Oakland restaurant owner slams city’s crime problem

Stories about high-profile companies in Oakland closing shop or hiring extra security have made grim headlines in recent months.

But it’s not just corporations that are feeling the crunch of increased crime in the Bay Area.

One local Oakland restaurant owner bluntly told Fox News Digital that the city where she’s spent nearly all her 45 years is “the worst I’ve ever seen it.”

Target closed its downtown Oakland location last year after police responded to more than 100 smash-and-grab thefts and similar incidents in 2023.

In-N-Out recently announced its sole Oakland burger joint was closing, the first time in the company’s history it had to make such a decision, due to rampant burglaries, property damage and armed robberies in the area.

A Denny’s also closed down last month because of the crime epidemic.

Then there’s Blue Shield, Clorox, and Kaiser Permanente, the largest employer in Oakland, who have issued warnings to employees, hired security guards or taken other actions in response to a crime surge in the city. 

Weyanti Ahmed, who runs Y’s Choice restaurant in the city’s Jack London district near the waterfront, says the developments show Oakland won’t begin to thrive until it makes serious changes.

The neighborhood has been beset by rising crime, forcing local hubs to close or raise prices in response. 

“It’s scary for business owners,” she told Fox News Digital.

Stories about high-profile companies in Oakland closing shop or hiring extra security have made grim headlines in recent months. AP

“It’s scary for even a citizen just walking down the street. It’s just not comfortable. You’re always on guard, and it’s absolutely affected my business tremendously.”

She described one particularly terrifying incident in December when a shooting occurred near the restaurant while she had customers inside.

She has seven employees, and she says she no longer allows them to use public transportation if they don’t have their own vehicle.

“There’s just not enough police presence in Oakland,” she said.

“Especially in our area, like downtown, Jack London, it’s a tourist attraction. So it only makes sense for a lot of the crimes to happen there, because they know a lot of tourists are down there.”

One local Oakland restaurant owner bluntly told Fox News Digital that the city where she’s spent nearly all her 45 years is “the worst I’ve ever seen it.” AP

One woman told local outlet KTVU last year the once-vibrant district was turning into a “ghost town,” recounting seeing cars broken into in broad daylight while she walked her dog.

Another man said, “this could be a vibrant community but it ain’t right now.”

“Defund the police? That don’t work,” he said.

Ahmed says she and her fellow business owners in the neighborhood do their best to look out for one another, but they’re limited in what they can do.

She’s been forced to rely more on delivery apps like DoorDash and Grubhub because people don’t feel comfortable dining at her restaurant, which specializes in soul and seafood.

In-N-Out recently announced its sole Oakland burger joint was closing, the first time in the company’s history it had to make such a decision, due to rampant burglaries, property damage and armed robberies in the area. Getty Images

She also said she’s considered closing down her own location because of how many dine-in customers she’s lost.

“So when you’re going to have dinner or lunch or whatever it is, and then you go outside and your car’s broken into, that $30 meal has now cost you over $230,” she said.

“Would you go back? Probably not… The whole dining experience in Jack London, it’s just not going to happen because no one is comfortable to sit down and eat.”

Oakland is the county seat of Alameda County, whose District Attorney Pamela Price has faced criticism for being perceived as soft on crime with her progressive policies, including such measures and efforts as not trying juveniles as adults, seeking lower sentences and probation for more crimes, and doing away with special-circumstance sentencing enhancements.

Oakland is also without a permanent police chief at the moment, and Ahmed said she’s “fed up” and disappointed with Democratic Mayor Sheng Thao and the City Council.

Weyanti Ahmed, who runs Y’s Choice restaurant in the city’s Jack London district near the waterfront, says the developments show Oakland won’t begin to thrive until it makes serious changes. Google Maps

“I feel like the police officers are a little bit more timid,” Ahmed said.

“They’re not as aggressive as they should be. They don’t have authority in our city, so… we live in a lawless city. It’s really sad.”

Oakland’s troubles have gotten the attention of state leaders as well.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom blasted the “completely unacceptable” rise in crime and announced a surge of 120 California Highway Patrol officers to Oakland the East Bay, leading to dozens of arrests this week on everything from auto theft to drug possession.

According to a recent CBS News report, Oakland crime statistics showed robbery (37%), burglary (24%) and motor vehicle theft (45%) were all up double digits year-over-year.

The office of Mayor Thao has told local outlets that reducing crime is a top priority for City Hall, pointing to funding for more police academies to train new officers and bringing back foot patrols.

Oakland is one of the bluest cities in the U.S.; Democrats dominate municipal leadership and President Biden took 80% of the vote in Alameda County in 2020. 

Requests for comment to the offices of Thao and Price were not returned.

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Elderly San Francisco man Rongxin Liao to return to China after decades of living in US because it’s ‘too dangerous’

The family of an elderly man — who has been assaulted multiple times on the crime-riddled streets of San Francisco — has decided America is “too dangerous” for their loved one and is sending him back to his home country of China after decades of living in the States.

“It’s too dangerous here,” Jing Liao told the San Francisco Standard on Monday after he and his family booked his father, Rongxin Liao, 87, a one-way ticket back to his home city of Guangzhou, Guangdong.

“Public safety situation in San Francisco has become worse and worse,” Liao added, revealing his father had been brutally attacked multiple times while in San Francisco.

Rongxin Liao was the victim of one high-profile case in 2020 when security footage caught a deranged man jump-kicking him as he sat in his walker waiting for the bus on a street in the depreciating city.

The Chinese immigrant, who speaks little English, had appeared in court multiple times to ask the judge for a harsher sentence for his attacker.

Rongxin Liao was unprovokedly attacked in 2020 while he waited for the bus on a street in San Francisco. KGO

His attacker, Eric Ramos-Hernandez, was only jailed for seven months, then transferred to a mental health clinic, only to be later released for at-home treatment, the Standard reported.

Rongxin Liao suffered severe head injuries as a result of that attack.

The grandfather was attacked again on Oct. 1, 2023, while he was walking down Market Street in Downtown San Francisco, his son revealed.

A police report obtained by the outlet shows an 86-year-old Asian male matching Rongxin Liao’s description was sucker punched that day and transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Liao’s attacker, Eric Ramos-Hernandez, received a light sentence for assaulting the elderly Chinese immigrant. KGO

Rongxin Liao himself also told the Chinese-language newspaper Sing Tao Daily on Monday that he was attacked in the city seven years ago while walking to church.

The 87-year-old said he had been beaten unconscious by an unknown attacker and woke up in the emergency room of St. Francis Memorial Hospital with a partly fractured hand that required eight stitches.

Despite being questioned by police multiple times, his attacker was never found, and the case was dropped.

“I don’t want to be a drag to my son here,” Rongxin Liao told Sing Tao Daily. “I don’t want him to worry about me all the time.”

Liao and his family decided it would be safer for him to return to China after he was assaulted multiple times over the past few years. KGO

The family decided to send their elder back so he could live out the remainder of his days in peace with Jing Liao’s brother back in China.

Liao had a farewell dinner with some of his elder friends in Chinatown on Sunday to say his goodbyes after 24 years of living in America.

Before he leaves America this Saturday, he will revisit the hospital to check on his eye injuries stemming from the last attack.

Many of the homeless population in San Francisco, California, are linked to various crimes, including drug-related activities and instances of theft. Michael Ho Wai Lee/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

Assaults across San Francisco dropped by 4.9% in 2023, according to the latest crime statistics.

In 2022, however, assaults in the city had jumped a staggering 8.8% in comparison to 2021.

Following his 2020 assault, the video of the violent attack and members of Rongxin Liao’s family would appear in a recall campaign advertisement against then-District Attorney Chesa Boudin.

The ad, which ran in May 2022, claimed that since Boudin was elected as DA, hate crimes against Asian Americans have risen 567%.

Boudin was ousted from his role back in June 2022 after fed-up San Francisco voters chose to recall the soft-on-crime DA following surges in shameless shoplifting, car break-ins, and rampant, open-air drug dealing.



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AI Program Now Being Used to Spot Wildfires in California

California firefighters are using artificial intelligence to help spot wildfires, feeding video from more than 1,000 cameras strategically placed across the state into a machine that alerts first responders when to mobilize.

In an example of the potential of the ALERTCalifornia AI program launched last month, a camera spotted a fire that broke out at 3am local time (3.30pm IST) in the remote, scrubby Cleveland National Forest about 50 miles (80 km) east of San Diego.

With people asleep and darkness concealing the smoke, it could have spread into a raging wildfire. But AI alerted a fire captain who called in about 60 firefighters including seven engines, two bulldozers, two water tankers and two hand crews. Within 45 minutes the fire was out, Cal Fire said.

Developed by engineers at the University of California San Diego using AI from DigitalPath, a company based in Chico, California, the platform relies on 1,038 cameras put up by various public agencies and power utilities throughout the state, each one capable of rotating 360 degrees at the command of remote operators.

Since the AI program began July 10, Cal Fire provided other examples of AI alerting fire captains to a fire before a 911 call was made, though it did not yet have a comprehensive report.

Neal Driscoll, a professor of geology and geophysics at UCSD and the principal investigator of ALERTCalifornia, said the sample size so far was too small to draw conclusions.

Cal Fire hopes the technology can one day serve as a model for other states and countries around the world, a need underscored by unusually devastating wildfires in Hawaii, Canada and the Mediterranean this season.

“Its 100 percent applicable throughout anywhere in the world, especially now that we’re experiencing a lot larger and more frequent fire regimes and with climate change,” said Suzann Leininger, a Cal Fire intelligence specialist in El Cajon, just east of San Diego.

Part of Leininger’s job is to help the machine learn. She reviews previously recorded video from the camera network of what AI considers to be a fire, then tells the machine whether it was right with a binary yes or no answer. Any number of phenomenon can trigger a false positive: clouds, dust, even a truck with smoky exhaust.

With hundreds of specialists repeating the exercise up and down the state, the AI has already become more accurate in just a few weeks, Driscoll said.

Beyond the camera network, the platform is collecting vast amounts of additional information, including an aerial survey to quantify the vegetation that would fuel future fires and map the Earth’s surface beneath the canopy, Driscoll said.

Airplanes and drones are also collecting infrared and other wavelength data beyond the capabilities of human vision.

During the winter, the platform is able to measure atmospheric rivers and snowpack. The UCSD team is also capturing data on burn scars and their impact on erosion, sediment dispersal, water quality and soil quality, Driscoll said.

The data, which is available to any private company or academic researcher, could eventually be used to model fire behavior and improve as yet unforeseen AI applications for studying the environment.

“We’re in extreme climate right now. So we give them the data, because this problem is bigger than all of us,” Driscoll said. “We need to use technology to help move the needle, even if it’s a little bit.”

© Thomson Reuters 2023


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SUV crashes through second floor of California home

This takes car accidents to a new level.

An SUV crashed into a northern California home over the weekend and became lodged in the second-floor roof, authorities said.

Photos of the Sunday evening crash shared by the California Fire Nevada Yuba Placer Unit show the white vehicle resting amid debris on the carport roof of a residence near Colfax, about 45 miles outside of Sacramento.

The vehicle was severely damaged, as was most of the roof and a second-floor window.

Firefighters and other responders worked to stabilize the carport before extricating the vehicle’s occupant, Cal Fire wrote.

Pacific Gas & Electric also shut off power to the area during the risky rescue, WCSC reported.

While the driver was hospitalized, there were no reported injuries to occupants of the home or on-scene workers, Cal Fire said.


The cause of the crash is still being investigated.
CAL FIRE Nevada Yuba Placer Unit

The roof is level with a hill behind the house.
CAL FIRE Nevada Yuba Placer Unit

Officials are still investigating what caused the vehicle to land on the roof, which is level with a hill behind the house.

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Former Obama speechwriter Jon Lovett calls on Sen. Dianne Feinstein to resign immediately

Jon Lovett, an ex-speechwriter for former President Barack Obama, called on Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to resign on Tuesday amid her lengthy health-related absence from the Senate. 

Feinstein, the oldest serving member of the Senate, revealed on March 2 that she was hospitalized for shingles treatment after being diagnosed with an infection in February.

She was released from the San Francisco hospital on March 7, but the 89-year-old has yet to return to the Senate. 

Lovett, who is also the co-founder of progressive media company Crooked Media, argued that Feinstein’s current absence from the upper chamber is keeping the Senate from confirming justices – and that more people should be demanding her immediate resignation.

“There’s been a lot of reporting about Dianne Feinstein no longer being fit to serve in the Senate representing the biggest state in this country. She is currently out for shingles. That is sad. That is obviously not her fault,” Lovett said on his podcast, “Pod Save America,” according to the Hill.

“But because she is not in the Judiciary Committee, [Democratic Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin] has said that it has made it basically impossible to move a lot of these lower court nominees to the Senate for a vote, which means that Dianne Feinstein, who should not be in the Senate, is now preventing us from being able to confirm judges,” Lovett said.


Jon Lovett, former President Barack Obama’s speechwriter, called for Sen. Dianne Feinstein to resign immediately.
Joshua Blanchard

“I think what the people around Dianne Feinstein are doing, allowing, being part of this farce of having a lack of a senator in such an important job is really wrong,” he continued. “And Dianne Feinstein should no longer be in the Senate. She has to resign and more people should be calling on her to resign.”

Feinstein said after her release from the hospital that she is “recovering at home,” where she continues to receive treatment for shingles and that she looks forward to “returning to the Senate as soon as possible.”

For the last several weeks, Democrats in the Senate have been limited to only 49 members, equaling Republicans, due to the absence of Feinstein and Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), who was hospitalized for treatment for clinical depression.  

Durbin told The Hill earlier this month that Democrats in the Senate hope to be “back to full strength” after Easter.


Sen. Dianne Feinstein was hospitalized for shingles treatment after being diagnosed with an infection in February.
AP

In February, Feinstein posted a tweet announcing that she will not seek a sixth term for office in 2024.

When asked by reporters that day about the announcement, the California Democrat appeared confused that it was made.

“You put out the statement?” asked an incredulous-sounding Feinstein, before telling the press: “I didn’t know they put it out.”

“It is what it is,” the senator added. “I think the time has come. I have a whole other year. I have things that are underway. I expect to achieve them, I hope, and so we’ll see.”

Unnamed Senate colleagues and former staffers had claimed in April of last year that Feinstein’s memory was rapidly deteriorating and that her staff did much of her work.

Reps. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) and Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) have both announced that they will run for her vacant seat in 2024.

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Los Angeles under fire for blaring music in train stations to deter homeless

A US city has come under fire over a controversial plan to deter homeless people that has been described as “psychological torture”.

In recent months, Los Angeles has been blasting loud classical music in train stations in a bid to reduce crime and prevent homeless people from loitering.

It comes after a recent spike in fatal overdoses and serious crime such as rape, aggravated assault and robbery within the city’s public transport system.

According to the LA Times, a city pilot program has seen blinding floodlights deployed in the Westlake/MacArthur Park station, along with music from a royalty-free playlist by legendary composers such as Beethoven, Mozart and Vivaldi in a continuous loop.

But while LA Metro spokesman Dave Sotero told the publication “the music is not loud”, insisting it was being played at 72 decibels – less than normal noise levels outside the station – an experiment by the Times contradicted the claim, with a handheld meter revealing the sound levels actually averaged 83dB and peaked at 90dB in some areas.

According to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), decibel levels between 80 and 85 are comparable to lawnmowers and leaf blowers, with hearing damage possible after just two hours of exposure.

As a result, the publication argued: “There is a clear disconnect between what transit riders and the unhoused are experiencing in the subterranean confines of the station and LA Metro’s official line about the music’s volume.”


Los Angeles is just the latest in a string of global cities to spark backlash as a result of anti-homelessness measures.
Shutterstock

LA Metro also recently told the LA Daily News the noise levels were “comfortable” for short periods of time.

“The idea is to create an atmosphere that is comfortable for spending short amounts of time transiting through our station, but not conducive to hours-long loitering,” a spokesperson said.

But the move has spared fierce backlash, with online commentators branding it an inhumane torture tactic.

“This is despicable. Sonic torture of people without homes in LA,” civil rights lawyer Scott Hechinger tweeted.

Another Twitter user called for LA Metro to “stop the psychological torture”, while another compared it to psychological horror flick A Clockwork Orange.

And other critics pointed out it did little to address the root cause of the homelessness problem.

Music has long been used as a weapon, with the US military infamously blasting Metallica’s Enter Sandman at Iraqi detainees in Guantanamo Bay, while “music torture” was used to force strongman Manuel Noriega out of hiding at the Vatican’s embassy in Panama City in 1989.

Los Angeles is just the latest in a string of global cities to spark backlash as a result of anti-homelessness measures.

In recent years, UK cities including London and Manchester were widely criticised for installing “defensive architecture” in the form of metal spikes which were placed on the ground in areas where people were known to sleep rough.

Pavement sprinklers have also been positioned over the years in New York, Hamburg and Guangzhou, with the intention of spraying homeless people who linger too long.

There are also countless examples right across the world of bus shelter benches that tilt forward, park benches with uncomfortable dividers and cement bollards positioned under bridges in an attempt to drive away those sleeping rough.

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Bunny named wellness officer at California police department

This bunny got a badge.

A rabbit was given the rank of “wellness officer” at the Yuba City Police Department in California, just in time for Easter.

The hare-y tale began by the side of the road.

Last year, Officer Ashley Carson of the YCPD, which is about 40 miles north of Sacramento, found the lost rabbit on a local street and brought it back to the station.

After an attempt by animal control to locate its family was unsuccessful, a police services analyst adopted it and named the little cottontail Percy.

On Wednesday, the department posted the hoppy news of Percy’s new title on Facebook, describing the wellness program there, which is open to employees and their families, as “providing tools and resources to reduce stress and create a positive foundation for well-being.”


An officer from the department fond the lost rabbit on a local street last year.
AP

“Officer Percy lounges at the police department during the day and is a support animal for all,” the post said.

“Most enjoy his company, while some are still getting used to the idea of a rabbit being inside a police department.”

With Post Wires

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Parrot worth $2.5K stolen from porch of California home in broad daylight

A devastated California family is pleading for help after their pet parrot worth $2,500 was yanked off their porch and stolen by a brazen thief in broad daylight.

The hooded bird snatcher walked up to the front porch and aggressively grabbed the 4′ by 2′ bird cage with the parrot inside on March 12, according to footage obtained by ABC 7.

The thief was captured alongside a second man, shoving the cage into the back of a red SUV before taking off with the animal.

Police believe at least two people were involved in the theft, the outlet adds.

The African Gray Parrot named Luna was snatched off the front of the Orange County home early afternoon.

The family says their winged companion was outside getting some fresh air, and they are surprised at how quickly he was taken.

The grey-hooded thief stole the family pet in the middle of the afternoon.
Facebook/Abigail Ayapantecatl
The family is pleading with the public for any information on the suspects involved.
Facebook/Abigail Ayapantecatl

“Typically we have him out for a little while, just to get some sun, and the person just came in and in a matter of seconds took the bird and the cage,” Karen Gerardo, one of Luna’s owners told the outlet.

Luna — who’s been with the family for 10 years — is the family’s son’s pet, and the bird is said to be highly attached to the son.

“My brother tried chasing them down but they drove off quickly down Main towards Warner,” Abigail Ayapantecatl wrote in a Facebook post asking the public for help.

Gerardo said Luna was “a joy to have around” and even knew how to sing along and mimic certain movies and television shows and would say “hello” if someone answered the phone around him.

“No different than losing a dog or cat,” Gerardo told the outlet. “Birds, specifically, have their own personality. So it is a loss for our home.”

Gerardo said her family has received an outcry of support from social media and local pet store owners and hopes someone will identify the suspects involved.


The pair of thieves are seen loading the cage with Luna inside into the red SUV.
Facebook/Abigail Ayapantecatl

The red SUV used as the getaway vehicle did not have plates attached to it at the time of the bird-napping.
Facebook/Abigail Ayapantecatl

The snatcher of the cage was seen in a charcoal gray hoodie, gray gloves, and light gray sweats, with his alleged accomplice wearing a tan bucket hat and black hoodie.

The SUV had no license plate on it at the time of the robbery, according to Ayapantecatl’s post.

The African grey parrot — which can live up to 70 to 80 years — is considered a brilliant bird, with studies finding that some can perform “cognitive tasks at levels beyond that of 5-year-old humans.”

The breed of parrot can be valued anywhere from $2,500 and $5,000.

“It’s been difficult,” Gerardo said. “It was a 4′ by 2′ [cage] in the middle of our living room, and having that void is a daily reminder that our pet is no longer with us. Not because it died, but because it was stolen by someone.”

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Vanessa Maldonado arrested for dumping newborn in gas station trash can

A California woman was arrested after allegedly dumping her newborn baby in a gas station trashcan.

Venissa Maldonado was arrested for attempted murder and felony child abuse after the 25-year-old left her crying baby boy inside a Chevron gas station restroom on Thursday, Fullerton Police officials told The Post.

“Through her statements to detectives, it was determined that the child was hers,” department spokesman Sgt. Ryan O’Neil told The Post.

O’Neil said detectives have yet to determine whether Maldonado gave birth to the baby boy inside the restroom or not.


Venissa Maldonado, 25, was arrested Friday for attempted murder and felony child abuse, police officials said.
Fullerton Police Department

Cops found the crying newborn inside a trash can at a Chevron gas station in the 900 block of West Orangethorpe Avenue in Fullerton, Calif.
Google Maps

One of the gas station employees called 911, O’Neil said. Police officers who responded to the call discovered the sobbing baby inside the trash can.

The Fullerton Fire Department was called immediately to the scene and performed life-saving measures on the baby. The newborn was transported to a local hospital, where he remains in critical but stable condition, O’Neil said.

Police served a search warrant at about 1:45 a.m. Friday at a Fullerton apartment, where Maldonado was arrested.

California has a Safely Surrendered Baby Law, which allows parents to surrender newborns at any fire or police station or other designated sites without fear of prosecution within 72 hours of the birth.

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‘Party Mom’ Shannon O’Connor attacked by in California jail

A mom accused of hosting secret parties where she watched her teen sons’ friends having sex was attacked by inmates at a California jail.

The five inmates, who are being held at a Santa Clara County jail, allegedly kicked Shannon O’Connor and beat her with their bare hands, according to court documents obtained by KRON.

The five inmates — Erika Amaya, Danielle Chavez, Sophia Vigil, Anita Quiroz and Marjaana Gardea — allegedly attacked O’Connor, 47, while inside a dorm room on Oct. 24, Los Gatos Sheriff’s Deputy Frank Thrall wrote in court documents.

O’Connor has been locked up at Elmwood Correctional Facility since she was arrested for throwing the booze-filled teen sex parties during an eight-month period in 2020 to 2021 without her husband’s knowledge.


Shannon O’Connor is accused of hosting wild parties and helping drunk teenage boys sexually assault girls in California.
Ada County Sheriff’s Office

Prosecutors said the “Party Mom” met the then-14 and 15-year old teens through social media and through her sons, who attend Los Gatos High School. The girls told investigators that O’Connor watched as they were sexually assaulted by the boys.

The girls “would vomit, be unable to stand and fall unconscious,” prosecutors said.


“Party Mom” Shannon O’Connor was attacked by five inmates at Elmwood Correctional Facility.
Google Earth

During one party, O’Connor allegedly handed a boy a condom and pushed him into a room where an intoxicated 14-year old girl was lying on the bed.

“[The girl] was afraid, ran and locked herself in the bathroom, prosecutors said.

O’Connor, who has been awaiting trial, was attacked by the five inmates for about 16 seconds before deputies broke up the fight. The alleged party mom didn’t fight back, Thrall wrote in court documents. She was treated at the hospital for injuries.

Her alleged attackers are scheduled to appear in court on Thursday to face charges.

Meanwhile, O’Connor is facing 39 counts, including felony child endangerment and sexual battery. O’Connor, who worked as an administrative assistant at Aruba Networks, also faces fraud charges for more than $120,000 in unauthorized charges on a company credit card.

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