Santa Barbara County News and Events

Sunny Saturday, warm weekend March 1st

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SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. - We will cool slightly on Saturday but remain in the high 70s and 80s with mostly clear skies.

Temperatures will drop for some areas like Santa Maria and Lompoc back into the 60s starting Sunday and lasting through Tuesday or Wednesday.

After that, cooler areas will warm back into the low 70s. Santa Barbara is the 70s for the full 7 day forecast.

There will also be an increase in cloud coverage for early next week but that only lasts through about Tuesday with lots of sunshine to follow.

There are no rain chances present through mid March.

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Neil Sedaka, the singer-songwriter behind dozens of hits of the 1960s and ‘70s, dies at age 86

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By The Associated Press

Neil Sedaka, the hit-making singer-songwriter whose boyish soprano and bright melodies made him a top act in the early years of rock ‘n’ roll and led to a second run of success in the 1970s, has died.

Sedaka, whose hits included “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do” and “Laugher in the Rain,” died Friday at age 86.

“Our family is devastated by the sudden passing of our beloved husband, father and grandfather, Neil Sedaka,” his family said in a statement. “A true rock and roll legend, an inspiration to millions, but most importantly, at least to those of us who were lucky enough to know him, an incredible human being who will be deeply missed.”

No other details of his death were immediately available.

A key member of the Brill Building songwriting factory, Sedaka teamed with lyricist and boyhood neighbor Howard Greenfield on songs that reflected the teen innocence of the post-Elvis/pre-Beatles era of the late 1950s-early 1960s, including “Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen,” “Calendar Girl” and “Oh! Carol,” a lament for his high school sweetheart, Carole King.

After a long dry spell, he reemerged with such smashes as “Laughter in the Rain” and “Bad Blood.” The Captain & Tennille’s cover of his “Love Will Keep Us Together” was a chart-topper in 1975.

Short and dark-haired, with a big smile and high-pitched voice, he was a Juilliard-trained, Brooklyn-born son of a Jewish taxi driver who began performing as a teen and kept at it for decades.

Sedaka still played dozens of concerts a year well into his 80s. He retained the enthusiasm and broad vocal range of his youth and never tired of the standards he had sung hundreds of times.

“Past 70, Pavarotti told me the vocal cords are not what they used to be. I’m very fortunate that my voice has held,” he told The Associated Press in 2012. “It’s nice to be a legend, but it’s better to be a working legend.”

Sedaka’s songs sold millions worldwide and have been covered by a range of performers, from Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra to The 5th Dimension and Nickelback. Sedaka helped propel the career of Connie Francis with “Stupid Cupid” and “Where the Boys Are,” the latter for the soundtrack of the movie with the same name. The Captain & Tennille received a best-album Grammy thanks largely to “Love Will Keep Us Together” and included a nod to Sedaka at the end of the song, when Toni Tennille exclaimed “Sedaka’s back!”

Sedaka grew up in Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach neighborhood, pampered by his grandparents, aunts and mother in a two-bedroom apartment he shared with 11 relatives. He has a street there named in his honor, Neil Sedaka Way.

But his music compensated for his unpopularity as a kid, he once recalled. His talent was recognized by a second-grade teacher who urged his homemaker mother, Eleanor, to buy him a piano. She went to work in a department store to pay for a secondhand upright and managed his career for years, as did his wife, Leba.

Sedaka loved songwriting and never quit, but he craved performing.

“Once a performer, always a performer. It’s that adrenaline rush. It’s like a natural high when you’re in front of an audience, and if you get that standing ovation, it’s infectious,” he told the AP.

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The hunt for who kidnapped and killed 7-year-old Morgan Violi was cold for decades. Then came a break

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Melissa Blythe and her daughter Shenne Blythe

By Hannah Rabinowitz, CNN

(CNN) — Authorities say they now know who kidnapped and strangled 7-year-old Morgan Violi nearly 30 years ago.

Prosecutors say Robert Scott Froberg admitted to taking the girl in July 1996 during a prison escape. They say he snatched her near a Bowling Green, Kentucky, apartment building, drove her in a maroon van to a different town, strangled her with a handkerchief, and dumped her body — all before being recaptured.

Froberg had entirely evaded investigators’ suspicion until a recent re-test of hair collected from the van, prosecutors say. He now faces either life in prison or the death penalty.

“For years, this community has feared that Morgan’s abductor lived silently among us and that one of our kids could be next,” US Attorney Kyle Bumgarner said in a statement Friday. “Investigators in the FBI and the Bowling Green Police Department have worked tirelessly to bring justice for Morgan. They applied new technology, reexamined old evidence, and never stopped searching the truth.”

It was only recently that investigators had the ability to run a strand of hair they found at the scene through a national database — CODIS — that stores DNA from local, state and federal investigations, and match it to Froberg.

Using that match and piecing together Froberg’s associates — including a male nurse known to exchange money or assistance for sexual favors — the FBI and local police were able to identify him.

Froberg was already serving a lengthy prison sentence in Alabama for armed robbery the year that Violi went missing, but had escaped from a work detail and drove to Pennsylvania, prosecutors say. He was recaptured after a child discovered him on a playground and told their parent, but he quickly escaped custody once again.

In a Tuesday interview outlined in court documents, Froberg — now in his 60s — told investigators he then stole a car and started driving to Alabama to stay with a male nurse he met while incarcerated. Froberg stopped in Kentucky to buy marijuana, according to court documents, which is when he spotted Violi and another child playing in the parking lot.

Froberg allegedly told investigators that he grabbed Violi, who was “screaming” and “freaking out,” and that he told Violi they were going to see her father to calm her down. Investigators say he admitted to covering her mouth with his hand, strangling her in the maroon van he had stolen, and disposing of her body in the woods.

Froberg also cleaned and abandoned the van at a truck stop, where it was later found by authorities and swept for evidence. That is where investigators ultimately found a strand of his hair.

“Morgan fought,” Bumgarner said at news conference Friday, which Viori’s parents reportedly attended. “She screamed. She resisted. Morgan was a fighter.”

Froberg was captured and rearrested in August 1996 and has been in prison since.

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