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Here’s how much traffic crosses the U.S.-Mexico border

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Ports of entry

President Donald Trump has threatened to shut down the U.S. border with Mexico. Today we look at the yearly movement of vehicles and people between the two nations.

According to the U.S. government, the San Ysidro port of entry is the busiest land border crossing in the Western Hemisphere. It’s one of three ports of entry near San Diego area.

The checkpoint processes an average of 70,000 northbound vehicle passengers and 20,000 northbound pedestrians daily.

The map shows pedestrian and personal vehicle totals at 26 border crossings in 2018. The totals are from the U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics.In 2017, 85 percent of goods traded between the U.S. and Mexico were transported by truck or rail, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

Steady trafficMore personal vehicles pass through San Ysidro than any other port of entry. Here’s how the flow of cars has fluctuated over the years.

san ysidro traffic

According to Business Insider, two-way trade across the border totals $1.4 billion per day and takes place at 25 major ports of land entry between the U.S. and Mexico. Among these are 39 crossing points (high-volume locations such as Laredo, Brownsville and Nogales have multiple crossing points), of which 22 are open all day, every day.

Border crossing delays can cost billions of dollars in trade. In 2011, Bloomberg estimated that delays at the U.S.-Mexico border cost the U.S. economy up to $7.8 billion annually.For comparison, the busiest port along the U.S.-Canadian border is Buffalo/Niagara Falls, where 4.97 million vehicles and 358,652 pedestrians crossed in 2018.

Ports of entry

arizona ports of entry

Texas ports of entry

busy ports

Sources: U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Business Insider, Bloomberg


Another state legislator is trying to block Orange County’s toll road agency from building new roadways

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A bill proposed in the state Legislature would block any new major projects by Orange County’s tollway agency, including an extension of the 241 toll road.

If the bill were to pass, the Transportation Corridor Agencies would be kept from building any new bridges or toll roads after Jan. 1, 2020, and from issuing new bonds to finance projects. The TCA oversees the county’s 241, 261, 133 and 73 toll roads and is studying a variety of scenarios for connecting the 241 to the 5 Freeway as well as adding travel options in south Orange County.

Assemblyman Bill Brough, who proposed the bill, said in an April 3 letter that the TCA has drifted away from its mission as a toll road operator and into a regional planning agency operating outside its lane. TCA officials, however, said the bill would strip local control from an agency that has successfully built and operated key roads for decades.

San Clemente, which is in Brough’s district, has strongly opposed a road connection sought between the 241 and the 5 freeway that would pass through the city. The agency has also faced scrutiny for how it has used its funds, including how much it pays its contractors.

The proposed bill would “return the toll roads to its core mission,” Brough, R-Dana Point, said in his letter outlining why he drafted the bill.

Former Assemblyman Rocky Chávez proposed a similar bill last year that stalled in a state Senate committee.

In his letter, Brough also said his bill is necessary to lower housing prices in the county. Developers pay the toll road agency up to $6,000 per single-family home they build – a fee that is passed along to the new homeowners, he said.

“These fees are all paid by us through our homes and businesses and have been for years for a road, in my opinion, that will never be built,” he said of the 241 extension.

Transportation Corridor Agencies CEO Mike Kraman released a statement on Thursday, April 4, opposing the bill, saying the agency has been improving the county’s infrastructure without relying on sales taxes or gas taxes. The agency has more than $3 billion in projects planned to help travel through the region, he said.

The proposed bill “not only prohibits TCA from fulfilling its core mission to enhance mobility in Orange County, but also prevents TCA from utilizing its innovative funding to develop traffic relief solutions,” Kraman said.

The TCA boards of directors are expected to discuss taking a stance on the bill at their April 11 meeting. On the agenda for the same meeting, is having board members vote on whether a third-party should audit the agency’s consultant contracts. The vote comes after a Los Angeles Times article on TCA contractors’ billing practices.

Adam Schiff vs. the grifter-in-chief

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In a different, better world, it might be funny to witness the craven defenders of a congenital liar assail the principled stand of a straight-arrow former federal prosecutor whose entire career has been built on speaking hard truths.

But that is not the world we live in. We live in an alternate universe in which a man addicted to lying about everything from his golf handicap to matters of dire international consequence is the current president of the United States.

And while the sight of his eventual oil portrait in some Washington hallway will sicken stomachs from here to eternity, hanging as it will be alongside those of an Abraham Lincoln and a Teddy Roosevelt, future Americans will only have to ponder what manner of calamity put a flimflam man in the White House for four years.

Whereas we of the present have to deal with his daily disasters in, as they say, real time.

In the wake of a letter synopsizing some of the Robert Mueller report, we also have to deal with the silly calls for the head of my congressman, Adam Schiff, because the chair of the House Intelligence Committee maintains the current president worked with Russians against our nation’s interests during his campaign.

You remember that letter:  The attorney general says Mueller’s team found no conspiracy between the president’s 2016 campaign and Russia’s well-known election interference. Though the special counsel made no decision on his other investigation, whether the president illegally obstructed the inquiry, he very clearly declined to exonerate him.

That’s what we know so far, and it ain’t much. But ya think the Intel chair might know some things that we don’t, magnifying his understandable frustration that so far we haven’t publicly seen some smoking gun?

My congressman has a definite fascination with the in-hock-to-Russia angle on the current president. He is a Boy Scout, and just can’t stand the fact that a grifter is in the White House.

I can’t stand that, either, and am embarrassed for all past, present and future Americans. But I have never put any particular eggs in the Russian Easter basket. While we haven’t seen the Mueller report, I have never agreed with the obsessive hopes of my properly anti-this-president friends that proof of collusion with the Russkies would be the way we would get rid of the quack.

We’ll get rid of him at the ballot box. Sadly for the fate of human dignity around the world, that means a bit of a wait. But absent something in the real Mueller report that the attorney general forgot to tell us, and absent the president releasing his tax returns, which probably contain evidence of more skulduggery than you’d find at a Pimps and Arms Dealers Ball, he won’t be impeached.

Impeachment would just fuel the worst impulses of his conspiracy-minded backers, who would forever believe that the Deep State had overturned an election.

And this Russian fixation has always been a little over the top. Who could believe, for instance, that Putin, the richest man in the world, could be bought by the promise of a Moscow penthouse? What would he do with that?

But I’m sticking by my congressman, who got in a great dig at the president last week for breaking the “cardinal rule of childish nicknames” by giving Schiff several instead of just one. The Intel chair — and you’re welcome, by the way, from those of us who elect him — is just doing his job: “We will continue to investigate the counterintelligence issues. That is, is the president or people around him compromised in any way by a hostile foreign power?”

Larry Wilson is on the Southern California News Group editorial board. lwilson@scng.com.

Dodgers’ home-run barrage continues during win at Coors Field

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  • Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda commits a throwing error while trying to put out Colorado Rockies base runner Tony Wolters at second base in the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson works against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

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  • Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda works against the Colorado Rockies in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado throws to second base after fielding a ball hit by Los Angeles Dodgers’ Justin Turner in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda works against the Colorado Rockies in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Corey Seager, right, fields the throw to put out Colorado Rockies’ Charlie Blackmon at second base on a ground ball hit by David Dahl in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • DENVER, CO – APRIL 5: Tyler Anderson #44 of the Colorado Rockies pitches against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second inning during the home opener at Coors Field on April 5, 2019 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers second baseman Enrique Hernandez, left, throws to first base after putting out Colorado Rockies’ David Dahl out at second base on the front end of a double play hit into by Nolan Arenado in the first inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Justin Turner follows the flight of his single off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson in the third inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Corey Seager follows the flight of his RBI-single off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson in the third inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda puts down a sacrifice bunt against the Colorado Rockies in the third inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies’ Nolan Arenado follows the flight of his RBI-sacrifice fly off Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda in the third inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda, right, congratulates first baseman Max Muncy after his unassisted double play to end the third inning of a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson reacts after giving up a solo home run to Los Angeles Dodgers’ Max Muncy in the fourth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Max Muncy follows the flight of his solo home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson in the fourth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • DENVER, CO – APRIL 5: Max Muncy #13 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates as he runs the bases after hitting a fourth inning solo homer against the Colorado Rockies during the Colorado Rockies home opener at Coors Field on April 5, 2019 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Max Muncy gestures as he crosses home plate after hitting a solo home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson in the fourth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • The Dodgers’ Cody Bellinger, right, follows the flight of his three-run home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson in the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Corey Seager, left, congratulates Cody Bellinger, who crosses home plate after hitting a three-run home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tyler Anderson during the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black, left, takes the ball from starting pitcher Tyler Anderson, after Anderson had given up a single to Los Angeles Dodgers’ A.J. Pollock during the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • DENVER, CO – APRIL 5: Kenta Maeda #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches against the Colorado Rockies in the second inning during the Colorado Rockies home opener at Coors Field on April 5, 2019 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

  • Colorado Rockies’ Trevor Story reacts after being called out on strikes against Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda to end the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Carlos Estevez works against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers pinch-hitter Joc Pederson reacts after striking out against Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Carlos Estevez to end the top of the fifth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 5, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • DENVER, CO – APRIL 5: Kenta Maeda #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches against the Colorado Rockies in the first inning of the home opener at Coors Field on April 5, 2019 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

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DENVER — During the spring, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said his team might not hit as many home runs this season as it did last year when Matt Kemp, Yasmani Grandal, Manny Machado and Yasiel Puig helped boost the total to a franchise-record 235 homers.

It might be the first time Roberts has ever sold his team short.

The Dodgers hit three more home runs Friday – one each by Cody Bellinger, Max Muncy and Russell Martin – and thumped the Colorado Rockies 10-6, ruining their home opener Friday afternoon at Coors Field.

The three home runs raise the Dodgers’ total to 21 in the first eight games of the season (two short of the MLB record set by the St. Louis Cardinals in the first eight games of the 2000 season). They have hit at least one home run in each of those eight games, extending the franchise record.

And that puts them on pace to hit 425 home runs this season.

That seems … improbable. Then again, there is no sign of Bellinger cooling off.

Bellinger’s three-run home run in the fifth inning was his sixth of the season, giving him the major-league lead in homers and RBIs (16) – and the franchise record for both in the first eight games of a season.

Bellinger is 15 for 36 (.417) to start the season, including 7 for 19 (.368) with two home runs off left-handers.

Only three players in major-league history have opened the season with at least six home runs and 16 RBIs in their team’s first eight games – Eddie Mathews with the Braves in 1953, Alex Rodriguez with the Yankees in 2007 and Bellinger this season.

Muncy’s home run – a 417-foot solo shot in the fourth – also came off Rockies left-hander Tyler Anderson (the fourth consecutive left-handed starter the Dodgers have faced this week) as Roberts moves farther away from last season’s nightly platooning.

Muncy also added a two-run triple in the seventh off lefty reliever Mike Dunn, going 3 for 4 in the game.

Martin’s home run was the most impressive of the day, a 445-foot journey deep into the left-field pavilion off reliever Carlos Estevez to start the sixth inning.

While the Dodgers were dispensing souvenir baseballs to the sellout crowd, starter Kenta Maeda was tiptoeing around four hits and four walks in his five innings. Maeda was sharp when it counted, holding the Rockies to an 0 for 6 with runners in scoring position.

The Rockies did put up a three-run burst against Brock Stewart in the seventh before Pedro Baez restored order – but only temporarily.

Joe Kelly came on to close out the game in the ninth. But the first batter he faced, Charlie Blackmon, hit a line drive back to the mound. Kelly knocked it down and threw Blackmon out at first. After a visit from the Dodgers trainer, however, Kelly left the game.

Yimi Garcia replaced him and promptly gave up a solo home run to David Dahl and another to Trevor Story (his second homer of the game) before closing things out.

More to come on this story.

California’s first surgeon general prioritizes children and addressing health disparities

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Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general.

Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives during his inaugural address, including expanding health care coverage and lowering prescription drug costs.

Only three other states — Pennsylvania, Florida and Arkansas — have a surgeon general. Michigan was the first state to appoint a surgeon general in 2003, but eliminated the position seven years later.

  • California’s newly appointed Surgeon General Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, right, talsk with Charge Nurse Michael Ketterer during a tour of CHOC’s Mental Health Inpatient Center in Orange on Friday, April 5, 2019. It’s the only inpatient psychiatric center in Orange County exclusively dedicated to treat children ages 3-17 with mental illness. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

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  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Addressing the adverse physical and mental repercussions of childhood trauma has been the highlight of Dr. Nadine Burke Harris’s career as a pediatrician. And it’s an issue that will take center stage during her tenure as California’s first-ever surgeon general. Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Burke Harris in January soon after he unveiled several health initiatives […]

  • Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, California’s newly appointed and first Surgeon General, at Children’s Hospital of Orange County in Orange on Friday, April 5, 2019. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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Burke Harris, 43, whose family is from Kingston, Jamaica, moved to the United States when she was 4 and grew up in Palo Alto. She received her medical degree from UC Davis, master’s degree in public health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and served her residency at Stanford in pediatrics.

Burke Harris, whose career has been focused on treating children suffering with toxic stress, founded the Center for Youth Wellness in San Francisco in 2007. She also has written a book on the topic titled “The Deepest Well: Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood Adversity.” She was the founding physician and first medical director of the Center for Youth Wellness in San Francisco, where she helped develop a clinical model which recognizes the impact of adverse experiences to effectively treat toxic stress in children.

Her TED Talk in 2014, “How childhood trauma affects health across a lifetime,” has more than 5 million views.

On Friday, April 5, Burke Harris stopped by Children’s Hospital of Orange County in Orange as part of her multi-city listening tour across the state. She talked to the Southern California News Group about her role and priorities as the state’s first surgeon general.

How do you view your role as the state’s first-ever surgeon general?

I view my role as a public health advocate. It’s a non-partisan role. That said, we are also in a time when health care is under attack. Science is under attack. Vulnerable communities are under attack. We have a lot of challenges before us. My role is to bring the strongest science, evidence and expertise. I intend to use my role, the bully pulpit, to shine the light on important health care issues that could change lives and improve outcomes for children and families.

What will your role be in addressing the issue of the uninsured in California?

The administration is taking an ambitious stance in addressing the uninsured issue and is pushing back on encroachments on the Affordable Care Act. I will be an expert adviser to the administration on this issue. I’ll be a partner.

What are some of your top priorities?

My hope is to be able to mobilize partnerships not just in the medical community, but the community at large, with everyday Californians. My number one area of focus will be adverse childhood experiences and toxic stress. My next important issue is early childhood development — providing kids and families with support systems. When we invest in early childhood, it pays big dividends later. My third biggest issue is health equity. We currently have unacceptable disparities in our own state.

Why has childhood trauma been such an important issue for you?

I have been an advocate in this area for a long time. There is no question that early detection and early intervention result in better outcomes. California passed AB 340 requiring trauma screening for all children who have Medi-Cal. But, it needs to be better enforced. I would like to lead the charge to implement universal trauma screening for children and adults. Toxic stress is preventable, but only when we detect and identify it. It’s treatable. But, the problem is, because it’s so familiar, people think they know how the story goes. It’s hard for them to think how the story could be different.

Are you optimistic about the future and about finding solutions to these challenges?

Yes, I am. California has it all. We have a wealth of expertise in data and technological infrastructure. We have folks who are really committed to doing right by vulnerable communities. We have a governor who has made health care a top priority. We have the opportunities, resources and leadership. This is a good time to be a public health advocate in California.

2 injured in assault in Lake Forest park; Mission Viejo school told to shelter-in-place

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Students at a middle school in Mission Viejo was briefly told to shelter-in-place after an assault at a nearby park.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Department said deputies responded to a Heroes Park in Lake Forest at about 2 p.m. about an assault that left two people with head injuries.

A school in Mission Viejo was told to shelter-in-place after an assault at Heroes Park in Lake Forest. (Photo courtesy of the Orange County Sheriff’s Department)

Los Alisos Intermediate School was told to shelter-in-place due to its close proximity to Heroes Park, and school resource officers stayed at the campus.

“After an extensive search, the suspect(s) were not located and the shelter-in-place was lifted,” the sheriff’s department said.

Costa Mesa opens short-term homeless shelter for 50 people

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At least 20 more people are off the streets and under a roof since Costa Mesa became the latest Orange County city to create an emergency shelter to address the region’s homeless crisis.

That’s how many clients were already checked into the new 50-bed shelter when it officially opened Friday, April 5, on the grounds of Lighthouse Church of the Nazarene, city officials said.

The church already ran a bad-weather shelter and is leasing property to the city for the new facility, which is made up of modular buildings that house beds, showers and storage for clients’ belongings. Nonprofit Mercy House, which also operates the county-owned Bridges at Kraemer Place shelter in Santa Ana, is running the Costa Mesa shelter.

“We’re already seeing positive results from opening the shelter,” Mayor Katrina Foley said, including chronically homeless people who had been seen on city streets for years getting moved into the shelter, recuperative medical care or other housing with support services.

Through the city’s efforts, people who landed on the streets after they were unsuccessful in Costa Mesa’s sober living homes now have plane tickets to rejoin family in other states, Foley said, and one homeless woman was able to shower for the first time in two months.

“It’s morally irresponsible to continue to allow people to live on the streets and the sidewalks and in the parks and not care for our community,” she said.

The city also is in escrow to buy a building just west of John Wayne Airport that could become a permanent emergency shelter. Officials hope to have it up and running in about a year, at which point they would close the Lighthouse church facility.

Anaheim and Santa Ana also have recently opened shelters, Buena Park and Placentia are exploring potential sites and Huntington Beach just nixed a proposed location amid a community outcry. Officials are looking for a new spot.

All that activity stems from an explosion of homelessness in Southern California the past few years and federal lawsuits filed on behalf of homeless people who were forced out of their Santa Ana River Trail encampment last year.

Cities that have made plans to address the issue in their community have been released from the lawsuit. Those who haven’t taken steps to provide emergency shelter could be barred from enforcing rules against camping in public.

UCLA deal with Jamie Dixon falls through, dealing another blow to coaching search

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UCLA stumbled on the final hurdle just as it appeared ready to cross the finish line of its marathon search for a new men’s basketball coach.

Unable to reach an agreement on a reported $8 million buyout, UCLA is preparing to move on from TCU’s Jamie Dixon as a candidate for the head coaching position that’s been open since Dec. 31.

After an initial report from the Los Angeles Times, a source confirmed to the Southern California News Group that the deal that was at one time thought to be done had fallen through Friday. Sources from TCU agreed that Dixon may be staying at his alma mater, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Dixon, TCU’s three-year coach, agreed to a two-year extension in 2018 that ran through the 2023-24 season. UCLA has improved its financial status in recent years, leading to improvements like the $35 million Mo Ostin Center, and paid nearly $4.5 million to buy former head coach Steve Alford out of his contract.

UCLA also failed to rope another top choice in John Calipari, who declined the school’s reported six-year, $48 million contract to instead sign a lifetime contract with Kentucky this week. Calipari was the highest-paid head NCAA men’s basketball coach in the country last year with a $9.2 million salary.

UCLA reportedly interviewed former Bruin point guard Earl Watson, who is currently on campus finishing his undergraduate degree. Watson is a favorite choice among many prominent program alumni, including Baron Davis, Lonzo Ball, Matt Barnes and Ryan Hollins, who publicly advocated for the former Phoenix Suns head coach.

However, the vocal former players clashed with fans on social media and message boards over Watson’s candidacy as he has strong ties to the program, but only a brief coaching career that includes no experience in college.

“Leadership doesn’t react, it responds!” Watson wrote on Twitter on Thursday. “All of these inner combating UCLA tweets from Bruins are classless. If you knew Coach Wooden like me then you know he’d be disgusted & most of you would be quiet! Don’t forget who we are! Best of luck in the search!”

 


Watch Mike Trout’s grand slam for the Angels in 4th inning against Drew Smyly, Rangers

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  • The Angels’ Mike Trout rounds first base after hitting a grand slam home run in the fourth inning against the Texas Rangers in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • The Angels’ Mike Trout takes off to round the bases after hitting a grand slam home run against the Texas Rangers in the fourth inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

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  • The Angels’ Mike Trout watches his grand slam home run sail over the left field wall against the Texas Rangers in the fourth inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • The Angels’ Mike Trout, left, rounds third after hitting a grand slam home run in the fourth inning against the Texas Rangers in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • The Angels’ Mike Trout swings to connect for a grand slam home run against the Texas Rangers in the fourth inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • The Angels’ Albert Pujols loses his bat as he strikes out swinging in the first inning against the Texas Rangers in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • Angels shortstop Andrelton Simmons, left, turns a double play as Texas Rangers’ Hunter Pence is out at second in the fourth inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • Texas Rangers relief pitcher Drew Smyly delivers a pitch against the Angels in the first inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

  • Angels starting pitcher Tyler Skaggs delivers a pitch against the Texas Rangers in the first inning in Anaheim on Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

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Mike Trout continues to prove he is worth every penny of the 12-year, $426.5-million deal the former MVP signed to remain with the Los Angeles Angels in March.

In the fourth inning against the Texas Rangers, Trout hit a grand slam off a pitch from Drew Smyly at Angels Stadium.

Trout hit two home runs Friday against the Rangers.

Ducks’ Korbinian Holzer celebrates 1st goal of the season in finale

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ANAHEIM — Defenseman Korbinian Holzer skated from his usual spot near the blue line toward the opposing net midway through the Ducks’ season finale Friday against the Kings at Honda Center. Only one person on the ice paid attention to him. Everyone else was focused on Max Jones, Holzer’s teammate.

Jones skated past the Kings’ Anze Kopitar and toward the net from the right wing, and then he slipped a pass to the left wing to Holzer, who had cut unnoticed behind a puck-focused Dustin Brown. Holzer couldn’t have missed the net if he tried, scoring his first goal in more than two years.

Holzer and Jones embraced in celebration behind the net, smiling broadly as a sellout crowd of 17,306 cheered the go-ahead goal in the Ducks’ eventual 5-2 victory over the Kings. Jones seemed almost as excited as Holzer, who hadn’t scored a goal since April 2, 2017.

To be accurate, Holzer did score twice in 12 games with the San Diego Gulls of the AHL before the Ducks recalled him Feb. 25. Holzer was in the minors to tune up his game after sitting out the first 42 games of the NHL season because of offseason wrist surgery.

“I kind of still know how to do it,” Holzer said, laughing. “Jones made a great play. He gets most of the credit. I just had to put it in the open net. I slid down (from the perimeter) and, luckily, he found me. It feels good in the last game to get a goal and get rid of the doughnut on the stat sheet.”

Holzer has five goals and 23 points in 157 career games in the NHL, including three goals and 14 points in 99 contests with the Ducks. The 31-year-old native of Munich, Germany, is eligible to become an unrestricted free agent July 1.

NOTEWORTHY NUMBERS

The Ducks’ season-ending three-game winning streak was their longest since they won four consecutive Dec. 9-17. … They recorded an NHL-leading 23 points (11-5-1) and scored 57 goals, fourth-most in the league, in their final 17 games. … Their 35 wins were their fewest in a full 82-game season since 2011-12, the last time they missed the playoffs. …

All-Star goalie John Gibson went 8-1-0 with a 2.45 goals-against average and a .929 save percentage in his final nine starts of the season. Gibson was 26-22-8 overall with a 2.84 goals-against average and a .917 save percentage… Jakob Silfverberg scored eight goals and 19 points in his final 17 games and had a team-leading 24 goals overall, a career high.

MINOR ROSTER MOVES

The Ducks re-assigned Jones, fellow forward Sam Steel and defenseman Jacob Larsson to San Diego. The Gulls, third in the Pacific Division, have three regular-season games remaining, including their home finale Wednesday against the second-place San Jose Barracuda.

Defenseman Brendan Guhle also was expected to be sent to San Diego for the final regular-season games plus the playoffs, but he suffered an unspecified upper-body injury Friday against the Kings. He had been sidelined by a strained oblique for 14 games before returning to the lineup.

Right wing Troy Terry and defenseman Jaycob Megna also are likely to be re-assigned to the Gulls in the coming days. Terry has a broken leg and is expected to be sidelined between eight and 12 weeks. He could join the Gulls if they make a deep playoff run.

MINOR MOVES (PART 2)

Hunter Drew, a defenseman who was the Ducks’ sixth-round draft pick in 2018, has signed an amateur tryout with the Gulls. Drew set career highs with 16 goals, 34 assists and 50 points in 61 games this season with the Charlottetown Islanders of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

Ex-US Sen Ernest ‘Fritz’ Hollings of South Carolina dies

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By MEG KINNARD

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Ernest F. “Fritz” Hollings, the silver-haired Democrat who helped shepherd South Carolina through desegregation as governor and went on to serve six terms in the U.S. Senate, has died. He was 97.

Family spokesman Andy Brack, who also served at times for Hollings as spokesman during his Senate career, said Hollings died at his home on the Isle of Palms early Saturday.

Hollings, whose long and colorful political career included an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, retired from the Senate in 2005, one of the last of the larger-than-life Democrats who dominated politics in the South.

He had served 38 years and two months, making him the eighth longest-serving senator in U.S. history.

Nevertheless, Hollings remained the junior senator from South Carolina for most of his term. The senior senator was Strom Thurmond, first elected in 1954. He retired in January 2003 at age 100 as the longest-serving senator in history.

In his final Senate speech, made in 2004, Hollings lamented that lawmakers came to spend much of their time raising money for the next election, calling money “the main culprit, the cancer on the body politic.”

“We don’t have time for each other, we don’t have time for constituents except for the givers. … We’re in real, real trouble.”

Hollings was a sharp-tongued orator whose rhetorical flourishes in the deep accent of his home state enlivened many a Washington debate, but his influence in Washington never reached the levels he hoped.

He sometimes blamed that failure on his background, rising to power as he did in the South in the 1950s as the region bubbled with anger over segregation.

However, South Carolina largely avoided the racial violence that afflicted some other Deep South states during the turbulent 1960s.

Hollings campaigned against desegregation when running for governor in 1958. He built a national reputation as a moderate when, in his farewell address as governor, he pleaded with the legislature to peacefully accept integration of public schools and the admission of the first black student to Clemson University.

“This General Assembly must make clear South Carolina’s choice, a government of laws rather than a government of men,” he told lawmakers. Shortly afterward, Clemson was peacefully integrated.

In his 2008 autobiography, “Making Government Work,” Hollings wrote that in the 1950s “no issue dominated South Carolina more than race” and that he worked for a balanced approach.

“I was ‘Mister-In-Between. The governor had to appear to be in charge; yet the realities were not on his side,” he wrote. “I returned to my basic precept … the safety of the people is the supreme law. I was determined to keep the peace and avoid bloodshed.”

In the Senate, Hollings gained a reputation as a skilled insider with keen intellectual powers. He chaired the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee and held seats on the Appropriations and Budget committees.

But his sharp tongue and sharper wit sometimes got him in trouble. He once called Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, the “senator from the B’nai B’rith” and in 1983 referred to the presidential campaign supporters of former Sen. Alan Cranston, D-California, as “wetbacks.”

Hollings began his quest for the presidency in April 1983 but dropped out the following March after dismal showings in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Early in his Senate career, he built a record as a hawk and lobbied hard for military dollars for South Carolina, one of the poorest states in the union.

Hollings originally supported American involvement in Vietnam, but his views changed over the years as it became clear there would be no American victory.

Hollings, who made three trips to the war zone, said he learned a lesson there.

“It’s a mistake to try to build and destroy a nation at the same time,” he wrote in his autobiography, warning that America is now “repeating the same wrongheaded strategy in Iraq.”

Despite his changed views, Hollings remained a strong supporter of national defense which he saw as the main business of government.

In 1969 he drew national attention when he exposed hunger in his own state by touring several cities, helping lay the groundwork for the Women, Infants and Children, or WIC, feeding program.

A year later, his views drew wider currency with the publication of his first book “The Case Against Hunger.”

In 1982, Hollings proposed an across-the-board federal spending freeze to cut the deficit, a proposal that was a cornerstone of his failed presidential bid.

He helped create the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and write the National Coastal Zone Management Act. Hollings also attached his name to the Gramm-Rudman bill aimed at balancing the federal budget.

Hollings angered many of his constituents in 1991 when he opposed the congressional resolution authorizing President George Bush to use force against Iraq.

In his later years, port security was one of his main concerns.

As he prepared to leave office, he told The Associated Press: “People ask you your legacy or your most embarrassing moment. I never, ever lived that way. … I’m not trying to get remembered.”

He kept busy after the Senate helping the Medical University of South Carolina raise money for the cancer center which bears his name and lecturing at the new Charleston School of Law.

Hollings’ one political defeat came in 1962 when he lost in a primary to Sen. Olin Johnston. After Johnston died, Hollings won a special election in 1966 and went to the Senate at age 44, winning the first of his six full terms two years later.

Ernest Frederick Hollings was born in Charleston, South Carolina, on Jan. 1, 1922. His father was a paper products dealer but the family business went broke during the Depression.

Hollings graduated from The Citadel, the state’s military college in Charleston, in 1942. He immediately entered the Army and was decorated for his service during World War II. Back home, he earned a law degree from the University of South Carolina in 1947.

The next year, he was elected to the state House at age 26. He was elected lieutenant governor six years later and governor in 1958 at age 36.

As governor, he actively lured business, helped balance the budget for the first time since Reconstruction and improved public education.

Hollings had four children with his first wife, the late Patricia Salley Hollings. He is survived by three of his four children. His second wife, “Peatsy,” died in 2012.

A funeral home handling arrangements said that after a three-hour visitation April 14 in Charleston, the senator’s body will lie in state Monday, April 15, at the South Carolina Statehouse in Columbia, with a funeral service to follow the next day at the Citadel in Charleston.

Former Associated Press Writer Bruce Smith contributed to this story.

2 Pomona men and 1 teenage boy arrested on suspicion of robberies including in Rancho Cucamonga, Rialto and San Antonio Heights

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Two men and a teenage boy have been arrested by the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department on suspicion of armed robbery, home invasion robbery and residential burglary in connection with several robberies this year in four Southern California counties.

K’aron Knight, 20, Ricky Gonzalez, 18, and a 16-year-old boy, all of Pomona, were arrested over the past few weeks, the Sheriff’s Department said in a statement April 4.

Officials said the three targeted communities in San Antonio Heights in the Upland area, Rancho Cucamonga and northern Rialto. The robberies started on Feb. 10 when the Sheriff’s Department said two pizza deliverymen were robbed.

“Shortly after, the suspects followed a woman from a shopping center to her San Antonio Heights residence,” officials said. “After the elderly woman entered her garage, the suspects held the woman at gunpoint and robbed her using force. Two days later, the same suspects robbed another woman at gunpoint after she exited her vehicle in the garage of her residence.”

Authorities said after those armed robberies, the same suspects are believed to have committed armed robberies in Claremont, Mission Viejo, Riverside and Walnut.

The Sheriff’s Department said an investigation revealed the car used by the suspects was an Audi A3 that was stolen in Beverly Hills.

“Investigators verified the residences of the suspects and executed several search and arrest warrants,” officials said. “These searches resulted in recovery of multiple stolen items.”

The 16-year-old boy was the last of the three suspects, and he was arrested on April 3.

Knight, Gonzalez and the teenage boy also have pending cases in Riverside, Orange and Los Angeles counties, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

Orange County scores and player stats for Saturday (4-6-19)

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Scores and stats for the Orange County games on Saturday, April 6.

BASEBALL

SOFTBALL

SWIMMING AND DIVING

SANTA MARGARITA DIVING INVITATIONAL

Boys (top 3)

1 Nick Leavell, Santa Margarita, 458.60 points

2 Rhys Davies, Santa Margarita, 387.80

3 Ian Asuncion-Duong, Santa Margarita, 376.15

Girls (top 8)

1 Kayla Haigh, Santa Margarita, 478.20

2 Charlotte Bowen, Dana Hills, 465.05

3 Mandy Baird, ML King, 429.00

4 Julia Maclean, Mission Viejo, 406.50

5 Zola Conot, Capistrano Valley, 391.40

6 Erin Young, Dana Hills, 384.25

7 Katie Wallace, Mission Viejo, 360.10

8 Isabella Maceranka, Laguna Hills, 357.90

BOYS NOTE: This was Nick Leavell’s first title at the SM Invite, after finishing second to Noah Kanan of Esperanza last year.

GIRLS NOTE: This was Kayla Haigh’s first title at the SM Invite. Three-time champion Charlotte Bowen of Dana Hills finished second.

BOYS LACROSSE

NONLEAGUE

Corona del Mar 6, Mater Dei 4

Goals: (CdM) Kelly 2

Saves: Cord (CdM) 6

St. Margaret’s 18, Bellarmine Prep 5

Goals: (SMES) Todd 5, Groeninger 4, Sanchez 4

Note: Pollard (SMES) won 14 of 17 faceoffs

Santa Margarita 18, Orange Lutheran 2

Goals: (SM) Carr 2, Horvath, Lemieux, Stensby

 

Rival Libyan forces say they have captured Tripoli airport

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BY RAMI MUSA

BENGHAZI, Libya — Forces loyal to rival Libyan army commander Khalifa Hifter said Saturday they seized control of the main airport in Libya’s capital Tripoli, two days after Hifter ordered his forces to seize the seat of Libya’s U.N.-backed government.

Hifter’s media office said in a post online that they took full control of the Tripoli international airport and were working to secure the facility. They posted photos of troops apparently inside the airport, saying “we are standing at the heart of the Tripoli international airport.”

Hifter’s offensive on Tripoli could plunge the oil-rich country into another spasm of violence, possibly the worst since the 2011 civil war that toppled and later killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi. The country is governed by rival authorities: The internationally backed government in Tripoli and the government in the east, which Hifter is aligned with. Each is backed by an array of militias.

Fayez Sarraj, chairman of the Presidential Council of Libya, said his government had offered concessions to Hifter “to avoid bloodshed and to end divisions” and was surprised by Hifter’s order to take the capital.

“We were stabbed in the back,” he said Saturday in televised comments, adding that his forces would confront Hifter’s troops with “force and determination.”

The Tripoli airport has not been functional since fighting in 2014 destroyed much of the facility.

The media office said that troops also captured the area of Wadi el-Rabeia, south of Tripoli, amid clashed with militias loyal to Sarraj.

Ahmed al-Mesmari, spokesman for the self-styled Libyan National Army led by Hifter, said 14 troops had been killed since Hifter declared the offensive. He said rival militias launched four airstrikes Saturday targeting Hifter’s position in the town of al-Aziziya, but that no casualties had been reported.

Al-Mesmari said Hifter’s forces declared Tripoli a no-fly zone for warplanes.

Hifter announced Thursday he was deploying his forces toward Tripoli, sparking fears that the tensions could be escalating out of control as militias from the western cities of Zawiya and Misarata said that they have mobilized to confront Hifter.

He also put at risk upcoming peace talks between Libyan rivals brokered by the U.N. aimed at drawing a roadmap for new elections.

The U.N. Security Council on Saturday called on Hifter forces to halt all military movements and urged all forces in Libya “to de-escalate and halt military activity.”

The U.N. envoy for Libya, Ghassan Salame, said the UN is determined to hold the planned national conference later this month to set time for possible elections.

Speaking at a news conference in Tripoli, he said he was striving to prevent the new crisis from getting out of control. “We have worked for one year for this national conference, we won’t give up this political work quickly,” he said.

Alexander: Amateurs who chose ANA Inspiration made right choice

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RANCHO MIRAGE — Patty Tavatanakit had a choice, one that honestly shouldn’t have been necessary.

Tavatanakit is a sophomore on UCLA’s golf team, a 19-year-old from Bangkok, Thailand, who was the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year in 2018 and is currently ranked No. 3 in the world among female amateur golfers.

She had an exemption to compete against the LPGA’s best in the ANA Inspiration, the first major of the season. She also had an invitation to the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur, a tournament that purportedly is a belated attempt by the good ol’ boys who bring you the Masters to recognize that women, too, play this game at the highest level.

The tournament in Georgia ended Saturday with Wake Forest’s Jennifer Kupcho, the world’s No. 1 amateur, winning. But it was almost a bait and switch, a 54-hole tournament with only the last 18 played on the famed Augusta National layout.

Tavatanakit, and fellow amateurs Frida Kinhult (No. 4 in the world), Albane Valenzuela (No. 5), Rachel Heck (No. 11) and Xin Hou, chose the California desert, a tournament with its own rich heritage and traditions, and 72 holes against the world’s best professionals.

It was the right choice.

Tavatanakit and Valenzuela, a Stanford golfer, made the 36-hole cut and are at 4-over and 5-over, respectively, going into Sunday’s final round.

More significantly, they’ve learned and experienced things that will impact their futures far more dramatically than one day’s worth of dealing with Amen Corner.

“It’s on the West Coast, it’s literally a two-hour drive from school, and it’s a major event,” said Tavatanakit, who may have underestimated the drive time from Westwood to Rancho Mirage (or else came out later at night when the CHP wasn’t looking), but otherwise was right on.

“I’m more focused on how my game can improve on a professional level,” she added, saying that playing against the pros “does help a lot, mentally, physically and strategically. Being out here, my mental game has improved so much … There’s a lot of experiences, like when you miss in the wrong spot. Usually I would probably make some big numbers, but now I’ve just gotta get it up there and hope for a good putt. That’s definitely something you can’t really get out of just watching golf. You have to experience it yourself.”

Beyond that, there is the opportunity to play alongside pros, to observe and to ask questions. Tavatanakit played the first two days with Jaye Marie Green and said she had a blast. On Saturday, she played with Cristie Kerr, who is in her 23rd year on tour and has 20 tour victories and two major wins. Tavatanakit said she asked Kerr about dealing with the mental game.

Her presence here is about her future. Tavatanakit played here in 2017, as a high school senior. She tied for fifth at June’s U.S. Women’s Open at Shoal Creek, Ala., which earned her the exemption to return to Rancho Mirage. As a Bruin, she has a 71.6 stroke average in seven tournaments this spring, with two wins and five top 10s.

She did acknowledge that “it’s a bummer not going to Augusta and (experiencing) all that they’re doing for women’s golf. I’m really grateful for what they’re doing, but at the same time you just gotta stick to your focus, your long-term goal.”

That’s the diplomatic view.

My take: What, exactly, are they doing of any substance?

As previously noted, only the last of the amateur tournament’s three rounds is actually played at Augusta National. This is a club that had to be poked, prodded and shamed before it admitted women as members in 2012 (and at last count, reportedly, there are a whopping six females among its membership).

And the timing – basically built on the premise that there is the Masters, and everything else in golf is in its orbit – is actually a stunning show of disrespect to those who truly have attempted to advance women’s golf.

Yes, we know. Ratings, interest, sponsors, blah, blah, blah.

For those who might have lost count, the Rancho Mirage stop on the LPGA tour is being played for the 48th year. It is one of the tour’s majors for the 37th year. And while the  Masters has its green jacket, this tournament – which a good number of us still refer to as the Dinah Shore – has the fluffy bathrobe the winner dons after jumping into Poppie’s Pond off the 18th hole.

Tradition comes in different forms. That doesn’t make it any less strong.

Augusta chose to compete with Rancho Mirage by putting its event on this weekend. Inviting LPGA icons and Hall of Famers Nancy Lopez, Lorena Ochoa, Se Ri Pak and Annika Sorenstam to hit ceremonial first shots Saturday doesn’t change the fact that trying to siphon the attention of the women’s golf audience away from one of the LPGA’s signature events is arrogant, tone deaf and just wrong.

I’m not expecting anyone to ever counterprogram the Masters in a similar fashion. But if you are a passionate follower of women’s sports – and I know you’re out there, because I see you on my Twitter feed – I have a suggestion for you:

Unless and until the good ol’ boys move their amateur event to another time of the year – and put all of it on their course, instead of just one token round – don’t give any event staged by Augusta National the consideration you’d give, say, the time of day.

Starting this coming week.

jalexander@scng.com

@Jim_Alexander on Twitter


Mike Trout slams Angels to 5-1 win over Rangers

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ANAHEIM — There will be days, like Saturday, when Mike Trout catches three ceremonial first pitches, plays flawless defense in center field, draws an intentional walk, is hit by a pitch, and makes the richest contract in baseball history look like a bargain.

There will also be days, like Saturday, when the Angels couldn’t score if they were provided a police escort around the basepaths. They loaded the bases in the first inning against the Texas Rangers, and had two runners on in the second and third, each time failing to score.

In the fourth inning, they loaded the bases again. This time, Trout strode to the plate with one out and did the very thing that makes him the face of a franchise, if not the face of baseball. His 458-foot home run cleared both bullpens, cleared the bases, and cleared the Angels’ conscience after three innings of near-misses.

The grand slam was Trout’s fourth home run in his past three games, and it made the difference in a 5-1 win over the Rangers before an announced crowd of 31,747 at Angel Stadium.

Trout has a chance to hit a home run in his fourth consecutive game Sunday, something he’s done only once before in his eight-year career.

Albert Pujols hit a solo home run in the seventh inning against Rangers pitcher Adrian Sampson. The insurance run was the 3,089th hit of Pujols’ career, tying Ichiro Suzuki for 23rd on the all-time leaderboard. The home run nearly landed in the Angels’ bullpen, but Noe Ramirez caught the ball in his hat before it could reach the earth.

The two homers gave the Angels (3-6) their first win against a left-handed starting pitcher in 2019. It was more than enough run support for their own southpaw, as Tyler Skaggs allowed just one run in 6 ⅓ innings, working around five hits and a walk. Texas went 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position.

Skaggs (1-0) had not won a game since July 25 of last year.

The Angels’ bullpen closed out the game with minimal effort. Luis Garcia retired the final two batters in the seventh inning in relief of Skaggs. Hansel Robles struck out the side in the eighth inning. Luke Bard pitched a 1-2-3 ninth inning in a non-save situation.

David Fletcher started at third base and batted leadoff for the first time this season. He finished 3 for 5 and reached base four times ahead of Trout. Andrelton Simmons, Brian Goodwin, Kevan Smith, Tommy La Stella and Peter Bourjos had one hit apiece. Bourjos’ single in the fourth inning was his first hit of the season.

The Angels can clinch their first series win of the season Sunday against the Rangers.

US wants 2 years to ID migrant kids separated from families

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By ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their families at the border before a judge halted the practice last year, a task that it says is more laborious than previous efforts because the children are no longer in government custody.

The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday that it will take at least a year to review about 47,000 cases of unaccompanied children taken into government custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018 — the day before U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw halted the general practice of splitting families. The administration would begin by sifting through names for traits most likely to signal separation — for example, children under 5.

The administration would provide information on separated families on a rolling basis to the American Civil Liberties Union, which sued to reunite families and criticized the proposed timeline on Saturday.

  • FILE – In this June 20, 2018, file photo, immigrant children walk in a line outside the Homestead Temporary Shelter for Unaccompanied Children, a former Job Corps site that now houses them in Homestead, Fla. The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their parents at the border before a judge halted the practice last year. The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday, April 5, 2019 in San Diego that it will take at least a year to review the cases of 47,000 unaccompanied children taken in custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)

  • FILE – In this June 24, 2019 file photo, immigrants from Honduras seeking asylum wait on the Gateway International Bridge, which connects the United States and Mexico, in Matamoros, Mexico. The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their parents at the border before a judge halted the practice last year. The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday, April 5, 2019 in San Diego that it will take at least a year to review the cases of 47,000 unaccompanied children taken in custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

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  • FILE – In this June 25, 2018 file photo, U.S. Border Patrol agents load a migrant from Guatemala into a van after he was caught trying to enter the United States illegally in Hidalgo, Texas. The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their parents at the border before a judge halted the practice last year. The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday, April 5, 2019 in San Diego that it will take at least a year to review the cases of 47,000 unaccompanied children taken in custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

  • FILE – In this June 17, 2018 file photo provided by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, people who’ve been taken into custody related to cases of illegal entry into the United States, sit in one of the cages at a facility in McAllen, Texas. The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their parents at the border before a judge halted the practice last year. The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday, April 5, 2019 in San Diego that it will take at least a year to review the cases of 47,000 unaccompanied children taken in custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Rio Grande Valley Sector via AP)

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“We strongly oppose a plan that could take up to two years to locate these families,” said Lee Gelernt, the ACLU’s lead attorney. “The government needs to make this a priority.”

Sabraw ordered last year that more than 2,700 children in government care on June 26, 2018 be reunited with their families, which has largely been accomplished. Then, in January, the U.S. Health and Human Services Department’s internal watchdog reported that thousands more children may have been separated since the summer of 2017. The department’s inspector general said the precise number was unknown.

The judge ruled last month that he could hold the government accountable for families that were separated before his June order and asked the government submit a proposal for the next steps. A hearing is scheduled April 16.

Sheer volume makes the job different than identifying children who were in custody at the time of the judge’s June order, Jonathan White, a commander of the U.S. Public Health Service and Health and Human Services’ point person on family reunification, said in an affidavit.

White, whose work has drawn strong praise from the judge, would lead the effort to identify additional families on behalf of Health and Health and Human Services with counterparts at Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement. Dr. Barry Graubard, a statistics expert at the National Cancer Institute, developed a system to flag for early attention those most likely to have been separated.

The vast majority of separated children are released to relatives, but many are not parents. Of children released in the 2017 fiscal year, 49 percent went to parents, 41 percent to close relatives such as an aunt, uncle, grandparent or adult sibling and 10 percent to distant relatives, family friends and others.

The government’s proposed model to flag still-separated children puts a higher priority on the roughly half who were not released to a parent. Other signs of likely separation include children under 5, younger children traveling without a sibling and those who were detained in the Border Patrol’s El Paso, Texas, sector, where the administration ran a trial program that involved separating nearly 300 family members from July to November 2017.

Saturday marks the anniversary of the administration’s “zero tolerance” policy to criminally prosecute every adult who enters the country illegally from Mexico. The administration retreated in June amid an international uproar by generally exempting adults who come with their children. The policy now applies only to single adults.

Rajon Rondo is polarizing among Lakers fans, but he’s built equity in locker room

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LOS ANGELES — The haters haven’t tried the cookies. That might be one explanation.

Rajon Rondo is known to occasionally bring a Tupperware container of chocolate chip cookies on road trips for teammates and staff. The outsiders might not see how his trash-talking in shooting competitions lifts spirits, or how his sometimes outrageous wardrobe choices – he wore a sweatshirt that read “(expletive) AWESOME” on Friday night after the game during media interviews – make the other Lakers crack up.

There are a lot of things about the 33-year-old veteran guard that people don’t see, and there’s a massive gulf in opinion on Rondo between those who see him only on the court and those who see him behind closed doors.

Let’s get it out of the way: The Lakers (36-44) haven’t had the season they envisioned, and in terms of production, it’s been a difficult year for Rondo.

He’s played in just 46 games, sidelined twice by hand injuries and once by suspension, and his shooting numbers inside the arc, have been some of his worst since his rookie season (42.8 percent). While many teammates and coaches talk about his defensive awareness, numbers suggest he’s a liability on that end: The team’s defensive rating improves from 112.8 when he’s on the floor to 105.3 when he’s off it, the largest jump on the roster.

And yet within the locker room, he’s held in almost the same circle of regard as LeBron James. Luke Walton calls him “great to coach.” James calls him a “mastermind.” Young players and veterans alike have rapport with him. Even as fans have bemoaned Rondo’s performances on social media, he’s told ESPN that he’d like to come back next season, and other reports indicate that the Lakers might be interested.

What accounts for this gap? It has a lot to do with the role the Lakers insisted he would play all year, as a mentor and teacher. He’s thrived behind the scenes and cultivated relationships that have helped bridge generational divides in the locker room.

While the on-court performance has to be considered as the Lakers weigh bringing Rondo back at the end of his one-year, $9 million deal, the intangibles matter, too.

“He’s been a bright spot as far as what we’re building and what we’re trying to do,” Walton said. “One of our top priorities with a lot of young guys was to continue to grow them as quickly as possible. And his leadership and the way his teammates look at him and toward him has been great.”

Rondo has reiterated several times that he enjoys playing for Walton. And even though Walton joked after a recent game that he would like to see Rondo do less one-handed chucking down court in favor of “a nice chest pass,” that respect flows both ways.

Since the All-Star break, Rondo has played more minutes (725) than any other Laker – both a sign of his health in a season when that’s been a rare trait for the franchise, but also symbolic of Walton’s trust in him. His turnover rate (22.5 percent) is the highest on the team for this season, but he’s rarely pulled for mistakes.

That’s because he has transcendent moments, as he did in Friday’s victory over the Clippers, when he made three 3-pointers and had 11 assists in the fourth quarter alone. While Alex Caruso received much of the credit, Walton said Rondo “took over” in that frame – and he wants to give him the freedom to step up to what is popularly called “Playoff Rondo” around the league (a moniker the veteran hates).

“It’s part of what’s made him a great point guard in this league for so long: His creativity,” Walton said. “The way he sees the game. If you try to take that away from him, and tell him, ‘We need you to do just this or just that,’ then you take away one of his biggest strengths.”

There are other things Walton and his coaches have leaned on Rondo for, too. It’s common, he said, for him to ask Rondo what he sees out of an upcoming opponent, because, as 18-year-veteran Tyson Chandler puts it, “I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anybody watch more film than him before.”

He’s also been a trusted voice for Walton, along with James, on the state of the locker room.

Lakers guard Rajon Rondo has been up and down on the court this season, but he still brings intangibles that the coaches and his peers place a lot of value on. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

“If there’s a day that maybe we should practice, maybe we shouldn’t, I’ll ring them up and see what their feel is for the locker room,” Walton said. “Some days, they’ll be like let’s definitely practice today, other days they’ll say guys just need to get away for a day, you know what I mean? But when whatever we decide to do, he’s in. He brings energy. He brings humor. He loves competing.”

It’s telling that both Rondo and James essentially strong-armed their way into post-practice shooting competitions with Lonzo Ball, Kyle Kuzma, Brian Shaw and Miles Simon. While James’ shooting partner for much of the year has been veteran and fellow Klutch Sports client Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Rondo has opted for youth: He played with Svi Mykhailiuk before he was traded, and then brought in rookie Moe Wagner afterward.

While Rondo is one of the most staunch advocates for rookie duties and has the younger Lakers running errands for him, Wagner said when he’s on the court with him, those barriers of status fade away.

“What I think he does a great job of is he equalizes everyone,” he said. “Obviously there’s a certain authority between vets and rookies, but once everybody’s on the court, they’re the same. So if you’re on the court, take your shot with confidence. He always tells us that, because we’re here to play basketball.”

While some veterans might accentuate the tiers of experience, especially a former All-Star with an NBA title on his résumé, to Rondo, leveling the playing field with his teammates makes the most sense in the world.

“I need my guys out there,” he said of Wagner. “Even though he’s a rook and he’s got a lot to learn, I may be on his ass more than normal because the game is going so fast, and it’s a different pace at this level. I try to coach him as much as I can and put him in the right position to be successful. So regardless of age, when a guy is on a court with me, that’s how it goes.”

It’s that unseen work that drives the respect Rondo has earned in the locker room. Caruso, a two-way contract player who has seen his stock rise in recent weeks, said both Rondo and James have helped grow his confidence and belief that he belongs in the NBA. Walton said Rondo makes time for one-on-one film sessions with younger players.

Recently he’s worked with Ball – who beat him out for a starting spot earlier this season – on being a better finisher and attacking from different angles when defenders go under screens.

“He really takes being a veteran mentor leader seriously,” Walton said, “which is huge for us with the amount of young players we have.”

Teammates also respected his desire to stay with the group during his injuries. While he recovered from two different hand ailments, he was a fixture at practices and on the road trips he was medically cleared for. There were instances when he tried to play in practice, even though he was wearing a hand wrap. Coaches quietly had to pull him out of action.

Even now, Rondo has been playing the last few games with stitches above his left eye: In New Orleans last weekend, he took an elbow, received sutures during the third quarter, and returned to finish with a season-high 24 points.

“That goes back to the competitive nature of who he is,” Caruso said. “When you’re out there with him, he’s competing until the wheels fall off.”

The wheels aren’t off, but they have looked more rusty. Rondo is getting blocked at the rim more than he used to, which accounts for the falling shooting percentage, and while he’s improved his 3-point shooting (35.9 percent), it would be generous to call him a marksman. Turning 34 next season, his statistical curve suggests he’s in decline, as far as ever being a regular starter again for a competitive team.

But that doesn’t mean he can’t have a role on one. Walton didn’t hesitate when asked if he would like to coach Rondo again: “Absolutely.” And Rondo has made it clear he wouldn’t mind a redo in L.A. next year after injuries helped foil the Lakers’ ambitions.

But over the years, he’s found a certain even-keeled nature when it comes to worrying about the future.

“I don’t know what next year holds,” he said. “We’ll see when we get there.”

Murder charge sought for driver as CHP officer fatally injured in Lake Elsinore is recalled as ‘beloved sergeant’

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A veteran CHP officer fatally injured when struck by a car driven on the right shoulder of the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore was described Sunday as a “beloved sergeant” who mentored officers and “loved the Highway Patrol and his family.”

Sgt. Steve Licon of the CHP Riverside Area. (Photo courtesy CHP)

Sgt. Steve Licon, with the agency for 27 years, was struck Saturday afternoon as he wrote a traffic citation for a Chrysler sedan he had stopped on the southbound 15 Freeway, north of Nichols Road.

“We lost a darned good sergeant. He is going to be missed,”  Capt. Mario Lucio, California Highway Patrol Inland Division Special Services Commander, said at a Sunday afternoon news conference also watched by several Caltrans workers, who had left flowers and a Caltrans hardhat at the outside step of the CHP’s Riverside office.

CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said in a tweet that Licon left behind a wife and two daughters.

Licon died of his injuries at Inland Valley Medical Center in Wildomar, Lucio said.

“The impact was significant,” Lucio said of the crash that took the sergeant’s life.

Arrested at the scene on suspicion of murder and driving under the influence was Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, described by Lucio as an “errant driver.” He was being held without bail at the Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside, jail records showed Sunday.

  • People bring flowers to the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. CHP Sgt. Steve Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • CHP Officer Steve Carapia reacts as Captain Mario Lucio, CHP Inland Division Special Services Commander, talks about CHP Sgt. Steve Licon as he gives an update on Saturday’s fatal accident involving Licon during a press conference outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

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  • A small memorial of flags and flowers is seen outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. CHP Sgt. Steve Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Captain Mario Lucio, CHP Inland Division Special Services Commander, gives an update on yesterday’s fatal accident involving CHP Sgt. Steve Licon during a press conference outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Caltrans workers listen as Captain Mario Lucio, CHP Inland Division Special Services Commander, gives an update on yesterday’s fatal accident involving CHP Sgt. Steve Licon during a press conference outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Captain Mario Lucio, CHP Inland Division Special Services Commander, gives an update on yesterday’s fatal accident involving CHP Sgt. Steve Licon during a press conference outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • A small memorial of flags and flowers is seen outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. CHP Sgt. Steve Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • A Caltrans hat is seen among a small memorial of flags and flowers outside the CHP office in Riverside on Sunday, April 7, 2019. CHP Sgt. Steve Licon, a veteran California Highway Patrol motorcycle officer, was killed Saturday in a crash on the 15 Freeway in Lake Elsinore. The driver, Michael Callahan, 36, of Winchester, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and other charges. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

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The investigation was in its early stages, Lucio cautioned in response to questions, but he confirmed that CHP investigators were seeking a first-degree murder charge rather than a vehicular manslaughter charge more often sought in collision deaths.

“We have uncovered evidence which shows gross negligence both during and before this tragic collision occurred,” Lucio said. “Because of that, our investigators… believe recommending murder charges are completely appropriate.”

Callahan does not have a documented criminal record in Riverside County, according to Superior Court records. Lucio would not comment further on the case during the news conference.

Riverside County District Attorney spokesman John Hall said Sunday the prosecutor’s office “will review the evidence provided to our office and make a determination on any charges at the appropriate time.”

Jail records said Callahan’s expected court date to enter a plea to whatever charges may be filed is Wednesday, April 10.

The crash happened in an area that has seen heavy traffic in recent weeks because of the spectacular poppy blooms in the nearby hills. It wasn’t immediately known if the flower-viewing traffic contributed to the collision, and Lucio on Sunday declined to discuss the case in detail.

Licon was injured at 4:26 p.m. Saturday as he was writing a citation for a Chrysler sedan he had stopped, Lucio said. A grey Toyota Corolla driven by Callahan on the freeway’s right shoulder struck Licon’s motorycycle, the sergeant and the Chrysler.

Licon appears to be the only person seriously injured in the crash; Callahan was described as having minor injuries and the four people in the Chrysler were described as uninjured.

“Sergeant Licon was just an officer’s sergeant,” Lucio said. “He was one of the guys, but he was firm and he was strict and he held people accountable for (their) actions. I saw him as a mentor. I credit him for being where I am at today, and that’s the truth.”

“He was a family man, and when I say that, in the truest form, he was a family man, with strong faith, he loved the Highway Patrol and loved his family, and he talked about those things often in briefings” as he tried to mold officers, Lucio said. “That’s just who he was.”

“We look at them as our brothers and sisters,” Caltrans District 8 Director Mike Beauchamp, who was present at the news conference, said afterward about the CHP officers.

“It’s a risk just being out there,” he said.

CHP officers and Caltrans workers “are taking their lives at risk every day when they are out there, and they know that,” Caltrans spokeswoman Terri Kasinga said “Yet they still do it … a lot of the things they are doing out there is to keep the traveling public safe.”

“We’re asking motorists to make it safe for us, too. It’s time to stop driving impaired, it’s time to stop being a distracted driver … it’s time to stop,” Kasinga said.

She said she had worked with Licon, most recently for organizing traffic and pedestrian safety for the Lake Elsinore poppy “superbloom.”

“This man was a hero…I’ve worked with him on and off over the years,” she said. “It affects too many people when something like this happens. Not only his family and his close co-workers, but it’s just on such a large level.”

The office of Gov. Gavin Newsom said that during his 27-year career, Licon served with the CHP in the Baldwin Park and Santa Ana areas besides the Riverside area.

“We mourn the loss of a husband and father of two who lost his life while protecting the state of California. We extend our heartfelt condolences to his family, his friends and his many California Highway Patrol colleagues for their devastating loss,” Newsom and Acting Gov. Eleni Kounalakis said in a statement, adding Capitol flags will be flown at half-staff in honor of Licon.

On Monday, CHP Commissioner Stanley will preside over a bell-toll tribute to Licon at the CHP Academy in West Sacramento.

Law enforcement officers from several agencies and medical personnel assembled outside Inland Valley Regional Medical Center in Wildomar late Saturday night to honor Licon as his body was taken from the hospital to the Riverside County Coroner’s office in Perris. Residents and officials lined roads for the procession.

Licon’s hearse was among the first in the long procession of hundreds of police cars, police motorcycles, fire engines and fire chief SUVs that arrived at the coroner’s office at 9:48 p.m. with emergency lights flashing and sirens quiet.

Onlookers stood quietly and respectfully, some with hands over their hearts.

Bobby Steele, 48 and a resident of Lake Elsinore, works for Brothers Towing. He and a number of other tow crews parked outside the coroner’s office to pay their respects.

“We work hand in hand with these guys (CHP officers), day in and day out, and it hits the heart when it happens,” Steele said.

Donations

The California Highway Patrol issued details for a sanctioned memorial fund for Licon, with 100 percent of the proceeds going to the family. Donors can click on the memorial fund site or send checks to the:

Sergeant Steven Licon Memorial Fund

CAHP Credit Union

PO Box 276507Sacramento, CA 95827

Staff writer Brian Rokos contributed to this story.

 

1st-timers Texas Tech and Virginia face off for NCAA title

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — For Virginia and Texas Tech, doing something that had never been done before took hard work, dedication, determination — and vision.

The Cavaliers and Red Raiders meet in the NCAA Tournament championship game Monday night. Neither program has ever been this close to a title, making it a rare matchup of first-timers to the final game of the college basketball season. The last time both teams in the championship game had never been there before was 40 years ago, when Magic Johnson and Michigan State beat Larry Bird and Indiana State.

Between the Red Raiders (31-6) and Cavaliers (34-3), a first-time champ is guaranteed. The last one of those was crowned in 2006, when Florida won the first of back-to-back titles.

College basketball’s hierarchy, blue bloods in an array of shades from Duke to Kentucky, North Carolina to Kansas, is difficult to crack. Getting here started with Virginia coach Tony Bennett and Texas Tech’s Chris Beard believing it could be done.

“Then you’ve got to get people on board that really believe it and believe it in front of you, behind your back, believe it at 10 o’clock when they’re out of town, on the road somewhere. Believe it in the morning, believe it when they’re talking to their wife, their kid,” Beard said Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium. “They’ve got to really believe it.”

In less than a decade, Beard has gone from coaching in the semi-pro ABA to Division III, then II, and then a couple of seasons at Arkansas Little Rock before landing in Lubbock. The Red Raiders basketball history is solid but unspectacular. Texas Tech was where Bobby Knight landed after the volatile Hall of Fame coach wore out his welcome in Indiana. He took Texas Tech to the NCAA Tournament four times in the 2000s. Pretty good, but Beard expected much more.

“Our goal has never been to make a tournament. It’s been to win the tournament,” Beard said. “It’s easy to talk about, and really, really hard to do. But that’s where we started this whole thing, was just trying to have the expectations and the vision where we could be relative.”

Texas Tech reached the Elite Eight for the first time last season. This season, with a mostly rebuilt team around star Jarrett Culver, the Red Raiders shared the Big 12 regular-season title for the first time and are now on the cusp of an unlikely championship.

Bennett’s belief he could challenge the Atlantic Coast Conference’s Tobacco Road powers came from his father, Dick Bennett. The Badgers hadn’t been to a Final Four in more than 50 years, when Dick Bennett coached them there in 2000 using a methodical style.

“Can you go and take a team and build your program in a way that you think is best and compete against the best?” said Bennett, in his 10th season at Virginia. “There’s a way that I know works — or that I believe works. So when you get in those spots, you hope, you have a vision and you hope, but you never truly know. When you come in and say, ‘This is going to happen. We’re going to be a Final Four team, or we’re going to win the ACC.’ You believe it, and you hope it, and then you just go to work.”

Tony Bennett took his father’s blueprint and turned Virginia into a perennial ACC contender, going toe-to-toe with Duke and North Carolina, but not until this season were the Cavaliers able to break through — doing so on the strength of two improbable last-second plays. And just a year after suffering the most stunning upset in NCAA Tournament history, losing as the top overall seed to No. 16 seed UMBC.

Defense is the calling card for both the Cavaliers and Red Raiders, but Bennett is quick to point out, they are not similar when it comes to X’s and O’s, only results. By KenPom’s points allowed per 100 possessions, Texas Tech is ranked No. 1 in the country and Virginia is fifth. The betting total for this game was paltry 118 on Sunday.

Maybe they’re making defense cool again.

“I would like to think so,” Tech’s Brandone Francis said. “It’s like I love eating ice cream, no different than playing defense.”

This NCAA championship game might not lure in the casual fan, looking for one-and-done stars, iconic coaches and fast-paced 3-balling offenses like the ones Villanova used to win two of the last three titles.

“I think if you’re a basketball fan you’ll really enjoy the game,” Virginia’s Braxton Key said. “If you’re just kind of a highlight fan this isn’t the game to watch.”

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