Santa Barbara County News and Events

Pair of scammers arrested trying to pick up money after targeting local elderly resident

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) – Two men were arrested on Tuesday of this week in connection with a scam targeting an elderly resident.

On Feb. 24, around 11:30 a.m., deputies responded to a call about a suspected scam and were told by an elderly woman that the evening prior, Monday, Feb. 23, she withdrew $25,000 in cash and handed it to a courier she believed was a Deputy U.S. Marshal stated the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office in a press release Thursday.

The woman was contacted again on Tuesday and the caller demanded that the woman give an additional $25,000 claiming that the elderly woman's Social Security number and other identifying information had been compromised detailed the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office.

The scammers told the woman that they were trying to prevent any additional exposure of her private information and implied that she faced "adverse consequences" if they were not paid noted the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office.

When two men, a 21-year-old Tracy man and a 21-year-old man from Sacramento, arrived to collect the second payment, deputies arrested and booked the duo for multiple felonies including false personation, attempted grand theft, attempted financial elder abuse, and conspiracy to commit a crime explained the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office.

Bail for each man was set at $50,000 added the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office.

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office states that no government agency will request payment in cash, cryptocurrency, or gift cards and will not send couriers to collect payments.

Anyone who receives similar calls is urged to hang up immediately and report the incident to local law enforcement.

The post Pair of scammers arrested trying to pick up money after targeting local elderly resident appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

La Europa League define a sus clasificados para los octavos de final

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Por Pablo Antonio Garcia Escorihuela, CNN en Español

En la fiesta del segundo título en importancia de Europa, ya está servida la mesa.

La Europa League tiene a sus 16 clasificados para los octavos de final, en donde hay clubes con un historial interesante y donde la proporción de participantes está más repartida que en su hermana mayor, la Champions League.

Al Porto, el Braga, el Midjtyland, el Real Betis, el Olympique Lyon, el Aston Villa, el Friburgo y la Roma se unieron este jueves al Genk, Ferencvaros, Panathinaikos, Celta de Vigo, Stuttgart, Nottingham Forest, Bologna y Lille para completar de esta forma el cuadro de participantes de los octavos de final, que comenzarán el 12 de marzo y se cerrarán el 19 de marzo con los partidos de ida y vuelta, respectivamente.

La distribución por países dejó a España (Betis y Celta), Francia (Lyon y Lille), Italia (Roma y Bologna), Portugal (Porto y Braga), Alemania (Stuttgart y Friburgo) e Inglaterra (Aston Villa y Nottingham Forest) con dos participantes en la ronda. Por su parte, Grecia (Panathinaikos), Hungría (Ferencvaros), Midtjylland (Dinamarca) y Bélgica (Genk) tienen un participante cada uno.

Aston Villa —por su presente en la Premier League de Inglaterra y por ser el segundo preclasificado— y los españoles Betis y Celta de Vigo son los equipos que lucen como rivales más fuertes de cara a la ronda de los 16 mejores del torneo.

No se puede descartar a dos clásicos europeos, como la Roma, que también está jugando a buen nivel en la Serie A, y el Porto, venido a menos en el campeonato local, pero que aseguró su cupo en la ronda de octavos de forma directa.

Los 16 equipos ahora enfilan sus baterías y ponen un solo objetivo en la mira: llegar a Estambul, donde se jugará la final de la competición en esta temporada, en el Besiktas Stadium el miércoles 20 de mayo.

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The post La Europa League define a sus clasificados para los octavos de final appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Santa Barbara A.I. Think Tank Helps Non-Profits Use A.I. for Good

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Santa Barbara A.I. Think Tank Helps Non-Profits Use A.I. for Good

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—Coastal Intelligence Founder Mike Wald is teaching non profits creative ways to use A.I.

“If you're curious. Person. Oh, this is a playground right now. This is like the best time to be alive,” said Wald.

Non profit leaders eagerly joined a free briefing at the Community Environmental County Hub on State Street Thursday morning.

“We took away, you know, the idea of the AI Council, AI policies, A.I. Data limitations,” said Santa Barbara Bowl Foundation Programs Director Eric Shiflett.

The session was designed to help local nonprofits integrate practical A.I. tools into their operations to increase efficiency, reduce administrative burden, and expand mission impact. 

Rich Sander says SBACT adopted A.I. into their nonprofit model early on.

“It's everything from analyzing data, helping onboard employees, helping look at all of our, documents because we're all nonprofit and making sure that they're legally compliant and are compliant and things that,” said SBACT Executive Director Rich Sander.

Much of the conversation revolved around reframing the way we look at A.I. as a helpful tool, not a replacement for human innovation.

“A lot of the nonprofits that we're working with are stressed at capacity, need funding, need more people power. And I can help with all of that,” said Sander.

“They already know how to do good with A.I. Does it have a force multiplier? They let them do more without additional funding, and without having to hire more staff, so they can actually invest the people that they have and use this new technology to advance their messaging and really expand that. What I like to call the ripple effect,” said Mike Wald.

Though A.I. is rapidly changing, many non profit leaders have high hopes for the future.

“What I always tell myself is AI is the worst that it's going to be today. So tomorrow it's just going to keep getting better,” said Rich Sander.

Coastal Intelligence is hosting a 2-day hands-on workshop where participants will receive customized A.I. coaching aligned with their mission. 

The workshop runs through Friday. 

The post Santa Barbara A.I. Think Tank Helps Non-Profits Use A.I. for Good appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Santa Barbara A.I. Think Tank Helps Non-Profits Use A.I. for Good

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) — Coastal Intelligence Founder, Mike Wald, is teaching non-profits creative ways to use A.I.

“If you're a curious person. Oh, this is a playground right now. This is like the best time to be alive,” said Wald.

Non-profit leaders eagerly joined a free briefing at the Community Environmental County Hub on State Street Thursday morning.

“We took away, you know, the idea of the A.I. council, A.I. policies, A.I. data limitations,” said Santa Barbara Bowl Foundation Programs Director, Eric Shiflett.

The session was designed to help local non-profits integrate practical A.I. tools into their operations to increase efficiency, reduce administrative burden, and expand mission impact. 

Rich Sander says SBACT adopted A.I. into their non-profit model early on.

“It's everything from analyzing data, helping onboard employees, helping look at all of our, documents because we're all non-profit and making sure that they're legally compliant and are compliant and things that,” said SBACT Executive Director Rich Sander.

Much of the conversation revolved around reframing the way we look at A.I. as a helpful tool, not a replacement for human innovation.

“A lot of the non-profits that we're working with are stressed at capacity, need funding, need more people power. And I can help with all of that,” said Sander.

“They already know how to do good with A.I. Does it have a force multiplier? They let them do more without additional funding, and without having to hire more staff, so they can actually invest the people that they have and use this new technology to advance their messaging and really expand that. What I like to call the ripple effect,” said Mike Wald.

Though A.I. is rapidly changing, many non-profit leaders have high hopes for the future.

“What I always tell myself is A.I. is the worst that it's going to be today. So tomorrow it's just going to keep getting better,” said Rich Sander.

Coastal Intelligence is hosting a 2-day hands-on workshop where participants will receive customized A.I. coaching aligned with their mission. 

The workshop runs through Friday. 

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post Santa Barbara A.I. Think Tank Helps Non-Profits Use A.I. for Good appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

How Dan Crenshaw’s feuds with Ted Cruz and MAGA threaten his political future

Kraig Pakulski 0 29 Article rating: No rating

By Sarah Ferris, Manu Raju, Adam Cancryn, CNN

(CNN) — As GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw and Sen. Ted Cruz prepared to board the same flight from Houston to Washington in recent months, the two famously brash Republicans had a tense exchange that now looms large over Crenshaw’s battle for political survival.

Crenshaw accused Cruz of working against him in his House primary. According to three people with direct knowledge of their interaction, Cruz responded: “If I’m working against you, you’re gonna know it.”

This week, Cruz made it known.

The junior Texas senator endorsed Steve Toth, a Texas state representative and a former megachurch pastor who is facing Crenshaw in Tuesday’s Republican primary. And he taped an ad that a pro-Toth super PAC is now airing in the Houston area.

“You deserve an unwavering fighter, a Republican who walks the walk,” Cruz says in the ad, which doesn’t mention Crenshaw.

Crenshaw, the Navy SEAL who has rocketed to national fame for his confrontational style, has spent years fighting with “Make America Great Again” allies who see him as insufficiently loyal to President Donald Trump. Now, days before his primary, Crenshaw’s previously unreported feud with Cruz reflects how the congressman is facing major enemies in his already tough reelection bid.

Trump has not endorsed a candidate in the race, making Crenshaw the only House Republican from Texas not to get the president’s backing.

“He told me he would — it’s up to him, he doesn’t owe me anything,” Crenshaw told CNN.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, too, endorsed 27 House Republicans for Congress this cycle without backing Crenshaw. And now Cruz is backing Toth.

The nasty primary between Crenshaw and Toth has mostly been out of the public eye. But it’s been increasingly ringing alarm bells in Washington as GOP leaders now believe Crenshaw could lose or at least be forced into a May 26 runoff.

Crenshaw has succeeded in close primary fights before. But those were against poorly funded opponents who still came close to unseating him. (His opponent in 2024 raised less than $30,000 but won 40% of the vote.)

In an interview, Crenshaw predicted he would win reelection in the Houston suburbs seat, telling CNN: “I see myself winning.”

Inside Crenshaw’s feud with Cruz

Crenshaw’s allies note that Cruz had initially endorsed his opponent in 2018. But over the years, tensions rose between the two Republicans – partly, according to multiple Texas GOP sources, as some Cruz allies feared that Crenshaw was preparing a primary bid against the senator in 2024.

Crenshaw denied such ambitions in a fiery call with Cruz in 2021, according to two people with knowledge of the conversation. Cruz began the call by thanking Crenshaw for defending him publicly shortly after the January 6 violence at the Capitol, when Cruz was facing national backlash for fundraising off the riot, those people told CNN.

Ahead of Cruz’s 2024 reelection run, the senator’s team privately and repeatedly asked Crenshaw for an endorsement for his reelection bid, according to two people familiar with the exchange.

But the two Texans were unable to connect by phone at the time, those people said, and an endorsement never happened.

A spokesperson for Cruz’s campaign denied that the senator ever asked for Crenshaw’s endorsement but declined to offer further detail.

Cruz stayed out of Crenshaw’s primary until last week, after Crenshaw Read more

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