LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Blue Ribbon Committee for the Rehabilitation of Clear Lake will convene on Wednesday, March 13, with a field tour from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. and a formal meeting from 1:30 to 5 p.m.
The field tour, at the Konocti Vista Marina, 2755 Mission Rancheria Road in Lakeport, presents the best management practices employed by the Big Valley Band of Pomo Indians to limit runoff and restore native plants.
The tribe’s efforts serve as a model for actions to reduce nutrient input to Clear Lake.
The formal meeting, at the Lakeport City Council Chambers, 225 Park St., will feature a discussion of the duties of a technical subcommittee and the formation of a socioeconomic subcommittee.
These two subcommittees are tasked with forwarding recommendations to the main body of the Blue Ribbon Committee as it develops projects to address the economic and environmental challenges facing Clear Lake and Lake County.
All meetings are open to the public.
Those interested in more information or in signing up for updates and announcements are invited to visit www.resources.ca.gov/clear-lake/.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – This year as part of its Wildflower Brunch, Clear Lake State Park Interpretive Association will be challenging amateur photographers to show the beauty of Clear Lake State Park.
What better way to enjoy the park’s 565 acres and 11,600 feet of shoreline that was originally donated by Nellie Henderson Dorn and Fred Dorn than to document what each of us sees through our camera.
Everyone has their own appreciation of the park whether it is the beautiful landscapes, animal life, or all the fauna we see throughout the park.
Do you have some great digital images to share with others? Would you like to earn some recognition and prize money? Do you love the beauty of the park and wish to show how you see its beauty?
If you answer yes to any of these questions and you are an amateur photographer with images that have never been published then you need to enter the association’s Wildflower Photography Contest.
The contest is for all ages.
There are three age divisions:
– Adult: 19 years of age and up; – Senior: 14-18 years of age; and – Junior: Age 13 and under.
The categories for submission are flora, fauna and nature.
All photographic submissions must be digital with a file size no larger than eight megabytes. You must be an amateur photographer and may use any type of digital camera or scanner.
Photographs must have been taken between Jan. 1, 2017, and April 19, 2019.
Your work will be posted to the association’s Web site at http://www.clearlakestatepark.org/ for viewing and will be displayed at the annual Wildflower Brunch on April 27 at the State Park.
All entries need to be submitted by April 19 to this email address: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Fifty dollars will be awarded to the best photograph in each division with one hundred dollars going to the best overall photograph.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control has several new dogs including a rare breed, the Akbash.
Dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Akbash, boxer, Chihuahua, German Shepherd, pit bull and shepherd.
Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.
If you're looking for a new companion, visit the shelter. There are many great pets hoping you'll choose them.
The following dogs at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (additional dogs on the animal control Web site not listed are still “on hold”).
“Jaelyn” is a female Chihuahua in kennel No. 9, ID No. 11861. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Jaelyn’
“Jaelyn” is a female Chihuahua with a short tan coat.
She already has been spayed.
She’s in kennel No. 9, ID No. 11861.
“JessJess” is a male Chihuahua in kennel No. 9, ID No. 11862. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘JessJess’
“JessJess” is a male Chihuahua with a short tan coat.
He’s already been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 9, ID No. 11862.
“Sarra” is a female Akbash in kennel No. 12, ID No. 11855. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Sarra’
“Sarra” is a female Akbash with a medium-length white coat and green eyes.
Shelter staff said she should go to a home with no cats, small dogs or livestock.
She’s in kennel No. 12, ID No. 11855.
This female pit bull terrier-boxer mix is in kennel No. 22, ID No. 11825. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Pit bull terrier-boxer mix
This female pit bull terrier-boxer mix has a short tan and black coat.
She’s in kennel No. 22, ID No. 11825.
This female German Shepherd is in kennel No. 23, ID No. 11842. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female German Shepherd
This female German Shepherd has a short black and brown coat.
She already has been spayed.
She’s in kennel No. 23, ID No. 11842.
“Little Foot” is a white male Akbash is in kennel No. 27, ID No. 11854. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Little Foot’
“Little Foot” is a white male Akbash with a long white coat and gold eyes.
Shelter staff said the right home for him will not have cats, small dogs or livestock.
He’s in kennel No. 27, ID No. 11854.
“Blossom” is a female pit bull terrier in kennel No. 28, ID No. 11864. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Blossom’
“Blossom” is a female pit bull terrier with a short blue coat.
She already has been spayed.
She’s in kennel No. 28, ID No. 11864.
This female shepherd is in kennel No. 33, ID No. 11826. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female shepherd
This female shepherd has a medium-length red coat.
She already has been spayed.
She’s in kennel No. 33, ID No. 11826.
Lake County Animal Care and Control is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport, next to the Hill Road Correctional Facility.
Office hours are Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. The shelter is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
For more information call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
In honor of Women's History Month, the achievements of Dr. Nancy Grace Roman are being commemorated.
In a time when women were discouraged from studying math and science, Dr. Roman became a research astronomer and the first chief of astronomy at NASA.
She earned her Ph.D. in astronomy in 1949 from the University of Chicago in 1949.
Known today as the “Mother of Hubble,” she was instrumental in taking the Hubble Space Telescope from an idea to reality and establishing NASA’s program of space-based astronomical observatories.
Dr. Roman died on Christmas Day, 2018, at the age of 93.
Hear her recount her story in the video above.
To learn more about Dr. Roman’s life and work, visit the American Institute of Physics Web site and read an in-depth oral history from an interview she gave in 1980s.
In this image, Dr. Nancy Grace Roman explains the Advanced Orbiting Solar Observatory to astronaut Buzz Aldrin in 1965 in Washington, D.C. Photo courtesy of NASA.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – Police said a young male juvenile was responsible for setting a fire in a student bathroom at Terrace Middle School in Lakeport this week.
The fire occurred on Monday morning, prompting a school evacuation, as Lake County News has reported.
Firefighters arriving at the scene quickly knocked down the fire and students later were able to go back to class, officials said.
The Lakeport Police Department and Lakeport Fire Protection District began an immediate investigation into the fire’s cause, which quickly was found to have been intentionally set.
A $600 reward also was offered for information leading to the identification of the responsible individual.
Lakeport Police Lt. Jason Ferguson told Lake County News that a young male juvenile was identified as having set the fire.
Due to the sensitivity of the case, Ferguson did not release any other specifics, including the child’s age.
Terrace Middle School includes grades fourth through eighth.
Through the investigation and interviewing other students, police were able to identify the responsible child, Ferguson said.
Ferguson said the boy brought a lighter to school and was lighting toilet paper in the bathroom to show off.
The boy lit some toilet paper that flew up and hit the toilet paper dispenser, which caused the fire, according to Ferguson.
Because the boy is so young, Ferguson said he was not referred to Lake County Probation, which handles juvenile cases.
Due to changes in laws over the last few years, police couldn’t even speak to the child directly, according to Ferguson.
“It’s really complicated now,” Ferguson said.
Ferguson said the parents were notified and the school will handle any disciplinary issues.
Interim Lakeport Unified School District Superintendent Patrick Iaccino said Friday that the middle school administration is dealing with the situation, and is following state education code and district board policy as it relates to student matters of discipline.
Iaccino said that he didn’t yet have a dollar figure on the damage the fire caused to the bathroom.
As for the $600 reward that was offered, “We are going to have a meeting next week to determine who actually came forward, how many persons and how to disperse the money,” Ferguson said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – On Friday, the preliminary hearing of the man accused of setting the Clayton fire and a host of other fires in 2015 and 2016 wrapped up another week with testimony from three investigators.
The preliminary hearing for Damin Anthony Pashilk, 43, of Clearlake entered its eighth day on Friday.
He’s charged with 23 counts for setting the Clayton fire in August 2016 and 15 other fires between July of 2015 and August of 2016, as well as an attempted start of a 17th that self-extinguished.
Branden Smith, a Cal Fire battalion chief and law enforcement officer who participated in the surveillance of Pashilk in the summers of 2015 and 2016, returned to the stand after having given testimony earlier in the week.
Smith had been involved in placing GPS trackers on a green Subaru station wagon and a silver Chrysler Sebring that Pashilk had been known to drive in 2015 and 2016, respectively.
The tracker, which Cal Fire received clearance to use through a search warrant, needed to be replaced on a regular basis due to battery life. Smith said the trackers were placed or swapped out while the Subaru was parked at Twin Pine Casino in Middletown, and on the Chrysler while it was parked in front of Pashilk’s Koloko Street home in Clearlake.
Smith said the surveillance team used both visual observation and the GPS tracker’s Web-based tracking program to follow Pashilk’s movements. The days could be long and uneventful while waiting for Pashilk’s vehicle to move, and then the officers assigned would coordinate to follow him, sometimes for hours on back roads.
Smith said that, based on his past work in investigating arsons, Pashilk’s driving pattern had significance, as Smith has learned that those who intentionally set fires tend to scout or drive specific routes looking for a location to ignite a wildland fire. On that day, the opportunity didn’t appear to have presented itself.
However, on Aug. 25, 2015, the day the Arrowhead fire burned in Clearlake, Smith said he tracked Pashilk in his green Subaru toward the area of Arrowhead and Eastlake Drive. When Smith followed Pashilk’s route in reverse, he found a small fire on the south side of Eastlake Drive where the GPS showed Pashilk’s car had just been.
The fire was 10 feet by 10 feet at that point. Smith notified other surveillance officers then called 911 shortly before 4 p.m.
Smith said he had tracked Pashilk in that same area on Aug. 20 and 23, 2015.
The following summer, on July 23, 2016, the Western fire burned on Western Mine Road. The following month, on Aug. 18 – three days after Pashilk’s arrest – Smith interviewed a resident of Western Mine Road who had made a report to the the arson tipline about seeing a vehicle like Pashilk’s silver Chrysler Sebring driving by at a high rate of speed at about the time the fire started.
On Aug. 4, 2016, Smith again was again surveilling Pashilk, who drive from Clearlake to Lower Lake, turned onto Morgan Valley Road, to Berryessa Knoxville Road and then on to Pope Valley and Middletown to Twin Pine Casino. Smith said no fires were found along that route.
On Aug. 7, 2017, Smith was following Pashilk when the GPS tracker showed he turned onto a dirt road near Lower Lake before taking off. Smith saw a fire where Pashilk had stopped and went to photograph and report it. He said a man stopped and began trying to put out the fire, which Smith stopped him from doing, explaining that it had a slow rate of spread and it was more important to preserve the evidence.
Smith also was first on scene of a fire he discovered on Aug. 9, 2016, after he went to check an area on Seigler Canyon Road where the GPS tracker had shown Pashilk has having stopped for a few seconds.
On Aug. 13, 2016, the day the Clayton fire started, the tracker showed that Pashilk’s Chrysler had been on Clayton Creek Road for about a minute and a half just before 5 p.m., which is the time the fire is reported to have begun.
Smith said he followed Pashilk to the Jack in the Box parking lot in Clearlake where he was seen with a woman, watching the fire, a short time after he left the scene of the fire.
At about 7 p.m. that day, Smith said he saw and spoke to Pashilk and the woman on a frontage road a few hundred yards from the Clayton fire. Smith, who was posing as a freelance photographer, asked them if they lived nearby and they said yes, which Smith knew wasn’t true.
After Pashilk was arrested for driving on a suspended license on Aug. 15, 2016, Smith and another Cal Fire officer were responsible for searching the Chrysler at the Clearlake Police Department. They seized evidence, which they photographed, cataloged and packaged.
Items taken for evidence included a meth pipe with white residue inside, paper towels, whole and torn paper napkins, marijuana joints, two lighters, burned and unburned paper matches, a torn paper cup, miscellaneous paper and plastic materials, cigarette papers and binoculars.
Smith said the paper products found can be used for setting fires. He added that he's arrested arsonists in the past who were using binoculars to watch the fires they set.
The next day, Smith interviewed the woman who Pashilk had been seen with and who lived at the same property. She said Pashilk had taken her to look at fires, but didn’t explain which ones. She also was the Chrysler’s registered owner, telling Smith Pashilk had bought it for her but drove it more than she did.
Jason Cox, a district attorney’s investigator, also testified on Friday. He conducted mapping, video sequencing and followup interviews for the investigation.
In September 2015, he contacted a 9-year-old girl and her family regarding a fire on Woodland Drive in Clearlake on Aug. 13, 2015. The girl initially had been interviewed by a Cal Fire officer on the day of the fire, and Cox conducted a followup interview with her and her parents.
The girl said she was in her front yard, facing Woodland Drive, when she saw a vehicle parked in a turnout across the street. She said she saw an item dropped from the vehicle before it left, and then the fire started.
Cox said the girl showed him where she was standing and were the fire started, about 100 feet apart. He also showed her pictures of cars – including Pashilk’s Subaru – and she said Pashilk’s car was similar to the one she saw, although she thought the windows were darker.
He also followed up with the woman on Western Mine Road who saw a silver car leaving the area at about the time the fire started there on July 23, 2016, and did a video recreation on Sulphur Bank Drive in an area where a Cal Fire officer reported seeing Pashilk’s Chrysler shortly before a small wildland fire was found.
During his testimony Cox showed videos of Pashilk’s Chrysler in the area of the North Branch fire on July 29, 2016, near Clearlake.
The last testimony of the day came from Cal Fire Deputy Chief James Engel, who has sat alongside Chief Deputy District Attorney Rich Hinchcliff at the prosecution table throughout the preliminary hearing.
Engel oversaw the investigation of the series of fires in eastern Lake County in 2015 and 2016 that Pashilk is charged with setting.
After Pashilk’s Subaru was seen numerous times on surveillance cameras near fires, Engel wrote the search warrant – signed mid-August 2015 – for Cal Fire to use the GPS tracker.
Engel said the investigation was named “Kiko,” a name assigned to it that was drawn from a random bank of names that Cal Fire establishes each year to give to criminal investigations.
Testimony will continue on Wednesday.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The National Weather Service is reporting that rain and snow are possible in parts of Lake County this weekend.
At the same time, a flood warning for Clear Lake remains in effect.
Flood stage begins at 9 feet Rumsey, the special measure for Clear Lake, and as of 12 a.m. Saturday the lake was at 9.82 feet Rumsey.
Despite the rain and snow forecast, the lake level is expected to continue to recede over the coming week.
The Lake County forecast calls for rain and light snow showers on both Saturday and Sunday, particularly in the Cobb, Kelseyville and Northshore areas.
Conditions are expected to be clear for most of next week, with the exception of Tuesday, when there are again chances of showers.
Winds ranging close to 25 miles per hour are in the forecast for Saturday night, with gusts closer to 20 miles per hour on Sunday night and single-digit wind speeds on Monday.
Nighttime temperatures this weekend and into next week will range from the mid 30s to low 40s, and daytime temperatures vary between the high 40s and mid 50s.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – It’s once again time to “spring forward.”
Daylight Saving Time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday, March 10.
At that time, clocks will go forward one hour as California goes from Pacific Standard Time to Pacific Daylight Time.
Since 1966, most states have been changing the clocks twice a year in order to save an hour of daylight.
Federal and state officials urge people to use Daylight Saving Time as a reminder to replace the batteries in smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, and to test or replace batteries in NOAA weather radios.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Fire Administration report that most alarms need a new battery at least once a year.
Also, if your smoke alarm is more than 10 years old, replace it with a new alarm and battery.
The National Fire Protection Association reports that:
– Three out of five home fire deaths result from fires in properties without working smoke alarms; – More than one-third (38 percent) of home fire deaths result from fires in which no smoke alarms are present; – The risk of dying in a home fire is cut in half in homes with working smoke alarms.
What's up for March? Jupiter in the morning, the start of spring, and a visit to the Beehive.
Jupiter greets early risers all month long. Look low in the southeast an hour before sunrise. (And if you have an unobstructed view toward the horizon, you'll be able to spot Saturn and Venus as well, a bit lower in the sky.)
March marks the 40th anniversary of the Voyager 1 spacecraft's flyby of Jupiter, in 1979. Voyager gave us our first detailed, close-up look at the giant planet and its moons.
March also brings the beginning of spring in the Northern Hemisphere, starting on March 20, with the spring equinox.
Equinoxes occur twice a year, in spring and fall, on the dates when day and night are of equal length.
From here until the beginning of fall, in September, daytime will be longer than nighttime, as the sun travels a longer, higher arc across the sky each day, reaching a peak at the start of summer. It's just the opposite in the Southern Hemisphere, where March 20 marks the fall equinox.
The arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere brings fresh flowers and the buzzing of bees, which makes March a great time to try to spot the Beehive Cluster.
This grouping of young stars sits about 600 light years away and consists of several hundred stars that are only a few hundred million years old. That's compared to our sun's four-and-a-half billion years.
Although the Beehive can be seen as a small fuzzy patch with unaided eyes under dark skies, it's best viewed with binoculars.
To find the Beehive Cluster, look south and follow a line from brilliant Sirius – the brightest star in the sky – upward and slightly to the left, toward another of the sky's brightest stars, Procyon. Continue that path about the same distance upward and then a couple of finger widths to the left.
While the Beehive Cluster is visible in the first half of the night all month long, the best times to look for it are the first and last weeks of the month, as the moon shines brightly mid-month, making faint objects like this cluster more difficult see.
You can catch up on all of NASA's current and future missions at www.nasa.gov.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The California Highway Patrol has released new details about the killing of a Santa Clarita man last month along Highway 20.
The CHP said that the death of 41-year-old Patrick Michael Weber has been determined to be a homicide.
CHP’s Northern Division Investigation Service Unit, Clear Lake CHP officers and Northern Division Multidisciplinary Accident Investigation Team, or MAIT, along with Department of Justice and Lake County Sheriff’s Major Crimes Investigation unit have uncovered new details during the investigation into Weber’s death.
Weber was found dead in his white 2014 sprinter van on the morning of Feb. 21 after a passing motorist reported seeing the crashed van, as Lake County News has reported.
The van, which had been traveling eastbound, was found off of Highway 20, about a mile west of Walker Ridge Road. It had gone off the south edge of the highway and into a ditch, crashing into a tree.
Red paint transfer marks were found on the driver’s side of Weber’s vehicle, officials said.
The CHP’s Clear Lake Area office said Thursday night that the results of an autopsy found that Weber had been shot, a fact that hadn’t been immediately apparent to investigators at the scene.
Investigators also found a large quantity of marijuana in the cargo area of Weber’s vehicle, the CHP said.
The investigators contacted the California Department of Cannabis Control and determined that Weber was not legally licensed to transport marijuana, according to the CHP’s report.
Weber’s wife had confirmed to Lake County News that her husband was involved in the cannabis industry. She said he had left home a few days before, and that she had last heard from him the night before his death, when they exchanged texts.
Authorities are still working to identify the motive of the suspect and are investigating the circumstances surrounding the incident, the CHP said.
Anyone with information regarding the incident is encouraged to contact the California Highway Patrol, Ukiah Communication Center at 707-467-4000, or during business hours contact the Clear Lake CHP Office at 707-279-0103.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The preliminary hearing of the man accused of setting a series of wildland fires in 2015 and 2016 – the largest and last of them being the Clayton fire – continued briefly on Thursday morning before more evidence-based issues led to delay.
Based on the outcome of the preliminary hearing, Damin Anthony Pashilk, 43, could face trial on 23 charges for setting the Clayton fire in August 2016 and 15 other fires between July of 2015 and August of 2016, as well as an attempted start of a 17th that self-extinguished.
The proceedings so far have stretched across seven days over the course of several weeks due to scheduling challenges.
On Thursday, as on Wednesday, the proceedings were cut short when the defense raised an issue with having access to the information used by the prosecution in building its case.
Defense attorney Mitchell Hauptman said Cal Fire Battalion Chief Branden Smith, who had testified on Wednesday about his surveillance of Pashilk, had referenced the collection of information about license plates of vehicles seen on surveillance cameras placed near areas where a rash of fires had been set in 2015. Hauptman wanted to see that information.
Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff, who said he had just found out about the issue, explained that after the first four fires, Smith and other investigators were reviewing camera data and logging license plate numbers, and putting them on an Excel spreadsheet.
In 2015 they were working at the Middletown fire station when the Valley fire broke out in September. They grabbed their computer equipment and left, and Smith believed the information was on the computer he had with him.
Judge Andrew Blum found Hauptman’s request for the information relevant and recessed while Hinchcliff and other members of the prosecution team went with Smith to the District Attorney’s Office to look for the information on the computer.
Hauptman later asked for Smith’s testimony to continue on Friday to give him time to review the materials.
Sheriff’s lieutenant discusses interview following arrest
Hinchcliff was able to call an alternate witness on short notice, Lt. Corey Paulich of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
Paulich testified to being part of the team that interviewed Pashilk at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office on August 15, 2016, the day he was arrested and two days after the Clayton fire began near Lower Lake.
Cal Fire had been tracking Pashilk for more than a year by that point, and wanted him for questioning. Earlier that day, Deputy Ben Moore conducted a vehicle stop on Pashilk and arrested him for driving on a suspended license.
Pashilk was in the interview room by himself, with Paulich and other investigators monitoring him on video, when Paulich said he saw Pashilk take something from his shoe and swallow it. Pashilk admitted that it was a “scraper bag” of meth, and that he hadn’t wanted to be caught possessing.
Paulich said he Mirandized Pashilk, who he interviewed along with Cal Fire investigator Jim Engel and sheriff’s Det. John Drewrey.
During the interview, Pashilk acknowledged to investigators that had had been in prison a couple of times for drugs. He also mentioned that he had fought fires during his second term in prison with a California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation fire camp and admitted to still using drugs.
Paulich said Pashilk maintained throughout the interview that he hadn’t set any fires, despite Paulich telling him they had evidence he was responsible.
When asked why he was in the area of the Morgan fire on July 21, 2016, he said he had a friend who lived in the area. Paulich told him he had been followed so they knew his movements.
Paulich also spoke with Pashilk about using cigarettes to start fires, which Pashilk had told him he didn’t think could be done because of cigarettes having something in them to prevent them from igniting when people aren’t smoking them.
Pashilk also had told investigators that he wasn't aware of the many small fires occurring around the county.
Regarding the Morgan fire on July 21, 2016, Pashilk confirmed that he had been driving a Chrysler Sebring that was spotted in the fire area on surveillance video that day. He also had been in the area of the Sulphur fire on July 26, 2016, telling the detectives that he had a friend out there and he went out to smoke marijuana and look at the lake.
On Aug. 7, 2016, the date the Agua fire burned near Lower Lake, Pashilk said he had been in the area to change clothes and smoke a marijuana cigarette, which he threw out of the car – a common practice for him, according to what he told investigators – and drove away. Later in the day, he drove back by and saw burned grass.
Investigators had been tracking Pashilk and knew that account wasn’t accurate, Paulich said.
Pashilk said he didn’t know why there were fires everywhere he went, and when the investigators told him they thought he wasn’t telling the truth, Paulich said. Pashilk still maintained he didn’t set the fires.
While explaining to investigators about why he drove on some backroads, Pashilk said it was because he had a suspended driver’s license.
The investigators told him that a GPS tracker was on his vehicle, to which Pashilk replied, “OK,” Paulich told the court.
Paulich said Pashilk also told them he hadn’t driven around to look at fires with a female acquaintance, with whom he was photographed on Aug. 13, 2016, watching the Clayton fire.
At one point, Det. Drewrey entered the interview and told Pashilk that if he had to tell his boss about all of the evidence, how could he explain that Pashilk wasn’t responsible. Paulich said Pashilk made a comment to the effect of, “If it walks and quacks like a duck …”
Pashilk also denied throwing a matching or flaming napkin out of the vehicle window. “He said he wouldn't do that,” Paulich said.
Hauptman asked if a “be on the lookout” notice regarding Pashilk was issued to law enforcement on Aug. 15, 2016.
Paulich said law enforcement units had been told to be on the lookout for him and to contact him, but not arrest him, based on a meeting the sheriff’s office had the day before with Cal Fire investigators.
Testimony will resume at 9 a.m. Friday.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – A Kelseyville man was arrested for driving under the influence following an early Thursday wreck that injured both him and another driver.
Joel S. Saldana, 26, was arrested on suspicion of felony DUI at the scene of the crash, which occurred on Highway 29 south of Cruickshank Road near Kelseyville, according to the California Highway Patrol’s Clear Lake Area office.
The other driver in the crash, Jamie Pannyasy-Watts, 35, of Clearlake Oaks, was seriously injured in the wreck, the CHP said.
The CHP said that at 12:57 a.m. Thursday Saldana was driving a 2001 Lexus IS300 northbound on Highway 29, south of Cruickshank Road, while Pannyasy-Watts was driving a 2003 Saturn ION southbound, approaching Saldana.
For reasons that the CHP said are still under investigation, Saldana crossed over the double yellow lines and traveled across the roadway before he hit a dirt embankment on the southbound shoulder.
Saldana’s vehicle overturned and then continued in a northerly direction within the southbound lane, traveling directly into the path of Pannyasy-Watts’ vehicle, resulting in a head-on crash, the CHP said.
The CHP said the two vehicles came to a rest in the southbound lane, with both drivers being trapped within them.
The Kelseyville Fire Protection District and CHP responded and extricated the two drivers, the CHP said.
Radio reports indicated that incident command attempted to secure an air ambulance but weather prevented a helicopter from responding.
Kelseyville Fire ground ambulance transported Pannyasy-Watts to Sutter Lakeside Hospital where she was treated for major injuries, the CHP said.
The CHP said Saldana was arrested and then transported to Sutter Lakeside Hospital by Kelseyville Fire for treatment of moderate injuries. He later was released from the hospital.
Both drivers were using their safety equipment, the CHP said.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.