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Twelve-year-old in stable condition after being hit by vehicle while riding an e-bike at DeVaul Park Saturday

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) – A 12-year-old had major injuries after they were hit while riding an e-bike at DeVaul Park near the intersection of Spooner Drive and Welsh Court Saturday.

The child has undergone several surgeries since the collision and is currently listed in stable condition at an out-of-the-area trauma center shared the San Luis Obispo Police Department in a press release Tuesday.

On May 9, around 4:30 p.m., first responders were called to the scene of a bicycle versus a vehicle incident at DeVaul Park stated the local police department.

Arriving first responders found a 12-year-old with major injuries and the child was initially treated at a local hospital before being flown out of the area due to the significance of their injuries explained the San Luis Obispo Police Department.

The driver of the involved vehicle is a San Luis Obispo resident and they are cooperating with the ongoing investigation, but at this point, impairment does not appear to have been a factor in the collision detailed the San Luis Obispo Police Department.

According to the San Luis Obispo Police Department, a preliminary investigation revealed that the 12-year-old was riding an electric bicycle while not wearing a helmet at the time of the collision.

The post Twelve-year-old in stable condition after being hit by vehicle while riding an e-bike at DeVaul Park Saturday appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Exclusive: CIA escalates secret war on cartels with deadly operations inside Mexico

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By Natasha Bertrand, Zachary Cohen, Evan Perez, Mauricio Torres, CNN

(CNN) — Earlier this spring, a mysterious explosion blew up a car carrying an alleged cartel operative in broad daylight on one of Mexico’s busiest highways just outside of its capital city.

Francisco Beltran was killed instantly along with his driver, their bodies found slumped over in their seats after the concentrated blast. Video and pictures of the attack on March 28 show a quick burst of flames with the car continuing to roll forward, drifting off the highway.

Known as “El Payin,” Beltran was accused of being a mid-level member of the Sinaloa Cartel, one of Mexico’s most notorious drug trafficking syndicates, Mexican security analysts and sources familiar with his activities said.

Mexican authorities have maintained extreme secrecy around the explosion, but multiple sources tell CNN that the attack was a targeted assassination, facilitated by CIA operations officers. An explosive device had been hidden inside the vehicle, the State of Mexico’s Attorney General told CNN.

The Beltran operation was part of an expanded, and previously unreported, CIA campaign inside Mexico — spearheaded by the agency’s elite and secretive Ground Branch — to dismantle the entrenched cartel networks, those sources as well as two additional people familiar with the campaign told CNN. President Donald Trump has designated several of those groups foreign terrorist organizations and deemed them to be at war with the United States.

Since last year, CIA operatives inside Mexico have directly participated in deadly attacks on several, mostly mid-level cartel members, the sources said. “The lethality of their operations has been seriously ramped up,” said one of the people briefed on the operations. “It’s a significant expansion of the kind of thing the CIA has been willing to do inside Mexico.”

The level of CIA involvement with operations has varied, according to the sources, from more passive intelligence sharing and providing general support to direct participation in assassination operations.

The CIA declined to comment for this story. Several Mexican government agencies did not respond to requests for comment.

The attack on Beltran was brazen even by the standards of typical Mexican cartel violence, and Mexican analysts debated in the days afterward whether it could signal a worrying, sophisticated new dimension of cartel-on-cartel warfare.

“We have been living in anarchic war for many months in Sinaloa,” Mexican journalist Jose Cardenas said on his television show broadcast by Grupo Informa in the days after the attack. “But attacks like this, if confirmed, in an area near the country’s capital, well, I have never heard of anything similar.”

A former CIA paramilitary officer told CNN that knowing how the agency operates, ‘They definitely wanted this incident to create the question in everyone’s mind of, ‘Who did this?’”

The CIA’s involvement in recent operations targeting high-profile cartel figures, like Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, has been well-documented, though much of that activity has publicly been described as intelligence sharing.

But the agency’s covert activity inside Mexico goes far beyond those few cases that attracted international attention and involves much more direct participation, sources told CNN.

The strategy, the sources said, is to dismantle entire cartel networks, which involves not only removing those at the very top but also identifying vulnerabilities throughout the organization and systematically targeting lower-tier players who serve as key cogs in the trafficking enterprise.

Those operations often attract little attention outside

Pain at the pump, dining solo, Arctic mystery: Catch up on the day’s stories

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By Daniel Wine, CNN

👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! Renowned chef Hillary Sterling has worked in kitchens with some culinary icons. Every meal doesn’t have to be a big production, though — she shared her favorite recipe for dining solo.

Here’s what else you might have missed during your busy day.

5 things

1⃣ Pain at the pump

Gas prices are within striking distance of $5 a gallon, a threshold that seemed virtually impossible when the year started. The summer driving season is right around the corner, and that could push demand even higher.

2⃣ ‘Blue dot’ in a sea of red

It’s been a decade since Nebraska sent a Democrat to Congress, but a Republican’s decision to retire turned his district into a key November battleground. Today’s primary ballot is crowded with contenders.

3⃣ CNN Exclusive

Anderson Cooper sits down with former Acting FBI Director Brian Driscoll, who says he was fired by the Trump administration for refusing to purge agents who investigated the US Capitol attack on January 6, 2021.

4⃣ Mystery solved

Researchers identified the remains of four sailors from a doomed 19th-century Arctic expedition by matching DNA to their living descendants. Along the way, they cleared up a case of mistaken identity.

5⃣ Tough adjustment

After living in California, Ireland and Colorado, an American family settled down in a small town in Germany. They feel right at home now, but it wasn’t easy at first.

Watch this

💥 Crazy collision: A motorcycle ended up dangling from a traffic light pole after crashing into a car in British Columbia, authorities said. See how it happened.

Top headlines

Check this out

🧊 ‘Triple whammy’: For decades, it seemed Antarctica might be insulated from the kind of rapid ice melting unfolding in the Arctic. That changed several years ago, and now scientists say they’ve figured out why.

For CNN subscribers

  • He earned a Purple Heart fighting for the US. Swept up in Trump’s immigration crackdown, Read more

The City of Brotherly Love will see this sibling duo contend for the PGA Championship

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CNN

By Patrick Snell, CNN

Newtown Square, Pennsylvania (CNN) — With the PGA Championship taking place just a few miles outside of the City of Brotherly Love this week, it’s certainly appropriate that two English siblings find themselves in contention for a major title.

Last month, Matt and Alex Fitzpatrick teamed up to share an emotional and historic win at the Zurich Classic before Alex recorded back-to-back top 10 finishes in his first two solo PGA Tour starts. That victory in New Orleans was Matt’s third in four tournaments, while Alex’s followed a breakthrough career triumph in India the previous month.

“It’s kind of really hard to describe. If someone had told me you’d win your first DP World Tour event and then a couple of weeks later you’d win on the PGA Tour, I’d have never ever believed you,” Alex Fitzpatrick told CNN Sports this week.

“Everything has changed,” the young Englishman added.

It’s never easy growing up in the shadow of your older brother, especially when he’s the 2022 US Open winner, but Alex Fitzpatrick has done a pretty good job of it.

For years, it was Matt’s name grabbing the headlines, but the narrative has now indeed changed and that’s just fine as far as the older Fitzpatrick brother is concerned. Matt says he’s both impressed and “super proud” of Alex’s recent achievements.

“I’m probably known as Alex’s brother now, as opposed to him being Matt’s brother,” Matt Fitzpatrick told reporters on Monday at Aronimink Golf Club outside Philadelphia while admitting it would be a “weird feeling” if the pair were ever battling it out to win a tournament.

The last few weeks have been a whirlwind of emotions for the younger Fitzpatrick who, before that win in Louisiana, was scheduled to immediately travel to Turkey to compete in an event there.

That trip never happened though, as winning in the Big Easy paved the way for the 27-year-old from Sheffield to earn his PGA Tour card through 2028, as well as entry into the lucrative $20 million signature events – not to mention a place in the second men’s major of the year.

He goes into the tournament in red-hot form, too, following a tied-for-ninth finish at the Cadillac Championship, then a fourth-place finish this past Sunday in North Carolina, having had a one-shot overnight lead going into the final round.

This will be Alex’s second start in a major following an impressive showing in his first at the 2023 Open Championship, where he finished tied for 17th and four shots better off than his older brother.

“The majors are the biggest events of the year. That was one of the goals of this year, to try and get into a major and I didn’t know how I was going to do it but they’re the most amazing events. And playing in the Open Championship, in front of a home crowd, was unbelievable, so I was super excited to try and get that opportunity again to play in one of the majors,” Alex said.

In a matter of just weeks, Alex’s life has turned on its head. With a trio of top 10 finishes and having won the best part of $3 million in his last three tournaments, Alex Fitzpatrick’s stock is very much on the rise.

It’s all a far cry from growing up as Matt’s younger brother.

“It’s very strange. I grew up following him ar

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