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San Jose: Utah authorities make fourth arrest in deadly May shooting

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San Jose: Utah authorities make fourth arrest in deadly May shooting


A fourth suspect in a deadly shooting at a South San Jose apartment complex in May was arrested this past week in Utah, authorities said.

San Jose police confirmed reports that Leimaunaloa Aholelei was arrested Wednesday in Vineyard, Utah by the U.S. Marshals Service and local police. Vineyard is located northwest of Provo, about 40 miles south of Salt Lake City.

Aholelei was the subject of an arrest warrant obtained by the San Jose Police Department related to the fatal May 26 shooting of 21-year-old Jonathan Isaac Oliva Rodriguez on Blossom River Way, near the Westfield Oakridge shopping center.

Three other men were arrested July 16 in connection with the shooting: Nuuvali Lafo, 19, of San Jose; Isaac Noa, 24, of Los Banos; and Jason Vaavaai, 25, of Los Banos.

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San Jose police have not fully detailed the circumstances of the shooting, which was the 15th homicide investigated by the department this year. But the U.S. Marshals Service reported that the killing was preceded by several people carrying out a home invasion and shooting the victim.

Marshals were acting on information developed in the SJPD investigation, authorities said, and they had to force their way into a Vineyard apartment to detain Aholelei, who eventually surrendered.

It was unclear when Aholelei would be extradited to the Bay Area; jail records show he was not in Santa Clara County custody as of Friday afternoon.

Anyone with information for San Jose homicide investigators can call 408-277-5283 or email Detective Sgt. Julien Taylor at 4257@sanjoseca.gov or Detective Mike Harrington at 4365@sanjoseca.gov. Tips can also be left with Silicon Valley Crime Stoppers at 408-947-7867 or at siliconvalleycrimestoppers.org.

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Chile's Cristobal Del Solar leads the Utah Championship through 36 holes, while Farmington's Daniel Summerhays is tied for 15th

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Chile's Cristobal Del Solar leads the Utah Championship through 36 holes, while Farmington's Daniel Summerhays is tied for 15th


Seven of the nine golfers in the field with Utah ties made the cut in the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship on Friday at Oakridge Country Club in Farmington.

With the second round in the books, Cristobal Del Solar of Vina del Mar, Chile, leads the PGA Tour-branded event at 15-under after carding a sparkling 8-under 63 on Friday.

Former University of Maryland golfer David Kocher is alone in second at -14.

Farmington’s Daniel Summerhays, a Korn Ferry Tour regular who is currently 41st on the tour’s points list, is tied for 15th at -10 after shooting a 68 in the second round on what he calls his home course.

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The cut came at -6, meaning that Utah-connected golfers Cooper Jones (-9), Connor Howe (-7), Kihei Akina (-7), Peter Kuest (-7), Carson Lundell (-6) and Max Brenchley (-6) will play this weekend.

Former Farmington resident Preston Summerhays, who currently plays for Arizona State, came in at -3, missing the cut by three shots. Utah State Amateur champion Cole Ponich, a BYU golfer, rallied back from Thursday’s 72 with a 69 on Friday to finish at -1 and well off the cut line.

Jones, who is playing in his third KFT event of the summer, recently completed his freshman season at BYU and will go on a church mission in September.

Howe, Akina and Kuest are tied for 49th. Howe is a former Weber High star from Ogden who played collegiately at Georgia Tech and is now a pro.

Akina will be a senior at Highland’s Lone Peak High this fall and has committed to play for BYU. Kuest, 26, was an All-American at BYU and is from Fresno, California, but currently lives in American Fork.

The fifth-year pro had one of the most interesting rounds of the tournament Friday, making a double eagle on the par-5 second hole and an eagle on the par-5 seventh hole, which were his 11th and 16th holes of the day because he started his round on the No. 10 tee.

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Kuest, who is 125th on the KFT points list and has played in 14 events this year, birdied the par-5 15th hole and made a par on the difficult 10th hole, a par-4 in the tournament which plays as a par-5 (and the opening hole) for members.

Like Kuest, Lundell is a former Cougar now trying to make it in professional golf. He got under the cut line with a 67 that included birdies on his first three holes.

Brenchley, who recently exhausted his eligibility at BYU, was even more clutch Friday, carding a 65 with a round that included an eagle on the par-5 second hole.



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It’s official: These 13 books are now banned from all public schools in Utah

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It’s official: These 13 books are now banned from all public schools in Utah


The Utah state school board on Friday ordered the removal of 13 book titles from every public school in the state, in accordance with a new law passed earlier this year.

The Utah State Board of Education list’s publication comes only weeks before the new school year will begin. Districts and charter schools must now dispose of the following titles, marking a historical first for the state.

These books are now banned from all Utah public schools:

  • “Blankets” by Craig Thompson.

  • “A Court of Frost and Starlight” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “A Court of Mist and Fury” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “A Court of Silver Flames” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “A Court of Thorns and Roses” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “A Court of Wings and Ruin” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “Empire of Storms” by Sarah J. Maas.

  • “Fallout” by Ellen Hopkins.

  • “Forever” by Judy Blume.

  • “Milk and Honey” by Rupi Kaur.

  • “Oryx & Crake” by Margaret Atwood.

  • “Tilt” by Ellen Hopkins.

  • “What Girls Are Made Of” by Elana K. Arnold.

How were the books banned statewide?

The books on this list had already been banned by select school districts and charters, but because of the new law signed by Gov. Spencer Cox in March, they will now be banned statewide.

The law, which went into effect July 1, requires that a book be removed from all public schools in the state if at least three school districts (or two school districts and five charter schools) determine it amounts to “objective sensitive material” — pornographic or otherwise indecent content, as defined by Utah code.

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Since the law applied retroactively, school districts and charters were asked to reevaluate the books that they had already decided to ban before July 1 using the state’s new “objective sensitive” criteria, a standard that did not exist before.

Utah State Board of Education members then had a chance to decide against instituting a statewide ban for each title that ultimately met the threshold for a statewide ban, which board leadership will continue to be able to do should more titles be subject to statewide removal.

To do so, “three or more” USBE leaders have 30 days to request that the material be placed on a board meeting agenda, so leaders can vote on whether or not to “overturn” the statewide removal requirement.

If no hearing is held, the statewide removal automatically stands.

This is a developing story.

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Inside Voices: Utah parents describe the ‘painful’ choice of returning to work

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Inside Voices: Utah parents describe the ‘painful’ choice of returning to work


Happy Friday, and welcome to Inside Voices, a weekly newsletter that features a collection of ideas, perspectives and solutions from across Utah — without any of the vitriol or yelling that’s become all too common on other platforms. Subscribe here.

Happy Friday, readers.

We so often hear Utah referred to as a “family-friendly” state, but data can be revealing and The Tribune has shared a lot recently on some not-so-friendly trends.

For example: Child care is becoming more expensive, housing is unaffordable for people earning the median income, women face a major wage gap and parental penalties are still prevalent for many working Utahns.

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I’ve been curious about how Utah parents feel, so I asked. Here’s what you shared:

  • “Although I graduated at the top of my pre-law class, I postponed my continuing education to have children,” said Denee in Orem. “When I returned, I chose a much lower paying profession because it was more ‘child-rearing friendly’ and allowed me summers off. I have lost retirement opportunities because of it.”

  • “My wife let her guard down and married me when she was 20 years old. At the time, she worked full-time at the University of Utah. It’s now 40 years later and she continues to work full-time at the U,” said Steven in Holladay. “We have two daughters. She was forced to return to work after six weeks with each child. We couldn’t afford child care, so she felt like she had no choice but to return to work. The thing is, I have learned since, she feels like it was the most painful thing in her life that she couldn’t have more time with each child and be a full-time mother … As a male in management and executive positions, I was told to offer women less for positions because ‘they will just get pregnant and leave, and we will have to absorb the cost of recruiting and training a replacement.’ I was told to limit my recruiting efforts to women who were past child bearing years or were unmarried. We *never* held a position for a woman who took maternity leave — if we even offered it. I am ashamed that I participated in such activities.”

  • “I was an Army wife and stay-at-home mom for 22 years,” said Gina in Taylorsville. “My experience moving back to Utah, where I grew up, has been painful and difficult. Not only am I treated like I’ve never worked as I’ve entered the workforce, I question whether my age is a factor in being able to find anything that pays a living wage. I went to school for two years to get a paralegal degree and have worked as a legal assistant, one step down from a paralegal position, barely making enough.”

  • “I have a bachelor’s degree, and I would love to use it, but all jobs aren’t flexible with kids,” said Heather in Lehi. “I would love just to have 20 to 30 hours in my field, but I take low-paying, entry-level jobs because they have different hour shifts so I can take kids to and from school around their schedule. My husband doesn’t have flexibility either, so he’s not able to take part of the burden.”

  • “I knew I wanted to have a kid and started looking into my former company’s policies a year in advance,” said Rachel in South Jordan. “It’s a global company, so I was extremely disappointed to find that our locations in Europe received almost a year of time off whereas I was only offered six weeks (partial pay as it was short term disability) with an additional six weeks covered by FMLA at no pay. I fought for and championed a parental leave policy at that company (non-child-bearing partners had no allowed paid leave) and saw an incremental improvement of four weeks fully paid added to the policy — so 10 weeks of some kind of pay for a child bearing mother. I was ecstatic! Until I read the fine print and realized I wouldn’t be eligible. My baby was due in September and the policy didn’t kick in until December with no retroactive payment offered. I missed an entire month more of sanity and bonding with my child because of some inane date. I ended up going back to work after just six weeks because I am the sole provider for my family (my husband is in medical school).”

I asked the same respondents what family-friendly policy looks like to them.

  • Denee: “Parental leave with a guaranteed job when you return, an equal pay law and child care subsidies where needed.”

  • Steven: “On-site 10-hour child care or equivalent paid 100% . One-year parental leave (male and female) with guaranteed position upon return, six months paid for one parent. Universal Healthcare (for everyone) but starting with kids until 18.”

  • Gina: “Equal pay laws, maternity leave for both parents, everything people younger than me need to thrive. I also believe this state needs to do more for women my age who find themselves at the bottom after working for a lifetime to build a family. I see too many women at every age suffering in Utah.”

  • Heather: “Encouraging work from home! Flexible hours, with the ability to take an hour here or there if you make it up at other times.”

  • Rachel: “Affordable daycare, maybe based on income? Workplaces that accommodate kid schedules, drop offs, pick ups, soccer practices, etc. Company culture that doesn’t look down on a woman for leaving her career or staying and putting her kid in daycare … and parental leave/maternity leave that makes sense. The two are very different, too. Maternity leave should be considered separate from taking care of a young child because honestly you’re just trying to recover mentally and physically from a major trauma. Then you have a newborn and sleepless nights to top it all off. I honestly think the time for a childbearing mother should be a minimum of six months (sleep training doesn’t even happen until 4 months old!).”

With school fast approaching, I’d love to hear from Utah teachers about how they’re feeling. Are you an educator? Tell me whether you’ve considered leaving the profession — and why or why not.

Utah Voices

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Smoke rises up behind homes near the Sandhurst Fire in Salt Lake City on July 20, 2024.

  • “Thinning trees and brush can leave unsightly marks on the landscape. Prescribed burns, one of the most effective means of reducing fuel loads, can temporarily increase air pollution. Thinning projects may require heavy equipment to spend several days parked on an otherwise pristine hillside,” writes Jamie Barnes, the Utah State Forester and Director of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands. “These short-term impacts are necessary to reduce Utah’s wildfire risks. While a thinning project may alter the view of the mountains from your backyard, the payoff will be worth it if it reduces the damage of future wildfires.” Read more.

  • “I recently completed a driving trip to the Navajo Nation and transited Salt Lake City via the freeways,” writes Steve Wheeler, a visitor from Oregon. “I count myself lucky to have survived the experience. Salt Lake is the only city I’ve ever driven in that has so many drivers going at least 80 MPH in the city limits. And if you’re not doing 80, you’re forcing other drivers to swerve around you like they’re driving the Indy 500.” Read more.

  • “As policymakers consider ways to address concerns around privacy protections of personal data and market concentration of the large tech platforms, there is a critical need to muster up some human intelligence to craft a more nuanced, smart policy on digital advertising,” writes small business owner Lauren Spatafore. “Policymakers will best serve the public interest by avoiding the penchant for overregulating and increasing the cost of doing business for me and fellow entrepreneurs.” Read more.

  • “Utah should deregulate liquor sales,” Parker McCumber told Tribune reporter Kolbie Peterson. “Allowing private businesses to compete would drive competition and better prices. It’s time to trust adults and embrace liberty by ending state control over liquor sales.” Read more.

Share Your Perspective

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) An empty classroom at Bonneville Elementary School, on Friday, Dec. 11, 2020.

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Are you a Utah educator? Tell me whether you’ve considered leaving the profession — and why or why not.

From Bagley’s Desk

The Last Happy Meal | Pat Bagley

I’m always looking for unique perspectives, ideas and solutions that move our state forward. Learn more about our guidelines for an op-ed, guest essay, letter to the editor and more here, and drop me a note at voices@sltrib.com.



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