San Diego, CA
San Diego police officer Anthony Hair resigns after locking himself in backseat with female detainee: ‘Are you single?’
A San Diego police officer has resigned after he was caught locked in the backseat of his squad car with a female detainee who propositioned him for sex last year, newly released bodycam footage showed.
Officer Anthony Hair left his post about a month after a probe was launched into the August 2023 incident and one day before he was to meet with investigators for his second scheduled interview.
Hair, who had been with SDPD for two years, found himself in the vehicle with the female suspect after he arrested her on suspicion of stealing a car outside of a convenience store, according to CBS 8.
The suspect, who has not been named, was one of two people wanted for car theft. She also had a bench warrant out for her arrest.
After Hair arrested her, he was supposed to bring her to police headquarters and later to the Las Colinas Detention Center in Santee, Calif., for questioning.
In bodycam footage released by the SDPD, the suspect was heard propositioning the officer for sex after asking him if he was married.
“You’re not too bad. What’s it gonna hurt me if I work the system, you know what I mean? That’s the way I see s–t,” she told Hair.
“Are you single?” she added, to which he responded, “Yeah, but you’re not.”
“I’m down to f–k right now,” she told him, before he interrupts, “Don’t say that right now…Don’t say that right now because everything is being recorded right now.”
As the pair approached the detention center, Hair can be heard asking the female suspect what she was doing in the backseat.
Hair turned off his bodycam and slowed his vehicle as he drove onto a residential street, the outlet added.
About 20 minutes later, Hair called for a fellow officer to help him out of the police car over the embarrassing mishap.
“I asked him if he was okay. He said, yes, and then asked if I had my patrol car key with me…I asked why he was asking and what did he need,” the unidentified officer said of Hair, describing him as panicked. “Officer Hair then asked me If I could go meet him.”
“I asked him his location and he said, near Cottonwood… I asked him why he needed me, and he said he would tell me when I got there. He said he was really embarrassed.”
Investigators reported that Hair believed the woman was suffering from a medical emergency, according to NBC San Diego.
Hair and the woman denied anything untoward happened, as the officer claimed he was “checking” on the suspect in the back.
“When I was waking her up, that’s when I noticed that this door closed on me. That’s when I was trying to kind of open the door,” Hair said in the clip.
San Diego police found traces of semen on Hair’s belt, CBS reported.
“He wanted to get with me when I was done with the warrant or whatever I got arrested for,” she said.
It’s unclear if he faces any criminal charges over the ordeal.
The Post has reached out to the San Diego Police Department for comment.
San Diego, CA
Amid rising energy demand and global unrest, this San Diego renewables company says it’s in a good spot
After 18 years of carving out a national niche in the energy infrastructure sector, San Diego-based SOLV Energy became a public company on Feb. 11, closing out its initial public offering and trading on the NASDAQ Global Select Market.
“You’re always a little nervous because you feel like you’re throwing a big party and you don’t know who’s going to show up,” founder and CEO George Hershman said.
It turned out that there was no reason to worry, as investors gobbled up 20.5 million shares of Class A common stock at an IPO price of $25 per share for the company that’s built more than 500 solar and battery energy storage projects across the country — and has constructed, operates and maintains 150 of its own utility-scale solar and battery facilities.
“I think the strength of our investors and the support of our business was strong,” Hershman said during an interview at SOLV Energy’s headquarters in Rancho Bernardo.
The company boasts a market cap of about $5.85 billion and despite stock market jitters caused by the twists and turns with the war in Iran, SOLV Energy stock has more than held its own. It closed the trading day last Friday at $31.66 per share.
“I think investors are looking at the stability of renewables as a real way to hedge against the volatility of fossil fuels” in the wake of the hostilities, Hershman said.
But regardless of what eventually happens near-term in the Middle East, it’s widely accepted that energy demand is poised to take a dramatic leap in the U.S.
Some analysts foresee domestic electricity consumption swelling 25% in the next four years — and continuing to rise well into the next decade — due to a combination of factors, most notably the growth of data centers feeding artificial intelligence.
SOLV Energy executives believe their company is in the right place at the right time.
“We’ve never seen that kind of energy demand in the U.S. so a company like ours is well-positioned to provide that generation and service,” Hershman said. “We’re sitting in a good spot to continue to grow and capture a lot of that market opportunity … I think the investor community understands that energy demand is real.”
Legislation dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill” that passed on Capitol Hill and was signed into law last summer by President Donald Trump cracked down on the 30% federal tax credit on solar and wind power. But a safe harbor provision for utility-scale projects is in place until July 4, and those that meet a “begin construction” deadline have as late as 2030 to receive the credit.
“It really didn’t create much of an impact on our business,” Hershman said. “Energy demand is what is driving our market now, not tax incentives.”
Microsoft is in the process of resurrecting one of the nuclear power units at Three Mile Island to provide electricity to fuel its AI data centers. Some tech titans are casting their eyes on natural gas plants for the same reason.
But Hershman says SOLV Energy has an advantage.
“A gas plant is going to take you seven to 10 years to build. A nuclear plant is going to take you a few decades to build, at best,” he said. But a solar and storage plant “can be deployed and be sending megawatt-hours to the grid in 12 to 18 months.”
But what about the fact that renewable energy sources are intermittent — that is, solar does not produce electricity when the sun is not shining and batteries typically run for about four hours? And what about concerns of battery fires?
Hershman said “long-duration battery (systems) are coming” and technological advancements are leading to more fire-resistant battery chemistries.
“We’re going to have to make sure that we do it safely, first and foremost, and technology is going to be a big part of that,” he said. “But the reality is, we’re going to have to meet this load somehow.”
Before its IPO, SOLV Energy was a private company, created as a division of commercial construction company Swinerton in 2008. Since 2022, SOLV has been owned by American Securities, a private equities firm.
SOLV’s national workforce is made up of about 2,600 employees, with more than 150 based in the San Diego area.
The company’s ticker symbol is MWH, which is appropriate for an energy company since that’s an acronym for “megawatt hours.”
San Diego, CA
Man arrested for allegedly threatening deputies in Santee
A business owner was arrested early Saturday after allegedly threatening to shoot sheriff’s deputies who had responded to reports of gunshots in Santee, officials said.
Deputies were called around 12:30 a.m. after someone heard possible gunfire along Magnolia Avenue near state Route 67. A short distance away, deputies spotted a 43-year-old man, apparently armed with a handgun, entering a heating and air conditioning business on Rockville Street, authorities said.
Deputies surrounded the property and attempted to contact the man, but he was uncooperative and refused to exit the building, Capt. Chris Katra said in a statement.
Deputies noticed possible bullet holes in a parking sign in front of the business suite, which is near a church. Since there were no victims, deputies made a tactical decision to leave the area, with plans to return later, Katra said.
Shortly after 7:15 a.m., deputies returned and “discovered evidence indicating Sanford was in possession of a handgun and had made threats to shoot deputies if they entered his business,” Katra said. Around 10 a.m., deputies returned with a search warrant.
With the assistance of SWAT officers, they arrested the man on suspicion of negligent discharge of a firearm and threatening peace officers. A 9mm handgun and multiple shell casings were recovered from the business, Katra said.
San Diego, CA
Rock concert to support type 1 diabetes research taking place in Cardiff
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — Seventeen-year old’s Brooke Lowman and Noam Luft met through a mutual friend. They both play guitar and love music but also share the fact that they have type 1 diabetes (TD1).
Luft was diagnosed as a 2-year old and Lowman diagnosed as an 11-year-old. While struggling with the challenges that living with T1D brings, the duo has used music as a way to cope and escape.
They decided to create a fundraiser to benefit and raise money for breakthrough T1D research, which is the leading type. Their benefit concert will take place April 12 from 5 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. at Tower 13 in Cardiff.
Watch the video at the top of this page to hear their stories.
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