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Man arrested after domestic violence dispute in San Luis Obispo

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) – San Luis Obispo Police arrested a man after reports of a domestic violence dispute at the 900 block of Valecito just before 11:00 p.m. Friday.

The victim talked to police on the phone after the man, who had been drinking, got physical with her and left the home, according to the SLOPD.

SLOPD officers ordered a shelter-in-place before they found the 35-year-old man in the domestic dispute and later detained him.

SLOPD officers then found several firearms and brass knuckles in the man's car near the home.

Further investigation revealed the 35-year-old pushed the woman mulitple times, prevented her from exiting the house and poured juice and gasoline on her car, according to the SLOPD.

SLOPD officers arrested the 35-year-old on the following charges where he is being held without bail:

  • felony false imprisonment with force
  • felony vandalism
  • misdemeanor domestic battery
  • misdemeanor possession of brass knuckles

The post Man arrested after domestic violence dispute in San Luis Obispo appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

A 9-year-old in France was found locked in a van since 2024, malnourished and unable to walk

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Story by Associated Press

Paris (AP) — A 9-year-old boy has been rescued after living locked in his father’s utility van in eastern France since 2024, according to the local prosecutor. The child has been hospitalized, and his father detained.

Police were alerted by a neighbor to the “sounds of a child” coming from a van on Monday in the village of Hagenbach, near the borders with Switzerland and Germany, according to a statement on Saturday from prosecutor Nicolas Heitz.

After forcing the van open, officers found the child “lying in a fetal position, naked, covered by a blanket on top of a mound of trash and near excrement,″ Heitz said.

The boy was clearly malnourished and could no longer walk after being in a seated position for so long, according to the statement.

The boy’s father told investigators that he put the child in the truck in November 2024 “to protect him” because his partner wanted to send the then 7-year-old to a psychiatric hospital, the prosecutor said.

Heitz said there was no medical record that the boy had any psychiatric problems before he disappeared and that he had had good grades in school.

The boy told investigators that he had “big difficulties” with his father’s partner and thought his father “had no choice” but to lock him up, according to the prosecutor. He said he hadn’t showered since 2024.

The father was handed preliminary kidnapping and other charges and kept in custody. His partner denied knowledge that the boy was in the van, according to the prosecutor. She was handed preliminary charges, including for failure to help a minor in danger, and released under judicial supervision.

The boy’s 12-year-old sister and the 10-year-old daughter of his father’s partner were placed in the care of social services.

The prosecutor’s office is investigating whether others were aware of the boy’s detention.

Friends and family told investigators they thought the boy was in a psychiatric institution. His teachers were told he had transferred to a different school, according to the prosecutor’s office.

The authorities have not released the names of the victim or his relatives.

Hagenbach residents contacted by The Associated Press expressed shock on Saturday over the cases and said they were unaware of the boy’s whereabouts, but didn’t want to discuss details.

The prosecutor declined to comment further to AP pending further investigation.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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The post A 9-year-old in France was found locked in a van since 2024, malnourished and unable to walk appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Late season storm moving through, April 12th forecast

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Rain on Water

Our late season storm system will continue to push through the region as we head through Sunday and possibly linger in to early Monday. Expect scattered showers with the chance for isolated thunderstorms which could then produce heavy downpours, strong wind, hail and even waterspouts or tornadoes. The chance for thunder appears to be pretty slim, but any chance means we all need to be vigilant and keep a close eye on the immediate changing forecast. Overnight lows will be in the 50's with a few upper 40's possible. Highs on Sunday will be mostly in the 50's and 60's. Showers could produce between a tenth of an inch up to three quarters of an inch. Again, if thunderstorms occur, rainfall totals could be higher for some areas. We do have one official advisory and that is for the mountains of Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties where up to 6 inches of snow could fall above 6000 feet through early Monday.

Looking ahead, scattered showers will be possible through early Monday before direr air rushes in behind the exiting storm system. Temperatures on Monday will start the week on the cool side before warming occurs through the middle of the week and toward the weekend. The Pacific storm track will stay very active with at ;east two more systems approaching the West Coast over the next ten days or so.  Our forecast models keep hinting that the storms will come close, but rain and mountain snow should stay mostly to our north. The first chance will occur about mid week with the following chance occurring over next weekend. We will monitor closely and see if the models show any changes and rainfall comes back in to the extended forecast.

Click here to download our First Alert Weather App.

The post Late season storm moving through, April 12th forecast appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

“Estamos unidos para siempre”: astronautas de Artemis II aparecen públicamente por primera vez tras su regreso a la Tierra

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Por Jackie Wattles y Ashley Strickland, CNN en Español

Fue una bienvenida de héroes para la tripulación de cuatro personas de Artemis II tras un amerizaje impecable en el océano Pacífico el viernes por la noche.

Los astronautas llegaron este sábado a Ellington Field, en el Centro Espacial Johnson en Houston, entre vítores, una ovación de pie y abrazos del administrador de la NASA, Jared Isaacman, y se reencontraron con sus familias por primera vez desde que concluyó su histórico viaje de 10 días alrededor de la Luna.

Isaacman se refirió a la misión como “la mayor aventura en la historia de la humanidad”.

Los astronautas —Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover y Christina Koch, de la NASA, y el astronauta de la Agencia Espacial Canadiense Jeremy Hansen— completaron un sobrevuelo lunar que batió récords, viajando más profundo en el espacio de lo que ningún ser humano se había aventurado antes. La misión Artemis II fue un vuelo de prueba, que sirvió como experimento para sentar las bases de futuras misiones. Pero el momento de reunirse con sus seres queridos ha sido de lo más esperado del viaje de la tripulación.

“Victor, Christina y Jeremy, estamos unidos para siempre, y nadie aquí abajo va a saber jamás por lo que los cuatro acabamos de pasar”, dijo Wiseman. “Y fue lo más especial que me pasará en la vida”.

Wiseman reconoció que nadie sabrá realmente por lo que pasaron las familias de la tripulación.

“No fue fácil estar a más de 322.000 kilómetros de casa”, dijo Wiseman. “Antes del lanzamiento, se siente como el mayor sueño en la Tierra, y cuando estás allá afuera, solo quieres volver con tus familias y tus amigos. Es algo especial ser humano y es algo especial estar en el planeta Tierra”. Wiseman estaba visiblemente conmovido, y los cuatro miembros de la tripulación se pusieron de pie para abrazarse en el escenario.

Glover admitió que aún no ha procesado por completo toda la misión y “lo que acabamos de hacer”, pero se mostró lleno de gratitud.

“Cuando esto empezó, quería agradecer a Dios en público, y quiero agradecer a Dios de nuevo, porque incluso más grande que mi desafío de intentar describir lo que vivimos, la gratitud de ver lo que vimos, hacer lo que hicimos y estar con quienes estuve, es demasiado grande para caber en un solo cuerpo”, dijo Glover.

“Y quería agradecer a nuestras familias por todo”, añadió. “Las amo, pero no solo a esas cinco hermosas mujeres de piel morena ahí mismo”, dijo Glover, señalando a su familia. “A todos ustedes”.

Koch contó que su enfermera en el barco de recuperación de la Marina le pidió un abrazo anoche, uno de muchos grandes “momentos humanos” que marcaron el inicio y el final de la misión, dijo. Artemis II realmente le enseñó el significado de lo que es formar parte de una tripulación, añadió Koch.

“Una tripulación es un grupo que está en esto todo el tiempo, pase lo que pase, que rema junto cada minuto con el mismo propósito, que está dispuesto a sacrificarse en silencio el uno por el otro, que otorga gracia, que exige rendición de cuentas”, dijo Koch. “Una tripulación tiene las mismas preocupaciones y las mismas necesidades, y una tripulación está ineludiblemente, de manera hermosa y responsable, vinculada”.

Dijo que una de sus revelaciones más fuertes llegó al observar a la Tierra verse diminuta a través de la ventana de Orion, y toda la negrura a su alrededor.

“Sé que aún no he aprendido todo lo que este viaje todavía tiene que enseñarme”, dijo Koch. “Pero hay una cosa nueva que sé, y es esta: planeta Tierra, ustedes son una tripulación”.

Hansen también señaló que la experiencia humana ha sido extraordinaria para él y sus compañeros de tripulación, y pareció entusiasmado al saber que fue igual para todos en la Tierra que siguieron la misión.

“Tenemos un término en nuestra tripulación que acuñamos hace mucho tiempo: el ‘tren de la alegría’”, dijo Han

History-making astronauts share first public remarks post-splashdown

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

By Jackie Wattles, Ashley Strickland, CNN

(Houston) — It was a hero’s welcome for the four-person Artemis II crew following a textbook splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on Friday evening.

The astronauts arrived Saturday at Ellington Field at Johnson Space Center in Houston to cheers, a standing ovation and hugs from NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman. The crewmates reunited with their families at the site for the first time since their historic 10-day journey around the moon concluded.

Isaacman referred to the mission as “the greatest adventure in human history.”

The crew — NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen — completed a record-breaking lunar flyby. The astronauts traveled deeper into space than any human had ventured before. The Artemis II mission was a test flight, serving as an experiment to lay the groundwork for future missions. But the moment of reuniting with their loved ones has been among the most anticipated steps of the crew’s journey.

“Victor, Christina and Jeremy, we are, we are bonded forever, and no one down here is ever going to know what the four of us just went through,” Wiseman said. “And it was the most special thing that will ever happen in my life.”

No place like planet Earth

Wiseman acknowledged that no one will truly know what the crew’s families went through.

“This was not easy being 200,000-plus miles away from home,” Wiseman said. “Like, before you launch it feels like it’s the greatest dream on Earth, and when you’re out there, you just want to get back to your families and your friends. It’s a special thing to be a human and it’s a special thing to be on planet Earth.” Wiseman was visibly choked up, and the four crewmembers stood to hug on stage.

Glover admitted he has not fully processed the entire mission and “what we just did” yet, but was full of gratitude.

“When this started, I wanted to thank God in public, and I want to thank God again, because even bigger than my challenge trying to describe what we went through, the gratitude of seeing what we saw, doing what we did, and being with who I was with, it’s too big to just be in one body,” Glover said.

“And I wanted to thank our families for everything,” he added. “I love you, but not just those five beautiful cocoa-skinned ladies right there,” Glover said, gesturing to his family. “All of you.”

‘You are a crew’

Koch shared that her nurse on the Navy recovery ship asked her for a hug last night, one of many great “human moments” that began and ended the mission, she said. Artemis II truly taught her the meaning of what it is to be part of a crew, Koch said.

“A crew is a group that is in it all the time, no matter what, that is stroking together every minute with the same purpose, that is willing to sacrifice silently for each other, that gives grace, that holds accountable,” Koch said. “A crew has the same cares and the same needs, and a crew is inescapably beautifully, dutifully linked.”

She said one of her strongest revelations came while observing Earth appear tiny through the window of Orion, and all of the blackness around it.

“I know I haven’t learned everything that this journey has yet to teach me,” Koch said. “But there’s one new thing I know, and that is planet Earth: You are a crew.”

Shared humanity and family ties

Hansen also noted that the human experience has been an extraordinary one for he and his crewmates — and seemed thrilled to learn it was the same way for everyone on Earth who followed the mission.

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