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Naked Man Shot By Police Works at Hospital: Roommate

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The naked man who was shot in the chest after police say he fought an officer works at a local hospital, his roommate told NBC 7.

Phil McMahon, 27, is the suspect in an attempted burglary that left him in the emergency room, according to a police source close to the case and his roommate Daniel Macks.

Macks said his roommate works as an assistant to surgical staff at the Scripps Memorial Hospital's operating room in La Jolla.

When NBC 7 reached out to Scripps spokeswoman Janice Collins responded to verify McMahon's employment there, Collins responded via email, saying "State law and Scripps Health policies dictate we cannot disclose personnel information."

Meanwhile, the police officer who shot McMahon has been identified as Christopher Gripp, a 5-year veteran officer with the San Diego Police Department. He has been placed on administrative leave as the case is investigated.

On Monday, police say a caller reported a break-in happening at a Mira Mesa home, and when an officer arrived, he confronted the naked suspect.

McMahon is accused of lunging at the officer, pushing him through a wooden side fence, according to officials. The officer tried to tase the suspect twice, but he continued fighting.

As the two scuffled, McMahon allegedly tried to remove the gun from the officer's holster. The gun fell to the ground, but the officer managed to grab it and shoot the man in the chest.

McMahon was taken to the hospital in critical condition. He was in fair condition on Wednesday, police said.



Photo Credit: John Eberst

3 San Diego Beaches Ranked in Top 25 in US

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San Diego prides itself on the abundant natural beauty you can enjoy year-round.

Trip Advisor thinks so, too, including three San Diego County beaches among the 25 best in the United States.

La Jolla Cove ranked the highest, at No. 6. Coronado Beach came in at No. 19 and Carlsbad State Beach was ranked No. 23. The traveler's website notes that you can enjoy these spots 12 months a year. We concur.

The list was filled with beaches in Hawaii and Florida and gave some mention to beaches in South Carolina, Maine and Massachusetts. The only other California beaches to make the cut were Newport Beach (No. 17) and Crystal Cove State Park in Laguna Beach (No. 24.)

The No. 1 beach in America? That would be Siesta Beach in Siesta Key, Florida.

OK, you win this one, Florida, but we’ll be back.

Sig Alert Canceled for I-5 in Del Mar, Lanes Reopened

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A sig alert was canceled at about 1 p.m. Wednesday, two hours after one was issued following a crash on the northbound Interstate 5 south of Via De La Valle in Del Mar.

The accident happened at approximately 10:50 a.m., the California Highway Patrol said.

Officials said the number 4 and 5 lanes will be closed for the next several hours.They reopened at 1 p.m.

The CHP was conducting a follow up accident investigation.

Eleven More Flu Deaths Reported

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Health officials said flu activity may be subsiding after 11 more flu deaths were reports in the San Diego area last week, leveling out the number of deaths this time of year to the same number reported this time last year.

Those that died from influenza-related deaths were 59 to 99 years old and all had underlying medical conditions, the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency said.

There have been 54 influenza deaths so far this season, health officials said.

“The local flu season appears to have peaked,” said County public health officer Wilma Wooten in a statement. “However, influenza is still in the community, as the flu season typically lasts through the end of March. Therefore, people should continue to take preventive measures to avoid getting the virus.”

Health officials said influenza this winter is spreading and sickening San Diegans at a faster rate than last year’s flu season: there have been 263 confirmed cases to date, more than double last year’s number.

This year's vaccine is not a good match for one of the strains, officials have said, but it is well-matched for other strains. Partial protection provided by the vaccine helps prevent the severity of symptoms.

Nationwide, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention has described this flu season as an “epidemic.”



Photo Credit: NBC 5 News

Serial Sex Assault Suspect in Custody

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A man suspected of sneaking into the bedroom of children and sexually assaulting them has been arrested, officials announced Wednesday.

San Diego Sheriff Bill Gore and Escondido Police Chief Craig Carter said DNA and other evidence tied Gilbert Andre Chavarria, 27, to four cases of sexually assaulting a minor. Bail was set at $4.5 million.

According to officials, Chavarria, dubbed "the Creeper," broke into homes in Escondido and San Marcosduring early morning hours in June and July of 2013 to sexually assault children. He would apparently cut pieces of their pajamas during the assaults.

Many of the incidents happened while parents were sleeping in same room, according to reports.

Most of the victims were teens, though the youngest victim was five years old.

On June 23, a window screen was cut open and a man shined a light onto a 13-year-old's face, then tried to reach inside and touch her.

One week later, police said a man forced entry into a residence in the Oak Hill neighborhood of Escondido and sexually assaulted a 10-year-old girl. He apparently cut holes in the victim's pajamas and underwear.

Investigators said another similar incident took place July 7, when a man assumed to be "the Creeper" forced his way into a home through another cut screen. He then sexually assaulted a 12-year-old and 15-year-old girl and cut holes into their clothing, police said.

A fourth incident of forced entry, sexual assault and cut clothing took place shortly thereafter. A 5- and 9-year-old girl were victims in that case.

Investigators were able to recover evidence and DNA from a family member that linked all of the crimes to the same individual, pinning down a suspect that lived in the vicinity and had been acting suspiciously.

Officers said when they tried to make contact in August 2013, he fled. There were no more "creeper" cases that they knew of after the foot chase.

Officials then submitted the DNA evidence to the California Department of Justice for the Familial DNA Testing Process. On February 5, 2015, the Sheriff's Department and Escondido Police were notified by DOJ officials that Chavarria was their suspect.

On Saturday officers conducted a surveillance sting and pulled DNA from a discarded item for testing. Eight hours later, the Sheriff's crime lab matched the DNA from the item to the DNA recovered from the crime scenes.

Chavarria worked at an auto shop and has a child himself, officials said. Police said they're continuing to speak with children he came in contact with to ensure they are not victims.

Police said they do not have an exact number of victims yet, and are seeking the public's help in finding others. Anyone with information about Chavarria or possible victims are urged to call the Sheriff's Department at (858) 565-5200 or the Escondido Police at (760) 839-4722.

Chavarria was charged with three counts of residential burglary with sexual assault, five counts of lewd acts with a minor under 14 and one count of attempted residential burglary with sexual assault.

He is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday.



Photo Credit: San Diego Sheriff's Department

Police Search for "Erratic" Carjacking Suspect

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San Diego police are searching for an "erratic" man who stole a sports utility vehicle in Rancho Bernardo and later ditched it. 

Police say the man started going door to door in the 17000 block of Aguamiel. As a resident was unloading groceries from his SUV, the suspect jumped in the vehicle and took off in it. 

The SUV was later discovered at the Interstate 15 - Interstate 5 connector. 

The suspect has not been found at this point. Police briefly closed lanes on the freeway as they investigated the abandoned SUV. 



Photo Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto

FDA Warning: Traces of Peanuts Found in Cumin

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Hundreds of products are being pulled from store shelves after traces of peanut were found in cumin spice — a life-threatening danger to some people with peanut allergies.

The recall has been ongoing since December, as more retailers identify products that contain the cumin. The Food and Drug Administration is now warning all people with peanut allergies to avoid cumin and products that contain cumin.

While such large allergy-related recalls are rare, undeclared allergens like peanuts are the leading cause of food recalls in the United States. That can be very unsettling to people who are keeping a close watch on what they or their children eat, since food allergies can be a matter of life or death.

"You might do all of the things you are supposed to do and read the label, but there could still be undeclared allergens," says Dr. Michael Pistiner, a Boston-based pediatric allergist. "It's challenging to know that and still feel comfortable."

Pistiner says he sees the recalls as low-risk, since often the amount of the undeclared allergen is very small. "But the highest risk is to our comfort," he says.

According to the group Food Allergy Research and Education, or FARE, 15 million Americans have food allergies, including 1 in 13 children. Eight foods account for more than 90 percent of the allergies — peanuts, tree nuts, milk, eggs, wheat, soy, fish and shellfish.

Since 2006, those allergens are required by law to be listed on food packages if they are ingredients. The law is less clear when it comes to cross- contamination, however — companies aren't required to list on the label if peanuts or another allergen are processed in the same facility or on the same equipment.

Little is known about how many people may have reactions to allergens that accidentally make their way into food. Those reactions are hard to track — much harder than a pathogen like salmonella, for instance, which can be identified in a person's stool and traced directly to the same strains in a food manufacturing facility or on a farm.

The FDA said it had 428 reports of "adverse events" related to undeclared allergens between January 2012 and December 2014, including reports of three deaths. The agency would not release any detailed information on those reports, which are made by consumers and can't always be confirmed by the agency.

The agency said it has had at least seven reports from consumers related to the cumin recall. Hundreds of products have been recalled since December, from spice mixes to black beans to meats with marinades that include cumin. The spice is often used in Tex-Mex and Indian dishes. The FDA declined to provide any further details on how it happened or what company added peanuts or peanut residue to its cumin spice.

The FDA said packaged foods may not have enough of the affected cumin to trigger a reaction — but those who are sensitive should be careful just in case. Some products may not actually list cumin, but list "spices" instead.

Multiple recalls have spanned a two-month period. The first was on Dec. 26, when Texas-based Adams Foods recalled several of its cumin spices. On Feb. 9, the retailer Whole Foods recalled more than 100 products that potentially contained the cumin. Last Friday, Goya Foods recalled some brands of its black beans and black bean soup. Several other foods have been pulled off store shelves as well.

FARE, the allergy group, routinely notifies its members of what recalls are out there so they can keep track. And the group is pushing the FDA to ensure that allergens are treated as importantly as pathogens like salmonella and E. coli when the agency issues final food safety rules later this year.

"Requiring food processors and manufacturers to identify potential allergen hazards and develop plans to avoid those hazards is critical," the group told the FDA in comments on the rule.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

"Heartbreaking": Military Widow Loses Gifts From Husband in Rental Car Theft

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A military widow is heartbroken after someone stole her rental car containing items belonging to her late husband.

Jane Horton says she has dedicated her life to serving families of fallen soldiers since her husband, Spc. Chris Horton, was killed in Afghanistan in 2011.

“It’s consumed me," she said. "It’s become the greatest part of me to serve those that have given their lives and make sure their families are taken care of."

This week, Horton was in Dallas to attend a military initiative at the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum when her rental car was stolen from Greenville Avenue.

“I know the people who took the car didn’t know, but it’s pretty heartbreaking," Horton said. "I’m pretty broken right now. I’m very upset."

Horton said she’d gone to a dinner at Ozona Bar and Grille and parked her car with valet.

A few hours into the dinner, a waitress approached her.

“I went back and they were like, nonchalantly, 'You’re car’s been stolen.' I was like, 'What?'” Horton said.

Horton said she hadn’t gone to the hotel yet, so inside the car were all of her belongings, including special items from the time her husband, a sniper, was at war.

“All my luggage and belongings and some personal items I’d brought of my husband’s to possibly give to the president and some other people,” she said.

Horton said also stolen was a very special necklace and earrings her husband had given to her around the time he proposed.

James Monroe, the manager of the company in charge of Horton’s rental car, said he believes crooks grabbed keys and stole two cars when his Superlative Valet employees were busy. One was recovered, but Horton’s was not.

Monroe said he’s working with police on the case and told NBC 5 he’d offer to help replace some of Horton’s items. The manager at Ozona said he is working with police to recover surveillance video of the theft.

The restaurant and Superlative Valet are offering a $3,000 reward for the return of Horton’s items.

Monroe added that there will no questions asked if the cherished belongings are returned to his company’s headquarters in Arlington or to Ozona Bar and Grille.

Horton pleaded that the thieves “please give me my stuff back." 

“It’s absolutely deplorable to take anyone’s belongings, but mine are very special to me and they mean the world to me," she said. "Nothing will ever bring back the loss of my husband, but it would be really nice to have something of the things he’d given me.”

NBC 5's Bianca Castro contributed to this report.



Photo Credit: NBC 5 News

Merritt Requests Docs in McStay Case: Report

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The man accused of murdering the McStay family of Fallbrook complained to the judge Thursday that he's not receiving the documents needed for his defense, according to social media posts from a reporter in the courtroom.

Charles Merritt, a former business partner of Joseph McStay, is accused of killing McStay along with Sunny McStay and the couple’s two boys in 2010.

On Thursday, Merritt served as his own attorney for the first time and asked for prosecution discovery documents and files on a computer that was seized by investigators, according to reporter Teri Figueroa.

Figueroa posted updates to Twitter as part of her coverage for U-T San Diego.

Merritt has said he wanted to represent himself because he only has six to eight months to live due to congestive heart failure and could not afford his own attorney.

The judge offered a court-appointed attorney at no cost, but Merritt declined.

For months after the Fallbrook family was reported missing, volunteers searched, cable shows highlighted their story and an investigation was launched by the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department.

It wasn’t until November 2013, that four bodies were uncovered in Victorville.

Another court hearing is scheduled in March with a preliminary hearing scheduled for April 7.


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Vandalism or Prank? District Investigates Graffiti

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San Diego Unified School District has launched an investigation to determine who spray painted "Patrick Henry Patriots" on the campus of rival Serra High School.

The graffiti was left on a doorway of a Serra High building and the letters PHHS were painted on a wall

The photos were then posted on Twitter.

District officials said principals of both schools met Thursday morning along with leaders from both student bodies.

The vandalism may have been done as some sort of prank, district officials said. Even so, it is being taken seriously.

"Whether intended as a prank or intentionally disparaging, it is not acceptable," said district spokesperson Ursula Kroemer.

She added that leaders of both schools believe "the ‘rivalry’ between the schools is and will remain a friendly one." 

If you or someone you know has any information about the vandalism, contact NBC 7 at (619) 578-0393.

4 Hospitalized After Dual Accidents on La Mesa Freeway

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Two accidents that happened almost simultaneously in La Mesa Wednesday night landed four people in the hospital.

The first happened shortly before 9 p.m. on the Severin Drive off-ramp on eastbound Interstate 8.

Heartland Fire officials said a motorcycle collided with a truck coming off the freeway, causing serious injuries to the rider.

The second accident happened just after the first on I-8 just after the Severin Drive off-ramp.

In that accident, a white sedan tried to avoid a collision with a stalled Jeep, but was unable to make it in time, according to California Highway Patrol.

Two more vehicles slammed into the first two and three people were subsequently sent to the hospital with injuries, CHP said.

Eastbound I-8 was shut down for an hour while the scene was cleared and and investigation was conducted.



Photo Credit: Heather Culver

"Frozen's" Elsa Wanted in Frigid Kentucky Town

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The cold might not bother Disney's Queen Elsa, but it's wreaking enough havoc in Kentucky that a police department announced a joke warrant for the popular "Frozen" character's arrest.

Police in the small, rural town of Harlan posted a Facebook message Wednesday about Elsa.

They wrote: "Suspect is a blonde female last seen wearing a long blue dress and is known to burst into song 'Let it Go!' As you can see by the weather she is very dangerous."

Police soon posted another message, telling residents that all kidding aside, they should take the weather seriously and be careful.

A massive system dropped more than a foot of snow in parts of Kentucky. Bitterly cold temperatures moved in Wednesday night and were likely to stay for several days.



Photo Credit: Disney

Mayor, Councilwoman Tour Potential Development Sites

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Mayor Kevin Faulconer and District 4 councilwoman Myrtle Cole joined the Jacob's Center for Neighborhood Innovation on a bus tour of more than a dozen areas that have investment potential.

The Jacob's Center owns more than 50 acres of land, which it hopes to work with others to revitalize the community through offering leasing incentives.

One of those 17 spots - an eight-acre lot on Euclid Avenue near the 94 freeway - is a Jacob's Center hopeful for businesses, housing and retail shops.

The city said it's ready to cut the red tape, making it easier to rezone the land, some of which was designated for industrial use or housing.

That zoning could be changed to be able to build markets, mini malls or apartment buildings, they said.

And with those types of developments comes job creation.

Councilwoman Myrtle Cole said the incentives to open businesses in the area are huge.

"We have a spending power of $1.9 billion," she said. "$1 billion is going outside our district because we don't have the restaurants and stores. That's what I'm wanting all the developers and investors to see."

Those spending figures come from Nielson Media and there is already one company that has invested in the area.

Just down the street, on Euclid Avenue, a Walgreen's Pharmacy is scheduled to open in March.

Some leaders in Southeast San Diego hope there is more to come.

"Suge" Knight Back in Jail After Hospital Visit

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Rap mogul Marion "Suge" Knight returned to jail Thursday afternoon after being taken from a West Los Angeles courthouse in an ambulance hours earlier during an arraignment unrelated to murder charges he faces, a court official said.

Knight, who was scheduled to submit a plea of guilty or not guilty on charges that he threatened a woman he allegedly stole a camera from in September, experienced a "medical issue" at Airport Courthouse, Commissioner Mark Zuckman told the courtroom.

His attorney, David Kenner, said he was having "stomach problems."

Knight was released from the hospital and returned to jail before 4 p.m., LASD spokeswoman Nicole Nishida said.

Knight was taken to the hospital at another court hearing in February, where he had an anxiety attack after pleading not guilty to murder and other charges in a separate hit-and-run case.

Already facing a robbery charge for allegedly stealing a celebrity photographer's camera along with comedian Katt Williams, prosecutors recently added the charge that the two made criminal threats against the photographer. Williams was expected in court on Thursday afternoon.

Authorities claim Knight and Williams stole the camera in a "strong-arm robbery" in a Beverly Hills alley, injuring photographer Leslie Redden.

Redden said Thursday she thought Knight was faking the injury.

"The Oscar goes to: Mr. Marion Knight," she said, wearing a brace on her wrist. "Every time he has to face what he's done, he runs, he's sick, he's got an excuse."

The Sept. 5 incident is unrelated to Knight's murder charge, for which he is in Los Angeles County Jail. Prosecutors claim Knight's pickup truck hit two men, killing one, in a Compton parking lot in January — charges he's denied, saying through attorneys that he was fleeing a beating when his car struck two men.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Photo Credit: Paul Buck/Europeanpressphoto Agency

Kyle Kraska's Condition Improves: Report

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Television sports director Kyle Kraska was released from the hospital, according to a report from KFMB-TV.

Kraska was shot multiple times outside of his home in the cul-de-sac south of Scripps Ranch Parkway on Feb. 10.

He was released from the hospital Wednesday and is continuing his recovery from home, CBS 8 reports.

Kraska released a statement thanking the community for their prayers.

"After awakening from a four-day medically-induced coma, I have begun the long process of healing," the statement reads.

On Tuesday, Mike Montana, 54, pleaded not guilty to a charge of attempted first degree murder with allegations that the crime was premeditated and a firearm was used.

In court, Deputy District Attorney Rebecca Zipp said Kraska was shot six times, including once in the torso and once in the abdomen.

"It appears that Mr. Montana was doing work on Mr. Kraska's house and there was a financial dispute," said Zipp. "And that was the reason or the motive."

She said Montana intended to kill him and shot him from several feet away.

Montana faces at least 37 years to life in prison if convicted.


"Sniper" Killer Delusional: Expert

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The defense rested late Thursday in the Stephenville, Texas, trial of Eddie Ray Routh for the murders of "American Sniper" Chris Kyle and his friend Chad Littlefield two years ago. Prosecution rebuttal witnesses are scheduled Friday with closing arguments and jury deliberation to follow Monday.

Routh’s attorneys presented two days of defense evidence from Routh’s girlfriend, his family and an expert psychiatrist. They all said Routh suffered from severe mental illness at the time of the murders.

Dr. Mitchell H. Dunn, a forensic psychiatrist at the Terrell State Hospital, said he has been involved with criminal insanity issues for more than 20 years.

Dunn reviewed medical records, police reports, witness interviews, videos and crime scene photos in Routh’s case. He said he interviewed Routh, a former U.S. Marine, for more than six hours in April 2014 at the Erath County Jail, longer than the typical prisoner interview.

Routh’s hospitalizations for mental health issues began in 2011. Dunn said Routh suffered delusions in the weeks before his arrest, including the belief that cannibals were trying to cook and eat him at his job in a cabinet shop. He was released from the Dallas Veterans Affairs Hospital in January 2013, just days before the murders.

“They believed he had psychotic symptoms and mental illness and not one that was going to go away when he was not intoxicated,” Dunn said.

Dunn said Routh suffered from schizophrenia, delusional beliefs and disorganized thinking leading up to the time of the murders.

Kyle planned to take Routh on an outing at the Rough Creek Lodge shooting range to help with what the VA had diagnosed as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

That day, Routh thought the victims were “pig assassins, hybrid pigs sent here to kill people,” Dunn said. “He was acting in self-defense to kill them before they killed him.”

Dunn concluded that Routh suffered from “a severe mental disease or defect and did not know his conduct was wrong” the day of the murders.

Prosecutors blame drug and alcohol abuse and claim Routh did know right from wrong. State rebuttal witnesses will address those claims Friday.



Photo Credit: NBC 5 News
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Motorcyclist Killed After Slamming Into Sign Post ID'd

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A San Diego man was killed after he slammed into a sign post in Point Loma late Wednesday night.

According to the medical examiner, Chad Michael Vosskuhler, 47, was found unresponsive and without a pulse in the 3100 block of Nimitz Boulevard after his dirt bike apparently hit a curb, causing him to fly from the bike and hit a sign post.

Police said he suffered major trauma to his chest and abdomen.

Vosskuhler was given CPR by medics on the scene before being transported to the hospital for surgery in an attempt to save his life, the medical examiner said.

Despite resuscitation efforts, Vosskuhler was pronounced dead at the hospital.

The San Diego Police Department is investigating the accident.

Man Dies After Lighting Self Ablaze

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A man who set himself ablaze inside a Southern California Starbucks earlier this week died in the hospital, fire officials said Thursday.

The man, about 60 years old, lit himself on fire inside the bathroom of a Van Nuys Starbucks on Tuesday when bystanders heard "an explosive sound." He then staggered out of the bathroom and collapsed near the entrance, where Starbucks customers helped douse the flames, officials said.

The burns covered 90 percent of the man's body, officials said.

He died in the hospital on Wednesday, according to the LA Fire Department.

Officials did not provide additional details about the man.



Photo Credit: NewsChopper4

UCSB Massacre Report Urges Overhaul

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An eight-month investigation into the deadly rampage in Isla Vista, California, closed on Thursday, concluding that Elliot Rodger acted alone and that better systems are needed for identifying troubled individuals who might be capable of killing others.

The investigation also found disturbing searches in Rodger's Internet history and other online activities.

The 64-page report (here) conducted by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office provides a detailed look at both at Rodger's "premeditated, murderous rampage" as well as an analysis of the evidence uncovered after Rodger killed himself.

In May 2014, 22-year-old Rodger stabbed three men to death inside his apartment, then went on a shooting rampage that began at UC Santa Barbara's Alpha Phi sorority house, when he fired on students from his car. He went on to fire rounds at multiple locations in the small town, killing another student at a nearby deli and wounding others.

He killed himself at the end of the rampage.

One focus of the report was whether Rodger acted alone.

"The convoluted nature of this rapidly unfolding massacre, and the nature in which it quickly ended, initially led law enforcement to believe that there were two suspects," Detective Joe Schmidt said in the report.

But detectives found no evidence to show he was assisted in any way.

At the time of the killings, Rodger was seeing a life coach who had become worried about his behavior. Deputies had been dispatched to his apartment for a welfare check by his mother on April 30, as she was worried about disturbing videos he had posted on YouTube.

He had been treated for mental health issues for many years, according to the report. He had also come into contact with deputies in the months before the shooting after an altercation with his roommate and others.

The report indicates, consistent with previous reports, that deputies did not find Rodger to be a danger to himself or others. They did not find that they had enough reason to place him on a mental health hold.

Rodger emailed a manifesto to some family members just minutes before he went on the shooting rampage, but hours after the first three stabbings, saying he was driven to kill women because no woman had wanted to date him, saying "Women’s rejection of me is a declaration of war."

The manifesto referenced slicing throats, bludgeoning, slashing and using his apartment as a torture chamber.

After Rodger killed himself, detectives also found in Rodger's Internet history that he had done extensive research into Nazis in the report, including searches on his laptop including the phrase "Did Adolf Hitler have a girlfriend."

They discovered Rodger had a strong interest in violent video games, movies and books.

He also uploaded a disturbing video to YouTube detailing his complaints against a society he felt had rejected him.

While the investigation concluded that numerous mental health professionals had not been able to foresee his violent crime spree, it encouraged a development of new tactics and methods of sharing information that might help prevent another person with known mental health issues from being able to carry out such a rampage again.

"It is hoped that a thorough review of these materials by both law enforcement and mental health professionals will lead to the development of some new techniques and practices in identifying and treating such troubled persons."



Photo Credit: Chris Carlson/AP

Fight Between Roommates Ends in Gunfire

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A fight between two men in University Heights Wednesday night resulted in a shotgun wound to one man's had and the other man in jail for pulling the trigger.

According to the San Diego Police Department, a 59-year-old man was arguing with his 38-year-old roommate about his use of methamphetamine and the apartment being trashed in the 2200 block of Madison Avenue just after 8:30 p.m.

The older man then grabbed a shotgun and the victim tried to fight the gun away from him, police said. The victim grabbed the barrel of the shotgun and it went off, resulting in a non-life threatening gunshot wound to his hand.

The older roommate was subsequently arrested and the police department is investigating.

Their identities were not immediately available.

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