San Diego, CA
Florida cold case murder suspect appears at extradition hearing in San Diego
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Exactly 39 years after a Florida woman’s body was found in a water filled ditch, a man made his first appearance in court for his alleged connection to the murder after being arrested in San Diego County.
In court, Donald Santini admitted he is the man authorities in Florida have been searching for decades.
However, his public defender, Douglas Miller, emphasized that was not an admission of guilt.
“We don’t know anything about the underlying facts that are alleged. He could have not committed this,” said Miller.
According to the United States Marshals Service, 65-year-old Donald Michael Santini was arrested in Campo on Wednesday after they got a lead from the Florida/Caribbean Regional Fugitive Task Force.
On Friday, Santini agreed to be extradited from San Diego to Florida, but said he does not “feel safe because of the family,” prompting the public defender to tell him to be quiet.
Santini is being held without bail.
According to the arrest warrant from 1984, Santini used several aliases, including “Charles Michael Stevens” at the time of the murder.
“Regardless of whether the case just happened yesterday, or in this case it’s something that’s 40 years old, we want to make sure that justice is achieved,” said Michael Running Junior, a Deputy District Attorney
The victim, 33-year-old Cynthia Ruth Wood, was strangled to death, according to the document.
It is still unclear how long Santini has been in San Diego County and what he has been doing for the last several decades.
On Thursday, the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO), the agency in Florida in charge of the investigation, issued a statement saying in-part:
“This arrest allows us to reexamine evidence collected in 1984 using the technology of today, as the case is now considered open once again.”
HCSO also said it was sending detectives to San Diego on Thursday to interview Santini.
If Florida authorities fail to extradite Santini within 30 days, he would have another hearing on July 10 at 8:30 a.m. in the San Diego Central Courthouse.
San Diego, CA
Long-closed Fry's Electronics being torn down for new apartments
A demolition crew has gutted most of the old Fry’s Electronics building in Serra Mesa to make way for a new apartment complex.
A City of San Diego spokeswoman said the property owners for the site applied for a permit to build a 310-unit apartment complex. NBC 7 contacted the current property owners to see if there is a timeline for demolition and construction but were unable to reach them during the holidays.
Fry’s closed in February 2021 as another victim of the pandemic and evolving consumerism. Nevertheless, the store was a beacon to tech geeks and electronics fans for decades.
“I’ve been in this building dozens of times in my life,” said NBC 7 Chief Photographer Scott Baird.
Baird remembered when the building first opened in the 1990s as Incredible Universe.
“It was like a big deal in San Diego,” Baird said. “You remember where you were when Horton Plaza opened and where this was when it opened.”
The parking lot was fenced in shortly after the store closed in February 2021. Baird flew DroneRanger 7 over the demolition on Tuesday.
“They’re making big piles of stuff into smaller piles of stuff inside so they can probably truck it out of here,” Baird said.
“We do this story 12 times a week,” explained Baird, the veteran journalist. “There’s not enough housing and there’s not enough places to live.”
San Diego, CA
San Diego’s low-wage workers are getting another cost of living pay raise but is it enough?
Despite a coming boost in the minimum wage, lower-paid workers still worry about being able to make ends meet while local restaurants fret that higher labor costs could make it more expensive to dine out.
Originally Published:
San Diego, CA
Norovirus spreading around San Diego faster than last year: Health officials
Doctors say norovirus — also known as the stomach flu — is spreading around San Diego faster than it did last year. With holiday gatherings, they’re bracing for even more outbreaks.
Three-year-old River doesn’t even remember how rough she had it a few months ago. Her mom and dad had what could’ve been norovirus too, but not as badly as she did.
“She was kind of lethargic, and then started throwing up, and then it didn’t stop for about two days,” River’s mom, Corrin Stotler, said. “We ended up taking her to the hospital because she couldn’t keep anything down.”
The county’s disease registry reports there have been almost 400 norovirus cases in San Diego so far. This number has likely changed after holiday gatherings, and a local doctor said it’s already trending worse than last year.
“September, we saw some cases,” said Dr. William Tseng, assistant area medical director at Kaiser Permanente. “October, we saw more. November, we saw more. So, we’re thinking, ‘Is December going to be worse,and where is the peak going to be?’”
The virus spreads through bodily waste and the surfaces it touches.
“You get the abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, cramping, diarrhea,” Tseng said.
Norovirus is a very contagious virus that causes vomiting and diarrhea. Learn how it spreads and how you can help prevent getting it.
If this is the case, doctors advise against taking medications that stop diarrhea because this is body’s way of clearing the virus. Taking meds can cause the illness to stay in the digestive tract longer.
There is no specific cure for a norovirus infection either. Most people get better on their own within a couple days if they increase their fluids.
“If they’re around a lot of kids, one of my friends gives her kid a vitamin C pack every time he gets home from daycare, and I’ve never seen that kid sick,” Stotler said.
An immunity boost can’t hurt, but Tseng said washing your hands is the best way to get the surging virus to slow down.
It can be easy to confuse norovirus for food poisoning. Tseng said pay attention to how soon after eating you start feeling sick. Food poisoning symptoms are almost immediate while norovirus can take a couple days to develop.
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