Single Top Officeholder Change Signals Voters’ Satisfaction With The Status Quo
In five of the six San Bernardino County governmental constitutional positions up for election in the June 2 Primary, the incumbents prevailed.
Looked at in another way, in another way, in all six of those contests, the candidate favored by the county’s social and political establishment won.
Up for reelection this year were Sheriff/Coroner-Public Administrator Shannon Dicus, District Attorney Jason Anderson, Treasurer-Tax Collector/Auditor Controller Ensen Mason, Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk Josie Gonzales, Second District County Supervisor Jesse Armendarez and Fourth District Supervisor Curt Hagman.
On Tuesday night, after the ballots contained in the ballot boxes from all 2,065 of the county’s precincts had been counted, which consisted of the votes cast by 224,573 or approximately 18,19 percent of the county’s 1,234,386 registered voters, Dicus, Armendarez and Hagman had come out on top, having captured more than 50 percent of the votes cast in their races to avoid having to take part in a run-off in November. Moreover, Anderson and Gonzales were reelected to upcoming four-year terms, essentially by proclamation, insofar as they faced no opposition.
Mason was the lone incumbent who failed to hold onto his position. Continue reading
Tuesday’s San Bernardino Municipal Vote Closes Out Resistance To Mayor Tran
By Mark Gutglueck
“The close of an era” is how the outcome of Tuesday’s voting in San Bernardino’s municipal elections was described, with two of the members of the city council who have more or less been central players in the council’s ruling coalition for the last six years having been shut out of office and the longest-serving member of the council who has been a mainstay on that ruling coalition being forced into a run-off in November where his chances of reelection appear to be at best fifty-fifty.
In the same contest, incumbent Mayor Helen Tran, whose first term has been marred by administrative faux pas beyond her control and the political resistance of the aforementioned ruling coalition, was reelected and by the outcome in the accompanying council contests strengthened considerably, having been given a council line-up for the next two years, at least, which will give her a shot at accomplishments in guiding and shaping city policy that has eluded her the last four years.
At stake in this year’s election was whether Tran, who was formerly the city’s human resources director and since 2022 mayor, was to remain in office in the face of challenges mounted by former Mayor John Valdivia, perennial mayoral candidate Rick Avila or relative political newcomers Amy Malone, Ivan Garcia and Ronnika Ngalande. In addition, there were contests in three of the city’s seven council wards. Tested in these was whether First Ward Councilman Ted Sanchez could hold off his predecessor as First Ward representative, Virginia Marquez and two others – Ron Alvarado and Omar Williams; Second Ward Councilwoman Sandra Ibarra’s staying power against her predecessor in the position, Benito Barrios, and another hopeful, Christian Shaughnessy; and if the dean of San Bernardino’s municipal politicians, Fred Shorett, who has been a member of the city council representing its Fourth Ward since 2009, would be able to withstand the onslaught of four of his constituents trying to unseat him. Those opposing Shorett were Erick Marquez, Jesus “Chuy” Medina, Vince Laster and Joe Salas. Continue reading
Prequel: The City Of Fontana And Its Half Of A Century Of Enduring Corruption
How Fontana and San Bernardino County built a machine that stole from taxpayers for five decades, and why no one was ever held accountable. It began with a casino credit line. It ends, if it ever ends, with an assistant city manager involved in the processing his brother’s real estate applications and a planning commissioner whose brother is a member of the county board of supervisors and a principal in the city’s preeminent real estate company who oversees and holds tremendous sway over the municipality’s official land use decisions.
In between, the residents of Fontana and San Bernardino County have paid hundreds of millions of dollars to fund a corruption machine so durable and so patient it simply waited out every reform, replaced every actor who left or got caught, and kept running.
This is the story of that machine, how it was built, who built it, what laws were broken, and why, across five decades, four mayors, three county supervisors and a bribery prosecution, no one, at least from Fontana, has paid the price for their depredations.
By Carlos Avalos
Era One: The Ratelle Years (1973–1987)
The Man Who Built the Template
Jack Ratelle was Fontana’s city manager for fourteen years, and during that time, he turned a struggling Inland Empire city into his personal enrichment machine. The mechanism was not subtle. Developers who wanted entitlements, approvals, or public infrastructure money paid Ratelle through a credit line at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas. Ratelle made weekly or bimonthly trips to collect, then returned to City Hall with stories about winning or losing at the dice tables. It was both his cover story and his collection mechanism.
For council members, the bribes were tailored to circumstance: a city contract steered to one councilman’s welding business; a no-show job created for another’s unemployed son-in-law; direct cash distributions to Mayor Nat Simon and others. The arrangement was Continue reading
Three Companies Settle Suit Over Smoke Bomb Sparking El Dorado Fire With $4M Payout
An Ohio-based smoke bomb designer/importer and two other companies have agreed to pay more than $4 million to the United States for costs and damages from the El Dorado Fire of 2020, which was ignited when one of the Ohio company’s smoke bombs created flames when it was used as the culmination of a gender reveal party. The flames spread into what was a nearly 23,000-acre conflagration, which resulted in the death of a firefighter.
Wholesale Fireworks Corporation, which is located in Hubbard, Ohio, and its subsidiary, American Fireworks Wholesale LLC, agreed to pay $4 million to settle claims brought on behalf of the United States Forest Service.
A third defendant, Pink or Blue Gender Team Incorporated, a Florida-based company, has agreed to pay $50,000 to settle claims related to the fire.
The fire was ignited on September 5, 2020, by a pyrotechnic device manufactured by Wholesale Fireworks and altered by Pink or Blue Gender Team at a gender reveal party thrown by Refugio Manuel Jimenez, Jr. and Angelina Renee Jimenez in El Dorado Ranch Park in Yucaipa. The flames from the device lit dry grass surrounding it, whereupon the couple, party attendees and bystanders sought to douse the flames with bottled water and called 911. The intense heat, the parched condition of nearby vegetation and winds caused the fire to quickly spread and move onto the mountainside, where the inaccessibility of the terrain in the fire’s path resulted in the fire raging out of control. Continue reading
Improper Disposal of Waste & Patient Info Nets LLU Health $7.5 Million Fine
Loma Linda University Medical Center and Loma Linda University Health Care along with their affiliated organizations have agreed to pay $7.5 million in civil penalties, reimbursements and fees in addition to implementing extensive compliance measures to resolve allegations that their employees unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste, medical waste, and confidential patient information at facilities throughout Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
The $7.5 million settlement was worked out between the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office, the District Attorney of Riverside County and Loma Linda University Health Care, following an investigation that was ongoing for nearly four years and a two-month long discussion between the party’s with regard to the implication of the information obtained in the course of the probe.
The investigation began in April 2022 and focused on how waste generated at hospitals, clinics, and medical facilities within the Loma Linda University Health network was being identified, handled, stored, and disposed of.
Investigators found numerous instances in which regulated waste was improperly disposed of into regular trash containers destined for municipal landfills. Items that turned up during inspections of landfills in both Riverside and San Bernardino included hazardous Continue reading
State Solons Mulling Reintroducing Grizzly Bears Into Golden State’s Wildlands
The last known sighting of a grizzly bear in San Bernardino County was in 1922 in Horse Canyon in the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains. It was promptly shot and killed.
Six years earlier, in October 1916, the last known grizzly bear in Los Angeles County had been similarly dispatched.
In 1924, two years after the grizzly end of grizzlies in Southern California in Horse Canyon, what was believed to be the last sighting of the species in California occurred in Sequoia National Park.
Now, more than a century later, California officials are considering re-introducing into the state’s wildlands and protecting them within circumscribed areas to be designated as their habitats.
A bill by California State Senator Laura Richardson, Democrat of San Pedro, would would call upon state wildlife officials to determine whether it is possible to relocate some to grizzlies to California in an effort to re-establish the populations of the massive ursines to those areas of what was their natural habitat which are at what is considered a safe distance from areas occupied by humans. If such an undertaking is determined to be “feasible and advisable,” the bill outlines another set of steps by which the California Department of Fish and Wildlife Continue reading
Phillosophically Speaking: Onward Christian Warmongers
Corrosive “Christianity” in the form of Greg Laurie and the “mega (but MAGA) churches”
If a ruler harken to lies all his servants are wicked.
—Proverbs 29:12
Whom would Jesus bomb?
—a popular bumper sticker
By Phill Courtney
It was 2004—the second year of George W. Bush’s war on Iraq—and I was spending another Friday night on a corner at University Ave. and Iowa Blvd. in Riverside (where I lived at the time), not too far from my former college (U.C Riverside), protesting a war that was both illegal and immoral.
Illegal because the U.N. charter is clear: one country cannot attack another that hasn’t or isn’t about to attack yours, and immoral because fabricated claims had justified an attack that was then still slaughtering tens of thousands of innocent Iraqis, most of whom did not and never had supported their dictator, Saddam Hussien, and his crimes.
One memorable member of our peace group was an older woman from Puerto Rico and was perhaps (at the risk of invoking a stereotype, but it was true) one of our most fiery and outspoken members opposing this war and George W Bush. Although she was from the Christian community, she was now disgusted by how many fundamental and evangelical Christians were supporting the war.
Counted amongst those supporters, was a man who preached in what’s now referred to as a “mega-church,” with this one being right there in Riverside, and through his multi-media ministry dominance, had become one of the most famous men in the area to call himself a Christian. Yes, I’m referring to Greg Laurie, of the Harvest Church—famous for their crusades which often drew thousands to Angel Stadium in Anaheim. Continue reading
June 5 SBC Sentinel Legal Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE GRAND TERRACE CITY COUNCIL
HEARING DATE: Tuesday, June 9, 2026
PLACE: Council Chambers, 22795 Barton Road, Grand Terrace, California
TIME: 6:00 P.M.
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GRAND TERRACE IS SCHEDULED TO HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING AT THE ABOVE TIME AND PLACE REGARDING THE FOLLOWING ITEM:
Levy and Increase (as previously authorized by property owners) of Annual Assessments for Fiscal Year 2026–27 for Landscape & Lighting Assessment District 89-1
Each year an Engineer’s Report is prepared and considered by the City Council for the levy of annual assessments for maintenance and operation of the District. Assessments for each parcel are included and incorporated into the property taxes for each property.
At the Public Hearing, the City Council will consider all oral and written statements made or filed by any interested person at or before the conclusion of the hearing regarding the improvements, boundaries of the assessment district and/or any zone therein; the proposed diagram, proposed assessments, and/or the Engineer’s estimate of the cost. The City Council will then consider and take final action on the Engineer’s Report for District 89-1.
If you have any questions regarding the assessments, the public hearing, or this notice, please contact Shanita Tillman, Senior Management Analyst with the Public Works Department at (909) 954-5191, or via email at stillman@grandterrace-ca.gov.
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on May 29, 2026 and June 5, 2026.
FBN20260004281
The following entity is doing business primarily in San Bernardino County as
BETTER NAKED STUDIO BODY WAX AND AESTHETICS 2416 S GROVE AVE UNIT 33 ONTARIO, CA 91761: JESI LOVE T BALTAZAR
Business Mailing Address: 3721 COUNTRY OAKS LOOP UNIT A ONTARIO, CA 91761
The business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL.
The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: N/A.
By signing, I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true information which he or she knows to be false is guilty of a crime (B&P Code 17913). I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
/s/ JESI LOVE T BALTAZAR, Owner
Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 5/08/2026
I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office San Bernardino County Clerk By:/Deputy K9236
Notice-This fictitious name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14400 et seq., Business and Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on May 15, 22 & 29 and June 5, 2026.
LLU Health Paying $7.5 Million For Improper Disposal of Waste and Patient Information
Loma Linda University Medical Center and Loma Linda University Health Care along with their affiliated organizations have agreed to pay $7.5 million in civil penalties, reimbursements and fees in addition to implementing extensive compliance measures to resolve allegations that their employees unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste, medical waste, and confidential patient information at facilities throughout Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
The $7.5 million settlement was worked out between the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office, the District Attorney of Riverside County and Loma Linda University Health Care, following an investigation that was ongoing for nearly four years and a two-month long discussion between the party’s with regard to the implication of the information obtained in the course of the probe.
The investigation began in April 2022 and focused on how waste generated at hospitals, clinics, and medical facilities within the Loma Linda University Health network was being identified, handled, stored, and disposed of.
Investigators found numerous instances in which regulated waste was improperly disposed of into regular trash containers destined for municipal landfills. Items that turned up during inspections of landfills in both Riverside and San Bernardino included hazardous pharmaceutical waste, batteries, aerosol cans, medical waste, and documents containing protected health information. It was discovered during the course of that investigation that the healthcare provider unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste, medical waste and confidential patient medical information into dumpsters and bins at Loma Linda health facilities in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, and those containers were emptied into refuse trucks and transported to municipal landfills by the private sector trash haulers that have franchises in Loma Linda and Riverside. The trash handlers penultimately reposited the collected materials into landfills.
In Riverside County, the Loma Linda University Health network operates the Loma Linda University Riverwalk Clinic at 4244 Riverwalk Parkway, Suite 100, the Ear Nose Throat/Head & Neck Surgery Clinic at 4646 Brockton Avenue and a Behavioral Health Clinic at 4095 County Circle Drive.
As part of the settlement Loma Linda has agreed to take significant steps to prevent future unlawful disposals.
The cavalier dispensing of hazardous medical waste is a glaring departure in the protocol observed by the operations associated with Loma Linda University Medical Center and Loma Linda University Health Care, associated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, extending to Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital, Loma Linda University Medical Center – Murrieta, Loma Linda University Shared Services, Loma Linda University Health, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda University Behavioral Medicine Center, Inc., Faculty Physicians and Surgeons of the Loma Linda University School of Medicine. The doctors and other health professionals associated with the university pride themselves and the system they are associated with as embracing a lifestyle or lifestyles that emphasize healthy living and life decisions. Moreover, the professional standards relating to patient confidentiality within the medical community have been codified in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s privacy rule, referred to colloquially by the acronym HIPAA, which carries the weight of law, requiring that nothing related to an individual’s medical condition or treatment be revealed without the patient’s explicit, written consent or a court order.
According to prosecutors with both counties, documents found at the landfills contained patient health information, and those documents should have been shredded, erased, or otherwise rendered unreadable before disposal.
Under the settlement, Loma Linda University Health will pay $7.5 million, including $6.75 million in civil penalties, $500,000 to reimburse investigative and enforcement costs, and $250,000 to fund environmental projects that benefit California communities.
As part of the settlement, Loma Linda University Health must comply with a permanent injunction prohibiting future violations of California laws governing hazardous waste, medical waste, and the protection of confidential medical information. The settlement also requires the health system to maintain and enhance a comprehensive compliance program. In addition, a $1 million penalty will remain suspended for five years and may be imposed if the health system fails to spend at least $3 million on required compliance measures.
The settlement resolves the allegations without trial and is intended to protect public health, safeguard patient privacy, and ensure compliance with California environmental and healthcare laws. Another consideration in the civil settlement was that it avoids hauling employees with the Loma Linda University Medical, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital, Loma Linda University Medical Center – Murrieta, Loma Linda University and Loma Linda University Behavioral Medicine Center, Inc., ranging from relatively low-standing grounds staff, orderlies, nurses, professors, physicians, surgeons and hospital administrators, several of them held to be pillars of the Loma Linda community into court and charging them criminally.
“During the investigation, Loma Linda University Health cooperated with prosecutors and undertook significant corrective actions, including a system-wide overhaul of its waste management program, modifications to employee training, and improvements to waste handling procedures,” the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office stated.
“Loma Linda remains an excellent community partner in our county, particularly as it pertains to their care, treatment, and expertise in pediatric cases,” San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office Public Affairs Officer Jacqueline Rodriguez said. “We appreciate their cooperation with the district attorney’s offices throughout the investigation.”
This case was handled for Riverside County by Riverside County Deputy District Attorney Lauren R. Martineau of the office’s the environmental protection team. San Bernadino Deputy District Attorney Stephanie Weissman worked in conjunction with her office’s consumer environmental protection unit in pursuing the case.