PHOENIX—Bad shooting nights are going to happen. But if rebounding and defense are still there, it’s manageable.
San Diego, CA
A Death on the Streets in Chula Vista Highlights Key Obstacle to Helping Homeless
When Elizabeth Marie Torres was a child, she could wow family and friends with an uncanny ability to recite her ABCs backward, starting at any letter of the alphabet.
“She was really smart,” Torres’ mother, Silvia Irigoyen-Adame, remembers. “People would challenge her and she would say it right away.”
Quiet and shy, Torres grew up in Chula Vista, where she was born in 1990 at Scripps Mercy Hospital. Her mostly happy, uneventful childhood ended abruptly in 2005, when her parents divorced. Three years later, Torres’ longtime boyfriend, the man she intended to marry, died of leukemia on her 18th birthday.
“That was the start of the bad,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “She clamped up. Didn’t want to go anywhere. Didn’t want to do anything. Didn’t want to go to counseling.”
Torres earned her GED and trained to become a medical assistant at Southwestern College. But already her life was veering off track. She gave birth to a son, Alejandro Camacho, with a man she met shortly after her boyfriend died.
She started a medical assistant internship and soon began disappearing for days at a time with a new group of friends.
“I was starting to lose her little by little,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “She was with the wrong crowd, and that’s where the drugs came from.”
Someone introduced Torres to methamphetamine. Her visits home dwindled then all but stopped. Irigoyen-Adame and her partner—now her husband—Frank Adame, took charge of Torres’ son, and later a daughter Torres had with another man.
Torres was arrested and spent a few nights in jail in connection with a car break-in. Eventually, Irigoyen-Adame found her daughter living in a tent near the Sweetwater River.
“She wanted help,” Irigoyen-Adame said. But every avenue the family pursued—rehab, a social worker, a psychiatric hospital, city outreach workers—seemed unable to provide the right service at the right time to guide Torres back to sobriety and stability.
In May of this year, Torres told her mother she’d tried to check herself into Chula Vista Village at Otay, a recently opened city-run tent shelter near Otay Valley Regional Park. Irigoyen-Adame said her daughter showed her an email instructing Torres to fill out an online intake form to determine her eligibility for help.
Irigoyen-Adame doesn’t know whether her daughter ever followed the email’s instructions. A few months later, in late August, Torres called to ask Irigoyen-Adame for help moving her tent from one street to another near the city’s southwestern border.
“We gathered her things and took her things to Industrial [Boulevard],” Irigoyen-Adame said. “I gave her some fruit and money and clothes.”
A week later, Torres was found unresponsive in a tent on the other side of the city, near Bayfront Park. A man emerged from the tent shouting, “Help me, help me, help me, she’s not breathing,” Irigoyen-Adame said, recounting the story she’d heard from eyewitnesses.
Torres was rushed to Scripps Mercy Hospital—the same hospital where she’d been born 34 years earlier—and placed on life support. She was pronounced dead on Sept. 6 of acute methamphetamine and fentanyl intoxication, according to a county medical examiner’s report.
Torres’ death has not yet been recorded in San Diego County’s quarterly report of countywide drug overdoses. In 2022, the latest year for which figures are available, 977 county residents were killed by drugs. When equivalent figures are compiled for 2024, Elizabeth Torres will be one of the people whose lives—and deaths—are recorded in an anonymous statistic.
From her mother’s perspective, Torres’ death stands as an indictment of what she called “a failed broken system that will not allow anyone to get the help needed.”
“I really tried to help her so many times,” Irigoyen-Adame said of her daughter. “And it just failed all the time. It shouldn’t have been that hard to get help for her.”
Since her daughter died, Irigoyen-Adame has appeared before the Chula Vista City Council twice, on Sept. 17 and again on Oct. 8, berating officials both times for what she described as the city’s heartless, confusing process for helping homeless people.
“When I asked for help, I got no help from anybody,” Irigoyen-Adame said to councilmembers during the Sept. 17 meeting. “I asked. I called. I begged. I got nothing…[City outreach workers] just go out there and do surveys. They don’t help them.”
Leaders in San Diego County’s vast system for serving, housing and advocating for homeless residents agree with Torres that the system’s current track record with homeless drug users is “a disaster,” said John Brady, an advisory board member with the San Diego Regional Taskforce on Homelessness.
In a September interview, Brady listed a range of shortcomings: Lack of coordination between service providers and public agencies; lack of affordable housing; and lack of drug and psychiatric treatment facilities.
San Diego County has just 78 contracted detox beds able to serve indigent patients on Medi-Cal, the state-run program for low-income Californians. The shortage is part of an overall drug treatment system that all participants agree is overwhelmed and unable to meet current or future needs.
“It’s a very frustrating situation we’re in right now,” Brady said.
Torres’ story illustrates a less-discussed but equally complicating factor: The sheer logistical challenge of helping chronic drug users, whose destabilized lives typically offer windows of opportunity for treatment that are few, fleeting and require almost immediate action.
Telling her daughter’s story, Irigoyen-Adame takes pains to counter a common stereotype, that homeless drug users choose, and enjoy, their lifestyle. Torres may have chosen to start using drugs, her mother said, but she certainly didn’t love the experience once addiction took hold.

“She was ashamed,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “She said she was embarrassed and didn’t want her kids to see her like that…It was not my daughter anymore. She was not the same person.”
Yet, Torres frequently ignored or rejected her family’s efforts to help her. “She had everything,” Irigoyen-Adame said her daughter would tell her. “She didn’t need anything…When I put her in [a] rehab center, she said, ‘I can’t relate to people here,’” and left the program. “She was an adult, and it’s harder to deal with an adult because she thinks she knows what she’s doing and I can’t force her to do anything.”
The National Institute on Drug Abuse, a federal research agency, describes drug addiction as “a chronic, relapsing disease” that causes “functional and molecular changes in the brain.” Among those changes is damage to parts of the brain that control decision-making. The longer people use drugs, according to researchers, the less their brains are able to stop.
Periodically, something would happen prompting Torres to ask her mother for help. The moments were unpredictable and often came when Irigoyen-Adame was working or trying to care for Torres’ two children. Irigoyen-Adame would leap into action anyway.
Over the years, she enrolled her daughter in a residential treatment program for women in San Diego, begged a judge to send Torres to counseling, had her committed in a psychiatric hospital, tried to get her into a detox facility and begged her to follow up with Chula Vista’s transitional tent shelter.
Each time, the necessary service was either unavailable, closed for the weekend, didn’t specialize in Torres’ needs or simply turned her down. By the time the right service was available, Torres was back on the street or had changed her mind.
“She slipped through the cracks,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “I don’t have the money to put her in an expensive rehab…I’m sure I’m not the only parent who has been through this hell.”
Irigoyen-Adame said her daughter’s failure to gain entrance to the city-run tent shelter was especially frustrating because it was Torres’ last serious effort to get help, and because city officials often point to the program as evidence of their commitment to helping homeless residents.
“They make it really difficult to get into those places,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “They don’t want people with problems…They need people to say, ‘We’ll help you no matter what, even if you fail.’”
Angelica Davis, a homeless solutions manager for the city of Chula Vista, said she and her city’s 12-member homeless outreach team frequently hear such complaints from homeless residents and their advocates.
But she said many claims made about the city’s homeless services—that they do not serve drug users, that they turn away people with problems or that they seek only to clear encampments—are not true.
“I would say we’re extremely low-barrier,” Davis said of the city’s transitional tent shelter. “We have some rules in place for the security and safety of clients. If you’re trying to bring in drugs or alcohol or weapons, or are not willing to work with the program, you would not be let in.”
Otherwise, “if someone expresses interest in shelter, we assess their situation [and] connect them with services,” Davis said. Services offered by the city range from shelter to rent subsidies, referrals to detox and drug treatment, a planned supportive housing project and specialized programs for veterans and seniors.
Davis said that, as of September, 57 of the transitional tent shelter’s 65 beds were occupied by people in various stages of progress from the streets into housing.
Davis said that, rather than lack of services, “drugs is the thing that makes it hardest for people to transition off the streets…Clients say yes [to an offer of help], they get on the truck and when they get to the shelter, they say no and don’t enter.”
Researchers and treatment providers debate the right combination of compassion and coercion required to help homeless drug users transition to housing and sobriety. Roughly 45 percent of Chula Vista homeless residents surveyed in a recent count said they had an alcohol or drug use disorder, according to a city report. Of the city’s 786 homeless residents, just 12 were placed in a detox facility over the past year, according to the report. Most contacted by outreach workers—536, according to the report—declined offers of service.
A new state law expected to take effect in San Diego County starting in January will expand public authorities’ ability to force people with acute drug and alcohol problems into treatment even if they refuse. The law remains controversial, and advocates for homeless drug users say lack of treatment options remains a barrier, despite ongoing county efforts to expand capacity.
While policymakers debate solutions, Irigoyen-Adame said she has begun trying to help other homeless people transition off the street, in part to atone for a sense of guilt she feels about her daughter’s death.
During some of her final conversations with Torres, Irigoyen-Adame said, “I told her, ‘Liz, I can’t help you anymore…Mija, I have to leave you in God’s hands because I can’t do this anymore.’ And I guess maybe he decided to take her. I think maybe if I hadn’t said those words she would still be here.”

Irigoyen-Adame learned that her daughter had overdosed from her ex-husband, who received a call from the hospital. Irigoyen-Adame rushed to the intensive care unit.
Torres “looked like she was asleep,” Irigoyen-Adame recalled. Her heart had already stopped beating multiple times on the way to the hospital. Doctors said there was nothing further they could do. “It was so hard for me to decide to take her off life support,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “It was really hard for me to make that decision.”
Irigoyen-Adame decided that her daughter would have wanted to serve others by donating her organs. The last time she saw Torres, she was being wheeled into an operating room for organ donation. “They had put a braid in her hair at the hospital,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “Her eyebrows were perfectly done. Her face was perfect. She looked asleep. Peaceful.”
Torres’ last moments on the streets remain a mystery. Irigoyen-Adame said she went to the place where her daughter died and questioned homeless people there, as well as friends of Torres near the Sweetwater River, where her daughter had spent much of her time.
“I come with flowers and people offer condolences and I ask who that guy was [who gave Torres a fatal dose of drugs] and they give different names,” Irigoyen-Adame said. “Police say she was alone in the tent but the medical examiner says she was with her boyfriend.”
A small wooden cross etched with Torres’ name marks the spot on Bay Boulevard where Torres overdosed. The cross is surrounded by flowers, candles and handwritten cards. There are low-slung office buildings nearby. Traffic on Interstate 5 hums in the distance.
Torres was buried on Oct. 1 at Glen Abbey Memorial Park and Mortuary in Bonita. The service, presided over by a Catholic priest, was attended by Torres’ extended family and several of the homeless people she spent time with on the streets. Her ashes rest near the graves of her grandfather and two uncles, who are also buried at the cemetery.
The service announcement included a message from Irigoyen-Adame to her daughter: “I love you so much, my baby girl. You’re in my heart Forever, until we meet Again. Momma.”
San Diego, CA
Arizona men’s basketball dominates San Diego State in 2nd half to remain perfect
Top-ranked Arizona tested that theory on Saturday night, stinking up the joint offensively for most of the evening yet still coming away with another lopsided victory thanks to its defense and work on the glass.
Tobe Awaka and Motiejus Krivas combined for 28 rebounds, same as San Diego State’s entire team, in a 68-45 win in a Hall of Fame Series game at Mortgage Matchup Center. It was the UA’s sixth consecutive win by at least 20 points, their longest streak since 1942-43.
Awaka had 15 rebounds, his fourth game with at least 15 this season, along with nine points in 22 minutes off the bench while Krivas had three points and 13 boards. The Wildcats (11-0) outrebounded SDSU 52-28, grabbing 20 offensive boards that resulted in 14 second-chance points.
Jaden Bradley and Koa Peat each had 11 points, while Brayden Burries, Anthony Dell’Orso and Ivan Kharchenkov had 10 apiece for Arizona, which shot just 37.9 percent and was 6 of 25 from 3. Three of those makes came in 4-minute stretch in the second half when the Wildcats pulled away after trailing by as many as eight in the first half.
SDSU (6-4) shot 26.3 percent, its worst shooting performance in 11 years, and was 1 of 14 from 3 after coming in shooting 41.3 percent.
Arizona missed its first nine 3-pointers before Dell’Orso swished one in the final minute of the first half to give his team a 28-27 halftime lead, ending on an 8-0 run. Four of the Wildcats’ first five shots after the break were from deep, all misses, before Peat dunked on a runout.
A 3 byKharchenkov put the UA up 37-31 with 14:51 left, its first 2-score margin. It led by six with 12:36 to go when an out of bounds call first went Arizona’s way and then was reversed, prompting Tommy Lloyd to challenge the call.
He won the challenge, improving to 3 for 3 since challenges were implemented this season, andAwaka scored on the other end to give the Wildcats a 41-33 lead with 12:11 remaining.
After starting 2 of 17 from 3, Arizona hit three straight—two from Dell’Orso and one from Dwayne Aristode—to blow it open. That came during a 12-2 run to build the margin to 53-36 with 8:31 left.
A putback slam by Awaka put the Wildcats up 20 with 4:49 to go.
The UA started 4 of 16 from the field, missing six straight shots at one point, and trailed 19-11 with 10:07 left in the first half. It was the largest deficit since being down eight to UCLA in the second half on Nov. 14.
During that time, Peat picked up his second foul and sat the final 11-plus minutes of the half.
The Wildcats got within three a few minutes later but then hit a wall offensively, coming up short on seven consecutive possessions when it could have tied it. SDSU was able to stretch the lead out to 27-20 with 2:36 left in the half when the tied turned.
The UA got five straight points from the line, including three on one possession with 1:18 to go. Bradley was hacked going to the hoop, and after making one foul shot SDSU coach Brian Dutcher was called for a technical foul, withDell’Orso making 1 of 2 technical free throws.
Bradley made the second, getting Arizona within two, then after a missed 3 on the other end Dell’Orso came off a Krivas screen and drained the Wildcats’ first triple with 30.6 seconds remaining in the half to put the UA up for the first time since 8-7.
Arizona returns home for its final two nonconference games, hosting Bethune-Cookman on Monday and South Dakota State on Dec. 29.
San Diego, CA
San Diego’s cost-of-living committee led big policy fights in 2025. The City Council is ending it.
A year after creating a special committee on cost-of-living, the San Diego City Council is shutting it down.
Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera, who chaired the committee, said he was content to let it die as the council had plenty of work to do completing policy initiatives that started there.
The committee took on some of the most high profile and divisive issues that the city considered last year, such as the successful effort to increase the minimum wage for tourism workers to $25 starting in July 2026.
But it also operated just as city officials passed new and increased fees that added to residents’ cost of living. The city’s new monthly trash fee, hikes to parking rates around town and increased charges for using city facilities all hit residents’ bottom lines this year.
Elo-Rivera stood by approving those fees with one hand while trying to combat costs with the other.
“The cuts on the table that those fee increases mitigated or avoided — library, recreation center and park hours services — were things the community said they didn’t want cut,” he said. “The fees we established were the most fiscally responsible way to avoid those cuts.”
Elo-Rivera is still pushing two other cost-of-living initiatives that could pass in 2026. One is a joint effort with the county to ban landlords from charging hidden fees tacked on to rent. The other is a potential June ballot measure to impose a $5,000 per-bedroom tax on vacation rentals or second homes.
“I completely understand why someone would say, ‘If you want to fix the cost of living, don’t raise these other costs,’” Elo-Rivera said. “We proposed a vacation home tax for the specific purpose of having the things that city residents want and deserve, without the cost of that resource falling on the backs of middle class and working class San Diegans.”
San Diego this year also became the first city in the country to ban grocery stores from offering digital-only deals, another initiative that started at the committee.
Elo-Rivera said the fees the city passed this year “only made it more important to have urgency to address cost-of-living increases driven by corporate greed, those that are disproportionately felt by everyday people.”
Councilmembers Henry Foster III and Marni von Wilpert also served on the select committee. Elo-Rivera credited them for stepping up.
“Everyone wants to talk about affordability, but nobody wants to own it,” he said. “There’s a tension there, but those two weren’t afraid to stand next to this issue and wrestle it.”
San Diego, CA
Surveillance video shows thief stealing children’s Christmas gifts from home
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — A local mother is raising awareness about holiday theft after her children’s Christmas presents were stolen from their family home.
Meanwhile, San Diego police are warning people to be wary of scammers and thieves this time of year when the department sees a rise in these types of crimes.
“All the gifts that were hidden from my children were all gone,” said Kristin Lyons.
Plans for a Christmas surprise are now a loss for her two boys. Just before 3 a.m. Friday, a holiday grinch was caught on camera walking up the family’s University Heights driveway.
“It was a male. Jeans, gray sweatshirt, black backpack, a brown Padres hat and he came in on a bike,” said Lyons.
The alleged thief used a flashlight to search their carport before leaving with arms full.
“It was a big bin full of like 30 or 40 gifts wrapped,” according to Lyons. She explained the gifts included a scooter, shoes, clothes, and toys for her 3 and 4-year-old sons.
“They may not be very expensive items, they were very sentimental and personalized for the kids,” said Lyons.
Her neighborhood is located off Park Blvd. and Adams Ave. “We’ve had a lot of foot traffic, which has increased a lot of the crime as well.”
She said she and her neighbors rely on security cameras for safety, but hope police increase patrols after filing a report.
“There’s crimes of opportunity,” said SDPS Lt. Cesar Jimenez. He added that typically thieves look for easy targets.
“They’re looking for homes that are empty. They’re also looking into windows, and if people have all their presents, they have their Christmas tree by a window with all the presents underneath, then that’s a big temptation,” said Lt. Jimenez.
He advised residents to avoid placing their Christmas tree right by a window and to make sure packages are secured and out of sight.
Meanwhile, Lyons said she wants others to learn from her experience and isn’t letting this bring her and her family down.
She added that a neighbor found a partially wrapped gift dumped in the area and returned it to her after they saw her Nextdoor post. She’d like others who may stumble upon more gifts to also post about it on the Nextdoor app in the University Heights area, and she will keep an eye out.
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