OUR CREDO
"The press is the only business in America specifically protected by the Constitution... to inform, to arouse, to reflect, to state our dangers and our opportunities, to indicate our crises and our choices, to lead, mold, educate, and sometimes even anger public opinion."
John F. Kennedy
CAN'T-MISS VIDEO
Millions have seen "The Hart Locker: SLO Sheriff Shredding the Fourth Amendment." You should, too. Click to view.
'HERE'S WHAT I THINK'
Giving voice to issues and individuals so often ignored, KCCN.tv offers intelligent discussion of sometimes-controversial viewpoints by people you know. Mark Phillips kicks off the feature with his views of events following 9-11. Click to view.
Stop in at the Redondo Fun Factory at the Redondo Pier next time you're in Southern California
on El Capitan
It was just a short fall, maybe four feet, but Michael Schmoelzer's climbing rope had encircled a thumb, and the resulting jolt sliced it from his right hand like a surgeon's scalpel.
Complicating matters for theAustrian mountain climber: he now was hanging suspended and helpless on the sheer granite face of one of the world's most challenging edifices, 7,569-foot El Capitan, in Yosemite National Park.
Read more...
Brady death probe
Bryan Brady's bizarre death one year ago has proved so perplexing to Paso Robles police officials that they have tried on several occasions to just quietly close his file.
That hasn't happened yet, but only because of perseverance by the young man's distressed parents. His mother, Kasi, said this week she believes her son was murdered, and she expressed concern that the Paso Robles police department's growing staff deficiencies may be contributing to the investigation's sluggish progress.
Read more...
Santa Barbara Charges
UPDATE: Santa Barbara officials have now dismissed several charges against Jeff Lind "in the interest of justice." Prosecutors on August 11 voided the two misdemeanor charges that remained from this case. Lind still faces more serious charges of filing official documents upsetting to court officials.
Prosecutors in a neighboring county have filed a flurry of felonies against a San Luis Obispo marketing executive following a December 2010 incident in a Santa Maria courthouse.
Security cameras in the courtroom foyer recorded a brief discussion between Jeffery Lind, 55, and a Guadalupe police officer. The resulting images -- no sound can be heard -- appear to refute at least some of the allegations now being leveled by the officer and district attorney's deputies.
Read more...
A mysterious satirist, "SLOShank," takes a pointed but very humorous look at those awkward revelations of San Luis Obispo Mayor Jan Marx's secret involvement in the battle against South County rancher Ernie Dalidio's development plans, as uncovered by CalCoastNews' Karen Velie.
"It's complicated," wrote Adam Hill on Facebook recently, referring to his marital status. With this not-so-cryptic plunge into the swirling, dark waters of the new social media, the county supervisor now has embraced a trend sweeping the entire planet -- that of spilling one's guts on the Internet.
Far and wide. Forevermore.
Read more...
San Luis Obispo Mayor Jan Marx, by her own admission in a series of emails, was a key player in an illegal campaign aimed at torpedoing a development project proposed by rancher Ernie Dalidio - something she has repeatedly denied.
Marx's reference to herself as "vice president" of Citizens for Planning Responsibly (CPR) is contained in emails to other members, copies of which were obtained by the news website KCCN.tv last month.
Read more...
Dorothea Montalvo Puente died March 27 at the age of 82. Finally, the Wicked Witch is dead.
The notorious Sacramento murderess had been a guest of the state of California for the past 22 years or so, complaining all the while that she was about to succumb to a variety of cancers and other infirmities. Her final years, though, were much more pleasant than the last moments of her many elderly victims. She killed with malice and forethought, and buried the bodies of eight innocents in her Victorian home’s yard to reap their Social Security checks.
Read more...
By DANIEL BLACKBURN
Posted March 21, 2011
Death threats, conflicts, dissension... a divisive, 30-year dispute over a sewer for a small California coastal community may be coming to a head, but a loaded selection process for the concept may financially crush many of Los Osos' current inhabitants. If you think this is an old story, then you don't know the whole story.
(See the 15-minute video.)
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Posted February 8, 2011
In the wrenching aftermath of the deeply disturbing slaying of teenager Dystiny Myers, local news reporters encountered a virtual blackout of details from investigators. So when this Web site published an account last October relating some of the last terrible moments of the girl's life, some of those law enforcement officials apparently were not pleased.
Read more...
A County Corrupted, Pt. 2
Cash-rich developer spun sticky web

Former mayor Mike
Brennler raised the alert.
View the video.
See also A County Corrupted Pt 1.
Former Sheriff John Pierce Laid to Rest

Newly elected Sheriff Ian Parkinson offers his sympathies to Diana Pierce, widow of former San Luis Obispo County Sheriff John Pierce during memorial services January 21.
Photo by Richard Bastain
Gearhart's grip on county was corrupting influence
Kelly Gearhart, the one-time SLO County builder wunderkind who captured the hearts and purchased the souls of so many with his ill-gotten largesse, enmeshed government officials from here to Sacramento. How the most interesting man in Atascadero became its biggest grifter, picked the pockets of thousands, and had his way with local leaders, is the subject of KCCN.tv’s ongoing new series, “A County Corrupted.”
Deputy Murphy taps Playboy to attack KCCN.tv video
This county's most notorious badge-toting lawbreaker has chosen the December issue of Playboy magazine to make his first public comments regarding his brazen, unconstitutional raid of an Atascadero man's home and gun safe in 2008.
San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Deputy Darren Murphy broke his silence in the "Forum" section of the men's magazine, saying a 23-minute video produced by Central Coast News Agency and posted on KCCN.tv caused him to be "maligned online."
Noori sues Cal Poly, Velie
A former Cal Poly dean of the College of Engineering has filed a lengthy lawsuit naming the California State University Board of Trustees, Cal Poly, journalist Karen Velie, and others, citing a dozen allegations including racial and religious discrimination, defamation and wrongful termination.
In an action filed Dec. 7 in Los Angeles Superior Court, Mohammad Noori, 57, said his complaints centered around his unsuccessful efforts in 2008 to assist a Saudi Arabia university in starting an engineering program. Noori also named as co-defendants Cal Poly's Provost and Vice-President of Academic Affairs Robert Koob, engineering professor Unny Menon and blogger Roger Freberg.
He seeks reinstatement by the university to his previous position and unspecified compensatory and punitive damages for alleged losses of income. Noori was hired as the College of Engineering dean in 2005 and demoted in June 2010.
Noori's attorney says in the lawsuit, "In the fall of 2007, as negotiations with the University of Saudi Arabia prolonged, a series of racial and defamatory attacks on Noori began by Freberg and Velie, which appeared on their respective websites. Menon provided internal materials to Freberg and Velie."
Both Freberg and Velie said they stand by their articles which are still available on the web.
The Saudi proposal was controversial because it appeared to limit in a discriminatory manner those who could participate. CalCoastNews reported on February 14, 2008 in an article headlined: "An intriguing Cal Poly/Saudi project if you're not a woman, Jewish or gay".
The article details "a proposed Cal Poly agreement to develop an engineering program in Jubail from which women, Jewish people and gays would be excluded. The controversial co-venture pits a department head and a handful of administrators backing the project against an apparent majority of the Engineering College faculty."
The issue was also reported by the Los Angeles Times and NPR's California Report.
The website, in an June 10, 2008 article headlined Cal Poly's controversial dean of engineering dismissed, reported: "After years of controversy, high staff turnover and faculty discontent, Mohammad Noori, the controversial dean of Cal Poly's College of Engineering, was asked last week to step down as the head of the university's most prestigious college, CalCoastNews has learned.
"The move caps more than two years of maneuvering by faculty and department chairs within the Engineering College over how to deal with the increasingly unpopular Noori. Dissatisfied critics said Noori's inability to manage budget deficits, a seemingly lack of leadership for such an important academic unit within Cal Poly and his failed plan for a proposed partnership in 2008 with an engineering school in Saudi Arabia project led to growing calls that he be fired. CalCoastNews learned that Cal Poly's interim provost Robert Koob met with Noori last Thursday and told him he had to step down."
The article further reported that prior to being hired at Cal Poly, Noori served as the mechanical and aeronautical engineering department head at North Carolina State University from 1999 to 2004. The administration forced Noori to step down as department head due to reported widespread dissatisfaction with his performance.
Noori noted in his lawsuit that he had been assured his proposed dismissal would be confidential until he was allotted more time to state his position. The next day, he said Velie arrived at his office and requested an interview about his dismissal.
Freberg, who writes a popular blog that often reports on Cal Poly occurrences, was alleged by Noori to have caused defamatory articles, blogs to appear against the plaintiff (Noori), including one which showed Osama Bin Laden's head placed on a Cal Poly jersey.
"I used it as a metaphor for Cal Poly's proposed relationship with Jubail University in Saudi Arabia," Freberg said. "It is sad, this is someone who doesn't understand free speech and obviously wants to strike back at all those who disagree with him."
Noori also alleged retaliation; failure to prevent discrimination; breach of contract; negligent interference with economic advantage and intentionally inflicting emotional duress.
Noori was told to step down in June 2010, about six months before he would be vested in his state retirement. Cal Poly officials said he would join the faculty and teach mechanical engineering. He has been on leave from the university since June. In the lawsuit, Noori claims venue in Los Angeles County is proper because he either lives in, or is doing business, there. He is currently slated to teach at Cal Poly in the spring.
At an Academic Senate Executive Committee meeting, Norri told attendees that he was not Muslim. In the lawsuit, he claims he is.
Noori is represented by Charles Mathews of The Mathews Law Group, San Marino.
New sheriff faces concealed gun fight
Incoming San Luis Obispo County sheriff Ian Parkinson will encounter one additional headache when he takes office in January.
A powerful California gun advocacy group plans a major campaign to make firearm carrying permits easily obtainable to all "law abiding Californians." (Read more...)
Tom Baron remembered
Funeral services for Thomas Joseph Baron, a former Southern California fire chief and Paso Robles city council member, were held Nov. 12 at St. Rose Church in Paso Robles.
Baron died Nov. 4 at his home. He was 80.
Baron’s last interview was with KCCN.tv for the documentary, “Paso’s Withering Water War.” He was one of two council members who wanted to put the city’s participation in the Nacimiento Water Project to a vote of city residents.
Fred Strong, a close friend of Baron’s, announced the former official's death in an e-mail. Strong said Baron's "passing was peaceful."
"The Baron family has asked me to let those I'm able to contact know that Thomas Baron passed away at 6:45 p.m.," wrote Strong.







