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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - A YouTube video of a community college police officer who drew his gun on a San Diego man carrying a camera Wednesday is going viral.The video shows the Mesa College police officer getting out of his car and asking Chris, the man with two cameras, what he was filming.Chris, who did not want to provide his last name, refused to put down the GoPro camera. Within seconds, the officer took his weapon out of the holster. The officer did not put his gun back in the holster until a second officer arrived.Chris is the founder of California Citizens Watch, a group that audits government entities. He told 10News reporter Allison Ash he was not trying to provoke the officer into pulling his gun.Watch the confrontation: 10News spoke with former El Cajon police officer Kevin LaChapelle who said he believes Chris was definitely out for a confrontation. However, LaChapelle also said the Mesa College officer messed up by pulling his weapon.Mesa College released a statement which read: 1025
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — A woman broke her thigh bone after she was riding on a motorized scooter and lost control in downtown San Diego Friday.The 65-year-old woman was riding a Bird scooter just before 2 p.m. in the Embarcadero area, according to San Diego Police. Her family members were also riding scooters with her.For some reason, police say the woman lost control of the scooter and overturned. She was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for a fractured Femur.No one else was injured.RELATED: 512

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- After more than a month-long journey from the epicenter of the coronavirus in China to federal quarantine in San Diego, a Nebraska man is heading home -- with a box of pizza.Charles Wasserburger was among more than 150 evacuees who passed temperature checks Tuesday and were released from quarantine at MCAS Miramar.10News introduced viewers last week to Wasserburger, an Omaha-based employee of a microbiology company who was longing for some pizza while holed up in the mandatory 14-day quarantine.READ MORE: Amid coronavirus quarantine, a request for pizza at MCAS MiramarWith assistance from a half-dozen people and two federal agencies, 10News helped Wasserburger’s wife deliver the pizza in time for Valentine’s Day.“It’s a morale boost to get me through the next week because it was starting to get a little rough here,” he said at the time.Wasserburger and other evacuees were bused to San Diego International Airport Tuesday for return flights around the country.“Extremely happy,” he said after arriving at the airport. “Maybe even a little emotional. It's been a long trip.”He hasn’t been home in Omaha since January 15.“I’m very happy to be going home, but I met a lot of good people while I was here. The people of San Diego, the people at Miramar were so good to us,” he said.10News surprised him with one more pie from Landini's Pizzeria in Little Italy to take on his flight back.“Look at that! Wow, that’s awesome,” he said.A delicious ending to an otherwise tense trip. 1515
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - An Orange County-based company believes it could change the current healthcare landscape with one-hour COVID-19 testing.According to officials at Fluxergy, initial tests by researchers using a synthetic SARS-CoV-2 virus suggest this system has the potential to change the landscape for point-of-care diagnostic testing for COVID-19. It would dramatically reduce the time it takes to get results and deliver those results directly at the patient’s bedside. The company said it could be able to identify the virus in as little as 45 minutes."The typical laboratory tests that you do in a central lab or the doctor's office, you collect the sample and get that sent out to a central lab," said Fluxergy President Tej Patel. "We do those same types of tests, but in a single device, I want to say that's the size of a small PC or a shoebox-size device."Last week, the research team at UC San Diego began an initial benchtop evaluation of the Fluxergy system using the SARS-CoV-2 virus from patients in San Diego the company said.Patel told 10News Fluxergy technology aims to take that same test, put it in a single device, and make it portable. He said the changes to the system will make for easier access by removing some medical barriers."Our goal is to kind of democratize testing and increase the accessibility to testing," Patel said. "So when you try to focus your system more on point-of-care testing, where you make testing much easier to gain access to, where you don't have to go through your doctor or other provider, and not have to worry about reimbursement. If you can just go and do these tests, it's going to really elevate in general the whole healthcare system.""We need to test and test," said UC San Diego’s Dr. Davey Smith. "The countries that have done best to lower their mortality have done best by flattening the curve by testing where the infections are happening and knowing who's getting infected."Dr. Davey Smith is the head of the UCSD Division of Infectious Diseases and Global Public Health.Smith said immediate testing would give doctors an advantage."It's only going to be in certain situations, really point-of-care contact, and it will be for special circumstances that we’ll be able to make clinical decisions on right away," Smith said.According to Fluxergy, "The Fluxergy system is currently available as a Research Use Only, or Investigational Use Only device for the development of new diagnostic products. The Fluxergy system has not yet been reviewed or approved by the FDA. However, as noted, if the physician-scientists at UCSD obtain promising validation results using the system, they intend to begin immediate use of the diagnostic consistent with FDA's guidance and pursue an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). An EUA would then enable the UCSD CLIA-certified diagnostic laboratory to continue to utilize the Fluxergy system with patients who need to be tested for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, subject to the terms and conditions set forth by FDA in the authorization." 3035
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- A San Diego woman is searching for the hero who saved her from drowning after a cliff dive at Sunset Cliffs.“I think the ocean really taught me a lesson that day. It really did,” Justice Arreguin said.It happened a week ago Sunday.Arreguin was with some friends when she jumped off the cliff into the water. The first jump was fine, she said. But when she jumped the second time, it almost killed her.The big waves pulled her under and tossed her around. She couldn't breathe.“Then this guy he just popped out of nowhere and he was like 'you have to stay calm. Try to stay calm,'" Arreguin said. "And so I did and after a while, he jumped in the water when it was safe."The man pulled justice out. She never got his name.Arreguin wants to meet him again and thank him.If you know who he is please email us at the station at tips@10news.com. 874
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