Nevada
‘Raise the conscience’: Videos highlight unhoused population in Nevada County
With out regular earnings, landlords won’t hire to a potential tenant.
A Grass Valley couple realized that the laborious method. Regardless of their marketable expertise and occasional work, they usually stay unhoused.
Vadi Zaitsev is a pianist and guitarist. He’s taught non-public music classes whereas performing on the Miners Foundry, Nevada County Fairgrounds and Sergio’s Restaurant.
“I play all of it — jazz, blues, rock, bossa nova and flamenco,” he stated. “Possibly I may begin educating once more, however we want a mattress in a pleasant neighborhood.”
Then there’s the well being points.
Judy Wheeler, his accomplice, additionally has poor well being. When she arrived in Nevada County in 2013, she was renting a house close to Lake Wildwood she shared along with her grownup son, Michael. Wheeler’s mom had solely not too long ago died. She acquired an inheritance, which proved to be a lifeline as landlords wouldn’t hire to an unemployed tenant.
“The owner needed a 12 months’s hire up entrance if you happen to’re not working and if you happen to’re simply residing off an inheritance, it kind of bleeds out over time,” she stated.
Earlier than caring for her mom, Wheeler labored in Los Angeles doing information entry. She labored there for 3 years when her mother took sick.
“I did search for employment, however after that 18- to 19-year hole, employers thought my expertise have been out of date as a result of I used to be utilizing paper ledgers as an alternative of on-line software program packages,” she stated.
Wheeler misplaced her Lake Wildwood rental when the proprietor opted to promote it in summer season 2017. Her inheritance was operating low and he or she hoped to carry out till Christmas after which transfer to Tennessee, the place her son Michael was working for a ebook retailer. However time ran out for a transition and he or she needed to vacate by September.
POLICE
Wheeler then tried residing out of her hatchback in a South County parking zone.
“I tucked my automobile method within the again the place I assumed it was darkish,” she stated. “However a police officer tapped on the automobile window with a flashlight, and when he shined it on the again seat he noticed all my possessions and figured I used to be houseless.”
The visibility of homelessness over the previous decade has more and more caught the eye of regulation enforcement. The Grass Valley Police Division has taken the initiative to organize officers to successfully interact with them. Capt. Joe Matteoni stated all officers full licensed 16-hour, use of pressure/de-escalation coaching.
“The purpose is to enhance officer consciousness of the homeless inhabitants,” Matteoni stated. “And we’re rising consciousness of particular circumstances involving the homeless.”
Moreover, Grass Valley police have a full-time CalVIP officer — the California Violence Intervention and Prevention Program. The Break the Cycle of Violence Act clarifies the aim of CalVip: to reinforce public well being and security by means of efficient violence discount initiatives in communities disproportionately impacted by violence.
Police additionally acquired three years of funding from the Board of State and Neighborhood Corrections for a pilot program patterned after San Diego’s Psychiatric Emergency Response Workforce targeted on homeless outreach.
“The mannequin pairs a police officer with an outreach employee/case supervisor,” Matteoni stated. “This particular person may additionally be a licensed medical therapist. The grant required 51% of funding be handed to a nonprofit accomplice, and Grass Valley was certainly one of a handful of rural cities eligible for the grant, supported by $575,000 over three years. The nonprofit accomplice is the Hospitality Home, however supervision of this system is primarily overseen by GVPD.”
VIDEO PROJECT
Wheeler additionally lived in a parking zone, although police had him transfer in 2018 and he went to Hospitality Home.
It was at Hospitality Home the place Wheeler met Zaitsev. They discovered prolonged stays at motels because of pandemic reduction help, although sources dried up in April they usually needed to return to their automobile.
Tom Durkin, homeless advocate, then made their acquaintance. As Durkin has lengthy maintained, all people wants a secure place to be. It’s the motto of his impartial communications undertaking — the No Place to Go Video Challenge.
It’s an initiative to help a safe-ground sanctuary camp for unhoused individuals. Towards that trigger, Durkin launched his video undertaking.
“I’m interviewing unhoused individuals and making one-minute movies,” he stated. “I need to increase the conscience of the neighborhood. This camp ought to be supported. It’s morally, legally and economically proper and it’s a security problem.”
Durkin not too long ago was awarded a Sierra Enterprise Council micro-business grant.
“It’ll assist me get well from a near-total lack of enterprise due to COVID-19,” he stated. “This can enable me to proceed the No Place to Go Video Challenge with an actual video digital camera, wi-fi Lavalier microphones {and professional} video enhancing software program.”
Wheeler referred to as the secure sanctuary encampment a good suggestion.
“And Tom stated on his web site, it’d be secure from police intervention,” she stated. “But it surely additionally stated, it’ll have the ability to evict any dangerous guys who trigger bother.”
William Curler is a employees author with The Union. He may be reached at wroller@theunion.com
Nevada
Nevada court rules that Las Vegas Hells Angels can face gang prosecution
Las Vegas Hells Angels motorcycle club members accused of targeting a rival club in a Henderson highway shooting can be prosecuted as gang members under state law, the Nevada Supreme Court ruled Thursday.
The 2022 Memorial Day shooting on Interstate 11 — which Clark County prosecutors alleged targeted Vagos Motorcycle Club members — injured seven people.
Addressing that case, the higher court ruled that there was enough probable cause to classify the Hells Angels as a criminal gang.
Indicted Hells Angels members included local chapter President Richard Devries.
District Court Judge Tierra Jones in 2023 dismissed some of the charges the suspects were facing, including racketeering, gang enhancements and 20 of 25 shooting-related counts.
Jones had sided with defense attorneys who had argued that the indictment failed to properly specify which defendants engaged in alleged racketeering activities.
Police told a grand jury that investigators recovered 25 spent bullets on the highway.
Jones noted that prosecutors only presented evidence from a witness who testified that one of the suspects fired five rounds.
Defense attorneys countered that the state failed to consider exculpatory evidence that some of the Vagos members had guns and that one of the indicted suspects, Rayann Mollasgo, had also been shot.
‘Criminal gang’
“We conclude that this was an error because the State presented at least slight or marginal evidence to support a reasonable inference that Hells Angels members commonly engage in felony-level violence directed at rival motorcycle clubs, such that that group constitutes a criminal gang,” Supreme Court justices wrote in their ruling.
Added the higher court: “Because the District Court substantially erred in dismissing the gang enhancement, we reverse and remand.”
The other Hells Angels members indicted were Stephen Alo, Russell Smith, Aaron Chun, Cameron Treich and Taylor Rodriguez.
After Jones’ ruling, they still were facing 17 charges, including attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Roneric Padilla, who also was indicted, was charged with accessory to commit a felony.
The Vagos group was returning to Las Vegas from Hoover Dam in a ride commemorating the holiday when Hells Angels motorcyclists rode behind the victims, according to prosecutors, who allege the Vagos were ambushed.
The suspects broke up the victims’ group and then shot at individual riders, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors alleged that the shooting might have been in retaliation for a California shooting that killed a Hells Angels motorcyclist, an accusation challenged by Vagos members during a grand jury hearing.
Nsc Hells Angels Decision by Las Vegas Review-Journal on Scribd
Contact Ricardo Torres-Cortez at rtorres@reviewjournal.com.
Nevada
Nelson paces All-Southern Nevada soccer selections
Honored among the state’s best, Boulder City High School girls soccer stars Makayla Nelson and Abbey Byington were named to the All-Southern Nevada team.
An honor usually presented to 5A and 4A players, Nelson and Byington were among seven 3A players to make the 54-player team.
“I am very proud of Mack and Abbey’s accomplishments this year,” head coach Kristin Shelton said. “I’m not surprised they were honored as top players in the state, as they absolutely deserve it. Their talent is obvious and I’m so happy it was recognized by others.”
A dynamic scorer with a state-leading 58 goals, Nelson was named a second-team All-Southern Nevada selection after being named 3A Mountain league’s most valuable player.
Helping the Lady Eagles to a 15-4-1 record, Nelson was named to the 3A All-State first team, after generating 15 assists as well this past season.
“I can’t say it enough that Mack was a force to be reckoned with this year,” Shelton said. “Not only was she our leading scorer, she was just an all-around great student-athlete and leader. Every other coach in our league knew her by name and agreed that she was most deserving of Player of the Year.”
Named an honorable mention selection, Byington was named to the 3A Southern region second team after generating 30 goals and 16 assists this past season.
Honored by the 3A, junior Sancha Jenas-Keogh was a first-team 3A All-State selection after being named defensive player of the year for the Southern region.
Emerging as a breakout presence on both sides of the ball, Jenas-Keogh generated eight goals and eight assists, along with 20 steals.
“Sancha blew everyone away defensively this year,” Shelton said. “Her speed is unmatched, which is why she was able to shut down so many top players in our league. I am extremely excited to have her for one more season and really look forward to continue watching her soccer success.”
Named to the Mountain League second team for the Eagles was senior Abby Francis (eight goals, 12 assists) and juniors Josie Cimino (six goals, seven assists) and Leonesse Williams (six assists, 48 steals).
Nevada
Top 5 high school mascots in Nevada: Vote for the best
Some of the best high school mascots in Nevada are in some seriously remote locations, but one urban contender for best in the state is Cheyenne High School’s Desert Shields in North Las Vegas.
Over the next couple of months, SBLive/SI will be featuring the best high school mascots in every state, giving readers a chance to vote for No. 1 in all 50.
The winners and highest vote-getters will make up the field for our NCAA Tournament-style March Mascot Madness bracket in 2025. The Coalinga Horned Toads (California) are the defending national champions.
Here are High School on SI’s top 5 high school mascots in Nevada (vote in the poll below to pick your favorite):
The poll will close at 11:59 p.m. ET Thursday, Jan. 9.
The North Las Vegas school was built in 1991, a year after the United States’ Operation Desert Shield began in Iraq. For Native Americans, a desert shield is a protective hide often decorated with bright designs and feathers.
Not quite a tornado, a dust devil is a strong, well-formed, relatively short-lived whirlwind. And the Dust Devils’ mascot has lots more personality than a lot of tornado logos out there — it looks ready to fight with its dukes up while sporting a serpent-like tail.
Tonopah is in mining country in off-the-beaten-path Nevada, and mucking is a little-known mining process. Muck is a mix of silver, rock and dirt, and muckers load it into ore cars for it to be rolled to the surface and processed. Fighting Muckers, on the other hand, play high school sports.
Mineral County residents have been telling horror stories about Walker Lake’s Cecil the Serpent since the 1800s, warning of imminent death to anyone who dared to swim in Cecil’s lake. If that’s not a perfect scenario for a high school mascot, I don’t know what is.
Anyone with arachnophobia will want to skip ahead to the next one (and stay away from Gabbs, Nevada, in the fall). From September through November, thousands of desert tarantulas get out of their burrows and roam searching for a mate, representing the world’s largest tarantula migration. They’re so ever-present in Gabbs that the high school made the obvious choice of calling themselves the Tarantulas.
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— Mike Swanson | swanson@scorebooklive.com | @sblivesports
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