Red Bluff Daily News

November 27, 2015

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Brief History: What be- gan as a marijuana deal re- sulted in kidnapping, rob- bery and one individual with a gunshot wound. PTC: November 30 at 1:15 pm in Department 3 People vs. Anthony Na- hinu, attempted murder Brief History: The De- fendant is charged with shooting the minor victim. PTC: December 18 at 11 am in Department 3 TBJ: January 6, 2016 at 1:30 pm in Department TBD People vs. David Hast- ings, Grand Theft of Per- sonal Property; First De- gree Residential Burglary; Possession of Burglar's Tools; First Degree Resi- dential Burglary, 4 counts; Grand Theft of Personal Property, 3 counts; Grand Theft; Identity Theft, 2 counts; Possession of a Firearm by a Felon; Pos- session of Ammunition; Receiving Stolen Property, 9 counts; Petty Theft. Brief history: The vic- tim's vehicle was broken into and several personal items were stolen includ- ing a wallet. The following day, the victim's bank account was missing $1,300. It was later found the defen- dant's cell phone bill had been paid with the exact same amount by the vic- tim's checking account. The defendant denied. The victim's home was burglar- ized while on vacation. Neighbors had taken pictures of the vehicle and the driver that was at the home. While officers con- tacted the defendant on other matters, they dis- covered several of the vic- tim's items within the de- fendant's vehicle. The defendant was the suspect in various burglar- ies within the area. Several items of stolen property were found on the defen- dant's person while being contacted in regards to other cases. Arraignment on Infor- mation: November 30, at 10 am in Department 1 People vs. Daylan Mc- Donald, Possession of Fire- arm by a Felon Priors, Pos- session of Ammunition, Resist, Obstruct, Delay a Peace Officer or EMT, Bat- tery, Interference with a Wireless Communication Device Brief history: The de- fendant and the victim got into an argument in a gas station parking lot. Dur- ing the argument, the vic- tim told the defendant that he was going to call the po- lice and reached for his cel- lular phone. The defendant reached into the vehicle and took the cellular phone from the Victim's hand, then threw it down on the ground, breaking it. The defendant then returned to his vehi- cle and drove away. Law enforcement was called and they found the defen- dant. While behind the defen- dant's vehicle, the police saw the defendant throw an item from the car. The item was a Glock semi-au- tomatic pistol. The defen- dant is on felony probation in Shasta County. PPX: December 14, at 10 am in Department 1 PX: December 15, at 1:30 pm in Department 2 People vs. Roberta Draper, Cruelty to an an- imal (12 counts) Brief history: The defen- dant is currently on proba- tion for a prior cruelty to animal case. One of the terms of her probation is that she is not to possess any animals. A probation search was conducted at her residence and law en- forcement located dogs, geese, guinea hens and turkeys. One of the dogs was deceased, while some of the other animals ap- peared to be malnour- ished, dehydrated, and in poor health. The Defen- dant admitted that all the animals found belonged to her. PX: January 11, 2016 at 1:15 pm in Department 3 Court FROMPAGE4 By Sylvie Corbet The Associated Press MOSCOW French President Francois Hollande called for forming a broad inter- national coalition against the Islamic State group, us- ing his visit to Moscow on Thursday to try to unite France, the U.S. and Russia on a response to the Paris attacks that killed 130 peo- ple. IS has claimed responsi- bility for the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, as well as deadly bombings in Beirut and the downing of a Russian air- plane on Oct. 31 that killed all 224 people on board over Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. "We need to take the lead so that there can be actions against terrorism that must be intensified," Hollande told Russian Pres- ident Vladimir Putin at the start of their talks at the Kremlin. "Terrorism is our enemy," Hollande said. "We know it, it has a name: it's Daesh, the Islamic State." Putin said that Russia was mourning for Paris vic- tims and those who died in the downing of the Russian passenger plane over Egypt. He praised Hollande's ef- forts to build an anti-ter- ror coalition and said that Moscow was open for stron- ger cooperation. Germany, meanwhile, has decided to send recon- naissance aircraft, tanker planes and a warship to help in the fight against IS. Hollande's visit comes two days after he met with President Barack Obama in Washington, where both leaders vowed to escalate airstrikes against IS and bolster intelligence sharing. Hollande's difficult task became even more ardu- ous after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane near the Syrian border on Tues- day. The incident under- scored the complex mil- itary landscape in Syria, where a sprawling cast of countries and rebel groups are engaged on the battle- field and in the skies over- head, sometimes with min- imal coordination. The French president hopes to make progress on three priority issues: to prevent Syrian President Bashar Assad from target- ing civilians, to focus the airstrikes on IS militants — not the moderate Syrian opposition — and to move forward on a political tran- sition in Syria. France will also seek to "avoid an escalation" be- tween Russia and Turkey, according to a French dip- lomatic official who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. In advance of Hol- lande's meeting with Pu- tin, France sought to dis- miss concerns that it might soften its stance on inter- national sanctions against Russia over Ukraine in ex- change for Russia's cooper- ation in the fight against IS. France's ambassador to the U.S., Gerard Araud, tweeted on Tuesday evening that "Hollande has confirmed the sanctions will be main- tained as long as the Minsk agreements are not imple- mented." Araud was referring to peace agreements for east- ern Ukraine forged in the Belarusian capital in Feb- ruary. Following his meeting with the French president, Obama said Russian coop- eration in the fight against IS would be "enormously helpful." Both Obama and Hollande, however, in- sisted that a political tran- sition in Syria must lead to Assad's departure. Russia, on the other hand, has been Assad's staunchest ally. Last week, Hollande called for the U.S. and Rus- sia to set aside their pol- icy divisions over Syria and "fight this terrorist army in a broad, single coalition." But his office acknowl- edges that "coordination" sounds like a far more re- alistic goal. With two suspects of the Paris attacks at large, ten- sions were still high in Bel- gium on Thursday with the capital, Brussels. But au- thorities lowered the threat level in Brussels to the sec- ond-highest level. Since Saturday morning, Brussels — home to the Eu- ropean Union and NATO headquarters — had been wary of a threat that was considered "serious and im- minent." PARIS ATTACKS Hollande, in Moscow, calls for broad anti-IS coalition POO—ALEXANDERZEMLIANICHENKO Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, shakes hands with his French counterpart Francois Hollande during their meeting in Moscow, Russia, on Thursday. By Suzan Fraser and Vladimir Isachenkov The Associated Press ANKARA, TURKEY A tug- of-war over a Russian war- plane downed by a Turk- ish fighter jet at the border with Syria escalated Thurs- day, with Moscow drafting a slew of economic sanc- tions against Turkey and the Turkish president de- fiantly declaring that his military will shoot down any new intruder. The spat reflected a clash of ambitions of two strongman leaders, neither of whom appeared willing to back down and search for a compromise. Turkey shot down the Russian Su-24 military jet on Tuesday, insisting it had violated its airspace de- spite repeated warnings. The incident marked the first time in half a century that a NATO member shot down a Russian plane, rais- ing the threat of a military confrontation between the alliance and Moscow. Russian President Vlad- imir Putin denounced the Turkish action as a "treach- erous stab in the back," and insisted that the plane was downed over Syrian terri- tory in violation of interna- tional law. "Until that moment, we haven't heard a clear apol- ogy from Turkey's top polit- ical leadership, or an offer to compensate for the dam- age or a promise to punish the criminals," he said at the Kremlin while receiv- ing credentials from several ambassadors. "It gives an impression that the Turk- ish leadership is deliber- ately driving Russian-Turk- ish relations into a dead- lock, and we regret that." ButTurkishPresidentRe- cep Tayyip Erdogan was in no mood to apologize, and warned that Ankara would act in the same way in the event of another intrusion. "Faced with the same violation today, Turkey would give the same re- sponse," Erdogan said. "It's the country that carried out the violation which should question itself and take measures to prevent it from happening again, not the country that was sub- jected to a violation." Erdogan said Turkey had not specifically tar- geted Russia when it shot down the plane, saying it was "an automatic re- sponse" in line with its rules of engagement. DOWNED WARPLANE Spat between Turkey, Russia escalates By Nicole Winfield and Tom Odula The Associated Press NAIROBI, KENYA Pope Francis warned Thurs- day that it would be "cat- astrophic" for world lead- ers to let special interest groups get in the way of a global agreement to curb fossil fuel emissions as he brought his environmental message to the heart of Af- rica on the eve of crucial cli- mate change talks in Paris. Francis issued the pointed warning in a speech to the U.N.'s re- gional office here after cel- ebrating his first public Mass on the continent. The joyous, rain-soaked cere- mony before 300,000 faith- ful saw the Argentine pope being serenaded by ululat- ing Swahili singers, sway- ing nuns, Maasai tribes- men and dancing children dressed in the colors of Ke- nya's flag. Francis has made ecolog- ical concerns a hallmark of his nearly 3-year-old pa- pacy, issuing a landmark encyclical earlier this year that paired the need to care for the environment with the need to care for human- ity's most vulnerable. Fran- cis argues the two are inter- connected since the poor of- ten suffer the most from the effects of global warming, and are largely excluded from today's fossil-fuel based global economy that is heating up the planet. On Thursday, Francis re- peated that message but took particular aim at those who reject the science be- hind global warming. In the United States, that includes some Republican presiden- tial candidates and law- makers, who have opposed steps President Barack Obama has taken on his own to cut greenhouse gas emissions. "It would be sad, and dare I say even cata- strophic, were special inter- ests to prevail over the com- mon good and lead to ma- nipulating information in order to protect their own plans and interests," Fran- cis said. He didn't elaborate, but in the United States at least, there has been a well-funded campaign that rejects the findings of 97 percent of climate scien- tists that global warming is likely man-made and in- sists that any heating of the Earth is natural. Francis, who has said global warming is "mainly" man-made, said the world was faced with a stark choice in Paris: either im- prove or destroy the envi- ronment. He said he hoped the Paris talks would ap- prove a "transformational" agreement to fight poverty and protect the environ- ment by developing a new energy system that depends on minimal fossil fuel use. "Many are the faces, the stories and the evident ef- fects on the lives of thou- sands of people for whom the culture of deterioration and waste has allowed to be sacrificed before the idols of profits and consumption," he said. "We cannot re- main indifferent in the face of this. We have no right." SPEECH Pope says it will be 'catastrophic' if interests derail climate talks ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis arrives to celebrate a Mass on the campus of the University of Nairobi, Kenya, on Thursday. NOV. 28 GiveTehamaCountyStores and Businesses a shot this Weekend! Select"Subscribe"tabin lower right corner Complete information for automatic weekly delivery to your email inbox That's it! FREE online subscription to TV Select Magazine Digital edition emailed to you, every Saturday! 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