Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/618141
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 JoseArtemioBriseno: 33,ofCorningwasarrest- ed Thursday on Blossom Avenue. He was booked into Tehama County Jail on the charges of contempt: disobey court order and possession of marijuana over 28.5grams. Corning Police were dispatched about 6p.m. to report of a man at the residence in violation of a restraining order. Bail was $8,000. Thomas Ely Bower: 41, of Red Bluff was arrested Thursday at the Brickyard Creek Apartments, Walnut Street. He was booked into jail on the charge of battery of spouse/ ex-spouse/date. Bail was $5,000. Samuel L. Beck: 56, of Red Bluff was arrested Thurs- day on Gilmore Road. He was booked into jail on the charge of violating a court order. Bail was $5,000. Burglary Aloha Street: A man re- ported a burglary at his resi- dence. Items taken inlcude: Two knives, value $100, over 30pieces of jewelry, total value $300, one black Dell Tablet valued at approxi- mately $85to replace, one black Tom-Tom GPS sys- tem, value $50, one nickel plated pistol, value $400, one white gold necklace value $200, one 14k gold wedding band, value $500, one Black Hills gold ring with an eagle image on it, value $100. four Playstation One games, value $200, Several XBOX One games, value $200, one Black Opera- tions three Playstation Four game value $50and one Kill Zone Playstation Four game, value $50. Drugs Blackburn Avenue: Some- one at Corning Union High School requested an officer for a student in possess- sion of drugs. A youth was cited and released for pos- session of marijuana: under 28.5grams. Missing South Main Street: Some- one at American Express Inn reported Jillian Kurschinski, 31, of South Lake Tahoe missing Friday. Kurchinski is 5'9", 135pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a white jacket, blue jeans, carrying a black purse and a black backpack. She was last contacted via a text message on Friday at 2:29 a.m. saying she was walking home from the 700block of Main Street to the her motel on the 200block of S. Main Street. Scam Washington Street: Someone came to the Red Bluff Police lobby to report a person posing as PG&E had called her father and he had given them his social security number. Suspicious Edith Avenue: Someone at the Corning Safeway reported about 4:15p.m. Thursday that his 12-year- old daughter had been ap- proached by an older teen in a black jacket and vans shoes. The boy, who was last seen in front of Casa Ramos, reportedly offered to sell her marijuana. An area check was made, but he was not located. Toomes Avenue: Extra patrol was requested in the area about 10:45p.m. Thursday due to two suspi- cious acting men hanging in the area. 19200Cahoon Ridge Road: A man reported a suspicious circumstance in which four men had come into his driveway and asked his wife to buy cleaning supplies. The s Adobe Road: Someone reported the the of a wa- ter proof box with miscel- laneous tools from the bed of a pickup at the Hampton Inn. Edith Avenue: Someone at Rite Aid reported the the of bicycle tubes by a wom- an in her 40s. Tanya Marie Sullivan, 45, was cited and released on a warrant and given a trespass admonish- ment. Oriole Drive: Someone re- ported the the of Christ- mas lights. 5500block Rawson Road: A man reported the lion statue on the end of his driveway had been stolen. Threats South Jackson Street: A woman reported the mother of a student at her Vista School had stated her child would stab the woman's daughter. State Route 99W: Some- one at the California Inn reported being threatened by a woman resident in unit 4. The person requested the woman be contacted and told to leave her and her family alone. POLICELOGS An item on Friday's sports page about the Red Bluff High School Spar- tans JV basketball team contained an error. Ethan Darnall is the team's assis- tant coach. The Daily News regrets the error. Itisthepolicyofthe Daily News to correct as quickly as possible all errors in fact that have been published in the newspaper. If you believe a factual error has been made in a news story, call 737-5042. CORRECTION DarnallisJV assistant coach Gossett:ElviraLorraine Gossett,95,ofRedBluffdied Thursday,Dec.17atSt.Eliza- bethcommunityHospital. Arrangementsareunderthe directionofRedBluffSimple Cremations&BurialServices. PublishedSaturday,Dec.19, 2015intheDailyNews,Red Bluff,California. Lord: Peter Nowell Lord, 57, of Red Bluff died Sun- day, Dec. 13at his home. His body was donated to University of California San Francisco for scientific research according to his wishes. Published Saturday, Dec. 19, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. DEATH NOTICES The hearing will deal with setting a fee for situ- ations in which there is a change in services with a business or school, Lucero said. "This does give us the ability to be able to charge fees without having a con- tract and to collect from an individual," Lucero said. "It's not a huge amount of money, but it does let us collect. The fee will be based on the time it takes to provide service, the cost of equipment and supplies and the overhead adminis- trative cost." A time in motion study was conducted in March 2015 to gather data for de- termining the cost. The staff report accompanying the agenda proposes that supervisors authorize an automatic fee increase in the yearly percentage in- crease in the cost of health care services measured in the Consumer Price In- dex Medical Care Compo- nent. The fees will be reas- sessed every five years, Lu- cero said. "The recommended fee adjustments are intended to capture no more than the reasonable costs asso- ciated with the provision of services and do not exceed the actual costs of provid- ing these services," Lucero said. A copy of the study and data to support the fee in- creases is available at the Health Services Agency Administrative Office, 818 Main St., as well as the Te- hama County Clerk and Re- corder Office, 633 Wash- ington St., Room 12 for the public to view. Proposed fee increases are as follows: TB Test, $34 plus cost of test ma- terials, TB Treatment $56- 94 range; HIV Test, $44 plus third-party laboratory charges; Pregnancy test, $72 plus cost of test materi- als; Head lice/ scabies, $34; Chest x-ray, actual cost of third party x-ray service; Car seat class, $50 group, $25 individual, car seat at cost; STD exam, $63 per visit plus third party labo- ratory charges, STD Treat- ment $55 plus actual cost of medication; Immunization State provided vaccine $26 per shot, $32 maximum per person per visit, $40 max- imum per family per visit, Non state-provided vac- cine, $38 plus actual cost of vaccine; Public Health Nursing Service level I- ex- tended services similar in complexity to outpatient visit by a new patient, STD exam, HIV test, active TB treatment with investiga- tion or pregnancy exam, $68; Public Health Nurs- ing Service level II includes intermediate services sim- ilar in complexity to rou- tine outpatient visit by es- tablished client, STD treat- ment, latent TB treatment or continued TB treatment, $60; Public Health Nurs- ing Service Level III, basic services similar to an office consult, head lice and sca- bies test or TB test, $34. Fees FROM PAGE 1 The girls both agreed to put the weapons down and at that time they heard a gun shot. Oneofthegirlsinvolvedwas shot and sent to Mercy Medi- cal Center in Redding follow- ing the incident. She has since recoveredfromherinjuries. Shooting FROM PAGE 1 Call 877-4DAD411 or visit www.fatherhood.gov be a dad today. Take time to Staff report The Tehama County Su- perior Court has a new pre- siding judge, Todd Bottke, as of Dec. 8, according to a press release issued Friday by court CEO Caryn Down- ing. Bottke had served as as- sistant presiding judge un- der Presiding Judge John Garaventa. Judge Matthew McGlynn has taken on the roll of assistant presiding judge, the release said. The term for the posi- tions of Presiding Judge and Assistant Presiding Judge will run through Dec. 31, 2018, and may terminate or be extended by a major- ity vote of the judges of the court. The position also may terminate by the deci- sion of the individual judge. Bottke was elected in 2010 and his term expires in 2017. McGlynn was elected in 2012 and began serving in 2013; his term expires in 2019. Garaventa was ap- pointed by former gover- nor Pete Wilson in Febru- ary 1998. He was elevated to the Superior Court in Au- gust 1998 upon court unifi- cation. He was most recently re-elected in 2012 and his term will expire in 2019. The release did not spec- ify a reason for the change, but did include informa- tion about court procedure in the event of an extended absence of a judge. "To the extent that any one individual (or more as the case may be) judicial officer is absent for any pe- riod of time from the Court, the Tehama County Supe- rior Court will continue to ensure that there is no in- terruption in the access to justice for the citizens of Te- hama County and the State of California," the release states. "To that end, and as the Court has always done in the past on an 'as needed' basis, the Court will con- tinue to assign matters to a different department, call upon an Assigned Judge to sit as part of the Assigned Judges Program per Arti- cle VI, Section 6 of the Cal- ifornia Constitution as di- rected by the Chief Justice or call upon a reciprocal as- signment of a judicial offi- cer from another county." A message left for Gara- venta Friday afternoon was not immediately returned. SUPERIOR COURT Bottke named presiding judge The Associated Press SACRAMENTO An initia- tive to limit the price the state pays for prescription drugs has qualified for Cal- ifornia's 2016 ballot. The proposal would bar any state agency from pay- ing more for a prescription drug than the negotiated price the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs pays. It's backed by the Califor- nia AIDS Healthcare Foun- dation. Supporters said Fri- day that it would rein in ex- orbitant prices on hundreds of vital medications. Pharmaceutical com- panies call the initiative "misleading and flawed." Spokeswoman Kathy Fair- banks says it will increase the cost of prescription drugs for veterans and limit drug choices for all Califor- nians. The state Legislative An- alyst's Office says it was un- able to obtain information about how much the VA and the state pay for vari- ous drugs. That means offi- cials couldn't assess the fis- cal effect to the state. PROPOSAL Drug price initiative qualifies for 2016 ballot By Sudhin Thanawala The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO Record- ings secretly made by an anti-abortion group at an abortion association's meet- ings do not show evidence of criminal activity and could put the association's members at risk, a federal judge said Friday, citing the recent shooting at a Colo- rado Planned Parenthood clinic. U.S. District Judge Wil- liam Orrick made the com- ments during a hearing over the National Abor- tion Federation's request for a preliminary injunc- tion that would continue to block the release of the re- cordings by the Center for Medical Progress. Orrick did not immediately issue a ruling. He previously is- sued a temporary restrain- ing order blocking the re- cordings pending the out- come of the preliminary injunction hearing. The Center for Medi- cal Progress has released several secretly recorded videos that it says show Planned Parenthood em- ployees selling fetal tissue for profit, which is illegal. Planned Parenthood has said it abides by a law that allows providers to be re- imbursed for the costs of processing tissue donated by women who have had abortions. The videos have riled anti-abortion activists and fueled discussion in Con- gress about cutting off funding for Planned Par- enthood. The National Abortion Federation filed a lawsuit in July, saying members of the Center for Medical Progress infiltrated its meetings and recorded its members. The federation says the release of any audio or video would put members in danger. Orrick seemed to agree, saying doctors who have appeared in videos re- leased by the center have received death threats. He also cited suspected arson at abortion clinics and the November shooting at the Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood clinic that left three people dead and nine wounded. Catherine Short, an at- torney for the Center for Medical Progress, said there was no evidence the Colorado shooter was moti- vated by the group's videos or that doctors have been directly threatened. The re- lease of the recordings is vi- tal to furthering public dis- cussion about topics such as whether the country's abor- tion laws are too loosely written, she said. The cen- ter says in court documents its work is the equivalent of investigative journalism and protected by the First Amendment. "It's beyond dispute that this material is of sig- nificant public interest," Short said. "I don't think this court should be saying the public can't handle the truth." The National Abortion Federation says the re- cordings violate agree- ments the center entered into not to make such re- cordings of any meetings or discussions at the fed- eration's conferences and not to disclose information learned at its conferences to any third party without first obtaining the federa- tion's consent. "Here clearly, our expec- tation was that we were creating a safe place for our people to dialogue and learn and address prob- lems," said Linda Shostak, an attorney for the National Abortion Federation. UNDERCOVER VIDEOS Judge: No evidence of crimes in recordings of abortion group The Center for Medical Progress has released several secretly recorded videos that it says show Planned Parenthood employees selling fetal tissue for profit, which is illegal. R ed Bluff Simple Cremations and Burial Service FD1931 527-1732 Burials - Monuments - Preneed 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2015 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 5 A

