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Tag: Sacramento

  • Arik Armstead discusses departure from 49ers, joining the Jaguars and his Sacramento football camp

    Arik Armstead discusses departure from 49ers, joining the Jaguars and his Sacramento football camp

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Former 49ers defensive lineman Arik Armstead talks to FOX40’s Sean Cunningham about his departure from the Niners after nine seasons, the new beginning with the Jacksonville Jaguars, explains why things didn’t work out to keep him with San Francisco.

    The 30-year-old from Elk Grove’s Pleasant Grove High School also discusses hosting his annual charitable weekend in his hometown of Sacramento, bringing a VIP fundraising gala to the Sawyer Hotel, along with his youth football camp to Sacramento City College, which included an opportunity for kids to tour the campus.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Kings head coach Mike Brown on the season coming to an end in New Orleans following loss to Pelicans

    Kings head coach Mike Brown on the season coming to an end in New Orleans following loss to Pelicans

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    NEW ORLEANS (KTXL) – Kings head coach Mike Brown shares his observations on Friday’s 105-98 loss to the Pelicans in the Play-In Tournament, Sacramento’s season ending with a sixth loss to New Orleans, the impact of the Pelicans’ bench and the disappointment of heading into the offseason.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Keegan Murray on Play-In matchup with Pelicans, Kings looking to snap 0-5 record vs. New Orleans

    Keegan Murray on Play-In matchup with Pelicans, Kings looking to snap 0-5 record vs. New Orleans

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Following Thursday’s practice in Sacramento, Keegan Murray reflects on the Kings win over the Warriors on Tuesday night, the hope of carrying that momentum into New Orleans on Friday night for the final Play-In Game, the pressure that comes with playing in an elimination game, the Pelicans 5-0 dominance over his squad this season and the sense of accomplishment to advance in the Play-In Tournament.

    The Kings and Pelicans will tip-off on Friday night at 6:30 p.m. PT in New Orleans.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Keegan Murray on his 32-point night to lift his Kings over the Warriors, advancing to meet Pelicans

    Keegan Murray on his 32-point night to lift his Kings over the Warriors, advancing to meet Pelicans

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Kings forward Keegan Murray talks about Tuesday night’s 118-94 win over the Warriors in the Play-In tournament, the sense of accomplishment to end Golden State’s season after losing a Game 7 to them in last season’s playoffs, his game-high performance with 32 points in the contest, Sacramento’s defensive effort and getting a shot to play in New Orleans on Friday night as they try to avoid losing to the Pelicans for a sixth consecutive time this season.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • De’Aaron Fox on the Kings Play-In matchup with Warriors; Sacramento’s experience with Golden State

    De’Aaron Fox on the Kings Play-In matchup with Warriors; Sacramento’s experience with Golden State

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Following Monday’s practice, Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox shares his thoughts on another matchup with the Warriors coming up in Tuesday’s winner take all Play-in Game, the experience they have against Golden State after dropping a seven-game playoff series last season, how three of the four games this season were decided by one-point and the defensive improvements for Sacramento this season.

    The Kings will host the Warriors on Tuesday night at Golden 1 Center with tip-off set for 7:00 p.m.

    The winner of Tuesday’s contest will advance to face the winner of Wednesday’s Pelicans and Lakers Play-In game in New Orleans, where the victorious team hosts the second Play-In game on Friday night.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Firefighters search for a suspect in six arson fires in south Sacramento

    Firefighters search for a suspect in six arson fires in south Sacramento

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    The search for a suspect in six arson fires in south Sacramento continues. The fires started late Friday night into Saturday morning near businesses and neighborhoods around Florin Road and Stockton Boulevard. Others happened within a homeless encampment on Orange Avenue. Sacramento Metro Fire spokesperson, Parker Wilbourn, said investigators identified a man who was seen near each of the fires. “These fires are dangerous because although they are small and potentially contained, they can get out of control very quickly,” Wilbourn said. Mohamad Altahan, who witnessed two of the fires and works nearby, says this is not the first time a fire like this has happened. “A few months ago, somebody set fire to the trash outside,” Altahan said.Fire officials told KCRA 3 they are aware of the concerns and are working to address the issue.Anyone with information is asked to call investigators at 916-859-3775.

    The search for a suspect in six arson fires in south Sacramento continues.

    The fires started late Friday night into Saturday morning near businesses and neighborhoods around Florin Road and Stockton Boulevard.

    Others happened within a homeless encampment on Orange Avenue.

    Sacramento Metro Fire spokesperson, Parker Wilbourn, said investigators identified a man who was seen near each of the fires.

    “These fires are dangerous because although they are small and potentially contained, they can get out of control very quickly,” Wilbourn said.

    Mohamad Altahan, who witnessed two of the fires and works nearby, says this is not the first time a fire like this has happened.

    “A few months ago, somebody set fire to the trash outside,” Altahan said.

    Fire officials told KCRA 3 they are aware of the concerns and are working to address the issue.

    Anyone with information is asked to call investigators at 916-859-3775.

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  • Unsettled Saturday in Northern California

    Unsettled Saturday in Northern California

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    Unsettled weather returns to Northern California this weekend with valley rain and mountain snow expected. Rain showers will be heaviest through the morning hours becoming more scattered in the afternoon with a few thunderstorms also possible. We could potentially see 0.25″ to 0.50″ of rainfall in the valleys and foothills.Snow levels will drop rapidly to about 4,000′ Saturday morning. We could see up to 3-6″ of snow in the higher elevations. Lingering showers will persist in Sunday, though not nearly as many as Saturday.Drier air returns Monday.

    Unsettled weather returns to Northern California this weekend with valley rain and mountain snow expected. Rain showers will be heaviest through the morning hours becoming more scattered in the afternoon with a few thunderstorms also possible. We could potentially see 0.25″ to 0.50″ of rainfall in the valleys and foothills.

    Snow levels will drop rapidly to about 4,000′ Saturday morning. We could see up to 3-6″ of snow in the higher elevations.

    Lingering showers will persist in Sunday, though not nearly as many as Saturday.

    Drier air returns Monday.

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  • De’Aaron Fox claims he was fouled in final possession of Kings 108-107 loss to Suns

    De’Aaron Fox claims he was fouled in final possession of Kings 108-107 loss to Suns

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox talks about Friday night’s 108-107 loss to the Phoenix Suns, dropping five of their last six games, the final possession of the game where he believes he was fouled but was not whistled, the poor way they’ve closed out recent games and the magnitude of Sunday’s contest against the Portland Trail Blazers.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Kings legend Chris Webber discusses his new memoir; says Sacramento plays prominent role

    Kings legend Chris Webber discusses his new memoir; says Sacramento plays prominent role

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Former Kings legend Chris Webber chats with FOX40’s Sean Cunningham about authoring his new memoir “By God’s Grace”, which documents his Hall-of-Fame basketball career from the University of Michigan to the NBA, his time with the Fab-5 and the infamous timeout he called in the NCAA championship game.

    Webber, 51, talks about his motivations for writing the book, what he learned about himself while working on the memoir and explains the role Sacramento plays in his life.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Sacramento History Museum becomes famous on social media

    Sacramento History Museum becomes famous on social media

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    (FOX40.COM) — The name Howard Hatch might ring a bell. That’s because Hatch has been a volunteer docent at the Sacramento History Museum for 25 years.

    He spends the majority of his time printing on a 1852 historic Washington Hand Press. However, that’s the only place you may have seen Hatch. Odds are if you are a social media user, you have seen Hatch on Instagram, Tik Tok, YouTube, or Facebook.

    In his mid-80s Hatch became an international viral social media sensation racking up subscribers by the million! Reaching millions of views and likes from people all around the world.

    “Numbers that I can’t even get my head around anymore,” Hatch said.

    The social media videos showing Hatch, ‘The Printer’, well, just doing his job. It all started during the pandemic.

    “I asked Howard, can I film you for Tik Tok? And he said, what’s Tik Tok?” said Jared Jones, Sacramento History Museum social media manager.

    “It was some… crazy dance routines were the hot thing at that particular time. So, I came back and told Jared, I said, I am not doing any of that crazy dancing stuff,” Hatch added.

    After being convinced it wouldn’t involve any dancing Jones started documenting Howard using the 1852 Washington handpress. The videos capture the old school printing press while throwing out a couple of historical facts and puns.

    “I’m learning from Howard and the world is learning from Howard at the same time,” Jones said.

    Fast forward to almost four years later, their social media accounts just keep growing.

    “We are now at over three million YouTube subscribers,” Jones said. “So, we are the most followed museum on Tik Tok and the most subscribed museum on YouTube.”

    “There’s been some instances where I’ve been recognized around Sacramento, even though I’m not dressed like this,” Hatch said.

    For Hatch and Jones, it’s not about fame or verified blue check marks. It’s about sharing their passion and a little bit of Sacramento to people all around the world – one video at a time.

    “It’s something that I never would have thought would happen. But I am blessed to not only get to work with Howard a couple of days a week, but we are able to share Sacramento with not just the people that visit our museum, but the people that never be able to visit our museum in person,” Jones said.

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    Kimberly Cruz

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  • Three people hospitalized after crash in North Highlands

    Three people hospitalized after crash in North Highlands

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    Three people were injured in a crash in North Highlands on Wednesday evening, Sacramento Metro Fire said. Officials said two vehicles got into a traffic collision at the intersection of Jackson Street and Madison Avenue at approximately 8:05 p.m.According to Sacramento Metro Fire, one woman needed to be extricated from a vehicle.Officials said all three individuals were taken to an area hospital, and their condition is unknown. See our live traffic map for updates.Click the video player above to watch the latest headlines from KCRA News 3This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.Sharing brings us closer together. If this story happened near you, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they can read along with you. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here.

    Three people were injured in a crash in North Highlands on Wednesday evening, Sacramento Metro Fire said.

    Officials said two vehicles got into a traffic collision at the intersection of Jackson Street and Madison Avenue at approximately 8:05 p.m.

    According to Sacramento Metro Fire, one woman needed to be extricated from a vehicle.

    Officials said all three individuals were taken to an area hospital, and their condition is unknown.

    See our live traffic map for updates.

    Click the video player above to watch the latest headlines from KCRA News 3

    This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.

    Sharing brings us closer together. If this story happened near you, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they can read along with you. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.

    See more coverage of top California stories here.

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  • Eyes hurt after the solar eclipse? Here’s what to know

    Eyes hurt after the solar eclipse? Here’s what to know

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    (FOX40.COM) — Days after a solar eclipse was viewed by millions of people throughout the United States, some people fear there may be some damage done to their eyes.
    • Video Above: Opthalmologist describes how to properly view the solar eclipse

    “We kind of get a little nervous in the office when something like this happens,” Dr. Paymaun Asnaashari of Arden Park Optometry in Sacramento told FOX40.com. “The solar eclipse was a once in a lifetime opportunity for some, but as amazing as it is, it can still have harmful effects.”

    Experts issued several advisories about how to properly view the eclipse and avoid injury before it happened. After Monday’s celestial event, KTLA reported that the Google search for “eyes hurt” spiked. Although some people may have missed the safety memo, the damage done to a person’s eyes depends on how long a person looked up at the sun, according to Asnaashari.

    “Think of it like like a sunburn. When a person is exposed to the sun for too long it can cause a temporary burn. The longer a person’s skin burns, the more damage is done,” Asnaashari said. “But unlike the skin, the eyes don’t have stem cells which help heal. The sun can destroy the eye cells that control vision, which is an irreversible loss.”

    Asnaashari said the main condition to be on the lookout for is solar retinopathy which is permanent eye damage from sun.

    “If a person experiences noticeable changes in vision that doesn’t improve, I would recommend to see an eye care professional,” Asnaashari said. “Retina damages requires a specific type of imaging to be able to see and diagnose it.”

    On the bright side, Asnaashari said that if a person wore the proper protective gear while viewing the solar eclipse, their vision should go back to normal.

    He added, “unless they bought something generic or something not up to standard for blocking U.V radiation, they are less likely to have permanent damage.”

    Symptoms of solar retinopathy

    The most common cause of solar retinopathy happens from looking at the sun, which happens with sun-gazing or viewing a solar eclipse, according to the American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. The retina does not have pain receptors, so injury isn’t felt when it happens, but tell-tale signs occur within hours of the developed damage.

    •“Blind spot” in one or both eyes (scotoma).
    • Abnormal color vision (dyschromatopsia).
    • Twisting or warping of the central vision (metamorphopsia)
    • Seeing objects smaller than they actually are.
    • Headaches

    Treatment for solar retinopathy

    There isn’t a known treatment for solar retinopathy, according to AAPOS. Many people improve on their own between three and sox months without any treatment. Steroids have also reportedly been tried to improve and reverse symptoms, however, there is no proven effectiveness for solar retinopathy. 

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • How will the solar eclipse impact Sacramento?

    How will the solar eclipse impact Sacramento?

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    (FOX40.COM) — Sacramento may not experience the totality of the upcoming solar eclipse, however, the area will still feel the effects of a partial one.

    “If you didn’t know it was coming, you might just write it off as an abnormally cool spring day,” said Raj Dixit, Sacramento Valley Astronomical Society. 

    Sacramento is expected to experience 45 percent coverage of the sun, according to Dixit.

    “It’s going to appear like someone took a bite out of the sun, from the bottom,” Dixit said. “Imagine just the sun, but half as bright.”

    The Sacramento Valley Astronomical Society reported that there are some similarities in what people will be able to see in Sacramento compared to 2017, the last time there was a total eclipse.

    Residents of the Capital City should expect to witness the eclipse at 11:15 a.m. Experts said it will be accompanied by a noticeable drop in temperature – 1 to 2 degrees.

    “Back in 2017, when there was another total eclipse, Sacramento had a better show,” Dixit said. “It was 79 percent covered, as opposed to less than 50. And you could definitely feel the temperature drop five degrees.”

    No matter the degree of what will be seen, Dixit said people should soak in the eclipse because the next total eclipse won’t happen again for about 20 years.

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Opinion: I’ve covered California’s homeless since before the word was used. This is what I learned

    Opinion: I’ve covered California’s homeless since before the word was used. This is what I learned

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    In 1980, I reported on Sacramento’s “public inebriates.” Most of them, a few hundred in all, lived in flophouse hotels. But some slept “in the weeds.”

    I walked the wooded banks of the rivers that converge in the capital and found just a few dozen spots where men had bedded down on simple mats of cardboard or newspaper. There were no tents or camps.

    The word “homeless” was rarely used then. It didn’t appear in my article for the Sacramento Bee.

    By 1982, amid a recession, newcomers who had lost their jobs began to appear in the weeds. In 1985, after three years of reporting on the subject, I co-authored one of the first books on contemporary homelessness. In 1988, I spent a week walking 10 miles of Sacramento riverbank and found 125 elaborate camps. This was new.

    I returned to Sacramento more recently amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Now the tent cities in the woods along the rivers stretched as far as the eye could see, rivaling those photographed by Dorothea Lange during the Great Depression. The most recent federally mandated survey found more than 5,000 unsheltered homeless people in the city.

    I can trace several of our modern “doom loops” to the 1980s. The roots of our continuing struggles with police brutality and sexual violence were present in stories I covered then. Meaningful gun control measures could have prevented the proliferation of mass shootings over the past four decades. And pro-housing policies could have negated the presence of today’s tent cities.

    I’ve long despaired about the homelessness crisis in particular. In the wake of Ronald Reagan’s election, I blamed conservatives for abandoning the poor. I thought my journalism and others’ could change policy, perhaps even inspire a New Deal-style response equal to the challenge. Such was my naiveté.

    The blame, I eventually realized, also belongs to people we might call “good liberals.”

    By 1980, baby boomers were in their first decade of homeownership in places such as Silicon Valley and the New York City suburbs of Westchester County. They rapidly became NIMBYs, vehemently opposing affordable housing in their neighborhoods. Many were Clinton Democrats. They went on to plant “Black Lives Matter” signs in their lawns. The message was hollow: We support you; just don’t live near us.

    Boomers, especially if they were white, got to buy houses, and then they zoned everyone else out. They watched their lawns and home equity grow. I was one of them.

    In 1981, at 24, I bought my first house. At a price of $70,000, it cost less than three times my annual salary of $25,000, which was roughly the median income in Sacramento County. If adjusted for inflation alone, the home’s value would be $218,000 four decades later, and my salary $78,000.

    The median household income in the county today is about $84,000, not far from what inflation would predict. But Zillow estimates that my former home is now worth $578,000, more than double what can be attributed to inflation. My annual wages would need to be more than $190,000 to afford the house as easily as I did then. This is what the children and grandchildren of boomers face.

    Much was made of the more than 60 housing bills passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last year. The legislation will streamline approval of housing in cities that aren’t meeting their goals, limit the use of environmental laws to block affordable housing, allow developers to build more densely when they include affordable units and let faith-based organizations build housing on their land, among other measures.

    But it’s not nearly enough. Politicians have to get more aggressive in wresting control of zoning from cities.

    Starting in 2018, state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) repeatedly tried to advance bills that would have overridden local zoning to allow taller, denser apartment buildings near public transit and job centers. His fellow Democrats blocked them.

    Even less ambitious housing-friendly bills often face a similar fate in Sacramento. Last year, state Sen. Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) proposed legislation that would have eased approval of small “starter homes” in areas restricted to single-family housing. That provision was stripped out of the bill.

    It’s the same story on the East Coast. Last year, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed legislation to override local opposition to housing. Fierce blowback came from largely white, relatively affluent “good liberals” in places such as Westchester County, where Joe Biden got 67.6% of the vote in 2020. As in California, Democrats opposed to the plan used code language: “local control,” “overcrowding,” “traffic.”

    New York state Assemblyman Phil Ramos cut through the euphemisms: “It doesn’t matter what kind of incentive you give them,” he said at a rally. “A wealthy community, before they allow Black and brown people in, they’ll walk away from any amount of money.” Hochul’s plan was defeated in the Democratic-dominated Legislature.

    Republicans, for their part, haven’t gotten any better on these issues. A podcast by the right-wing Cicero Institute suggested that instead of calling people “homeless,” we revert to words like “vagrants,” “bums” and “tramps.”

    Such vilification is proved off the mark by the fact that poverty-stricken Mississippi has relatively few homeless people. Los Angeles County has six times as many unhoused people per capita as metropolitan Jackson. Why? An average apartment in the Mississippi capital rents for around $900, compared with $2,750 in L.A.

    The Biden administration recently released a report calling for more housing, but the feds have limited power here. “Ultimately,” the report stated, “meaningful change will require State and local governments to reevaluate the land-use regulations that reduce the housing supply.” That largely means undoing single-family zoning.

    Sen. Wiener’s push for apartment buildings in transit corridors had it right. Would this make parts of Los Angeles a little more like Manhattan? We can only hope so. If New York City is any guide, it would mean more vibrant neighborhoods and higher property values.

    As the struggle over housing continues, tent cities have been normalized in California and beyond. Last year, a student of mine looked puzzled when I explained that homelessness of this kind hasn’t always existed. I couldn’t be frustrated with her, though: This crisis has lingered — and worsened — for more than twice as long as she’s been alive. It didn’t have to.

    Dale Maharidge is a journalism professor at Columbia University and the author of the forthcoming “American Doom Loop: Dispatches from a Troubled Nation, 1980s–2020s,” from which this was adapted.

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    Dale Maharidge

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  • Sacramento police seek help to find missing teen with medical condition

    Sacramento police seek help to find missing teen with medical condition

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    (FOX40.COM) — The Sacramento Police Department is asking for the community’s assistance with locating an at-risk teenager.

    Officers said the missing person is 19-year-old Elijah Anobian and is considering to be at risk because of a medical condition. Anobian resides in the area of East Commerce and Natomas Crossing and was reportedly last seen wearing a red jacket, green and yellow baseball cap and noise cancelling headphones.

    Sac PD advised anyone with information on his whereabouts to call the department at 916-808-5471. 

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Suspect detained after Sacramento police search prompted shelter in place

    Suspect detained after Sacramento police search prompted shelter in place

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    A wanted felony suspect has been detained after a police search that partially closed Martin Luther King Boulevard in Sacramento on Friday evening. A perimeter was set up between 14th and 17th avenues on MLK Boulevard, according to the Sacramento Police Department. Residents within the area were asked to shelter in place.Police said the suspect had fled from officers as they were looking for him. A KCRA 3 photographer was at the scene as SWAT arrived. There are no outstanding suspects involved in the search, according to police.

    A wanted felony suspect has been detained after a police search that partially closed Martin Luther King Boulevard in Sacramento on Friday evening.

    A perimeter was set up between 14th and 17th avenues on MLK Boulevard, according to the Sacramento Police Department. Residents within the area were asked to shelter in place.

    Police said the suspect had fled from officers as they were looking for him. A KCRA 3 photographer was at the scene as SWAT arrived.

    There are no outstanding suspects involved in the search, according to police.

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  • Sacramento mother of 13-month-old child who drowned in bathtub arrested in Stockton

    Sacramento mother of 13-month-old child who drowned in bathtub arrested in Stockton

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    (FOX40.COM) — The mother of a child who drowned after being left unattended in a bathtub was recently arrested.

    On Aug. 2, 2019, a 13-month-old and a disabled two-year-old child were left without adult supervision in a residential bathtub, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office. Deputies said their mother, Regjanah Nash, left the children under the care of an 8-year-old cousin.

    Nash told law enforcement that she left her residence for 15 minutes after she received a “frantic call” from her sister who was having an emergency, however, she later admitted that she was out running errands for 90 minutes, according to SCSO. Deputies said that Nash and her sister returned to the residence and found the 13-month-old lying unresponsive in the bathtub. 

    Rather than calling 9-1-1, SCSO said that Nash and her sister drove the three children to a local hospital where the 13-month-old was pronounced dead by hospital staff.

    After an investigation, SCSO detectives said they obtained an arrest warrant for Nash on April 21, 2021, and arrested her on May 4, 2021. She was released the same day on zero bail, held to answer at her preliminary hearing on Feb. 10, 2022, and scheduled to return on Jan 6, 2023, however, she failed to appear, according to SCSO. Nash was on the run for over a year.

    On Thursday, detectives from the Sheriff’s Major Crimes Bureau said they located and arrested Nash in Stockton at a family member’s house. She was booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail, where she remains in custody ineligible for bail.  She is scheduled to appear in court on April 2, 2024.

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  • Limited Entertainment Permit would ease process for live music at smaller Sacramento venues. Business owners encouraged.

    Limited Entertainment Permit would ease process for live music at smaller Sacramento venues. Business owners encouraged.

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    Sacramento city leaders are taking steps toward easing the permitting process for small businesses looking to bring live entertainment into their spaces. Some small business owners say they’re encouraged by the news.The council recommended preparing the change after hearing a presentation Tuesday by Tina Lee-Vogt, Sacramento’s nighttime economy manger.“We’re really excited about the opportunity to bring more social activities throughout the city,” she said Wednesday.The current entertainment permit was established back in 2003, Lee-Vogt explained to council. It functions as a one-size-fits-all permit and does not consider the size or scale of business or event in its application.For smaller business owners, like Heidi Rojek of There and Back Cafe, the “cumbersome” process has been a deterrent from expanding entertainment offerings within the downtown space. “We do our best to be a community hub,” Rojek said. “We’re not just a grab a coffee and go.”Rojek said she’s encouraged to hear the city is taking steps towards easing the permit process for businesses like hers. She said she has big hopes for her space and a more streamlined process would help.Joe Wilson, of Bear & Crown, agreed. “We support the idea of a new limited entertainment permit and look forward to hearing more details as the program is developed further,” Wilson said in an emailed statement to KCRA 3 News.He expanded, saying he’d like to see a decreased application fee, an extended length of time the permit is valid for and a simplified process so that permits can be issued faster.“The existing process is lengthy, expensive and frustrating to navigate,” Wilson said. “I understand the necessity of the city to ensure the safety of patrons at entertainment venues, but the level of oversight and regulation for a restaurant with one acoustic performer in the background does not need to be the same as what is required for a nightclub.”Changing the permit structure comes after two city research projects stated it would have positive impact on local businesses.The Office of Nighttime Economy will present a draft of the revised city ordinance that would introduce the Limited Entertainment permit to the city council in the next six to eight weeks.Lee-Vogt said her team is also looking at ways to expand outreach to community members about the permitting process.

    Sacramento city leaders are taking steps toward easing the permitting process for small businesses looking to bring live entertainment into their spaces. Some small business owners say they’re encouraged by the news.

    The council recommended preparing the change after hearing a presentation Tuesday by Tina Lee-Vogt, Sacramento’s nighttime economy manger.

    “We’re really excited about the opportunity to bring more social activities throughout the city,” she said Wednesday.

    The current entertainment permit was established back in 2003, Lee-Vogt explained to council. It functions as a one-size-fits-all permit and does not consider the size or scale of business or event in its application.

    For smaller business owners, like Heidi Rojek of There and Back Cafe, the “cumbersome” process has been a deterrent from expanding entertainment offerings within the downtown space.

    “We do our best to be a community hub,” Rojek said. “We’re not just a grab a coffee and go.”

    Rojek said she’s encouraged to hear the city is taking steps towards easing the permit process for businesses like hers. She said she has big hopes for her space and a more streamlined process would help.

    Joe Wilson, of Bear & Crown, agreed.

    “We support the idea of a new limited entertainment permit and look forward to hearing more details as the program is developed further,” Wilson said in an emailed statement to KCRA 3 News.

    He expanded, saying he’d like to see a decreased application fee, an extended length of time the permit is valid for and a simplified process so that permits can be issued faster.

    “The existing process is lengthy, expensive and frustrating to navigate,” Wilson said. “I understand the necessity of the city to ensure the safety of patrons at entertainment venues, but the level of oversight and regulation for a restaurant with one acoustic performer in the background does not need to be the same as what is required for a nightclub.”

    Changing the permit structure comes after two city research projects stated it would have positive impact on local businesses.

    The Office of Nighttime Economy will present a draft of the revised city ordinance that would introduce the Limited Entertainment permit to the city council in the next six to eight weeks.

    Lee-Vogt said her team is also looking at ways to expand outreach to community members about the permitting process.

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  • Keegan Murray discusses Kings disappointing 132-96 loss to Mavericks, performance by Luka Doncic

    Keegan Murray discusses Kings disappointing 132-96 loss to Mavericks, performance by Luka Doncic

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Kings forward Keegan Murray talks about Tuesday’s 132-96 loss to the Mavericks, the terrible second half effort from Sacramento, the performance from Luka Doncic to lead Dallas to victory and looking ahead to a rematch on Friday with a chance to win the season series.

    With the loss, the Kings fall a game behind the Mavericks, who now sit in sixth place in the Western Conference standings. Both teams will meet again at Golden 1 Center on Friday night.

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    Sean Cunningham

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  • Kings head coach Mike Brown honors Domantas Sabonis’ milestone after 108-96 win over 76ers

    Kings head coach Mike Brown honors Domantas Sabonis’ milestone after 108-96 win over 76ers

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) – Kings head coach Mike Brown shares his observations of Monday’s 108-96 win over the Philadelphia 76ers, the milestone from Domantas Sabonis who made history with his 54th consecutive double-double, which is the most since the NBA/ABA merger in 1976-77, as well as the impact from Davion Mitchell, who helped lead another impressive defensive effort from Sacramento.

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    Sean Cunningham

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