Peter Lance DUI-Series Part Thirteen
Peter Lance DUI-Series Part Thirteen
Peter Lance DUI-Series Part Thirteen
SALES OF PREVIOUSLY OWNED HOMES GO DOWN AGAIN IN JULY FOR THE THIRD TIME IN FOUR MONTHS; 2011 ON PACE TO BE WORST IN 14 YEARS
GUNMEN CROSS DESERT INTO ISRAEL, LAUNCH SERIES OF ATTACKS THAT KILL 8
F R I D A Y, A U G U S T 1 9 , 2 0 1 1
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NEW YORK Just when Wall Street seemed to have settled down, a barrage of bad economic reports collided with fresh worries about European banks Thursday and triggered a global sell-off in stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 419 points a return to the wild swings that gripped the stock market last week. Stocks were only part of a dramatic day across the financial markets. The price of oil fell more than $5, gold set another record, the governments 10-year Treasury note hit its lowest yield, and the average mortgage rate fell to its lowest in at least 40
years. The selling began in Asia, where Japanese exports fell for a fifth straight month, and continued in Europe, where bank stocks were hammered because of worries about debt problems there, which have proved hard to contain. On Wall Street, the losses wiped out much of the roughly 700 points that the Dow had gained over five days. Some investors who bought in the middle of last week decided to sell after they were confronted with a raft of bad news about the economy: More people joined the unemployment line last week than at any time in the past month. The number of people filing claims for unemployment benefits rose to
408,000, or 9,000 more than the week before. Inflation at the consumer level in July was the highest since March. More expensive gas, food, clothes and other necessities are squeezing household budgets at a time when most people arent getting raises. Sales of previously occupied homes fell in July for the third time in four months more trouble for a housing market that cant seem to turn itself around. This year is on pace to be the worst since 1997 for home sales. Manufacturing has sharply weakened in the mid-Atlantic states, according to a report from the Federal Reserve. Manufacturing has been one of the strongest parts of the economy since the recession
ended in 2009, but its growth has slowed this year. The manufacturing news was especially bleak on an already bad day, said Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at brokerage BTIG. He called the Fed report an atrocious set of numbers. That really set the market on its head, he said. Wall Street and other financial markets have wrestled for several weeks with fears that a new recession might be in the offing. Morgan Stanley economists said in a report Thursday that the U.S. and Europe are dangerously close to recession.
SACRAMENTO The state auditors office is adding teacher pensions to the list of high-risk issues facing California government. A report released Thursday added the pension fund because it cant pay retirement benefits beyond the next 30 years. The pension problem was added to a list of risks that also includes Californias chronic budget deficit, retiree health costs and prison crowding. The California State Teachers Retirement System reported in March that it had only 71 percent of the assets needed to cover retirement costs for its 852,000 members and family members. The estimated shortfall is $56 billion. School districts and educators pay for pensions, but the amount has not changed for decades. Both the pension board and Gov. Jerry Brown have called for funding changes, which the legislature must approve.
Travelers carry their baggage into the new terminal at Santa Barbara Airport on its first full day of operation.
Its no LAX, but the new Santa Barbara Airport terminal offered amenities much more akin to those found in its bigger counterparts when it welcomed its first departing passengers on a brilliant Thursday morning.
A scarlet banner draped from the Spanish Colonial Revival style building and the words grand opening scrolling across the checkin counter screens informed passengers and visitors they were some of the first to use the new facility. Passengers coming off the first flights of the morning found their way to the new baggage
claim, now located inside the terminal near the escalator that carries arriving passengers downstairs from their gates. The baggage claims are going to be a lot better, Aline Faucett, a 43-year Santa Barbara resident, told the News-Press.
In what has now become a nearly eight-month investigation into the Santa Barbara Police Department and its award winning Top DUI Officer Kasi Beutel, the story of how the city of Santa Barbara has reacted to the criminal fraud investigation by the California Department of Insurance underscores the perceptions by many of just how far city officials have been willing to go to protect the 39-year-old officer from possible criminal charges in the face of a growing scandal suggesting that during her time in uniform she falsified evidence, witnessed forged blood test waivers and withheld exculpatory evidence from defendants, while earlier committing perjury in state and federal court proceedings and acting to suborn perjury in 2005. The effort by the city attorney to affirmatively clear Officer Beutel in that Department of Insurance fraud probe potentially runs counter to the pledge made by Mayor Helene Schneider and City Administrator Jim Armstrong on Aug. 2 that under the City Charter it was the duty of the city administrator, city attorney and chief of police to review those allegations (in the News-Press series) and, if necessary, take appropriate action to initiate discipline, outside investigations etc. In fact, the latest evidence uncovered in this investigation shows that City Attorney Stephen Wiley went to lengths to influence an investigator from the Department of Insurance Fraud Division to close out the initial probe. The workers compensation claim Officer Beutel filed Nov. 14, 2009 stems from the incident described in Part Two of this series in which she stopped commercial fisherman Michael Kenny on suspicion of DUI and ended up shooting him with a Taser at point blank range with a charge of 50,000 volts. After Mr. Kenny pulled the Taser probes from his chest and ran, he was apprehended a few blocks away and later charged with driving under the influence, battery on a peace officer and resisting arrest. When a blood test later proved that his blood alcohol content was .07 under the legal limit and after the police report showed that Officer Beutel was not injured, the District Attorneys Office dropped the driving under the influence and battery charges and Mr. Kenny pled guilty to resisting arrest. His case wound its way through Superior Court for the next 22 months until June of this year, when his former lawyer Robert Goodman was presented with a letter dated June 3, from Julia Alcocer of the citys Risk Management Division. The letter sent to the district attorney asked that Mr. Kenny face additional criminal charges so
Dale Francisco
By KATHRYN WATSON
NEWS-PRESS STAFF WRITER
With the fountain of the Central Library courtyard in the background, incumbent City Council candidate Dale Francisco focused on what he deemed the basics of the councils civic responsibilities in his official campaign kick-off speech late Thursday afternoon. Public safety, municipal finance and infrastructure may not be glamorous, but thats what the people who vote for us want us to take care of, he told supporters in a seven-minute speech that was
Longtime Lompoc Police Chief and one-time mayor Jimmy Dean J.D. Smith was remembered Thursday by friends and family as a cops cop, a tough law enforcer who liked to put bad guys in jail and valued his family above all else. Mr. Smith died Aug. 12 at the age of 80. Mourners entering the Lompoc Foursquare Church were greeted by a cadre of police Explorers in their trademark light blue shirts standing watch over his badge the group is a legacy of Mr. Smiths tenure as the citys sixth police chief. He served faithfully, valiantly, aggressively for 16 years, said Pastor Bernie Federmann. The pews of Foursquare were filled with uniformed officers including a number of retirees hired long ago by the former chief as well as three past chiefs, three former mayors, current and long-ago council members and community members. The audience was representative of
Retired Lompoc Police agent Milt Baldwin reflects on the life of former Lompoc mayor and Police Chief Jimmy Dean J.D. Smith.
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SA N TA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
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A5
EVENTS
SOUTH COAST Film Screening: 5:30 p.m. Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Mary Craig Auditorium, 1130 State St. Floating Weeds. An aging actor returns to a small town and reunites with his former lover and illegitimate son. Michael Berry, Contemporary Chinese Culture Studies professor at UCSB will introduce the film and lead a Q-and-A. Part of Friday Night Films: Artists Pick series. Free. 963-4364. Sings Like Hell Series: 8 p.m. Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. Featuring Calexico, a diverse collective based around the duo of guitarist-vocalist Joey Burns and drummer John Convertino. $35 reserved seating. Butterflies Alive!: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily through Sept. 11. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 2559 Puesta del Sol Road. More than 1,000 free-flying butterflies in a garden setting. Bring camera. Free with museum admission: $10 adults; $7 seniors 65 and older, teens 13-17; $6 children 2-12; free to members and children younger than 2. 682-4711. Let It Go Yoga: 10:30 a.m.-noon. Bronfman Family Jewish Community Center, 524 Chapala St. Bring own workout mat, blanket and long scarf or tie for use as yoga belt. Free. 957-1115 or www.jewishsantabarbara.org. Laughter Yoga: 8:45 a.m. Luis Oasis Senior Center, 420 Soares Ave., Orcutt. Free. 937-9750 or 868-8021. Guided Meditation: 12:30- 1:45 p.m. Sansum Clinic, 317 W. Pueblo St. Instructor is Roger Ford, co-founder of Healing in America. Free. 681-8976, press 3. Santa Barbara County Courthouse Tours: 2 p.m. daily; 10:30 a.m. Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays. 1100 Anacapa St. Tours begin in Mural Room on second floor. Also: 10:30 a.m. first and third Saturday of month, courthouse gardens tour. Meet under large arch on Anacapa Street. Free. 962-6464. Pilates Mat: 9-10 a.m. Goleta Valley Community Center, Room 4, 5679 Hollister Ave., Goleta. All ages and levels. Small classes. $75 for six sessions; $15 per class for drop-ins; $10 per class for age 62 and older. 692-4906. Sierra Club Friday Night Hike: 6 p.m. meet at Santa Barbara Mission; 6:15 p.m. hike starts. Easy-to-moderate two- to four-mile round-trip. Bring flashlight. Free. For more information, call Al at 685-2145. NORTH COUNTY Quick Draw Art Festival: Various times and locations today and Saturday in Los Olivos. Quick draw will be held 11 a.m. Saturday at Lavinia Campbell Park, Grand Avenue and Alamo Pintado Road. Festival includes art demonstrations, art auction, food booths, music and childrens activities; quick draw involves artists racing to complete their work in 60 minutes. All proceeds go to support Los Olivos beautification efforts. Free admission. 688-1082 or www.losolivosca.com. Wine & Fire Weekend: Various times and locations today through Sunday in North County. Includes wine tasting, seminar, barrel tastings and open houses. Presented by Sta. Rita Hills Winegrowers Association. For ticket packages and more information, email info@staritahills. com or go to www.staritahills.com/events.html. PCPA Theaterfest Production: 7 p.m. today, Saturday and Aug. 26, previews. Marian Theatre, Allen Hancock College Campus, 800 S. College Drive, Santa Maria. American premiere of a musical about Hans Christian Andersen, directed by Scott Schwartz. $23 general, $20.70 seniors, $15 students and children. 922-8313 or go to pcpa.org. Olde Town Market: 5-7 p.m. Fridays through Aug. 26. 100 block of South H Street in Lompoc. Theme is International Night and features entertainment and activities related to theme. Sponsored by Lompoc Valley Chamber of Commerce and Visitors Bureau. Free admission. 736-4567. VENTURA COUNTY Chumash Garden: Noon-4 p.m. Sundays, 1-4 p.m. Thursdays-Fridays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays. Ojai Valley Museum, 130 W. Ojai Ave., Ojai. Living botanical garden that explains use of native plants by the Chumash for food, medicine, baskets and other crafts. Free with museum admission: $4 general, $1 youth 6-18, free to members and children 5 and younger. 640-1390 or www.ojaivalleymuseum.org. MEETINGS Santa Barbara city offices closed furlough day. Santa Maria city offices closed furlough day.
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SA N TA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
NEWS
Transient occupancy tax revenues came in at $1.7 million for the month of July, 12.1 percent growth over July 2010. July marked the third of four months to post double-digit growth.
Transient occupancy tax collections for the city of Santa Barbara came in at $1.7 million for the month of July, growing 12.1 percent over July 2010, the citys finance department said Thursday. That made July the third month of the past four to see double-digit growth, and was the strongest performance since July 2010, when TOT revenues grew 12.8 percent over the previous year. TOT, also known as bed tax, comes from hotel stays and short-term rentals, and typically sees strongest revenues in the summer months because of tourism. Summer months generally bring in well over $1 million each month, with July and August traditionally the highest months for revenue collection. This year a royal visit from William and Kate, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, boosted usually solid revenues even higher the last time one month drew more than $1.7 million was July of 2009. Kathy Janega-Dykes, president of the Santa Barbara Conference and Visitors Bureau, said hotels were sold out during the royal couples visit, and occupancy was up 5.6 percent over the previous July. Santa Barbara was in the international spotlight with the arrival of the royal couple in mid-July, and were certain this visit led to exposure for our area as well, she told the News-Press. We certainly were in the news
both nationally and internationally, and that of course led to more interest. With schools starting later this year, many families are vacationing longer, she said. More small groups of family members or friends are traveling together this summer than in the past, and often dont have advance reservations, leading to a lot of lastminute short hotel stays. International visitors make up a large percentage of tourism business as well, with international exposure bringing visitors from Sweden, France, Italy and Norway in addition to the usual showing of tourists from the United Kingdom and Germany, Ms. Janega-Dykes said. The meeting and conference sector is also continuing to recover, she said, particularly with mid-week business stays. Julys revenues started the 2012 fiscal year, which runs July 1 through June 30, with $1.7 million of its $12.8 million budget projections for FY 2012 TOT revenues. And despite Julys strong revenue collections, Ms. Janega-Dykes said shes hearing from hotels that based on their advanced reservations, August will be an even better month than July. TOT, along with sales and property tax, make up a major portion of the citys general fund revenues. Sales tax for the quarter ended June 30, 2011, will be reported in September. email: melseth@newspress.com
TOT, also known as bed tax, comes from hotel stays and short-term rentals, and typically sees strongest revenues in the summer months because of tourism.
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A default by any country would hurt the European banks that hold its bonds, plus American banks that have lent to their European counterparts.