Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/584226
The following informa- tion is compiled from Red Bluff Police Department, Red Bluff Fire, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment, Corning Fire, Cal Fire and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrest PaulMurrayPrinzing: 50,ofRedBluffwasar- rested and booked into Tehama County Jail on the felony charge of vandal- ism: $400+ and the misdemeanor charge of discharge of a fire extin- guisher. Officers were sent about 11:15p.m. Thursday to Tehama County Mental Health, 1850Walnut St., for a disturbance where they found a patient had punched and kicked several holes in the walls and dis- charged a fire extinguisher inside the building. Staff was not injured in the inci- dent, but there was about $1,000-$1,500in damage done to the facility. Collision Southbound Interstate 5, south of Adobe Road: No one was injured, but traffic was temporarily snarled following a three- vehicle collision about 11:30a.m. Thursday that included an RV. The RV entered southbound I-5at the Adobe Road on-ramp and failed to see a Honda Accord. The RV pulled immediately into the far le lane of the freeway, di- rectly in front of the Honda resulting in a collision that sent the Honda spinning out into the center divide. The Honda spun back onto the road where it collided with a Chevy 1500pickup. The Chevy hit the guard rail while the Honda hit the RV again, sending it into the center divide. Scam Corning: A woman re- ported receiving a scam phone call in which a per- son posed as her grandson in Georgia asking for bail money. Threat Otis Court: A woman reported about 6:30p.m. Thursday that she had been threatened by a neighbor. Vandalism Franzel Road: A woman called at 1:38a.m. Friday to report she had awoken to find the front window of the residence had been broken out. 18000block Phyllis Road: A man reported an unknown person had thrown a rock through his vehicle window on Sunday morning. Policelogs "The Home Depot peo- ple has gone above and beyond in the commu- nity," Chandler said. "It's been rewarding to be able to get out of the house by myself. Sometimes it's two weeks before I get out to my yard. I like to get out and take care of it myself when I can." Ramp FROM PAGE 1 ERIC DRAPER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Rescue workers walk past the Northridge Meadows Apartments that collapsed during the earthquake in Los Angeles. By Christopher Weber The Associated Press LOS ANGELES Thousands of older wood and con- crete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under sweeping retrofitting rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would af- fect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, which are typ- ically wood-frame struc- tures with large spaces such as parking lots on the ground floor. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also re- quire upgrades. The measure passed on a 12-0 vote. "There's no question that we're going to have an earthquake. The question is, when?" Councilman Gil Cedillo said. "In here we've laid out the groundwork for the seismic retrofitting that needs to be done." Before the vote, repre- sentatives for residential landlords and commer- cial building owners sig- naled their approval of the plan — while express- ing concerns about poten- tial costs. City leaders will now have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per- unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows own- ers to increase rents up to $75 per month to pay for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such a hike is too steep. One proposal is to divide the costs 50-50 and cap possible monthly rent in- creases at $38. To help pay for the up- grades, apartment groups are looking for certain fi- nancial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes and business license and build- ing permit fees for owners who retrofit. Los Angeles orders qu ak e re tr ofi t fo r many older buildings UPGRADES By Don Thompson The Associated Press SACRAMENTO A U.S. air- man hailed as a hero for helping thwart a European terror attack was upgraded from serious to fair condi- tion Friday as he recovered from three stab wounds suf- fered in a late-night attack near a bar, UC Davis Medi- cal Center officials said Fri- day, indicating that his vital signs are stable and normal and he is conscious. Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone, 23, "is awake, able to get out of bed and in good spirits," the hospital said in a statement. Police were continuing to sort through conflict- ing accounts of what hap- pened and have made no arrests, Sacramento Police Sgt. Doug Morse said. He said police inter- viewed a 24-year-old woman who was also hurt in the fight and was treated at a hospital for abrasions. Morse said the woman was with Stone and three oth- ers when they became in- volved in a brawl with an- other group in the Sacra- mento nightclub district. "We're really hoping that additional witnesses or any- one involved comes for- ward," Morse said. "Right now detectives are work- ing around the clock to clar- ify all that stuff. It would be way too premature to dis- cuss what witnesses saw." Police said Stone was out with three women and an- other man before the fight early Thursday. A grainy surveillance video from out- side a liquor store shows a large man who appears to be Stone fighting against a half-dozen people at an in- tersection. A second video released by police appears to show a woman who was not with Stone's group and two men fleeing in a vehicle after the altercation. Police collected surveil- lance video from three bars down the block from the fight, owner T.J. Bruce said. Hesaidstaffwhowerework- ing that night did not see an altercation inside or outside the three connected clubs. "There was no confronta- tion in the bar that night," Bruce said. "We have secu- rity that's posted in front of our doors all night. There was nothing." He said police have not told him if their review of the clubs' surveillance video showed any of the people in- volved in the fight. Stone, who is assigned to Travis Air Force Base in California, suffered a severely cut thumb and a knife wound to his neck in August when he and two childhood friends from Sacramento stopped a ter- ror attack aboard a Paris- bound passenger train. Stone, National Guards- man Alek Skarlatos and col- lege student Anthony Sadler were vacationing in Europe when they tackled Ayoub El-Khazzani, a man with ties to radical Islam who had boarded the train with a Kalashnikov rifle, pistol and box cutter. Sacramento police said there is no connection be- tween the Sacramento fight and the attack in France. Police have not said what started the argument but said there was no evidence the assailants knew who Stone was. 3 WOUNDS US a ir ma n' s co nd it io n up gr ad ed as he recovers from stabbing KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE French President Francois Hollande shakes hands with U.S. Airman Spencer Stone outside the Elysee Palace in Paris a er Hollande awarded Stone and two friends with the French Legion of Honor for subduing a gunman on a Paris-bound train three days earlier. This week's most wanted subject is Christian Alexan- der Macedo, 21, from Corn- ing. Macedo has a $1,515,000 felony warrant for his ar- rest for attempted mur- der. Macedo's physical de- scription is a Hispanic male adult, 5 feet 7 inches tall, 130 pounds, black hair, brown eyes with a tattoo on the left side of his neck. Macedo should be con- sidered dangerous and any- one with information re- garding Macedo's where- abouts can call any local law enforcement agency at any time. During business hours call the Tehama County District Attorney's Bureau of Investigations Office at 529-3590. All callers will remain confidential. MOST WANTED Police search for Christian Macedo Christian Alexander Macedo MULTNOMAH COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE — PORTLAND POLICE Multnomah County Sheriff's Office photos show the three suspects who were arrested Wednesday in Portland, Ore., in the killing of Steve Carter, a tantra yoga teacher, on a hiking trail in Marin County From le are Sean Michael Angold, 24; Lila Scott Allgood, 19; and Morrison Haze Lampley, 23. A hiker found Carter's body on Monday. By Janie Har and Paul Elias The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO Police said Friday that three young and homeless wan- derers used a handgun sto- len from an unlocked car parked in San Francisco to rob and kill two people. San Francisco Police Lt. Toney Chaplin said the handgun's owner reported it stolen on Oct. 1 from the Fisherman's Wharf neigh- borhood in San Francisco. Twodayslater,a23-year- old Canadian woman on a backpack excursion was found dead in San Francis- co's Golden Gate Park. Po- lice say Audrey Carey was shot once in the head. Police say the same gun was used to shoot to death Steve Carter, 67, while he was walking his dog on a popular hiking trail Monday evening in Marin County, about 20 miles north of San Fran- cisco. Carter's dog was also shot, but is expected to survive. Carey was from Quebec and had planned to back- pack in the United States and Europe. Carter was a popular tantra yoga in- structor who was caring for his cancer-stricken wife. The three suspects — Morrison Haze Lampley, 23; Sean Michael Angold, 24 and Lila Scott Alligood, 18 — were arrested outside a Portland, Oregon, soup kitchen Wednesday after- noon. Carter's Volkswagen Jettawasparkedacrossthe street. Detectives traced it and the suspects through the car's navigation sys- tem. Trio use stolen gun to rob, kill 2 in San Francisco HOMELESS WANDERERS Only moments before the press conference, Repub- licans were gathered for a lunch meeting and had expected to vote for their nomination for speaker. In- stead, McCarthy made the surprise announcement that he wasn't their guy. LaMalfa has worked in government with McCar- thy since 2002 when each man was first elected to the California Assembly. Just like the rest of the people in the room, "I was stunned by his decision," LaMalfa said. "I was saddened but it was also one of the most selfless things I've ever seen in the political realm," La- Malfa said by telephone Friday from the Washing- ton airport as he waited to travel to California for the weekend. He said he believed Mc- Carthy would have had 180 or 190 Republican votes. Yet reaching the needed 218 votes from the full House of Representatives might have required a "pro- tracted battle right on C- SPAN that wouldn't have looked good for our side," LaMalfa said. Instatementstothepress, McCarthy said he wanted to have more support, some- thing like 247 votes for his role as speaker. LaMalfa FROM PAGE 1 The tribe intends to use funding from the Commu- nity Development Block Grant program for Indian tribes to pay for the pro- posed project. As a part of the grant application the tribe needs letters of sup- port for the project. A letter of support has already been typed up and is ready for Mayor Gary Strack to sign after council deliberations. It states "As always, the city will con- tinue to work as a partner with the tribe in providing mutually beneficial pro- grams and services to tribal members and the commu- nity." Brewer recommends the council approve the pro- posed letter to support the building project, according to the report. The City Council meets at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 794 Solano St. The meeting is free and open to the public. Council FROM PAGE 1 R ed Bluff Simple Cremations and Burial Service FD1931 527-1732 Burials - Monuments - Preneed 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2015 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | NEWS | 9 A

