California Highway Patrol Commissioner Warren Stanley. Photo courtesy of the CHP. California Highway Patrol Commissioner Warren Stanley has spent nearly four decades advocating for highway safety in California.
His unwavering commitment to public service and dedication to CHP employees caught the attention of the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, or AAMVA, which on Tuesday rewarded his efforts with the AAMVA Lifetime Achievement Award in Highway Safety – Law Enforcement.
The award is presented annually to an AAMVA member whose primary function is directly associated with highway and traffic safety efforts and who has had a distinguished career in this arena.
“My entire career has been fueled by a passion for safety,” said Commissioner Stanley. “I am fortunate to be able to work alongside so many others who have demonstrated a lifelong commitment to reducing traffic fatalities and injuries on our roadways. This honor would not be possible without their dedication and shared vision.”
As a dedicated member of the law enforcement community, Commissioner Stanley has served the people of California for more than 37 years.
In 2018, Stanley became the first African American to hold the rank of CHP Commissioner. He is also one of the distinguished few to have held every uniformed position from officer to Commissioner within the CHP.
“This is hard work, but it is exceptionally important and incredibly rewarding,” added Commissioner Stanley.
Winners of this, and other awards, are traditionally recognized at AAMVA’s International Conference in August of every year. Due to COVID-19 and travel restrictions, AAMVA cancelled its 2020 conference. Previous recipients of the distinguished honor from AAMVA include former CHP Commissioners Dwight O. Helmick (2004) and Joe Farrow (2011).
The mission of the CHP is to provide the highest level of safety, service and security.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – US Forest Service officials will hold a virtual meeting to update the community on the work to contain the August Complex on the Mendocino National Forest.
The meeting will take place at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2.
People also can join the meeting by phone at 888-844-9904, passcode 3096536#.
For general questions about the August Complex, people are invited to email the incident management team at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call 530-487-4602.
Israeli firefighters have arrived to support California’s firefighter efforts. Photo courtesy of the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services. In response to a request from the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services, a team of 10 Israeli firefighters has deployed to California to assist in battling some of the largest wildfires in the state's history.
Though other countries have supported California – including Australia and New Zealand on the Mendocino Complex fire in 2018 – this is the first time Israelis have been assigned to fight fires in the United States. The deployment is expected for two weeks.
The Israeli crews arrived in Sacramento over the weekend and will be assigned to wildfires burning throughout Northern California.
The SCU Lightning Complex, the second-largest wildfire in state history, has consumed 391,150 acres and is 72-percent contained, while the LNU Lightning Complex, the third-largest, has burned 375,209 acres and is 74-percent contained.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Public Health officer on Tuesday evening reported the county’s fifth death related to COVID-19, which is part of a cluster of cases that also resulted in a death late last week.
Dr. Gary Pace said his agency received confirmation of the fifth death of an individual with “a COVID-19-related illness” on Tuesday.
“This was the second individual to pass away as a result of a cluster of cases in a local residential facility,” said Pace. “Again, the individual was greater than 65 years old and had chronic medical issues. They had tested positive for COVID-19 last week, and passed away early this morning.”
The county’s fourth COVID-19 death, which occurred on Friday, was in the same residential facility, the county confirmed. However, officials have not disclosed the name of the facility where the outbreak has occurred.
Pace said they are not giving out any additional information to protect the privacy of the person and their family.
He said it has been a trying time for those connected to the residential care facility.
“The public can be reassured staff at the residential care facility are appropriately responding by testing, isolating and quarantining residents and employees, alike, using established protocols,” Pace said.
Pace said the Lake County Public Health Division and the California Department of Public Health continue to provide consultation and every available measure is being taken to limit the probability of spread.
As of Tuesday, Lake County Public Health has reported 346 COVID-19 cases, of which 35 remain active and monitored by health officials and 306 are recovered. Two currently are hospitalized.
“This second tragic death reported in a period of four days again reinforces the need for all Lake County residents to take precautions,” Pace said. “COVID-19 cases do not spontaneously arise in residential care facilities. They are transmitted by people that provide care and services; people that may not have even been aware they had COVID-19. Cases in residential facilities have shaken communities around the United States. We must be vigilant and slow the spread.”
Pace told the Board of Supervisors during its Tuesday meeting that this is a critical time for the Lake County community.
“If we take precautions, we can slow transmission of the virus, protect the vulnerable and allow local businesses to expand services,” Pace 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.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Firefighters are at the scene of a wildland fire burning along Highway 20 just east of Clearlake Oaks, with the incident prompting evacuations in the area.
The fire was first dispatched just before 4 p.m. Tuesday on Highway 20 at Catholic Church Road.
The first unit on scene reported that the fire was burning on both sides of the road and running at a high rate of speed up the hill into timber. Wind is reported to be hitting the fire.
Incident command called for the evacuation of Morine Ranch Road just before 4:15 p.m.
Minutes later, incident command asked for Highway 20 to be closed at Sulphur Bank Road and at the Highway 53 intersection.
Dozers are being brought in off of Morine Ranch Road and through the nearby Clearlake Lava quarry, with a task force also responding.
Cal Fire, Lake County Fire and Northshore Fire are being joined by units from the LNU Lightning Complex, with Cal Fire Copter 901 and air attack also on scene, based on radio resources.
Air attack reported that it cannot see long-range spotting on the fire.
Just before 4:30 p.m., incident command asked for law enforcement to be expedited, as they need to evacuate the Highway 20 corridor from Clearlake Lave down to Sulphur Bank Road. A lot of vehicle traffic is building up in that area.
Incident command estimated the fire to be between 10 and 15 acres just after 4:30 p.m.
Radio traffic indicated the helicopter is conducting water drops on the fire.
Just before 6:15 p.m., the sheriff's office reported evacuations were lifted for Morine Ranch Road.
As of 7:10 p.m., the California Highway Patrol said Highway 20 was open to one-way traffic between Sulphur Bank Road and Highway 53.
Additional information will be published as it becomes available.
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.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – US Forest Service officials on Tuesday afternoon released new information about the death of a firefighter that occurred on the August Complex on the Mendocino National Forest.
Forest officials said three firefighters were involved in a vehicle crash on the Tatham fire within the complex on Monday.
One firefighter died, a second was receiving attention for burns to their hand and arm, while the third firefighter involved received no injuries, forest officials reported.
"This was a tragic incident and our hearts go out to the family, friends and colleagues of the fallen firefighter," said Acting Forest Supervisor Sandra Moore. "Right now we are committed to providing support to those involved, while safely continuing firefighting operations.”
Forest Service officials, Federal Southern Area Blue Team Incident Management and Cal Fire Incident Management Team 4 are working to support the families, who have been notified, officials said.
The California Highway Patrol is currently leading the investigation. Forest Service officials said more details will be made available as they are confirmed.
The August Complex, burning since Aug. 17 and caused by thunderstorms, has burned 242,941 acres and is 20-percent contained, officials said Tuesday afternoon.
The Tatham fire, the portion of the complex where the firefighter’s death occurred, is 15,594 acres and burning in southwest Tehama County.
Approximately 690 personnel are assigned to the complex, the Forest Service 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.
The August Complex as mapped on Tuesday, September 1, 2020. Map courtesy of the US Forest Service.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – One firefighter has died and another was injured while working on the August Complex in the Mendocino National Forest.
Late Monday night, the US Forest Service confirmed the death of the firefighter in an incident that occurred earlier in the day.
A second firefighter is receiving medical attention, the Forest Service said.
Additional details – including information about where on the forest the incident had occurred – were not immediately available, according to Forest Service spokesman Michael R. Williams.
“We are still gathering details and will release additional information as it becomes available,” Williams told Lake County News.
The complex, burning since Aug. 17 in remote portions of the forest, grew to 236,288 acres on Monday afternoon, with containment at 20 percent.
The largest fires in the complex, primarily on the Grindstone Ranger District portion of the forest, include the Doe, 177,536 acres, 59 percent contained; the Glade, 25,358 acres, 0 percent contained; and the Tatham, 14,457 acres, 9 percent contained, the Forest Service reported.
On the Upper Lake Ranger District, the Hull fire north of Lake Pillsbury was at 11,109 acres and 10 percent contained on Monday, the Forest Service reported. Over the weekend officials said the Hull and the Doe actually burned together in the area of Rattlesnake Creek.
More than 670 firefighters were assigned to the incident on Monday, with officials reporting that 200 military personnel also are due to arrive this week to assist the firefighting effort.
Forest officials had reported over the weekend that crews are working in very rugged and steep terrain, some of it too difficult for even hotshot teams to get into safety.
Just two years ago, the Ranch fire portion of the 459,123-acre Mendocino Complex left a large fire scar in the Mendocino National Forest.
Katy Hooper, a spokesperson for the August Complex’s management team, said crews are working in the area of the old Ranch fire scar, using established fire line and fuel breaks to slow the August Complex.
Like the August Complex, the Ranch fire resulted in the death of a firefighter. Battalion Chief Matthew Burchett of the Draper City Fire Department in Utah died Aug. 13, 2018, when he was hit by a falling tree.
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.
The August Complex as mapped on Monday, August 31, 2020, image courtesy of the US Forest Service.
Jose Feliciano Medina Jimenez was convicted of the felony charges of arson and resisting executive officers by means of threat or violence for a fire that occurred on Saturday, June 20, 2020, near Clearlake Oaks, California. Lake County Jail photo. LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Clearlake man has been sentenced to state prison for setting a June fire that occurred east of Clearlake Oaks.
On Monday, Judge J. David Markham sentenced Jose Feliciano Medina Jimenez, 27, to four years in state prison for felony violations of arson of forest land and resisting executive officers by means of threat or violence, said Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Hinchcliff.
At the same time, Hinchcliff said Judge Markham ordered Jimenez to register as an arson offender for the rest of his life.
Sheriff’s deputies responded to the area of Mule Skinner Road and Highway 20 east of Clearlake Oaks on June 20 in response to a vegetation fire, as Lake County News has reported.
Sheriff’s Deputy Matthew McCabe arrived and contacted Jimenez standing in the middle of Highway 20 waving his arms, according to investigative reports by the Lake County Sheriff’s Office and Cal Fire.
When McCabe attempted to speak to Jimenez, Jimenez removed a large knife from his pocket. Jimenez ignored numerous commands to drop the knife and walked toward McCabe twice with the knife in his hand, the investigative reports said.
After about 10 minutes McCabe was able to get Jimenez to get rid of the knife and was able to handcuff Jimenez. When McCabe tried to place him in his patrol vehicle Jimenez began violently thrashing around, based on the reports.
Jimenez was placed in the vehicle with the assistance of other deputies arriving on the scene. One officer suffered a laceration to his knee, authorities reported.
While in the patrol vehicle, authorities said Jimenez attempted to kick the door open. When deputies opened the door Jimenez jumped out of the vehicle toward the deputies and violently resisted the deputies. The deputies were able to restrain Jimenez with a leg restraint and end his resistance and combativeness.
The reports said a Bic lighter was located in Jimenez’s pocket and he was determined to be under the influence of methamphetamine.
Deputy Antonio Castellanos and Cal Fire arson investigator Gary Uboldi interviewed Jimenez. The reports said Jimenez admitted starting the fire, claiming he became paranoid from the methamphetamine and believed people were spying on him and were going to hurt him.
Jimenez admitted to starting the fire in an effort to get the people to leave. He also admitted to starting the fire in an area with plywood and tires near a tree where it was dry and would be conducive to starting a fire, officials said.
Jimenez also admitted that at the time all of this occurred he had been working cultivating and tending marijuana plants on the property. The sheriff’s reports said deputies eradicated 352 marijuana plants from the property.
Cal Fire investigators Gary Uboldi and Brandon Bertolino conducted the origin and cause investigation for the fire, which fire officials said burned six acres and was quickly suppressed by Cal Fire using multiple engines and aircraft.
Cal Fire prevented the fire from possibly burning hundreds or thousands of acres and numerous structures due to the dry conditions and rural, brushy and steep terrain in the area, Hinchcliff said.
Hinchcliff said Jimenez’s prior criminal history included a conviction in 2017 for driving under the influence causing injury and two federal convictions in 2014 and 2018 for illegal entry into the United States.
Hinchcliff, who handles most of the fire-related prosecutions for Lake County including this case, charged Jimenez with arson, resisting officers and marijuana cultivation. Thomas Feimer was appointed as a public defender to represent Jimenez.
On Aug. 4, pursuant to a plea agreement negotiated with the District Attorney’s Office, Jimenez pleaded no contest to felony arson of forest land and felony resisting officers, with an agreed-upon potential sentence of up to four years state prison, Hinchcliff said.
At the Tuesday sentencing, in addition to sentencing Jimenez to four years in prison and ordering him to register as an arson offender, Hinchcliff said Judge Markham also ordered him to pay $1,200 in restitution.
Hinchcliff said restitution also was reserved for Cal Fire.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Firefighters pushed containment still higher on the LNU Lightning Complex on Monday, continuing to hold the third-largest fire in the state’s history to no new growth.
The complex, which has been burning for two weeks following a round of lightning storms, remained at 375,209 acres on Monday, with containment up to 66 percent, Cal Fire said.
The fires on the complex include the 317,609-acre Hennessey, burning in Colusa, Lake, Napa, Solano and Yolo counties, which is 64-percent contained; the Walbridge fire west of Healdsburg, at 54,940 acres and 70-percent contained; and the Meyers fire north of Jenner, which remains at 2,360 acres and 99-percent containment, according to Cal Fire’s Monday evening report.
Assigned resources have begun to be reduced slightly. On Monday, Cal Fire said there were 2,730 personnel, 277 engines, 59 water tenders, 19 helicopters, 46 hand crews and 59 dozers.
Cal Fire reported that the number of structures threatened by the complex is down to 3,375 – about a tenth of what it was at its height – with structures destroyed remaining at 1,209 and those damaged at 193.
Much of the structure damage has been in Napa, Solano and Sonoma counties. To date, nine structures – eight of them homes – have been reported destroyed in Lake County.
Evacuation orders and warnings for parts of southern Lake County remained in place on Monday night, Cal Fire reported.
Those included evacuation orders for part of Jerusalem Valley and east of Hidden Valley Lake, east of Middletown and the Lower Lake area west of the Lake County line, while evacuation warnings are still in effect for Middletown and Lower Lake.
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.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region, and the National Interagency Fire Center have coordinated with the Department of Defense for the deployment of approximately 200 soldiers plus command staff to help with wildfire suppression efforts in Northern California.
The soldiers are due to arrive early this week from the 14th Brigade Engineer Battalion, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, I Corps, from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington.
The soldiers will be deployed on the August Complex on the Mendocino National Forest after conducting additional ground training and fireline certification.
The August Complex started on August 17, 2020, from 37 different lightning fires. Many of those fires have been contained or have merged to form larger fires. As of Monday night, the Complex was 236,288 acres and 20-percent contained.
“This support will provide additional capacity to ensure firefighting resources are available to respond to ongoing and emerging wildfires in California,” said Randy Moore, regional forester for the Pacific Southwest Region. “I thank the U.S. military for their continued support with these soldiers, as well as C-130 aircraft, equipped with Modular Airborne Fire Fighting Systems units. Their assistance with wildfire suppression efforts for California’s wildfires is greatly appreciated.”
This is the first active-duty military mobilization for wildfire support in California since the Mendocino Complex Fire in 2018.
U.S. Army North, U.S. Northern Command’s Joint Force Land Component Command (JFLCC) will oversee the operations, providing personnel and command and staff support.
“For more than four decades, the Department of Defense has maintained an interagency agreement with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of the Interior to provide firefighting support to wildland fire management agencies when requested,” said Lt. Gen. Laura J. Richardson, U.S. Army North (Fifth Army) and JFLCC commander. “During that time, federal military ground forces have mobilized 37 times to support wildland firefighting response efforts, and it is an honor to oversee such a mobilization again in support of our partners and America.”
There are 38 large wildfires currently burning in California, with more than 1.5 million acres burned so far this year.
August Complex incident information is posted on InciWeb.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday night announced that he has signed legislation to protect millions of tenants from eviction and property owners from foreclosure due to the economic impacts of COVID-19.
These protections apply to tenants who declare an inability to pay all or part of the rent due to a COVID-related reason.
“COVID-19 has impacted everyone in California – but some bear much more of the burden than others, especially tenants struggling to stitch together the monthly rent, and they deserve protection from eviction,” said Gov. Newsom. “This new law protects tenants from eviction for non-payment of rent and helps keep homeowners out of foreclosure as a result of economic hardship caused by this terrible pandemic.”
Newsom added, “California is stepping up to protect those most at-risk because of COVID-related nonpayment, but it’s just a bridge to a more permanent solution once the federal government finally recognizes its role in stabilizing the housing market. We need a real, federal commitment of significant new funding to assist struggling tenants and homeowners in California and across the nation.”
On Friday, the governor, Senate President pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon announced an agreement on the legislation, AB 3088, co-authored by Assemblymembers David Chiu (D-San Francisco) and Monique Limón (D-Santa Barbara) and Senators Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) and Anna Caballero (D-Salinas).
Under the legislation, no tenant can be evicted before Feb. 1, 2021, as a result of rent owed due to a COVID-19 related hardship accrued between March 4 and Aug. 31, 2020, if the tenant provides a declaration of hardship according to the legislation's timelines.
For a COVID-19-related hardship that accrues between Sept. 1, 2020, and Jan. 31, 2021, tenants must also pay at least 25 percent of the rent due to avoid eviction.
Tenants are still responsible for paying unpaid amounts to landlords, but those unpaid amounts cannot be the basis for an eviction. Landlords may begin to recover this debt on March 1, 2021, and small claims court jurisdiction is temporarily expanded to allow landlords to recover these amounts. Landlords who do not follow the court evictions process will face increased penalties under the Act.
The legislation also extends anti-foreclosure protections in the Homeowner Bill of Rights to small landlords; provides new accountability and transparency provisions to protect small landlord borrowers who request CARES-compliant forbearance; and provides the borrower who is harmed by a material violation with a cause of action.
Additional legal and financial protections for tenants include:
– Extending the notice period for nonpayment of rent from 3 to 15 days to provide the tenant additional time to respond to landlord’s notice to pay rent or quit. – Requiring landlords to provide hardship declaration forms in a different language if rental agreement was negotiated in a different language. – Providing tenants a backstop if they have a good reason for failing to return the hardship declaration within 15 days. – Requiring landlords to provide tenants a notice detailing their rights under the Act. – Limiting public disclosure of eviction cases involving nonpayment of rent between March 4, 2020, and Jan. 31, 2021. – Protecting tenants against being evicted for “just cause” if the landlord is shown to be really evicting the tenant for COVID-19-related nonpayment of rent.
Existing local ordinances can generally remain in place until they expire and future local action cannot undermine this Act’s framework.
Nothing in the legislation affects a local jurisdiction’s ability to adopt an ordinance that requires just cause, provided it does not affect rental payments before Jan. 31, 2021.
Wynona Starr Anderson, 29, of Nice, California, was arrested on Sunday, August 30, 2020, for the murder of her boyfriend, 29-year-old Yancy McCloud Jr. of Nice. Lake County Jail photo. LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport Police Department said it has arrested a local woman for homicide in the death of her boyfriend.
Wynona Starr Anderson, 29, of Nice, is being held for the murder of 29-year-old Yancy McCloud Jr. of Nice, said Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen.
Rasmussen said that at 1:15 a.m. Sunday the California Highway Patrol responded to the 3400 block of Lakeshore Boulevard in unincorporated north Lakeport to investigate the report of a vehicle hitting a utility pole.
Initial radio reports on the incident described the vehicle as a Dodge Durango, with the crash shearing off a utility pole and leaving debris across the roadway.
When the officers arrived at the scene, they found Anderson, the vehicle’s driver, with McCloud, the passenger, unresponsive in the car, Rasmussen said.
Lakeport Fire Protection District personnel tried to resuscitate McCloud, who was transported to Sutter Lakeside Hospital, according to radio reports. Rasmussen said McCloud was pronounced dead at the hospital.
While at the crash scene, Rasmussen said the CHP arrested Anderson for driving under the influence, driving without a license, being under the influence of controlled substances and an unrelated misdemeanor arrest warrant. Booking records show that the arrest took place shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday.
Rasmussen said investigators determined that McCloud did not have injuries consistent with a vehicle crash and they believe he was dead prior to the wreck.
He said information developed during the course of the initial investigation pointed to the couple being in an altercation in the city of Lakeport prior to the crash taking place, with McCloud dying of injuries inflicted during that fight.
Based on that information, CHP officers contacted the Lakeport Police Department, which immediately began a homicide investigation, Rasmussen said.
During the course of the investigation that took place throughout the day on Sunday, Rasmussen said Lakeport Police officers developed information confirming the investigation’s earlier conclusions.
“Based on the facts and circumstances known to us, officers believed that McCloud was the victim of homicide committed by Anderson,” Rasmussen said in his Monday report.
At approximately 2 p.m. on Sunday, Lakeport Police officers arrested and booked Anderson for murder, Rasmussen said.
At the time of the homicide arrest, Anderson remained in custody at the Lake County Correctional Facility, where she had been booked after her early Sunday morning arrest, Rasmussen said.
Anderson remains in custody on bail of $1 million, according to jail records.
Rasmussen confirmed that Anderson and McCloud were in a dating relationship and said his department has had previous contacts with both of them.
Online booking records show that Anderson has had previous arrests in Tehama County for alcohol- and drug-related offenses, and a 2009 arrest in Lake County for grand theft.
Rasmussen said the investigation is ongoing. The work still to be done includes an examination of the vehicle, which is in police custody, along with evidence processing and an autopsy to determine the cause and manner of McCloud’s death.
He said his department is working with the coroner’s office to schedule McCloud’s autopsy for this week.
Anyone with information regarding the activities of McCloud and Anderson during the day prior to this incident is asked to contact Lakeport Police Lt. Dale Stoebe at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or by telephone at 707-263-5491.
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.