Ontario Councilman Bowman In Alcohol-Related Hit-And-Run Incident

By Mark Gutglueck
Ontario City Councilman Jim Bowman on Monday July 8 was involved in what has been described as an alcohol-related hit-and-run incident.
According to information available to the Sentinel, around midday July 8, 2024, Bowman was southbound on Euclid Avenue and driving at a rate that was in excess of the speed limit. Near the intersection of Euclid and Mission Boulevard, he rear-ended a car in front of him that, apparently, was slowing to make a right turn. According to several accounts, Bowman did not slow sufficiently and his truck hit the vehicle, which was being driven by a woman. The meeting of the front of Councilman Bowman’s truck with the back of the car occurred with some degree of force, enough, according to three people, to result in the lady suffering whiplash and breaking her arm.
Bowman, according to several narratives, did not stop after the collision and headed further south, without stopping, until he was near the 60 Freeway, roughly two miles from the scene of the accident.
There are some differences in the accounts provided to the Sentinel from that point forward. Two people have told the Sentinel that Bowman at some point near the freeway pulled over and called 9-1-1. His 9-1-1 call came in after at least two other calls made from near the scene of the accident, the Sentinel is informed.
Bowman ended up in the hospital, claiming to have some type of medical issue. His blood was drawn at the hospital, according to one version of events. Another version is that some metric of his blood alcohol content was made, although in this rendition it is not clear whether this was achieved through a blood sample, urine analysis or breathalyzer. Information available to the Sentinel is that Bowman had a blood alcohol content of 0.05, which is below the threshold of 0.08, the legal standard for being under the influence of alcohol in California.
Reports clash as to whether the Ontario Police Department arrested Bowman or not. Two individuals who would seem to be vantaged with a clear perspective of the events insisted to the Sentinel that the councilman was arrested. However, the Sentinel’s effort to find such documentation was unsuccessful. The police department had no immediately available record of arrest and the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department showed no record of his being booked at the West Valley Detention Center or any of the sheriff’s department’s other holding facilities.
One individual with the city stated that he had strong suspicions that the documentation relating to the incident is being purposefully withheld.
The Sentinel was told that as of Wednesday, repairs to Bowman’s truck were already under way or had been completed.
A narrative that popped up from a source sympathetic to Councilman Bowman was that he had a medical issue and that he had taken some medication, referred to as “cough syrup.”
It has been known generally and specifically around Ontario for decades that Bowman has had recurrent, indeed consistent, issues with alcohol. He was displaced from his position as fire marshal with the Foothill Fire District in the 1980s when he was arrested for driving under the influence in a Foothill Fire District vehicle in Huntington Beach, 56 miles outside the boundary of the Foothill Fire District. Bowman has been seen in public in Ontario so intoxicated that he was staggering when on his feet. There have been reports that on multiple occasions within the City of Ontario over the last two decades Bowman has been stopped by Ontario police officers when he was behind the wheel in a state of inebriation and that the officers opted to take him home without effectuating his arrest.
It is now being bruited about the Ontario community that within the police department, with regard to the current situation, there is a sharp divide among the officers who are cognizant of what occurred Monday. According to this account, the city’s higher-ups are seeking to minimize what occurred on Monday and the department’s officers are being pressured to bury the matter as deep as it can be buried. It is said that some of the officers are in tune with doing just that, as they recognize that by acceding to the preference of the controlling majority of the city council and the senior echelon of city administration, the city’s police officers will remain in the vaunted position of being employed by the best paid law enforcement agency in San Bernardino County, earning that pay by going along to get along. Nevertheless, there are, it is reported to the Sentinel, a few “Pollyanna” types within the department who feel Councilman Bowman should be held accountable for what he did, despite his powerful position and political primacy in Ontario. They, it is said, want the department to follow through on having him answer for having engaged in a hit-and-run in which a woman was injured. As a consequence, the Sentinel is informed, there is some degree of unrest/distrust within the police department.
The Sentinel contacted Mayor Paul Leon, City Manager Gilbert Ochoa, Police Chief Mike Lorenz and Bowman with regard to what had occurred on Monday.
There was confirmation that Bowman had been involved in an accident.
The officials, however, would not deal directly with questions as to whether Bowman immediately left the scene of the collision; whether he traveled well over one-and-three-quarter miles before he stopped, at which point he made a report by phoning 9-1-1; whether Bowman had alcohol in his system at the time of the incident; whether the police department sought to ascertain his blood alcohol level; what processes the department was applying to the incident; whether the department was according Bowman some level of special treatment;  whether Bowman had been arrested; and whether he had been booked.
The Sentinel sought from Lorenz whether, if Bowman indeed was not arrested and booked, an explanation of why not arresting him and not booking him was appropriate.
The Sentinel sought to ascertain whether the police department was keeping any documentation relating to the case from being disclosed that would routinely be available if it did not involve a city official and, if so, for what purpose.
The Sentinel asked Leon, Ochoa and Lorenz if they had spoken to Bowman since the incident and inquired of Bowman whether he had contact with Leon, Ochoa and Lorenz or other members of the city council since the incident.
The Sentinel attempted to determine which of the Ontario Police Department’s officers had direct interaction with Bowman relating to the matter.
The Sentinel sought from Lorenz whether he had spoken with Ochoa regarding the matter and, conversely, asked Ochoa if he had spoken with Lorenz about what had befallen Bowman.
The Sentinel tried to ascertain whether Lorenz had briefed the mayor and members of the council as to what the incident entailed and what the substance of the exchanges involved.
Neither Ochoa nor Bowman responded to the Sentinel’s inquiries. Mayor Leon indicated he had been kept in the dark about matter. On Wednesday, he told the Sentinel that he knew nothing at all about the incident, Bowman’s involvement in it or whether Bowman had been arrested.
Lorenz told the Sentinel at 9:35 a.m. on Thursday, July 11, “To address your specific questions would be difficult at this time as this is an ongoing investigation. The public position someone may hold has no bearing on this or any of our investigations.”
Lorenz added, “Ontario PD is not split about this incident because our officers did their job. They did their job professionally, with care and compassion for all parties involved and will submit a thorough and complete investigation to the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office for review.”
Lorenz said, “We will be putting out a press release about the incident today.”
An issue is, the Sentinel was told by an attorney, that a blood alcohol content of 0.02 or greater is grounds for a DUI arrest if the driver was involved in an accident that resulted in injury to another. The Sentinel, however, was not able to find in the California Penal Code or California Vehicle Code any provision of the law that imposes a special circumstance which lowers the driving under the influence or driving while intoxicated threshold to a blood alcohol content of 0.02 if an injury occurs.
The Sentinel sought from Lorenz but did not resolve whether the consideration that Bowman’s blood alcohol content was reported at 0.05 – below the 0.08 DUI threshold – obviated any potential of his being arrested and/or prosecuted for driving under the influence or while intoxicated.
Furthermore, the Sentinel sought to pursue with Lorenz the potential criminal implication of Bowman having left the scene of the accident. The Sentinel asked Lorenz if Bowman making the 9-1-1 call some five to ten minutes after he rear-ended the other vehicle from a place that was some two miles removed from where the accident occurred put the hit-and-run issue to rest. Lorenz did not address that question.

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Hostetter’s Supporters Hope Fischer Insurrection Case Decision Might Shorten His Sentence

His friends and supporters are hopeful that Former Fontana Assistant Police Chief Alan Hostetter, who is serving an 11-year federal sentence as a result of his insurrectionist activity on the U.S. Capitol grounds on January 6, 2021 in the failed attempt to prevent Congress’s certification of the November 2020 U.S. Presidential Election, will be able to obtain a sentence reduction based on the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 28 decision calling into question the way in which federal prosecutors were applying a 2002 law prohibiting interference with or obstruction of governmental processes.
The law in question, 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2), which makes it a crime to “otherwise obstruct, influence, or impede any official proceeding,” was used to convict Joseph Fischer of Pennsylvania who had participated in the demonstrations on January 6, 2021 that had raged out of control, including multiple incidents of violence as well as a number of protesters breaching the locked Capitol Building and flooding inside, which resulted in the interruption of the Electoral College ballot certification process. According to prosecutors and the presentation of evidence at the trial in which Fischer was convicted, he trespassed into the Capitol and was involved in a physical confrontation with law enforcement. Continue reading

County Wants Sacramento To Prevent Insurance Companies From Canceling Homeowners’ Fire Coverage

The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors unanimously urged the state to declare a state of emergency and take immediate emergency regulatory and legislative action to strengthen and stabilize California’s marketplace for homeowners insurance and commercial property insurance as part of a resolution it adopted at its June 25 meeting.
“The reduction of insurance options in the state has had a direct negative impact on our consumers’ ability to get coverage and it’s putting our homeowners and businesses at risk of catastrophic loss,” said Board of Supervisors Chairman and Third District Supervisor Dawn Rowe.
In 1988, California voters enacted Proposition 103, which established a robust set of consumer protections designed to keep insurance rates fair and affordable and to ensure a competitive marketplace.
On May 26, 2023 State Farm General Insurance Company and on June 2, 2023, Allstate, California’s two largest insurance carriers, representing over 27 percent of the admitted insurance market in California, announced they would stop issuing new homeowners and commercial property insurance policies in California. Previously American International Group (AIG) notified thousands of homeowners in California that its policies would not be renewed following their 2023 expiration. Several others, representing an additional 36 percent of the market, announced plans to limit new policy origination. Continue reading

Former Marine Combat Center Commander Mullen Found Dead At 29 Palms Base

Retired Marine Major General William F. Mullen died late last week at the Twentynine Palms Marine base, which he once commanded, under circumstances that are not clear.
Mullen was found dead within Building 1651, housing the base’s electronic training classrooms, on Saturday, June 29. It is not known how long he had been deceased when his body was found.
Mullen was 60. His body is undergoing an autopsic examination by the San Bernardino County Coroner’s Office, which is a division of the sheriff’s department.
It is customary within the U.S. Military for retired officers who achieved general or admiral rank to be given living accommodations at military installations, generally of their own choosing. Mullen, who was then a one-star brigadier general, took on the assignment of the commanding general of the Twentynine Palms base, known officially within the Marine Corps as the Marine Air Ground Task Force Training Command and Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in July 2016. While he was in that assignment, Mullen promoted to two-star major general status. On June 8, 2018, he left Twentynine Palms to serve as the Commanding General, Training and Education Command in Quantico, Virginia. He took official retirement from the Marine Corps in 2020.
The Sentinel was given confirmation of Mullen’s death by both the Marine Corps and the sheriff’s department.
The circumstances of his death, the lack of previous medical indicators of concern and his age being below that of life expectancy triggered the involvement of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, which is investigating the matter. The Marine Corps is ther maritime land force service branch of the United States Armed Forces, an ostensibly independent branch of the military that serves under the Department of the Navy. The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is the law enforcement branch of the Department of the Navy, which conducts criminal investigations as well as routine examinations of the noncombat-related deaths of sailors or Marines.
A graduate of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps program at Marquette University, Mullen was commissioned in 1986 and assigned to 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, where he served as a rifle and weapons platoon commander, and battalion training officer from 1987 to 1990.
From 1990-1993 he served as a platoon commander, executive officer and commanding officer of the Fleet Anti-Terrorism Security Team Company with the Marine Corps Security Force Battalion, Pacific at Mare Island, where he served as a platoon commander, executive officer and ultimately commanding officer. In this capacity, he deployed to Operation Desert Shield and participated in several counter-narcotics missions in support of Joint Task Force-6, also serving as battalion training officer.
After attending the Advanced Artillery Officer course at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, Mullen in 1993 was transferred to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines (later converted to 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines) at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, as the commanding officer of Fox Company. He participated in Operation Sea Signal in 1994, and deployed to the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit from 1995 to 1996 as a company commander with the small boat raid and cliff assault company, participating in contingency operations in the former Yugoslavia. From 1996 to 1999 he served as the inspector-instructor for Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 24th Marines based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and led a successful counter-narcotics mission in the Los Padres National Forest of California.
In 1999, then-Major Mullen was selected to be the Marine aide to President Bill Clinton and later George W. Bush. He served in that capacity until attending the School of Advanced Warfighting in 2001. After school, he reported to the Joint Operations Division of the Joint Staff, J-3 for duty in the Untied States Indo Pacific Command (PACOM) and the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) sections, and served as executive assistant to the deputy director for regional operations until 2004.
In 2004, having been promoted to lieutenant colonel, he reported to 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune for duty as the division plans officer, and was chosen later that year to be the operations officer for Regimental Combat Team – 8, with whom he deployed to Fallujah, Iraq from 2005 to 2006. After returning, he assumed command of 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines and returned to Fallujah in 2007. Following command he attended the Naval War College from 2008 to 2009, and subsequently commanded the Marine Corps Tactics and Operations Group in Twentynine Palms from 2009 to 2011.
After promotion to brigadier general in 2012, he was assigned as the commanding general, Education Command, and president of Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia. He then became director of Capabilities Development Directorate, Combat Development and Integration, and subsequently deployed and served as the director of operations in the Combined Joint Operations Center in Baghdad from June 2015 to June 2016 in support of Iraqi security forces during Operation Inherent Resolve.
In July of 2016, he assumed command of Marine Corps Air Ground Task Force Training Command, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center. Upon being succeeded by Brigadier General Roger Turner as the commanding general of the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center and Marine Air Ground Task Force Training Command in Twentynine Palms, Mullen was assigned to head the Training and Education Command, located 36 miles from Washington, D.C. in Quantico, Virginia.
Brigadier General Mullen held a BA and MA in political science from Marquette University, as well as an MA in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College. He completed the Advanced Artillery Officer, School of Advanced Warfighting, Airborne, Ranger, Summer Mountain Leader and Royal Marine Arctic Warfare Survival courses. With his wife Vicki, he had three children.

Actions Meriting Community Member, Deputies & Public Safety Personnel Commendations Described

On Thursday, June 27, 2024, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department recognized 25 individuals during the Sheriff’s Exceptional Service Awards for 2022 and 2023 in Highland.
Sheriff Shannon Dicus, who played a central role in refining the list of those to be honored for their demonstrated courage, bravery and quick and decisive action in keeping the community safe, was unable to present the awards, as was planned, due to a family emergency but expressed gratitude to all those who had been selected for the recognition. In his place, Assistant Sheriff Rick Bessinger made the presentations.
The Sentinel has obtained and assembled the following narratives which accompanied the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department’s recommendation of valor and extraordinary service on the part of the 25 community members, public safety personnel, and Sheriff’s Department members who distinguished themselves during the eleven incidents in which their immediate action saved lives or otherwise averted disaster.
On the afternoon of Wednesday, April 20, 2022, at approximately 4:15 p.m., John Kraus, a 53-year-old Yucaipa resident, watched as the driver of a Mazda Protégé lost control while driving on Calimesa Boulevard in Yucaipa. The Mazda slid sideways onto the shoulder of the roadway, then impacted a wood railing and the pony wall to the flood control channel.
The Mazda was nearly torn in half and the driver was trapped inside. Kraus approached the wreckage, realizing as he did no that the driver suffered a traumatic amputation of his right leg above the knee along with other significant injuries and a major loss of blood.
Recognizing he needed to stanch the driver’s further blood loss, Kraus utilized his belt as a tourniquet to stop the bleeding until medical arrived.
“If it wasn’t for John’s quick thinking and immediate action, the driver would have succumbed to his injuries before medical aid arrived,” according to the sheriff’s department.
On the morning of Thursday, June 29, 2023 at approximately 6:30 a.m., while Detective Shaunna Ables was driving to work at the Morongo Sheriff’s Station through the Twentynine Palms area, she noticed black smoke billowing in a residential neighborhood. Heading in the direction of the smoke, Ables came across a vehicle and a fence on fire in the 72300 block of Sunnyslope Drive. The fire was quickly spreading to the roof of a nearby residence.
After notifying the Sheriff’s dispatch center, Ables knock on the door to awaken the sleeping residents. Ables assisted the family out of the house which consisted of four children and an elderly disabled woman.
Before the responding fire company arrived and while Ables was evacuating the first residence, the fire spread to a neighboring house. Informed by a resident that an elderly male lived in the neighboring residence, at that point approaching being 70 percent engulfed in flames.
Deputy Brandon Narcisse arrived at the scene and both Narcisse and Ables yelled into the residence, to which the faint voice of the elderly man could be heard responding. The fire having consumed the front of residence and advancing toward the rear, Ables and Narcisse, without any protective equipment or gearn ran through the front door and, despite the heat and smoke, were able to locate the elderly man and evacuate him from the midst of the fire rapidly spreading through the residence to safety.
“If not for the quick thinking and heroic actions of both Shaunna and Brandon, several lives would have been lost that day to the fire,” according to the department.
On the afternoon of Saturday, July 29, 2023, at approximately 2:50 p.m., Jose Pulido, the chef at the P.F. Chang’s restaurant in Chino Hills, was in that establishment’s kitchen when a gunman entered and shot a staff member. Several of the kitchen personnel ran to safety, but Pulido, who was a few feet from the suspect, disregardful of his own safety launched himself toward the assailant, tackling him and then grappling with him after they both went to the floor. During the struggle, the suspect lost control of the firearm.
While Pulido and the shooter were thus engaged, the victim, who was shot once, was able to escape and seek medical treatment.
Pulido continued to wrestle the suspect and was able to pin him down until sheriff’s deputies arrived.
According to the sheriff’s Department, “Jose’s courageous and decisive actions were directly responsible for the preservation of the victim’s life and the lives of everyone else inside the restaurant that day.”
On the morning of Tuesday, May 30, 2023, at approximately 9:45 a.m., the sheriff’s dispatch center received a call for service for a fire at a residence located in the Jess Ranch Retirement Community in Apple Valley. Deputy Ernesto Madrigal was the first to arrive and saw the front of the residence and garage were already engulfed in flames, and explosions could be heard coming from the residence.
Madrigal jumped the fence to the back yard and found the rear door to the residence. When he opened it, black smoke billowed out, making it impossible to see inside. To Madrigal’s shouts, a faint male voice called back.
Without hesitation, Madrigal entered the residence and located a disabled elderly man who had difficulty walking. Madrigal evacuated the man from the residence and got him to medical aid personnel who transported the man to a nearby hospital for fire related treatment.
According to the department, “If it wasn’t for the swift decisions followed by the selfless actions of Ernesto, the Jess Ranch Retirement Community would be morning the loss their friend.”
In July of 2022, Mike Ball and Severin Christensen witnessed a vehicle lose control and drive off the side of the mountain on Highway 38. The vehicle went down about 30 feet and ultimately crashed into a tree.
Ball and Christensen ran down the embankment as the vehicle started to catch on fire. They reached the driver who was unwilling to leave the vehicle due to her disorientation. Ball and Christensen knew they had to get her out of the vehicle as the fire was getting worse.
Together, Ball and Christensen pulled the driver from the vehicle and were able to get her a safe distance away from the fire. By the time emergency personnel arrived at the scene, the vehicle was fully engulfed, and a rescue would not have been possible.
“Thankfully Mike and Severin did not take no for an answer and their quick thinking and teamwork saved the driver’s life,” according to the sheriff’s department.
On January 20, 2023, at approximately 3:00 p.m., hiker Dean Colbert, a retired Riverside County sheriff’s deputy, was hiking in the San Antonio Falls area of Mt. Blady when he observed a group of hikers frantically waiving for help. Colbert climbed down an icy and steep mountainside to reach them and found one of the hikers had a severe head injury due to falling debris. Colbert directed one of the hikers to leave the area and call for help while he stayed and tended to the injured hiker.
Deputy Chris Henry is assigned to the Mt. Baldy resident deputy position and received the call for help. Henry, along with Firefighters Cary Mitchell and Adam Salveson arrived and located the victim about 150 yards down the icy and treacherous trail. When they reached the victim, they saw she had an open wound to her head, exposing a portion of her brain. They knew they had limited time to get her the medical treatment she desperately needed.
Henry made arrangements to have the victim hoisted out of the canyon by a sheriff’s department helicopter, but as the weather was severe and winds were too high, the helicopter was unable to reach them. Henry, Mitchell, Salveson and Colbert made the decision to evacuate the victim themselves. During the evacuation, Henry fell in the icy conditions, and became injured, but he was able to continue moving the victim to safety where additional emergency personnel could reach them. The victim was transported to a local hospital and received emergency medical treatment.
“Had it not been for the bravery, skill, and dedication of Chris, Cary, Adam and Dean, the victim’s chances of survival would have been grim,” according to the sheriff’s department. “Instead, after a few days in the hospital, the victim made a full recovery.”
On the evening of Thursday, February 23, 2023, Captain Ross Tarangle was just getting off work from the Colorado River Station and noticed heavy smoke from a nearby residential area in Needles. Tarangle drove toward the smoke and found a residence was on fire.
Tarangle was the first responder on the scene, and he notified sheriff’s dispatch center of the fire. A neighbor told Tarangle he heard someone from inside the residence screaming for help. The garage was fully engulfed and the fire was spreading to the rest of the residence. Several rounds of ammunition and multiple cans of gasoline that were stored in the garage began to explode.
Hearing a woman screaming for help from inside the residence, Tarangle did not wait for the fired department, and immediately entered the residence. Tarangle found the female, a bed-ridden quadriplegic and her elderly father, who was too weak to escape. Tarange carried the woman to safety and without hesitation re-entered the burning residence. He was able to help the man to safety and reunite him with his daughter.
“Ross’s quick reactions and courageous measures were instrumental in saving the lives of the father and daughter, proving no matter how high the rank, deputy sheriffing never goes away,” the department stated.
On the afternoon of Monday, August 14, 2023, Deputy Jeremy Deruiter was on patrol at the Colorado River Station, Parker Dam area when he conducted a traffic stop for a vehicle code violation. The driver was identified as a violent wanted subject and he fled, leading Deruiter on a high-speed pursuit.
After 22 miles, the suspect slowed his vehicle, headed it toward the aqueduct, and jumped from the moving vehicle. The suspect fled on foot and the vehicle came to rest in the water-filled aqueduct. Deruiter lit out after the suspect but his attention was arrested by something else.
“As he exited the vehicle, the vehicle went into the canal,” Deruiter said. “I could see the kid banging on the windows.”
Realizing there was a young child in the vehicle, Deruiter went back to the sinking vehicle and could see what turned out to be a 6-year-old child strapped into a car seat and unable to escape the vehicle that was quickly filling with water. Deruiter jumped into the flowing aqueduct in full gear and used his rapid containment baton to break the vehicle’s window. Decruiter was able to rescue the child just as the passenger compartment filled with water.
Upon ensuring the child was safe, Deruiter coordinated the efforts to locate the wanted suspect and the suspect was apprehended a short time later.
“Jeremy’s ability to remain calm during the high-speed pursuit, coupled with his ability to continuously observe his surroundings led him to the discovery of the child which was instrumental in saving the child’s life,” according to the department.
On the afternoon of Sunday, May 15, 2022, Deputy Larry Torres was dispatched to a residential fire in Adelanto. As the first responder to arrive, Torres was immediately approached by a frantic mother who told him her nine-year-old son was trapped inside the residence.
Without hesitation Torres entered the burning, smoke-filled residence. Searching the home room by room, Torres located the child with his dog in the rear bedroom of the residence. The child was insistent that he was not going to leave without his dog.
Torres forced open the bedroom window and helped the dog through the window. Knowing the dog was safe, the child was willing and Torres helped the child out of the window and was able to get both the child and his dog to safety.
The child was transported to a nearby hospital for fire related treatment.
“Larry’s decision to enter the burning residence without due regard for his own safety is the reason the child will have many more years to spend with his best furry friend,” according to the department.
On the afternoon of Monday, January 16, 2023, Deputies Larry Torres, Jacob Delano, and Kevin Konior were on patrol at the Victor Valley Station and responded to a fire in an apartment complex. Delano was the first to arrive and noticed one of the apartments was fully engulfed. Kevin arrived on scene seconds after Delano and they both entered the burning complex to start evacuations.
Delano and Konior located a resident who was bedridden and could not evacuate on her own. They entered her smoke-filled apartment and carried her to the courtyard where they were met by Torres. With Torees’ assistance they were able to carry her out of the complex to safety.
The three deputies went back into the burning complex and evacuated 12 more residents to safety.
One of the residents had to be transported to a nearby hospital for fire related treatment.
“If it wasn’t for the selfless act of the three deputies and a disregard for their own safety, the apartment fire could have resulted in the tragic loss of several lives,” according to the department.
On Saturday, July 16, 2022, Deputy Marcus Mason from the Rancho Cucamonga Station responded to a suspicious person call. Mason arrived in the area and located the suspect, seated in a vehicle. Mason found the suspect was on active parole and had the suspect exit the vehicle to comply with his conditions of parole.
As Mason began to search the suspect for weapons, the suspect pulled a handgun from his waistband and Mason and the suspect began to fight for control of the firearm. As the two struggled, the suspect shot the firearm several times, striking Mason in the chest and waist for times. As Mason was critically wounded, he was able to radio pertinent information to dispatch and his partners.
Deputies Casey Allen, Eric Rebollar and David Johnson were working a traffic enforcement detail nearby and immediately responded to Mason. Working together, the deputies utilized their shooting trauma kits and began to give life saving medical treatment to Mason while reassuring him that he would be okay, and they were going to take care of him. Rebollar requested a helicopter to nearby Chaffey College in order to transport Mason to the hospital.
Simultaneously, Rancho Cucamonga Fire District Battalion Chief Chad Comeau and the Ontario Police Department’s helicopter crew, consisting of Pilot/Officer Derrick Alatorre and Flight Observer/Officer Michael Ayala were monitoring the patrol channel and heard Mason’s radio transmission that he was shot.
Comeau immediately dispatched his station’s medic engine crew and gave them the direction to enter the scene instead of waiting for the assistance call which accelerated their response time. Comeau’s quick actions saved valuable time and enabled Firefighter/Paramedic Alex Wherry to reach Mason and assume life saving measures within minutes.
Officers Alatorre and Ayala were on aerial patrol and not set up for medical transport, but they knew they were the closest helicopter. They landed at Chaffey College and immediately began taking out their back seats and prepared their helicopter for the medivac transport.
Meanwhile, Allen, Rebollar, and Johnson loaded Marcus into the backseat of their patrol car and transported him to the college while Wherry continued to provide medical treatment. Once at the college, the helicopter was already prepared for the transport. The deputies helped load Marcus into the helicopter and Wherry continued the in-flight medical care until they reached the Pomona Valley Hospital.
Trauma Surgeon Onaona Gurney and a team of trauma personnel were waiting for Mason to arrive and rushed him into surgery. Mason underwent several hours of complicated surgery to assess and repair multiple internal injuries. Dr. Gurney’s experience and determination were key to successfully repairing the extensive damage Marcus sustained from the gunshots.
From the time Mason advised he was shot Communications Dispatcher Heather Lassiter was a constant voice on the other side of radio assuring Mason he would be okay. She focused her attention on coordinating the efforts to ensure he received the urgent response needed to save his life. Lassiter remained calm and collected during one of the most difficult situations for a dispatcher to experience. Her experience displayed confidence as she controlled the communications amongst multiple personnel and agencies responding to Mason’s aid. Lassiter continued to organize the rapid response of additional personnel who began the dauntless search for the suspect.
The suspect was apprehended a short time later.
“The actions of the aforementioned resulted in a collective and rapid response that led to saving Marcus’ life,” according to the sheriff’s department. “From the first deputies to arrive on scene who began rendering critical aid, to the firefighters who risked their own safety by entering an active scene to provide patient care, to the helicopter crew that was determined to make the urgent needed transport to the surgeon who expertly performed lifesaving surgery and the dispatcher who led the way with calmness and clarity, all of this greatly contributed to what continues to be a successful outcome for Marcus, his family, his friends, his co-workers and all who know him.”
Sheriff Shannon Dicus said, “I couldn’t be more proud of the heroes we honored from our department and the community. Putting yourself in harms way to save another is what make these heroes exceptional.”
According to the department, “Each recipient made a significant impact on our community.”

Old Hall Of Records & Public Health Building Being Demolished

Demolition has begun for two fire-damaged county buildings in downtown San Bernardino that served the public for six decades.
The former Hall of Records building, a six-story structure at 172 West 3rd Street, and the Public Health building next door at 351 North Mountain View Avenue will initially become an expanded parking lot while other uses for the land are considered.
As the name suggests, the structure at 172 W. 3rd St. originally served as the county’s Hall of Records before those services were moved to the current Hall of Records at 222 W. Hospitality Lane several years ago.
Code enforcement public administrator San Bernardino County Code Enforcement, Public Health and the civil grand jury a
Following the vacation of the county recorder’s office and the county assessor’s division, which made up the lion’s share of what was referred to as the Hall of Records, the building provided office space for several county departments, including office for the county’s code enforcement division, the public administrator, the civil grand jury and a few rooms for the Public Health Department. The structure, however, was irreparably damaged by a major three-alarm fire on June 19, 2022. Smoke from the fire inundated the aging Public Health building next door. The fire occurred on a Sunday morning – Father’s Day, in fact – so no county employees or customers were at risk.
Public Health and the offices located in the Old Hall of Records were moved to other nearby locations.
Because the buildings were built in the 1960s and modified over time before current construction regulations were enacted, fire remediation and environmental and hazardous materials abatement took two years to complete before demolition could begin.
Demolition is expected to continue into 2025.

County Museum Offering The Public Free Admission To Several Historic Sites

The San Bernardino County Museum is offering free admission to several of the county’s historic sites, including the Agua Mansa Pioneer Cemetery, the María Merced Williams and John Rains House, and the Oro Grande Cemetery.
“By offering free admission to our historic sites, we hope to attract new visitors and provide access to these historically significant sites to our entire community,” said Museum Director David Myers.
The Agua Mansa Pioneer Cemetery is all that remains of the communities of Agua Mansa and La Placita. Situated across from each other along the Santa Ana River, they were the first non-native settlements in the San Bernardino Valley and the largest settlements between New Mexico and Los Angeles during the 1840s. The cemetery is located at 2001 Agua Mansa Road in Colton and is open Sunday through Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Donations are welcome.
The María Merced Williams and John Rains House, built in 1860, has a history as colorful as the property’s gardens. Namesakes Rains and Merced, granddaughter of the prominent landowner Don Antonio Maria Lugo, built the home to withstand the hot inland Southern California climate, and of course to entertain. The house is located at 8810 Hemlock Street, at the Vineyard Avenue exit from Interstate 10 in Rancho Cucamonga and is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Continue reading

Fontana Now The Next San Bernardino County City To Ask Its Residents For Additional Sales Tax

Fontana is the latest of San Bernardino County’s cities to propose a sales tax increase within its city limits.
On July 9, the city council will discuss and vote upon a proposed resolution to place on the November ballot a measure to impose an additional 1 percent sales tax on all retail transactions to take place in the city, with the exception of those for non-prepared food and medicine. The tax would be applicable to all other items sold, including food sold in restaurants.
There is an issue extending to food which is to be sold by vendors in the city. While the tax would technically apply to such sales, the city does not have a ready mechanism to enforce the collection of the tax. Sales tax imposed by the State of California and the County of San Bernardino already , applies to sidewalk and street vendors in Fontana, but virtually none of them collect it.
In the March primary election, voters in Chino approved imposing a one-cent per dollar sales tax in that city. On June 24, the Yucaipa City Council voted to place an initiative on the November 2024 ballot asking that city’s residents to approve a one cent per dollar sales tax override. Yucaipa’s’ voters in 2020 rejected a half-cant sales tax proposal. Continue reading