PALO ALTO – A man forced a woman to the ground and assaulted her during an attempted robbery Tuesday in Palo Alto, police said.
The incident happened around 8:15 a.m. in the 700 block of East Meadow Drive near Mitchell Park, according to the Palo Alto Police Department.
The victim, a woman in her 40s, was walking in the neighborhood when she heard footsteps behind her, police said, adding that she was forced to the ground by the suspect.
The suspect then kicked the victim several times and demanded money, police said. The victim told the suspect she did not have any and yelled for help, after which he left the scene.
Police said the victim returned home and notified authorities about the attempted robbery.
The victim described the suspect as Latino and about 5 feet 8 inches tall with a thin build and shoulder-length hair. He was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt.
An investigation is underway into the incident, police said, adding that no similar crimes have been reported recently in the area.
The victim complained of pain and bruising from being kicked and she sought medical treatment on her own.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact the police department at 650-329-2413. Those wishing to remain anonymous can call or text 650-383-8984 or email paloalto@tipnow.org.
“The show will be in two parts, opening with the performance of the Grammy nominated masterpiece (album) ‘Seven Psalms,’” according to a news release. “After a brief intermission, the show resumes with Simon performing many of his greatest hits and many deep cuts celebrating the breadth of his career.”
Simon’s band for this tour includes: Edie Brickell (vocals), Mark Stewart (guitar), Bakithi Kumalo (bass), Andy Snitzer (saxophone), Jamey Haddad (percussion), Mick Rossi (piano, keys), Gyan Riley (guitar), Matt Chamberlin (drums), Nancy Stagnitta (flute), Caleb Burhans (viola) and Eugene Friesen (Cello).
TOUR DATES: June 4 Frost Amphitheater, Palo Alto, CA 7 Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, CA 9 Rady Shell at Jacobs Park, San Diego, CA 12 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison CO 13 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison CO 16 Starlight Theatre, Kansas City, MO 18 PNC Pavilion, Cincinnati, OH 20 Meadow Brook Amphitheater, Rochester Mills, MI 23 Blossom Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 25 RBC Amphitheater, Toronto, CA 27 Tanglewood, Lenox, Mass 30 BankNH Pavilion, Gilford, NH
July
3 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel Woods, NY
5 The Mann Center, Philadelphia, PA
8 Forest Hills Stadium, Forest Hills, NY
11 Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek, Raleigh, NC
13 Synovus Bank Amphitheater at Chastain Park, Atlanta GA
15 FirstBank Amphitheatre, Franklin, TN
17 Ravinia, Highland Park, IL
18 Ravinia, Highland Park, IL
Preparations are in full swing ahead of the Super Bowl. Businesses are getting ready for big crowds and watch parties; that includes an iconic spot in Palo Alto that just reopened in time for the Super Bowl.
What was once called The Old Pro is now called The Pro – a legendary sports bar in Palo Alto. After three years, they are now open and are getting ready for a Super Bowl watch party. They’re one of many businesses throughout the Bay Area getting ready to welcome in crowds.
“We kind of just worked as fast as we could to get open,” said Guillaume Bienaime, managing partner at The Pro.
The Pro in Palo Alto is now open for business, just in time for Super Bowl 60. Many have memories in this space.
It was once called The Old Pro, a legendary sports bar that had been around for decades but closed in 2022.
“We were in here when the Giants swept the world series, guys were on the bars with brooms sweeping away, we broke a few iPhones, I had many company parties here,” John Patrick Kelly, of Palo Alto said.
New partners took it over and have been in the process of revitalizing it for the last three years. Former Stanford and NFL quarterback and current Stanford Football GM Andrew Luck also became an investor. Now, Bienaime says they’re trying to honor the past while looking forward to the future.
The Old Pro was also known for its mechanical bull.
“That’s bucky the bull, we found him in storage, the son of the previous owner was kind enough to let us have it,” Bienaime said.
And much like The Old Pro, The Pro has memorabilia on its walls. But it does look and feel different – half of the space is a dining room. They’re looking to create more memories. Come Super Bowl Sunday, they’re having a watch party, and guests will have to purchase tickets online.
“We’re just super excited to create an awesome experience for people, we’ve got these really big screens,” Bienaime said.
The Pro is one of many spots throughout the Bay Area getting ready for watch parties and to welcome crowds on Super Bowl week. At The Brit in downtown San Jose, they’re stocking up for big crowds.
“All our tequila whiskey margarita mix, jello shots… we’ve got it all of it,” said Angelina Banwait with The Brit.
At The Press Room, the owner expects his restaurant to fill up leading up to the big game.
“We’re very excited. The Super Bowl is here in our backyard, especially this time of year because usually February is very quiet so we can really use that extra help during this time of year,” said David Mulvehill, The Press Room owner. It’s a chance for businesses to showcase themselves, to welcome new visitors, welcome back regulars and to create new memories.
After moving to Los Angeles from Palo Alto in 2023 with only a standing desk and a bed frame, Tess van Hulsen and Andrew Chait learned quickly how to furnish an empty rental without buying anything new.
Because they love thrifting, decorating together was actually fun for them.
In this series, we spotlight L.A. rentals with style. From perfect gallery walls to temporary decor hacks, these renters get creative, even in small spaces. And Angelenos need the inspiration: Most are renters.
Two years later, their love of thrifting, antiquing, bargaining and restoring has turned their Westwood rental into a showcase of “secondhand treasures,” says Van Hulsen, 28, who works as a commercial contract specialist.
“I have always liked things that have history and character and a story behind them,” she says. “Each piece represents a store we love, a lucky find or a successful haggle that ended with us carrying home something with history.”
Andrew Chait and Tess van Hulsen relax on their condo rooftop, sitting on patio furniture they bought in Venice through Facebook Marketplace.
Chait, meanwhile, enjoys the thrill of searching and bargaining. He likes making deals, and even if he walks away, he still feels like he’s won.
“I’m good at finding value, and Tess has the eye for style,” says Chait, 32, who works as a development director. “It’s something we really enjoy doing together.”
At a time when many millennials and Gen Z shoppers enjoy hunting for deals on secondhand items, Van Hulsen and Chait also wanted to avoid “fast furniture, poorly built materials and disposable design,” according to Van Hulsen. For them, gently used pieces make their rental feel special.
“People my age are taking an interest in having heirlooms and traditional items,” Van Hulsen says as she points to a silver-plated trinket tray that holds her jewelry. “I think it’s really fun to entertain and bring stuff out when guests come over. It makes the table look nice, and the platters are great for bringing food upstairs when we entertain on our rooftop patio.”
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1.An assortment of vintage items on display in a hutch the couple purchased at the Santa Monica Flea Market. 2.Brass angel candlesticks scored for $2 apiece at a Palo Alto garage sale flank a silver-plated punch bowl. The couple purchased the lithograph in Beverly Hills through Facebook Marketplace.
Except for a few family heirlooms and some small dressers from IKEA and West Elm, nearly everything in their condo is thrifted.
In the living room, an elegant cream-colored linen sofa from the Home Consignment Center is the main piece. On either side are striped linen armchairs, and a wooden coffee table from Facebook Marketplace completes the look, giving the room a relaxed coastal feel.
A vintage ashtray Van Hulsen found on Etsy rests on top of a Cezanne book scored at a Palm Springs estate sale.
Dutch ceramic figurines and Asian ginger jars from various estate sales and thrift stores.
Next to the 2-year-old sofa is an antique Tiger Oak hutch from the Santa Monica Antique and Vintage Market. It’s filled with their thrifted finds including silver champagne buckets, candlesticks, colorful Mexican ceramics and a tall rotating server from the Council Shop, a thrift store chain that supports low-income women and families in Los Angeles.
“It’s dangerous living so close to the Council Shop,” Chait says of the nonprofit, which is within walking distance of the couple’s rental. “We probably walk down there every two weeks or so.”
As the couple walks through their home, they reminisce about how each item has its own story.
In the bathroom, a mint julep cup that was given as a trophy at the 1964 Peacock Hill National Horse show holds toothpaste and toothbrushes.
“I knew we wanted a neutral couch,” Van Hulsen says of the sofa that was originally on hold when they first saw it. “Luckily, it is modular, so my mother-in-law and I took it home in pieces in two cars.”
The china cabinet was discounted to $60 at the Santa Monica Antique and Vintage Market because it was missing some glass pieces. “We purchased it from a father and son who were so nice,” says Chait. “Tess and I couldn’t fit it in our car, so they delivered it to us for $40.”
Adds Van Hulsen: “It’s narrow and the perfect size.”
In the dining room corner next to a table and eight chairs from the UCLA Thrift Shop that they had to pick up in two trips sits a charming oak dresser with carved floral details. “I found it on the street during bulky item pickup day in Palo Alto and brought it down during a holiday car ride back,” van Hulsen says.
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1.A matted frame with illustrations of St. Martin’s Church and St. James’ Palace in London.2.Chait’s collection of vintage mechanical banks. 3.A bronze duck paperweight.
She also found a vintage print of Windsor Castle, now hanging in the entryway, on the street in Palo Alto. “That was the furthest thing we have thrifted,” she says.
Many of the accessories in their penthouse such as a bright blue Kitchen Aid mixer (which can cost up to $699 new), coffee-table books and a decorative clam shell remind the couple of their favorite place: Palm Springs.
The couple play Phase 10 on the dining room table they purchased from the UCLA Thrift Shop.
Now that they’re settled, it’s easy to forget how tough it was to find a rental near Chait’s new job in Santa Monica. “It was hard,” Van Hulsen says. “It was around Christmas, and there wasn’t a lot available.”
“People were making deals and offering to pay more than the listed rent,” says Chait.
Eventually, they found a bright two-bedroom, two-bath unit in Westwood with high ceilings, a loft and a rooftop patio. “We applied to two other places before we saw this one. It was worth waiting for,” van Hulsen says.
Chait grew up in L.A. and spent 10 years in the Bay Area. He believes buying secondhand from strangers is a great way to get to know the city. “When I went to buy a wine fridge from someone yesterday, we ended up talking about surfing for half an hour,” Chait says. “It’s fun to meet new people and hear the stories behind what they’re selling. Plus, exploring new parts of L.A. is always interesting.”
A ceramic beagle rests next to two silver toothpick holders.
For them, sticking to a budget is a way to get creative. Whether it’s silver platters or things left out on the street during bulky item pickup day, the couple is always searching for stylish, affordable finds.
The result is a surprisingly cohesive look with jute rugs, light woods and striped linens creating a relaxed California coastal vibe with touches of Palm Springs and France. “My mom has always been a thrifter,” says Van Hulsen. “When we lived in London for four years, we collected all sorts of bits and baubles.”
“From the beginning, Tess and Andrew’s relationship was stitched together through a shared love for the hunt,” her mother Dana McCue said in an email. “Their weekends away were never just about the destination, but about the ‘treasures’ hidden in dusty corners and the thrill of the ‘find.’ Today, their beautiful Westwood Penthouse serves as a living gallery of their love story. Each curated piece is more than just decor; it is a physical milestone that captures their journey from that first shared discovery to the life they have built together.”
The couple’s bed and side tables are among the new items in their condo.
Though some couples who are making a home together for the first time prefer to buy new furniture, Van Hulsen and Chait have stuck with secondhand pieces except for their upholstered panel bed, which they purchased at Living Spaces. “That is our only big furniture purchase,” Chait says. “Things are so expensive, and so many things fall apart. And besides, we like the stories. That’s what we get excited about: the story, talking to people, imagining the life it had before.”
They have a dresser from the Venice Canals that Tess squeezed into her Jeep Cherokee, etchings from an estate sale in Carmel, a lamp from the Guy on Motor at Venice in Palms and a vintage mirror from San Diego. “We have thrifted all over California,” says Van Hulsen.
Silver platters are everywhere: on side tables, under cabinets and also under the bed. “Stubbing my toe on silver is not that bad of a life,” she adds, laughing.
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1.A vintage soldier decanter.2.A vintage case of Navy Cut cigarettes from Palm Springs. 3.Legos, a Nintendo Game Boy and figurine sit on top of a Sony Playstation 4 console.4.A bronze woman purchased in Laurel Canyon rests to other thrifted items in the dining room. 5.Leather-bound books are sandwiched in between brass duck bookends the couple found at an estate sale in Northern California.
Sometimes things don’t go as planned. For example, Chait recently bought a Frigidaire wine refrigerator for $100 on Facebook Marketplace, but when he got it home, he saw it was too big for their space. (They’re still trying to make it work.) Van Hulsen adds: “I’ve gotten some coffee tables that I ended up flipping because they didn’t work in our space.”
Making a cheap mistake isn’t a big deal when you can just resell the item online.
Now that their condo is furnished, do they have a rule about not bringing in too much stuff?
A photograph of the couple rests next to a painting of Manhattan Beach the couple found on Facebook Marketplace.
“You’re looking at him,” Van Hulsen says, grinning at her fiancé.
“You’re making me sound like the bad guy!” Chait says, laughing.
“That’s part of the fun,” Van Hulsen says as she brings over a sterling silver ice cream scoop engraved with “There’s nothing wrong with me that ice cream can’t fix” in barely perceptible cursive.
“We’re never really done,” Van Hulsen says. “It’s exciting to find new things and imagine how they’ll fit in our home.”
Disgraced Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes is hoping President Donald Trump will help her get out of prison early.
Holmes, the founder of Theranos, which is the now defunct blood testing start-up asked President Trump to release her from prison.
“Elizabeth Holmes has been auditioning for this for months because her social media posts have been very favorable to Trump and his administration and I think she’s doing that to curry favor to try to get this sentence commuted,” said Steven Clark, a legal analyst.
She was convicted in 2022 of defrauding investors.
A U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of the Pardon attorney said Holmes sought to commute her more than 11-year sentence last year, and her request remains pending.
In an earlier post on the “x” account Wednesday, it read “We are continuing to fight for my innocence”, adding “The fight against weaponization of our justice system is just beginning.”
“She is saying ‘I wasn’t treated fairly in my trial’, and that is something that resonates really well with the president because he feels he’s been victimized in many ways he the legal system and the department of justice,” Clark said.
Legal analysts say if Holmes is granted a commutation, she would still owe the $452 million dollars in restitution. But if she was pardoned, that obligation wouldn’t apply.
NBC News reached out to the white house and attorneys for Holmes but has not received an answer.
Holmes otherwise is scheduled for release in December 2031.
Two upscale, see-and-be-seen Il Fornaio restaurants are ending their tenure, including the Palo Alto location — a prime spot for years for Silicon Valley power breakfasts and deal-making dinners.
After 36 years, that Cowper Street restaurant will shut its doors Sunday night. The Beverly Hills Il Fornaio closed a week ago after a 43-year run.
“Both locations were fixtures in their communities for the last four decades but unfortunately are closing as their leases conclude,” the company said in an announcement. The news was first reported by Palo Alto Online.
For the Palo Alto restaurant, the era from the 1990s through Dot-com 1.0 was a heady time, with tech titans huddled over tables and whispered talk of deals and the next new thing. David Packard. Steve Jobs (sometimes on in-line skates). John Doerr. Jim Barksdale. John Sculley. David Kelley. Guy Kawasaki.
A 1997 Mercury News squib called Reality Check summed up the scene that played out on early weekday mornings: “Price of buying a venture capitalist a power breakfast of juice, eggs and coffee at Il Fornaio in Palo Alto: $10. (Price does not include tax, tip or the VC gaining control of your company.)”
That Il Fornaio long ago stopped serving breakfast. The restaurant’s final hours of service will be noon to 9 p.m. today and Sunday at 520 Cowper St., Palo Alto.
“We are saddened that we will be saying goodbye to many of our wonderful employees, many of whom have been with us for decades, while some will be moving to our other locations in California,” the company statement read.
Founded as a baking school and retail bakery in Italy in the early 1970s, Il Fornaio launched its dining concept — chef-driven, white-tablecloth restaurants with a regional Italian focus — in the 1980s. The original, which opened in 1986, is still operating in Corte Madera, where the restaurant group is headquartered.
Il Fornaio still owns restaurants in more than a dozen California cities plus Las Vegas. Besides Corte Madera, the company’s other Northern and Central California locations are in San Jose, Santa Clara, Mountain View, Burlingame, Walnut Creek, Carmel, Sacramento and Roseville.
Rallies began Saturday morning in Los Gatos and Mountain View, with more planned later into the day in Sunnyvale, Palo Alto, San Jose, Richmond and San Francisco. Many were organized by a coalition of groups including May Day Strong, Indivisible and others.
Robin Dosskey, of Mountain View, waves at motorist while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
In a statement, May Day Strong called for unity against U.S. occupation of Venezuela and the removal of “reckless untrained ICE agents from our communities.” They argued overseas wars and increased immigration enforcement enriched billionaires at a human cost, and that tax money should be used for “good jobs, better schools, access to health care and (getting) our basic needs met.”
At Los Gatos, David Bowie’s “Under Pressure” blared to over 100 people as passing cars honked in support of the demonstration.
George Hoffman, a 49-year-old Los Gatos resident, said he’s been protesting regularly at the town’s Tesla dealership since April 2025, in an effort to push back against Elon Musk’s support of Trump.
Hoffman said he started attending protests because he was tired of keeping quiet on the Trump administration’s actions and “feeling like everything was broken.”
“It was killing me,” he said. “I was in a hole of despair and loneliness.”
One week ago, a U.S. strike in Venezuela killed about 80 people and ended with the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, who are now in New York City awaiting trial on federal drug charges. Trump and others in his administration have said the U.S. would “run” the country, taking millions of barrels of oil with the blessing of the South American nation’s acting leadership.
Lynda Turkus, of Mountain View, shakes a cowbell while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Susanne Rondeau, of Sunnyvale, shakes a cowbell while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Susanne Rondeau, of Sunnyvale, shakes a cowbell and waves a US flag while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
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Lynda Turkus, of Mountain View, shakes a cowbell while protesting in Mountain View, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. About 25 people gathered at the corner of West El Camino Real and Grant Road to protest the recent immigration enforcements and President Donald Trump’s military actions in Venezuela. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Many within the U.S. and internationally criticized the attack as a flagrant violation of international law that ignores Venezuela’s sovereignty. However, Venezuelan expatriates in Florida and elsewhere were supportive of Maduro’s removal after years of reported human rights violations and economic troubles in the country.
In Mountain View, a couple dozen people went to a Chevron gas station to protest. Cindy Ferguson, a 73-year-old Mountain View resident, has been going to several demonstrations, including the No Kings protests in June. She specifically wanted everyone to rally around Chevron due to the president’s actions in Venezuela to gain control of their oil reserves. Ferguson was formerly in the Army between 1973 and 1976. She criticized the similarities she saw between the U.S.’s intervention in Iraq and Iran and the attacks in Venezuela, saying “none of it worked, then or now.”
“They stand to profit really big, so he’s just paying off his billionaire buddies, and all the money and spending is for that,” Ferguson said. “Why aren’t we feeding kids? Why aren’t we giving health care? We could do a lot with that money, too. Let’s care for everyone.”
On Wednesday, a Minnesota woman named Renee Good was fatally shot by a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis, a killing caught on video that quickly sparked outrage and, from the Trump administration, unsupported claims that Good was a “domestic terrorist.” A day later, two people were wounded in Portland, Oregon, when federal immigration officers shot them in their car outside of a hospital. Both of the shootings inspired vigils and demonstrations against crackdowns authorized by Trump.
Many people that were protesting in the South Bay were enraged over the Good’s death. John Elliott, a 77-year-old Los Gatos resident, said that he had seen the video footage of Good’s shooting and thought it was “striking” that there were people who could justify it. Similarly, 20-year-old Campbell resident Michael Zambon felt that Good’s death was an extrajudicial killing.
“This is really not just about the murder of Renee Nicole Good. It’s also about the rule of law,” Zambon said. “This is a regime of lawlessness. And I believe we need to push back as best we can in order to ensure that the rule of law can endure in the consciousness of the country.”
Lisa Guevara, a 58-year-old resident of Menlo Park, is affiliated with Showing Up for Racial Justice, an organization to help white people organize against racial discrimination. Guevara connected the ICE-involved shootings with the attack on Venezuela as examples of Trump’s government trying to convince Americans that they have a right to enter Venezuela or American cities to strong-arm them.
“I think all of it is connected; It’s all this fascist, patriarchal, white supremacy situation,” Guevara said. “It’s this idea of being able to to determine other people’s lives for them, whether it’s in foreign countries or whether it’s in our own neighborhoods.”
Hoffman said Good’s death was another example of the Trump administration lying to people about what has been happening in the nation.
“We need to stop seeing this as a single issue,” Hoffman said. “It’s all the same fight.”
This is a developing report. Check back for updates.
The Fix Our Forests Act isn’t about environmental safety; rather, it is a blatant attempt at expanding the logging industry under the cover of wildfire prevention. Congress is rushing to pass a bill that dramatically expands backcountry logging while weakening environmental review and public input, allowing projects up to 15 square miles to bypass the National Environmental Policy Act.
Decades of research shows that logging can actually increase fire severity by leaving behind flammable debris and drying forest microclimates. Meanwhile, the bill ignores the strategies proven to save lives — home hardening, defensible space and evacuation planning — in favor of remote timber projects far from communities.
Worse, it reduces scientific and judicial oversight at a moment when accountability matters most, while risking harm to watersheds, wildlife habitat and recreation. Congress should stop branding logging as wildfire protection and invest in tried-and-tested solutions that actually keep communities safe.
Chad Hanson suggests that implementing the federal Fix Our Forests Act will increase the threat of wildfire to communities.
In reality, this act will reduce wildfire threat to communities by facilitating forest thinning and strategic deployment of prescribed fire. Over a century of successful fire suppression across the landscape has allowed far too much vegetation (trees, brush) to accumulate. These overcrowded conditions represent an extreme wildfire threat. The act seeks to accelerate the treatment of unnaturally dense forests. To suggest that the act will increase forest thinning, thus exacerbating wildfire threat conditions, does not track with what foresters and wildland firefighters are experiencing in the field.
Reducing excess vegetation significantly mitigates wildfire behavior. In order to help protect communities, the U.S. Senate should pass the Fix Our Forests Act.
Tad Mason Carmel
Administration’s harm to businesses unchecked
President Trump is promising $12 billion in aid to U.S. farmers, who have lost sales due to tariffs and international ill will inspired by administration policies and rhetoric.
In the Bay Area, meanwhile, our son has lost the job he’d had for 13 years at a small business that shut its doors in the fall, after fluctuating tariffs disrupted their supply chain and our government’s treatment of foreign visitors triggered a precipitous drop-off in international tourism, cutting sharply into their potential customer base.
Is anyone in the administration trying to mitigate, or even to track, the impact of this year’s financial chaos on small businesses?
Sue Luttner Palo Alto
The world can’t afford an unreliable U.S.
In 1994, Ukraine surrendered the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal in exchange for “security assurances” from the United States, Britain and Russia. The promise: respect Ukraine’s borders and sovereignty. The result: Crimea was seized, the United States and Great Britain did nothing, Ukraine was invaded, and now U.S. support is openly wobbling — with the president taking Russia’s side.
If nations cannot trust security promises, disarmament becomes a risk rather than a path to peace. This precedent complicates global nonproliferation and undermines confidence in diplomatic guarantees. In future peace negotiations, what country will trust us when we can’t keep our word?
Our allies and partners must be able to rely on consistent, dependable commitments; without that, global stability is imperiled.
Howard Lutnick and Donald Trump don’t seem to understand how the U.S. economy works. Trump has bragged that his tariffs are bringing in $800 billion in tax revenue. He doesn’t get that tariffs are paid by the importer and ultimately the consumer. He went on to say that companies should temper the price increase by taking lower profits.
In this article, Lutnick, Secretary of Commerce, says that the new H-1B fees would be a $100 billion windfall to the U.S. Treasury. He makes it sound like a $100 billion additional tax on American companies is good for the economy. Would he be as enthused about the additional tax if the fees were being paid by his company?
In describing “Donald Trump’s kakistocracy,” Michelle Goldberg notes that as Trump has been thwarted in his fascist efforts to exert control and seek revenge, he “feel(s) increasingly cornered and aggrieved.”
As we end 2025, it is a “cornered and aggrieved” Trump that is most worrisome. Surrounded by cowed sycophants, Trump is the loose cannon who can destroy America both internally and on the world stage. While his tariffs and Big Beautiful Bill Act frustrate business, slow the economy, and increase poverty for millions, his America First policy produces Arrogant America, Bully America and ultimately America Alone, a pariah nation that others gradually learn to placate as necessary and work around as best they can.
2026 will be a sad 250th birthday for the USA, one in which we must realize that the American Experiment is in great jeopardy and wonder how many more birthdays there will be.
EAST PALO ALTO — A Peninsula man was arrested in connection with a robbery in East Palo Alto and an attempted robbery in Palo Alto on Sunday, according to authorities.
The robbery happened at Jack Farrell Park in East Palo Alto and the attempted robbery happened near the intersection of Lytton Avenue and Webster Street in Palo Alto, the East Palo Alto and Palo Alto police departments said in a joint news release. Both incidents were reported around 10:15 a.m. Sunday.
The victim in the East Palo Alto robbery, a boy, told police three people armed with handguns robbed him of personal belongings. One of the suspects smashed the boy’s phone on the ground, breaking it and delaying his call to police, according to authorities.
In the Palo Alto incident, a man “presented a firearm” and told a woman in her 30s to hand over her purse, police said.
The victim asked to keep some items in her purse, according to authorities. The suspect agreed, but he left the scene in a green Kia Soul as she was removing the items.
Police said neither of the victims was physically injured.
Palo Alto police officers spotted a Kia near the intersection of University and Woodland avenues and tried to conduct a traffic stop. The driver instead sped away.
The officers pursued the Kia to the intersection of University Avenue and Donohoe Street, where it was involved in a hit-and-run collision, according to authorities. The driver of the other vehicle was taken to an area hospital with minor injuries.
The Kia came to a stop a short distance away. Police said two suspects ran from the car and escaped while a third, a 20-year-old Redwood City man, stayed at the scene.
He was identified as the suspect in the Palo Alto attempted robbery, according to authorities.
Police said officers discovered the Kia was stolen in Suisun City. A search of the car also yielded a replica firearm and property that was stolen in the East Palo Alto robbery.
East Palo Alto officers arrested the man on suspicion of robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery and possession of stolen property, as well as brandishing a replica gun, possession of burglary tools and inflicting injury on a child, according to authorities.
The Palo Alto Police Department, meanwhile, plans to submit the case to the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office and request that charges be filed against the man.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact the police department at 650-329-2413. Those wishing to remain anonymous can call or text 650-383-8984 or email paloalto@tipnow.org.
Registration is open for El Camino Health’s 15th Annual Heart Forum.
The free event, taking place Saturday, Feb. 7, brings together cardiovascular physicians to share advances in heart care and features interactive sessions, a heart-healthy cooking demonstration and a patient’s story about their journey to better heart health.
Attendees will learn how to take charge of their heart health with a holistic approach to prevention and discover practical, enjoyable ways to incorporate movement into their daily routines to support cardiovascular health.
Attendees can join in person or online. An in-person health fair will be held from 8:30-10 a.m. at Graham Theater at St. Francis High School, 1885 Miramonte Ave., Mountain View. The main program will be in person and online from 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Register to attend at https://bit.ly/492qLwe
Wildfire resilience grant
The Santa Clara County Firesafe Council was awarded a $220,000 for wildfire resilience projects on a road that runs between Santa Clara and San Mateo counties.
The money comes from a 2025 State Fire Capacity grant for projects that would enhance fire resiliency and evacuation function on Los Trancos Road by creating a roadside buffer. The projects also aim to reduce the risk of roadside fire escaping to the wildland and provide opportunities to treat hazardous trees to protect the Los Trancos Creek Watershed from any future intense wildfires.
The Firesafe Council will partner with Fire Safe San Mateo County for this project. Projects that fall along the sections of Los Trancos Road in Palo Alto were planned by the Santa Clara County Firesafe Council in coordination with Palo Alto’s Foothills Fire Management Team. The two groups collaborated on fuels reduction prescription throughout Portola Valley.
The project starts at the intersection of Los Trancos and Alpine roads in Portola Valley and proceeds on Los Trancos Road until it turns into Vista Verde/Ramona Road, creating 6.1 miles of fuel reduction on either side of the roadway.
Filipino tech entrepreneur Diosdado “Dado” Banatao died at the age of 79.
Banatao is known for pioneering the technology that made personal computers possible, thus putting Silicon Valley on the map. He also co-founded three technology companies and started a nonprofit to help support Filipinos in STEM fields.
“Rising from humble beginnings in Cagayan, he went on to co-found transformative technology companies and played a pivotal role in advancing the global semiconductor and graphics industries,” said the National Federation of Filipino American Associations on LinkedIn in honor of Banatao’s passing. “Just as importantly, he invested deeply in people opening doors, mentoring founders and strengthening communities.”
According to a post on his website by his family, Banatao passed away peacefully on Christmas Day, surrounded by family and friends. His family said he “succumbed to complications from a neurological disorder that hit him late in his life.” He would have been 80 in May.
His family wrote, “We are mourning his loss, but take comfort from the time spent with him during this Christmas season, and that his fight with this disease is over.”
Banatao was born to a rice farmer and housekeeper in Iguig, Cagayan, according to ABS-CBN. According to his 2015 documentary, he didn’t have access to electricity growing up and was taught math using bamboo sticks. He said it was typical for his classmates to stop going to school after sixth grade to help their parents work in the fields, but his father told him to continue studying.
He developed a love for engineering and graduated with a degree in electric engineering from Mapua Institute of Technology, a private research university in Manila. He said in his documentary that there were no design jobs for engineers in the Philippines, so he moved to the U.S. and pursued a master’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science at Stanford University. He graduated in 1972.
Soon after college, Banatao worked as a design engineering at Boeing. ABS-CBN reported that he then went on to work for other technology companies, like National Semiconductor and Intersil. While at Commodore International, he designed the first single chip, 16-bit microprocessor-based calculator.
He is credited with developing the first 10-Mbit ethernet CMOS chip in 1981 while working at Seeq Technology. He also developed the first system logic chipset for IBM’s PC-XT and PC-AT and one of the first graphics accelerators for personal computers. These inventions allowed for faster computer performance, according to Inquirer.net. The Harvard Club of Southern California credited Banatao for bringing GPS technology to consumers.
“Dado is the man who invented a graphical chipset that took us from black screens with green writing to the dynamic displays we have today,” the club wrote for a description of a lecture he gave in 2017 for the Harvard Business School Association of Orange County.
Banatao founded the chipset company Mostron with a business partner in 1984. One year later, he also co-founded Chips and Technologies, a graphics adapter company that Intel later acquired for around $430 million.
The CEO of Intel, Lip-Bu Tan, expressed his grief at Banatao’s passing on LinkedIn, crediting his friend for challenging him when he became CEO of Cadence Design in 2009.
“I am forever grateful for your challenge and encouragement as I continue my life journey following your footstep as CEO of Cadence Design for 12 years and continuing as CEO intel,” Tan said in his post. “Dado, you are the best technology entrepreneur and legend from (the) Philippines.”
He then founded S3 Graphics in 1989, which led the local bus concept and developed Windows accelerator chips, becoming the third-most profitable technology company in 1993. In 2000, Banatao entered the world of venture capital by founding Tallwood Venture, a firm focused on investing in semiconductor technology, and served as managing partner.
While working at Tallwood in 2011, Banatao told Bloomberg News that he encouraged his companies to expand internationally, focusing particularly in China, due to greater government support and lower production costs.
“It used to be that we started companies here and we didn’t think about going offshore until we were substantially big,” Banatao said when he was 64 at his office in Palo Alto. “At the outset now, as we fund the company, we think about going outside right away.”
Dinakar Munagala, co-founder and CEO at Blaize, Inc., a computer hardware manufacturer in El Dorado Hills, wrote on LinkedIn that he was “deeply saddened” by Banatao’s death.
“Dado was instrumental in shaping Blaize during its formative years,” Munagala said. “His belief in our mission, steady counsel, and generous spirit left a lasting mark on all of us who had the privilege of learning from him.”
Banatao has received several awards and recognitions for his contributions, including the Pamana ng Filipino Award in 1997, Asian Leadership Award in 1993, and the Ramon V. Del Rosario Award in 2018, according to ABS-CBN. In 2003, the Asian American Activities Center at Stanford recognized Banatao in the university’s Multicultural Alumni Hall of Fame.
Inquirer.net also reported that an institute at the University of California bears his name: the Banatao Institute at the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society.
Banatao founded the Philippine Development Science and Technology Foundation, a nonprofit also known as PhilDev that provides scholarships, mentorship and training programs to young Filipinos in STEM fields. His family urged people to donate to PhilDev in Banatao’s memory.
“We (Filipinos) know hardship,” Banatao said in his documentary. “It’s time we learn success.”
Staff writer Kyle Martin contributed to this report.
How bad are Bay Area roads? You may be surprised at which ones are getting the worst marks.
A report from the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), the government agency that oversees transportation planning and financing for the Bay Area, graded local roads on ride quality, cracking and other signs of distress.
Overall, they give the Bay Area’s 44,000 miles of local streets a 67 out of 100. That’s about a D grade. Here’s how the best and worst scored:
Worst conditions:
Vallejo – 44
Petaluma – 50
Pacifica – 50
Napa County – 50
Millbrae – 52
Best conditions:
Larkspur – 87
Palo Alto – 83
Cupertino – 82
Orinda – 82
NBC Bay Area’s Raj Mathai spoke with John Goodwin, spokesperson for the MTC, to learn more about the report. Watch their conversation in the video player above.
San Jose continues to fail to improve animal shelter services to the community.
A scathing city audit of one year ago has failed to deliver measurable results. The city still fails to provide low-cost public spay and neuter, nor is outreach to rescue groups or trap-neuter-return a priority. The San Jose animal welfare community continues to be ignored.
In response to a number of ethics complaints that I filed regarding staff who have mismanaged SJACC, I was told by a deputy city manager that the “city is experiencing increased communication and complaints from you that is distracting staff from important work.”
This “Ivory Tower” attitude of entitlement, lack of ownership and accountability by city leaders funded by taxpayer money is clearly troubling — especially given that the budget for SJACS has increased to $17.5 million while performance and services have declined.
On this last No Kings Day, we stood along El Camino Real, a few yards from an inflated brown bear holding a “Resist” sign. During our time at the curb, at least half a dozen protesters in frog costumes passed behind us.
That evening, we joined a march through downtown Palo Alto led by a penguin, under the benevolent eye of an inflated frog who bounced at the edge of each crosswalk as we passed.
Later, I realized: On the first No Kings Day in June, the left reclaimed the American flag as a symbol of our commitment to democracy. Last Saturday, we reclaimed the frog as a symbol of life and joy, a counter to the alt-right’s misappropriation of Pepe as a racist meme.
Susan Luttner Palo Alto
Students shouldn’t worry about ICE raids
It is heartbreaking to see the pain and suffering so many families are experiencing. People are forced to live in constant fear that they won’t make it home to their families after a long day of underpaid work.
Despite having worked their whole lives and being positive members of our community, they are labeled as illegal aliens and criminals. So many Latino students are faced with even more anxiety and stress as they are forced to prepare in case their parents are deported. Children who have parents who have been deported are also at risk of developing depression and not doing well academically.
Students should be able to focus on school without having to worry about themselves or their family members being deported. Immigrants pay taxes even though they are not eligible to receive any benefits. Immigrants are an essential part of our society.
Wendy Martinez San Jose
Colleges must increase mental health services
College can be one of the most exciting yet most challenging times in a young person’s life. Between academic pressure, financial stress and the transition to adulthood, many students quietly struggle with anxiety, depression and other mental health challenges. Unfortunately, on many campuses, the demand for counseling services far exceeds the number of available counselors.
Adding more counselors, peer-support programs and wellness activities such as mindfulness workshops, stress-relief events or support groups can make a real difference. These don’t just help students in crisis; they also promote emotional resilience and well-being.
No students should have to wait weeks for an appointment when they’re struggling. By expanding counseling staff and providing accessible mental health programs, colleges can show that they truly care about their students’ success — both academically and personally.
Mireya Ramirez San Jose
Speak up to stop Trump’s wrecking ball
The wrecking ball is in full swing.
Aid to starving countries from USAID is gone; convicted criminals serving their full sentence is gone; civil discourse is gone; the dignified Oval Office is gone, replaced with ostentatious gold everywhere; the East Wing of the White House is gone. The list goes on and on. Will the freedom we all cherish be next?
It’s not about America first. It’s about Donald Trump first; always has been and always will be. These are sad times for America. Only we can stop the wrecking ball. Make your voice heard and vote.
Pat Toby San Jose
Trump’s future plans bode ill for Democrats
The Trump administration, having already commenced the process of desensitizing Americans to military presence in major cities, possibly in preparation for declaring martial law in the event that other measures fail to keep them in power, is perhaps now doing the same, foreshadowing the domestic use of lethality against opponents.
They strategically selected a most unsympathetic group, “foreign drug traffickers,” labeling them as “terrorists” justifying “armed conflict” to creatively legitimize lethal attack and commence the desensitization process for making it acceptable to kill anyone they desire to label as a “terrorist” with no proffered legitimate evidence, oversight or accountability. Thus far, the president’s domestic critics have only been subject to punitive attacks by government agencies, including the Department of Justice, funding elimination and civil suits. But it is noteworthy that Stephen Miller, one of the administration’s top white supremacist henchmen, has ominously described the Democratic Party as fomenting left-wing domestic “terrorism.”
Palo Alto city leaders on Monday came up with a multi-prong approach to address residents’ and business owners’ concerns over people living in RVs and other homelessness issues.
The City Council approved a plan to address safety and security concerns with the following actions: exploring an RV buyback program; removing any inoperable RVs and trailers; working to secure more safe parking; outlawing “vanlording,” the act of renting RVs on public space; and increasing street sweeping and signage.
The action on RVs could cost the city up to $6.5 million over the next two years.
Records: Stanford (2-4, 1-2 ACC); Florida State (3-3, 0-3 ACC)
Kickoff: 7:30 p.m. at Stanford Stadium.
TV: ESPN
Radio: KNBR 1050 AM
Series history: First meeting. The only program Stanford has played from the state of Florida is UCF, with meetings in 2015 (31-7 win) and 2019 (45-27 loss).
Stanford storylines: After its fourth road loss (all in different time zones), the Cardinal returns home to Stanford Stadium, where it is 2-0 with wins over Boston College and San Jose State. It hasn’t started 3-0 since 2018 – the last time it made a bowl game. … With games still to come against Miami and Notre Dame, a loss Saturday would all but guarantee there won’t be another bowl game this season. … After getting carved up by SMU’s Kevin Jennings last week, the Stanford defense must do a better job against another dual-threat QB in Tommy Castellanos.
Florida State storylines: The Seminoles started the season with a top-10 win over Alabama, but they fell from No. 7 to out of the AP Top 25 after starting ACC play with losses to Virginia, Miami and Pitt. … They still have one of the top offenses in the nation, ranking third in yardage (536.5 per game) and fifth in scoring (44.2). .. Their 21 rushing touchdowns this season are tied for third in the FBS, while Stanford has allowed just five rushing touchdowns this season (tied for 22nd).
Stats that matter: FSU has lost eight straight ACC games dating back to last year’s win at Cal. … Over the last three weeks, Stanford senior CJ Williams is second in the Power 4 in receptions and second in the ACC in receiving yards. … FSU QB Tommy Castellanos leads the nation with an average of 15.87 yards per completion. … Stanford QB Ben Gulbranson has completed 64.6% of his passes for 630 yards and three touchdowns in the two home wins. … The 10:30 p.m. ET kickoff will tie the latest scheduled start for FSU, matching games at San Diego State in 1973 and 1977.
Flood advisories are in effect across the Bay Area as a storm system moves through the region this evening, according to the National Weather Service.
The biggest storm to hit the Bay Area in roughly seven months began to douse much of California on Monday afternoon, slowing motorists, dropping snow in the Sierra Nevada, and providing a clear signal that the winter rainy season has begun.
A cold front from the Gulf of Alaska was expected to bring half an inch to 1 inch of rain for most Bay Area cities, with up to 2 inches in the Santa Cruz Mountains and Big Sur by the time it was all over.
The steady rain began around lunchtime Monday, hitting the North Bay first and working its way south. Forecasters said it was likely to continue overnight into early Tuesday, stopping around mid-morning as the system passes through to the east.
The average monthly rainfall total for October in San Francisco is 0.94 inches, 0.88 in Oakland and 0.80 in San Jose, meaning this storm has the potential to bring a month’s rain in two days. While there have been huge storms occasionally in October, like in 1962 and 2021, it’s not normally a rainy month.
Pedestrians are reflected in shop windows as they walk in the rain in downtown Palo Alto, as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) Cars make their way along a flooded High Street near Interstate 880 in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) A shopper at Broadway Plaza shields themself from the rain in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Police respond to an accident as traffic backs up near the Fruitvale Avenue exit in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) People spend the morning enjoying themselves before the expected rain arrives later this afternoon while at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Pedestrians walk in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) Mount Diablo is surrounded by clouds as hawk flies in the horizon at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Michelle Lemos, of San Ramon, walks in the rain while holding her water lilies umbrella while shopping at Broadway Plaza in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
A pedestrian walks in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Jane Tyska, Jose Carlos Fajardo, Dai Sugano, Paul Rogers
The debate over renting vs. owning has long posed a challenge for households in California. Arguments have morphed in recent years as home prices and mortgage rates soared beyond the increasing rents. To illustrate the complexities, we’ve created a hypothetical rent vs. buy scenario to track housing finances over a 30-year period. However, the math doesn’t account for the intangibles: the flexibility of renting compared to the stability of owning.
HOW MONTHLY COSTS COMPARE
Key in any housing calculation is monthly cost. Our example estimates California house rent today at $4,000 a month vs. buying a $900,000 house with a 10% down mortgage at 6.5% plus property taxes, insurance, association fees, and repairs. The scenario assumes costs grow with historical inflation and the mortgage rate is lowered twice by a half-point through refinancing.
RUNNING THE TAB
Homeowners need to repay their mortgage plus cover a range of additional costs. So renting’s total costs run cheaper for nearly two decades. But owning ends up costing slightly less over time. Here’s cumulative costs by year, in thousands of dollars.
THE BOUNTY: Ownership’s edge
Owning’s true financial benefit arises from the increasing value of the home. Assuming historical gains of 5% per year, the owners gets a $3.8 million asset after 30 years. The renter, who hypothetically invested the $90,000 down payment in the stock market, would accumulate $929,000. Here’s investment value by year, in thousands of dollars.
WHERE IT GOES
Look at the slices of 30 years of housing expenditures, rent vs. own. The renter just pays the landlord. Owner costs go to principal and interest on the mortgage, property taxes, home insurance, association fees, and repair and maintenance costs. Note: Interest payments and property taxes can be tax deductible.
A HISTORY LESSON
Look at the past 30 years of historical returns for three key factors in this rent vs. buy calculation, using 10-year moving averages for rent (California Consumer Price Indexes); home values (federal California index) and stocks (Standard & Poor’s 500).
Unfathomable, unaffordable
California’s long-running and steep affordability crunch makes the rent vs. buy debate a moot argument for many people. Housing costs throttle numerous California family budgets. The state’s flock of high- paying jobs pushes up housing costs well past what more typical paychecks can easily afford. That’s true for households considering renting or buying.
Stagnant ownership
Stubbornly high ownership costs have kept California’s share of people living in homes they own relatively stable, except for a temporary surge in the early 2000s when mortgages were too easily obtained. Those risky loans played a key role in the Great Recession, as borrowers defaulted in huge numbers.
Housing afforability index
It’s tough to be a California homebuyer. The estimated number of Californians earning the statewide median income who could comfortably purchase a single-family home is falling sharply, according to a California Association of Realtors index. The Golden State share of qualified buyers is significantly below the national norm.
Housing-cost stresses
The 2024 edition of Census housing data details how California’s cost of shelter varies between renters and homeowners — with or without mortgages on the property.
But because renters typically earn less than owners, it’s more likely that their housing costs exceed 50% of their household incomes, an extreme level of financial stress.
Big housing worries
A statewide survey last year asked “How often do you worry about the cost of housing for you and your family?” Those who said “every day” or “almost every day” …
NEW YORK — Federal auto safety regulators are investigating why Tesla has repeatedly broken rules requiring it to quickly tell them about crashes involving its self-driving technology, a potentially significant development given the company’s plans to put hundreds of thousands of driverless cars on U.S. roads over the next year.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in a filing on Thursday that Tesla’s reports on “numerous” incidents involving its driver assistance and self-driving features were submitted far too late — several months after the crashes instead of within five days as required.
The probe comes two months after the electric vehicle maker run by Elon Musk started a self-driving taxi service in Austin, Texas, with hopes of soon offering it nationwide. The company also hopes to send over-the-air software updates to millions of Teslas already on the road that will allow them to drive themselves.
Investors enthusiastic about such plans have kept Tesla stock aloft despite plunging sales and profits due to boycotts over Musk’s support for U.S. President Donald Trump and far-right politicians in Europe.
The safety agency said the probe will focus on why Tesla took so long to report the crashes, whether the reports included all the necessary data and details and if there are crashes that the agency still doesn’t know about.
Tesla did not respond to a request for comment, but the agency noted that the company has told it the delays were “due to an issue with Tesla’s data collection,” which Tesla says has now been fixed.
The new investigation follows another probe that began in October into potential problems with Tesla’s self-driving technology in foggy weather and other low visibility conditions, which has been linked to several accidents including one death. That probe involves 2.4 million Tesla vehicles.
The crash reporting rule for vehicles using Level 2 driver-assistance software, or those that require drivers to pay full attention to the road, was implemented in 2021. Since then Tesla has reported 2,308 crashes when the software was used, the vast majority of the more than 2,600 reported by all automakers, according to agency data. The numbers are skewed by the fact that Tesla is by far the dominant maker of partial self-driving vehicles in the U.S.
The company has been offering robotaxi rides in Austin to only a select group of riders, but said it will allow any paying customer to hail its cabs starting sometime in September, according to a Musk post on X earlier this month. Tesla has also begun allowing limited robotaxi service in San Francisco with a driver behind the wheel as a safety check to conform with California rules.
Investors in Tesla were initially cheered after Trump won the presidency in hopes he would reward his biggest financial backer, Musk, by getting safety regulators to go easier on the company. Now that isn’t so certain given Musk’s falling out with the president in recent months after Musk called Trump’s budget bill an “abomination” that would add to U.S. debt and threatened to form a new political party.
Tesla stock fell less than 1% in afternoon trading Thursday to $321.
It might feel like autumn is approaching at lightning speed, but some local culinary events should help ease into September.
Taste of Los Gatos, on Saturday, Sept 6, noon-5 p.m., showcases bites from local restaurants, eateries and coffee shops such as Chez Phillipe, First Born, Gardino’s, Parkside, Los Gatos Roasting Company, Manresa Bread, We Olive and Wine Bar 107. Visit nearly 20 wineries tucked into retailers around town and sip on the latest from local wineries like 3P, Cooper Garrod, David Bruce, Gali Vineyards, Mount Eden and more while you shop. Tickets are $80.12 for food only and $101.22 for both food and libations at https://bit.ly/45lQnUm.
The Art of Food & Wine brings together a rich feast of local food and wine on Sunday, Sept 7, at Montalvo Center for the Arts in Saratoga. Meet iconic chefs like Peter Armellino of Plumed Horse, Scott Cooper of Le Papillon and Greg Kruzia-Carmel of Camper, along with rising talents like Julian Silvera of The Tasting House, Aubree Arndt of Emerald Hour and Broma and Sergio Box of Macarena. So many wines, so little time, but make sure you check out the auction table for some outrageous bargains this year. VIP admittance at 3:30 p.m. General admission tickets are sold out; VIP tickets are $440 at my.montalvoarts.org.
At Star Chefs 2025, top talent from local restaurants from San Martin to Palo Alto go skillet-to-skillet in the region’s most fun pairing taste-off. On Sept 21, 3-7 p.m., at The Glass House in downtown San Jose, sample the latest effort from Chef Patrick Capurro of Be.Steak.A, who was last year’s Judge’s Choice winner, as well as from Chef Jackie of Jackie’s Place, winner of last year’s People’s Choice award. These two will defend their aprons and honor against challengers like Chef Marcelino Hernandez of Asa Los Gatos, Chef Nicko Moulinos of Eos & Nyx, Julian Sivera of The Tasting House, Ross Hanson of Oak & Rye and Anthony Secviar of Protégé. Other stars in the constellation include Good Times Bar, Orchard City Kitchen, The Bywater, Forbes Mill, Oak and Rye, Silos, Alter Ego, Odeum, One Fish Raw Bar and Cordevalle’s Il Veneto. Dine and vote for a good cause. Tickets are $150 at https://momentumforhealth.org/starchefs-2025.
Taste of Half Moon Bay at The Ritz on Sept 19, 6:30 p.m., offers a four-course cliffside dinner on the dramatic Ocean Lawn. Award-winning wines and winemakers from Beauregard Vineyards in the Santa Cruz Mountains take center stage. Tickets are $270 at https://bit.ly/45UxnMN.
And coming this fall, Ritual at Manresa welcomes a lineup of chefs from three different continents, beginning with HAŌMA and Chef Deepanker Khosla. In September, it’s Mayta of Perú with Chef Jaime Pesaque, and in October, Culler De Pau from Spain showcases Chef Javi Olleros. And there’s a rumor of more Manresa-related activity happening on the coast. Stay tuned.
Can you believe it’s been one year since Gardenia debuted on the dining scene in Los Gatos? This gorgeous property feels like a southern estate with its copious front lawn, dotted with tables. It continues to impress with charming décor and an ever-changing and improving brunch menu. Kudos for all the great choices and the always personal service.
Any way you slice it, people love pizza, and famed pizzaiola Tony Gemignani is set to open a new location of Slice House by Tony Gemignani, at 1286 Great Mall Parkway in the mixed-use complex across from the Great Mall. They are hiring for more than 30 new full and part-time jobs.
“As we continue to expand Slice House’s footprint across the country, it’s especially exciting for me to open doors throughout the Bay Area where I grew up and launched my pizza career – and this is true for Milpitas,” said Gemignani in a release.
Che Fico Menlo Park is now offering weekend brunch. The outdoor ambiance is lovely; it feels like vacationing at a Mediterranean resort. Brunch covers the bases of sweet and savory, with special treats from Little Sky Kitchen literally down the street. You can make a meal of the sides.
Also in Menlo Park, Flea Street is celebrating 45 years, and the fact that restauranteur Jesse Cool has stuck with this crazy business for this long is testament to her perseverance and her love of this business and this place. She invites you to toast this milestone Tuesday, Aug. 26-Saturday, Aug. 30, from 5-6:30 p.m. each evening.
Nobu in Palo Alto offers both brunch/breakfast, beginning at 8 a.m., and afternoon tea, beginning at noon, on weekends.
Brunch favorites include the house-cured salmon lox with yuzu cream cheese, a breakfast skillet of potatoes, chicken apple sausage, miso spinach and poached heirloom tomatoes with fried egg, and Bao Buns stuffed with applewood smoked bacon and sunny side up eggs. Don’t skip the Suntory whiskey-soaked date cake, topped with vanilla sorbet and served with candied walnuts, for dessert.
Nobu Hotel Palo Alto’s Afternoon Tea in the Garden offers myriad delights, among them stone fruit crispy prosciutto crostini, quiche and caviar with dashi, yuzu cream and chives, and grilled pineapple dulce cream puff.
Palo Alto police have closed off parts of some downtown streets Thursday afternoon after a man’s body was found in a city parking garage.
Police said the discovery of the body was made by a passerby shortly after noon on the first floor of the Bryant/Lytton Garage. Details about the possible cause of the man’s death were not immediately available from investigators.
The 400 blocks of Bryant Street and Florence Street are shut down while police investigate the case.