Disco Inferno Funds Firefighting Foundation

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SUMMERLAND, Calif. (KEYT) Firefighters were guests of honor at the "Disco Inferno."

The Santa Barbara South Coast Firefighter Foundation hosted its Second Annual Disco Inferno on Sunday, Feb. 22nd.

It took place at The Hanger at Bella Vista Ranch in Summerland.

Foundation President Brian Lombardi said the money raised will help fund all sorts of things firefighters are involved with in the local community.

They include the Junior Lifeguard Program, swim lessons, helmet and pads for sports, and other community needs.

Gail Kvistad is a founding board member.

She said professional dancers did a disco demonstration.

Guests also enjoyed photo opportunities and an auction.

There is still time to donate to the foundation.

For more information visit https://sbsouthcoastff.com

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Cal Poly loses series finale and settles for a split in 4-game series with Washington State

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Gavin Spiridonoff celebrates his first collegiate home run

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) - Cal Poly could not hang onto a 4-3 lead and they dropped the series finale with Washington State 5-4. The two teams split the 4-game series.

The Cougars (3-4) tied the game at 4 in the top of the eighth inning on an RBI double by Luke Thiele and scored what proved to be the game-winner on an RBI ground out by Max Hartman in the 9th inning.

The Mustangs (4-3) erased a 3-1 deficit in the middle innings by getting a solo home run by freshman Gavin Spiridonoff which was his collegiate homer. They tied game in the sixth inning on a sacrifice fly by Vinnie VanderVel and tookj the lead in the seventh inning when Dante Vachini raced home on a wild pitch.

Cal Poly stays at home and begins a 4-game home stand with USC starting Thursday night with first pitch at 6 p.m.

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Five awards handed out at Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table luncheon at Harry’s

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Ethan Ono accepts his Athlete of the Week honor

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Double Athlete of the Week honors were handed out as there was no luncheon last week because of the Presidents' Day.

Girls Athlete of the Week: Jules Horton, Santa Barbara High School water polo: She scored 9 goals and drew 10 exclusions leading the Dons to playoff victories over Edison and Temple City. She scored the winning goal in overtime at Edison.

Girls Athlete of the Week: Eden Wynne, Bishop Diego High School basketball: She totaled 29 points in two playoff wins to lead the Cardinals into Saturday's CIF-Southern Section Division 5 championship game against Burroughs of Burbank.

Boys Athlete of the Week: Ethan Ono, Dos Pueblos High School wrestling: He went 5-0 to qualify fo the elite Master's meet.

Boys Athlete of the Week: Luis Campos, San Marcos High School soccer: He scored 5 goals in three playoff games including a highlight-reel bicycle kick for a golden goal in overtime to beat Mountain View in the quarterfinals.

The Phil Womble Ethics in Sports Award: Hazel Dugre, Carpinteria High School water polo and swimming: She has a 4.8 GPA and was complimented several times by her coaches for showing great character to her teammates and her opponents.

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US tourists stranded in Mexico amid ‘really scary’ cartel violence following drug lord’s killing

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Firefighters stand next to burned out buses in Puerto Vallarta


CNN

By Jack Guy, CNN

(CNN) — The killing of Mexican cartel leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes on Sunday set off a wave of retaliatory violence from his gunmen, affecting areas popular with foreign tourists such as Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara.

The US State Department advised Monday that more areas of Mexico have “returned to normal” following widespread unrest, but cautioned US citizens in Puerto Vallarta, Guadalajara, and Ciudad Guzman to continue to shelter in place. Several US airlines suspended flights to the popular resort town Puerto Vallarta, stranding many tourists who were desperate to escape the violence and return home.

CNN spoke to a number of those affected, including American Yoni Pizer, who lives in Puerto Vallarta and told CNN he was attacked by gunmen during Sunday’s violence, when the car he was driving in was hijacked, torched, and used to barricade a road.

Pizer said he was on his way to go whale watching with his husband and two friends when they came across a white truck stopped at an intersection.

“A young man came running with a gun pointed at our windshield to us, screaming in Spanish: Get out of the car! Get out of the car!” Pizer told CNN’s Jim Sciutto on Monday.

They jumped out of the vehicle. The gunman got into the driver’s seat and, with his gun in one hand, maneuvered the car to the intersection, Pizer said.

“(The gunman) threw an incendiary device or some sort of bomb in the car, which immediately exploded in flames. And then two seconds later, the truck was also on fire,” Pizer said.

As Pizer and his friends ran away, they heard explosions from the car and gunfire.

“Then they just started grabbing people as more traffic started coming toward the intersection. Some people were able to squeal and make u-turns and head away. Others were caught, and were dragged out of their cars. And their were cars were moved also to block the road.”

Chaos and confusion

Dallas resident Adryan Moorefield, who was set to travel home from Puerto Vallarta on Sunday but awoke to the news that members of organized crime groups had set buses on fire, blocked roads and clashed with authorities.

“It was such a complete shocker and it almost felt like being in the twilight zone,” Moorefield told CNN. “We’ve been to PV before and thought that this would be a no brainer place to come and do a quick, easy beach vacation.”

American tourist Jim Beck told CNN he ventured outside his hotel in Puerto Vallarta to get breakfast on Sunday and saw “taxi cabs blown up all over town, blocking the roads.”

“Then immediately, everyone was running down the street, screaming and yelling, and they told everyone to get back to their hotels,” Beck said.

Mari, another tourist who asked to go by her first name for privacy reasons, said her young family had been sheltering in their vacation rental and watching the unrest unfold outside.

“We have

Ofensiva contra los cárteles en México conlleva riesgos políticos para Trump

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Análisis por Stephen Collinson, CNN

El presidente Donald Trump había puesto a México sobre aviso: debía perseguir a los poderosos capos de la droga del país, o lo haría él.

La largamente esperada ofensiva de las autoridades mexicanas llegó cuando el capo del narcotráfico más buscado del país murió después de un tiroteo con el ejército de ese país.

Pero el malestar que se desató tras el sangriento intento de captura de Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes trajo consigo una advertencia.

El entusiasmo de Trump por aplicar la ley con mano dura podría sembrar disturbios mucho peores que la reacción violenta del fin de semana que dejó a estadounidenses varados en lugares turísticos y autobuses y negocios en llamas.

La acción de la presidenta mexicana Claudia Sheinbaum contra el líder del poderosísimo Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, que contó con la ayuda de la inteligencia estadounidense, representó un duro giro político tras un año de intensa presión por parte de Trump.

Pero el presidente estadounidense ya exige más. Respondió al ataque escribiendo en redes sociales: “¡México debe intensificar sus esfuerzos contra los cárteles y las drogas!”.

La desaparición del Mencho podría aliviar la presión estadounidense sobre Sheinbaum. Pero una ofensiva más permanente contra los cárteles generaría nuevos dilemas y riesgos políticos.

La violencia generalizada y prolongada podría poner a los votantes en contra del presidente y perjudicar la economía o interrumpir la organización conjunta de la Copa Mundial de la FIFA este verano en México.

Y la historia demuestra que los asesinatos o capturas de alto perfil de capos de la droga pueden acaparar titulares y fortalecer el derecho a la fanfarronería política a ambos lados de la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México. Pero no detienen el flujo de drogas hacia los estadounidenses ni moderan a los cárteles, que siembran la corrupción en el mundo empresarial, policial y político mexicano.

Washington suele creer que todo gira en torno a sí mismo. Pero analizar los acontecimientos en México este fin de semana desde una perspectiva estrecha, desde la perspectiva de la política estadounidense, ignora la iniciativa y los intereses políticos personales de Sheinbaum.

La presidenta llegó al poder en 2024 con la promesa de poner fin a las políticas más permisivas de sus predecesores contra los cárteles, y ya había tomado medidas para reconstruir el sistema y el liderazgo de la seguridad nacional antes de atacar.

Aun así, su ataque contra Jalisco —una organización de cárteles activa en todo el país y con decenas de afiliados— se produce tras la reorientación del poder de Estados Unidos hacia su conflictiva comunidad.

El presidente no ha ocultado su deseo de una guerra contra las drogas en el contexto de un cambio de política que ahora considera las amenazas a la patria y su entorno como uno de los peores problemas de seguridad nacional.

“Somos muy amigos de ella, es una buena mujer. Pero los cárteles gobiernan México. Ella no gobierna México”, declaró Trump en “Fox and Friends” el 3 de enero.

Hace un año, el Departamento de Estado designó a ocho pandillas y cárteles criminales latinoamericanos, incluyendo a Jalisco, como organizaciones terroristas extranjeras.

Desde entonces, el Pentágono ha llevado a cabo una operación incesante para atacar lo que las autoridades describen como “barcos narcotraficantes” en el Caribe y el Pacífico.

La administración Tr

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