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Fire at Lemon Grove U-Haul Lot Under Investigation

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An arson investigation was launched after two trucks caught fire in a U-Haul rental truck lot in Lemon Grove.

It happened around midnight at the company on Lemon Grove and Massachusetts avenues.

A witness told investigators people left the area just before the fire started.

When deputies and firefighters arrived the front end of one truck was engulfed in flames.

The outside of the truck was scorched and its windows were blown out.

The burned vehicle was parked near a dozen other U-Haul trucks.

A second truck parked next to the burning vehicle also caught fire.

Firefighters knocked it out before the fire could continue to spread.

The San Diego County Sheriff's Bomb Squad is investigating the fire to determine a cause. Officials say it appears to be arson.

In fact, deputies already detained and questioned two people - a man and a woman - in connection to the fire but have since released them.
 



Photo Credit: Matt Rascon, NBC 7

Theater Gunman Was 'Always a Little Off,' Ex-Lawyer Says

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The lone gunman who unleashed a torrent of bullets in a packed Louisiana movie theater on Thursday night, killing two people before turning the gun on himself, once hung a Nazi flag over his bar was shut down in Georgia, police said. 

"He was pretty frustrated with the police department and the judicial system generally, and his response was he had a Nazi flag attached to his building," LeGrange Police Cheif Louis Dekmar told NBC News Friday. 

Houser's bar had been closed by the city after police in 2000 found that alcohol was being servied to minors, Dekmar said. 

The alleged gunman had "always been a little off," ex-attorney John Swearingen told NBC News.

Swearingen said John Houser, 59, had once tried to burn down his Columbus, Georgia, law office in the 1980s.

Court documents which detail a court filing by Houser's wife in May, reveal that he made threats to family members, had a history of hospitalizations for his mental conditions and was known to law enforcement. Houser's wife told police in 2008 that she removed the guns from their home in Phenix City, Alabama, because he "should not have one" and may have obtained them illegally.

California-Arizona Route Reopens After Flood Repairs

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A 50-mile stretch of the main highway connecting California and Arizona reopened at noon Friday after repairs due to flood damage.

The 10 Freeway bridge east of the Riverside County community of Coachella partially reopened to traffic, according to the California Department of Transportation. Part of the bridge collapsed in flash floods during a major storm July 19 that damaged several other bridges in the area.

The reopening is welcome news for travelers and truckers, but traffic bottlenecks will remain. The California Department of Transportation said delays as long as half an hour can be expected at peak travel times, including Friday evenings and late Sunday afternoons.

Crews worked on the westbound side of the bridge, allowing two-way traffic to use one lane in each direction over the small desert gully. Once the section of freeway is reopened, workers will start repairs on the eastbound side of the bridge.

Two other bridges in the area required minor repairs, Caltrans said.

The closure forced about 54,000 daily driver, many making the trip between California and Arizona, to take a detour of several hours.

The bridge that washed out was built in 1967 and easily passed a March safety inspection. It had been "armored" with boulders lining the gully that runs under the span. The gully is normally dry but can flood during the sudden and intense rainstorms that happen in the desert.

Caltrans said the span would have withstood the flooding if the water had barreled down the middle of the natural channel, but its path shifted. That concentrated the water's full force on the western bank, leading to the collapse.

One person was hospitalized with broken ribs, a shattered knee and lacerations to his liver in a crash on the damaged section of bridge.



Photo Credit: Courtesy of KMIR

First Woman to Command U.S. Third Fleet

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A flyover and a gun salute will honor Vice Admiral Nora Tyson as she accepts command of the U.S. Third Fleet in San Diego Friday.

The promotion makes Tyson the first female commander of the U.S. Third Fleet.

The change of command ceremony took place aboard USS Ronald Reagan while the ship was docked at Naval Air Station North Island.

Tyson relieved Vice Admiral Kenny Floyd as he retires after 35 years of service.

Tyson commanded USS Bataan as the ship led the Navy's contributions to disaster relief efforts on the U.S. Gulf Coast in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. She also served as Commander, Carrier Strike Group 2, where she led USS George H.W. Bush Strike Group on its maiden deployment.
 

Gas Leak at Westfield UTC Capped After Closing Stores

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Stores and other businesses closed for several hours Friday after customers complained of smelling a strong odor within Westfield UTC.

San Diego Police and San Diego Fire-Rescue were called to La Jolla Village Drive and Executive Way just before 10 a.m. for a natural gas leak.

Construction crews were working in the area when they broke a pipeline, officials told NBC 7.

A bank and more than a dozen stores closed after customers complained of a strong odor.

Firefighters walked through the mall using special detectors but never found any signs of measurable gas.

The leak was successfully capped without any damage or injuries and at 1:45 p.m., fire officials were preparing to reopen the mall. 

Westfield UTC used to be known as University Towne Centre and includes such anchor store as Macy's, Sears, Nordstrom and Forever 21. 



Photo Credit: NBC 7

2 Charged in 2011 Cold Case Killing

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A man and woman have been charged with murder in connection with the slaying of a man shot to death on the streets of San Diego’s Swan Canyon community more than four years ago, investigators confirmed.

The San Diego Police Department (SDPD) said suspect Jennifer Whitmer, 28, was taken into custody Friday morning by detectives and Gang Suppression Team officers in the 5000 block of Solola Avenue.

She was charged with murder in the killing of Cordell King, 28, a San Diego man gunned down on April 17, 2011.

Suspect Dionte Simpson, 25, was also charged with murder in connection to King's killing. Police said Simpson was already in custody at the South Bay Detention Facility on unrelated charges.

According to investigators, King was standing near a sidewalk just after 5 p.m. in the 4600 block of Thorn Street when a car carrying four people pulled up next to him and stopped. Several gunshots were fired from the car, striking King in the torso before he fell to the ground.

Police said the group initially drove away, but then turned around and returned to the wounded victim. A suspect got out and proceeded to shoot King several more times while he was on the ground.

King was left critically wounded, lying on the pavement. When police officers arrived, he was dead.

The suspects had fled and were never arrested – until now.

For the past four years, SDPD Homicide Detectives have continued to actively investigate this cold case, the department said. Recently, Homicide, Gang and Criminal Intelligence detectives received information that helped them identify the suspects involved in the killing.

Police said they anticipate more arrests in this case soon. For now, Whitmer has been booked into Las Colinas Detention Facility, while Simpson will soon be transferred to San Diego Central Jail.

The investigation is ongoing and police are working with the San Diego District Attorney’s office to bring forward a prosecutable case. Anyone with information on King’s killing should contact the SDPD Homicide Unit at (619) 531-2293 or Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477.
 

High-Tech Car Seat Aims to Prevent Hot Car Deaths

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As summer temperatures continue to rise, so does the risk of hot car deaths among children. Now, one company is using new technology to help parents avoid tragedy by remembering their little one in the back seat.

The Evenflo Embrace DLX Infant Car Seat features a sensor that attaches across the baby's chest, sounding an alarm after the car ignition is turned off, according to TODAY.

"It seems impossible that you would forget that your baby is in the car, but you're exhausted, the seat's facing the other way, you're sort of going by muscle memory, and you can forget the baby is in the car,'' said Jason Tanz, editor-at-large at Wired Magazine. "So this is a reminder using Wi-Fi, using a sensor to keep your baby safe."

The carseat is currently sold online at Walmart for around $150, and is set to hit store shelves next month.


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Deadly La. Theater Rampage Just the Latest Since Mid-June

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The movie theater shooting in Lafayette, Louisiana, that left two women dead was the latest deadly rampage in the last five weeks. John Russell Houser also wounded nine others before killing himself, police said. Houser, 59, was described as a drifter who was estranged from his family.

A week earlier, four U.S. Marines were shot to death at military facilities in Chattanooga, Tennessee. A U.S. sailor later died from his wounds. The gunman, 24-year-old Mohammad Youssuf Abdulazeez, who had downloaded audio recordings from a radical American-Yemeni cleric, was killed after a shoot-out with police.

And on June 17, 21-year-old Dylann Roof shot and killed nine people in Charleston, South Carolina, at one of the country’s oldest African-American churches. He has been charged with federal hate crimes.

Though the latest shooting wounded a significant number of people in a public place, it does not technically meet the FBI definition for a "mass kiling" -- four or more dead, excluding the attacker. The chart below includes only fatalities from mass shootings.
 



Photo Credit: AP

Pizza Delivery Driver Scares Off Would-Be Robbers

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Two men armed with an air soft gun tried to rob a pizza delivery driver in Emerald Hills overnight, but the driver chased them away with a stick, thwarting their plan.

The San Diego Police Department said the near-robbery happened in at Bollenbacher and McHugh streets. A driver stopped to deliver pizza in the neighborhood and two men standing outside told him the pizza was for them.

When the victim got out of his car with the pizza, one of the men pointed a black weapon at him and demanded the pizza and cash.

Police said the victim noticed the weapon was an air soft gun, and he refused to give the men anything. Instead, the pizza delivery driver picked up some sort of stick and chased the suspects to 56th Street, where they then ran in separate directions.

The victim then stopped and called police. He was not injured.

Officials said the incident is under investigation. The suspects are both described as being thin, black males and in their late teens. The first suspect – the one with the air soft gun – has curly hair and was wearing a blue and white sweater with a dark shirt. The second suspect was wearing a blue shirt and jeans.

Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477.
 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Driver Killed in Head-On Crash

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A driver was killed when a pickup truck slammed head-on into a tractor trailer on Interstate 5 near Camp Pendleton overnight.

Traffic was at a complete stop due to construction, officials said

The California Highway Patrol said the crash occurred at 11:30 p.m. in the northbound lanes of I-5 near Harbor Drive.

The victim was identified as a 67-year-old man from Santa Fe Springs.

The tractor trailer driver was uninjured. He was carrying 80,000 pounds of tomatoes.

Sister ID'd Brothers in Family Massacre: Police

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An Oklahoma girl told police that her teenage brothers were the killers after her parents and three siblings were found stabbed to death on Wednesday night, according to police records. 

The 13-year-old survived after being stabbed several times "made statements to officers that her brothers was [sic] responsible for attack her and her family," Broken Arrow Police said in an arrest report released Friday. 

Robert Bever, 18 and his unidentified 16-year-old brother are in police custody after their parents, David and April Bever and their three siblings, aged between 5 and 12 years old, were found slain in their Broken Arrow home. 



Photo Credit: Broken Arrow, Okla., Police Department / AP

Barack Obama's First Trip to Kenya as President

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President Barack Obama is traveling to Kenya and Ethiopia this week, where he will be the first sitting U.S. president to visit the two countries.

Photo Credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

Woman Who Barricaded Students in Classroom Sentenced

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A former after-school assistant who held several students against their will in a San Diego classroom last March was sentenced Friday. 

Linda Lira, formerly of Lemon Grove Academy, was sentenced to 241 days in jail and 5 years’ probation Friday morning. Last month she pleaded guilty to felony child endangerment and misdemeanor battery charges.

Lira barricaded herself and several others students in a classroom last March. According to the students, she threw things, upended desks, and took off her clothes as she struggled with police. The prosecutor said she reportedly “saw demons.”

She will be released immediately Because of time served. She is to have no contact with children, and is required to have psychiatric treatment.



Photo Credit: Family

Handyman Kills Grad in Apartment

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A Drexel University graduate was on the phone with her mother when she was attacked, sexually assaulted and murdered allegedly by a recently fired maintenance man who served time for killing his own father, Philadelphia detectives said. 

James Harris was charged Friday with the murder of 27-year-old Jasmine Wright. Police said the 56-year-old lurked inside the woman's third-floor apartment along 50th Street for 30 minutes on the afternoon of July 16.

When she walked in the door, he grabbed Wright, who was on the phone with her mother in  Virginia, and struggled with her, police said. Her mother heard the scuffle before the phone call abruptly cut off.

Wright was severely beaten, sexually assaulted and strangled on the apartment floor, police said. Investigators believe Harris moved her battered body to a bed and used bleach on the floor to try and cover his tracks.

"He's a monster and we're very happy to get him off the streets," said Philadelphia Police Homicide Capt. James Clark.

A week before the killing, Harris lost his job as a maintenance man in the building and was banned from the property for failing to clean and take out the trash, Clark said. The building's owner never got his keys back.

"He had keys to get into the building, I don't believe he would have had keys to get into the individual apartments unless he made copies or stole them," said Clark.

Witnesses placed Harris at the scene a half-hour before the murder and DNA linked him to the case, according to detectives. He is charged with murder, rape, burglary and related offenses. Court records did not list an attorney.

Harris has a history of violent acts including being found guilty of voluntary manslaughter in the 1982 death his father. He served time in prison. Harris was charged with murder in the case, but was acquitted of the charge. Police did not immediately know the case details.

He's also faced various theft and burglary counts and was charged with rape and attempted rape in the past but was either found not guilty or had the charges withdrawn, according to court records.

Wright's death left her neighbors in West Philadelphia, who said she was a well-liked young professional, in shock.

"It's hurt me just to know that it's right next door," neighbor Keith Hooks told NBC10. "And to happen to that person who didn't bother a soul."

Wright had plans to leave the apartment in the coming weeks as she pursued her career in public health, said Clark.



Photo Credit: Family Photo / NBC10 / Philadelphia Police

SD Explained: Fast-Tracking Stadium Report

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The city's moving forward with a $2.1 million environmental impact study on the potential site of a new Chargers stadium. Then it'll have to present its findings to the NFL, in the hopes that the league will then tell the Chargers to come back to the negotiating table with San Diego officials.

But there are two ways the city could speed up that process.

First, they could run what's called a citizens initiative, where voters gather signatures to put a measure on the ballot. If it passes, the city can forget about doing an environmental review, and instead let that public support stand on its own.

Another option would be to get help from Sacramento, in the form of special legislation that would help San Diego expedite legal challenges.

On this San Diego Explained, NBC 7's Catherine Garcia and the Voice of San Diego's Scott Lewis talk through those options and why the city isn't following through on them.


'I Was Real Terrified': Witness of La. Theater Shooting

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A Louisiana man watching a movie at a Lafayette theater was struck with bone-chilling fear Thursday after he heard a volley of shots coming from a screening room next door.

“I was real terrified, especially once I saw that a lady was shot,” theater patron Jalen Fernell, 21, told NBC 7 in a phone interview Thursday night.

Fernell said he heard two shots coming from the screening room next door as he watched a movie with a friend at The Grand 16. After the shots were fired, he said a siren and lights were activated, and a digital voice over and public address system sounded off, ordering everyone to evacuate.

Fernell said he then heard police entering the building, followed by two or three more shots. Moments later, Fernell said he heard a volley of shots followed immediately by a police radio call from inside the theater.

Fernell said it was a panicked scramble to get out of the theater through emergency doors and into the parking lot.

“Everyone is charging to their cars trying to get out of the theater. In my head I'm thinking what if there if the shooter is in one of these cars?” Fernell recalled.

Although in a haze of shock, he realized just how fortunate he was.

“I do feel lucky because he was right next door. All he had to do was instead of taking a right he could have taken a left and would have been in our theater,” Fernell told NBC 7.

Lafayette police have identified the gunman as John Russell Houser, 59, a “drifter” who had moved to Louisiana recently from Alabama. The shooting left two victims dead and nine others injured. Houser then killed himself with a self-inflicted gunshot.

According to eyewitnesses, the shooter said nothing and acted alone.

The motive for the deadly theater shooting remains under investigation.

Witnesses and police told NBC News Houser sat in the movie theater for 20 minutes before opening fire. He parked his car near the exit and planned to escape after the shooting but a quick response from law enforcement forced him back inside the theater, where he fatally shot himself, police said.

The two women killed in the shooting were identified as Mayci Breaux, 21, and Jillian Johnson, 33, NBC News reported Friday.

Of the nine people wounded, police said two had been released from the hospital as of Friday morning. The rest of the victims are still being treated, with one person in critical condition, NBC News reported.



Photo Credit: AP

Colorado Theater Shooting Trial: Local Testifies

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Colorado theater shooting gunman James Holmes was described as “sweet” and “shy” by those who knew him in childhood and his teen years according to testimony Friday.

Several California residents traveled to Denver to testify on behalf of Holmes in the penalty phase of the trial. 

When a juror’s illness prompted Judge Carlos A. Samour, Jr. to excuse the panel, he ordered the testimony of those who had traveled from out of state be recorded for playback.

The James Holmes they described seemed far different than the orange-haired man who strapped on body armor and extra ammunition before opening fire inside a crowded midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises,” on July 20, 2012.

Twelve people died and 70 were injured in the rampage. Jurors have convicted Holmes of first degree murder and are now hearing arguments on whether Holmes should be sentenced to death or life in prison. 

Arlene and Bob Holmes: 'Wonderful Parents'

Holmes grew up in a “real community neighborhood” where residents bonded and “lived their lives through their kids,” testified former neighbor Martin Barrett.

He described a friendly suburban neighborhood in Oak Hills, about 20 minutes north of Monterey with barbeques, street hockey, baseball and basketball games. He said Holmes played among a group of more than a dozen boys all near the same age.

Holmes, or “Jimmy”, was a sweet gentleman who would never get involved in altercations, Barrett testified.

“He would always stand back and just observe and hope it didn’t grow any bigger than what it was,” Barrett said.

He added that he never saw a mean streak in the boy and that overall, Holmes seemed happy.

Joseph Barrett was about 10 when he met the defendant. He played with Holmes daily and attended track practice with him. "He was great to be around, always encouraging," he said.

Barrett and his wife also testified separately that the Holmes were "wonderful parents."

Jimmy 'Kind of Flew Under the Radar'

The Holmes family moved from the neighborhood in May 2000 to Rancho Penasquitos, northeast of downtown San Diego.

Ina Pirie Maston has known the Holmes family for more than 10 years through the Penasquitos Lutheran Church.

She and Holmes’ mother, Arlene, carpooled off and on for three years. She testified the two women would often talk about their children.

“They both were very involved in their kids’ lives,” she said of Arlene and Bob Holmes adding that the problems facing the family didn’t seem to be anything out of the ordinary.

She met James Holmes when he was in his teens. Maston recalled he was a “shy, reserved young man but not uncomfortable in a social setting.”

Maston, who is still friends of Holmes' parents, testified, “We wanted to make sure everybody understood how we support the family as individuals and as a community.”

Patrick Silva of San Jose went to Westview High School with Holmes and competed alongside him on the JV soccer team.

“I remember a very funny, very sweet, quiet kid who kind of flew under the radar, didn’t cause a lot of trouble at all,” Silva testified in court.

He also said he respected Holmes' athletic ability.

Mental Illness a Key to Next Phase

The jurors who convicted Holmes of murder unanimously decided Thursday they can consider the death penalty. 

They said capital punishment is justified because Holmes murdered a large number of victims; caused a grave risk of death to others; committed murder in a heinous, cruel or depraved manner; and laid in wait or ambush.

The defense will now lead the next phase, trying to show that his mental illness and other "mitigating factors" make it wrong to execute him in any case.

Then, jurors will then deliberate for a second time, deciding whether the extent of his mental problems outweighs the lifelong suffering Holmes caused.

If so, the trial would end there, with a life sentence instead of the death penalty.

If not, the sentencing will move into a third and final phase, in which victims and their relatives would describe the impacts of Holmes' crimes.



Photo Credit: Colorado Judicial Department via AP, Pool

Charity Ex-CEO Silent When Asked 'Where's the Money?'

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The ex-CEO of a San Diego-based charity accused of embezzling donations meant for kids with cancer spent thousands on personal items including a vehicle from CarMax and a water bill, prosecutors allege.

Brianna King pleaded not guilty Thursday to one felony count of grand theft and one felony count of fraudulant appropriation.

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King was the CEO and President of WishWarriors, a charity formed in April 2014 to help several Southern California families with sick children.

NBC 7 Investigates has been reporting on the allegations surrounding King since a local family first raised concerns.

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Rodney and Susan Harvey of Rancho Penasquitos say they felt the nonprofit took advantage of their situation and used their daughter, Kasey, as a marketing tool.

NBC 7 Investigates soon uncovered King has a criminal record.

Then, in response to several of our reports, Angelica Simmons, a board member and the attorney for WishWarriors, sent an email saying, “At this time it appears most of the money raised by WishWarriors is gone -- used by Brianna for her own personal desires.”

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King was then arrested and charged with grand theft and fraud. During the investigation, prosecutors say there was some unusual activity found in the charity’s bank account.

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“We found expenditures that were questionable and personal in nature. Two particular expenditures were unmistakenly tied to Ms. King. The first being her personal city water bill and the second being her car payment to CarMax for her vehicle,” said San Diego County Deputy District Attorney James Teh.

After weeks of requests for an interview, King continued to avoid questions regarding missing donation money.

NBC 7 Investigates caught up with King before her first court appearance Thursday. She did not respond to our team’s questions and turned away from our camera. We also reached out to King’s defense attorney, but did not receive a response.

One concern of the Harvey family was an April charity fundraiser involving their daughter, who is battling Rhabdomyosarcoma cancer. Maddie Taylor, 12, of Poway and her family were also invited to participate. Maddie is battling a form of bone cancer.

The Harvey and Taylor families lent their time, energy and image with the promise from WishWarriors that they’d receive a portion of the donated proceeds.

“To date, none of the cancer patients have received any money from this charity golf tournament,” said Teh.

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WishWarriors has cut all ties with King and has ceased fundraising efforts for the time being.

The charity’s legal counsel and board member Angelica Simmons sent NBC 7 Investigates this statement in response to King’s arraignment:

“We have learned that at this time it appears most of the money raised by WishWarriors is gone - used by Brianna for her own personal desires. We have reported this to the San Diego County Sheriff's Department and are fully cooperating with the authorities in their investigation of the matter. We hope that the investigation will allow us to recover the funds so that we can distribute them to the families as we, the remaining board members, had always intended. We are suspending all fundraising activities while this issue is ongoing.” 

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Photo Credit: NBC 7
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30+ Razor Blades Found at Local Park

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Officials have temporarily closed a park in San Diego's Chula Vista area after more than 30 razor blades were found in the grass – some with the blade side facing up – in what appears to be an intentional act.

The Chula Vista Police Department confirmed Friday that Harvest Park at 1550 E. Palomar Street, right in the middle of a residential community, is closed for investigation after razor blades were discovered scattered in a large grass area commonly used for youth sports activities.

According to police, a father was at the park Wednesday afternoon running football drills with his two sons when he spotted the shiny, sharp objects strewn about the grass. When he got closer, he found approximately 12 razor blades, some placed blade up, in an area about 30 feet in radius.

Investigators said some of the blades had been cut into pieces, consistent with having been hit by a lawn mower. Police said the park had been mowed by Chula Vista Parks and Recreation personnel that morning, explaining the smaller pieces.

When officers searched the area about 100 feet out, they discovered an additional eight razor blades, plus two more broken blades.

Police reached out to supervisors from parks and rec, who then shut down the park and began a detailed search of the entire area using metal detectors and magnets.

The following day, parks and rec personnel found more than a dozen more broken pieces of razor blades scattered throughout a large area of the park.

The case is under investigation, and although it appears to be an isolated incident, police said parks and rec employees are checking other parks throughout the city for razor blades as a precaution.

Anyone with information should call the Chula Vista Police Department at (619) 691-5202 or (619) 691-5151.

Though no injuries have been reported as a result of the razor blades, police said they are investigating this case as a felony crime that comes with serious charges, should they find the culprit. This ranges from child endangerment to setting up a booby trap, possession of a deadly weapon and assault with a deadly weapon, should someone get hurt.

Chula Vista mother Michelle Dilay, who lives around the block from Harvest Park, said the news of razor blades at this family-friendly spot is extremely worrisome. She told NBC 7 she found out about the park closure after another mom in the neighborhood sent out a text message alerting friends to the incident.

Dilay said she walks her dog there every day after she drops off her sons. Her kids also often play at the park, so this hits far too close to home for her.

“I’m really shocked that something so close to home would happen,” said Dilay. “How could this happen here? We’re such a quiet community. The only thing that ever happens here are birthday parties and soccer games.”

Dilay said she’s never seen any suspicious activity at Harvest Park, which makes this even more baffling to the local mother.

“Something that could hurt your child – it’s honestly sickening. It’s really sad,” she lamented.

Another local mother brought her baby, Charlie, to play at the park Friday only to find that it was closed.

“I think it’s pretty atrocious," the mother said of the razor blades incident. "There are kids here every day. I don’t know why someone would do something like this. It’s not okay.”

Another woman who lives across the street from Harvest Park told NBC 7 the park is often packed with kids playing sports. She worries someone might get hurt if more razor blades are put in the grass.

“I don’t want anything happening to my grandkids,” she said.

Other parks around San Diego have been the targets of similar crimes involving razor blades, including Bonita Cove Park, which has been hit several times since August 2013.

In May, police installed a security camera at that Mission Bay-area park in an effort to deter the unknown suspect responsible for intentionally planting razor blades there.

In the case of Bonita Cove Park, San Diego police have said the investigation is difficult because the incidents are often spread out, with months between each.

San Diego Police Department Lt. Scott Wahl said investigators do not know, at this point, if the cases at the two parks are in any way connected.

As for Harvest Park, officials said it will reopen Saturday, as long as city personnel deem it safe.
 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego
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Police Kill Shooter on Ventura Blvd

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Police shot and killed a gunman who fired shots outside a popular Studio City shopping district, terrorizing shoppers and prompting a massive LAPD response.

The call of a man with a gun and possible shots fired was reported at 3:28 p.m. in the 12000 block of Ventura Boulevard.

Frightened shoppers ran as others were ushered to safety by police.

Terry Burstein was driving along Ventura when she heard a noise and saw a man sitting outside a bank, shooting a gun in the air.

"Just randomly shooting shots in the sky," she said.

Burstein said she saw people, including five children, race out of a Chipotle and into a parking lot.

She said the gunman emptied a magazine and put the gun down "almost like in slow motion.

"He reached into a brown paper bag, got a new magazine and reloaded his gun and sat there," she said.

Five minutes later, she said, he fired another shot into the air.

"He could've shot me, but he wasn't really focused on people," she said. "He seemed like a guy who was maybe a little out of touch. He seemed very passive. He didn't seem angry. He didn't say anything. It didn't seem to be his intent to kill people.

"It was only until the police arrived when the sirens went off all hell broke loose."

Witness Wyatt Toroshian said he was in the bathroom at the Starbucks across the street when he came out and noticed police -- their guns drawn toward the Union Bank building -- at the corner.

"I looked right at the individual who was holding a gun concealed under a piece of paper and saw them fire two shots directly at him," he said.

The individual appeared to be homeless, "overweight and scraggly," Toroshian said. He didn't appear to have any business with the bank.

"It had to be a minute and a half," he said. "It was very, very quick. No alarm, no nothing. It was completely silent. The officers just swooped down on scene immediately."

Ventura Boulevard was temporarily closed to traffic between Laurel Canyon Boulevard and Laurelgrove Avenue. Ventura Boulevard was reopened between Laurel Canyon Boulevard and Whitsett Avenue around 4:30 a.m on Saturday.

Aerial footage showed an uncovered body in or near a flower pot in front of two banks. A bomb squad robot was retrieving a suspicious device from near where the body of the gunman lay.

There were no reports of injuries.

Conan Nolan, Beverly White and Rosa Ordaz contributed to this report.

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