Surf City man found drowned in...
Surf City man found drowned in harbor
A motorist on Pacific Coast Highway found the body of James
Cormack floating in shallow water in Huntington Harbour about 100
yards from the dirt shoulder at about 8 a.m. Sunday morning.
Police believe that Cormack, 76, a Huntington Beach resident, fell
overboard because foul weather conditions. There are no signs of foul
play, Seal Beach Police Sgt. Tim Olson said.
He was first reported missing on Nov. 8 from his boat that was
docked in nearby Sunset aquatic park. A search by divers from the
Huntington Beach Marine Safety was conducted.
Police charge parents in toddler’s death
The Long Beach Police Department has launched an investigation
into the death of a 2-year-old girl who died last week after being
taken to Huntington Beach Hospital.
The parents of 2-year-old Maria Mendoza -- Raul Mendoza, 26, and
Martha Lopez, 23 -- have been charged with felony child abuse, Long
Beach Police Officer Greg Chirmer said.
The Long Beach couple called police from a Chevron Gas Station on
Edinger Avenue where they had stopped for gas with their two
children, when they noticed she was not breathing.
Paramedics took the child to the hospital, where she was
pronounced dead.
Police began investigating the death after bruises were found on
the girl’s body.
Autopsy results determined that the girl died of internal injuries
caused by blunt force trauma.
The case was referred to the Long Beach Police Department because
that is probably where the crime occurred, Huntington Beach Police
Sgt. Gary Meza said.
“We’ve taken over the investigation completely,” Chirmer said.
The couple’s 3-year-old son has been placed in protective custody.
City’s money-making jail in magazine
Money-generating concepts used in the Huntington Beach jail were
spotlighted in this month’s Wester City Magazine, the magazine of the
League of Western Cities.
Huntington Beach Police Capt. Jon Arnold and Sgt. Guy Dove
co-wrote the article, which details the ways the city uses the jail
to make money.
The police department contracts with eight surrounding cities and
books prisoners into the jail for a fee, giving the city more than
$18,000 a year in revenue.
The department also allows those sentenced for nonviolent
misdemeanor offenses to serve their time in the city jail rather than
the county jail and it charges prisoners $75 per day for doing so.
Those prisoners perform custodial services while they serve their
time. That program saves the city more than $7,000 a year and it has
brought in more than $280,000 in the last two and a half years.
-- compiled by
Jose Paul Corona
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