Los Angeles, Ca
23-year-old man charged with murdering his father in Moorpark apartment
A 23-year-old Ventura man was charged with killing his father, officers introduced Friday.
Jason Tyler Fernandes was charged with the homicide of his father, Michael Fernandes, the Ventura County District Lawyer’s Workplace stated in a information launch.
The criticism alleges one depend of homicide with the particular allegation of private use of a lethal or harmful weapon.
Deputies responded to an house within the 4000 block of Park Lane in Moorpark on Wednesday.
They discovered the sufferer, Michael Fernandes, unresponsive and affected by a number of accidents.
He was transported to Los Robles Hospital, the place he succumbed to his accidents later that day.
Jason Fernandes was discovered close by and brought into custody.
Fernandes was arraigned Friday and pled not responsible to the cost and allegation.
The case is about for an early disposition convention on March 22 on the Ventura County Superior Court docket.
Fernandes is presently in custody with bail set at $1 million.
No additional particulars had been instantly obtainable.
Los Angeles, Ca
Authorities searching for at-risk missing teen last seen in Lancaster
Authorities in Los Angeles County are searching for a teenage girl they say could be at risk.
According to the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department, 13-year-old Aleah Ashley Salgado was last seen at 11 p.m. Friday night on the 3000 block of East Avenue H-2 in Lancaster.
Authorities say her family is concerned for her well being.
Salgado was described as Hispanic, 5-foot-4 and 120 pounds, with long black wavy hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a black T-shirt, grey sweatpants and black shoes.
Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, Lancaster Station at 661-948-8466.
Los Angeles, Ca
Santa Clarita man charged for dealing drug 3 times more powerful than fentanyl, 1 fatal overdose
A Santa Clarita man was charged with dealing a drug three times more powerful than fentanyl, causing one fatal overdose, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
Arraigned on Wednesday, Benjamin Anthony Collins, 21, was charged with one count of distribution of protonitazene that resulted in what the DOJ says could be the nation’s first death-resulting criminal case involving this narcotic.
The indictment alleges Collins knowingly and intentionally dealt protonitazene to a victim in the early morning hours of April 19, 2024. The DOJ only identified the victim as a 22-year-old man from Stevenson Ranch.
The Los Angeles Times reports that hours before his death, the victim called Collins asking for Percocet pills, and Collins sold him five oxycodone pills for $20 each.
Also included in the L.A. Times’ report was a recount of text messages between the two before the drug deal that were shown in court documents: “I need real Perc’s tho…. Cuz my boy just died…. I get worried,” texted the victim.
According to the report, Collins responded by saying, “yeah bro same with my best friend bro. He just died 3 days ago. Off fake pills.” He also then said, “those fake Perc’s get you . . I test all my [expletive] … negative evry time.”
Soon after the deal, the DOJ says the 22-year-old took the pills in the front seat of his car and quickly died. His mother found him parked outside her home and called 911, officials say.
“In recent years, protonitazene has been sold over the internet and is believed to be several times more powerful than fentanyl, which itself is 50 times stronger than heroin,” the DOJ wrote in a statement released Thursday.
According to the World Health Organization, protonitazene and other “nitazenes” were first synthesized in the late 1950s as “novel opioid alternatives to morphine,” but were soon abandoned and never approved for medical use.
The DOJ says Collins, in addition to giving the victim the pills that ended his life, had planned on also selling him a bulk supply of the same drugs in the future.
Collins was arrested on Monday, Nov. 18, and he pleaded not guilty on Wednesday. He is scheduled for a trial date in January, and meanwhile is being held without bail.
If convicted, Collins would face a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in federal prison and a statutory maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
Los Angeles, Ca
Family’s dog still missing after losing home to Mountain Fire
A family is still searching for their missing pit bull, Blue, who disappeared moments before the Mountain Fire took their house in the hills above Camarillo on Nov. 6.
In a rush to escape the flames, Madison O’Donnell, 30, and her father were trying to get their three dogs into the car when a gas tank in a nearby car exploded, startling the dogs, the VC Star reports.
The two dogs that ran into the house were quickly rounded up according to the report, but the 10-year-old pit bull disappeared.
“They searched as the fire spread to their house, her dad running in to check one more time,” details the VC Star. “Still, no Blue.”
O’Donnell and her dad returned to their home on Estaban Drive later that day to look again, but both Blue and their house were gone.
According to the report, O’Donnell says Blue is “the sweetest boy,” who loves sunbathing and has a unique run described as a sort of gallop or “more of a hopping dance.”
O’Donnell also notes that Blue is hard of hearing, but can always sniff out her dad.
“Her dad’s shirts hang on the gate near what she now calls ‘the lot’ instead of home,” reported the VC Star.
The family has also posted signs around their town and online and has reached out to shelters and rescues for help. They’ve even sifted through the rubble of their home to search for his remains, but have not found any.
O’Donnell told the VC Star that sometimes she finds hope in knowing that Blue once survived on his own in an Oxnard field for a time until he ended up at the shelter where she and her father rescued him from about two years ago.
O’Donnell is asking anyone with information on Blue’s whereabouts or possible sightings to email helpusfindblue10@gmail.com.
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