San Diego, CA
San Diego may pay $30M to family of Black teen fatally shot by police
The city of San Diego is poised to approve one of the nation’s largest settlements in a police-related killing, weighing a $30 million settlement to the family of Konoa Wilson, a 16-year-old Black boy who was fatally shot by a San Diego police officer in January.
Newsweek has reached out to the San Diego Attorney’s office and the Wilson’s family attorney for comment via email on Saturday.
Why It Matters
Police violence and racial tensions have been major issues in the U.S. for years, fueling mass movements for police reform. Protests surged after the killing of George Floyd in 2020, driven by Black Lives Matter (BLM) demonstrations and renewed calls to shift funding away from law enforcement.
In 2021, Minneapolis approved a record $27 million civil settlement with Floyd’s family after he died when a police officer pinned him to the ground and pressed a knee on his neck.
According to Mapping Police Violence, a nonprofit aggregating data, “police have killed at least 1,079 people in 2025.”
What To Know
In June, Wilson’s parents sued the city of San Diego and police officer Daniel Gold in connection to their son’s death six months earlier. The family says Wilson was fleeing gunshots fired at him from someone else when he encountered Gold who shot the boy twice in the back. The teen was pronounced dead at the University of California San Diego Health Medical Center nearly an hour later.
Authorities released body camera video of the January 28 shooting that shows Wilson running through a corridor after someone pulled a gun on him. The footage shows Wilson emerging at close range as Gold moved toward the corridor. Gold then fired on Wilson, later saying “San Diego Police.” The family argues in their lawsuit that Gold “instantly, without any warning” fired on the teenager.
In a video compilation of the footage posted on Facebook in February, the police department wrote, “When officers began providing medical aid, a firearm was located concealed under clothing in the juvenile’s right thigh area.”
Gold was in the area due to an unrelated nearby call, the lawsuit and San Diego Sheriff’s Office stated. At the time of the shooting, Gold had been with the force for two years.
A resolution authorizing the $30 million to Wilson’s family has been added to the city council agenda for Tuesday, the Associated Press reported, which also noted the money would be paid from the Public Liability Fund.
What People Are Saying
Nick Rowley, the Wilson family attorney, said in a statement to City News Service on Friday: “What happened to Konoa was a catastrophic failure of policing. A 16-year-old boy was running for his life. He was not a threat and not a suspect, yet he was shot in the back by a police officer who only saw him for one second before deciding to pull the trigger.”
The San Diego Sheriff’s Office said in a late January press release: “The investigation and review process for officer-involved shootings are extremely thorough. When the Homicide Unit completes its investigation, it will be reviewed by the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office to determine if the officers bear any criminal liability for their actions. The San Diego Police Department will conduct an administrative investigation into the officer’s discharge of his firearm.”
What Happens Next?
The city council is expected to authorize the money on Tuesday.
San Diego, CA
Couple arrested for double murder in Grant Hill where 3 kids were found nearby
San Diego police announced on Tuesday that they had arrested a couple in the killing of a man and woman found shot to death in Grant Hill early Monday, with three children found nearby.
The bodies of Ruben Chavez, 31, and Evelyn Virgen, 28, who were both from San Diego, were identified by law enforcement on Tuesday.
According to investigators, the killings stemmed from an “ongoing dispute” that they had with Virgen’s ex, Ramses “Rex” Morales, 21, and his current girlfriend, Princess Perez, 25. Detectives were able to determine that Morales and Perez were in the area when the shooting occurred “but fled prior to police arrival.”
San Diego police said they received an anonymous report at about 12:30 a.m. that two people were lying on the street near 27th Street and Imperial Avenue. The caller said at least one person “appeared bloody,” according to police.
Morales and Perez went to Mexico after the killings but were detained by Border Patrol agents at the San Ysidro Port of Entry when they tried to cross the border back into the U.S., according to investigators. While they were being processed at the crossing, they were interviewed by SDPD homicide detectives and were eventually each charged with two counts of murder, officials said.
SDPD said on Tuesday that Virgen was the mother of the three young children, all under the age of 2, who were found in the van nearby.
The killings
When officers arrived early on Monday Chavez and Virgen , were found dead. The nature of their injuries was not clear but detectives said shell casings were found at the scene.
Two people were found dead in the Grant Hill neighborhood, and police then discovered three children unharmed in a vehicle parked nearby. NBC 7’s Jackie Crea reports.
The three children were unharmed during the incident and taken into protective custody after officers arrived.
Neighbors told NBC 7 on Monday that they heard the gunshots.
“Two gunshots,” one male said. “I was just in my room, and I didn’t think anything of it until I see there’s a bunch of cops outside. It was crazy.”
“Been here for 16 years and nothing but good stuff,” said another. “Tragic stuff happened.”
Anyone with information was asked to call SDPD’s homicide team at (619) 531-2293 or Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477.
San Diego, CA
San Diego shows what happens when a city actually lets builders build
As Los Angeles grapples with a housing shortage, it could learn from San Diego, which has proved better at convincing construction companies to build more.
The city is more welcoming to developers, industry insiders say, with fewer regulations and fees, better planning and less rent control.
“It is easier to build in San Diego over Los Angeles because of its legal structure, political culture and defined processes,” said Kevin Shannon, co-head of capital markets at real estate brokerage Newmark, which is overseeing the sale of a sprawling development site in San Diego that is zoned to have thousands of apartments.
The result: As of last quarter, the number of new apartments under construction in San Diego County rose 10% from three years earlier, CoStar data show. New apartment construction in Los Angeles County tumbled 33% over the same period, hitting an 11-year low in the three months through December. San Diego is expanding its apartment pool at nearly twice the rate of L.A. and other major city clusters in the state.
View of An apartment building is under construction in downtown San Diego on Jan. 16, 2026. The city is more welcoming to developers than Los Angeles, industry insiders say,
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
L.A.’s vacancy rate is among the lowest in the country and rental rates are among the highest nationwide. Still, the supply of fresh rental units, which make up the bulk of new housing in Los Angeles, is thinning out despite robust demand.
Although local lawmakers create regulations to protect renters and keep rents down, hoping to combat homelessness, developers and economists warn that the wrong regulations often can add to the cost of building and maintaining apartments, making it hard to make a profit on new and existing projects. People who already have apartments may be protected, but over the long run, fewer are built, they say.
Rent control has been at the center of the debate recently. The city of Los Angeles just tightened its rent control.
It has just lowered the cap on rent increases for rent-stabilized apartments, a massive portion of the city’s housing stock that houses nearly half of the city’s residents. Although the cap doesn’t apply to units built after 1978, it still discourages developers, as it sends the wrong signal to those already worried about restrictions.
At the state level, a similar housing bill that would have halved the cap on rent increases to 5% a year died in the Assembly last week. Assemblymembers decided that too many restrictions can be counterproductive.
“That sounds nice and humanly caring and all that and warm and fuzzy, but someone has to pay,” said Assemblymember Diane Dixon (R-Newport Beach). “How far do we squeeze the property owners?”
San Diego doesn’t have traditional rent control, though it does enforce less restrictive statewide tenant protections.
In Los Angeles, Measure ULA, known as the mansion tax, is another top reason that developers decide to build elsewhere. They also point to other local regulations that make it challenging to evict tenants who don’t pay their rent.
“L.A. has been redlined by the majority of the investment community,” apartment developer Ari Kahan of California Landmark Group said in October.
It’s easier to do business in San Diego because of its real estate development policies, project approval process and overall business-friendly attitude, industry insiders said. It outlines what it wants in a general plan, and if projects line up with that, they can be approved at the city staff level.
“San Diego has a clear, enforced General Plan, and for the most part, it sticks to it,” Shannon said. “San Diego updates its Community Plan and then lets projects proceed if they comply.”
“In contrast, L.A.’s General Plan is outdated and inconsistent,” he said. “Almost everything requires discretionary approvals.”
A view of the downtown San Diego skyline Jan. 16, 2026. It’s easier to do business in San Diego because of its real estate development policies, project approval process and overall business-friendly attitude, industry insiders said.
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
Elected officials in L.A., including the City Council, have the discretion to decide whether a new project can be built, which can add months to its approval process as the proposal winds through City Hall and public meetings.
“The City of San Diego continues to prioritize the permitting and development of new homes to address our region’s housing needs and support a better future for all San Diegans,” said Peter Kelly, a spokesman for the city Planning Department. “Through updated community plans, streamlined permitting processes and proactive implementation of state housing laws, we are working to increase housing supply and affordability in all neighborhoods.”
The city updates its Land Development Code annually to streamline the permitting process and accelerate housing production, he said. It also adds capacity to build new homes through rezoning and updates to the city’s community plans, with a focus on placing new homes and jobs near transit, parks and services.
“If we can bring more supply, it will hopefully bring down rents,” said Kip Malo, a real estate broker in JLL’s San Diego office.
Most new apartments are being built outside of downtown San Diego, Malo said. “The city has made a concerted effort to try to clean up downtown and it has gotten better, but it’s still got a ways to go.
Of course, developers in San Diego still face the same headwinds that affect developers in other cities, such as interest rates that make construction loans more expensive than they have been in years past.
Recent policy out of Washington also hasn’t helped. Higher tariffs have driven up the prices of construction materials and equipment, while the crackdown on undocumented workers has thinned and spooked much of the international workforce on which the industry depends.
An apartment building is under construction in downtown San Diego on Jan. 16, 2026. In L.A., elected officials, including the City Council, have the discretion to decide whether a new project can be built, which can add months to its approval process as the proposal winds through City Hall and public meetings.
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
California’s construction industry depends on immigrant workers. Around 61% of construction workers in the state are immigrants, and 26% of those are undocumented, according to a June report from the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.
San Diego is “still California,” Malo said, and has hurdles to get projects approved that aren’t faced by builders in Texas and other states with more lax requirements for new projects, Malo said, but “the political winds have shifted in developers’ favor.”
San Diego, CA
Magnitude 4.9 earthquake near Palm Desert briefly shakes San Diego County
A magnitude 4.9 earthquake occurred at 5:56 p.m. Monday about 17 miles northeast of Palm Desert in Riverside County, producing shaking that was felt throughout San Diego County, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
The shaking spread all the way to the Southern California coastline, drawing notice from San Diego and Chula Vista to Long Beach and Malibu.
A 3.5 after shock followed at 6:50 p.m.
The main quake broke near the San Andreas fault, an 800-mile-long system, part of which extends through the Cajon Pass area and Coachella Valley and into the Salton Sea.
“We periodically have quakes of this size, and they rarely lead to something bigger,” said Tom Rockwell, a seismologist at San Diego State University. “But 5% of the time, they do give us something bigger.
“We haven’t had a big quake on the San Andreas for 300 years. The interval time for one is about 150 years.”
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