San Diego, CA
North Park squatter home neighbors meet with mayoral candidate
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Despite a notice to vacate, demands to bring the property up to code, and locks on the gates, the City of San Diego continues to receive reports of trespassers at two vacant properties on Dale Street in North Park, one of which was set on fire last month.
Now, neighbors are meeting with city officials and mayoral candidate Larry Turner to discuss potential solutions.
“The squatters really took over and became entrenched in those two homes, which have been vacant for decades,” said neighbor Andy Laub. He and his wife, Natalie, are hoping for answers alongside other concerned residents living near the properties.
Following repeated 911 calls, break-ins, drug use accusations, and now lawsuits, one of the homes was set ablaze last month.
“Now that the fire has happened, these homes have been haphazardly boarded up. What’s next?” Laub asked.
The situation prompted the City of San Diego and the City Attorney’s Office to meet with neighbors last Wednesday to discuss next steps.
Laub and other residents have also reached out to Turner, Mayor Todd Gloria’s challenger in the upcoming election.
“We figured if we’re already working with the city, let’s see what the mayoral candidate would do about it,” Laub said.
Mayor Gloria was invited to the meeting but declined. A spokesperson for Gloria’s office said city staff are actively addressing the issue, and it would be inappropriate to mix city resources with a campaign event.
Event organizers said the property owner hasn’t done enough to secure the homes and are interested in hearing how Turner would address squatting issues like this one.
“What I hope to hear from him are actual steps to address the problem,” Laub said. “It’s not just about two houses on one block; this is happening all over the city.”
The city said the property owner has been cooperative with police, though he is countersuing neighbors who filed a lawsuit against him.
San Diego, CA
18-Year-Old Wanted For Shooting Rifle In San Diego County Arrested In Oklahoma
POWAY, CA — An 18-year-old wanted for various weapons violations in San Diego County was arrested Saturday in Oklahoma, authorities said.
Cameron Johnson fired a rifle in an open field Tuesday near Hidden Valley Drive and Birch Lane in Poway, according to the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office. Johnson, who was dressed in military-style fatigues, was in possession of a rifle that did not have a serial number when he was contacted by deputies.
“At this point, Johnson ran from deputies into an area with dense vegetation,” sheriff’s Lt. Colin Hebeler said. “Despite an hours-long search involving deputies, sheriff’s ASTREA (helicopter) and sheriff’s K-9s, Johnson was not located.”
Deputies found firearm parts without serial numbers and body armor when they served a search warrant at Johnson’s home, Hebeler said.
Johnson was wanted on suspicion of negligent discharge of a firearm, possession of an un-serialized assault rifle and violation of a gun violence restraining order, Hebeler said. The San Diego Superior Court issued a warrant for his arrest Thursday.
Johnson was located and arrested Saturday in Oklahoma City. He is expected to be booked into Oklahoma County Jail and returned to San Diego, Hebeler said. He is expected to face charges of illegal possession of an assault weapon and six counts of illegally possessing a firearm, ammunition, gun parts and magazines in violation of a gun violence restraining order.
San Diego, CA
Aztecs alone atop the Mountain West after beating Boise State
Chapter 10 in the San Diego State football team’s climb to the top of the Mountain West standings will be titled “Redemption in the Rain.”
SDSU defensive coordinator Rob Aurich offered the hopeful suggestion during warmups before the Aztecs played Boise State in a first-place showdown on a crisp, wet Saturday night at Snapdragon Stadium.
After a lopsided loss to Hawaii last week amid a steady rain in Honolulu, Aurich was eager to see his defense respond against the Broncos on a rare rain day in San Diego.
Boise State’s strong running game got its yards (164 of them), but the SDSU defense stood firm when it mattered most in the Aztecs’ 17-7 win before an announced crowd of 29,201 (15,804 turnstile), which weathered a night of intermittent rain that didn’t dampen the spirits of those in attendance.
SDSU took a 14-10 halftime lead and all but decided the matter on Gabe Plascencia’s 47-yard field goal with 10:51 remaining in the game.
While the Broncos put up some rushing yards, they paled in comparison to the 277 yards piled up by SDSU. Running backs Lucky Sutton (25 carries, 150 yards), who went over 1,000 yards for the season, and Christian Washington (9 carries, 98 yards) did most of the damage.
Those who braved the elements watched the Aztecs take control of the conference. SDSU (8-2, 5-1 MW) assumed a one-game lead in the Mountain West with two games remaining in the regular season. Boise State (6-4, 4-2) fell into a five-way tie for second place with Fresno State, Hawaii, New Mexico and UNLV.
The Aztecs close out the season with a home game Saturday night against San Jose State and a road game the day after Thanksgiving against New Mexico.
Boise State and SDSU have two of the better running teams around, and this contest set up as a ground-and-pound game even before weather put a premium on ball handling. For one thing, Boise State wanted to take the pressure off quarterback Max Cutforth (12-for-18, 108 yards), who was making his first start in place of the injured starter Maddux Madsen. Cutforth had fewer than 40 yards passing before a last-ditch drive that ended with Colton Boomer’s missed 41-yard field goal.
SDSU opened the scoring with a six-play, 80-yard scoring drive. Washington rushed five times for 79 of the yards, most of them coming on 41- and 26-yard runs that advanced the ball to Boise’s 1-yard line. SDSU quarterback Jayden Denegal (6-for-10, 17 yards) took it from there, pushing across the goal line for the final yard and a 7-0 lead with 13:15 remaining in the second quarter.
Boise State responded with a 14-play, 75-yard drive that included 13 rushes. interrupted only by a 6-yard pass by Cutforth. Broncos running backs Dylan Riley (21 carries, 79 yards) and Sire Gaines (13 carries, 78 yards) took turns moving the ball down the field before Riley evened the score on a 9-yard touchdown run with 5:29 remaining in the half.
Then it was SDSU’s turn again, and the Aztecs assembled an 11-play, 71-yard drive with running back Lucky Sutton handling the workload. Sutton rushed seven times, collecting 50 yards. Denegal attempted to pass twice, losing two yards on one attempt while the other was incomplete, before scoring on a 8-yard draw up the middle with 1:10 remaining in the half.
SDSU wide receiver Jordan Napier was the target on the sidline incompletion. He was injured on the play with 4:14 remaining in the half, heading to the treatment tent with a lower left leg injury. Napier did not return. No immediate update was available on his condition.
Linebackers Owen Chambliss and Mister Williams led the Aztecs with eight tackles apiece. The defense was boosted by cornerback Chris Johnson, who returned to the lineup after missing last week with a lower leg injury.
San Diego, CA
A Taste of Massachusetts in PB: The Story Behind Big Jim’s Roast Beef | San Diego Magazine
One beautiful Wednesday morning just before 11 a.m., I found myself faced with a mountainous pile of thinly sliced, slow-roasted, tender roast beef generously slathered with James River BBQ sauce, mayonnaise, and white American cheese (the traditional “three-way”), sandwiched between a buttered and grilled caramelized onion bun.
Looking at the towering challenge before me, I thought, “Surely I won’t be able to finish all of this right now.”
Approximately three minutes later, as I wiped the remnants of the now completely vanquished Super Beef from Big Jim’s Roast Beef from my hands, table, shirt, pants—and yes, a bit out of my hair—I realized there was no chance of any part of that sandwich going home with me. Not only was it ridiculously, awesomely delicious, chef/owner James “Big Jim” Jones had just explained that these types of sandwiches are best eaten immediately, as per Massachusetts’ North Shore Beef Code.
“These are the beef guidelines,” he explains, pointing to a list of rules lorded over by a very angry looking anthropomorphic roast beef sandwich that I would venture to guess at least a few hundred people in Massachusetts have tattooed on them. He runs through each rule, ranging from acronyms for efficient ordering (COTB: Cheese on the Bottom vs. COTT: Cheese on the Top) to review criteria for comparing notes with other aficionados (B2B: Beef to Bun ratio or NGB: Nicely Griddled Bun).
He stopped at TIB: Time in Bag. Ideally, the time your sandwich spends in a to-go bag should be as close to zero as possible—every second the medium-rare beef sits on a bun and not on your tongue, it goes from pink to gray. “You want to have no time in bag,” he says. “As soon as you get it, eat it.”
There aren’t a ton of places in Southern California to get a legit New England–style North Shore roast beef sandwich, and Big Jim’s feels like a teleporter to Massachusetts, where Jones originally hails from. When he moved to San Diego in 2016, he worked in a few kitchens around town like Ono Grinds, Wicked Maine Lobster, and Cloak & Petal for a couple of years. Cue the pandemic, and the at-home boredom.
He picked up a deli slicer from OfferUp and started roasting and slicing roast beef like he used to get back home. Making sandwiches for himself turned into making sandwiches for friends. That turned into making an Instagram page for deliveries and then a pop-up at Poor House Brewing Company in North Park. Finally, it became a booth at a couple of farmers markets.
Three years later, he got the chance to lease a small storefront in Pacific Beach, and celebrated the restaurant’s two-year anniversary this September.
Like the roast beef, Jones’ business plan takes time. “[I] let the universe work pretty naturally and organically,” he says in terms of his expansion plans. He’s in no rush to open a second storefront, but would be open to it once he feels the Pacific Beach location gets fully dialed in. There’s still a bit of customer education to do, because a North Shore-style roast beef sandwich shouldn’t be messed with, and the customer isn’t always right (at first).
“If people come in and they get a roast beef sandwich and ask me for ketchup, I say, ‘What are you using your ketchup for?’ And depending on what their answer is, you might not get the condiment that you want to go with your sandwich,” he says with a smile. “It’s beautifully perfect the way it is. Try it! And if you still want some condiments to go with it, come back. Let me know. I’ll take care of you.”

His signature sandwich is unquestionably the Super Beef, the New England regional classic that’s really not for the faint of heart. For a more diminutive approach, the Junior Beef is the same thing, but with slightly less roast beef on a plain bun rather than an onion bun. There’s also a French dip (which he admits isn’t a Massachusetts staple, but still beloved); a steak & cheese on a hoagie roll; and the homemade, hand-cut onion rings that have a cult following. (Warning: a large order of onion rings is bigger than you think.)
Despite making it to #33 on Yelp’s top 100 restaurants for 2025, a lot of Big Jim’s business comes from word of mouth and the small, but strong contingent of “Massholes” (he said it, not me!) in PB. “We’re the nicest jerks you’ve ever met,” Jones jokes.
But the San Diego sun must melt the grumpiness out of the East Coast transplants, because from what I can see, everyone leaving Big Jim’s is in a great mood, despite bulging bellies and barbecue-sauce smeared fingers. And now we can get real roast beef sandwiches and not have to deal with the East Coast’s nasty weather, San Diegans really do have the best of both worlds.
Big Jim’s Roast Beef & Subs is located at 4508 Cass Street, Suite B in Pacific Beach. Hours are Wednesday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Friday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sunday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
San Diego Restaurant News & Food Events
After A Year Of Rumors and Speculation, Las Cuatro Milpas Counts Down to Closing
The end was always going to come for Las Cuatro Milpas—the family said so themselves—and that time is nigh. The Barrio Logan property officially sold this week for $2.21 million, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune, and will likely cease operations by the end of the year.
The past year has been awash with rumors of the restaurant’s imminent closure, originally vehemently denied by the Estudillo family on multiple occasions both online and in-person, but the property’s sale has now been confirmed by the family’s real estate agent Voltaire Lepe. According to the U-T, only the building and adjoining parcel will change hands (not the business name or restaurant itself) to the longtime next door neighbor, Iglesia del Dios Vivo Columna Inc., the controversial Light of the World Church (again, something the family said would not happen). But mounting debts and aging owners leave few options, it would seem.
With so many conflicting narratives of what people wished would happen and what is actually happening, it’s a bit of a bummer how the end is shaking out for this iconic institution. But in the dwindling weeks we have left to enjoy the best beans and tortillas in town, I propose we focus on remembering the amazing 92 years the Estudillos gave San Diego. Take every opportunity you get to grab a taco and thank the ladies behind the counter for their long and tireless service. Las Cuatro Milpas, you will not be forgotten.
Beth’s Bites
- Crack Taco Shop is slowly, but surely extending its domain across San Diego. The home of the “world famous crack tri-tip taco” (debatable on being world famous, but still tasty) just opened its third location in Encinitas, and is less than a month away from opening its fourth location at 1009 Orange Avenue on Coronado. The group also just announced that they ditched seed oils in favor of olive oil and beef tallow, so if that’s a thing you keep track of, go ahead and add them to your list of seed oil-free restaurants in San Diego.
- If you’re looking to do some good in the community today, consider grabbing a bite at Just Peachy Market in Encinitas. Owner and father of two, Noberto Ambrosio recently had his immigration case reopened and is expected to appear before an immigration judge on November 25. He and his family posted a message of how they can best be supported, including writing to the judge or emailing the court, continuing to shop at Just Peachy, or even just stopping by with a message of support and solidarity.
Listen Now: The Latest in San Diego’s Food and Drink Scene
Have breaking news, exciting scoops, or great stories about new San Diego restaurants or the city’s food scene? Send your pitches to [email protected].
-
Nebraska1 week agoWhere to watch Nebraska vs UCLA today: Time, TV channel for Week 11 game
-
Hawaii1 week agoMissing Kapolei man found in Waipio, attorney says
-
Vermont6 days agoNorthern Lights to dazzle skies across these US states tonight – from Washington to Vermont to Maine | Today News
-
New Jersey1 week agoPolice investigate car collision, shooting in Orange, New Jersey
-
West Virginia7 days ago
Search for coal miner trapped in flooded West Virginia mine continues for third day
-
Seattle, WA1 week agoSoundgarden Enlist Jim Carrey and Seattle All-Stars for Rock Hall 2025 Ceremony
-
Detroit, MI1 week agoHere’s the snow forecast for Metro Detroit heading into next week
-
Culture1 week agoThis Poem About Monet’s “Water Lilies” Reflects on the Powers and Limits of Art

