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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - If you're driving along I-5 in Logan Heights, you might see Frankie Ortiz in a mariachi costume on the bridge above you.He told 10News Photojournalist Zach Wonderlie, he just wants to make San Diego smile!Ortiz said he gets encouragement on social media from people who enjoyed seeing him dance. 332
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Members of a newly formed Guardian Angels chapter in Pacific Beach went on patrol for the first time Saturday night.Members of the Sacramento Chapter traveled to San Diego to train the new volunteers. Administrator Sarah Bonesteel joined after a neighborhood crime walk, saying "crime is getting out of control, we've lost our parks, and our library and things like that."RELATED: Guardian Angels look to start street patrols in Pacific BeachThe Guardian Angels are a national crime prevention nonprofit organization that started in New York in 1979. The group said it created chapters in over 130 cities in 13 countries.While the group has several programs to prevent crime, the most visible are its street patrols. The Pacific Beach Chapter hopes to provide a safe environment after the bars close.Guardian Angels patrol in groups of at least two while wearing red berets and uniforms, and say the patrols are meant to serve as a visual deterrent and aim to avoid violent confrontations.Angels on patrols are unarmed but trained in self-defense to protect themselves in case a situation becomes physical. They hope they do not have to use their training.The organization conducts background checks on new members to ensure everyone's safety. 1270
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Kion Gould still lives at the La Jolla Crossroads Apartments, where one year ago on his birthday a gunman opened fire, hitting him and six others.He survived, but his friend Monique Clark died. He spent a month in the hospital recovering from three gunshot wounds. When he got out, he went back to his gym routine and says now he’s physically back in shape. But “mentally, there is anguish,” he says.His life has become a study in what happens to mass shooting victims who survive.The shooting plays out in his head often, reliving the day in vivid detail.“It seemed like it happened yesterday,” he says.It was April 30, 2017. Gould says things were winding down at the pool and they were about to head to dinner in Pacific Beach.He was heading toward the pool gate when he noticed a man lying by himself on a lounge chair.He remembers telling him, “It’s my birthday, come have a good time. We’ve got food, we’ve got drinks, we’ve got girls. That’s exactly what I said.”The man, now identified as Peter Selis, did not respond with words. Instead, he pulled out a .45 caliber handgun.“I didn’t think it was a real threat until he basically raised the gun toward my head,” said Gould.He remembered thinking part of him wanted to jump on top of the man and rip the gun away. But something held him back as he tried to rationalize the situation. Why would someone have a gun there?“What stopped me was the thought that he was a special needs person that had a toy,” he remembered. “Then I thought he was an undercover cop.”But within seconds it became clear it was not a fake and he intended to use it. Reflexively, Gould raised his arms over his face.Selis’ first shot hit his left arm.“I remember seeing blood dripping down my face so I thought I was shot in the head.”He turned to run and was hit twice in the back.He was able to make it out of the gate and up a set of stairs where he collapsed overlooking the pool.“I was up above everything and I was witnessing him shooting everyone. Like he’s just there shooting, reloading. Shooting, reloading.”Meantime, Kalli Seely was down on the pool deck. She had her purse strung over her shoulder and was on her way out when the shooting began.“I heard the first gunshot and looked automatically at Kion for some reason,” said Seely.But she couldn’t tell what was going on yet.“Then I felt something hit my arm,” she said. “I thought somebody threw something at me.”It wasn’t until she heard a friend yell “gun!” that she realized what was happening.She had been shot twice. Once in the arm and once in her left breast.“I was like ‘am I going to die?’ because that’s what you think when you get shot in the chest,” she thought.Later she would learn the bullet did not strike any vital organs but she ended up nearly passing out on the lawn outside the pool. Someone picked her up and brought her to a sidewalk on Judicial Drive where they waited for an ambulance.But as police arrived, they began closing off all the roads around the complex, blocking even ambulances from getting through. A few minutes later, Seely says a security guard drove by and took her and two other victims to the area where first responders were waiting.“Within 20 minutes we were in the hospital while the rest of them were scared, bleeding, in the pool area with the guy still shooting,” she said.By the time police killed Selis, seven people had been shot.Gould’s friend Monique Clark later died.“She had always been a happy person,” he said.Clark almost didn’t come. Gould said they had been hanging out several days before when he accidentally closed his car door on her finger, breaking it.“She was just mad at me. She didn’t hate me,” he said. But she was reluctant to come until Gould worked his charm to convince her.“I would gladly give my life for her to be here,” he now says, specifically because of her three children.“I would trade places with her, easily, without a doubt so she could be there for them. She will be forever in my heart.”Gould was eventually taken to am ambulance and remembers being conscious until he was sedated at the hospital.It turned out, the bullet did not make it through his arm into his head. Only a fragment had struck his eyelid.“The doctor was surprised I stopped the .45 with my bone,” said Gould.Doctors credited his strong physique for saving his life. While some of the fingers on his left hand are now numb, he says his body has made a full recovery.That’s only one step in the healing process though, he says.“There’s an aftermath that happens to all of this,” referring not just this shooting, but to victims of all shootings.“People just have developed [a] numbness to ‘oh, there’s a shooting. And another shooting.’ ”Seely agreed, observing mass shootings become widely publicized, then the media and the public move on to the next. The pain of the victims, especially the ones who survive, often gets forgotten she says.“There’s a deep pain that doesn’t go away and it lives with you everyday and it never stops.”Both describe it as a lingering weight.“I try and push it to the back of my head and forget that it’s there, but as soon as things are quiet and I go to mundane, everyday tasks it creeps right back in,” said Seely.Gould says he and another one of the shooting survivors have enrolled in an experimental PTSD treatment study at UCSD. But he’s skeptical it will help.Even though the shooter is dead, Gould says his hatred towards Selis can be all-consuming.“He created, this tragic, unforgiving, relentless thing that’s continuing to influence our lives. And you can never have that back.” 5625
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — It's already been one year since the San Diego Zoo Safari Park saw the first southern white rhino born through artificial insemination arrive at its park.Edward turned one-year-old on July 28, celebrating with a party at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park’s Nikita Kahn Rhino Rescue Center with his mother Victoria, 8-month-old female calf Future, and her mother Amani."Even though he doesn’t know it’s his birthday, it is very special to see Edward – a healthy, robust rhino - running around, enjoying his special treats," said Barbara Durrant, director of Reproductive Sciences at San Diego Zoo Global. "We aren’t just celebrating his birthday but also are celebrating the significance of his birth."Edward was born last year after hormone-induced ovulation and artificial insemination with frozen semen from southern white rhino Maoto on March 22, 2018. Victoria gave birth 16 months later. Edward's birth was the zoo's first successful attempt to birth a southern white rhino via artificial insemination and a critical step toward recovering its distant cousin, the northern white rhino. Currently, only two northern white rhinos exist in the world and both are female.Researchers believe that a northern white rhino calf could be born from artificial insemination within 10 to 20 years. 1313
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Locals will no longer have to rely on trips to Harrah's Resort or Downtown Disney to satisfy their Earl of Sandwich fix.The sandwich shop's downtown San Diego spot, the county's first, is now open for hungry locals but will hold its grand opening Saturday, according to the shop. The new sandwich shop can be found at 690 1st Ave.A cult following has developed behind Earl of Sandwich, with its popular sandwiches like The Full Montagu (roast beef and turkey), The Original 1762 (roast beef and cheddar), and Holiday Turkey (turkey, cranberry sauce, and stuffing) sandwiches.RELATED: Michelin identifies several San Diego restaurants as 'hidden gems'The restaurant chain is named after John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich. Montagu has long been considered the inventor of the modern sandwich, ever since he is said to have requested the dish while putting in some long hours at the gambling table.But guests are locked into sandwiches at the stop. Earl of Sandwich also sells a variety of freshly tossed salads, wraps, desserts, and several on-the-go items.The shop is open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday - Friday, and opens at 10 a.m. on Saturdays. 1177