San Diego, CA
Woman who escaped San Diego reentry facility arrested
SAN DIEGO – An incarcerated girl who walked away from a San Diego reentry facility this week was arrested late Thursday in San Bernardino County, state corrections officers stated.
Heather Gutierrez, 21, was apprehended about 10:30 p.m., a bit of greater than a day after officers observed she’d left the 82-bed Custody to Group Transitional Reentry Program, or CCTRP, facility at 3050 Armstrong St., a launch from the state’s Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation reveals. This system permits eligible girls convicted of crimes to serve their time in a CCTRP facility moderately than in jail with providers provided for substance abuse restoration, employment and social help.
Gutierrez was sentenced to state jail final September in San Bernardino County on a second-degree theft cost, officers stated. She was attributable to be launched from custody in July.
Gutierrez now has been transported to the California Establishment for Girls in Chino, the discharge reveals.
She’s now ineligible for the CCTRP program for not less than 10 years and officers say she might face further costs for escaping custody.
No additional particulars about her arrest have been supplied.
San Diego, CA
San Diegans welcome 2025 with celebrations across the county
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.
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