Red Bluff Daily News

February 04, 2014

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The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Department and California Highway Patrol. Arrests • Daniel Barragan, 39, Red Bluff was arrested Sat- urday at Finnel and Rawson for felony possession of a controlled substance. Barra- gan has outstanding charges of felony transportation of a controlled substance, failure to appear and misde- meanors of driving under the influence, driving on a suspended license, driving without a license and two charges of failure to appear. Bail was $185,000. • Raymond Robert Bell, 36, Gerber was taken into custody Friday for a Post Release Community Super- vision flash incarceration. • Dustin Doc Bill, 32, Red Bluff was arrested Sat- urday at Breckenridge at Grant for a felony parole violation. • Casey James Fogleman, 26, Red Bluff was arrested Saturday on the 14000 block of St. Mary's on outstanding charges of felony attempt to possess a controlled sub- stance, second degree bur- glary, two charges of failure to appear and misdemeanors of two charges of failure to appear, two charges of dri- ving on a suspended license, theft and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bail was $320,000. • Justin James Fulwider, 24, Sacramento was arrest- ed Friday on outstanding charges of felony failure to appear, possession of a con- trolled substance for sale and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $50,000. • Tye Davis Hamilton, 19, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday at Park Avenue and Johnson Street on outstand- ing charge of felony failure to appear and a special alle- gation offense. • Brett Ronnie Thomas Howell aka Bugsy, 23, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday at South Main and Fish streets for felony possession of a controlled substance and misdemeanor paraphernalia. Howell has outstanding mis- demeanor charges of para- phernalia, being under the influence of a controlled substance and failure to appear. Bail was $43,000. • Howard Roy King, Jr., aka Timothy Stingley, 48, Red Bluff was arrested Sat- urday at the Tehama District Fairground for a felony parole violation. • Johnathan Ray Mendez, 24, Red Bluff was arrested Friday on out- standing charges of felony battery with serious bodily injury and failure to appear. Bail was $100,000. • Tyler Hudson Price, 23, Red Bluff was arrested Thursday on Diamond Avenue for misdemeanor obstruction and a probation violation. Price has out- standing charges of felony failure to appear and misde- meanors of second degree burglary, public intoxica- tion, loitering and two charges of failure to appear. Bail was $53,000. • Gerald Frank Roehrich, 46, Gerber was arrested Friday on South Main Street for felony petty theft with priors. Bail was $15,000. • Kyle Joseph Silva, 28, Redding was arrested Sun- day on outstanding charges of felony possession of a stolen vehicle, two charges of vehicle theft, possession of a firearm by a felon, per- son prohibited from owning a firearm and two misde- meanors of failure to appear. Bail was $300,000. • Benny Raymond Tal- ley, 62, Los Molinos was arrested Saturday at Cost- U-Less on outstanding charges of felony posses- sion of a controlled sub- stance, failure to appear and misdemeanor corporal injury of a spouse or cohab- itant. Bail was $155,000. • Ryan Wesley Touvell, 25, Orland was arrested Sat- urday at Fairview and Yolo for a felony parole violation and misdemeanor obstruc- tion. Touvell has outstand- ing charges of misdemeanor driving without a license, entering a non-community dwelling, public intoxica- tion and two charges of fail- ure to appear. Bail was $12,000. Animals • A resident on the 18000 block of Basler Road reported their emu had been killed Thursday night by unknown animals. There were large cat prints and possibly dog prints in the area. Burglary • A 26-year-old man reported he was checking his parent's house and found it had been broken into. He said he believed firearms were missing. The man was then arrested on unrelated warrants. • A laptop, jewelry box and various other items were reported stolen from a residence on the 22000 block of Antelope Boule- vard. Disturbance • One person was detained early Sunday morning followed an inci- dent at the Hayloft. A vic- tim said someone had chased them down a street and toward an apartment building. Tipsy • A man made numerous calls to local agencies around 2:30 a.m. Saturday demanding someone drive him home after he had two drinks at Bar 99. The man also called a cab company at which time he started mak- ing threats to the cab driver. The cab driver advised he would not pick the man up. Logs show the man eventu- ally got a ride out of the area. Found • Fish and Game report- ed finding a bag of paint ball equipment abandoned on the side of Hogsback Road Saturday afternoon. Prowler • A resident on the 19000 block of Gazelle Place reported late Saturday that two people were prowl- ing around their backyard. School • A 13-year-old boy at Berrendos Middle School was found to be in posses- sion of a small amount of marijuana. Theft • More For Less reported receiving a counterfeit $100 bill. • Sunset Cab Company reported three white men dressed like cowboys jumped from his cab at Hogsback Road at the Prune Dryer around 2 a.m. Saturday without paying the fare. The three men ran into a nearby orchard. • A game camera was reported stolen Thursday night from property on the 18000 block of Quail Ridge Road. Threat • The Shasta County Bomb Squad was requested on the 18000 block of Quail Ridge Road around 5:10 p.m. Sunday after a man reported finding two 8-inch cylinders duct taped togeth- er with the words "Training Aid" on them. Vandalism • A rock was thrown through a house's window on the 25000 block of North Center Street shortly before 7 p.m. Friday. Damage was estimated at $100. 3A Tuesday, February 4, 2014 – Daily News THE VOICE OF TEHAMA COUNTY SINCE 1885 Editor: Chip Thompson editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports Editor: Andre Byik sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation Manager: Kathy Hogan khogan@redbluffdailynews.com Production Manager: Sandy Valdivia sandy@redbluffdailynews.com On the Web: www.redbluffdailynews.com MAIN OFFICE: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Main Phone (530) 527-2151 Outside area (800) 479-6397 545 Diamond Ave. Red Bluff, CA 96080 ______________________ Mail: Red Bluff Daily News P.O. Box 220 Red Bluff, CA 96080 Fax: (530) 527-5774 ______________________ CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT: Subscription & delivery Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. (530) 527-2151, Ext. 126 Home delivery subscription rates (All prices include all applicable taxes) Tuesday through Saturday $4.48 per week Business & professional rate $2.19 four weeks, Tuesday-Friday By mail: In Tehama County $12.20 four weeks All others $17.29 four weeks (USPS 458-200) Published Tuesday through Saturday except Sunday & Monday, by California Newspaper Partnership. NEWS News Tip Hotline: 527-2153 FAX: (530) 527-9251 E-mail: clerk@redbluffdailynews.com Daytime: (530) 527-2151 Sports: Ext. 111 Obituaries: Ext. 101 E-mail: dispatch@redbluffdailynews.com After hours: (530) 527-2153 ______________________ ADVERTISING DEPT. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Display: (530) 527-2151 Ext. 122 Online (530) 527-2151 Ext. 133 FAX: (530) 527-5774 E-mail: advertise@redbluffdailynews.com CLASSIFIED: 1-855-667-2255 VOLUME 129, NUMBER 53 The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955 © 2012 Daily News N EWS D AILY RED BLUFF TEHAMA COUNTY SPECIAL PAGES ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS Tuesdays: Health Wednesdays: Business Thursdays: Entertainment Fridays: Education Saturdays: Select TV, Farm, Religion HOW TO REACH US Publisher & Advertising Director: Greg Stevens gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Postage Paid Periodicals POSTMASTER SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO: PO BOX 220, RED BLUFF CA 96080 413 Walnut Street, Red Bluff 530 528-8000 Mon. 10am-4pm • Tues.-Fri. 10am-5:30pm • Sat.10am-4pm www.angelsamongusall.com www.redbluffgoldexchange.com 19 Years of Merchandise HUGE Inventory Reduction 50 % off All Jewelry Shop Early - Save "Serving our Community for over 19 years" Gold Exchange Red Bluff High School Sober Grad Bunco Fundraiser $15 per person Raffle Opportunities 6pm Thurs, Feb. 6 th & Thurs, March 6 th , 2014 Red Bluff Elks Lodge 355 Gilmore Road, Red Bluff For more information, please call Heide 526-1728 or Kim 736-0634 Tips N Toes A Full Service Nail Salon D e b i S t u h r O w n e r / O p e r a t o r H e a v e n S e n t R a n c h P o u l t r y @ g m a i l . c o m Shop: 530-953-6334 $5.00 off any one service with this ad (or mention this ad) Buys camera on Buys camera on worthless check for $20 worthless check for $20 Elmer Ray was the name given by a young man, apparently about 20, who passed a worthless check on Saturday evening on A. C. Kallstead, proprietor of the Red Bluff Drug store, taking with him an $18 camera, 50 cents worth of films and $1.50 in change. The check, for $20, was drawn on the Redding National Bank. It was made out to Elmer Ray and bore what purported to be the signature of W. D. McCumber. From the cashier of the bank Kallstead learned that McCumber had no account there. Moreover, the bank officials knew no one by that name. — Feb. 4, 1924 90 90 years years ago... ago... SECRET WITNESS 529-1268 A program of Tehama County Neighborhood Watch Program, Inc. Community people & events SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning num- bers drawn Saturday night: SuperLotto Plus Powerball games 9-14-15-16-44 5-12-15-27-38 Meganumber: 24 Powerball: 7 Lotto numbers Police reports Masks Some of the most important people, with the most important information to share, hide that information because they think they will be hurt if they do. They fear that people who matter will reject them, ridicule them or marginalize their mes- sage. These fictitious judges aren't usu- ally specific people. They are usually an idea of a person based on the ghosts of yesterday. The types of people who made fun of them for their ideas in school, on the job or in their relation- ships. People hold back sharing, even when their gut tells them to talk, because they think some Mayor of Sharingville will come and sanction them for telling a lame story and wasting precious time. That the Chief of Police of I've Got A Story will cite them for giving out infor- mation that no one can benefit from. So they stay quiet and ridicule themselves instead of putting themselves out there for someone else to hurt them. I wonder if self inflicted wounds don't actually hurt more than wounds caused by other people? So, instead of speaking their truth, they create a mask. A mask of acceptability. A mask of benign non-threatening mediocrity that doesn't rock any boats whatsoever. A mask of working, paying the bills, raising the kids and going to the store. A mask of socially acceptable activities that tell the world they are alright and no one fear anything from them. A mask the creates a lifestyle that is enough to drive a decent car, maybe take a vacation here and there, have a few paris of bling jeans and an invitation to the right social groups activities. Ahhh the good life. Wearing the mask has a price tag. It doesn't seem like it does. It seems as though that mask is worth every penny it costs because it saves so much. It saves us from ridicule, it saves us from being forced to grow intellectually and spiritually and it saves us from that boogeyman that we conjured up in our heads. The mask allows us to live in that medioc- rity without every single person we encounter seeing our eyes glaze over in the sameness of it all. Wearing the mask is unbelievably hard. Taking the mask on and off throughout the day is painful and sometimes in a moment of weakness, you forget to put it on. In a moment of unbridled freedom, under the right circumstance, a bit of your freak flag starts to fly and you ooze out some of the realness that you hold inside and, dare I say, you like it. You make a connection with someone that brings out your story, good or bad, and you feel like you are doing what you were always meant to be doing. Then you catch yourself. Maybe in the moment, maybe the next day as the fog clears about what you did last night. Maybe when someone looks at you funny or makes an off comment about something you said. Nonetheless, the mask goes back on and you ridicule yourself for forgetting it in the first place. There are infinite problems with wearing the mask. I could list them and some would apply to you and some would not. I want to appeal to your reasoning behind wearing it. If you tell yourself that the reason you wear the mask is to prevent people who wouldn't understand your story from rejecting you, I want to offer you another way of looking at it. The purpose of telling a story is to help others who can understand your story. The purpose of telling your story, being your authen- tic self or living your best life isn't about getting the ones who don't connect with you organically to see you as acceptable. The purpose of being you, the good, bad and the ugly, is so the people who could support and love you can find you and be grateful for what you have to offer. The fear isn't that we will discover new friends, it's that old ones will run from you. The fear isn't that people will be empathetic to you, it's that they will find you pathetic. The fear of taking off the mask isn't that you discover every- one wears them and it's common, it's that you were the only one and you identified yourself and became a target. Taking off your mask and telling your truth can be the single most rewarding thing you ever do. If nothing else, you will discover you are far more courageous than you ever thought. You will discover that you are far more interesting than you ever knew and the releasing of who you are into the world is far more exciting than anything you have ever done. Like Jumping from a plane and seeing the world from a whole new perspec- tive. Faydra Rector, MA is a mental health administra- tor, author, public speaker, educator and life coach who lives in Red Bluff. She can be reached at life- coach@shasta.com or view her blogs at faydraand- company.blogspot.com/ and allaboutdivorce.blogspot.com/. Faydra Rector You Matter Child able to attend dinner Theme child Ali Ben- Lanes and his parents greeted guests Saturday at the spaghetti dinner to benefit the Tehama County Society for Crippled Children and Adults. It was sponsored by Red Bluff Emblem club with Ginger Mohler heading the committee. Born on July 1, 2011, Ali was diagnosed with heart problems, glauco- ma and blindness. The society assisted his par- ents with monthly trips to the University of Cal- ifornia-Davis hospital for treatment. Although his heart has healed, he is still being treated for his eye condition and slow growth with less frequent trips. At the dinner, the tod- dler was able to circu- late among the guests. During 2013 the soci- ety spent more on help for Tehama County resi- dents than it received in donations and memori- als.

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