Quantcast
Channel: In EDC blogs
Viewing all 3438 articles
Browse latest View live

Mark your calendar for the 17th Annual Empty Bowls Supper.

$
0
0

[El Dorado Arts Council]
 
This fun and meaningful event will raise funds for the hungry, both locally and internationally. Local Students and Artists have made hundreds of hand-made ceramic bowls for this event. Guests choose a hand-made soup bowl to take home as a remembrance of all of the empty bowls in our community and the world.  

The Forni Room at the Fairgrounds in Placerville will provide more space for everyone. The Supper includes a home cooked meal of soup, bread and a beverage. There will be live music from Achilles Wheel and Coloma Celtic, a silent auction, bake sale, wine and beer bar and lots of friends and community members to share the evening.  

Come anytime from 4 - 8 PM. No reservations are needed. Suggested donation at the door $15 – 50+. All donations are tax deductible. No one is turned away due to lack of funds. 

The Forni Room at the Fairgrounds in Placerville will provide more space for everyone. The Supper includes a home cooked meal of soup, bread and a beverage. There will be live music from Achilles Wheel and Coloma Celtic, a silent auction, bake sale, wine and beer bar and lots of friends and community members to share the evening.  

Come anytime from 4 - 8 PM. No reservations are needed. Suggested donation at the door $15 – 50+. All donations are tax deductible. No one is turned away due to lack of funds. 

We welcome artist donations for the Silent Auction. Contact Jan atedjan.newell@gmail.com

All volunteer positions are filled at this time.

For more information or to make a credit card donation, take a look at Facebook: Empty Bowls Placerville or http://www.edpjc.org

Cash donations are very welcome to help defer the extra expenses of $2500 of moving to the fairgrounds.  

Empty Bowls Supper is sponsored by the non-profit organizations, El Dorado Peace and Justice Community and the Upper Room Dining Hall. Thank you for your support of this great community event.

Students with their ceramic bowls and donations from Brian Hayes' Ceramics Class at Folsom Lake College.  

El Dorado Arts Council's mission to promote, connect, and empower arts and culture throughout the county is achieved by targeted programs and services, a vibrant gallery exhibition series, and a focus on initiatives which support and sustain the cultural life of the region.

 

 

EL DORADO ARTS COUNCIL BOARD OF DIRECTORS:

Dan Cattone, President

Les Brown, Vice President

Madeline Restaino, Secretary

Terry Klas, Treasurer

David Girard

Chris Knopp

Mike Kobus

Jayne Moore

Carl Ribaudo 

 

 

STAFF:

Terry LeMoncheck, Executive Director - terry@eldoradoartscouncil.org 

Andrew Vonderschmitt, Programs and Communications Manager - andrew@eldoradoartscouncil.org

Brandy Nisbet, Administrative Assistant - brandy@eldoradoartscouncil.org 

 

El Dorado Arts Council locations:

Fausel House - 772 Pacific Street, Placerville, CA

Tahoe Mountain Lab - 3079 Harrison Avenue, South Lake Tahoe, CA (by appointment)

 

Mailing address: P.O. Box 2400, Placerville, CA 95667

Tel: 530.295.3496

 

Website  Support  Join

 

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Extended deadline for Happy Valley Road closures to Nov 12th

$
0
0

[Carla Hass]
 
El Dorado County Department of Transportation today announced the extension of the full closure of Happy Valley Road. The full closure will extend through November 12, 2018.

The closure is located one mile from the intersection of Mt. Aukum Road and Happy Valley Road. Residents on the west side of the closure will access their homes from Mt. Aukum Road to Happy Valley Road. Residents on the east side of the closure will access their homes following the detour of Mt. Aukum Road to Happy Valley Cutoff Road.

Repairs include construction of micropiles and a concrete grade beam retaining wall, removal of existing steel culvert, construction of new drainage inlet and reinforced concrete pipe culvert, and reconstruction of the roadway structural section.

Department of Transportation understands the inconvenience that motorists face while this closure is in place and sincerely appreciates your patience with this matter.

For questions regarding this construction, please contact the County’s Department of Transportation general information line at (530) 621-7900.

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Louisiana Schnell School and Placerville Head Start receive ‘Tools for Schools’ Award

$
0
0

[Dina Gentry]
 
Teachers at Louisiana Schnell School and the El Dorado County Office of Education’s (EDCOE) Placerville Head Start classroom excitedly received school supplies as a result of recently winning the Schools Financial Credit Union ‘Tools for Schools’ award. The supplies included colored construction paper, dry erase markers, colored markers, glue sticks, ruled-paper notebooks, pencils, erasers, safety scissors, and file folders. Sandee Bangs, veteran educator with 27 years of experience and EDCOE Head Start teacher, expressed, “These classroom materials will enable students to successfully learn essential classroom and social skills. In Head Start, we focus on helping students develop the fine motor skills needed to learn to write, learning numbers, recognizing number groups, colors, shapes, and introducing them to the alphabet."

“We are fortunate to have dedicated and passionate educators like Sandee, and sincerely appreciate the support from Schools Financial Credit Union,” Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Ed Manansala noted. 

EDCOE Family Service Associate, Jan Gibson, nominated the Head Start classroom and noted, “In my nomination letter I explained how hard our teachers work and how much they do for the children and the families. They do a lot of art projects with limited supplies so anything extra they might be given will be put to good use. Sandee is very organized and goes over and beyond for her kids. I know the teachers sometimes spend their own money to buy things for their classrooms, so this was a wonderful gift to win this grant!”

Louisiana Schnell School, located in Placerville, was nominated for the award by Dr. Suzanne Egger, retired Rescue Union School District Superintendent. She shared, “My grandson started Kindergarten at Louisiana Schnell School in August. Every school needs help with supplies, so I appreciate Schools Financial Credit Union’s generous donation to Schnell School.” Patrick Paturel, Louisiana Schnell School Principal expressed, “We as a school are always fortunate to be part of the Placerville community. When organizations like Schools Financial Credit Union donate to our school, it’s yet another reminder how fortunate we are to live in this community.”

The ‘Tools for Schools’ program was born of the great need expressed by classroom teachers for school supplies. The program provides classroom materials to thousands of students in the communities that Schools Financial Credit Union serves. This year, over 1,500 nominations for 563 schools were received describing how teachers and students would use and benefit from a large amount of classroom supplies. “We were really moved by the level of need expressed in the 1,500 nominations we received for our ‘Tools for Schools’ program this year and especially by those submitted on behalf of Louisiana Schnell Elementary and Placerville Portable Head Start,” expressed Cathy Grimes, VP of Marketing, Schools Financial Credit Union.

“This was a surprise, and it will be a great benefit to our Head Start and State Preschool families. Thank you Schools Financial for this gift!” expressed Jenny Pettit, Director of EDCOE Child Development Programs. The Head Start/State Preschool program is a publically-funded parent participation program for income eligible families with children from 3 to 5 years of age offering an individualized preschool experience in a center-based setting. The program promotes family engagement and provides a high-quality preschool experience to prepare children for success in school and life. For more information about the Head Start program visit edcoe.org

Louisiana Schnell School provides children with an excellent educational program that prepares them academically and inspires them to be confident, life-long learners who strive to realize their potential and make a positive contribution to society. For more information, visit pusdk8.us 

Visit www.schools.org for more information about the ‘Tools for Schools’ program.

 

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

SUPPORT A POSITIVE AGENDA

$
0
0

[Michael Ranalli]
 
Dear Friends, Fear mongering and divisiveness hurts our county and community. It is time to tell those agents of fear that we have had enough! 

Four years ago, I was honored to be elected to serve as your County Supervisor.  During my time on the Board, we have faced difficult and sometimes controversial decisions, but have successfully balanced our budget and implemented policies to protect our County’s rural character for future generations. 
 
In a campaign based on insults and criticism, my opponent has distorted my position on issues and misrepresented my decisions.  I stand by my record.
 
I stand by my record supporting the policies of our County's General Plan that protect our rural communities while creating jobs, business and economic development opportunities and housing affordable for our families.   
 
I stand by my record supporting public safety and the men and women who serve and protect our communities.  This includes the long overdue investment in a new public safety headquarters to house the patrol, investigative, training and administrative services of our Sheriff's Department, the funding of additional sheriffs’ deputies and a resident sheriffs’ deputy for the Divide. 
 
I stand by my record securing increased road funding and providing improvements to maintain and improve our local roads and bridges.
 
I stand by my record serving the residents of District 4, including meeting constituents in my office or your neighborhood, to listen to your concerns and to answer your questions, and to work alongside you as part of our shared commitment to improve our District.
 
Community organizations, business owners and local residents know my true record of performance and have endorsed my re-election as your County Supervisor.  I hope you will agree and vote to re-elect Michael Ranalli on November 6, 2018.
 
Michael Ranalli, El Dorado County Supervisor, District 4

To learn more about Michael Ranalli, visit: www.Ranalli4Supervisor.com

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Sheriff's Arrest and Activity Log for 11-4-18

$
0
0

[PRpond]

The following people are on the arrest log of NOVEMBER 4, 2018, as reported by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department:

MICHAEL    KEITH    ADAMS    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    33    E
1170(H)(5)    F    MCS VIOLATION    

ODOLFO        AGUILERA HERNANDEZ    M
LT    20181104    RELEASED    37    S
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $5,000.00

JENNIFER    NOEL    BAKANEC    F
PV    20181104    RELEASED    38    I
23152(F)    M    DUI ANY DRUG    $15,000.00
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $2,500.00

JOSHUA    JAMES    DANSBY    M
LT    20181104    RELEASED    25    S
647(F)    M    DISORD CONDUCT:ALCOHOL    $500.00

DUSTIN    CHARLES    ELLERT    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    33    P
1170(H)(5)    F    MCS VIOLATION    

TERRY    DEAN JR    FAIRCHILD    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    49    E
22210    M    MFG/ETC LEADED CANE/ETC    $30,000.00

CARL    THOMAS    HENSLEY    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    50    E
496(A)    M    REC KNWN STOLN PROP    $2,000.00
11364(A)    M    POSS UNLAW PARAPHERNALIA    $2,000.00
3056    F    VIOLATION OF PAROLE:FEL    
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT    $5,000.00

AUSTIN    JAMES    JENKS    M
LT    20181104    RELEASED    30    S
243(E)(1)    M    BAT:SPOUSE/EX SP/DATE/ETC    $7,500.00

MICHAEL    EVERETT    LIGHT    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    29    E
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $10,000.00

JASON    DEAN    LONG    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    37    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE    $50,000.00
273A(B)    M    WILLFUL CRUELTY TO CHILD    $10,000.00

CARL    JOSHUA    MCCOLLUM    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    42    E
243(E)(1)    M    BAT:SPOUSE/EX SP/DATE/ETC    $7,500.00

MARIA    CESILIA    ROSAS    F
PV    20181104    RELEASED    40    P
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL//    $10,000.00

WILLIAM    CHARLES    SCHNUTE    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    69    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE    $50,000.00

MICHAEL    ALLEN    WISE    M
PV    20181104    INCUSTODY    53    E
29800(A)(1)    F    FELON/ETC POSS/ETC F/ARM

EDSO Actvity Log for 11/4/2018

@ 0039 11364(A) HS POSS UNLAW PARAPHERN \ PLEASANT VALLEY RD, PLACERVILLE EG1809859
A MALE SUBJECT WAS CITED FOR POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA PURSUANT TO A BICYCLE STOP.
S01 ARRESTED ADAMS, MICHAEL SEX=M AGE=33

@ 0105 5.56.150 CO VHR REPORT \ PROSPECTOR TL, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809860
VHR REPORT

@ 0111 12500(A) VC DRIVE W/O LICENSE \ JAMESON BEACH RD, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809862
A MALE WAS ISSUED A CITATION AFTER ADMITTING TO DRIVING WITH AN EXPIRED DRIVER'S LICENSE.
S01 ARRESTED MILLENAAR, JOSHUA SEX=M AGE=34

@ 0127 5.56.120 CO VHR REPORT \ TOPPEWETAH ST, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809861
VHR REPORT

@ 0630 242 PC BATTERY ON PERSON \ DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1809864
A MALE SUBJECT WAS ISSUED A CITATION FOR A BATTERY
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =68
S01 ARRESTED MORRIS, THOMAS SEX=M AGE=57

@ 0929 5.56.110 CO VACATION RENTAL \, MEYERS EG1809866
EDSO RESPONDED TO A VACATION HOME RENTAL FOR AN ORDINANCE VIOLATION.
S01 SEX=F SUSPECT AGE=62

@ 1154 INFO IN BEAT INFORMATION \ DIXIE MOUNTAIN DR, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809870
EDSO FIELDED AN INFORMATION REPORT AT THE REQUEST OF A REPORTING PARTY REGARDING JUVENILES SMOKING MARIJUANA.

@ 1700 28 VC REPOSSESSION \ COACH LN, CAMERON PARK EG1809883
REPOSSESSION

@ 1709 69 PC OBSTRUCT/RESIST EXEC \ RESCUE EG1809877
A JUVENILE WAS ARRESTED FOR OBSRUCTING/RESISTING ARREST.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =0
S01 JUVENILE ARRESTED SEX=F AGE=

Please Note: Arrests are made based upon probable cause. All are entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law.

Image: 
Categories: 

Commentary - Two Terms Works – Why Measure U Is Bad Policy

$
0
0

[Dan Dellinger]
 
Our current County Charter requires County supervisors to leave the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors after serving two consecutive four-year terms totaling eight years.  We adopted this good and wise reform in 1994.  Unlike the lifetime ban in California’s State Office term limits, our County Charter allows termed-out County supervisors to seek re-election after a four-year time out period.  If passed, Measure U will change our current reform of eight years on and four years off to twelve years on and four years off the Board.
 
Measure U is a giant step backwards into an era when our County was run by career politicians who felt entitled to lifetime jobs with lavish PERS retirements.  Our eight-year limit is working.  This reform works because it forces politicians to live under the consequences of their eight years of laws and policies for at least four years before seeking their old job.  Extending term limits from eight to twelve years weakens this important benefit.
 
Measure U will add to our County’s growing public pension debt by increasing PERS retirement benefits paid most retired County supervisors from a lower eight-year rate to a higher twelve-year payout.
 
Under current limits, two County supervisors have been re-elected after observing time out periods.  So current policy doesn’t restrict choices where voters especially like a particular County supervisor.  
 
 In increasing El Dorado County political fashion, Measure U was placed on the Ballot by the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors THREE WEEKS AFTER THE DEADLINE initially set by the El Dorado County Elections Office to submit November ballot measures giving opponents little time to organize.
 
Measure U is bad policy intended to benefit two supervisors terming out in 2020.    
 
So I ask, since our current term limit reform is working, should we extend term limits to our elected department heads after we vote down Measure U?  


Dan Dellinger is a former candidate for Recorder-Clerk who works as a government relations and political consultant based in El Dorado County.  Dan earned his Bachelor of Science Degree in Agricultural Economics and Business Management from the University of California – Davis. Dan can be reached at dandellinger@infostation.com 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Help build a new hay shed for the Medicine Horse Project

$
0
0

[Chris Nichols]

The Medicine Horse Project -- Tuesday, November 27, 2018 at 12:00 AM. Please help us reach our goal on #GivingTuesday

#GivingTuesday is a global day of giving that harnesses the collective power of individuals, communities and organizations to encourage philanthropy and to celebrate generosity worldwide. Following Thanksgiving and the widely recognized shopping events Black Friday and Cyber Monday, this year’s #GivingTuesday will take place on November 27th and will kick off the giving season by inspiring people to collaborate and give back.

This is MHP's second year participating in #GivingTuesday! Last year the funds raised helped kick off our fencing project. This year we are hoping to build a new hay shed. Our hay shed is falling, and we need to tear it down before it falls down. That leaves hay exposed to the elements and at risk of mold, rodents and waste.

Our goal is $5,000. With this money we can buy the materials, and we have the volunteer labor to build it. Please help us reach out goal!!!

https://www.facebook.com/events/248726449148179/

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Eldorado National Forest is Selling Christmas Tree Tags Again this Year

$
0
0

[Jennifer Chapman, USDA Forest Service]

The Eldorado National Forest will begin selling Christmas tree permits on Tuesday, November 13, 2018. Tree tags that can be used to cut pine, fir or cedar trees up to 6 inches in diameter at the base will be available at the Forest Supervisor's Office in Placerville, the Placerville District Office in Camino, the Georgetown District Office in Georgetown, and the Amador District Office in Pioneer. This program offers an enjoyable holiday experience for families and friends in the natural setting of one of their national forests.

"There's a lot of variation in nature so sometimes it can be challenging to find a tree," said Forest Supervisor Laurence Crabtree. "If people want to cut their own tree, but don't necessarily want to go searching for one, there are also many excellent local Christmas tree farms in the area." 

Christmas tree permits will be issued with tree tags at a cost of $10 per tag (cash only), with a limit of two tags per family or address. Permits must be purchased in person, are not transferable and are sold on a first-come, first-served basis until all 4,500 tags are sold but no later than 12:00 pm on December 28th.Cutting under these permits will be allowed until December 31 to accommodate military families who may need to celebrate a delayed Christmas.

"The Christmas tree program also supports the Every Kid in a Park initiative," said Crabtree. Fourth graders who present a valid EKIP voucher or pass are entitled to one free Christmas tree. "Getting kids out in the forest builds healthy relationships and can make a life lasting impression. Our young people are the future stewards of the forest."

Visit www.EveryKidinaPark.gov for information about the program and to get your voucher. Visit any of the Eldorado NF offices selling Christmas tree permits to get your Christmas tree tag. The student must be present to get the tag.

Cutting a Christmas tree offers a traditional holiday experience and helps to thin out small diameter trees on the forest which creates a healthier forest over time. It is important to remember that winter storm weather can be dangerous due to wet roads, and winds which may cause branches or dead trees to fall. If possible, visitors should try to avoid wet, windy days, or be sure to use extra caution and always let someone know their travel plans. 

Permits will be sold in four locations Monday through Friday 8:00 am to 4:30 pm (all offices will be closed on Thanksgiving Day) and will also be open Saturdays on November 17th and 24th and December 1st and 8th:

-- Forest Supervisor's Office - 100 Forni Road (3034 Briw Road for GPS), Placerville

-- Placerville Ranger District - 4260 Eight Mile Road, Camino

-- Amador Ranger District - 26820 Silver Drive, Pioneer

-- Georgetown Ranger District - 7600 Wentworth Springs Road, Georgetown

Note: All visitor services at Pacific Ranger District have been moved to the Placerville Ranger District.

A Christmas Tree Cutting Map will be provided to all permit holders and is required to be in the permittee's possession when cutting. This map indicates areas of the forest where cutting is permitted. Permit holders should only drive vehicles on National Forest System roads, or park vehicles within one car length from the road.

Please follow permit guidelines for responsible collection, including respecting private property and not trespassing when entering or leaving National Forest lands. Visitors should check for seasonal road closures and be prepared to walk into a cutting area to find a tree. No off-road vehicle travel is allowed.

For more information, visit the forest website at http://www.fs.usda.gov/eldorado .

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Sheriff's Arrest and Activity Log for 11-5-18

$
0
0

[PRpond]

The following people are on the arrest log of NOVEMBER 5, 2018, as reported by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department:

JEREMY    MICHAEL    BROCK    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    35    I
23152(A)    F    DUI W/PRIORS:PER 23550 VC    $50,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT    $15,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT    $25,000.00

PAULA    FRANCES    CAMARATA    F
PV    20181105    RELEASED    63    E
602    M    TRESPASSING    $2,000.00
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $2,500.00
11350(A)    M    POSSESS NARCOTIC CNTL SUB    $2,500.00

BRADLEY    MARK    CARDWELL    M
PV    20181105    RELEASED    30    E
14601.1(A)    M    DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ETC    $2,500.00
14601.1(A)    M    DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ETC    $2,500.00

GREGORY    VINCENT    GIFFORD    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    53    E
647(F)    M    DISORD CONDUCT:UI/DRUG    $500.00
602(O)    M    TRESPAS:REFUSE LEAVE PROP    $2,000.00
4573    F    BRING CNTL SUB/ETC JAIL    $50,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT    $15,000.00

JOHN    CHARLES    GILKEY    M
LT    20181105    INCUSTODY    50    E
368(D)    F    THEFT:ELD/DEP ADULT $400+    $50,000.00
1551    F    FUG JUST:WARRANT ARREST    $2,000.00
476A(A)    M    INSUFICNT FUND:CHECK/ETC    $1,500.00
476A(A)    F    INSUFICENT FUND:CHECK/ETC    $105,000.00
7(A)(1)    M    DEFRAUD INNKEEPER -$950    $10,000.00

DONALD    JAMES    GODSEY    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    53    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE

CHRISTOPER    SCOTT    HERRERA    M
PV    20181105    RELEASED    49    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE    $50,000.00

MATTHEW    MICHAEL    KELLAGHER    M
PV    20181105    RELEASED    34    P
11550(A)    M    UNDER INFLUENCE CNTL SUB    $2,000.00

CHUCK    RINEHART    LAVADO    M
PV    20181105    RELEASED    51    E
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $25,000.00

JACOB    TYLER    LEWIS    M
LT    20181105    RELEASED    27    E
14601.1(A)    M    DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ETC    $10,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT:FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $5,000.00

NICOLE    PAIGE    MORSE    F
PV    20181105    RELEASED    22    E
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT    $55,000.00

WALTER    FITZGERALD    MUSTAIN    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    48    E
2800(A)    M    FAIL OBEY PO:LAWFUL ORDER    $50,000.00

JAMES    ALLEN    NICHOLS    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    37    E
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    

WAYNE    ROBERT    PATTEN    M
LT    20181106    RELEASED    64    E
25400(A)(1)    F    CCW IN VEHICLE    $15,000.00

TROMA    ELLEN    ROEHR    F
PV    20181105    RELEASED    40    E
14601.5(A)    M    DRIV:LIC SUS/ETC:UI/RFUSL    
4000(A)    M    NO REG:VEH/TRAILER/ETC    

MICHELLE    RENEE    RUDOLPH    F
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    49    E
23152(A)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $50,000.00
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT    
14601.2(A)    M    DRIV:SUSP/ETC LIC:DUI:VIO

JACOB    TIMOTHY    SATTLER    M
LT    20181105    RELEASED    22    E
23152(A)    F    DUI W/PRIORS:PER 23550 VC    
23152(B)    F    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 W/PRS    

JACOB    TIMOTHY    SATTLER    M
LT    20181105    INCUSTODY    22    E
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT    $200,000.00

MARY    MARGARET    SHELDON    F
LT    20181105    INCUSTODY    67    E
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT

CODY    DUANE    SMITH    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    27    E
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    

ROBERT    GARY    STIRNAMAN III    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    19    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE    $50,000.00

GERALD    ROGER    SULLIVAN    M
LT    20181105    INCUSTODY    68    S
487(A)    F    GRDTHFT:MONEY/LABOR/PROP    $10,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT    $25,000.00

DANIEL    BRADFORD    WILLIAMS    M
PV    20181105    RELEASED    21    E
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT

TRAVIS    ALLEN    WOODROW    M
PV    20181105    INCUSTODY    33    P
3455    F    POST RELEASE REVOCATION

EDSO Actvity Log for 11/5/2018

@ 0700 27491 GC CORONER CASE \, EL DORADO HILLS EM1809887
S01 SEX=F SUSPECT AGE=90

@ 1120 487 PC GRAND THEFT \ HIGHWAY 50 , SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809902
A WEATHER STATION WAS STOLEN FROM A GOLF COURSE IN SOUTH LAKE TAHOE.

@ 1134 273.5(A) PC CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB \ POLLOCK PINES EG1809909
V01 SEX=F VICTIM AGE = 22
S01 ARRESTED STIRNAMAN III, ROBERT SEX=M AGE=19

@ 1147 488 PC PETTY THEFT \ HAZELNUT CR, EL DORADO HILLS EG1809892
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED PETTY THEFT. DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =45

@ 1218 484G PC THFT:USE ACCESS CARD \ SHOO FLY RD, KELSEY EG1809893
V01 SEX=F VICTIM AGE = 40

@ 1225 14601.1(A VC DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ \ HIGHWAY 50 , SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809908
AN ADULT MALE WAS ARRESTED FOR OPERATING A MOTOR VEHICLE UPON A PUBLIC ROADWAY WITH A SUSPENDED DRIVER'S LICENSE.
S01 ARRESTED LEWIS, JACOB SEX=M AGE=27

@ 1245 530 PC PERSONATE GET MONEY/ \ GRESHAM DR, EL DORADO HILLS EG1809894
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED ATTEMPTED IDENTITY THEFT. DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =61

@ 1303 459 PC BURGLARY \ MILLBRAE RD, CAMERON PARK EG1809888
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED BURGLARY- DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.

@ 1330 13700 PC DOMESTIC DISPUTE \ PONY EXPRESS TL, POLLOCK PINES EG1809910
DOMESTIC DISPUTE

@ 1412 LOST PROP IN LOST PROPERTY \ POST ST, EL DORADO HILLS EG1809889
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED LOST PROPERTY. DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =45

@ 1420 459 PC BURGLARY \ TRAVERSE CT, GARDEN VALLEY EG1809890
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED BURGLARY- DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =55

Please Note: Arrests are made based upon probable cause. All are entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law.
 

Image: 
Categories: 

MONTH-LONG CLOSURE OF AIRPORT ROAD SCHEDULED TO BEGIN

$
0
0

[Carla Hass]
 
(PLACERVILLE, CA) – El Dorado County Department of Transportation today announced the full closure of Airport Road beginning Monday, November 12, 2018 through December 12, 2018, weather permitting. Repairs include reconstruction of the failed slope, drainage improvements, reconstruction of the structural section adjacent the slope failure, and placement of asphalt concrete paving.

Changeable message signs have been placed in the vicinity to provide notice of the closure at the following locations:

1. On Airport Road, approximately 0.5 miles west of the road closure

2. At the intersection of Broadway and Airport Road, approximately 1.5 miles north of the road closure

The closure on Airport Road is located approximately three miles from the intersection of Cedar Ravine Road and Main Street and approximately 1.5 miles from the intersection of Broadway and Airport Road. Residents on the west side of the closure will access their homes from Cedar Ravine to County Club Drive to Airport Road. Residents on the east side of the closure will access their homes from Broadway to Airport Road. Please access the Placerville Airport from west (Cedar Ravine to Country Club to Airport Road). The attached Detour Plan will be implemented for the duration that Airport Road is closed.

Department of Transportation understands the inconvenience that motorists face while this closure is in place and sincerely appreciates your patience with this matter.
 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

2018 Apple Farms Shuttle Ridership

$
0
0

[Breana Berry]
 
The El Dorado County Transit Authority (El Dorado Transit) reports that there were 24,256 boardings during the Apple Farms Shuttle service. 

The shuttle, operated by El Dorado Transit, ran from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday in October.

The free shuttle was funded in part by a grant from the El Dorado County Air Quality Management District. The free shuttle parking was made available by Sierra Pacific Industries and SMUD.

 

Image: 
Tags: 

Election Update

$
0
0

[PR Pond]


El Dorado Union High School District, Governing Board Member Total
 Top 3 Win

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/94720 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0

 TIMOTHY M. CARY 0 N/A
 DELOY LINK 0 N/A
 JOE FERGERSON 0 N/A
 TRISHA WILKINS 0 N/A
 DALLAS SWEENEY 0 N/A
 KEVIN BROWN 0 N/A


Mother Lode Union School District, Governing Board Member Total
Top 3 win

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/10491 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
CHARLES RICHARDS 0 N/A
ALAN PRIESTLEY 0 N/A
JANET VANDER LINDEN 0 N/A
CHUCK WOLFE 0 N/A


County Supervisor - 4th District
Top 1 wins

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/25204 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
MICHAEL RANALLI 0 N/A
LORI PARLIN 0 N/A


County Supervisor - 5th District
Top 1 wins

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/25204 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
MICHAEL RANALLI 0 N/A
LORI PARLIN 0 N/A


County Recorder-Clerk
Top 1 wins

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
JANELLE K. HORNE 0 N/A
TODD WHITE 0 N/A


City of Placerville - City Council
Top  3 win

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/6061 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
LENA JORDAN CULL 0 N/A
JOHN L. CLERICI 0 N/A
ERIN YOUNG 0 N/A
KARA TAYLOR 0 N/A
DENNIS THOMAS 0 N/A
PATRICIA BORELLI 0 N/A


City of South Lake Tahoe - City Council
Top 3 win

Zero Report

 Times Counted 0/10959 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 HAL COLE 0 N/A
 PATRICK F. JARRETT 0 N/A
 WENDY DAVID 0 N/A
 TOM DAVIS 0 N/A
 TAMARA WALLACE 0 N/A
 DEVIN MIDDLEBROOK 0 N/A
 AUSTIN C. SASS 0 N/A
 BRUCE GREGO 0 N/A
 CODY BASS 0 N/A


El Dorado Irrigation District - Division 2 Director
Top 1 wins

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/18374 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
PAT DWYER 0 N/A
GREG PRADA 0 N/A


El Dorado Irrigation District - Division 4 Director
Top 1 wins

Zero Report

Times Counted 0/16285 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
DALE COCO 0 N/A
LORI ANZINI 0 N/A


 Measure J - County TOT

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure N - County Cannabis

Zero Report
 Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure P - County Cannabis

Zero Report
 Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure Q - County Cannabis

Zero Report
 Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure R - County Cannabis

Zero Report
 Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
 Total Votes 0
 YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure S - County Cannabis

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure U - County Charter

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure V - County Charter

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/121192 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure M - City of Placerville

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/6061 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 Measure T - City of South Lake Tahoe

Zero Report
Times Counted 0/10959 0.0 %
Total Votes 0
YES 0 N/A
NO 0 N/A


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Sheriff's Arrest and Activity Log for 11-6-18

$
0
0

[PRpond]

The following people are on the arrest log of NOVEMBER 6, 2018, as reported by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department:

JORDAN    DOMINIC    ASCENCIO    M
PV    20181106    RELEASED    21    E
602    M    TRESPASSING    $2,000.00

ROSEMARY    AMELIA    DELAGARZA    F
PV    20181106    INCUSTODY    26    E
368(D)    F    THEFT:ELD/DEP ADULT $400+    $50,000.00

JOHN    ELLIS    DUPRE    M
LT    20181106    INCUSTODY    33    S
288(A)    F    L&L W/CHILD UNDER 14    $250,000.00

GREGORY    ALLEN    GARNER    M
PV    20181106    RELEASED    34    E
273.5(A)    F    CRPL INJ:SPOUS/COHAB/DATE    $50,000.00

JUYDIE    ANN    GREESON    F
PV    20181106    RELEASED    53    P
11377(A)    M    POSS CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE    $2,000.00

ALEX    RAY    HALL    M
PV    20181106    INCUSTODY    30    E
487(A)    F    GRDTHFT:MONEY/LABOR/PROP    $10,000.00

TODD    ALLEN    JACKSON    M
LT    20181106    INCUSTODY    34    S
273.6(A)    M    VIO ORD:PREVNT DOMES VIOL    $25,000.00
836.6(B)    M    ESC/ATT ESC AFTER ARREST    $10,000.00

STEVI    LEIGH    LENNING    F
PV    20181106    RELEASED    29    E
11364(A)    M    POSS UNLAW PARAPHERNALIA    $2,000.00
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $2,500.00
ENHANCEMENT    M    ENHANCEMENT/FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $5,000.00

MATTHEW    VINCENT    NEVIEUX    M
PV    20181106    INCUSTODY    27    P
148(A)(1)    M    OBSTRUCT/ETC PUB OFCR/ETC    $3,000.00
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    $10,000.00
29825(A)    F    PROHIB BUY/ETC F/ARM/ORDS    
ENHANCEMENT    M    ENHANCEMENT -FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $2,500.00

WAYNE    ROBERT    PATTEN    M
LT    20181106    RELEASED    64    E
25400(A)(1)    F    CCW IN VEHICLE    $15,000.00

BRENDA    NEAL    SHERMAN    F
PV    20181106    RELEASED    56    E
487    F    GRAND THEFT    $10,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $45,000.00

EDSO Actvity Log for 11/6/2018

@ 0014 14601.1(A VC DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ \ LAKE TAHOE BL, SO LAKE TAHOE EG1809930
ADULT SUBJECT WAS CITED AND RELEASED FOR DRIVING WITH A SUSPENEDED LICENSE.
S01 ARRESTED DURAN, DANIEL SEX=M AGE=63

@ 0230 12500(A) VC DRIVE W/O LICENSE \ LAKE TAHOE BL, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809924
SUBJECT CITED FOR DRIVING WHILE UNLICENSED.
S01 ARRESTED MARTINEZ CASILLAS, JONATHAN SEX=M AGE= 24

@ 0818 490.2 PC PETTY THEFT:-$950 \ MISSOURI FLAT RD, DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1809936
SUSPECT CUT CHIAN LINK FENCE AND STOLE ITEMS.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =67

@ 1535 27491 GC DEATH INVESTIGATION \ CAMERON PARK EM1809944
CORNER INVESTIGATION
V01 SEX=F VICTIM AGE = 43

@ 1820 28 VC REPOSSESSION \ PONY EXPRESS TL, CEDAR GROVE EG1809947
REPOSSESSION

@ 2009 601 WI RUNAWAY JUVENILE \ EL DORADO HILLS EG1809951
MALE JUVENILE RAN AWAY
S01 SEX=M SUSPECT AGE=

@ 2124 11377(A) HS POSSESS CNTL SUB \ COACH LN, CAMERON PARK EG1809953
FEMALE WAS ARRESTED FOR POSSESSION OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE AND POSSESSION OF CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE PARAPHERNALIA.
S01 ARRESTED LENNING, STEVI SEX=F AGE=29 

Please Note: Arrests are made based upon probable cause. All are entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law.
 

Image: 
Tags: 

Sheriff's Arrest and Activity Log for 11-7-18

$
0
0

[PRpond]

The following people are on the arrest log of NOVEMBER 7, 2018, as reported by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department:

MEREDITH    DANIELLE    ABRAM    F
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    37    E
647(F)    M    DISORD CONDUCT:UI/DRUG    $500.00

JAMES    WALKER    CHALMERS    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    64    E
459.5    M    SHOPLIFTING    $50,000.00
DETAINER    F    DETAINER    

DAVID    MICHAEL    COY    M
PP    20181107    INCUSTODY    40    E
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    

SUMMER    MARIE    FLEMING    F
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    31    E
490.5(A)    M    PETTY THEFT RETAIL/ETC    $20,000.00

JASON    PAUL    GILBERT    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    48    E
11379.6(A)    F    MFG/ETC CNTL SUB    $1,000,000.00

OKSANA    PETROVNA    GOLOVEY    F
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    26    E
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    $25,000.00

DARRIN    DEAN    HAGEN    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    22    E
243(E)(1)    M    BAT:SPOUSE/EX SP/DATE/ETC    
236    M    FALSE IMPRISONMENT    
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB

LACEY    ANN    HELENIAK    F
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    31    E
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    
11357(C)    M    POSS MARIJUANA SCHL GRNDS    
11550(A)    M    UNDER INFLUENCE CNTL SUB

MICHAEL    WARREN    KENYON    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    61    E
11364(A)    M    POSS UNLAW PARAPHERNALIA    $2,000.00
9.30.040E    M    LOITERING    $2,000.00
25658(A)    M    SELL/ETC LIQUOR TO MINOR    $2,000.00

MALGORZATA    GOSIA    KLIMCZUK    F
PV    20181107    RELEASED    32    I
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $10,000.00

EUGENE    LYLE    LAMBERT    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    62    E
290.011(A)    F    TRAN FAIL REG RLS CUSTODY [Failure To Register As A Sex Offender]   $10,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT/FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $105,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT/FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $50,000.00

JOSEPH    PATRICK    LEONARD    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    33    P
10852    M    TAMPER WITH VEHICLE    $2,000.00
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    

KURTIS    ANDY    LINK    M
PV    20181107    RELEASED    55    I
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $5,000.00

SUMMER    ANN    MASCOTT    F
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    38    E
1170(H)(5)    F    MCS VIOLATION    
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    

AMIE    RAE    MCGRADY-WHEDBEE    F
PV    20181107    RELEASED    32    E
530.5(A)    F    GET CREDIT/ETC OTHER'S ID

GARY    WAYNE    OCONNOR    M
LT    20181107    INCUSTODY    54    T
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $10,000.00

TROY    LEONARD    OHARRAN    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    53    P
3056    F    VIOLATION OF PAROLE:FEL

MATHEW    KEITH    SAUSEDA    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    27    E
10851(A)    F    VEHICLE THEFT    $25,000.00

ARTHUR    WAYNE    SWANTY    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    33    E
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    
DETAINER    F    DETAINER    
1203.2(A)    F    VIOL OF PROBATION    $10,000.00

CHIDI    OGADINMA    UBOCHI    M
PV    20181107    INCUSTODY    21    E
496(A)    F    REC KNWN STOLN PROP    $50,000.00

TAYLOR    DEREK    WEIK    M
LT    20181107    RELEASED    23    E
166(A)(4)    M    CONTEMPT:DISOBEY CRT ORDR    $10,000.00

EDSO Actvity Log for  11/7/2018

@ 0300 10.16.140 CC PRIVATE PROPERTY TOW \ IDLEWOOD PL, EL DORADO HILLS EG1809955
PRIVATE PROPERTY TOW

@ 1004 530.5(A) PC GET CREDIT/ETC OTHER \ IDLE CREEK DR, SHINGLE SPRINGS EG1809964
AN ELDERLY MALE WAS SCAMMED INTO OPENING A LOAN AND SENDING THREE CASHIERS CHECKS TO AN UNKNOWN SUBJECT.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =84

@ 1130 SUSP CIRC IN SUSPICIOUS CIRC \ PERRYHILL DR, PLACERVILLE EG1809891
V01 SEX=F VICTIM AGE = 52

@ 1200 11364(A) HS POSS UNLAW PARAPHERN \ MISSOURI FLAT RD, DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1809967
A MALE SUBJECT WAS ARRESTED FOR NARCOTICS PARAPHERNALIA AND LOITERING. A FEMALE SUBJECT WAS CITED FOR LOITERING.
S01 ARRESTED KENYON, MICHAEL SEX=M AGE=61
S02 ARRESTED PATUREL, JULIE SEX=F AGE=4
9

@ 1200 48900(H) ED POSS OF TOBACCO SCH \ EL DORADO EG1810033
TWO MALE STUDENTS WERE FOUND IN POSSESSION OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
S01 SEX=M SUSPECT AGE=
S02 SEX=M SUSPECT AGE=

@ 1232 11377(A) HS POSS CONTROLLED SUBS \ SCHNELL SCHOOL RD, PLACERVILLE EG1810030
DETECTIVES SERVED A STEAGALD WARRANT AT A PLACERVILLE HOME IN AN ATTEMPT TO ARREST A SUBJECT WITH A FELONY WARRANT. SUBJECT ARRESTED AND BOOKED. CASE FOR INFORMATION ONLY.
S01 ARRESTED WHEDBEE, AMIE SEX=F AGE=32

@ 1239 459 PC BURGLARY \ WALNUT DR, RESCUE EG1809968
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED BURGLARY- DOCUMENTATION REPORT ONLY.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =50

@ 1244 484(A) PC THEFT OF PERSONAL PR \ MISSOURI FLAT RD, DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1810029
UNKNOWN SUSPECT(S) REMOVED LUGGAGE FILLED WITH PERSONAL ITEMS FROM BED OF VICTIM'S PICKUP TRUCK AND FLED IN AN UNKNOWN DIRECTION.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =53

@ 1249 470 PC FORGERY \ GRIZZLY MOUNTAIN DR, SOUTH LAKE TAHO EG1809969
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED FORGERY BY POSSIBLE KNOWN SUSPECT(S).
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =47
S01 SEX=U SUSPECT AGE=0

@ 1258 488 PC PETTY THEFT \ SIERRA DR, MEEKS BAY EG1809970
VIA EDSO ON LINE REPORTING SYSTEM- VICTIM REPORTED PETTY THEFT.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =48

@ 1530 27491 GC DEATH INVESTIGATION \ SOUTH AV, SOUTH LAKE TAHOE EM1810039

Please Note: Arrests are made based upon probable cause. All are entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law.
 

Image: 
Categories: 

El Dorado Transit November Holidays

$
0
0

[Breana Berry]
 
Sunday, November 11, 2018

El Dorado Transit will not operate any services on Sunday, November 11, 2018 in observance of the Veteran’s Day holiday.

Thursday, November 22, 2018 through Friday, November 23, 2018

El Dorado Transit will not operate any services and administrative offices will be closed on Thursday, November 22, 2018 through Friday, November 23, 2018 in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday.

Dial-A-Ride Scheduling

·         Dial-A-Ride requests for November 24, 2018 through November 26, 2018 will be accepted beginning Tuesday, November 20, 2018

·         Dial-A-Ride requests for November 27, 2018 and November 28, 2018 will be accepted beginning Wednesday, November 21, 2018. 

 
Sac-Med Non-Emergency Transportation Scheduling

 
Sac-Med trip requests for Tuesday, November 27, 2018 and Thursday, November 29, 2018 must be placed no later than Tuesday, November 20, 2018.

 
For more information, please call El Dorado Transit at (530) 642-5383 or visit the website at www.eldoradotransit.com.

 
 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

The Greatest Generation’s Greatest Generation

$
0
0

[Jon Hendrickson]
 
November 11, 2018 is Veterans’ Day, and a special time to remember the Armistice.  

When I was a kid, Veterans’ Day was called Armistice Day.  For a few weeks in the fall, my dad would come home with these little red paper flowers with green stems.  I think I remember being told they were poppies because for years I thought all paper flowers were called poppies.  I didn’t have any idea what the flowers were all about, but was curious about the occasional old man of my grandfather’s age wearing a blue cap standing on a corner of the main street of our little town holding a fistful of those little flowers.  And about the people who would come up and buy them from him.  And then you would see these little red paper flowers pinned to the lapels of the ladies and gentlemen of our town.  And then, on a chilly, bright sunny morning I would stand on the side of that main street with my mom and dad and watch 20 or so old men of my grandfather’s age walking in the street, some holding flags anchored to their bellies leading the way and others with rifles up on their shoulders, followed by another group of younger men of my dad’s age, all wearing blue caps.  Then there were some girls twirling batons followed by a band and a couple cars with people waving at us and then it was over.  I think I remember my grandfather being one of the old men with the blue caps walking in the street and am pretty sure it didn’t occur to me then to wonder why my dad wasn’t one of the group of men I knew were his friends walking in the street.  But he and my mom and all of the adults on the sidewalk in front of this little ceremony were wearing those little red paper flowers.  The next day and for the rest of the year, you didn’t see them.

I would have been four or five then, and memories from that age are hazy and fragmented.  They get kind of confused, except to the extent they are refreshed and confirmed by later events or conversations you have with your grandfather, dad, their friends and other relatives, what you read in books about others’ recollections or study in school.  Growing up, I became aware of the events of the Second World War because that was my dad’s generation’s war.  When his generation’s war began, World War One had ended only slightly less than 20 years before and U.S. participation began a little over 23 years after the Armistice.  I went into the Navy in 1970, only 25 years after the end of WWII.  The first Gulf War, Operation Desert Shield, occurred a little less than 18 years after the end of the Vietnam War and the Global War on Terrorism, in its various iterations, has been ongoing since September 11, 2001.  It’s now been 38 years since U.S. participation in the war of my generation, Vietnam, ended.  This recitation may at first blush appear to support a myth in current parlance viewing the United States as merely another warmonger among a league of warmongers.  In contrast, the central theme of America’s wars, particularly since the beginning of the 20th century when General Black Jack Pershing, among others, defended the southern U.S. border from incursion by Mexican revolutionaries, has been to fight potential and actual enemies if not actually on their own ground, at least not on ours.  Our people have in varying proportions always answered their country’s call by running toward, rather than away from, the threat.  And each time they have, they have done so with a perspective informed by their knowledge of their fathers’ war.  And maybe their fathers’ fathers’ war.

Both of my grandfathers served in the Army during the Great War, as it was known at the time.  Wars don’t always have a name that sticks until after they’re over.  The Great War wasn’t known as World War I until World War II came along and, even then, World War II wasn’t known generally by that name until after it had been going on long enough that the participants figured out it should be called that because it actually was a Second World War.  

My mom’s dad was a gentle man of very few words, with whom I don’t remember having much conversation before he died when I was 13.  So, I don’t know anything about where he served or what he did.  But I do remember there were two or three American Legion riflemen from Leeds, North Dakota at his prairie graveside one bleak winter morning to render the three volley rifle salute and fold the flag that draped his coffin.  And I also know his three sons all served, two in the Army during World War II and the youngest in the Navy at the end of the Korean conflict.  

My dad’s dad went to France where he was a sergeant in charge of a motor pool.  He brought back a small collection of French 75mm artillery shell casings transformed by intricate metal work into containers for celebratory drinking.  And a few stories of the sort told by soldiers of their experience in Europe.  Four of his five sons all served in the military, one a sailor in the South Pacific during WWII, another in the Army serving stateside during Korea and his twin brother an Air Force Airman in Greenland at the same time, the fourth a now retired California National Guard Command Sergeant Major.  My dad was 4F because of the effects of childhood polio, but still served as a civilian employee of the Navy in Hawaii during and shortly after WWII.

In its participation in World War I for a little over a year and a half, the United States military mobilized nearly five million Americans, over half of which served overseas, sustaining a loss of over116,000 dead and about 320,000 sick and wounded.  This was during the beginning of the Spanish Influenza epidemic and about half the total casualties were disease and non-combat related.  Three fourths of the American combat deaths occurred in the three months immediately preceding the Armistice.  The Secretary of War at the time noted that about 25% of all American men of military age were serving in one of the services at that time.  The last American veteran of The Great War died in 2011 at the age of 110.  

Tom Brokaw coined the phrase “The Greatest Generation” to describe American Second World War participants, military and civilian, in this greatest of war efforts in his book of the same name.  For the most part, that generation grew up during the depression of the 1930s in the shadow of The Great War.  Between December 7, 1941 and September 2, 1945, sixteen million Americans, roughly 11% of the entire U.S. population at the time, served in the military services, 73% serving overseas.  Over 405,000 were killed in action and about another 671,000 were wounded.  Fewer than 500,000 veterans of that war are alive today and around 500 are passing away each day.  With them are passing into history the memory of that conflict and the time in which it occurred.  Their fathers’ war has already passed into that state of rest, as is the memory of The Greatest Generation’s Greatest Generation.  Among them was my dad’s dad to whom I said good-bye in 1979 as his remaining buddies from the Minnie Barrow Barracks of World War One Veterans solemnly folded the flag over his casket while reciting: 

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead.  Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
    In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
    In Flanders fields.

- Lt. Col. John McCrae, MD, Canadian Expeditionary Force, Ypres, Belgium; 5/3/1915

On Sunday, when the clock at Greenwich, England, passes into the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of the year 2018 (3:00 a.m. in Placerville), London’s Big Ben will strike eleven times and mark the 100th anniversary of the end of The First World War, The Great War, “The War to End All Wars.”  Our time on this mortal coil and the memory of our and our fathers’ generations’ conflicts will also soon enough pass into that repose.
 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

$1.1 Million Red Hawk and Cache Creek Casino Fraud Scheme Gets Woman Two-Year Prison Sentence

$
0
0

[CORT SMITH, Casino.Org News]
 
A 55-year old Georgia woman who could have faced as much as 20 years has been handed a two-year prison sentence for defrauding two California casinos, as well as several credit card companies, out of more than a million dollars between 2008 and 2014.

Vivian Wang of Alpharetta, Georgia — located about 20 miles north of Atlanta — pleaded guilty to credit card fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft back in February. Her scamming and swindling — which  took place at two smaller casinos both situated outside the Sacramento area — came to light via a collective investigation between the FBI and the Bureau of Gambling Control in California.

Her case was connected to that of 49-year-old Frank Luo, who was given a three-year sentence for defrauding Georgia’s Cache Creek and Red Hawk Casinos (Sic) [ "Georgia’s 49-year-old Frank Luo, who was given a three-year sentence for defrauding California's Cache Creek and Red Hawk Casinos"]. According to the US Attorney General’s office, the two were co-conspirators, working together to steal the identities of migrant workers to get casino credit for themselves.

Six-Year Scam

Their deceitful racket spanned a period between 2008 and 2014.

The duo obtained the names and social security numbers of migrant workers, using those identities to earn casino credit, or “markers,” with which to gamble. They also opened credit card accounts under the fake identities, giving them even more options to pull cash from.

They created good reputations with the targeted casinos initially by repaying the markers, not only to create the illusion that their credit was good, but to build a good track record for other gaming venues they were planning to deceive down the road.

The Justice Department says Wang and Luo worked together to make it look like they were often losing money, which would encourage the casinos to fork over even more credit. The duo enlisted the help of others, whom authorities refer to as “clients,” who would help convince the casino that they were legitimate.

Once they had accrued enough cash and credit, they would disappear from the casino without repaying their debts. Between the markers and the cash they had pulled off of the bogus credit cards, it added up to $1.1 million in losses.

The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that Wang lived in a five-bedroom home between 2008 and 2016, despite declaring bankruptcy in 2010.

Many Ways to Scam a Casino

People have been trying to cheat casinos out of cash for decades, some by more sophisticated means than others.

There was the recent case of the Finnish teenager who took advantage of a bug in an online casino to swindle them out of $152,000. His parents were also prosecuted, since they had the proceeds of the crime in their bank accounts. They were all eventually handed suspended sentences.

A British fraudster went for a slightly cruder tact, concocting a fake lottery ticket to claim a  £2.5 million ($3.27 million) prize.

And of course, there’s the simplest kind of cheating of all. Former NBA star Charles Oakley made headlines when he tried to take back his roulette bet after releasing he was going to lose.

Oakley eventually got off with a $1,000 fine.

Via: https://www.casino.org/news/1-1-million-casino-fraud-scheme-earns-georgia-woman-two-year-prison 

 

Image: 
Categories: 

2019 Annual Day Use Permit Applications Are Available Now for Jenkinson, Caples, and Sliver lakes

$
0
0

[EID]
 
Permits Valid at Jenkinson, Caples, and Silver Lakes

EID's recreation division announces that 2019 annual day use permit applications are available. Permits make a great holiday gift and are valid for all EID-managed day use areas which include three lakes: Jenkinson, Caples, and Sliver.

Sly Park Recreation Area with Jenkinson Lake at the heart of the park is open all year and offers something for all outdoor enthusiasts. There are over 9 miles of trails that wind around the lake and provide access to more than thirty additional miles of trails.  Trails are suitable for hiking, biking or riding your horse. There are plenty of places to picnic,  enjoy water sports, fishing, or just find a place to rest and relax.

Caples and Silver lakes are located off highway 88. These high-elevation recreation lakes have spectacular views, award-winning fishing, and access to many trails.

See Link: https://www.eid.org/home/showdocument?id=3193 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 

Sheriff's Arrest and Activity Log for 11-8-18

$
0
0

[PRpond]

The following people are on the arrest log of NOVEMBER 8, 2018, as reported by the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department:

KELLI    SUZANNE    BROWN    F
LT    20181108    INCUSTODY    33    T
23152(A)/23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $15,000.00

PAULA    FRANCES    CAMARATA    F
PV    20181108    RELEASED    63    E
602    M    TRESPASSING    $2,000.00

ELIJAH    STEVEN    COOPER    M
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    21    I
10851(A)    F    VEHICLE THEFT    $25,000.00
496D(A)    F    POSS STOLEN VEH/VES/ETC    $7,500.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $25,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $10,000.00
HANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $15,000.00

JAMES    RALPH    COOPER    M
LT    20181108    RELEASED    59    E
4462.5    M    SHO ON VEH/GIV PO FLS REG    
12500(A)    M    DRIVE W/O LICENSE    

JAMES    EDWARD    FINDRICK    M
PP    20181108    INCUSTODY    56    E
550(B)(1)    F    FLS/ETC INS INF F/PAY/ETC    
550(A)(2)    F    FILE MULTPL CLAIM:INJ/ETC

KENNETH    JAMES    FULLBRIGHT    M
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    49    E
23152(E)    M    DUI DRUG    $40,000.00
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $2,500.00
11364(A)    M    POSS UNLAW PARAPHERNALIA    $2,000.00

CHRIS    ROBERT    HUBER    M
PV    20181108    RELEASED    50    I
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL    $5,000.00

JULIAN    JAMES    MILLER    M
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    24    E
211    F    ROBBERY    $50,000.00
22810(A)    F    UNLAWFL POSS/USE TEAR GAS    $15,000.00
14601.1(A)    M    DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ETC    $2,500.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $15,000.00
HANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $10,000.00

DORR    FRANK    MOORE    M
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    34    I
23152(F)    M    DUI ANY DRUG    $5,000.00

RONALD    EUGENE    MORRIS    M
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    52    E
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    
1203.2(A)    M    VIOL OF PROBATION    

MORALES    JARQUIN    OCTAVIANO    M
PP    20181108    INCUSTODY    33    E
14601.5(A)    M    DRIV:LIC SUS/ETC:UI/RFUSL

TROY    JOSEPH    PASKERT    M
LT    20181108    RELEASED    23    E
594(A)(2)    M    VANDALISM:DAMAGE PROPERTY    $5,000.00
148(A)(1)    M    OBSTRUCT/ETC PUB OFCR/ETC    $3,000.00

SAMANTHA    ROSE    RANDAZZO    F
LT    20181108    INCUSTODY    37    S
22810(G)(1)    M    ILUSE TEARGAS/TEARGAS WPN    $15,000.00

CHEALA    MAE    ROBINSON    F
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    36    E
484(A)    M    THEFT OF PERSONAL PROP    $250,000.00

JERRY    MICHAEL    RYAN    M
LT    20181108    INCUSTODY    40    S
30305(A)(1)    F    PROHIB OWN/ETC AMMO/ETC    $20,000.00
10851(A)    F    VEHICLE THEFT    $25,000.00
14601.1(A)    M    DRIVE:LIC SUSPENDED/ETC    $2,500.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $25,000.00

BEN    EDWARD    RYAN    M
LP    20181108    INCUSTODY    55    E
22810(G)(1)    M    ILUSE TEARGAS/TEARGAS WPN    

LINDSAY    MAE    SMITH    F
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    31    I
23152(F)    M    DUI ANY DRUG    $5,000.00

LYNETTE    DEE    STEWART    F
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    36    E
602.1(A)    M    TRESPASS PUBLIC BUSINESS    $2,000.00
4060    M    POS CNTL SUB:W/O PRESCRIP    $2,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    M    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $5,000.00

MICHAEL    JOHN    THORNBURG    M
PP    20181108    INCUSTODY    46    E
23152(B)    M    DUI ALCOHOL/0.08 PERCENT

CHEYENNE    CELASTEVEN    WARD    F
PV    20181108    INCUSTODY    23    I
10851(A)    F    VEHICLE THEFT    $25,000.00
496D(A)    F    POSS STOLEN VEH/VES/ETC    $7,500.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $25,000.00
ENHANCEMENT    F    ENHANCEMENT - FOR BAIL PURPOSES ONLY    $15,000.00

DONALD    JAMES    WHEELER    M
PV    20181108    RELEASED    61    E
602    M    TRESPASSING    $2,000.00

SUZANNE    ELISABETH    WHITE    F
PV    20181108    RELEASED    49    P
11377(A)    M    POSSESS CNTL SUB    $17,500.00

EDSO Actvity Log for  11/8/2018

@ 0716 594(A)(2) PC VANDALISM:DAMAGE PRO \ GLEN EAGLES RD, SOUTH LAKE TAHOE EG1810051
R/P REPORTED A VANDALISM . DEPUTIES ARRESTED THE MALE SUSPECT AFTER A FOOT PURSUIT.
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =60
S01 ARRESTED PASKERT, TROY SEX=M AGE=23

@ 0730 10.12.210 CO VEHICLE ABATE \ CEDAR RAVINE RD, PLACERVILLE EG1810052
AN ABANDONED VEHICLE WAS TAGGED FOR ABATEMENT.

@ 0938 459 PC BURGLARY \ STAGE CT, DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1810056
SUSPECT(S) GAINED ACCESS TO A STORAGE UNIT. THE SUSPECT(S) THEN TOOK A FEW ITEMS FROM THE STORAGE UNIT.

@ 1420 459.5 PC SHOPLIFTING \ MISSOURI FLAT RD, DIAMOND SPRINGS EG1810062
A SUBJECT STOLE ITEMS FROM A STORE.
S01 SEX=M SUSPECT AGE=21

@ 1444 22810(A) PC UNLAWFL POSS/USE TEA \ ONYX TL, POLLOCK PINES EG1810063
A TRAFFIC STOP ON S1'S VEHICLE WAS CONDUCTED. A VEHICLE INVENTORY SEARCH REVEALED A PROHIBITED WEAPON, ILLEGAL NARCOTICS, AND NARCOTIC PARAPHERNALIA INSIDE. S1 AND S2 PLACED UNDER ARREST.
S01 ARRESTED MILLER, JULIAN SEX=M AGE=24
S02 ARRESTED FULLBRIGHT, KENNETH SEX=M AGE=49

@ 1530 488 PC PETTY THEFT \ HIGHWAY 50 HY, SOUTH LAKE TAHOE EG1810064
UNKNOWN SUSPECT STOLE THE VICTIM'S SECURITY CAMERA
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =34

@ 1826 27491 GC CORONER CASE \ SO LAKE TAHOE EM1810066
V01 SEX=M VICTIM AGE =87

@ 1910 602.1(A) PC TRESPASS PUBLIC BUSI \ TOWN CENTER BL, EL DORADO HILLS EG1810068
FEMALE WAS ARRESTED AND BOOKED INTO JAIL FOR TRESPASSING AND POSSESSION OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE WITHOUT A PRESCRIPTION.
S01 ARRESTED STEWART, LYNETTE SEX=F AGE=36

@ 2208 28 VC REPOSSESSION \ PLEASANT VALLEY RD, EL DORADO EG1810070
REPOSSESSION

@ 2311 28 VC REPOSSESSION \ MARICOPA CT, CAMERON PARK EG1810071
REPOSSESSION

Please Note: Arrests are made based upon probable cause. All are entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law.
 

Image: 
Categories: 

SPECIAL REPORT: Woman Paralyzed By Pain Discovers Breakthrough Relief Called 'Nature's Oxycontin'

$
0
0

[Richard Jing]
 
Jamie Richardson from Dallas Texas just netted one of the biggest deals in Shark Tank history.

All 5 investors on ABC's Shark Tank teamed up to buy 30% of Richardson's breakthrough "miracle pain relief" formula for a staggering $2.9 million dollars.

Here's what it's all about...

In 2016, Dr. Jamie Richardson sold over 1.9 million bottles of his family's secret pain relief formula, Hemp Extract CBD, after a congressional bill legalized the sale of CBD products in all 50 states.

Hemp Extract CBD is made from Cannabidiol (CBD), the non-psychoactive ingredient in cannabis. It is an ingredient in cannabis that relieves pain and fights inflammation along with a slew of other miraculous benefits.  

Hemp Extract CBD has been called "Nature's Oxycontin" because it quickly relieves even the most agonizing pain and reduces inflammation allowing the body to finally heal.

 

 

 

Millions of Americans are already using Hemp Extract CBD on a daily basis. Many say it works like magic. Some say it works better than prescription painkillers like Vicodin and Oxycontin.

Here at Fox News, we received hundreds of emails about whether Hemp Extract CBD is a legitimate alternative to potent painkillers, and if it carries any unwanted side effects. We wanted to find out...

 

Is "Nature's Oxycontin" The Real Deal... Or Just Another Gimmick?

 

The story of how Hemp Extract CBD was created is fascinating. 

Hemp Extract CBD was discovered by 92-year-old Mary Richardson, Jamie's mother, and a retired doctor from Yuba City, California. 

Mary had been battling horrible arthritis pain for years, which she was barely able to control.

Enduring this mind-numbing pain was bad enough but what happened next was nothing short of a nightmare.

Without warning...

Mary suffered two major strokes in 67 days!

Miraculously, Mary survived, but her arthritis raged hopelessly out of control as a result of the strokes.

Doctors pumped her full of their strongest drugs, but her pain sprang to unbearable levels.

Desperate for relief, Mary began looking for answers on her own.

Twelve agonizing months later, she stumbled upon a surprising pain remedy used by ancient healers

Mary was surprised the major ingredient turned out to be concentrated Cannabidiol extracted from the marijuana plant (CBD).

Mary re-created the formula… and the results were instantaneous! She calls it her…

 

Hemp Extract CBD:  Miracle In A Bottle!

Mary was flabbergasted. This discovery changed her life- literally overnight.

The formula seemed to melt away the pain -in her words - “just like it was never there.”

At the urging of her son, Jamie, Mary began sharing her secret formula with other hurting folks.

Unfortunately, Mary could never publicly give away her miracle formula. At the time, the US Government classified CBD as a schedule 1 drug, meaning Mary could face over 60 years in jail if she were ever caught. 

Regardless, Mary would secretly ship bottles of her pain relief formula to those in need.

Since then, Mary's formula has helped thousands of people find relief from arthritis... sore muscles... inflammation... swollen joints...and injury pain. 

Luckily, Congress introduced a new federal bill in spring 2017 to reschedule marijuana and CBD as a schedule III substance, meaning CBD could be freely distributed for medical and research purposes!!

That's when Jamie, Mary's oldest son, took his mother's secret healing formula and improved it. Now, it's a widely used treatment for pain and inflammation as well as many other conditions.  

What Jamie Richardson Did Next Started a Medical Breakthrough

Jamie Richardson knew he could not sell his mother's miracle formula right away without further research. He needed to prove to the public that CBD was an effective solution for pain management with little side effects.

So, Jamie applied for a research grant to run the first ever FDA approved clinical trial involving CBD. 

With the help of Harvard researchers and medical doctors, Jamie led a clinical trial studying the effects of CBD on pain and inflammation. 

The results were astonishing. Through their research, they discovered a multitude of other health benefits of CBD they never anticipated. Richardson's team ran additional follow-up studies that concluded CBD is nothing short of a real medical miracle.

CBD has now been clinically proven to:

  • Reduce pain by binding to CB1 receptors while reducing swelling
  • Reduce social anxiety, cognitive impairment, and discomfort in patients diagnosed with Generalized Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD)
  • Decrease cancer spread by "turning off" genes involved in tumor development
  • Combat neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer's by removing plaque that block neuron-signaling
  • Reduces cigarette addiction by modulating the rewarding the effects of nicotine
  • Improves sleep quality and restore respiratory stability to those experiencing sleep Apnea
  • Clears acne by inhibiting lipid synthesis on the skin
  • Regulates blood sugar and lowers insulin resistance
  • Provide relief to those suffering from IBD (Chron's or Colitis) through its anti-inflammatory effects
  • Improves symptoms of MS (multiple sclerosis) by providing durable protection to neurons 
  • Prevents obesity. Several follow up studies have shown CBD usage is associated with smaller waist circumference  
  • And much, much more!

Jamie knew he had to get this news out to the millions of Americans suffering from pain, inflammation and other illnesses. 

So he teamed up with his group of Harvard researchers to create Hemp Extract CBD, a brand of medical grade CBD supplements developed through thousands of hours of research and clinical trials. 

Jamie warned everyone the medicinal and recreational cannabis boom has also brought a huge rise in the number of different cannabis producers. Most operating under fluctuating, often ill-defined regulatory standards. 

"We've got a lot of 'garage scientists' in the industry, who are well-meaning people--I don't think anyone gets up in the morning, goes to the garage, and thinks they’ll make something poisonous that could hurt people," Richardson explains.

"What makes Hemp Extract CBD different is our CBD is extracted from cannabis plants using the 'green method' of supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) with CO2, noted that "the butane, hexane used to process much of the consumer-grade cannabinoid that others use can leave unwanted traces behind."

Hemp Extract CBD has produced incredible results in every single clinical trial...

 

Big Pharma Vowed To Shut Jamie's Company Down!

The big Pharmaceutical companies tried everything they could to stop Hemp Extract CBD from reaching the masses. They lobbied to congress, spread fake news on the dangers of CBD, and even sued Richardson's company!

Yet, their attack had the opposite effect. In trying to shut down Hemp Extract CBD, the Pharma industry ended up raising even more public awareness for the pain relief and healing power of CBD. 

 

Eventually, Hollywood celebrities started trying Hemp Extract CBD for their ailments, and once they saw how well it worked, they started spreading the word to millions of fans.

Morgan Freeman: "The Only Thing That Offers Relief For Fibromyalgia is CBD"

Jennifer Aniston: "I Enjoy Using CBD And Wish More People Knew The Benefits"

 

Now back to Richardson's pitch to the Sharks.

When the investors reviewed Hemp Extract CBD sales numbers, clinical trial results and celebrity endorsements, they were absolutely floored. 

All 5 Sharks jumped on the opportunity to invest in Hemp Extract CBD with confidence, calling it the...

"Natural Miracle Cure That Will Bring Down Big Pharma" 

 

Yet here at Fox Health, we needed more proof Hemp Extract CBD is really the miracle cure it claims to be.

Just because 5 of the wealthiest business people in the USA endorse the product, does not mean it's a holy grail. So we decided to try it for ourselves. And boy we're glad we did.

Last month, our senior editor Taylor Wellington volunteered for our experiment. Taylor was chosen because of her history with Rheumatoid Arthritis, a painful autoimmune condition doctors don't yet have a complete cure for.

Below is her story...

Taylor's Real Life Experience With Hemp Extract CBD

"My name is Taylor and I'm a 49-year-old mother of three from Alabama. I have a history of anxiety attacks and chronic arthritis, which has prevented me from living a normal life. On top of that, I accidentally slipped on our family vacation a few years ago and have been experiencing chronic back pain ever since.

Since my diagnosis, I tried various exercises for my back pain. I spent hours every day meditating to help with my anxiety attacks. I was even given a high dose of Vicodin to help manage my pain, but they made me nauseous, foggy headed and always craving for more. 

I tried natural supplements but none of them worked. I tried various therapies like massages, chiropractic adjustments and acupuncture yet those didn't help either. At one point, I was even considering a $5,000 surgery! But I read about horrible side effects from others online. Plus, I couldn't afford to dig myself deeper into financial debt. So I decided to keep searching.

One day, while watching an episode of The Doctors, I heard Dr. Travis Stork talk about a natural solution to pain management and inflammation that's even more effective than prescription meds. Of course, the solution was CBD and the brand he recommended was Hemp Extract CBD. 

At first, I was hesitant because I didn't want to get "high" but through more research, I discovered CBD has no psychoactive effects, so I can function as normal. So I decided to order a bottle and give it a shot. 

Within a few weeks, my pain completely disappeared and my normal panic attacks began to subside. I was amazed! Most of all, my back pain was much better and I was even able to take my 3-year-old son in my arms for a walk for the first time in years! I not only saved thousands of dollars, but also the hassle of doctor visits and therapy sessions thanks to Hemp Extract CBD.

 

Will Hemp Extract CBD Work For You?

Hemp Extract CBD is absolutely safe and legal in all 50 states. You can skip the long wait for doctors appointments and the frightfully expensive bills by using Hemp Extract CBD instead. 

 

Image: 
Categories: 
Tags: 
Viewing all 3438 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>