(FOX40.COM) — The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office is currently investigating a shooting that injured two people on Saturday morning.
Around 1 a.m., SCSO responded to reports of a shooting near Elkhorn Boulevard and Walerga Road. Two men were shot and transported to a local hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
Two people were shot in Sacramento County on Oct. 19, 2024. /Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office
Anyone with information can call the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office at 916-874-5115.
A person is in the hospital after an early Friday morning fire at a mobile home park in Sacramento County, officials said.The fire started just after 2 a.m. at the Camelia Gardens Mobile Home Park in the Arden-Arcade area, the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District said. When firefighters arrived, they noticed heavy fire from one of the units.Parker Wilbourn, a spokesperson for Metro Fire, said they initially got a report that two people were missing. Crews found one person with burns and sent them to a hospital. That person’s injuries were described as minor to moderate.Wilbourn said they found the other person, and they had no injuries.Parts of Northern California are under a red flag warning because of dry vegetation and strong winds that create a high risk of wildfires with a fast rate of spread.Wilbourn noted those conditions posed a challenge for crews putting out the fire because of winds blowing embers toward other mobile homes. Firefighters managed to keep flames mostly to the one unit, with nearby homes having minor damage. But he explained the fire could have been much worse.”We know in these particular situations fire can move from home to home very fast,” Wilbourn said. “We’ve seen that. We’ve had mobile homes where we’ve had 10, 15, 20 homes burn because they’re such close proximity. Knowing that, knowing the wind, it’s red flag conditions — we had a lot of things going against us.” Wilbourn said while they are still investigating the fire, crews believe it started after a person who was smoking a cigarette fell asleep on a sofa.Meteorologist Dirk Verdoorn said winds will taper overnight and be fairly light Saturday, but because the winds are coming from the north, the red flag warning will stay in effect until 5 p.m. Saturday.Do you have photos or video of an incident? If so, upload them to KCRA.com/upload. Be sure to include your name and additional details so we can give you proper credit online and on TV.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
A person is in the hospital after an early Friday morning fire at a mobile home park in Sacramento County, officials said.
The fire started just after 2 a.m. at the Camelia Gardens Mobile Home Park in the Arden-Arcade area, the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District said. When firefighters arrived, they noticed heavy fire from one of the units.
Parker Wilbourn, a spokesperson for Metro Fire, said they initially got a report that two people were missing. Crews found one person with burns and sent them to a hospital. That person’s injuries were described as minor to moderate.
Wilbourn said they found the other person, and they had no injuries.
Wilbourn noted those conditions posed a challenge for crews putting out the fire because of winds blowing embers toward other mobile homes. Firefighters managed to keep flames mostly to the one unit, with nearby homes having minor damage. But he explained the fire could have been much worse.
“We know in these particular situations fire can move from home to home very fast,” Wilbourn said. “We’ve seen that. We’ve had mobile homes where we’ve had 10, 15, 20 homes burn because they’re such close proximity. Knowing that, knowing the wind, it’s red flag conditions — we had a lot of things going against us.”
Wilbourn said while they are still investigating the fire, crews believe it started after a person who was smoking a cigarette fell asleep on a sofa.
Meteorologist Dirk Verdoorn said winds will taper overnight and be fairly light Saturday, but because the winds are coming from the north, the red flag warning will stay in effect until 5 p.m. Saturday.
Do you have photos or video of an incident? If so, upload them to KCRA.com/upload. Be sure to include your name and additional details so we can give you proper credit online and on TV.
As election day nears, efforts to get people to vote across the state are in full gear.In Sacramento, advocates for vulnerable communities such as the unsheltered population ensure they’re not left behind this election season.On Tuesday, Sacramento County officials partnered with the nonprofit organization Loaves & Fishes to host a registration drive, where a dozen unsheltered people took the time to ensure they’re ready to vote in the 2024 General Election.The respite center serves around 1,000 people daily through its 60 programs.”These are folks who don’t necessarily have a platform to be heard anywhere so we try to facilitate that for them here, especially through the vote – everyone’s vote matters,” said Naomi Cabral, the development director at Sacramento Loaves & Fishes. In California, residence is not a requirement to be eligible to vote.”Just because you may be experiencing homelessness, doesn’t mean you are not eligible to vote,” said Sacramento County’s Ken Casparis.While options like mail-in ballots are tricky, Sacramento County sends ballots to people living in shelters if they receive their mail at those shelters. “Some unhoused individuals keep PO boxes and use those to receive their ballots,” said Casparis. Voters cannot use a P.O. Box or business address to register to vote but can use a P.O. Box or business address to receive mail.Unhoused registered voters who do not have an address to receive mail can visit vote centers to receive a ballot or register and vote at any county voting center by submitting a general location such as a shelter, a park, or an intersection where they’re sleeping.Sacramento’s latest Point-in-Time count found that 6,615 people experience homelessness on any given night.Currently, there are 603 active registered unhoused voters in Sacramento County.One of those voters is Carla McClein. She signed up at Loaves & Fishes on Tuesday and is ready to make her voice heard.”I believe I can make a change if I vote and say what I disagree with. It just gives me a right,” said McClein.The 59-year-old’s top concern is the economy, as she spends another day on the street.”I would like in my senior years – because my health is not very good – I would like to at least be in a comfortable apartment where I don’t have rent increases and I’m not forced out because I can’t afford rent,” McClein told KCRA. Sacramento County officials have held similar events at Stanford Settlement Neighborhood Center and Mercy Housing. The next registration drive at Sacramento Loaves & Fishes will take place on Oct. 17 from 8 a.m. to noon. For more information about the November election, including key issues and other races on the ballot, check out the KCRA 3 Voter Guide.Find more political news from our national team here.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
As election day nears, efforts to get people to vote across the state are in full gear.
On Tuesday, Sacramento County officials partnered with the nonprofit organization Loaves & Fishes to host a registration drive, where a dozen unsheltered people took the time to ensure they’re ready to vote in the 2024 General Election.
The respite center serves around 1,000 people daily through its 60 programs.
“These are folks who don’t necessarily have a platform to be heard anywhere so we try to facilitate that for them here, especially through the vote – everyone’s vote matters,” said Naomi Cabral, the development director at Sacramento Loaves & Fishes.
In California, residence is not a requirement to be eligible to vote.
“Just because you may be experiencing homelessness, doesn’t mean you are not eligible to vote,” said Sacramento County’s Ken Casparis.
While options like mail-in ballots are tricky, Sacramento County sends ballots to people living in shelters if they receive their mail at those shelters.
“Some unhoused individuals keep PO boxes and use those to receive their ballots,” said Casparis. Voters cannot use a P.O. Box or business address to register to vote but can use a P.O. Box or business address to receive mail.
Unhoused registered voters who do not have an address to receive mail can visit vote centers to receive a ballot or register and vote at any county voting center by submitting a general location such as a shelter, a park, or an intersection where they’re sleeping.
Sacramento’s latest Point-in-Time count found that 6,615 people experience homelessness on any given night.
Currently, there are 603 active registered unhoused voters in Sacramento County.
One of those voters is Carla McClein. She signed up at Loaves & Fishes on Tuesday and is ready to make her voice heard.
“I believe I can make a change if I vote and say what I disagree with. It just gives me a right,” said McClein.
The 59-year-old’s top concern is the economy, as she spends another day on the street.
“I would like in my senior years – because my health is not very good – I would like to at least be in a comfortable apartment where I don’t have rent increases and I’m not forced out because I can’t afford rent,” McClein told KCRA.
Man dead, woman injured in Sacramento County roll-over crash
Updated: 10:37 PM PDT Sep 4, 2024
A driver has died and their passenger was injured following a crash near Walnut Grove Wednesday night, the California Highway Patrol said.Crews responded to the report of a crash around 9 p.m. at the intersection of Race Track and Tyler Island roads. CHP said the crash involved one vehicle, which had rolled over.Officials said the male driver was pronounced dead at the scene. A woman who was a passenger in the vehicle was taken to an area hospital with major injuries.CHP has not yet identified the man who died.The crash remains under investigation.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
SACRAMENTO COUNTY, Calif. —
A driver has died and their passenger was injured following a crash near Walnut Grove Wednesday night, the California Highway Patrol said.
Crews responded to the report of a crash around 9 p.m. at the intersection of Race Track and Tyler Island roads.
CHP said the crash involved one vehicle, which had rolled over.
Officials said the male driver was pronounced dead at the scene. A woman who was a passenger in the vehicle was taken to an area hospital with major injuries.
WE BEGIN WITH BREAKING NEWS. I WANT TO TAKE YOU TO THIS BREAKING NEWS HAPPENING OUT OF SACRAMENTO COUNTY TONIGHT. WHERE A WATER RESCUE OPERATION IS GOING ON RIGHT NOW. THIS IS HAPPENING AT LAKE NATOMA IN RANCHO CORDOVA. AND WE ARE TOLD A SWIMMER WAS LAST SEEN IN THE WATER ABOUT THREE HOURS AGO. SO WE HAVE A CREW AT THE SCENE. HERE IS A LIVE LOOK. OF COURSE. RIGHT NOW IT IS VERY DARK OUTSIDE AS THIS WATER RESCUE CONTINUES TONIGHT. RIGHT NOW WE KNOW METRO FIRE HAS PEOPLE SEARCHING ON THE WATER AND THE LAND FOR ANY SIGNS OF THAT PERSON. WE STILL DON’T HAVE ANY INFORMATION ABOUT THE VICTIM AND WHAT THEY WERE DOING OUT ON THE WATERWAY. ON THIS LABOR DAY. BUT OF COURSE, WE KNOW MANY PEOPLE WERE OUT ON THE WATERWAYS AND WE KNOW THAT CREWS ARE NOW TRYING TO CONDUCT THIS RESCUE. WE WILL CONTINUE TO KEEP AN EYE ON THIS AS WE TAKE A LOOK HERE AT WHAT APPEARS TO BE THE SHORE. AGAIN, VERY DARK HERE IN SACRAMENTO COUNTY AT LAKE NATOMA. BUT A WATER RESCUE OPERATION IS UNDERWAY. A SWIMMER WHO WAS LAST SEEN IN THE WATER ABOUT THREE HOURS AGO HAS NOT BEEN SEEN SINCE. AND THAT IS WHAT WE ARE SEEING RIGHT NOW IS THAT ACTIVE SEARCH. WE WILL CONTINUE TO
Crews searching for person missing in Lake Natoma in Sacramento County
Updated: 11:06 PM PDT Sep 2, 2024
One person is believed to be missing at Lake Natoma Monday night, the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District said. Fire crews responded to the lake in Sacramento County around 9:50 p.m.Sac Metro Fire said the person believed to be missing has not been seen for around three hours.Officials said a group that was with the person missing had been searching for them for around two hours.Sac Metro Fire said boats and unmanned aerial vehicles have been deployed.This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
GOLD RIVER, Calif. —
One person is believed to be missing at Lake Natoma Monday night, the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District said.
Fire crews responded to the lake in Sacramento County around 9:50 p.m.
Sac Metro Fire said the person believed to be missing has not been seen for around three hours.
Officials said a group that was with the person missing had been searching for them for around two hours.
Sac Metro Fire said boats and unmanned aerial vehicles have been deployed.
This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
SACRAMENTO COUNTY — A Sacramento County hospital is accused of misplacing a woman’s body. The woman’s mother told CBS13 she had no idea her daughter had died for a year.
Jessie Peterson was admitted to Mercy San Juan Medical Center in Carmichael in April 2023. According to her mother, Ginger Congi, it was not uncommon for her daughter to receive medical treatment for Type 1 diabetes. She was diagnosed when she was a teenager, Congi said, and although it was difficult, Peterson “just carried on.”
“She loved to run. She loved sports. She loved dance. She played the guitar,” Congi said.
Last April, Peterson called her mother asking to be picked up from the hospital. Congi said her daughter wanted to leave. Congi told her she was in the safest place, admitted for treatment after a diabetic episode. This would be the last time the two spoke.
The day of their call was April 8, 2023, according to the family’s lawsuit filed in Sacramento County against Mercy San Juan Medical Center and Dignity Health.
Congi said she attempted to contact Peterson’s room three days later and was told that Peterson had been discharged against medical advice. The truth, Congi said she learned a year later, is that her daughter died two hours after their phone call in April 2023.
“We didn’t lose hope. At that point in time, we thought, you know, maybe she’s just, she’s just gone silent for a little while. Then, you know, she would resurface again,” Congi said.
The family set out to find Peterson and reported her missing, officially. They put up flyers with her photo and the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office contact information.
“Members went in the area and handed out pictures, contacted local security guards to see if maybe they’d seen her. So the search was extensive. I was even looking at looking along the levees down in Sacramento, you know, going on bicycle rides and seeing if maybe I might come across through there. I was even looking in places when I was driving to work,” Congi said.
Answers came on April 12, 2024, when a detective with the sheriff’s office contacted Peterson’s family that she was found dead at Mercy San Juan hospital.
“At this point, Jessie’s body was so decomposed that an open casket funeral was not feasible, and Jessie’s fingerprints were not even obtainable for any keepsake,” as described in a line within the family’s lawsuit.
Peterson’s body was moved to an off-site cold storage facility, according to the lawsuit.
“They just totally discarded her. It wasn’t even 24 hours after she died that they shipped her off to some storage facility and in a freezer up on a shelf, you know, and just didn’t have a care in the world for her or for us,” Congi said.
In a statement to CBS13, a spokesperson for Dignity Health said they could not comment due to pending litigation.
“We extend our deepest sympathies to the family during this difficult time. We are unable to comment on pending litigation.”
Congi said she wants accountability and is moving forward with legal action to prevent this situation from happening to other families.
The family alleges negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligence, and negligent handling of a corpse as the cause of action in the lawsuit for a total of $5 million in actual and statutory damages.
Sacramento County announces third heat-related death of the year
Updated: 3:57 PM PDT Aug 20, 2024
A third person has died in 2024 due to the heat in Sacramento County, officials announced on Tuesday.County officials said 53-year-old Stephanie Baker of Citrus Heights died of a heat stroke on Aug. 4 at Mercy San Juan Medical Center. Baker was housed at the time of her death, officials said.KCRA 3 Meteorologist Tamara Berg said the high temperature on Aug. 4 reached 102 degrees in Sacramento. It was also part of a heat wave, being the fifth day in a row that reached temperatures above 100 degrees.In July, 58-year-old Kevin Gerhardt and 77-year-old Albert Edadiz both died as a result of the heat. Neither were unhoused and Gerhardt’s mother said that he did not have air conditioning.Officials said because Baker was hospitalized, the coroner’s office did not conduct an autopsy.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
SACRAMENTO COUNTY, Calif. —
A third person has died in 2024 due to the heat in Sacramento County, officials announced on Tuesday.
County officials said 53-year-old Stephanie Baker of Citrus Heights died of a heat stroke on Aug. 4 at Mercy San Juan Medical Center.
Baker was housed at the time of her death, officials said.
KCRA 3 Meteorologist Tamara Berg said the high temperature on Aug. 4 reached 102 degrees in Sacramento. It was also part of a heat wave, being the fifth day in a row that reached temperatures above 100 degrees.
A woman in a motorized wheelchair was hit and killed by a big rig Friday morning in the Arden-Arcade area of Sacramento County, California Highway Patrol said.CHP was dispatched around 10:20 a.m. to the crash site at Fulton Avenue and Alta Arden Expressway. The roadway was closed while a police investigation was underway. Officials said the truck driver had stopped at a red light on westbound Alta Arden Expressway, while the woman was stopped at a crosswalk to cross to Fulton Avenue. As the woman began to cross the street, CHP said the truck driver made a right turn onto Fulton Avenue and hit the woman. The woman died at the scene.CHP said no drugs or alcohol were suspected in the collision.Click the video player above to watch other headlines from KCRA News 3.See our live traffic map for updates.This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
ARDEN-ARCADE, Calif. —
A woman in a motorized wheelchair was hit and killed by a big rig Friday morning in the Arden-Arcade area of Sacramento County, California Highway Patrol said.
CHP was dispatched around 10:20 a.m. to the crash site at Fulton Avenue and Alta Arden Expressway. The roadway was closed while a police investigation was underway.
Officials said the truck driver had stopped at a red light on westbound Alta Arden Expressway, while the woman was stopped at a crosswalk to cross to Fulton Avenue.
As the woman began to cross the street, CHP said the truck driver made a right turn onto Fulton Avenue and hit the woman.
The woman died at the scene.
CHP said no drugs or alcohol were suspected in the collision.
Click the video player above to watch other headlines from KCRA News 3.
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
Through the Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity (RAISE) grant program, Sacramento County will receive $25 million for the Grant Line Road Safety Improvement Project, which seeks to provide critical safety improvements and more “multimodal transportation” options along Grant Line Road.
The total cost of the first phase of the Grant Line project is $55.5 million, and Sacramento County said the rest of the funding will come from the Sacramento Transportation Authority, another grant from the California Transportation Committee, and Measure A.
Sacramento County and the City of Rancho Cordova will also contribute money to the project as well, officials added.
“After decades of underinvestment, the condition of America’s infrastructure is now finally getting better instead of worse, and today we proudly announce our support for 148 more projects in communities of every size across the country,” Buttigieg said.
He continued, “Through President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, we’re funding projects across the country to make roads safer, make it easier for people to move around their community, make transportation infrastructure more resilient to extreme weather, and improve supply chains to keep costs down for consumers.”
In total, $1.8 billion in federal funds were granted to nearly 150 projects across the United States. According to the Department of Transportation, almost $13 billion worth of RAISE funds were requested.
Grant Line Road begins slightly east of Rancho Cordova and extends southwest into Elk Grove.
A husband and wife were arrested on Sunday, accused of sex trafficking two 17-year-old girls, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.Officials said a sheriff’s deputy was patrolling near Watt Avenue and Winona Way in North Highlands around 8 p.m. when he observed two young girls wearing lingerie near a vehicle. The deputy spoke to both girls and discovered they were victims of sex trafficking, the sheriff’s office said.Officials said detectives learned the two girls were being trafficked by family friends, later identified as 46-year-old John Cheso and 35-year-old Shannon Powell. The girls referred to Cheso and Powell as their “street parents,” the sheriff’s office said.”it’s very rare that we are able to go from contacting a victim to arresting their pimp like that,” said Sgt. Amar Gandhi. “That’s was really significant about this case.” Cheso and Powell were arrested on felony human trafficking charges.The sheriff’s office said both remain in custody on Monday. Cheso is held on a $2 million bail and is scheduled to appear in court on June 26. Powell is held on a $1 million bail and is scheduled to appear in court on June 25.Detectives believe there may be additional sex trafficking victims. Anyone with information is asked to contact the sheriff’s office at 916-874-5115.The sheriff’s office said the deputy who found the two victims had just rescued another young girl who was also being sex trafficked. Victim advocate Leia Schenk said Monday that city and county leaders need to do more to provide wraparound, 24-hour services to victims to ensure they have a safe place to be in the hours and days after getting off the street.”It’s always good to know that we’re trying to clean up the streets when it comes to traffickers but for me, I always think of the victims. What happens to them?” she said. Schenk founded Empact, an organization that supports at-risk youth and victims of trafficking. She said too often trafficking victims do not have a safe place to go outside of the care of their trafficker and are forced back into a situation of having to exploit themselves to survive.”They will run to that life if they think that’s all they’re good for,” she said. “They make sure that they eat, that they have somewhere to live but at the end of the night they’re going to sexually exploit you and they’re going to force you to go out and sell your body against your will.”Schenk is working to raise funds to start a permanent safe house for victims in Sacramento County and fund a round-the-clock outreach team as human trafficking continues to be a pressing issue in Sacramento County. She said for survivors, services can be hard to come by outside of business hours.”We need something more concrete because this is bigger than us. It is huge and we’re not able to stay on top of it,” she said.KCRA 3 Investigates spent a year talking to sex trafficking survivors, advocates, lawmakers and law enforcement about the problems they’re seeing on the streets and what they think needs to change. Learn more here.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
NORTH HIGHLANDS, Calif. —
A husband and wife were arrested on Sunday, accused of sex trafficking two 17-year-old girls, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.
Officials said a sheriff’s deputy was patrolling near Watt Avenue and Winona Way in North Highlands around 8 p.m. when he observed two young girls wearing lingerie near a vehicle. The deputy spoke to both girls and discovered they were victims of sex trafficking, the sheriff’s office said.
Officials said detectives learned the two girls were being trafficked by family friends, later identified as 46-year-old John Cheso and 35-year-old Shannon Powell. The girls referred to Cheso and Powell as their “street parents,” the sheriff’s office said.
“it’s very rare that we are able to go from contacting a victim to arresting their pimp like that,” said Sgt. Amar Gandhi. “That’s was really significant about this case.”
Cheso and Powell were arrested on felony human trafficking charges.
The sheriff’s office said both remain in custody on Monday. Cheso is held on a $2 million bail and is scheduled to appear in court on June 26. Powell is held on a $1 million bail and is scheduled to appear in court on June 25.
Detectives believe there may be additional sex trafficking victims. Anyone with information is asked to contact the sheriff’s office at 916-874-5115.
The sheriff’s office said the deputy who found the two victims had just rescued another young girl who was also being sex trafficked.
Victim advocate Leia Schenk said Monday that city and county leaders need to do more to provide wraparound, 24-hour services to victims to ensure they have a safe place to be in the hours and days after getting off the street.
“It’s always good to know that we’re trying to clean up the streets when it comes to traffickers but for me, I always think of the victims. What happens to them?” she said.
Schenk founded Empact, an organization that supports at-risk youth and victims of trafficking. She said too often trafficking victims do not have a safe place to go outside of the care of their trafficker and are forced back into a situation of having to exploit themselves to survive.
“They will run to that life if they think that’s all they’re good for,” she said. “They make sure that they eat, that they have somewhere to live but at the end of the night they’re going to sexually exploit you and they’re going to force you to go out and sell your body against your will.”
Schenk is working to raise funds to start a permanent safe house for victims in Sacramento County and fund a round-the-clock outreach team as human trafficking continues to be a pressing issue in Sacramento County. She said for survivors, services can be hard to come by outside of business hours.
“We need something more concrete because this is bigger than us. It is huge and we’re not able to stay on top of it,” she said.
KCRA 3 Investigates spent a year talking to sex trafficking survivors, advocates, lawmakers and law enforcement about the problems they’re seeing on the streets and what they think needs to change. Learn more here.
(FOX40.COM) — Two teenagers were arrested after they allegedly fled from law enforcement in a stolen vehicle and hit a mother who was walking across a street with a child.
At around 5 p.m. on Monday, Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said they located a stolen vehicle and were led by a 16-year-old boy on a high-speed chase through North Highlands. The teen had another 16-year-old in the passenger seat.
“These aren’t kids that are on their way to Bible study,” said Sacramento Sheriff’s Office Sergeant Amar Gandhi. “These are gang members, these are criminals, these guys are up to no good.”
Ghandhi said as the stolen vehicle came across an intersection, they struck another vehicle and a pedestrian woman who suffered serious injuries.
After the crash and a foot chase, deputies said a gun was recovered and the teens were arrested and taken into custody.
(FOX40.COM) — The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office is currently engaged in a standoff after a man fled a traffic stop.
On Tuesday evening, deputies said a man who was pulled over fled the scene on foot and is currently in a vacant apartment at 1100 Howe Avenue. The standoff lasted for several hours.
At around 10 p.m. deputies said the suspects whereabouts were unknown.
(FOX40.COM) — A part of Interstate 5 that is traveled by over 100,000 vehicles daily is set to undergo a $123 million improvement that will begin within the next few weeks.
According to Caltrans, drivers who frequently travel from Stockton to Sacramento on Interstate 5 will experience numerous lane shifts and road closures as workers seek to improve over 30 miles of existing pavement and shoulders from Hammer Lane in Stockton to the San Joaquin/Sacramento County line.
The “I-5 Anchor Pavement Rehabilitation and Improvement Project” will begin the week of June 7, which is a Friday. The project was made possible by over $100 million of federal funding.
“The $123 million effort is made possible by $111 million in federal funding and $12 million from the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017,” Caltrans said. “Work will also replace on- and off-ramps with upgraded concrete at Eight Mile Road, State Route 12, Turner Road, Peltier Road, and Thornton Road/Walnut Grove Road.”
Caltrans Director Tony Taveras said, “Residents and commercial drivers who rely on this frequently traveled stretch of I-5 will benefit from a smoother, safer ride as they deliver freight or commute to work, school, or other engagements.”
Grace Magsayo, the acting director of Caltrans District 10, said, “This important project will help improve the safe movement of traffic and increase accessibility for all users.”
Other improvements that will be made throughout the I-5 Anchor project’s entirety include:
Bridge rail replacement at Hammer Lane
Shoulder extension
New curb ramps and accessible pedestrian signals
Truck-turning improvements at Peltier Road and Thornton Road on and off-ramps
Replacing guardrails as needed
Replacing and installing overhead signs, roadside signs
Installing new overhead lighting near all on and off-ramps
Replacing and installing Traffic Management System elements, which include changeable message signs, closed circuit TVs, fiber optics, and vehicle detector stations
Caltrans said it expects to complete the project by September 2026 and will begin construction between Hammer Lane and Eight Mile Road on Interstate 5 northbound and southbound.
Upon completing that portion of Interstate 5, Caltrans will begin work from Eight Mile Road to the San Joaquin/Sacramento County line.
Two people died and another adult and three children were injured in a Sacramento County crash where alcohol is believed to have been a factor, officials said. The California Highway Patrol said it got a report of a head-on crash around 12:17 a.m. on Saturday at Highway 160 and Sherman Island Road. On Monday afternoon, CHP issued a clarification about those involved in the crash. According to CHP, a gray Nissan SUV going southbound on Highway 160 at an unknown speed had a 26-year-old man from Antioch driving.At the same time, there was a silver Lexus SUV going northbound on Highway 160 just south of Sherman Island Road at unknown speed, CHP said. That vehicle had a 33-year-old driver, a 29-year-old passenger, and three other children as passengers, a 2-month-old, 10-year-old, and 5-year-old.For reasons not yet known, CHP said the Nissan SUV crossed into the northbound lane, slamming into the Lexus head-on.The Nissan’s driver died, CHP said. The Sacramento County Coroner identified him as John Malley.Jessica Hay, the 29-year-old passenger in the Lexus SUV, was the other person who died.The Lexus’ driver was taken to a Bay Area hospital with major injuries, along with the 5-year-old girl and the 2-month-old. The 10-year-old was taken to a Sacramento hospital, CHP said. Hay was the mother to the three children in the vehicle, her aunt Cynthia Padilla confirmed to KCRA 3. The driver was Hay’s boyfriend and the father of the 2-month-old, Padilla said. They had been driving back to Rio Vista from the Bay Area. Highway 160 was closed for about an hour while officers investigated.The family of Jessica Hay has created a GoFundMe to help with medical expenses and funeral costs. Click here for more information.Editor’s Note (May 13, 2024): This story has been updated to reflect new information and clarification from CHP about who was in each vehicle that was involved in the crash. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
RIO VISTA, Calif. —
Two people died and another adult and three children were injured in a Sacramento County crash where alcohol is believed to have been a factor, officials said.
The California Highway Patrol said it got a report of a head-on crash around 12:17 a.m. on Saturday at Highway 160 and Sherman Island Road.
On Monday afternoon, CHP issued a clarification about those involved in the crash.
According to CHP, a gray Nissan SUV going southbound on Highway 160 at an unknown speed had a 26-year-old man from Antioch driving.
At the same time, there was a silver Lexus SUV going northbound on Highway 160 just south of Sherman Island Road at unknown speed, CHP said. That vehicle had a 33-year-old driver, a 29-year-old passenger, and three other children as passengers, a 2-month-old, 10-year-old, and 5-year-old.
For reasons not yet known, CHP said the Nissan SUV crossed into the northbound lane, slamming into the Lexus head-on.
The Nissan’s driver died, CHP said. The Sacramento County Coroner identified him as John Malley.
The Lexus’ driver was taken to a Bay Area hospital with major injuries, along with the 5-year-old girl and the 2-month-old. The 10-year-old was taken to a Sacramento hospital, CHP said.
Hay was the mother to the three children in the vehicle, her aunt Cynthia Padilla confirmed to KCRA 3. The driver was Hay’s boyfriend and the father of the 2-month-old, Padilla said.
They had been driving back to Rio Vista from the Bay Area.
Highway 160 was closed for about an hour while officers investigated.
The family of Jessica Hay has created a GoFundMe to help with medical expenses and funeral costs. Click here for more information.
Editor’s Note (May 13, 2024): This story has been updated to reflect new information and clarification from CHP about who was in each vehicle that was involved in the crash.
(FOX40.COM) — A man who was arrested and in the process of being fingerprinted died at the Sacramento County Jail on Sunday morning, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.
At around 4:20 a.m., SCSO said a 55-year-old man was brought into custody by another agency, the Sacramento Police Department, for two misdemeanor warrants. Deputies said the man was “medically cleared for incarceration,” but did not specify what he was examined for.
About one hour after the medical examination, deputies said they attempted to fingerprint the man as part of the intake process. While being fingerprinted, the man became unresponsive, according to SCSO.
Deputies said medical staff and first responders attempted first-aid, CPR, and administering Narcan to the man. Despite those efforts, he was pronounced dead at the jail.
The sheriff’s office said the incident is under internal investigation. The Sacramento County Coroner’s Office will determine the cause of death and release the name of the deceased after notification has been made to his next of kin.
(FOX40.COM) — A man who was convicted of four freeway shootings and sentenced to 90 years in prison was approved to be released back into Sacramento County after only serving 14 years.
Kyle Douglas Frank was convicted by a jury for firing several gunshots at cars on four separate occasions in August and September of 2009. His victims were all Black or Hispanic and officials believe his crimes were racially charged.
“He unloaded his gun and put about six bullets in my passenger door, shattered my side view mirror, and all because I looked inside of his car,” said Paul Adcock, a survivor of one of the freeway shootings on I-80 in 2009. “Calling me the N-word and everything else and giving me the finger.”
On April 10, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s Board of Parole Hearings granted parole to Frank.
“I thought justice was done, when they said 90-plus years. It hasn’t even been half of that. So why he’s getting out so soon, is beyond me,” Adcock said.
Sacramento County Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Rochelle Beardsley voiced concerns about the possibility of Frank being released from prison.
“It’s our position that he is not eligible or amenable to parole,” Beardsley said. “Public safety is the mandate of the District Attorney’s Office.”
Sacramento County District Attorney Thien Ho’s office warned the public of Frank’s release.
“Each victim was either Hispanic or African American,” the DA’s office said. “He attempted to murder eight innocent people simply because of their skin color.”
The DA’s office said they asked Governor Gavin Newsom to intervene with the boards decision, but if he doesn’t, Frank will be released back into the Sacramento community.
T.R. Smedberg Middle School was put on lockdown and later evacuated as a precaution on Friday morning due to a call regarding a bomb threat, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.Parents can pick up their children at the Shelton High School Football field, the sheriff’s office and school’s principal said. The sheriff’s office said the school received the call just before 10 a.m.According to a message from the principal, school officials immediately contacted law enforcement and the threat is being investigated. Parents should not come to the Smedberg Middle School campus. The school is part of the Elk Grove Unified School District. This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
T.R. Smedberg Middle School was put on lockdown and later evacuated as a precaution on Friday morning due to a call regarding a bomb threat, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.
Parents can pick up their children at the Shelton High School Football field, the sheriff’s office and school’s principal said.
The sheriff’s office said the school received the call just before 10 a.m.
According to a message from the principal, school officials immediately contacted law enforcement and the threat is being investigated.
Parents should not come to the Smedberg Middle School campus.
The school is part of the Elk Grove Unified School District.
This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
Two women died after a Sacramento County shooting, officials said Thursday morning. Deputies are investigating both deaths as homicide.The shooting happened Wednesday night outside of The Eleven Hundred apartment complex along Howe Avenue near Northrop Avenue, the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said.Deputies who went there found two women, each with at least one gunshot wound, the sheriff’s office said. Both died at the scene. A neighbor told KCRA 3 they heard several gunshots.Details were not released on what led to the shooting, or if there were any other people involved. There is also no known motive.This is the same apartment complex where a murder-suicide left a man and two women dead September 2023, also resulting in an evacuation of people who live at the complex.This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
Two women died after a Sacramento County shooting, officials said Thursday morning. Deputies are investigating both deaths as homicide.
The shooting happened Wednesday night outside of The Eleven Hundred apartment complex along Howe Avenue near Northrop Avenue, the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said.
Deputies who went there found two women, each with at least one gunshot wound, the sheriff’s office said. Both died at the scene.
A neighbor told KCRA 3 they heard several gunshots.
Details were not released on what led to the shooting, or if there were any other people involved. There is also no known motive.
Millions of taxpayer dollars will go toward settling a lawsuit accusing California of numerous safety violations involving underground storage tanks beneath state buildings, according to Sacramento County court documents.This comes at a time when California state leaders are dealing with a significant budget shortfall.Last month, Sacramento County District Attorney Thien Ho filed a formal complaint in Superior Court accusing the State of failing to follow safety procedures.”THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, brings this law enforcement action to protect public health and the environment from harm due to releases of hazardous substances from leaking Underground Storage Tanks (UST’s), including harm to groundwater and surface waters and against harm from indoor air impacts. Plaintiff also brings this action to protect public health and the environment from harm due to the unlawful mismanagement of hazardous waste and hazardous materials,” read a Superior Court filing against the California Department of General Services.Read the full complaint here.The complaint alleges inspections at a number of sites uncovered safety violations between 2018-2023. This included failing to maintain annual inspections or equipment testing, lacking proper permits or improper storage, according to the court filing.Locations of safety violations:State Capitol BuildingDepartment of Justice BuildingThe California MuseumCapitol Annex Swing SpaceViolations were also found in downtown Oakland. The District Attorney there is a co-plaintiff in this complaint.In a separate settlement agreement, the state agreed to pay $2.26 million in civil penalties, $350,00 for training and $55,000 for investigative costs. Read the agreement here.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
Millions of taxpayer dollars will go toward settling a lawsuit accusing California of numerous safety violations involving underground storage tanks beneath state buildings, according to Sacramento County court documents.
This comes at a time when California state leaders are dealing with a significant budget shortfall.
Last month, Sacramento County District Attorney Thien Ho filed a formal complaint in Superior Court accusing the State of failing to follow safety procedures.
“THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, brings this law enforcement action to protect public health and the environment from harm due to releases of hazardous substances from leaking Underground Storage Tanks (UST’s), including harm to groundwater and surface waters and against harm from indoor air impacts. Plaintiff also brings this action to protect public health and the environment from harm due to the unlawful mismanagement of hazardous waste and hazardous materials,” read a Superior Court filing against the California Department of General Services.
The complaint alleges inspections at a number of sites uncovered safety violations between 2018-2023.
This included failing to maintain annual inspections or equipment testing, lacking proper permits or improper storage, according to the court filing.
Locations of safety violations:
State Capitol Building
Department of Justice Building
The California Museum
Capitol Annex Swing Space
Violations were also found in downtown Oakland. The District Attorney there is a co-plaintiff in this complaint.
In a separate settlement agreement, the state agreed to pay $2.26 million in civil penalties, $350,00 for training and $55,000 for investigative costs.
An hours long standoff in Sacramento County ended around 9:30 p.m. when deputies took the suspect into custody.A 39-year-old man had barricaded himself inside a Gold River area home after a police chase that ended with the suspect running into a residence. The driver ran inside a residence on Hollenbeck Way around 4:30 p.m. Tuesday after being pursued by the California Highway Patrol. Officials said the pursuit began when officers saw a vehicle driving in a “dangerous and unsafe manner.” The officer attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver failed to stop and follow the officer’s instruction.LiveCopter 3 showed a large police presence in the residential area while deputies worked to get the suspect out of the house.The suspect was taken to a mental health facility for evaluation. No one was injured in the incident.CHP said it will seek criminal charges through the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.
GOLD RIVER, Calif. —
An hours long standoff in Sacramento County ended around 9:30 p.m. when deputies took the suspect into custody.
A 39-year-old man had barricaded himself inside a Gold River area home after a police chase that ended with the suspect running into a residence.
The driver ran inside a residence on Hollenbeck Way around 4:30 p.m. Tuesday after being pursued by the California Highway Patrol.
Officials said the pursuit began when officers saw a vehicle driving in a “dangerous and unsafe manner.” The officer attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver failed to stop and follow the officer’s instruction.
LiveCopter 3 showed a large police presence in the residential area while deputies worked to get the suspect out of the house.
The suspect was taken to a mental health facility for evaluation. No one was injured in the incident.
CHP said it will seek criminal charges through the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office.