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Nathan Canilao
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Nathan Canilao
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SAN FRANCISCO — The future of women’s basketball was on full display at Chase Center on Sunday night.
And Cal had no answer for her.
Despite a valiant effort, Cal couldn’t stop Freshman sensation Jazzy Davidson as she scored 24 points in a 61-57 win for USC.
Sakima Walker finished with 13 points and 10 rebounds for Cal. Taylor Barnes also had 13 points and Lulu Twidale added 11 points.
Cal did just enough to trail by just three points at halftime.
But Cal quickly took back the momentum coming out of the halftime break. The Bears scored seven unanswered points to start the third quarter to take a three-point lead and force USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb to call a timeout.
After scoring 14 points in the first half, Cal held Davidson to just three points in the third quarter.
Cal’s lead ballooned to as large as nine in the third quarter, but USC ended the quarter on a 10-3 run to come within two points of Cal’s lead heading into the fourth quarter.
USC took a four-point lead with under 90 seconds left on a jumper from Kara Dunn. Two free throws from Gisella Maul cut the Trojans’ lead to just two at the 1:15 mark.
But a costly turnover down two and a missed free throw trailing by Walker was the difference late as USC hit every clutch shot at the line to seal the win.
Despite a hot-scoring start from Davidson, Cal kept up with the high-powered USC offense.
The Bears shot 41% from the field and didn’t allow USC to find a secondary scorer in the first half. Davidson scored 14 points through the first two quarters, but no other USC player scored more than seven.
USC forced 11 Cal turnovers that led to nine points, helping the Trojans build a 31-28 advantage by halftime.
Cal will host Cal Poly next Sunday.
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Nathan Canilao
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Members of Brownie Troop 60125 volunteered at the Family Giving Tree warehouse in Sunnyvale on Dec. 7, sorting, wrapping and organizing gifts and getting them ready for bagging for the nonprofit’s Holiday Wish Drive. The troop also hosted a Virtual Giving Tree along with Junior Troop 60174, adopting 25 wish cards, and used cookie sale proceeds to shop for gifts at Pennyland Toys in Campbell, which offered the troops a discount. Donations to the Virtual Giving Trees can be made until 9 p.m. on Jan. 15, 2026, at https://wishdrive.org/girlscouttroop60125
Founded in Milpitas and now located in Santa Clara, Family Giving Tree has already collected more than 24,000 gifts this season and is working toward helping 50,000 children and families across the Bay Area, according to Evelyn Huynh, director of community resource development.
Grammy-nominated pianist Joyce Yang will perform with the Peninsula Symphony Jan. 17, 2026, in a program balancing the First Concerto of Beethoven with three orchestral visions of the story of “Romeo and Juliet.” Works by Strauss, Prokofiev and Diamond complete this program, to be performed at Campbell’s Heritage Theatre, located at 1 W Campbell Ave.
The concert starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $35-$50 at https://peninsulasymphony.my.salesforce-sites.com/ticket. Children and students are admitted for free.
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Anne Gelhaus
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Despite large swaths of San Francisco struggling with blackouts as heavy rainstorms moved through the Bay Area on Saturday night, the Warriors’ 119-116 over the Suns was not lacking for juice.
Less than 48 hours after the Suns beat Golden State in a chippy one-point game, the teams squared off again, this time in the Bay Area.
Like many of Golden State’s games this season, it was competitive late into the fourth quarter.
With a minute showing on the clock, Curry brought the ball up with the Warriors leading by just two. Curry hit Gary Payton II, who found Jimmy Butler on the baseline for a contested layup that he turned into an and-1 score and a 115-112 lead.
Devin Booker responded by driving for an and-1 layup of his own five seconds later. Collin Gillespie had a chance to take the lead on an open corner three, but he missed, Brandin Podziemski grabbed a contested rebound, and Steph Curry made two free throws to push the lead back to four.
But Gillespie made it a 117-116 game when his one-legged 3-pointer in the corner went cleanly through the rim. The Suns elected not to foul, and let Steph Curry make a baseline layup with 5.7 seconds remaining. The Suns missed a desperation attempt from midcourt to end the wild game.
Curry scored a team-high 27 and Butler put up 25 points for Golden State, and Will Richard added 20. Booker led Phoenix with 38 points, and Dillon Brooks scored 22.
It was abundantly clear early on that neither side had much love for the other.
There were three technical fouls handed out and one ejection.
Draymond Green was ejected in the second quarter after shoving Gillespie from behind and arguing with the officials afterwards.
Booker also got whacked with a tech for complaining to Pat Fraher’s crew over what he believed to be an uncalled foul on Curry.
Brooks, the longtime Warriors nemesis, and Butler had a brief incident when Butler flung the ball at Brooks after a Warriors bucket, but no technical was called.
The Suns jumped out to a 44-32 lead after one quarter, but the Warriors cut the deficit to 67-64 at halftime thanks to Richard and Butler’s aggression. The Warriors led 93-87 after three quarters.
The Warriors (14-15) will remain in the Bay Area and will welcome the Magic to Chase Center on Monday.
Turnovers, turnovers, turnovers
Steve Kerr has tried quite possibly every lineup combination possible, attempted a multitude of tactics this season, all in aims of finding a way of mitigating the Warriors’ turnover-happy ways.
None of them are working, and nothing he did seemed to work on Saturday night. After giving up 30 points on 20 turnovers on Thursday, Golden State did not benefit from being back home.
The Warriors turned the ball over 13 times in the first half alone, and 20 times overall. Those giveaways led to 15 points for Phoenix.
Will Richard makes most of opportunity
One adjustment Kerr made in rainy San Francisco was giving an unheralded rookie another chance. After starting a dozen games in November and early December, the second-round rookie Richard was a healthy scratch for each of the past three losses.
But with the team in need of a spark, Kerr went back to the kid from Georgia.
He made the most of his first action in almost two weeks when he checked in during the first half in lieu of Buddy Hield. The rookie out of Florida scored 20 points, shooting 6 of 7 in the process, including 4-of-4 on 3-pointers and 4-of-4 from the line.
Jonathan Kuminga out with illness
One game after rejoining the Warriors’ rotation, Jonathan Kuminga remained at home with an unspecified illness. Curry also previously missed time with an illness.
Kuminga rejoined the rotation after three consecutive healthy scratches, and produced two points and four rebounds in 10 minutes of action.
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Joseph Dycus
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SAN JOSE — Collin Graf may have been born to play hockey. He certainly didn’t know it at the time.
But these days, Graf is making headlines on the ice. Most recently, the second-year Sharks forward scored two goals Thursday night in a 5-3 loss to the Dallas Stars, notching the first multi-goal game of his career.
Playing on San Jose’s top line with Macklin Celebrini and rookie Igor Chernyshov, Graf finished off a pass from Celebrini in the crease and potted another net-front pass from Chernyshov.
This season has been Graf’s NHL breakout. He stuck on the Sharks’ roster out of training camp and has played in 34 of 35 games, accumulating 18 points.
“He’s put in a lot of work,” Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky said. “When he first came in, in the NHL, the pace is extremely high. So he went in after the summer, put a lot of work in last year to get the pace up. And now his details, his hockey sense is really what sticks out the most. He’s a smart individual. And now he’s added another layer to his game with the checking component.”
Graf, 23, grew up as the son of engineers Robert and Theresa in Lincoln, Massachusetts, and his initial foray onto the ice came for a different reason.
“My mom just wanted me to learn how to skate,” Graf said. “And then when I was skating, there were hockey players on the other side of the ice, and I guess I told my mom that I wanted to do that.
“So then it took me like two years to get good enough at skating to become a hockey player. And ever since, I’ve been a hockey player.”

A hockey player, but not one who was ticketed to be a professional from the beginning. Graf was undersized and undrafted coming out of juniors at 5-foot-8 and 145 pounds. He didn’t play for a Canadian major junior team or in the American junior leagues, instead staying within the Boston Bruins’ junior development program.
He signed with Union College in 2021, scoring 11 goals and 22 points in his freshman season. Then he transferred to Quinnipiac, where he led the Bobcats with 58 points as they won the national championship.
He thought then about turning pro then but opted to return for one more year.
“I met with teams, and I definitely considered it,” Graf said. “My linemates, we all ended up signing the next year. We talked about it, and we wanted to come back. We had a good group of guys. They’re my buddies. My best friends are still from college to this day. It was a great decision on my part, just in terms of getting bigger, stronger, becoming more mature as a human.”

Graf continued to develop his all-around game and signed with San Jose after Quinnipiac’s season ended in April 2024. He played immediately, recording a point in his second career game and finishing with two in seven games played as the Sharks wrapped up the last-place season that landed them Celebrini with the No. 1 overall pick.
The next season wasn’t always glamorous for Graf. Though he joined Celebrini for 33 games with the Sharks and compiled 11 points, he spent most of the year in the AHL with the Barracuda, putting up 35 points in 40 games.
It’s uncertain how long he’ll stay on the Sharks’ top line this year. Will Smith is due back before long from an upper-body injury, and Warsofsky said he may shuffle San Jose’s lines before Saturday’s game against Seattle.
But after adjusting to the pace of the game, Graf has made enough headway that he is quickly becoming a part of the Sharks’ long-term plans.

“He’s transformed his game from what he was in college,” Warsofsky said. “He’s getting to the point where he’s accepting that more and more. There’s another level we continue to push and get to, but he’s done a really good job. He’s here late in the facility. You can tell he really wants it, and that’s an important piece of the whole thing.”
For Celebrini, who jumped into the NHL minted as a franchise star from the get-go, Graf’s intelligence is a separator that has emerged as he’s grinded his way to the highest level.
“He’s one of the smarter players on the ice, and he’s always in the right spot with a great stick,” Celebrini said. “That’s why he’s been so great on our PK as well, his ability to disrupt plays and read plays before they happen. It helps when you’re playing with him and trying to create offense. He’s seeing the same things as I am.”

It’s been a dream journey for Graf to reach this point. He’s already blown his own expectations out of the water.
“When I first went into college, I wasn’t thinking about the NHL or pro hockey,” Graf said.
Now he has the best in the game singing his praises.
“We’ve built a good relationship,” Celebrini said. “The play speaks for itself. He’s just so smart and it’s easy to play off him because he’s always thinking two steps ahead.”

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Christian Babcock
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SAN RAMON — A cluster of earthquakes struck the San Ramon area Friday night, continuing a pattern of seismic activity in recent weeks, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Things kicked off at 7:41 p.m. with a magnitude 2.5 centered 3.1 miles southeast of the city.
It was followed by a pair of quakes at 7:49 p.m. – a magnitude 2.9 and a magnitude 3.8. The earthquakes were centered 3.1 miles and 2.4 miles, respectively, southeast of the city.
The biggest of the bunch – a magnitude 4.0 – hit at 7:56 p.m. 3.1 miles southeast of the city.
The earthquake swarm continued with a magnitude 3.1 at 7:57 p.m. and a magnitude 2.9 at 8:10 p.m. – the temblors were centered about 2.4 miles southeast of the city.
There were no immediate reports of injuries of damage, but BART ran trains at reduced speeds until it completed safety inspections, resulting in a 20-minute delay.
Regular train service resumed just before 8:45 p.m., according to the transit agency.
Check back for updates.
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Jason Green
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OAKLAND — One man was killed and another man was wounded early Friday in a shooting in the San Antonio district of East Oakland, authorities said.
No information was immediately released about either man.
The shooting happened about 3:15 a.m. in the 1600 block of Solano Way. Police did not release details about what led up to the shooting.
The man killed was pronounced deceased at the scene. The other man was taken to a hospital where he was in stable condition.
The killing is the 65th homicide investigated by Oakland police this year. Last year at this time, police had investigated 78 homicides in the city.
Anyone with information may contact investigators at 510-238-3821 or 510-238-7950.
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Harry Harris
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SAN RAMON – A magnitude 3.0 quake jolted the Tri-Valley area late Tuesday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The earthquake hit around 10:11 p.m. about 2.6 miles southeast of San Ramon, 3.6 miles north of Dublin and 5.6 miles south-southeast of Danville, the USGS reported.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage.
The quake was felt as far away as San Rafael, Alameda and Stockton, according to the USGS.
It was the area’s second noteworthy earthquake of the day. Around 5:53 a.m., a magnitude 3.1 quake struck about 3.1 miles southeast of San Ramon, the USGS reported.
Both came just eight days after three temblors rattled the same area over the course of about 100 minutes. More than 30 earthquakes also were recorded between midnight and 10:15 a.m. on Dec. 8, according to CalTech’s California Earthquake Center.
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Jason Green
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Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.
Re: “Judge closes case for former officer” (Page A1, Dec. 13).
The appointed Alameda County District Attorney, Ursula Jones Dickson, was the endorsed candidate of the Pamela Price recall committee, which promised to end the alleged coddling of criminals. Indeed, Jones Dickson promises justice by prosecuting more children as adults and sending them to adult prisons.
Now, though, she has finally found a judge to drop manslaughter charges against the killer of Steven Taylor, former San Leandro cop Jason Fletcher. This despite then-District Attorney Nancy O’Malley’s Probable Cause Declaration that when he was shot after being tased twice, “Mr. Taylor was struggling to remain standing as he pointed the bat at the ground …” and “posed no threat of imminent deadly force or serious bodily injury to defendant Fletcher or anyone else.” Jones Dickson considers dropping the charges justice.
I would like a district attorney who has only one standard of justice.
Bob Britton
Castro Valley
Re: “Oakland surrenders in ‘coal war’ battle” (Page A1, Dec. 11).
Anyone who truly cares about future generations and acknowledges the impacts of climate change and the health risks of coal-related particulate pollution can’t in their right mind want to locally handle, ship and ultimately facilitate the burning of several million tons of coal annually.
If Oakland Bulk & Oversized Terminal LLC and its partners intend to develop their export terminal for coal, then they should build the specialized, enclosed, dome-shaped terminal they had said they would build to address coal dust health concerns — dust that could harm port workers and nearby residents.
The best outcome would be building a bulk terminal to export hundreds of commodities, excluding coal. If there’s still an option to stop coal as an export commodity here by gathering additional environmental health information, then that pathway should be pursued.
Dan Kalb
Oakland
As your family gathers for the holidays, ask about your family’s health history. Knowing your family’s health history can be key to a longer, healthier life. And it can help your health care provider identify traits that may put you at risk for certain health conditions or diseases.
Talk to immediate family members. Include three generations. Grandparents, parents, siblings, aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews may all have helpful information. Gather information about major medical conditions, age of onset, and for deceased relatives, causes of death. If you have a family history of a condition, it’s important to know this. While you can’t change your genetic makeup, there may be steps you can take now that could help you stay healthy.
Felicia Ziomek
Livermore
Our Congress wants health care for all Americans. We all want health care for all Americans. But let’s do it the right way. The current Obamacare program is not sustainable. Replete with the fraud, waste and corruption that has been uncovered — finally — it is obvious that it is costing far more than it should. Extending the existing subsidies without improving the program and its controls is simply throwing good money after bad.
Let’s get control of the current program, drive out the fraud, waste and corruption, so we can see what the existing program would cost if managed properly. Then we can determine how much we can afford to spend and design a well-controlled program that meets our needs. Extending the current payouts without controlling whether the money is spent appropriately, although easier, is simply irresponsible.
John Griggs
Danville
Why has Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth ordered our largest, most lethal aircraft carrier with supporting destroyers and guided missile ships to sail near Venezuela? Donald Trump says it’s to stop drug traffickers, yet, at the same time, he released from prison the Honduran ex-president, who was convicted of massive cocaine trafficking into our country.
The aircraft carrier was moved from the eastern Mediterranean, near the Ukraine conflict. Trump seems to be abandoning our allies in Europe, giving Russia the opportunity to expand its war-stolen territory in Ukraine, while at the same time, he’s picking a fight in our hemisphere with fishermen in small boats.
Is the “emperor” crazy? Are his true loyalties toward aggressive dictators like Vladimir Putin? Americans need to know.
China is watching us closely and assessing whether we would defend Taiwan, Japan and Korea if they pulled a “Putin” in the western Pacific.
Bruce Joffe
Piedmont
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A San Jose man was killed Sunday morning when his pickup truck veered off Highway 17 in Santa Cruz County and slammed into a tree, authorities said.
The crash happened around 10:39 a.m. Dec. 14 in the southbound lanes just south of Vine Hill Road, near the north edge of Scotts Valley, according to the California Highway Patrol’s Santa Cruz office.
CHP investigators said the 49-year-old man was driving a 2025 Toyota Tacoma when, for reasons still under investigation, the truck left the roadway and struck a tree near the right shoulder. The vehicle then veered back across the lanes and hit the center barrier.
Despite life-saving efforts by medical personnel, the driver was pronounced dead at the scene, the CHP said. He was not immediately identified.
Authorities said it is not yet known whether alcohol or drugs played a role in the crash. Anyone with relevant information is asked to contact the CHP at (831) 796-2160.
Copyright © 2025 Bay City News, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication, rebroadcast or redistribution without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. Bay City News is a 24/7 news service covering the greater Bay Area.
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A man was arrested Saturday evening after a police pursuit on Highway 1 in San Mateo County that included an officer firing a single shot, authorities said Sunday.
The California Highway Patrol said officers responded at around 5 p.m. to reports of a black Acura driving recklessly on Highway 1 near Highway 84.
Officers attempted to stop the driver after the Acura was spotted on Highway 1 near Verde Road, but the driver kept going, authorities said. CHP officers pursued the vehicle northbound and coordinated with the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office.
The pursuit ended when officers were able to stop the Acura driver near Triple D Ranch, the CHP said.
An officer discharged one shot while responding to the incident, but there were no injuries.
The man driving the Acura was taken into custody without further incident, authorities said.
Traffic on Highway 1 was closed between Lobitos Creek and Tunitas Creek in coastal San Mateo County on Saturday night while authorities investigated, according to the CHP.
The incident remains under investigation.
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Ryan Macasero, Caelyn Pender
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SANTA CLARA — Brandon Aiyuk has officially left the 49ers’ building — and roster, likely forever.
Aiyuk’s stalled comeback from last season’s knee injury turned into such a vanishing act that the 49ers reclassified his status Saturday as “reserve/left squad.”
Aiyuk did not previously count against the 53-man roster with his reserve/physically-unable-to-perform list, and now the 49ers are announcing he’s not returning this season — nor essentially in the foreseeable future.
Although the 49ers voided $27 million in 2026 guarantees back in late July for reportedly violating terms of his knee rehabilitation, Aiyuk maintained a very visible presence during training camp and the first month of the season as he shadowed wide receivers’ warmups.
He vanished from the media’s sight once October arrived, although 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch stated that Aiyuk continued to show up for early-morning therapy sessions.
Aiyuk has not officially commented to the media since last season.
Teammates have expressed concern for Aiyuk and, in recent days, the tone shifted to a past-tense about his 49ers career, which began as a 2020 first-round draft pick and peaked with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons in 2022 and ’23.
Aiyuk and the 49ers clashed throughout the 2024 offseason before he agreed to a four-year extension worth $30 million annually. His right knee’s ligaments and meniscus were torn in a devastating hit against the Kansas City Chiefs in October 2024.
“At this point, it doesn’t seem like he’s coming back. I try my best not to think about it,” tight end George Kittle said Thursday. “I love Brandon. He’s one of my best teammates I’ve played with. We have a lot of moments together from his rookie year (in 2020). Every year we have a ton of memories. That’s the Brandon I remember.
“I wish he was here. It kind of just makes me sad so I just push it to the side,” Kittle added. “Look, we have to make to due with what we have in the locker room, and the guys that want to be here are here.”
Jauan Jennings is the only 49ers wide receiver with a touchdown catch this season, and his five are tied for the team lead with Kittle and running back Christian McCaffrey, the latter of whom surfaced on Saturday’s injury report with a back issue that has him questionable for Sunday’s game between the 49ers (9-4) and visiting Tennessee Titans (2-11).
Quarterback Brock Purdy, along with Kittle, praised how special Aiyuk was to the 49ers’ offense, when healthy.
“He did it all at receiver,” Purdy said Thursday. “So, he did a great job with that. And obviously I wish he was healthy to be able to be with us and play and roll, but like I said before, and I’ve said in the past, all the things off the field, that’s not my place to say anything. All I can say is I’d love to play with him and in the past we’ve had such great times together and so that’s all I can really say about it.”
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Cam Inman
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Christian Babcock
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OAKLAND — Nearly two years after Oakland police Officer Tuan Le was gunned down while pursuing suspects in a series of armed burglaries at a marijuana grow facility, nine people are in custody and facing a slew of federal charges, prosecutors said.
Seven of the defendants — Allen Brown, Sebron Russell, Marquise Cooper, Janiero Booth, Jowaun Jones, Shawn McGee and Salvador Munguia — are charged with conspiring to distribute, possessing with intent to distribute and attempting to possess with intent to distribute more than 100 marijuana plants, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Brown and Russell are also charged with discharging and brandishing a firearm in connection with a drug-trafficking crime.
The remaining defendants — Jasmine Kumar and Felicia Sanders — are charged with accessory after the fact.
They all made their initial appearances Thursday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco.
The charges stem from three armed burglaries of a marijuana grow facility at 499 Embarcadero between the late evening hours of Dec. 28 and the early morning hours of Dec. 29, 2023, according to an indictment filed Nov. 20 and unsealed Thursday.
The indictment alleges Brown, Russell, Cooper and an unnamed co-conspirator organized and carried out the burglaries. They also recruited Booth, Jones, McGee and Munguia for the final burglary, which happened around 4 a.m., prosecutors said.
More than 100 marijuana plants were allegedly stolen from the facility, prosecutors said.
Le and his partner were among the officers dispatched to the third burglary. The pair, who were working undercover at the time, arrived to find the suspects leaving the facility.
The unnamed co-conspirator pointed a black pistol at the officers’ unmarked truck and got into an Infiniti, which was among several suspect vehicles that then left the scene, according to the indictment. Prosecutors identified Brown as the driver of the Infiniti.
Le and his partner followed one of the suspect vehicles, a Chevrolet Malibu, along Embarcadero. As they approached the on-ramp to southbound Interstate 880, Brown pulled behind the officers and the unnamed co-conspirator, who was in the front passenger seat of the Infiniti, fired more than 20 shots, the indictment alleges.
Le was hit in the head and later died of his injuries at an area hospital, prosecutors said.
Following Le’s death, Kumar, the shooter’s girlfriend, and Sanders, the shooter’s mother, helped him elude authorities, including by furnishing him with a one-way plane ticket, prosecutors said.
If convicted of their respective charges, Brown and Russell face up to life in prison; Cooper, Booth, Jones, McGee and Munguia up to 40 years in prison; and Kumar and Sanders up to 15 years in prison.
Some of the defendants are scheduled to appear for bail proceedings early next week.
Check back for updates.
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Jason Green
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It’s going to be a busy weekend at San Jose’s Christmas in the Park.
VTA’s annual Stuff the Bus, a donation campaign in partnership with the U.S. Marines Toys for Tots program, returns to Plaza de Cesar Chavez on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. VTA staff and U.S. Marines will be on hand to collect new, unwrapped donations of toys and books, as well any monetary gifts. They’re looking for gifts appropriate for kids ranging from newborns to mid-teens, with one caveat: No plush toys.
And on Sunday, the 14th annual Santa Run Silicon Valley will make its way through downtown San Jose, with the 5K’s runners and walkers finishing the race at Plaza de Cesar Chavez. You can still register for either the main race, which starts at 3 p.m., or the kids’ Reindeer Dash at 4:30 p.m. at www.santarunsv.com.
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Sal Pizarro
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The Warriors’ last two games felt like a fever dream.
That, or it’s been so long since they last played that the memories are getting fuzzy.
Did we really see Pat Spencer turning into the second coming of Jeremy Lin? Did the Dubs really beat the Cleveland Cavaliers and then dismantle the Chicago Bulls?
Did they have swagger? Momentum?
This Spencsanity that’s sweeping through the Bay is clearly infectious and possibly dangerous.
Maybe we should take a breath.
Because if you look closely at what actually happened this past weekend, you realize two things:
1. The Warriors played well.
2. We still know absolutely nothing about this basketball team.
Let’s start with the Dubs’ victims: The Cleveland Cavaliers are swooning hard. They are a shell of last year’s team, a squad playing with all the cohesion of a middle school group project.
And the Bulls? The Bulls are doing that thing they do best: aiming for the bottom with the precision of a heat-seeking missile. Beating Chicago right now isn’t a statement; it’s a civic duty.
So, yes, the Warriors won. They entered this quasi-bye week — a scheduling quirk that feels like a gift from the heavens — feeling good, if a bit conflicted. But let’s be honest: Those wins don’t change anything. They’re just delicious, sugary, satisfying empty calories. They offer zero nutritional value for a team trying to figure out if it’s a contender or a pretender.
The actual test? That starts now.
The Warriors’ next five games leading into Christmas will tell us a lot.
No more tanking Bulls. No more crumbling Cavs. The upcoming slate features a gauntlet of teams sitting right there in the Warriors’ “corridor” of the Western Conference — the Timberwolves, Suns, Blazers and — sprinkled with an Eastern Conference playoff team — the Magic — that isn’t above resorting to pugilism to win.
This is the “put up or shut up” portion of the program for the Dubs. If the Warriors are actually turning a corner, this is where they prove it. If the swagger is real, it survives a Thursday night against a team desperate for playoff seeding, not just a Sunday stroll against a team whose success is determined by how many lottery balls they have at the end of the campaign.
The good news? Much-needed reinforcements are coming. Specifically, the reinforcement. Steph Curry is expected to be back for Friday’s game against the Timberwolves. He won’t solve all the Warriors’ problems, but he can cover up a great deal of them. He is still the deodorant for an organization that often carries a desperate scent.
With 30 back, anything is possible, even making sense of whatever this roster is.
But even Steph’s return can’t solve the Warriors’ biggest problem — the 6-foot-7 issue sitting on the end of the bench:
Against the Bulls, in a game where everyone ate, Kuminga starved. A ‘DNP-CD’ against a bottom-barrel team is not a “rest day.” It’s a message.
And for those of you hoping this was just a one-off—a little “tough love” motivational tactic—I wouldn’t hold your breath. Steve Kerr’s leash isn’t just short with JK right now; it’s non-existent.
He’s done to the point where he didn’t even try to sugarcoat things on his weekly flagship radio hit:
“He has not played well lately, that’s why I went away from him in the last game,” Kerr said Tuesday on 95.7 The Game (KBMZ-FM). “It’s no different than any other player on the team — other than the obvious: Steph, Jimmy, Draymond, those guys are going to play no matter what because… I know what I’m going to get from them every night.”
That’s Kerr making it clear: Stars get star treatment — and you, Jonathan Kuminga, are no star.
“He’s obviously a guy with a lot of ambition, which I love. He wants to be a star. He’s got the ability that gives him that hope and gives us that hope. But there has to be a consistent level of play in order to achieve that,” Kerr said. “The potential is there.”
“It has been a discussion for many years,” Kerr added. “His play tailed off… It is what it is.”
Kerr has always valued process over potential, execution over athleticism. Right now, Kuminga is offering buckets of the latter and thimbles of the former.
And after how many years of this back-and-forth, Kerr is ready to move forward. Jan. 15 — the first day the Warriors can trade Kuminga — can’t come soon enough.
But where will the Warriors stand then?
Can the “Pat Spencer Era” endure, or will it quickly be relegated to the “remember that?” category?
Can Curry get back in the lineup and take an operation that’s showing signs of cohesion to that next level?
Can this team get out of its own way for a couple of weeks?
It truly is never dull in the Bay. But don’t let that nice weekend getaway fool you — the Warriors are a long way from figuring this thing out, and real tests are coming.
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Dieter Kurtenbach
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SAN FRANCISCO – Jimmy Butler likes to refer to Steph Curry as “Batman,” an otherworldly talent who can bail the Warriors out of many a tough spot.
After a five-game absence caused by a left quad injury suffered on Nov. 26 against the Rockets, Golden State’s superhero is set to return during Friday’s home game against the Timberwolves.
The Warriors will have had four days off between Sunday’s blowout victory in Chicago and the matchup with Minnesota, thanks to the NBA Cup schedule.
Curry spent the last three road games working out with the Warriors’ medical staff in the Bay Area and practiced with the team at Chase Center on Wednesday afternoon.
“For Friday, he’s day-to-day, but it’s looking good,” coach Steve Kerr said.
Curry was a full participant in practice, and was involved in the team’s scrimmage.
The team survived Curry’s absence, going 3-2 and putting up a surprising 2-1 record on the most recent Eastern Conference trip to Philadelphia, Cleveland and Chicago.
Unheralded 29-year-old guard Pat Spencer was a revelation as an athletic and energetic pick-and-roll guard, scoring in double-figures in each of the last four games while starting twice.
Spencer will head back to the bench as Golden State’s franchise player returns, but still expect him to get plenty of minutes.
“I think it’s the shooting, the threat from long range,” Kerr said of Spencer. “He’ll be in the rotation for sure.”.
In his 17th season, Curry has remained an elite player. He is averaging 27.9 points and 4.0 assists per game while shooting 39.1% from behind the 3-point line.
He has scored at least 30 points in seven of the 16 games he has played this season, including three 40-point games.
His next 40-point game will break a tie (44 games) with Michael Jordan for the most games with at least 40 points scored since turning 30.
This was the second absence of the season for Curry. He missed three games in October and early November with a severe illness that had him bedridden for several days.
Frontcourt veteran Draymond Green (right foot) is expected to be available for Friday’s matchup with Minnesota, the first time the teams have played since the Timberwolves eliminated the Warriors in five games during the second round of last spring’s playoffs.
Green missed the past two games with a right foot sprain suffered during the Philadelphia loss, which is also the last game Al Horford played. Horford has played in only one game since Nov. 21 against the Trail Blazers, and will remain out for Friday with sciatica.
While Curry, Green and Horford are expected to receive minutes, Jonathan Kuminga’s status is uncertain.
The forward, who signed a two-year, $46 million extension this summer, was a healthy scratch for the Warriors in Chicago, drawing speculation about his future with the team. Kerr said he spoke to Kuminga before practice, and is willing to be “coached hard.”
“I can imagine it’s not easy for him, and we’ve talked about the situation,” Kerr said. “My desire for JK is for him to become the best player he can be, regardless of where he ends up, whether it’s here or elsewhere.”

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Joseph Dycus
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OAKLAND — Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson’s office formally asked a judge this week to dismiss the manslaughter case against the former San Leandro police officer accused of fatally shooting Steven Taylor during an April 2020 shoplifting call.
The request by Jones Dickson’s administration — which is expected to be argued at a hearing Friday morning — marks yet another twist in the case against Jason Fletcher, who was charged with manslaughter months after the killing but has yet to face trial amid a rotating cast of district attorneys. His case has since become a rallying cry by advocates pushing for greater accountability among law enforcement officers who use deadly force.
If granted, the dismissal would represent an abrupt end to the first police officer charged in an on-duty killing in Alameda County since BART Officer Johannes Mehserle was tried — and convicted — in the fatal shooting of Oscar Grant more than 15 years ago. Mehserle was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in July 2010, by a Los Angeles County jury after the case was moved south.
In a motion filed Tuesday, the district attorney’s office argued that Fletcher’s case “cannot be proved beyond a reasonable doubt,” nor that it’s entirely clear that Fletcher didn’t act out of self defense or the right to defend others inside the San Leandro Walmart where the shooting happened.
Taylor was fatally shot on April 18, 2020, while allegedly trying to steal an aluminum baseball bat and a tent from the Walmart. Only about 40 seconds passed between the time Fletcher encountered Taylor, 33, and when the fatal shot was fired, according to a lawsuit against the city of San Leandro by the slain man’s family.
Alameda County prosecutors had previously argued that Fletcher did not try to de-escalate the confrontation before fatally shooting Taylor once in the chest after using a Taser on him multiple times. A judge later called the case “a battle of the experts,” given the vast amount of testimony at an evidentiary hearing from police use-of-force experts.
Those experts became the subject of a recent bid by Fletcher’s attorneys — largely backed by the work of Jones Dickson’s own team — to dismiss the case on the grounds of “outrageous government conduct.” The officer’s attorneys argued that previous prosecutors in the case — each overseen by former District Attorney Pamela Price — acted unethically while seeking experts to testify on the prosecution’s behalf.
In ruling from the bench last month, Alameda County Judge Thomas Reardon said he found no evidence that those former prosecutors tainted the case by allegedly hiding evidence from defense attorneys.
The district attorney’s dismissal motion this week again took direct aim at Price’s administration, claiming that her strategy was nothing more than “a desperate de-evolution into violations of both ethics and the law around these experts.”
“The effort made to conceal expert opinions from the defense in violation of Supreme Court case law that requires transparency of this type of evidence only created more hurdles to the prosecution of Fletcher,” the motion added.
The motion appears to have been authored by Darby Williams, a relative newcomer to Jones Dickson’s staff who previously spent time as a prosecutor in San Francisco and Santa Clara counties, as well as a public defender in Los Angeles, according to her LinkedIn account. The site shows her having joined the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office in July.
The request by Jones Dickson’s team continues a trend by the former Alameda County prosecutor and judge, who has worked to unwind the legacy of Price, who voters recalled last year. That includes dismissing numerous cases filed by Price’s administration, including several against law enforcement officers related to the deaths of inmates at Santa Rita Jail.
Price has since announced a campaign to once again seek election as the county’s district attorney, roughly a year after voters removed her from office by a nearly 2-to-1 margin. So far, Price and Jones Dickson are the only people known to be vying for the post.
The wave of dismissals had led to fears by Taylor’s family that Fletcher’s case could be next.
Reached Wednesday morning, Taylor’s grandmother, Addie Kitchen, slammed the decision.
“I’m shocked,” said Kitchen, noting how the request to end the case came not from Fletcher’s attorneys, but from Jones Dickson’s office. “How do you think it feels? Five and a half years — the biggest slap in the face by the district attorney.”
Check back for updates to this developing story.
Jakob Rodgers is a senior breaking news reporter. Call, text or send him an encrypted message via Signal at 510-390-2351, or email him at jrodgers@bayareanewsgroup.com.
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Jakob Rodgers
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Having spent much of the last two years celebrating the old — with the Fumbling Towards Ecstasy 30th Anniversary Tour — Sarah McLachlan is now onto something new.
“This is a brand new show, with brand new songs off the new album called ‘Better Broken,’” McLachlan told the capacity crowd at the Masonic in San Francisco on Friday. “I’m going to pepper the set with new stuff, but there will be lots of old, familiar stuff as well.”
New path, but one thing definitely remains the same as ever: her voice is better than ice cream. And, yes, that includes cookie dough ice cream.
During the course of nearly two hours, and running through 20 songs from more than 30 years of her stellar career, McLachlan’s voice was nothing short of exquisite, divine, miraculous, wondrous — take your pick of highly complementary adjectives, since they all pretty much work in this situation.
The 57-year-old Canadian singer-songwriter — who became a household name in the ’90s while leading the blockbuster Lilith Fair tours and selling millions upon millions of records — took the stage at 8:20 p.m., some 10-15 minutes before her band would join her, and opened the show with a brilliant solo-piano version of the new album’s title track.
It was one of seven tunes performed from the recently released “Better Broken,” McLachlan’s long-overdue 10th studio album that marks her first collection of new original music since 2014’s “Shine On.” Of course, 11 years is a long time to make fans wait for new material, but this batch of music may just be worth it — ranking among the finest albums of 2025.
She’d remain alone on the stage for the first three songs (and change) — thrilling the crowd with “Fumbling” favorite “Possession” then introducing the new song “Only Human” — before the five-piece band joined a few moments into “I Will Remember You.”
As per usual, McLachlan was quite personable and charming on stage, opening up to the crowd about a number of challenges and key moments of her life. She’d use these stories, as many of the best performers do, to add depth and reveal meaning to the music.
For instance, she provided background — background that she kept to herself for quite some time — on her first-ever top five pop hit, “Adia,” from the mega-popular album “Surfacing” from 1997. McLachlan explained how the song was inspired by the pain she caused to one of her friends.
“I basically crossed a line you were never supposed to cross,” she told the crowd. “I fell in love with my best friend’s ex.”
(Audible groans from the audience)

“Yeah,” McLachlan continued. “It was, obviously, completely unplanned. This door swung open and there was no closing it. I was young and dumb. I did not not handle it very well at all. And my friend was really, really hurt — no surprise.”
The man in the middle of the drama, McLachlan explained, is long gone, but the singer and the woman patched things up and are “still best friends.” The revelation provoked the most humorous crowd response of the night, as one female fan loudly yelled out the mission statement: “Sisters before misters!”
With a good belly laugh to move her forward, McLachlan continued to mix old and new, going from yet another “Surfacing” ’90s pop classic — “Building a Mystery” — into the “Better Broken” track “Reminds Me.” McLachlan described the latter as her attempt at writing a country song, having been inspired by hours spent binging “Yellowstone” during the pandemic.
The setlist was almost entirely built from the new album and her two huge hit platters of the ’90s — “Fumbling Toward Ecstasy” and “Surfacing” — as well a pair of tracks from the multiplatinum 2003 affair “Afterglow.” That’s understandable, since it allowed McLachlan ample opportunity to support “Better Broken” while still giving fans all the big radio hits.

Yet, it’s still a shame that McLachlan didn’t touch on her earlier material — especially 1991’s “Solace,” which may just be the finest album in her catalog — and that she ignored her very worthy, yet far-less commercially successful later records like 2010’s “Laws of Illusion.”
Also, McLachlan has built herself a pretty impressive resume as a Christmas crooner, having released two very well received seasonal efforts — the platinum-plus-selling “Wintersong” of 2006 and the 2016 follow-up “Wonderland.” So, it would have been really nice to hear her toss in a few holiday favorites into the mix — perhaps her great versions of “O Little Town of Bethlehem” or “Silent Night” — given the timing.
But it was hard to quibble about the setlist as McLachlan and her superb band just kept right on performing one winner after another, including some really memorable takes on the “Fumbling Towards Ecstasy” cuts “Elsewhere” (featuring a stellar guitar solo from Luke Doucet) and the fun crowd sing-along on “Ice Cream.”
McLachlan closed the main set with two more “Fumbling” tracks — a volcanic vocal take on “Fear” that prompted an exuberant standing ovation from the crowd and then, to close, the title track.
But McLachlan quickly returned with a two-song encore that mimicked the back-and-forth nature of the overall set — starting out with the final new song of the night, “Gravity,” before closing the night in superb fashion with longtime fan-favorite “Angel.”

Sarah McLachlan setlist:
1. “Better Broken”
2. “Possession”
3. “Only Human”
4. “I Will Remember You”
5. “Adia”
6. “Building a Mystery”
7. “Reminds Me”
8. “Wait”
9. “World on Fire”
10. “One in a Long Line”
11. “Sweet Surrender”
12. “The Last to Go”
13. “Answer”
14. “Elsewhere”
15. “Ice Cream”
16. “If This Is the End…”
17. “Fear”
18. “Fumbling Towards Ecstasy”
Encore:
19. “Gravity”
20. “Angel”
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Jim Harrington
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