Arnold Schwarzenegger filled a service trench, not a pothole 

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Arnold Schwarzenegger filled a service trench, not a pothole  Movie star and former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger went viral on Tuesday for posting a video of him personally filling a hole that he said was a pothole that had been bothering him and his neighbors in Brentwood "for weeks."But as it turns out, the hole was not technically a pothole. The video, which has amassed over 11 million views since it was posted on Tuesday afternoon, shows “The Terminator” actor filling the hole with packaged blacktop. “I always say, let’s not complain, let’s do something about it,” Schwarzenegger tweeted.  However, the hole that was pestering drivers wasn’t there by accident. According to a statement made by SoCalGas, the hole was an active service trench. “This location is a utility trench that relates to active, permitted work being performed at the location by the Southern California Gas Company,” SoCalGas said in a statement. “The Gas Company placed a temporary asphalt surface, which will ...

Homeless encampments growing next to Beverly Hills

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Homeless encampments growing next to Beverly Hills Some Beverly Hills residents and business owners are expressing concern for their safety as homeless encampments expand along the city’s border with Los Angeles.The encampments have appeared along San Vincente Boulevard near Orlando Avenue, just south of the upscale Beverly Center shopping mall.A homeless encampment along the Beverly Hill/Los Angeles border. April 13, 2023. (KTLA)A homeless encampment along the Beverly Hill/Los Angeles border. April 13, 2023. (KTLA)A homeless encampment along the Beverly Hill/Los Angeles border. April 13, 2023. (KTLA)Residents reported seeing a homeless woman, who they believe was intoxicated, lying naked on an abandoned couch.The most recent survey conducted by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority found approximately 69,000 people experiencing homelessness in L.A. County and 41,000 in the city in 2022. Unprovoked, violent attacks by homeless part of a broader problem, advocate says L.A. Mayor Karen Bass has launched a program dubbed Inside...

Kellogg's new cereal offers a colorful twist to a popular brand

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Kellogg's new cereal offers a colorful twist to a popular brand Kellogg's will soon offer a colorful twist on one of its most popular cereals. SpaghettiOs releases new flavor aimed toward millennials The breakfast company announced on Thursday that Rainbow Krispies would be available at retail locations nationwide later this month.Kellogg’s Rice Krispies Cereal Introduces Kellogg’s First Fruity Cereal With An Excellent Source Of Vitamin D In Every Bowl. (Kellogg Company)The company promises that the new cereal will be a nutritious and vibrant addition to everyone’s morning routine.“Whether you're looking to increase your daily Vitamin D intake or hungry for a tasty bowl of colorful goodness, Kellogg's Rainbow Krispies are here to add a boost to even the most mundane mornings,” Laura Newman, senior director of brand marketing at Kellogg Company, said in a statement. Starbucks Pink Drink coming to grocery stores nationwide Kellogg's also encouraged its customers to use the new cereal to create colorful Rice Krispy treat creations.Prices for th...

Whoops! 10 ways to make your home safer

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Whoops! 10 ways to make your home safer When I came home from the gym, all four limbs were working fine. But not for long.Moments later, I got out of the shower. While grabbing a towel, I dripped water on the floor. My labradoodle was napping nearby in the doorway between my bathroom and closet. Because heaven forbid I should disturb him, I took one giant step over his lazy body with my left foot. I planted my bare heel on the wood floor, hit water and did not stick the landing. I skidded like a cartoon character on a banana peel and crashed straight down onto my right knee.And that, my friends, is how you break your kneecap.Thanks to that one-second misstep, I am sporting a fashionable leg brace, crutches and a humble-pie attitude for four to six weeks. Oddly, I am grateful. I don’t mean to sound dire, but what if I’d slipped down a flight of stairs or fallen backward and hit my head on the bathtub? My knee will heal. I’ll be fine. But this little slip is a painful reminder of how quickly injuries at home can happen, and...

Florida man charged with six felonies in alleged Palo Alto sexual assault

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Florida man charged with six felonies in alleged Palo Alto sexual assault A 34-year-old Florida man accused of committing a daytime sexual assault at a Palo Alto pedestrian underpass — and arrested as a suspect after similar attacks near UC Berkeley — has been charged with six felonies in connection to the Peninsula incident, court records indicate.Daniel Widyanto Condronimpuno, of West Palm Beach, Fla., was arrested Tuesday in Berkeley in connection to Sunday afternoon’s alleged sexual assault of a woman at the California Avenue underpass in Palo Alto. The woman told police that she was struck from behind while walking her bike in the tunnel and was sexually assaulted after she fell to the ground.Court records revealed that Condronimpuno was formally charged with six felonies on Thursday in Santa Clara County. The charges include two counts of sexual penetration by force, violence, duress, menace or fear of bodily injury, one count of assault with intent to commit felony, one count of robbery in the second degree, one count of assault by means of f...

North Korea fires missile that may have been new type of weapon

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

North Korea fires missile that may have been new type of weapon By HYUNG-JIN KIM, KIM TONG-HYUNG and MARI YAMAGUCHISEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Thursday conducted its first intercontinental ballistic missile launch in a month, possibly testing a new more mobile, harder-to-detect missile for the first time, its neighbors said, as it extends its provocative run of weapons tests.Japan briefly urged residents on a northern island to take shelter in an indication of its vigilance over North Korea’s evolving missile threats.U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres strongly condemned the launch and reiterated his calls on North Korea to comply with U.N. resolutions banning such launches, reopen communications channels and resume dialogue toward peace and denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, his spokesman said.The missile was launched on a high angle from near the North Korean capital of Pyongyang and fell in the waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan following a 620-mile flight, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staffs said in a statement...

Truck thieves somehow take off with $100,000 worth of dimes

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Truck thieves somehow take off with $100,000 worth of dimes PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Thieves may not have been counting on finding a mountain of change when they broke into a truck filled with $750,000 in dimes, but they still made off with a chunk of the cargo and left coins scattered around a Philadelphia parking lot, authorities said.Authorities say the thieves apparently fled with at least $100,000. It’s not yet known how they carted off the mounds of dimes.The theft was reported around 6 a.m. Thursday. The tractor-trailer driver had picked up the dimes from the Philadelphia Mint on Wednesday, authorities said, and was planning to transport them to Florida on Thursday.It’s not clear how many people may have been involved in the theft or if they knew what the truck contained. Responding police officers found hundreds of dimes scattered all over the parking lot, and authorities were still trying to determine how much money was stolen.No arrests have been made.

Bob Lee knew his accused killer, San Francisco Police Chief says

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

Bob Lee knew his accused killer, San Francisco Police Chief says SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- Tech mogul Bob Lee was murdered in San Francisco by someone he knew, police and prosecutors said at a news conference Thursday. Lee, 43, was stabbed to death on April 4 by 38-year-old Nima Momeni, Police Chief Bill Scott told reporters. Momeni was arrested at his home in Emeryville early Thursday morning and booked into jail on one count of murder. Momeni is the owner of Expand IT, a Bay Area technology and security company, according to a LinkedIn profile. "We can confirm that Mr. Lee and Mr. Momeni knew each other," Chief Scott said. "Most people who commit homicides know the people who they kill. This has nothing to do with San Francisco. This has to do with human nature. Right now, Mr. Momeni is our focus as the single suspect of this case. I don't want to put out information that is going to come back and haunt us in this case. There is still more work to be done."Bob LeeThe Cash App founder was stabbed in the upscale Rincon Hill neighborhood near the Ba...

SF DA accuses Musk of 'reckless and irresponsible' statements about Lee stabbing

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

SF DA accuses Musk of 'reckless and irresponsible' statements about Lee stabbing SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins accused Twitter owner Elon Musk of making "reckless and irresponsible" statements about the killing of tech mogul Bob Lee following the arrest of another tech exec in connection with the crime."Reckless and irresponsible statements like those tweeted by Mr. Musk assumed incorrect circumstances about Mr. Lee's death," Jenkins said at a news conference about the arrest on Thursday, "served to mislead the world in their perceptions of San Francisco and also negatively impact the pursuit of justice."On Thursday, San Francisco PD confirmed the arrest of tech entrepreneur Nima Momeni and charged him with the murder of Lee.Following the initial incident, Musk was one of several high-profile media figures to leverage Lee's killing as an opportunity to criticize San Francisco and question public safety in the city. What we know about the alleged killer of Cash App founder Bob Lee "Many people I know have been severely a...

In Pentagon Leak, the Problem Is What’s Classified, Not What Got Out

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:01:41 GMT

In Pentagon Leak, the Problem Is What’s Classified, Not What Got Out Only death and taxes are certain in life, Ben Franklin wrote in 1789, though he could have done us a favor by also noting that we can count on our government to make exaggerated claims about the unauthorized publication of classified documents.Like clockwork, after a set of secret national security documents burst into public view last week, the Washington Post reported a “high level of panic” at the upper echelons of the Department of Defense, with officials “stunned” and “infuriated.” According to Politico, one Pentagon aide even said he was “sick to [his] stomach” over the alleged betrayal. The Department of Justice opened a criminal investigation, while John Kirby, the National Security Council spokesperson, warned, “This is information that has no business in the public domain. It is not intended for public consumption, and it should not be out there.”The intelligence documents appear to have entered the public domain in an unusual way — someone began sharing them, starting lat...