PEOPLE WHO WORKED AT THAT AREA WHO MAY HAVE BEEN EXPOSED. NOW TO MERCED COUNTY, WHERE DEPUTIES FOUND A WOMAN’S BODY JUST SEVEN MILES FROM WHERE A WOMAN WAS REPORTED MISSING. THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS LUPITA ONTIVEROS HAS NOT BEEN SEEN SINCE JANUARY 28TH. THAT’S WHEN SHE AND THREE OTHERS CRASHED A DUNE BUGGY INTO A CANAL. WHILE THE WOMAN’S BODY HAS NOT YET BEEN IDENTIFIED, THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAID
Central Valley officials find body near January crash site where woman disappeared
A body was found a short distance from the site of a January crash where a woman has been missing ever since, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday.On Jan. 28, four people riding a dune buggy crashed into a canal, and Lupita Ontiveros has not been seen since the crash, the sheriff’s office said.At 10:15 a.m. Sunday, the sheriff’s office said it got a report of a body in the Delta Mendota Canal near Whitworth and Cottonwood roads, about seven miles from the January crash. A recovery team found the body of a woman who has yet to be identified.The California Highway Patrol is leading the search for Ontiveros, and the sheriff’s office said it is helping.While the body has not yet been identified, the sheriff’s office said it is hoping that it is Ontiveros. Once the next of kin is notified, officials will release the name of the body. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
MERCED, Calif. —
A body was found a short distance from the site of a January crash where a woman has been missing ever since, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday.
On Jan. 28, four people riding a dune buggy crashed into a canal, and Lupita Ontiveros has not been seen since the crash, the sheriff’s office said.
At 10:15 a.m. Sunday, the sheriff’s office said it got a report of a body in the Delta Mendota Canal near Whitworth and Cottonwood roads, about seven miles from the January crash. A recovery team found the body of a woman who has yet to be identified.
The California Highway Patrol is leading the search for Ontiveros, and the sheriff’s office said it is helping.
While the body has not yet been identified, the sheriff’s office said it is hoping that it is Ontiveros. Once the next of kin is notified, officials will release the name of the body.
One person is dead after a small plane crashed Tuesday evening in a rural area west of Interstate 5 and southwest of Merced in Central California, officials said.
The California Highway Patrol said the crash happened in an open area just off the freeway between Highways 165 and 152 in the Los Banos area.
The Merced County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that the plane took off from an airport in the San Jose area. Preliminary reports indicate there was one person aboard the aircraft, who was pronounced deceased at the scene.
No information has been released yet regarding the identity of the victim or the cause of the crash.
The sheriff’s office said it is working with the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration on the investigation.
When the federal government closed Castle Air Force Base in Merced County in the 1990s, the dilapidated buildings and vast expanse of aging tarmac left behind seemed more like a liability than an opportunity.
But by 2018, the old runways that once carried B-52 bombers had found a new and unexpected customer: Google, which was testing its experimental self-driving vehicles there, far from the prying eyes of Silicon Valley.
At the urging of then-state Assemblyman Adam Gray, California gave Merced County $6.5 million that year to expand the self-driving testing program at the old base.
A few years later, Gray invested there, too.
In 2022, a company in which Gray is a minority owner bought four apartment buildings on the former base from Merced County, according to a Times review of business filings, property records and Gray’s financial disclosures. Gray’s link to the real estate deal has not been previously reported.
The sale closed for $600,000 in August 2022, records show, and the property is now valued at more than $2.5 million. Gray’s representatives said that the investment shows his interest in providing affordable housing, and that renovations have been so costly that he has yet to make money.
Nonetheless, the real estate deal in rural Atwater, Calif., has come under scrutiny as Gray, a Democrat, fights to unseat first-term Rep. John Duarte (R-Modesto). The race in California’s 13th Congressional District is a bitter rematch of 2022, when Duarte beat Gray by the second-closest margin in the nation: 564 votes.
The race is among the handful of contests across the U.S. that are seen as pivotal in determining which party controls Congress after the November election.
Republicans have questioned the timing of Gray’s purchase, which closed four months before he left the Legislature and less than a year before California officials awarded nearly $50 million in new funding for the site. The 2023 grant from the California State Transportation Agency helped Merced County build out a rail hub on the base site to handle cargo loaded onto trains from the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles.
“Gray’s self-serving scheme reveals his true colors as a Sacramento politician who lines his own pockets at the expense of Valley families’ trust and hard-earned dollars,” said Ben Petersen, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, which works to elect Republicans to the House of Representatives.
Petersen accused Gray of “mixing taxpayer money with personal profit” and said the apartment deal should be investigated.
Far from Gray lining his pockets, his campaign and company said, the old Castle Air Force Base apartments have required so much renovation that Gray has actually lost money.
Ben Rodriguez, Gray’s campaign manager, said the allegations were false and “intended to distract voters from John Duarte’s disastrous record.”
“While Adam Gray has brought back real help for families across this district, Duarte is making things worse for families every day he spends in Congress,” Rodriguez said.
Gray is a minority owner in Gemenii LLC, the company that owns the apartment complex at the base. Gemenii is a subsidiary of a family-owned residential and commercial construction company of which Gray is also a member, the firm said.
Gray learned about the Castle Air Force Base apartments about six months before the sale, when “partners that own other properties at Castle” approached him with the idea of renovating the 80-unit complex to provide affordable housing, the company said.
The four spartan buildings, once barracks for airmen, were in disrepair, and three were vacant. Merced County had classified the property as surplus and assessed the buildings and the 5.3 acres of land beneath them at $400,000 to $600,000, the company said.
When the county received “no other competitive offers,” the firm said, Merced County sold the buildings for $600,000.
The firm has since spent millions on renovations, “exactly as intended by Merced County when the property was sold in an open and public sale process,” company attorney Richard Marchini said in a written statement.
Gray was still representing the Modesto area in the state Assembly when the sale closed.
A Google Waymo autonomous vehicle navigates the roads inside the company’s facility on the property of the former Castle Air Force Base, which is now a municipal airport, in Atwater, Calif. in 2017.
(San Francisco Chronicle / Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images )
Gray has a 30% stake in the firm that owns the apartments, the company said. His name does not appear in the company’s state business filings.
Gray first disclosed his investment in his 2022 Form 700, the financial disclosure that California lawmakers are required to file annually with state ethics officials.
Government experts said it did not appear that Gray’s real estate deal broke the law.
But, they said, elected officials who invest in real estate must be aware of the appearance of conflicts of interest, particularly when investing in their districts.
Dan Schnur, the former head of the California Fair Political Practices Commission, said that Gray’s real estate investment at the site being bookended by the award of taxpayer funds seemed “suspicious.”
“Everyone deserves the benefit of the doubt, but the best way to receive the benefit of the doubt is to earn it,” Schnur said. “A public servant ought to be aware of how these things might be perceived.”
After Gray lost his run for Congress in 2022, he filed a federal financial disclosure with the House in which he did not disclose the real estate investment or his stake in the LLC that owns the buildings.
His campaign said that Gray did not mention the apartment complex investment because there was no revenue to report, but that he disclosed his position in the parent company.
In a new filing made public this month, for Gray’s second run for Congress, he said he received between $100,000 and $1 million from the LLC that owns the apartments in 2023, and between $50,000 and $100,000 in the first half of 2024.
Those figures represent the company’s total revenue, rather than Gray’s, and were listed “out of an abundance of caution,” the campaign said.
Gray has not received any income from the business in 2023 or 2024, the campaign said, and the investment has not made a profit.
The former air base, now called Castle Commerce Center, covers about 3 square miles. It’s home to miles of empty roads, as well as dozens of private and government tenants, including a federal prison, a post office, Merced’s commercial airport and Waymo, Google’s autonomous vehicle company.
After Gray helped secure the $6.5-million grant for the self-driving car testing site in 2018, Merced County converted vast stretches of unused tarmac at the base into a testing hub. There are now full intersections with traffic lights and signage and a 2.2-mile test freeway with on- and off-ramps where vehicles can practice driving in urban environments.
The site, operated by an Ohio-based company, has hosted two dozen companies from Silicon Valley and major automotive firms.
In the midst of that boom, Merced County’s supervisors continued selling portions of the base as surplus land. That included the 5.3-acre site and the 80-unit apartment complex, which the board sold on a 4-0 vote in May 2022 to Gemenii.
At the time of the sale, the land was valued at $465,000, and the structures were valued at $135,000, according to tax records provided by the company.
The company took out an $885,000, 30-year mortgage at the end of 2022, and a $3-million, 15-year mortgage in June of this year, to finance renovations at the building, the company said.
Two buildings have been gutted and renovated so far, a process that included asbestos removal and replacing windows and appliances, the company said.
The renovated buildings are now valued at more than $2 million, while the underlying land value has risen by $9,300, according to tax bills provided by the company.
The increase in value is “directly connected to the material financial efforts of Gemenii to revitalize the property,” the firm said. Any developments at the air base site, the company said, “have had no impact on the property’s value.”
According to deputies, the body was found around 4:15 p.m. about a mile downstream from Hagaman Park. Video Above: Diver recovers two bodies in river, searches for another (From May 13)
The sheriff’s office said the body matches the description of the teen, but added that it is unable to make an identification at this time.
“We hope to have the male’s identification in the next few days. We will provide an update as soon as we have one,” the Merced County Sheriff’s Office said.
It continued, “Our thoughts are with his family. We know it has not been an easy week, however, we hope to provide closure to the family soon.”
The other body was 30-year-old Brenda Duran, whose body was found one day before Mother’s Day days after she jumped into the San Joaquin River in an attempt to save her daughter who was struggling to stay afloat.
(FOX40.COM) — The California Garlic Festival will host this year’s festivities at the Merced County Fairgrounds instead of its usual location in San Joaquin County this year.
The California Garlic Festival is scheduled to happen from Aug. 30 to Sept. 1. It’s expected to feature monster truck shows, live entertainment, music, a carnival, fresh-cooked garlic delicacies, vendors and more.
MERCED COUNTY, Calif. (KFSN) — Authorities are searching for the people behind a human trafficking operation in Merced County.
On Wednesday afternoon, Merced County sheriff’s deputies served a search warrant at a home in the area of Vassar and Tyler Road.
During the search, deputies found 60 people working to process hundreds of pounds of marijuana.
They also found several animals that were not receiving proper care.
As the investigation continued, detectives say they discovered the workers are victims of human trafficking.
They were brought across the U.S. – Mexico border and arrived at the home days earlier.
The workers were promised good-paying jobs and a place to stay.
Instead, investigators say the workers were housed in bad living conditions while being forced to process marijuana to pay back those who brought them across the border.
County officials offered several resources to those men and women.
Child Protective Services was contacted for a child at the site who was later released to their parent.
The animals were removed from the property and the investigation is ongoing.
San Francisco — The suspect in the kidnapping and killings of an 8-month-old baby, her parents and an uncle had worked for the family’s trucking business and had a longstanding feud with them that culminated in an act of “pure evil,” a sheriff said Thursday.
The bodies of Aroohi Dheri; her mother Jasleen Kaur, 27; father Jasdeep Singh, 36; and uncle Amandeep Singh, 39, were found by a farm worker late Wednesday in an almond orchard in a remote area in the San Joaquin Valley, California’s agricultural heartland.
Investigators were preparing a case against the suspect – a convicted felon who tried to kill himself a day after the kidnappings – and sought a person of interest believed to be his accomplice.
The suspect, 48-year-old Jesus Salgado, was released from the hospital and booked into the county jail Thursday night on four counts each of kidnapping and murder, the Sheriff’s Office said. It wasn’t clear if he had a lawyer who could speak on his behalf.
An undated photo of 48-year-old Jesus Manuel Salgado, charged with murder and kidnapping in the abduction and killings of a family of 4 in Merced County in Central California on Oct. 3, 2022. On the right are surveillance photos of a man believed to be Salgado taken on Oct. 3.
Merced County Sheriff’s Office
Relatives and fellow members of the Punjabi Sikh community, meanwhile, were shocked by the killings.
“Right now, I’ve got hundreds of people in a community that are grieving the loss of two families, and this is worldwide. These families are across different continents,” Merced County Sheriff Vern Warnke told The Associated Press. “We’ve got to show them that we can give them justice.”
Earlier, Warnke called for prosecutors to seek the death penalty. The sheriff called it one of the worst crimes he has seen over his 43 years in law enforcement and pleaded for Salgado’s accomplice to turn himself in.
“There’s some things you’ll take to the grave. This to me was pure evil,” he said in an interview Thursday.
The city of Merced, where the family’s trucking business was located, will hold evening vigils in their memory through Sunday.
Undated photos of Aroohi Dheri, her mother, Jasleen Kaur, her father, Jasdeep Singh, and her uncle (right) Amandeep Singh, who authorities say were kidnapped and killed on Oct. 3, 2022.
Merced County Sheriff’s Office
The victims’ bodies were found near the town of Dos Palos, about 30 miles south of Merced.
Warnke on Thursday wouldn’t discuss the condition of the adults’ remains in the orchard but said it was unclear how the baby died. Warnke said the child had no visible trauma and an autopsy will be conducted.
He said earlier that the victims were found “relatively close together.”
The sheriff emphasized that they were found in an “extremely rural farm area, not a lot of folks come out here.”
Salgado was previously convicted of first-degree robbery with the use of a firearm in Merced County, attempted false imprisonment and an attempt to prevent or dissuade a victim or witness. Sentenced to 11 years in state prison in that case, he was released in 2015 and discharged from parole three years later, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. He also has a conviction for possession of a controlled substance, the department said.
Relatives of Salgado contacted authorities and told them he’d admitted to them his involvement in the kidnapping, Warnke told KFSN-TV on Tuesday. Salgado tried to take his own life before police arrived at a home in Atwater – where an ATM card belonging to one of the victims was used after the kidnapping – about 9 miles north of Merced.
Efforts to reach Salgado’s family were unsuccessful Thursday.
The victims were Punjabi Sikhs, a community in central California that has a significant presence in the trucking business with many of them driving trucks, owning trucking companies or other businesses associated with trucking.
Public records show the family owns Unison Trucking Inc. and relatives said they had opened an office in the last few weeks in a parking lot the Singh brothers also operated. The feud with Salgado dated back a year, the sheriff said, and “got pretty nasty” in text messages or emails. Other details about Salgado’s employment and the nature of the dispute weren’t immediately available.
Warnke said he believes the family was killed within an hour of the Monday morning kidnapping, when they were taken at gunpoint from their business.
Surveillance video showed the suspect – later identified as Salgado – leading the Singh brothers, who had their hands zip-tied behind their backs, into the back seat of Amandeep Singh’s pickup truck. He drove the brothers away and returned several minutes later.
The suspect then went back to the trailer that served as the business office and led Jasleen Kaur, who was carrying her baby in her arms, out and into the truck before the suspect drove them away shortly before 9:30 a.m.
Hours later, firefighters on Monday found Amandeep Singh’s truck on fire in the town of Winton, 10 miles north of Merced. Police officers went to Amandeep Singh’s home, where a family member tried to reach him and the couple. When they weren’t able to reach their family members, they called the sheriff’s to report them missing.