Red Bluff Daily News

October 07, 2014

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The following infor- mation has been com- piled from Red Bluff Po- lice Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrests AliciaArellano:20,Santa Ana was arrested Friday on northbound Interstate 5at Sourgrass for felony possession of a controlled substance for sale and transportation of a con- trolled substance. Bail was $250,000. Jodi Jane Cordial: aka Rockstar, 44, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday on the 17000block of Hooker Creek Road for felony second degree burglary, possession of a stun gun and misdemeanor posses- sion of burglary tools. Bail was $68,000. Arturo Gilberto Felix: 63, Red Bluff was arrested Friday for felony lewd and lascivious acts with a child under 14and assault to commit a lewd act on a child. Bail was $50,000. Rainya Bevelaine Halter: 31, Palo Cedro was ar- rested Friday at Paskenta Road near Walnut Street for felony possession of a controlled substance, possession of cannabis concentrates, possession of a narcotic and misde- meanor paraphernalia. Bail was $48,000. Jake Richard Hardwick: 27, Corning was arrested Friday on the 1600block of Solano Street for felony possession of a controlled substance and misde- meanor paraphernalia. Bail was $153,000. Kevin Jacobo: 19, Santa Ana was arrested Friday on northbound Interstate 5at Sourgrass for felony possession of a controlled substance for sale and transportation of a con- trolled substance. Bail was $250,000. Nasau James Johnson: aka Prophet, 30, Red Bluff was arrested Sunday on Little Avenue for felony inflicting corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant and child endangerment. Bail was $100,000. Jose Dejesus Gaspar Juarez: 25, Costa Mesa was arrested Friday on northbound Interstate 5 at Sourgrass for felony possession of a controlled substance for sale and transportation of a con- trolled substance. Bail was $250,000. Tia Khotpanya: 44, Fresno was arrested Thursday on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting mari- juana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Phat Kingkham: 48, Fresno was arrested Thurs- day on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Chanhthy Leutnapha: 34, Fresno was arrested Thurs- day on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Douangdy Leutnapha: 40, Cottonwood was arrested Thursday on the 16000 block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Ly Leutnapha: 69, Cotton- wood was arrested Thurs- day on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Natalia Marie Rodgers: 29, Red Bluff was arrested Friday at Main Street and Adobe Road for felony child endangerment and misde- meanor driving under the in- fluence. Bail was $55,000. Curtis John Scott: 28, Red Bluff was arrested Fri- day at Paynes Creek Road for felony possession of a narcotic and misdemeanor paraphernalia. Bail was $18,000. Kheua Sisompeng: 62, Fresno was arrested Thurs- day on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Lang Sybounheuang: 52, Fresno was arrested Thurs- day on the 16000block of Oak Hollow Drive was arrested for felony planting marijuana and possession of marijuana for sale. Bail was $100,000. Ashley Renee Reynolds: 24, Red Bluff was arrested Wednesday on Pinon Way for felony possession of a controlled substance and misdemeanors of parapher- nalia and false identification to a peace officer. Reynolds has an outstanding felony charge of keeping a place to sell drugs. Bail was $21,000. Dwayne Williams: 52, Red Bluff was arrested Saturday at the Raley's parking lot for felony inflicting corporal in- jury on a spouse or cohabi- tant. Bail was $50,000. Animals Dog bite: A Red Bluff High School student was bitten by a dog at a bus stop at Ventura Avenue and Chip- man Friday. Dog bite: A dog bite was reported Friday on the 24000block of Oklahoma Avenue. Burglary Dale Avenue: A mo- torhome was broken into sometime in the past few weeks. The Thunderbird and Live Oak roads: A marijuana the was reported Friday. Mulberry and Round Up avenues: A trailer hitch was taken from the back of a truck Saturday night. Vandalism 5000block Antoinette Court: Graffiti was re- ported Saturday on a wall and vehicle. 16000block Lariat Loop: A rock was thrown at a trailer Sunday. Chestnut Avenue: A mail- box was damaged Saturday and a pack of cigarettes le behind inside the box. Policelogs Tehama County 4-H congratulates new par- ents Evan and Taylor Wal- ters and big sister Aaliyah on the arrival of 7 lbs., 3 oz., Evan Harvey Walters. Baby Evan was born 12:08 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 5. and named the first Te- hama County baby born during National 4-H Week. A giant gift basket was de- livered by 4-H staff to the Walters family on Mon- day morning at St. Eliza- beth Community Hospital. Community and 4-H clubs around Tehama County made donations to the gift basket. National 4-H week is Oct. 5-11 and will culmi- nate in a 4-H Open House event 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat- urday, Oct. 11 in the park- ing lot of Tractor Supply Co. and Cornerstone Com- munity Bank in Red Bluff. All are welcome to this free event, featuring fun hands-on activities, con- cessions and test-firing of Rockets to the Rescue, a National Youth Science Day project. Tehama County 4-H is enrolling for the 2014-2015 program year. Call (530) 527-3101 or visit http://cete- hama.ucanr.edu/4-H_Pro- gram/ for more informa- tion. 4-H FirstTehamaCountybabyborn during National 4-H week This past weekend I found myself in what must have been a diabetic reac- tion while crossing an- other item off of my Te- hama County bucket list. Saturday, I had the great honor to be a judge in the apple pie contest and learn all about the art of good pie. Two of the four of us were returning judges who told me that they look forward to this event every year. Af- ter offering me some ad- vice and techniques, we set out to judge nearly 20 pies based on appearance, taste and crust quality. How hard could that be? Let me tell you what, there are things about pie I never knew. You would think that something that has the same essential ingredients would taste somewhat con- sistent from pie to pie…..um- mmmm no. You would also think that pies would have the same mouth feel and that a crust is a crust is a crust, wrong again. Usually when you eat pie you have no other pies in comparison to weigh its merit against. Chances are, if you like pie, most pie will do. When you are comparing 20 pies against one another, you become painfully aware of the subtle, and sometimes not so subtle, nuances be- tween crusts, fillings and textures. It seems that I en- joy pies that are flakey on top, with softer crust on the bottom, and that I espe- cially like crumb pies. I thor- oughly enjoy apples that are more cooked than firm, and I am not a big fan of weird outlier spices. Oh and I def- initely prefer crust made with butter over lard. Tasting pies and judging them is entirely subjective. I had no training other than the fact that I do enjoy pie and was willing to eat sam- ples of 20 pies made in ran- dom kitchens I knew noth- ing about. At one point I joked of writing a CSI epi- sode where someone is mur- dered using a pie-judging contest as a beard. None- theless, it turns out that one of the judges likes the types of pies I don't, so I am sure out votes counted each other out. Also, you can't judge a pie by its appearance. The pie I ranked highest for appearance got my lowest ranking for taste and crust. The best part of the whole time was meeting so many readers and hearing them speak about what columns they have enjoyed through the years. After eight years of writingandnorepeats,Ihave given out a lot of content. It meant a lot that people cared enough to let me know that I matter, just like the people I highlight in my column. As I set my sights south looking forward to my move this June, I am hav- ing a blast participating in all things quintessential Tehama County. In a cou- ple of weeks I will fulfill a huge bucket list item when I sit in Author's Alley at the Dairyville Orchard Festival and offer my six books at the very same school where it all started. It doesn't get much better than that. Thanks Manton for allow- ing me the honor to join your ranks of judges and I look forward to other opportuni- ties to join in on the festivi- ties in Tehama County. If you have ideas or connections for other fun, send me a note at lifecoach@shasta.com. FaydraRector,MAisa 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.blogs- pot.com/. FAYDRA RECTOR Another bucket list item checked off This is not a fish story. It's the story of a fish. It's the story of a big fish. It's the story of a prize winning fish. The story of a fish big- ger than any other fish in the contesttowinarodandcase. Hence an important fish. Early in the season John Morse, who manufactures flied and rods and other fishing paraphernalia, of- fered a rod and case to the Tehama county fisherman that brought into Walter Stoll's place the largest trout caught with Morse equip- ment. Some big ones were turned in, but it remained for George Connover, con- nected locally with the Stan- dard Oil Company, to hook the prize and get the reward. Connover brought in a trout from Klamath river that weighed nine pounds. Fish- ermen on mountain streams will say that was some fish. Paul Holsinger, of Red Bluff, had the next largest one, caught near Chester. It must be a great joy to snag nine pounds of fighting trout and then get a lot of fancy fishing tackle for doing it. — Oct. 7, 1924 90 YEARS AGO... A nine pounder is easy winner of fishing award The workshop Calflo- ra's Obsever Pro: Emerg- ing Botanical Field Meth- ods will be offered 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday Oct. 11 at 129 Holt Hall at CSU Chico. Learn to use Calflora's Observer Pro Android ap- plication. Android phones, tablets and GPS pucks will be provided to ensure ev- eryone has the chance to get familiar with using these tools. Each participant will receive a free one-year professional registration to Calflora and will get to use these individual regis- trations to explore a range of exciting tools available through the Calfora web- site. Cynthia Powell is the Project Manager of the Cal- flora Database where she helps this leading source of California wild plant in- formation to develop inno- vative new mapping, data analysis, and management of planning tools. Registration is $50. To register, send an email to chatfield@csuchico.edu. For more information about the workshop, send an email to cpowell@cal- flora.org. Detailed workshop de- scriptions are available on www.csuchico.edu/biol/ Herb/Events.html. CHICO STATE HERBARIUM Botanical workshop offered at CSU Chico By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press GRANTS PASS, ORE. Citing a threat from rat poison used on illegal marijuana plantations, federal biolo- gists on Monday proposed Endangered Species Act protection for West Coast populations of the fisher, a larger cousin of the wea- sel. The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service published notice in the Federal Register that it wants to list the fisher as a threatened species in Or- egon, California and Wash- ington. The full proposal was ex- pected Tuesday. Other reasons for the proposal include the loss of forest habitat to wild- fire, logging and urban de- velopment, disease, being eaten by other predators, illegal fur trapping and cli- mate change. The fisher is the sec- ond species in the West for which biologists have for- mally recognized a threat from marijuana cultivation. A recovery plan for coho salmon calls for reducing pollution from pesticides and fertilizers used on pot plantations; decreasing ille- gal water withdrawals from salmon streams; and easing clear-cut logging. Scientists are also work- ing to see how much the poisons are affecting the northern spotted owl. Erin Williams, who over- saw the analysis for Fish and Wildlife, said the poi- sons are regulated, but the rules have done little to stop misuse on pot farms in for- ests where fishers live. The full proposal notes that 84 percent of the 77 fisher carcasses found in California's northwestern mountains and the south- ern Sierra Nevada tested positive for rat poison. A map shows that virtually all fisher habitat includes illegal marijuana growing sites. Six of the eight fishers tested on the Olympic Pen- insula of Washington tested positive, said Mourad Ga- briel, executive director of the Integral Ecology Re- search Center. WILDLIFE Proposal to protect fisher cites pot farm threat Faydra Rector www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service..................527.2151, Ext. 126 Fax.........................................................................................530.527.5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Newsroom .............................................527.2151 Toll free................................................................................ 800.479.6397 A er hours.....................................................................................527.2153 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..................................545Diamond Avenue, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Home delivery subscription rates: Tuesday through Saturday: $4.48 per week; Business and professional rate: Tuesday through Friday, $2.19for four weeks. Subscription rates by mail: $12.20for four weeks in Tehama County; $17.29for four weeks all other areas. Pric- es include all applicable taxes. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send addr ess changes to: P.O. 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