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Meeting on arson verdicts set

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Coarsegold pair convicted

COARSEGOLD — A town hall meeting has been set for 7 p.m. Monday to discuss the conviction of a Coarsegold couple on dozens of charges for a slew of fires that terrorized residents in Yosemite Lakes Park.

A Madera jury took five days of deliberation to deliver its verdict this week.

Authorities said Kenneth Allen Jackson, 41, and Alice Waterman, 47, set 23 fires last year from May to June that caused more than $1 million in damages.

Jackson, the more serious offender, was convicted on 21 counts of arson, one count of battery on a peace officer, and one count of resisting arrest. Madera County District Attorney Michael Keitz said he faces 32 years in prison for those charges...


Fire chief eludes statewide hunt

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — After a week of futility, authorities appeared no closer Friday to finding a state fire battalion chief being sought in the stabbing death of his girlfriend inside their home near Sacramento.

Orville “Moe” Fleming, who formerly served in Madera County, vanished more than a week ago, abandoning his official California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection pickup in a Sacramento suburb before sheriff’s investigators were alerted to the body of 26-year-old Sarah June Douglas. She was found inside the south Sacramento home they had shared for the last two years.

Investigators say Fleming, 55, moved in with Douglas after meeting her as an escort who advertised on the Internet. The victim’s past and comments Fleming’s estranged wife made to investigators have sparked as yet unsubstantiated reports of an incriminating sex tape.

Sacramento County Sheriff’s Sgt. Lisa Bowman said investigators are aware of Douglas’ history as an escort and that Meagan Fleming, the estranged wife, has told them that she viewed a tape showing Douglas having sex with her husband and other firefighters. Authorities previously gave the victim’s middle name as Jane but now say that was incorrect.

Court records available online show that Orville Fleming filed for divorce from his wife in Fresno County Superior Court in October, but the case has not been finalized.

Bowman will not say whether detectives have a video like the one Fleming’s wife described to sheriff’s investigators. Instead, she said the department is focused on a manhunt that is complicated by Fleming’s considerable skills in the outdoors, his familiarity with California’s mountains and a set of keys that give him access to hundreds of state fire buildings and storage facilities.

The keys can unlock gates meant to keep vehicles out of remote areas and provide access to roughly two dozen isolated wildfire lookout towers, locked caches of food and firefighting tools, air bases, firefighting camps and fire stations.

Two handguns registered to Fleming have not been found, Bowman said.

“He knows the land much better than anybody, because in the scope of his job he’s worked in the backcountry and he knows what’s available to him,” Bowman said. “He’s got more access to a way to survive and a way to hide out.”

Fleming was a CalFire battalion chief until he was fired this week for failing to show up for work at a department training facility. Armed guards are patrolling the training grounds, and department spokesman Daniel Berlant said Fleming’s wanted poster has been plastered on each of CalFire’s hundreds of facilities statewide.

Yet Fleming may no longer look like the man firefighters knew during his 21 years with the department, Bowman said. When he temporarily shaved his head and moustache last fall, she said it changed his appearance so that even his family and friends didn’t recognize him.

Investigators have received hundreds of tips, including unsubstantiated sightings as distant as Oregon and Los Angeles. Yet they say he is particularly familiar with the Yosemite Valley, other regions of the Sierra Nevada and with the Santa Cruz Mountains.

“He’s on the run; he knows he’s wanted. He very well could have altered his appearance and very likely he’s got two guns,” Bowman said. “We do have a valid fear for the public. What is he going to do if he gets cornered?”

Berlant said CalFire is not asking Fleming’s estranged wife or other firefighters about the purported sex tape because the department does not want to interfere with the criminal investigation.

“If anything comes to light through the sheriff’s investigation ... obviously we will take the necessary action,” he said. “We do not tolerate that type of behavior. But at this point, that is still an unsubstantiated allegation.”

Fugitive nabbed in Chowchilla

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Madera County’s elite Special Investigation Unit (SIU), a multi-agency Gang Task Force, captured one of Madera County’s most wanted fugitives in Chowchilla on Friday afternoon, authorities said.

Agents apprehended Maderan Billy Childers, 32, shortly before 2 p.m. at a home on Avenue 20 near Road 15 1/2. The homeowner, 37-year old Ricky Seaver, was also taken into custody, wanted for a probation violation.

The Madera County Sheriff’s Office had been looking for Childers, who is wanted for a robbery and assault with a firearm, according to sheriff’s spokeswoman Erica Stuart.

Childers had barricaded himself in the home with an illegal assault rifle after the detention of Seaver, but after eight minutes was taken into custody without further incident, Stuart said. He was brought to county jail and his bail set at $225,000...

Kelley returns to Madera hospital

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Former Madera Community Hospital CEO Bob Kelley is back in the chair he occupied before his retirement in 2005.

Kelley on April 1 became interim CEO of the hospital after Mark Foote, who had been named CEO after the retirement of John Frye earlier this year, decided he wanted to move back into his old position as the hospital’s chief financial officer. That was a position he had held for 11 years.

“The board asked me to come down and talk to them,” he said, “and they indicated that Mark knew being CEO wasn’t just the right job for him, and wanted to remain as CFO.”

Kelley said he wasn’t sure how long he would be at the hospital, but did say one of his jobs would be to recruit and help choose the next CEO for the hospital. He isn’t interested in the job permanently...

Health fair draws 600

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Students at Madera South High School walked through the west gymnasium collecting information, treats, knickknacks and watching performances on Friday.

The annual Science Club Health Fair, organized by students and staff, featured more than two dozen community organizations and businesses who provided information for hundreds of Stallions.

Randy Durbin, the adviser for the Madera South High School Science Club, said he was pleased with the turnout.

“Every year there’s a lot of students that come,” he said. “This year it looked like there were at least 600 who came through.” ...

Cash flies on SR 99

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Cash blown out of a vehicle on southbound state route 99 in central Madera prompted drivers to pull over Friday and endanger their lives, and that of drivers, according to the California Highway Patrol.

CHP Sgt. Jon Johnson say the exact source of the cash was unknown, but the money appeared to be only dollar bills blown by the winds into traffic.

Rumors of free money, a large amount of cash reportedly from an overturned armored bank vehicle, spread as quickly as the dollar bills.

“It’s not true, and it didn’t happen. There was no crash involving an armored truck. No millions of dollars blowing around. What did happen was people stopped and risked their lives to chase dollar bills in traffic,” he said...

Mary Chavira named 2014 Mother of the Year

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Mother of the Year Mary Chavira went from smiles to tears to laughs, all in one sitting, as she learned of her recognition during a sold-out event honoring mothers and organized by local women.

A flower corsage, pearls donated by Leighton’s Jewelers, a $140 gift certificate for Posh Salon & Spa and a plaque from Latinas Unidas were presented to Chavira.

“I want to thank my family and all my friends who are here,” a teary-eyed Chavira said. “I love everybody, especially all my children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. They really are great. This was a big surprise for me.”

The nonprofit organization Latinas Unidas puts on the yearly event with the help of sponsors, including businesses and individuals, to recognize mothers and raise scholarship funds for local high school and continuation school graduates...

Farmer locked in battle with union

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By Scott Smith

SANGER — Six months ago, workers at one of the largest fruit farms in the U.S. went to the ballot box to decide if they would continue to be represented by the United Farm Workers, which won that right two decades ago but never forged a labor contract.

The ballots, still uncounted by state officials and locked in a safe, sit at the center of a dispute between the union launched by iconic farm labor leader Cesar Chavez and Gerawan Farming, Inc., which hires more than 5,000 workers annually to tend and harvest nectarines, peaches and plums.

Chavez has long since passed away, but the UFW’s fight to get workers at Gerawan a union-negotiated contract goes on, moving from the farm’s vast orchards in Central California to courtrooms amid accusations of broken labor laws and intimidation tactics.

In California, the nation’s most productive agricultural region, unions over decades have won more than 750 elections to represent workers, said Philip Martin, a farm labor expert at the University of California, Davis.

But that never resulted in more than 350 negotiated contracts, so Martin said another 400 farms may find themselves in the same position as Gerawan.

In the South, such as North Carolina, a few farms and food processors have recently unionized, said David Zonderman, a labor historian at North Carolina State University, adding that the region still remains at the bottom of national rankings for organized labor.

“It can be Michigan, Main, North Carolina or Northern California,” Zonderman said. “Organizing farm workers is very, very difficult.”

Dan Gerawan, who runs the family business in Central California and claims it pays the highest wages in the industry, said the union and a runaway state labor board are in collusion, using what he considers to be an unconstitutional state law to take control of his business and rob his workers of their choice of whether to be represented.

Gerawan said the UFW turned its back on the workers for 20 years, until recently returning out of nowhere. “There’s no longer peace in the fields,” he said. “What was our sin that justifies this?”

UFW’s National Vice President Armando Elenes said farm workers need protection today more than ever from abuses such as low wages, exposure to harmful pesticides and working in extreme heat.

He disputed union critics who say the UFW is reasserting its long-dormant right to represent workers merely to bolster its membership rolls and dues. “It has nothing to do with a money grab,” he said. “It has to do with improving conditions for workers.”

This feud dates back to 1992, when the UFW began to represent Gerawan’s workers. The two sides met once, without agreeing to a contract.

After that, Elenes said UFW leaders realized they were up against a powerful, anti-union farm.

The union turned to Sacramento, Elenes said, and won passage in 2002 of a law that calls for mediation if two sides can’t reach a contract. The UFW tested the law at three smaller farms in San Joaquin and Madera counties, gaining hundreds of new members before returning to Gerawan in 2012.

Gerawan said in the two decades that passed he heard nothing from the union.

“Not a letter, no phone call, no fax, no email, no contact at all,” he said.

Elenes said there was no disappearing act, as Gerawan claims.

In a new round of negotiations last year, the sides met repeatedly without agreeing on a contract, and the UFW invoked its right to a mediator. Gerawan appealed, saying having a mediator order a contract has “dubious constitutional validity” and would unfairly force the union on him and his workers.

UFW’s Elenes said he would rather obtain a voluntary agreement and not have to use the mediation law.

Silvia Lopez, who has picked peaches for 15 years at Gerawan, said she is happy with the pay and working conditions. “If they don’t treat me good, I don’t stay there even one day,” the 38-year-old said.

Lopez said she doesn’t want the UFW taking 3 percent of her paycheck in dues. She led a signature drive to hold a vote on whether the workers want the UFW to represent them anymore. The vote happened Nov. 5, and she believes the ballots — if counted — would drive out the UFW.

Silas Shawver, director of the state Agriculture Labor Relations Board’s office in Visalia, said the ballots remain untouched because of unsettled allegations made by the UFW that Gerawan’s crew bosses coerced workers into signing the petition calling for the vote, compromising the process.

Shawver denied that the agriculture board is on the UFW’s side, saying his office is independent and bound by law to investigate potential violations of worker rights. Gerawan said his crew bosses have not intimidated workers, and he wants the votes counted.

Gerawan worker and union supporter Severiano Salas, 34, said in Spanish with the UFW’s Elenes translating that working conditions have improved since the union returned. Salas, who has worked at the farm for 15 years, said he is ready to pay 3 percent for full union representation.

“What would I tell my kids if I didn’t do this?” he said. “If I didn’t defend myself, how am I going to face them?”


20 bins of food donated

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Madera comes together to ‘Stamp Out Hunger’

Post office employees provided the labor and citizens provided the donations as thousands of pounds of food were raised for the benefit of several local nonprofits over the weekend.

Every year on the second Saturday of May for the “Stamp Out Hunger” food drive, mail carriers from more than 10,000 cities across the United States collect the gifted grub along their routes in addition to their normal work for donation to food banks and distribution to the needy.

Ryan McWherter, executive director of the Madera County Food Bank, said by Monday all the food was still being counted but at least 20 bins — which usually hold anywhere from 500 to 800 pounds each — were filled during the event.

“It went great,” McWherter said. “With us feeding 22,000 people a month it’s going to be some great support. I can’t thank the community enough… it’s going to feed a lot, and I mean a lot, of people.” ...

Marking studies’ finale

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Ceremony remains open to students

An educator wants local college students who are set to reach a milestone at the end of this semester to be honored in a baccalaureate.

Open to all Madera Community College Center students who are either earning an associate degree, a vocational certificate or transferring to a four-year university are welcome to participate in the recognition program, said Dan Rivera, the educational adviser at Madera Community College.

Rivera is hosting the event on his own at Madera Avenue Bible Church, 124 Walnut Street. The college does not sponsor the event, he said.

Rivera started the annual baccalaureate three years ago to honor those completing an educational endeavor. Seventeen students participated during the first baccalaureate, he said. Last year there were nine and so far nine students have signed up, Rivera said...

Memorial for law agents

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Surviving relatives to participate Wednesday

Surviving kin of Madera County law officers who died in the line of duty are expected to participate in a public memorial for all such state officers at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday in Courthouse Park.

The 7th annual Law Enforcement Memorial Ceremony includes a flyover, a wreath laying and a reading of the names of the 10 California officers who perished in 2013. Four died of automotive accidents and the rest died of gunfire. A K9 officer, Mattie, also was killed.

Those who plan to take part in the wreath laying include Margot Sciacqua, the daughter of Madera County Sheriff’s “matron,” Lucille Helm, who was the first female in the state of California to die in the line of duty, according to sheriff’s spokeswoman Erica Stuart.

Helm, a 44-year-old Madera housewife with four children, died on State Route 99 along with Sgt. George Terry, 53, on July 13, 1959. Their car was hit head-on by another while returning from Modesto after delivering a female mental patient, according to www.findagrave.com. Another deputy and a prisoner were injured, and the other car’s 78-year-old driver — who had suffered a heart attack — died...

All Breed Dog Show set

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Benefit to be Saturday

Proceeds from an annual dog show set for Saturday will benefit the local dog park, organizers said.

The All Breed Dog Show at Rotary Dog Park, 930 N. Gateway Drive, will begin with a pet contest for the best costume, cutest, ugliest and owner look-alike at 11 a.m. All breeds and sizes will be allowed to enter for a $5 fee, said event organizer Michelle Swengel.

“We want people to understand that this event is about family involvement and owner education,” she said. “We strongly encourage spayed and neutered pets to compete, where a lot of other registries don’t do that.”

The dog show will follow. Competing dogs will be categorized by age group, Swengel said. Canines under two years old may compete in the puppy group, while those older than two will be judged as adults, she said...

Parksions to mark 25 years wed

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Frank and Dianna Parksion of Madera Ranchos celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. They were married on May 8, 1964, at the Bethel Southern Baptist Church in Madera.

They plan to celebrate their anniversary with a trip in the near future.

Frank retired as head custodian for Madera Unified School District in 2000 where he worked at both Sierra Vista Elementary School and Madera High School. Dianna worked for many years at the Oberti Olive plant and as a nurse at Madera Community Hospital. The couple worships at the Pentecostal Church of God, located coincidentally right next door to the church where they were married.

On Friday nights, they enjoy attending the gospel singing at the First Assembly Of God Church. They also volunteer to help residents at the Country Villa Madera Rehabilitation and Nursing Center.

North Fork man helps Typhoon Haiyan recovery in Philippines

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You haven’t heard or seen it rain until you’ve experienced the thundering waterfall of a tropical downpour on a metal roof. You certainly don’t want to be in a tent or worse under that cascade.

The rainy season is rapidly approaching in the Philippines and thousands of Filipinos are still living, working and learning under makeshift shelters in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan’s apocalyptic devastation late last year.

North Fork native, Sierra High School and Fresno State graduate Jay York is one of a relay of volunteers from the California Southern Baptist Disaster Relief Ministry (CSBDRM) alleviating those wet and noisy conditions for school children on Leyte island in the Philippines.

Most CSBDRM volunteers serve in construction or chaplaincy roles, but York was sent as a photographer/videographer. His photos can be viewed at https://www.flickr.com/gp/csbdrm/501d64/...

Maderan retires from 24 years in the Navy

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Senior Chief Boatswain’s Mate Joel Martinez, a native of Madera, is retiring from the U.S. Navy after serving for 24 years.

The 1990 Madera High School graduate enlisted in July 1990 and will officially retire on July 31.

Martinez currently serves as the Deck Department Leading Chief Petty Officer onboard the USS Dwight D Eisenhower, where he just completed two arduous back-to-back combat deployments.

During his career, Martinez completed numerous deployments including Desert Shield and Desert Storm...


Madera South High School students win chalk art contest

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Madera South students Jacob Rodriguez and Nathan Nungaray won the 3rd annual MSHS Art Club chalk art contest held Tuesday during lunch.

Participants were given two hours to create a work of art using sidewalk chalk. Sarah White and Rosalinda Lopez judged the contest, which awarded winners with Visa gift cards and trophies.

Audrey Pulido along with twins Calvin and Kevin Galvez-Escobar won second place, while Samantha Raymond and Sandra Vidales won third.

The chalk pieces were created on tar paper so that it can be displayed around campus, club advisor Sheila Kincade said.

Man arrested for bomb scare

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A Raymond man remained in jail Tuesday for allegedly constructing and planting explosive devices on two separate occasions in Madera County, the FBI reported.

Richard Wilson Key, 37, allegedly planted homemade explosives on March 28 in Chowchilla and May 4 in Madera near Grace Community Church.

In the second instance, the device was found by children playing outside Crossroads Christian School and led to class closures the following day as administrative staff inspected the campus.

Both devices were secured by authorities with no injuries, an FBI spokeswoman said. Details about Key are scarce, the spokeswoman said. She could not give any other information about the case including a possible motive, or to quell rumors that a security camera at the church was hacked...

National Women’s Health Week observed

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An annual local health fair in observance of National Women’s Health Week featured free blood pressure and sugar screenings, BMI testing and other services on Tuesday.

Booths from 28 agencies lined the parking lot of the Women’s Health Center and part of B Street as representatives handed out information about health insurance, hospitals, behavioral health, nutrition, fitness and convalescent services, among other resources.

Organized by Camarena Health, the event aims to celebrate National Women’s Health Week, an observance led by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Women’s Health to encourage women to make their health a priority.

About 350 people attended, which is the average yearly turnout, said organizer Lizette Contreras, the director of community development...

Special needs person tied to desk

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Woman charged with imprisonment and abuse

A woman will face felony imprisonment charges in court next month for allegedly tying a 22-year-old person with special needs to a desk outside a home on Sunnyside Avenue last week for at least two hours, Madera County Sheriff spokeswoman Erica Stuart said.

Maria Duarte, 48, is charged with false imprisonment and abuse of a dependent adult, Stuart said. Duarte is from Southern California but recently moved to Madera.

Duarte is scheduled to appear in Madera County Superior Court at 8:30 a.m. June 2. On the afternoon of May 7, deputies responded to a jogger’s tip that he saw a what appeared to be a teenaged child in a sweatshirt and helmet tied to a desk outside a home on Sunnyside Avenue, Stuart said.

Witnesses told deputies the dependent adult had been tied to the table for at least two hours. One end of the rope was attached to the victim’s belt loop, with the other end attached to a desk drawer, Stuart said...

District 1 candidates respond to questions

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Forum features 4 of 5 would-be supervisors

Four of the five candidates for Madera County supervisor in District 1 appeared at a forum Monday night to answer questions from a panel made up of GOP and Tea Party members.

The top vote-getters in the June 3 primary will vie in the November election to replace Supervisor Manuel Nevarez, who decided not to seek the office to which he was appointed last year.

Hopefuls Mona Diaz, Brett Frazier, Ray Krause and Rochelle Noblett responded to questions and short speeches from panelists Chris Green, Leslie La Brucherie and Jim Watkins. District 3 County Supervisor Rick Farinelli, who organized the forum, was timekeeper while former Madera City Councilman Herman Perez was moderator.

Candidate Gary Johns was absent...

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