe, and Virginia Beach, prosecutors said. His bank records indicate he could not have paid for the Lake Tahoe trip with his own funds because his personal bank account had a negative balance the day he checked out of his hotel, according to investigators. The motion also alleges an instance when Hunter stayed at a Capitol Hill hotel with the female lobbyist on June 21, 2011, only to have his wife Margaret join him the following two nights. “In describing this expenditure to his campaign treasurer later, Hunter never explained the reason he kept the first night at a hotel,” the court document says. In August 2012, about five months after his alleged relationship with I-14 ended, documents indicate Hunter began a relationship with a congressional staffer, identified in court filings as I-15. Hunter began staying at the woman’s home “nearly every night,” using campaign funds for dinners and Uber rides to further the relationship, prosecutors said. RELATED: Rep. Duncan Hunter wants federal case dismissed The third woman in the case, known as I-16, worked in Hunter’s congressional office. Prosecutors say Hunter spent campaign funds on their dates, including an outing when one of Hunter’s teenage relatives visited Washington, D.C., for a night. Prosecutors say two more women, Individuals 17 and 18, engaged in “intimate personal activities” unrelated to Hunter’s official duties, although he used campaign funds on Uber rides to their homes. The U.S. Attorney’s office filed the evidence motion “to establish the personal nature of the expenditures” and “demonstrate Hunter’s knowledge and intent to break the law, and to establish his motive to embezzle from his campaign.” “Simply put, carrying out a sequence of romantic liaisons is so far removed from any legitimate campaign or congressional activity as to rebut any argument that Hunter believed these were proper uses of campaign funds,” according to the motion. RELATED: Wife of Rep. Duncan Hunter pleads guilty in federal case Hunter and his wife both pleaded not guilty in 2018 to federal charges of using 0,000 in campaign funds for personal use and falsifying campaign finance reports. Earlier this month, Margaret Hunter changed her plea to guilty to one count of conspiracy in a plea deal with the federal government over misused campaign funds. As part of a plea deal with prosecutors, Margaret Hunter will testify against her husband in his upcoming trial in September. Hunter's attorney, Gregory Vega, declined comment Tuesday. 3403
(KGTV) - Tired of turkey after Thanksgiving? DoorDash has a deal for Black FRYday.The app-based delivery service is giving away 15,000 orders of french fries for free on Friday, Nov. 23.Customers must place a door dash order of or more from the following restaurants: 278
(KGTV) - San Diegans looking to find a new job - or get a better one - will soon have a new resource to help them get there. Goodwill Industries San Diego is finishing a more than 4,000 square-foot job training center in San Ysidro, which it plans to open Sept. 13. The 0,000 facility is replacing the organization's rack store at 630 Front St. in San Ysidro, which moved to a new location. The center will offer free career counseling, meeting spaces for interviews, open computers, and even job fairs - all free to San Diegans looking for work, or a bigger paycheck. RELATED: California is the sixth-worst state for retirement."So even if they get a job, that job that just puts food on the table, we want them to continue to come to us so that we can support them, so they can get that better job," said Toni Giffin, CEO of Goodwill Industries of San Diego County. The state reports that there are still about 58,000 San Diegans who are unemployed, even with the jobless rate near a record low of 3.7 percent. That number does not include San Diegans who would like more hours, or whose jobs don't pay enough to make ends meet. Ken Joy, 75, is currently living with his sister in La Mesa. Social Security is his only income. He would like to move out, but first, he needs a job. RELATED: San Diego City Council passes ordinance to prevent affordable housing discrimination"I want to do something four hours or five hours a day part time, and have time to do things that I enjoy doing otherwise," said Joy, who is honing his computer skills at one of Goodwill's other job training centers.Goodwill currently has four job training centers in the county - in Oceanside, Escondido, Point Loma, and Chula Vista. That Chula Vista location, on Broadway, will close when the new center in San Ysidro opens.Goodwill also offers training in the following areas: 1910
(KGTV) - Support has been pouring in for a California hot dog vendor who's money was seized by a University of California officer over the weekend in Berkeley.A GoFundMe for "Beto" has raised ,526 as of Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. The account was started by Martin Flores, who shot the now-viral video of a University of California Police (UCPD) officer taking Beto's money and citing him. RELATED: Outcry after police take hot dog vendor's money outside UC Berkeley football gameThe UCPD officer said Beto did not have a permit to sell hot dogs outside the Cal football game on Saturday adjacent to the campus's Memorial Stadium.The video soon prompted an outcry from the Internet at large."Yeah, this is law and order in action," the officer could be seen saying in the video. "That's how it works."The officer then takes the money, which was booked into evidence.Since the video was released, UC Berkeley Vice Chancellor Scott Bidd issued a statement saying they, "have instructed our officers to monitor illegal vending outside our event venues. This action has been motivated at least in part by issues of public health, the interests of local small businesses and even human trafficking.""In addition, while I cannot comment on the specifics of this particular case, our practice is to issue warnings before giving a citation. In a case such as this, it is typical to collect any suspected illegal funds and enter them into evidence," Bidd said in a statement.Bidd added that he has assigned University of California Police Department to open an investigation into the incident and that the well-being of the community "including those from our marginalized communities of color, is most important to us."UCPD detained three other individuals for vending without a license during the same weekend, according to the university. All were released with a warning.Flores said via GoFundMe that a public ceremony would be hosted at a Los Angeles venue in the coming weeks to present Beto with the funds raised."All funds will go to Juan (Beto) and the efforts to support street vendors in advocacy. Thank you again for all of your support and helping us humanize street vendors and not criminalize," Flores wrote. 2268