Raquel Maria Dillon

Lawsuit alleges wrongful death in police shooting

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PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — The parents of a college student who was shot and killed by Pasadena police alleged in a federal lawsuit that their son’s death was part of a pattern of abuse by the department and that the investigation “reeks” of a cover up.

Kenneth McDade and Anya Slaughter alleged in the wrongful death and civil rights lawsuit filed Tuesday that the department tried to cover up its wrongdoing in the shooting death of their 19-year-old son Kendrec McDade on March 24.

Police blamed McDade’s fatal shooting on Oscar Carrillo’s 911 call claiming he had been robbed at gunpoint by two men. Police said the phone call by Oscar Carrillo led officers to believe McDade was armed when they spotted him in an alley and opened fire after they say he made a motion at his waistband. McDade did not have a weapon.

Police said Carrillo later admitted to lying about the gun to speed up response, but in an interview with KNBC television on Wednesday, the 26-year-old said he really believed the college student was armed at the time.

“I thought they had guns or something or they were going to shoot me,” Carrillo told NBC, his face obscured.

Police held Carrillo for six days on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter, but prosecutors declined to file those charges.

After being shot multiple times in the chest, witnesses said McDade tried to talk to the officers, according to the lawsuit. Officers handcuffed McDade and he began to “twitch,” the suit said. The teen died at a hospital.

Grief still evident in her red eyes and tired stare, Slaughter told The Associated Press that Pasadena police took “her baby.”

Slaughter gave birth to her third child at Huntington Memorial Hospital. A week later she returned to the same hospital because her first-born, Kendrec, died there.

“I want the world to know that he’s not what the Pasadena police has portrayed him to be. He was one of those kids who stayed in school,” she said.

Kendrec’s father, Kenneth McDade, said Slaughter calls her son’s cellphone just to hear his voice, and put a pair of shorts he wore just before he died underneath her pillow.

“He doesn’t get to watch his little brother grow up. The only thing that was kind of a blessing is that he did get a chance to see his little brother, to hold him and enjoy him for one week,” he said, tears rolling down his cheeks.

The federal lawsuit alleges McDade’s death was part of a pattern of abuse and killings of black people in Pasadena at the hands of police, including the shooting death of Leroy Barnes Jr., who was shot 11 times in 2009 by the department’s officers.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of McDade’s parents by attorney Caree Harper, names Pasadena police Chief Phillip Sanchez, Griffin, Newlen and detective Keith Gomez as defendants. It seeks unspecified damages.

The city attorney hasn’t seen the lawsuit and couldn’t comment, said Pasadena city spokesman Tim McGillivray.

Convenient Cupcakes Are Dangerous For Dieters

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Convenient Cupcakes Are Dangerous For DietersIn this photo taken Monday, March 5, 2012, Sprinkles Cupcakes Sara Cebulski, right, arranges a custom box of cupcakes at Sprinkles in Beverly Hills, Calif. A new 24-Hour Cupcake "ATM," an automatic machine that will be continuously restocked to dispense fresh cupcakes is opening at Sprinkles Cupcakes. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)(Credit: AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Sprinkles, the Beverly Hills bakery that helped inspire the craze for sweet frosting in snack-size portions, will launch a cupcake dispensing machine at its flagship store.

Founder and owner Candace Nelson said her company is rolling out the first high-tech vending machine on Tuesday, with three more in the works for New York City by the summer.

The ATM-like machine features a touchscreen and a robotic arm that pulls the right flavored cupcake from a wall of single-serving boxes inside the store.

Nelson said the custom-built gadget is in response to demand for increased hours at the popular store.

“After dinner people want a cupcake. But we can’t be open all night long because of our poor employees. So we’ll just stock it fresh before they leave for the evening and it’ll be good to go,” she said.

The machines will be restocked constantly throughout the day so the goods stay fresh.

Nelson said she was inspired to make the sugary treats available 24-7 when she realized that she couldn’t satisfy her own late-night cravings.

“I was pregnant with my second child and I thought, I’m the owner of a cupcake bakery and even I can’t get a cupcake in the middle of the night,” she said.

Customers think the vending machines are a sweet idea.

“You can never have too much access to your cupcakes,” said Patrick Swope of Rogers, Ark., who was visiting the Sprinkles New York City shop with his family.

Nelson, who is a featured judge on the Food Network’s “Cupcake Wars,” started this bakery with her husband 10 years ago. Since then, cupcakes have become big business with bakeries popping up in neighborhoods across the country.

The vending machines will give Sprinkles an edge over the competition, she said. The machines will charge $4 for a boxed cupcake. The same sugary sweet sells for $3.25 in the store, with no box.

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Convenient Cupcakes Are Dangerous For Dieters

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Convenient Cupcakes Are Dangerous For DietersIn this photo taken Monday, March 5, 2012, Sprinkles Cupcakes Sara Cebulski, right, arranges a custom box of cupcakes at Sprinkles in Beverly Hills, Calif. A new 24-Hour Cupcake "ATM," an automatic machine that will be continuously restocked to dispense fresh cupcakes is opening at Sprinkles Cupcakes. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)(Credit: AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Sprinkles, the Beverly Hills bakery that helped inspire the craze for sweet frosting in snack-size portions, will launch a cupcake dispensing machine at its flagship store.

Founder and owner Candace Nelson said her company is rolling out the first high-tech vending machine on Tuesday, with three more in the works for New York City by the summer.

The ATM-like machine features a touchscreen and a robotic arm that pulls the right flavored cupcake from a wall of single-serving boxes inside the store.

Nelson said the custom-built gadget is in response to demand for increased hours at the popular store.

“After dinner people want a cupcake. But we can’t be open all night long because of our poor employees. So we’ll just stock it fresh before they leave for the evening and it’ll be good to go,” she said.

The machines will be restocked constantly throughout the day so the goods stay fresh.

Nelson said she was inspired to make the sugary treats available 24-7 when she realized that she couldn’t satisfy her own late-night cravings.

“I was pregnant with my second child and I thought, I’m the owner of a cupcake bakery and even I can’t get a cupcake in the middle of the night,” she said.

Customers think the vending machines are a sweet idea.

“You can never have too much access to your cupcakes,” said Patrick Swope of Rogers, Ark., who was visiting the Sprinkles New York City shop with his family.

Nelson, who is a featured judge on the Food Network’s “Cupcake Wars,” started this bakery with her husband 10 years ago. Since then, cupcakes have become big business with bakeries popping up in neighborhoods across the country.

The vending machines will give Sprinkles an edge over the competition, she said. The machines will charge $4 for a boxed cupcake. The same sugary sweet sells for $3.25 in the store, with no box.

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California firefighters gain on worst wildfire

Progress is made to contain 1,400-acre blaze, the larger of two that have forced 2,300 to evacuate

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Hundreds of firefighters gained ground Wednesday against the most destructive of two big wildfires that have burned homes and forced 2,300 people to evacuate mountain communities on the edge of the Mojave Desert and in the southern Sierra Nevada.

A 1,400-acre blaze that chased residents from the Old West Ranch community about 10 miles south of Tehachapi was 25 percent contained.

The firefighting command revised the number of destroyed structures down to 25, and Kern County Fire Department Battalion Chief Dean Boller said most were homes.

Fire officials initially estimated 30 to 40 homes were lost. Another 150 homes in the loosely connected community remained threatened.

The area is usually so gusty that wind farms line ridges, but Wednesday afternoon the weather was cooperating with the 800 firefighters on the lines, producing only light breezes.

Winds were expected to increase to 15 mph later in the day, but Boller said firefighters had yet to see the kind of gusts that drove the fire the previous day.

“It was absolute chaos,” he said. “It is very, very overgrown. There’s so much dead and downed fuel out there — we knew we were in trouble.”

Boller, who turned over command of the incident to a state fire official on Wednesday, said the area had no reported fire history.

“It probably hasn’t burned in over 100 years,” he said.

Overnight, the fire ran through the crowns of trees, sending flames 150 feet into the sky, said Kelly Zombro, the new incident commander.

At a Red Cross evacuation center in Tehachapi, Sarah DeSmet, 22, of Los Angeles cuddled a dusty black kitten she had pulled out of the rubble at the home of her uncle, George Plesko, who looked dazed as volunteers tried to get him to eat lunch.

“My uncle called my mom to say his final goodbyes” because he didn’t think he would get out alive, DeSmet said.

Part of the fire in the eastern foothills of the Tehachapi Mountains, about 70 miles north of Los Angeles, was sending up a large plume of smoke, while other areas only smoldered.

About 40 miles to the north, a fire that began Monday in Sequoia National Forest grew to 15,600 acres, or about 24 square miles, and was only 5 percent surrounded after burning eight homes and six outbuildings in the area of Kernville, a launching point for mountain adventuring.

About 1,200 homes and structures scattered in the fire area were considered threatened, but Bureau of Land Management information officer Michell Puckett said that did not mean they were in immediate dangers.

Rafting companies, which normally take vacationers on trips down the Kern River, were being used to ferry firefighters to parts of the blaze that were otherwise inaccessible, Puckett said.

Officials were investigating what caused the fires.

The fire in Old West Ranch broke out Tuesday and carved a path of destruction. At one site, a house had collapsed upon itself. At another property, only a singed wooden bannister was left standing.

Lane Butchko, a retired resident without a car, recounted desperately fleeing a half-mile down a mountain road before a motorist picked him up.

“I grabbed my dog and we ran for our lives. I forgot my teeth,” he said. “We were going at a full gallop and halfway down I fell, tripped on the dog’s leash. When I got up, I felt the heat of the fire on my back and I saw a tree burst into flames.”

Years of drought in the Tehachapi area, along with tree diseases and bugs among the foothills’ pine and chaparral, have turned the area into a “tinderbox,” said county fire Battalion Chief David Goodell.

Peggy Pingry, who has lived in Old West Ranch for 25 years with her husband, said people are drawn to the remote area by the solitude, freedom to do what they like on their property, and the wildlife.

“Nobody up there is rich, well, maybe one person. Everyone’s retired or working, with some people on limited incomes,” she said. “They’re all self-sufficient and happy to be alone and off the grid.”

In the parking lot of the evacuation center, Robert Tipton, 67, tried to soothe his dog, Poppy, who barked and whined inside a metal crate.

Tipton said Poppy’s barking was his first warning of the fire Tuesday afternoon.

“The next thing I knew, the fire department was up there and I was on the way down the hill towards town, hoping to pick up my things later,” he said. “I found out last night that we’ve lost all our property. I don’t know what to say. It’s going to be hard, but we’ll survive all this.”

Meanwhile, firefighters made progress against the largest of more than 150 lighting-sparked fires in northeastern California. The 250-acre blaze east of Straylor Lake in the Lassen National Forest was expected to be fully contained by the end of the day, said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

An additional 187 fires were burning in other remote parts of Lassen County and in Plumas, Siskiyou, Shasta and Modoc counties. Most were less than an acre and were contained.

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Arrest made in Calif. beach house killings

After an eleven-month investigation, DNA evidence from a separate robbery case leads to a suspect

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A man suspected of stabbing a pregnant woman and her husband at their California beach house while their two young children were home was linked to the killings through DNA evidence collected in a separate robbery case, authorities said Monday.

Joshua Packer, 20, was taken into custody Sunday and booked for investigation of three counts of murder and two counts of robbery, capping an 11-month investigation of one of the most horrific homicides in years in Ventura County, sheriff’s Deputy Chief Gary Pentis said.

Brock and Davina Husted, both 42, were repeatedly stabbed last May by an intruder wearing a motorcycle helmet who slipped into their Faria Beach home through an open sliding-glass door. Police considered it a triple homicide because Davina Husted was about five months pregnant.

The Husteds’ 9-year-old son saw a man confront his mother in the kitchen and ran to his 11-year-old sister, who was asleep, authorities said. The children then ran to a neighbor’s home and called 911. They were not hurt and now live with relatives.

“It’s horrible for the children,” sheriff’s Capt. Ross Bonfiglio said.

Pentis believes the crime began as a robbery. He said items were taken from the couple’s home but didn’t provide further details.

“My personal opinion is this was not a random act,” Pentis said. He wouldn’t say whether Packer knew either Brock or Davina Husted. No other arrests were expected.

Packer’s DNA was entered into a state database after he was arrested for investigation of robbery at a Santa Barbara gas station in September 2009. He is suspected of pulling a gun and ordering a clerk to the ground.

Packer posted $115,000 bail and was released from Santa Barbara County jail in late January.

Authorities put Packer under surveillance and seized items that police believe were in his possession on the night of the killings. Other evidence includes text messages and telephone conversations, Pentis said.

Packer has owned several motorcycles, Pentis said, but he would not say whether any were linked to the killings in the beachfront community along U.S. Highway 101 about 80 miles from Los Angeles.

Scott Husted, brother of Brock Husted, said the family was grateful for the hard work of detectives but added the arrest does not ease the loss.

“When two people and their baby are killed, there’s no way it will ever make sense,” he said.

Packer, a security guard, was being held in county jail on $2.2 million bail. It wasn’t immediately known if he retained an attorney. Pentis believes Packer will be represented by a public defender.

Packer was scheduled to appear in court Thursday in Santa Barbara for a preliminary hearing in the robbery case.

Packer has had a recent rash of legal problems, according to court documents.

In Ventura County, he has been charged with misdemeanor battery stemming from an incident in November. A month later, he was charged with misdemeanor hit-and-run. Further details weren’t immediately available.

——

Associated Press Writers Alicia Chang and Greg Risling in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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