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Tag: Pomona

  • Colorado youth wrestling is growing, and it’s showing at 2026 state tournament

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    Deanna Betterman chuckled at the simple notion of her kids spending extended time away from a wrestling mat.

    “What’s the offseason schedule like?” the Sand Creek High wrestling coach was asked Friday morning, as the mats at Ball Arena began to bustle again.

    “There is no offseason,” Betterman said.

    This weekend, three wrestlers from Sand Creek High, a public school in Colorado Springs, advanced to or beyond the girls’ 4A semifinals of the Colorado state wrestling championships at Ball. All three wrestle for a girls’ program in its very first season of existence. All three, improbably, are freshmen: Peggy Dean (100 pounds), Stella Isensee (105 pounds), and Karris Carter (130 pounds). All three came by way of the Betterman Elite Wrestling Club, a youth academy in Colorado Springs run by Betterman’s husband Joe, a former Team USA wrestler.

    Sand Creek wrestlers only actually attend classes in person on Monday and Wednesday during the school year, Betterman said. On Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, they arrive at the Betterman Elite gym at 8 a.m., practice from 9-11, shower, eat lunch, do online classes, and then have a second training session at 4:30 p.m. They take roughly one month off from this schedule in August. Last spring, the academy sent Dean and others — then in eighth grade — to Tallin, Estonia, for the largest wrestling tournament in Europe.

    Dean won a gold medal.

    “When we’re looking at the big goals, we’re looking at the Olympics for Peggy Dean, Karris Carter, all those girls,” Betterman said. “So these are just little stepping stones we’re hitting. We don’t put a lot of pressure on winning state titles and these little things.

    “Those little things just happen, when you have those high expectations, and those high goals.”

    Peggy Dean of Sand Creek works a takedown on Lilly Lundy of Lewis-Palmer during their Colorado State Wrestling Championships semifinal match at Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026. Dean won by way of a 15-0 technical fall. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Youth movement

    Sand Creek’s triumvirate of prodigies is just a microcosm, truly, of a wide array of younger contenders at the 2026 state wrestling championships this weekend. Eleven different freshmen wrestlers advanced to the semifinals at Ball Arena in the 5A boys’ and girls’ brackets alone.

    It’s indicative of a larger trend in Colorado and beyond. To be a powerhouse wrestling program, schools “have to have a feeder program,” as Betterman said — a youth club in the area that can pipe in young talent ready to reach a state stage from Day 1.

    “Back in my day, it was the local tournaments,” said 37-year-old Pueblo East head coach Tyler Lundquist. “Now the guys are in bigger buildings than this from 5 years old, until they’re in high school. So the show’s not too big for them, most of these guys.”

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    Luca Evans

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  • Hillwood, David Weekley to gift mortgage-free home to US Navy veteran at Pomona in Manvel – Houston Agent Magazine

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    Hillwood Communities and David Weekley Homes are partnering with Building Homes for Heroes to provide a new mortgage-free home for United States Navy veteran Hospital Corpsman Gabriel George. The home is located within Pomona, Hillwood’s master-planned community in Manvel.

    George, who joined the Navy in 2004, was severely injured in a vehicle accident during training for deployment in 2008. After sustaining numerous injuries including to his spinal cord, George spent weeks on a ventilator in an induced coma. His right arm was later amputated because of nerve damage.

    George was honorably and medically discharged from the military in 2009. Today, he’s director of pickleball at Military Adaptive Court Sports and is active in para-archery, even competing on Team U.S. in the 2020 Invictus Games.

    Since its founding in 2006, Building Homes for Heroes has delivered almost 500 mortgage-free homes to wounded veterans. The nonprofit is projected to complete construction on 30 new homes this year alone.

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    Emily Marek

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  • Teenager shot and killed in Pomona apartment complex

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    A person of interest was detained after a teenager was fatally shot in an apartment complex in Pomona Sunday night, according to the Pomona Police Department. 

    The incident occurred at the Le Concorde apartment complex on the 1300 block of East Pasadena Street, near Holt Avenue at around 5:20 p.m.

    When officers arrived they found the 16-year-old boy who was pronounced dead at the scene.

    The investigation is ongoing.

    No further details were immediately available.

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    Génesis Miranda Miramontes

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  • 20 Pomona College protesters arrested after storming, occupying president’s office

    20 Pomona College protesters arrested after storming, occupying president’s office

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    What began as a peaceful pro-Palestinian demonstration on Friday afternoon at Pomona College, quickly devolved after protesters stormed and then occupied the college president’s office. By the end of the evening, 20 students had been arrested and booked by riot-gear-wearing local police forces.

    Nineteen students were charged with misdemeanor trespassing, and one with obstruction of justice, according to the Claremont Police Department. Police from Claremont, Pomona, Azusa, and La Verne responded to the scene.

    The protest started over the college’s dismantling of a piece of student-erected pro-Palestinian protest art on the Claremont campus, which had been standing since March 28.

    The 32-foot-long, eight-paneled “apartheid wall” outside the Smith Campus Center was a physical and artistic protest designed to highlight “the unequal treatment of the Palestinian people living under the brutal conditions of the illegal Israeli Occupation,” and underscore the administration’s refusal to heed the will of students, who voted in February for the college to divest from companies seen as aiding Israel.

    “Civil disobedience and peaceful protests by students were met with tactical gear and assault rifles,” wrote members of the Claremont Consortium Faculty for Justice in Palestine in a statement about the event. “Students who are scheduled to graduate in less than a month are being threatened with suspension for non-violent protest. This response is shameful.”

    A letter sent out Friday by Gabrielle Starr, the Pomona College president, described the situation as “an escalating series of incidents on our campus, which has included persistent harassment of visitors for admission tours.”

    She said protesters had refused to identify themselves to campus authorities, and had verbally harassed staff, “even using a sickening, anti-black racial slur in addressing an administrator.”

    On Friday morning, students were told the campus would be taking down the wall. Many students had been camping there since the wall was erected in late March, but according to Eve Oishi, a professor of cultural studies at Claremont Graduate University, had packed up and disassembled their encampment.

    Oishi said she stopped by the wall late Friday morning in order to drop off books and snacks for the few students sitting at a table nearby. They requested “unhealthy snacks,” she said, because they’d been living off donated and shared granola bars for days.

    The wall consisted of eight wooden panels including maps of Palestinian territory since 1946, and large lettering with phrases such as “Disrupt the Death Machine,” “Apartheid College; We are all Complicit,” and “Smash Imperialism, Long Live Int’l Solidarity.”

    Oishi said the wall “was not highly unusual at all” in terms of the kinds of art, installations and protests often seen around campus. “I don’t understand why it was seen as such a threat.”

    At around 1:15 p.m., college staff began to take apart the wall “in preparation for events scheduled on Sunday, and in line with our policy,” wrote Starr in a statement, describing the “occupiers” as masked — which is against college policy.

    It was at this point, alleged Starr, that the students “proceeded to verbally harass campus staff” and used a racial slur.

    According to a statement from the Claremont Consortium Faculty for Justice in Palestine, college staff removed half of the installation’s panels, while students “protected the other panels from removal.”

    At 4 p.m., 18 of the demonstrators entered Alexander Hall, “under false pretenses,” according to Starr, and made their way up a staircase and into Starr’s office.

    According to a news release from Pomona Divest Apartheid, “the 18+ students sitting in Starr’s office were barricaded in by Campus Safety Officers, who positioned themselves in front of the exits.”

    Fifty more protesters spilled into the building in a second wave, after a protester unlocked a door to let them in. They occupied the hallway outside Starr’s office.

    According to the Claremont Courier, local police arrived roughly an hour later in riot gear, and then exited with 19 arrested students.

    Social media photos and videos of the events show police physically pushing student reporters out of the room, and closing window blinds to prevent them from documenting the situation.

    The arrested students were taken to the Claremont Police Department, where a demonstration quickly grew.

    At 12:20 a.m., the 20 students were released.

    According to Oishi, the students were from Pomona, Scripps and Pitzer colleges. She said the students have been expelled from campus and “not allowed back into their dorm rooms. Some of them are a month away from graduation. They have no place to to stay. No way to eat, no way to get to finish their classes.”

    In Starr’s statement, she wrote that any Pomona students involved in the protest would be subject to immediate suspension, whiles students from the other Claremont Colleges would be banned from Pomona’s campus and “subject to discipline on their own campuses.”

    Oishi said faculty would be looking into the “due process policies that the President used extraordinary emergency powers that were not merited, given the lack of community threat.”

    She said campus security had sent out an announcement saying there was no threat to the community.

    “So why were heavily armed and militarized police necessary?” she said.

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    Susanne Rust

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  • 3 women killed, 2 others injured in violent crash in Pomona; driver accused of DUI

    3 women killed, 2 others injured in violent crash in Pomona; driver accused of DUI

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    A Pomona man was arrested on Saturday after allegedly driving under the influence and crashing into another car, killing three women, police said.

    Police arrested Victor Siharath late Saturday night after responding to a two-vehicle traffic collision around 11 p.m. at White Avenue and Phillips Boulevard in Pomona.

    Everyone involved in the collision was “moderately to severely injured,” police said in a news release, and they were treated by Los Angeles County Fire Department personnel.

    Two women died of their injuries at the scene, police said. Three others were taken to a nearby hospital, where another woman died.

    A two-vehicle crash in Pomona on Saturday night killed three people. Police arrested Victor Siharath late Saturday night.

    (OnScene.TV)

    The victims’ names have not been released.

    Police did not immediately respond to questions about the conditions of the injured passengers.

    Officers identified Siharath as the sole occupant of an SUV. After determining that he was driving while impaired, police said, Siharath was arrested on suspicion of felony DUI.

    The Pomona Police Department’s Major Accident Investigation Team is investigating the collision. Anyone with information is asked to call the department’s Traffic Services Bureau at (909) 620-2048.

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    Brittny Mejia

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  • FOUR LA Sheriff’s Department Officers Dead By Suicide Within 24 Hours: REPORT – Perez Hilton

    FOUR LA Sheriff’s Department Officers Dead By Suicide Within 24 Hours: REPORT – Perez Hilton

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    [Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]

    The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is reeling after the deaths of four “beloved” active and retired officers.

    In an email statement to KTLA on Tuesday, LA County Sheriff Robert Luna addressed a jaw-dropping report that has shocked the community: within 24 hours, four officers died, all said to be by suicide. Luna did not confirm the manners of death, but multiple anonymous sources suggested to the LA Times that suicide was the consistent factor among the four fallen men.

    Related: Black Panther Stuntman & 3 Of His Kids Die In Horrific Georgia Car Wreck

    The first was discovered on Monday at around 10:30 a.m. in Valencia, and just two hours later another was found in Lancaster. Later that same evening at 5:40 p.m., LASD detectives discovered a third deputy in Stevenson Ranch, while the fourth was found on Tuesday at around 7:30 a.m. in Pomona. The outlet reported one of the victims was 25-year vet Commander Darren Harris, who was allegedly discovered with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, while another was Sergeant Greg Hovland.

    How utterly confounding. FOUR deaths by suicide in just 24 hours?? We know these types of self-harm incidents tend to cluster in families, but in a single day??

    Luna wrote in his statement:

    “We are stunned to learn of these deaths, and it has sent shockwaves of emotions throughout the department as we try and cope with the loss of not just one, but four beloved active and retired members of our department family. During trying times like these it’s important for personnel regardless of rank or position to check on the well-being of other colleagues and friends. I have the deepest concern for our employees’ well-being, and we are urgently exploring avenues to reduce work stress factors to support our employees’ work and personal lives.”

    The deaths are being investigated by homicide detectives and the County of Los Angeles Medical Examiner. As of now, authorities — believe it or not — do NOT believe they’re related! However, retired Santa Monica police officer Cristina Coria alluded to what sounds like a mental health crisis within the force that isn’t being addressed. She told Fox 11 on Wednesday:

    “There are so many officers that I know that have talked about committing suicide that I never thought in a million years would think about it or talk about it. There are so many officers out there that are struggling with their identity, with finances, with relationship problems, with addictions to pain meds, addiction to alcohol, you name it. There are so many things going on, that our departments are not reaching out to them [struggling officers] enough.”

    See more (below):

    Wow. The LASD added that its Psychological Services Bureau and the Injury and Health Support Unit are providing support to the families of the victims. We hope everyone gets some answers soon.

    If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide, help is available. Consider contacting the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988, by calling, texting, or chatting, or go to 988lifeline.org

    [Images via FOX 11 Los Angeles/YouTube]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • Civil rights activist Myrlie Evers-Williams looks back on her incredible journey

    Civil rights activist Myrlie Evers-Williams looks back on her incredible journey

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    Claremont, California — Myrlie Evers-Williams says she has never lived a day of her 90 years without love.

    But she has undoubtedly battled hate. As the widow of the late civil rights icon Medgar Evers, together, they fought racial injustice in Mississippi.

    “Our fear of losing each other was real,” Evers-Williams told CBS News. 

    On June 12, 1963, Evers was assassinated at their home in Jackson, Mississippi.

    “There was the love of my life, shot by the door of his car as he was getting out,” Evers-Williams said.

    She had promised her late husband that if anything happened, she and their children would move to California.

    “I was determined to see that my husband’s life would not be in vain,” Evers-Williams said.

    It was a mission that started with Evers-Williams earning a college degree in 1968 from Pomona College in Claremont, California.

    “I never felt safe anywhere, but Pomona College was the safest place that I knew of,” Evers-Williams said.

    That safe space will now be home to her personal archival collection, which includes newspapers, handwritten letters and priceless photos showing a life lived.

    Evers-Williams remarried, became chairwoman of the NAACP, ran for Congress, and in January 2013 — at then-President Barack Obama’s inauguration — became the first woman to deliver the invocation at a presidential inauguration.

    Myrlie Evers-Williams
    President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden listen to an invocation by Myrlie Evers-Williams during the 57th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 21, 2013, in Washington, D.C. 

    JEWEL SAMAD/AFP via Getty Images


    Every detail has been saved, Evers-Williams said, serving as a lesson to future generations.

    “To see if they can search those pages and find hidden solutions to the problems that we have today,” Evers-Williams said. “To realize that there is hope for all of us to do better.”

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