Tag Archives: San Francisco Bay

California man pretended to be African leader's son, feds say

A San Francisco man was in federal custody Friday on charges that he defrauded a Northern California real estate agent and his girlfriend out of $1.6 million by pretending to be the son of Congo‘s president.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Francisco said Blessed Marvelous Herve persuaded the couple to forward him the money over four years with promises of repayment, lucrative commissions, and multi-million bonuses and a collection of impressive-looking documents that included a certificate of recognition from a U.S. senator.

Instead, they received excuses and demands for more funds, according to an affidavit prepared by the FBI agent who investigated the case.

The affidavit states that Herve told the Marin County real estate agent that his father wanted to buy luxury homes in the San Francisco Bay area, but that first he needed help recovering millions of dollars seized by the U.S. government, advances so he could rent limousines to tour potential properties, and additional financial assistance paying IRS debts and costs associated with other legal troubles.

It said that after the agent had given Herve about $635,000 and “was financially broke,” his girlfriend stepped in and provided another $970,000. At 41, Herve is the same age as Joseph Kabila, who has been president of the Democratic Republic of Congo since 2001.

Herve’s lawyer, Assistant Federal Public Defender Edward Hu, declined to comment on the allegations.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Watch a New Star Trek Into Darkness Clip

Watch the new clip below from Star Trek Into Darkness that aired during Sunday’s MTV Movie Awards. It features a good look at the starship crashing into San Francisco Bay that we’ve seen in past trailers, but that ship doesn’t appear to be the USS Enterprise, which further confirms chatter about there being two Enterprises (or at least two of the same class of Federation starships) in the movie.

As TrekMovie points out: “While the sequence gives the impression that the ship falling from space is also the ship crashing, tt is now clearer than ever that the ship falling into San Francisco Bay is not the USS Enterprise. Any subscriber to Nacelles Monthly would be able to tell you there are a number of key differences, notably the nacelles are a different shape than those of the USS Enterprise. And even more apparent is how the nacelle struts are very widely spaced, as opposed to the Enterprise which has the struts much closer together. And the above ship’s saucer has more of a tapered knife-edge as opposed to the Enterprise’s more flat blunt edge.”

Continue reading…

From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/15/is-that-the-enterprise-crashing-in-new-star-trek-into-darkness-clip

UnitedHealthcare Awards $5.2 Million in Grants to California Nonprofits – $897,240 to On Lok Lifeway

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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UnitedHealthcare Awards $5.2 Million in Grants to California Nonprofits – $897,240 to On Lok Lifeways of San Francisco


Grants support nine California nonprofit organizations to strengthen wellness, care delivery and health technology in underserved communities

SAN FRANCISCO–(BUSINESS WIRE)– On Lok Lifeways has been awarded a $897,240 grant from UnitedHealthcare to help strengthen its health information technology system and delivery of care to San Francisco Bay area seniors through electronic medical records initiatives.

UnitedHealthcare’s San Francisco Bay Area employees join On Lok participants to make flower arrangements and pot plants as part of the nonprofit’s Spring Volunteer Day Monday, April 8, at On Lok Lifeways Gee Center. UnitedHealthcare also presented On Lok an $897,000 grant to strengthen its services and programs for seniors in the region. Lower L to R: Shi Chen Wang, Marie Schmidt of UnitedHealthcare. Upper L to R: Shim Pu-Nam, Matthew Yi of UnitedHealthcare, Kelly Lai, Benedyne Kim, Greg Wright, West Region president, UnitedHealthcare Medicare & Retirement (Photo: Amy Sullivan)

The grant is part of $5.2 million UnitedHealthcare is awarding to nine health care organizations to support nonprofit clinics, hospitals and health care organizations that improve health care services for underserved communities statewide.

Founded in 1972, On Lok Lifeways in San Francisco is one of the nation’s leading providers of health services including long-term care and support services to seniors. On Lok Lifeways’ pioneering efforts in the Bay Area created “PACE” (the Program of All- inclusive Care for the Elderly), a model of care delivery that has been replicated in 91 organizations in 30 states.

The UnitedHealthcare grant will help On Lok Lifeways strengthen its “PACELink” program, which uses health information technology and electronic medical records to improve care and coordination for seniors served by a network of 10 health care and wellness centers in the Bay Area. Specifically, the grant will fund software improvements, technology investments and training that will provide greater efficiencies in the coordination of care through the automation of scheduling, clinic appointments, transportation, home-visit reporting, medication distribution and pharmacy prescriptions.

The grant was announced during a volunteer day at On Lok’s Gee Senior Center, 1333 Bush St. in downtown San Francisco, where UnitedHealthcare employees joined community leaders to help On Lok Lifeways seniors plant a vegetable garden, plant …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Ship pilot in Bay Bridge hit facing license loss

The pilot of an oil tanker that side-swiped the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in January should have his license revoked or suspended, a state panel recommended on Thursday.

The finding about pilot Guy Kleess was contained in a report by the California Board of Pilot Commissioners’ Incident Review Committee about the mishap involving the 752-foot Overseas Reymar.

The committee said the board should find for pilot error in the Jan. 7 bridge strike. The board is expected to take up the recommendations later on Thursday.

Kleess reportedly changed course immediately before clipping the tower. The U.S. Coast Guard has said the ship had been warned it was off course.

The tower’s wooden fenders were damaged, but the bridge remained open. No oil was spilled and there were no injuries.

The U.S. Coast Guard is also investigating the incident.

Kleess’ attorney, Rex Clack, has said the pilot was well-rested and had been off-duty for 39 hours before boarding the tanker at 10:30 a.m., about an hour before the crash.

Kleess and the crew tested negative for alcohol and drug use, according to the Coast Guard.

Bar pilots are required by state law to guide every large vessel in the San Francisco Bay and other Northern California waterways.

Kleess had lost his pilot license between Nov. 9, 2010, and Jan. 11, 2011, after going on medical leave, board records show.

Records also indicate Kleess was involved in three previous accidents. He was held responsible for two and ordered to undergo more training after a ship he was piloting damaged a dock in Stockton in 2009.

It was the second-time since 2007 a large vessel controlled by a local pilot struck the Bay Bridge.

A cargo ship operated by Capt. John Cota hit the bridge on a foggy morning in November 2007, spilling 53,000 gallons of oil into the bay.

Cota later pleaded guilty to two misdemeanors environmental charges and was sentenced to 10 months in prison. The companies that owned and operated the …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Police ID two suspects in $1M California gold heist

Police have named two suspects in a gold heist in California that netted more than $1 million a year ago.

The two men, both from the San Francisco Bay area, allegedly made off with more than $1.25 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts from a display case in the lobby of the Siskiyou County Courthouse during a February 2012 robbery.

Now, police say they’ve issued felony warrants for David Dean Johnson, 49, of El Cerrito and Scott Wayne Bailey, 51, of El Sobrante.

The men are the primary suspects, the LA Times reported.

“This has been a long and arduous investigation involving … suspects responsible for burglarizing our courthouse and stealing a historic gold display and other antiquities which cannot be replaced,” Sheriff Jon Lopey said in the release, according to the paper.

After making off with the gold and other items, Johnson and Bailey used the money from the sale of the goods to purchase “high-value” items, Lopey said.

The entire gold collection before the theft was valued at about $3 million. Lopey said it would be “highly speculative” to guess how much of the gold, if any, would eventually be recovered.

Surveillance footage captured video images of two men breaking into the courthouse at the time of the heist. An alarm that was rigged to notify Yreka police and sheriff’s deputies did not sound at the time.

Yreka, the seat of Siskiyou County, sits in the shadow of 14,000-foot Mount Shasta near the Oregon border.

Miners and other residents donated much of the gold to the collection over the past century.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

After another near miss, professor wants to find asteroids that threaten Earth

(Phys.org) —On Saturday, an asteroid the size of one and a half football fields flew within 240,000 miles of Earth. If the space rock had hit land, it would have leveled an area the size of San Francisco Bay. If it had hit the Pacific Ocean, the impact would have sent a tsunami to every facing shore. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Analysis: Jumbo mortgages are back, but at far from 2007 levels

A home for sale in San Francisco, August 24, 2010. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Home sales and prices are rising briskly in those neighborhoods where the well-heeled like to plant their mailboxes: along Chicago's north shore, in the San Francisco Bay area and in the haute Hamptons. Sales of properties worth between $750,000 and $1 million are up 38.7 percent over a year ago; $1 million-plus property sales are up 25.7 percent, according to the National Association of Realtors. …

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business

Members of 1st U.S team to top of Mt. Everest reunite in California

It might be hard to conceive now, in an era of extreme sports and ultra-light equipment, but there was a time when Americans who set out to conquer mountains engaged in a pursuit that was as lonely as it was dangerous.

But four men — Norm Dyhrenfurth, now 94; Jim Whittaker, 84; Tom Hornbein, 82, and Dave Dingman, 76 — remember. The leather boots that stayed wet for weeks. Oxygen canisters that weighed 15 pounds. The shrugs of indifference most of their countrymen gave a half-century ago to what it would take to get a U.S.-led mountaineering expedition to the top of Mt. Everest.

“Americans, when I first raised it, they said, ‘Well, Everest, it’s been done. Why do it again?'” Dyhrenfurth recalled Friday as he and three other surviving members of the 1963 expedition gathered in the San Francisco Bay area for a meeting honoring the 50th anniversary of their achievement.

The American Alpine Club is hosting lectures, film screenings, book-signings and a dinner this weekend recognizing the pioneering climbers and what their feat, captured in a Life magazine cover story, came to represent in the years after President John F. Kennedy honored the Everest team with a Rose Garden reception: the birth of mountaineering as a popular sport in the U.S.

“When they were talking about a reunion three years ago, I thought, who the hell cares about that? I figured we’d just get together for some beers,” Dingman said between interviews with National Geographic, Outside magazine and the Alpine Club‘s oral history project. “It’s turned into this big event, and I’m glad it has.”

Whittaker, who lives in Seattle and went on to become chief executive of outdoors outfitter Recreational Equipment Inc., was the first American to summit Everest. He and his Sherpa companion, Nawang Gombu, reached the top of the world on May 1, 1963, a decade after New Zealand’s Edmund Hillary and about six weeks after another climber on the U.S. expedition, Jake Breitenbach, died in an avalanche.

Memories of how close he came to his own death on Everest — he and Gombu ran out of oxygen on the summit and had to climb up and back without water after their bottles froze — infused every day of his life since with gratitude and child-like wonder, he said.

“I think I will probably take it with me into my next life, if I have one,” Whittaker said.

Three weeks after Whittaker’s ascent, two other Americans, Hornbein and the late Willi Unsoeld, became the first men ever to scale Everest via a more dangerous route on the mountain’s west side. The next day, they descended by the southern route that Hillary, Whittaker and by then, two more members of the American team, had taken to the summit.

The adventure, which included spending the night without sleeping bags or tents at 28,000 feet, made them the first men ever to traverse the world’s highest peak — and cost Unsoeld nine frost-bitten toes.

Dingman has been lauded over the years for sacrificing his own chance to scale …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Stunt drivers close Calif. freeway

The California Highway Patrol is trying to locate a group of drivers who briefly shut down part of a San Francisco Bay area freeway while they performed stunts in the middle of the road.

Sgt. Rob Barrera said Monday that the CHP is confident that someone will be prosecuted for the brazen sideshow that stopped traffic on Interstate 880 near the Oakland Coliseum on Saturday afternoon. Barrera declined additional comment.

Video clips show at least a half-dozen cars peeling out from the shoulder and doing doughnuts in the road while other vehicles stack up behind the demonstration.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Pilot changed course before ship hit SF Bay Bridge

The pilot of the empty oil tanker that sideswiped the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge made a course change immediately before clipping a support tower, a newspaper reported Tuesday.

The San Jose Mercury News (http://tinyurl.com/ay2yp66 ) reported that Capt. Guy Kleess initially indicated he planned to sail the 752-foot Overseas Reymar between two towers near the middle of the span on Jan. 7. But San Francisco port agent Capt. Peter McIsaac said Kleess then tried to steer the vessel through a different opening as he approached the bridge.

McIsaac said it’s unclear why Kleess made the late course change in foggy conditions amid a strong current.

“You are going across at a fairly acute angle. It’s not an easy maneuver to do,” McIsaac told the newspaper.

The Coast Guard continues to investigate the incident, which damaged about 30 feet of protective fender material but did no structural damage to the bridge.

The paper also said that Kleess’ attorney, Rex Clack, said the pilot was well-rested and had been off-duty for 39 hours prior to boarding the Overseas Reymar at 10:30 a.m., about an hour before the accident.

All vessels longer than 100 feet entering, leaving and transiting through the San Francisco Bay must be controlled by a local pilot trained to navigate Northern California waterways.

The Coast Guard reported that Kleess and the crew tested negative for alcohol and drug use. Coast Guard spokesman Dan Dewell said the investigation could take months.

This is the second-time since 2007 a large vessel controlled by a local pilot struck the Bay Bridge.

A cargo ship operated by Capt. John Cota struck the bridge on a foggy morning in November 2007, spilling 53,000 gallons of oil into the bay. Cota later pleaded guilty to two misdemeanors environmental charges and was sentenced to 10 months in prison. The companies that owned and operated the cargo ship paid a combined $60 million to settle lawsuits and criminal charges.

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Information from: San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News, http://www.mercurynews.com

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Coast Guard: Ship that hit Bay Bridge warned

An empty oil tanker that crashed into the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge was warned prior to striking the bridge tower, the Coast Guard said.

The nature of the warning remained undisclosed, but the Coast Guard said in a statement late Tuesday that a dispatcher with the Vessel Traffic Service, which monitors large ship traffic on San Francisco Bay, warned the tanker before it scraped the bridge Monday.

Coast Guard spokesman Dan Dewell said investigators will examine the recorded conversation between the 752-foot Overseas Reymar and a dispatcher with the service, along with a host of other factors.

No further details about the warning will be released until the investigation is complete, he said.

Mariners and others say the Vessel Traffic Service is a form of air traffic control with one crucial distinction: Its communications are advisory rather than mandatory like air traffic control.

So “warnings” from the service are often phrased as questions rather than direct statements of danger.

“They are not there to order captains around,” said Capt. John Konrad, a veteran operator of large ships who now operates the respected mariners website gCaptain.com. “They’ll ask a lot of questions.”

Konrad and others said expansion of the authority of the service was debated after the cargo ship Cosco Busan unleashed a massive oil spill when it crashed into the Bay Bridge in 2007. But little change resulted because the service only monitors large ships.

“Mariners like me oppose giving them that much authority,” Konrad said. “Unlike air traffic control, VTS doesn’t know where every small boat on the bay is. They may say turn right not knowing there’s a sailboat there.”

Jeff Bornstein, a lawyer who represented Capt. John Cota, the pilot of the Cosco Busan, said the service asked “what are your intentions” as the ship steamed for the center of a tower. Bornstein said if the service had issued an explicit warning, Cota may have had time to change course and pass under the bridge safely.

Instead, Cota said he planned to maintain course without opposition from the service, realizing too late that he was misreading onboard instruments.

Still, Konrad, Bornstein and others warned that no conclusions can be made until the Coast Guard releases the recorded communications with the Overseas Reymar.

The Coast Guard has classified the crash as a “major marine casualty” because property damage exceeded $500,000.

Dozens of feet of a protective fender wrapped around the support tower were damaged, but Caltrans said no structural damage was done to the bridge.

In addition, no oil leaks were reported and the bridge remained open. No crew members were injured.

The ship was being piloted by San Francisco bar pilot Guy Kleess, who has been a bar pilot since 2005 after captaining oil tankers and other large ships for companies.

Bar pilots are required by state law to guide every large vessel in the San Francisco Bay and other Northern California waterways.

Kleess lost his pilot license between Nov. 9, 2010, and Jan. 11, 2011, after going on medical leave, state Board of Pilot Commissioners records show.

Charlie Goddyear, a spokesman for the bar pilots association, declined to divulge the details of the medical leave.

The phone at Kleess’ home rang unanswered. His attorney Rex Clack didn’t return phone calls or email inquiries.

Records also indicated Kleess was involved in three previous accidents. He was held responsible for two and ordered to undergo more training after a ship he was piloting damaged a dock in Stockton in 2009, according to board records.

The medical fitness of pilots became an issue after Cota was found at fault for ramming the Cosco Busan into the Bay Bridge.

Federal investigators concluded that Cota withheld vital medical information from regulators, and that one of the factors in that crash was Cota’s use of prescription medication.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News