Two WWII-era grenades safely removed from Santa Barbara attic Wednesday evening

Kraig Pakulski 0 63 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Several homes were evacuated Wednesday evening in the 1500 block of Veronica Place after two WWII-era hand grenades were discovered in the attic of one of the homes.

Both of the hand grenades were safely removed by an explosive ordinance team from Vandenberg Space Force Base shared the Santa Barbara Police Department in a press release Thursday.

On Dec. 17, around 5:30 p.m., officers were dispatched to the 1500 block of Veronica Place after a property owner was working in their attic and found what they believed to be a pair of hand grenades detailed the Santa Barbara Police Department.

According to Santa Barbara Police, it is believed the grenades had been in the home for decades and arriving officers requested the Santa Barbara County Bomb Squad respond to the scene.

The bomb squad was able to determine the aged explosives were military ordinances and called the Vandenberg Space Force Base EOD (Explosive Ordinance Disposal) team to assist and several homes in the area were evacuated and the small street off of Veronica Springs Road was shut down out of an abundance of caution explained the Santa Barbara Police Department.

The military explosive ordinance team safely took possession of both grenades and the road was reopened and residents were able to return to their homes around 8 p.m. shared the Santa Barbara Police Department.

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Democrats will not release the ‘autopsy’ of their 2024 presidential loss

Kraig Pakulski 0 74 Article rating: No rating

By David Wright, CNN

(CNN) — The Democratic National Committee said Thursday that it would not release a highly anticipated “autopsy” of the 2024 election, a decision aimed at unifying the party that also sidesteps uncomfortable and lasting divisions over its loss to President Donald Trump.

DNC Chair Ken Martin issued a statement on the decision, saying that the committee was “already putting our learnings into motion” and arguing that “we’re winning again,” pointing to strong performances in a series of off-year elections.

“We are aligned on what’s important, and that’s learning from the past and winning the future. Here’s our North Star: does this help us win? If the answer is no, it’s a distraction from the core mission,” Martin said.

Indeed, the party had galvanizing successes in off-year gubernatorial contests in Virginia and New Jersey, as well as over-performing in a series of special elections. But major disagreements remain about the future direction of the party. Those divides – ideological, generational, and stylistic – have persisted in 2025, exemplified by the raucous New York City mayoral contest and a range of burbling intra-party primaries in next year’s midterms.

Committee officials involved with the report, which included hundreds of interviews conducted across 50 states, had concerns that it would inflame ongoing tensions within the party at a time when they felt they had begun to generate winning momentum.

The officials said that over the course of conversations, they decided it would be a strategic failure on the part of the DNC to publicly look backward, arguing that they were already putting reforms to work.

The unreleased report specifically identified issues with Democrats’ resource management, noting that despite the party’s consistently robust funding, it had failed to effectively spend those funds. Complaints about the Biden-Harris ticket’s spending were among the top concerns voiced by Democrats in the wake of 2024 losses.

It also criticized a field organization that was characterized as disorganized and ineffective. Authors noted that door knockers were failing to generate successful contacts or meaningful, persuasive conversations, and that one-sided digital outreach had failed to break through. The report recommended modernizing these efforts and emphasized the need for qualitative insights over raw data.

In addition, the report criticized aspects of Democrats’ 2024 messaging, saying that the party had failed to respond adequately to voters expressing concerns about public safety and immigration – key issues that Republicans made central to their campaigns.

The conclusions of any autopsy could be uncomfortable for the party’s midterm candidates and the contenders for its next presidential nomination, notably former Vice President Kamala Harris, who lost last year to Trump after replacing former President Joe Biden on the ticket. Harris has not ruled out another bid for the White House.

The-CNN-Wire
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