A look at the increased security at Trump’s Butler rally

A look at the increased security at Trump’s Butler rally – CBS News Watch CBS News Former President Donald Trump will rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday after an assassination attempt unfolded at his July 2024 rally there. Enhanced security measures were put in place, like trailers blocking the line of sight from the shed Thomas Crooks fired from. CBS News political correspondent Caitlin Huey-Burns and CBS News Pittsburgh reporter Jennifer Borrasso have the latest. Be the first to know Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting. Not Now Turn On

Why Jane Fonda is helping campaign for local political candidates

Why Jane Fonda is helping campaign for local political candidates – CBS News Watch CBS News Jane Fonda is no stranger to activism. During a career that has spanned seven decades, she has voiced her opinions on many issues, especially those related to climate change. Now, she’s getting involved at the grassroots level and helping campaign for local political candidates. Be the first to know Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting. Not Now Turn On

Shooting outside St. John Bosco High School during youth sporting event kills at least 1

At least one person died after a shooting at a Los Angeles County high school on Saturday morning, authorities confirmed. The shooting was reported at about 8:20 a.m. outside of St. John Bosco High School in Bellflower, according to the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department. The shooting took place in the parking lot outside of the school’s football stadium, where a youth sporting event was taking place. The victim, who remains unidentified, was found seated in a white sedan and suffering from multiple gunshot wounds, according to sheriff’s Lt. Hugo Reynaga. He was later pronounced dead at a local hospital. The man was at the school to watch his son play in a youth football game, Reynaga confirmed. Reynaga said a female was in the passenger seat of the vehicle, but she was uninjured, as were any other bystanders in the parking lot. According to Reynaga, that vehicle was reported stolen out of Lynwood. Additional details about the theft were not immediately available. “It appears to be [targeted],” Reynaga told reporters. “But we have no information that it is … We don’t know if maybe he

Riverside Offers Cooling Center for Pets Amid Autumn Heat Wave

The first cooling center in Riverside open to both people and their pets is available this weekend, offering an escape from the October heat wave. “Extreme heat is dangerous, so our cooling centers provide a vital respite during heat waves like this,” Riverside Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson said. “Being able to bring your pet along with you makes it more likely that people will take advantage of this, while keeping our animal friends safe as well.” The pet-friendly cooling center has been established in the Salvador J. Lara Casa Blanca Library at 2985 Madison St. People, dogs and cats are welcome from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. “Pets are especially vulnerable to extreme temperatures, and this cooling center is designed to provide a safe refuge for them,” Councilman Jim Perry said. “A pet-friendly cooling center is a great place to relax and dream of cooler weather.” There are spaces reserved specifically for animals, complete with water bowls, feed trays and other supplies. Pet owners are required to keep an eye on their four-legged friends at all times. More information is available at riversideca.gov/library/. The

LAPD Officers Shoot at Suspect in Hollywood; No Injuries Reported

Police shot at a man armed with what turned out to be a dark metallic-colored lighter in the design of a Luger pistol, but he was not struck, authorities said Saturday. Officers responded to the 1100 block of Cole Avenue in Hollywood, one block west of Cahuenga Boulevard, at about 5:10 p.m. Thursday after reports of an armed man, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. They contacted the suspect, later identified as Darrel Morgan, who was walking on the sidewalk adjacent to the Hollywood Pool, located near the intersection of Cole and Lexington avenues, with “an article in his waistband,” police said. Officers gave Morgan verbal commands, which he ignored, and he fled the area on foot, authorities said. He was later located with the assistance of a police helicopter in the area of Vine Street and La Mirada Avenue. Officers attempted to make contact with Morgan as he crossed the east side of Vine Street. Police said he was holding an object that resembled a small handgun. “Morgan appeared to point the object at responding officers, resulting in an officer involved shooting,” according

Justyn Martin shows poise and promise, but UCLA still falls to Penn State

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. —  UCLA might have found something in a season wildly veering in the wrong direction. Justyn time, you might say. With their starting quarterback sidelined by injury, the Bruins turned to Justyn Martin and watched the redshirt sophomore make smart, efficient plays early in his first start to keep his team competitive in a game it was expected to lose by four touchdowns. UCLA eventually wilted in a 27-11 loss to No. 7 Penn State on Saturday afternoon at Beaver Stadium, undone by many of the same issues that have plagued it all season, but there was no doubting the promise shown by the Bruins quarterback. “Took command of the offense and just made plays,” UCLA coach DeShaun Foster said, “so we just have to build off this and just hopefully we can build some momentum and get going.” Completing his first six passes, Martin immediately showed command of an offense that often looked like a foreign language to incumbent starter Ethan Garbers. Martin didn’t force throws or make bad decisions while playing in one of college football’s most unforgiving environments against one

Sharks’ Mukhamadullin returns to practice, but several questions remain

SAN JOSE – Defenseman Shakir Mukhamadullin practiced with the San Jose Sharks on Saturday morning, marking the first time he’s been on the ice with his teammates during training camp and raising questions about when he might be ready to participate in a game again. Mukhamadullin, 22, sustained a lower-body injury during a practice just before the Rookie Faceoff event in El Segundo. Mukhamadullin then missed that four-day event in mid-September and the first two weeks of training camp. “I’ve been preparing a long time for the season, and it happens,” Mukhamadullin said of the injury. “As hockey players, we all know it happens sometimes. You need to stay positive and just keep working.” Mukhamadullin, who is considered one of the Sharks’ top defensive prospects, began skating with some other injured players on Monday and progressed throughout the week without any setbacks. Now it’s a matter of when he can get up to speed and be game-ready. Certainly, the Sharks have some options with Mukhamadullin, who will not play in Saturday night’s preseason game against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena. With NHL teams

Watch: Group of masked suspects steal designer bags from Valentino at L.A. mall in ‘flash mob’ robbery

A group of masked individuals ran off with several designer bags and clothes in a “flash mob” robbery at a mall in the Canoga Park neighborhood of Los Angeles on Friday night, and part of it was caught on camera. The robbery, which was captured on video and obtained by Traffic News LA, was reported at around 6 p.m. at Westfield Topanga mall. The video showed what appeared to be masked young men grabbing the items and running off while leaving a messy path behind them. The robbery took place at the mall’s Valentino store, which is a high-end Italian fashion brand. Several masked robbers made off with designer bags and clothes at a Valentino store at the Topanga Mall on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024. (TNLA) As of Saturday, it wasn’t clear how many items were stolen. There were about 10 suspects, according to TNLA. The Valentino is next door to the Nordstrom store that was robbed in similar fashion just last week. According to TNLA, as much as $60,000 in merchandise was stolen in that flash mob robbery. No additional details were immediately made

Omara Portuondo se retira de los escenarios

La cantante cubana Omara Portuondo, izquierda, y su hijo Ariel Jiménez Portuondo se despiden tras una entrevista en la casa de la cantante en La Habana el 29 de noviembre de 2022. (Ramon Espinosa / Associated Press) LA HABANA (AP) — La estrella cubana Omara Portuondo, de 93 años, se retirará definitivamente de los escenarios esta semana luego de sufrir un incidente durante un concierto en España, informó el jueves su hijo. La gran diva del proyecto Buena Vista Social Club debió ser asistida durante una presentación en Barcelona el 2 de octubre cuando no pudo seguir a la orquesta y se le vio desorientada, según dieron a conocer medios de prensa locales. El incidente fue confirmado por su hijo Ariel Jiménez, quien es su mánager. “Consideramos oportuno anunciar el retiro definitivo de Omara de los escenarios durante la presentación en Budapest el próximo domingo”, expresó un comunicado de Jiménez publicado en la página de la artista en Facebook. “En esta ocasión Omara no cantará, recibirá el cariño y el aplauso”. Jiménez indicó que tras el incidente en Barcelona, Portuondo se encuentra bien y bajo

Justyn Martin shows poise, promise but UCLA still falls to Penn State

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. —  UCLA might have found something in a season wildly veering in the wrong direction. Justyn time, you might say. With their starting quarterback sidelined by injury, the Bruins turned to Justyn Martin and watched the redshirt sophomore make smart, efficient plays early in his first college start to keep his team competitive in a game it was expected to lose by four touchdowns. UCLA eventually wilted in a 27-11 loss to No. 7 Penn State on Saturday afternoon at Beaver Stadium, undone by many of the same issues that have plagued it all season, but there was no doubting the promise shown by the Bruins quarterback. Completing his first six passes, Martin immediately showed command of an offense that often looked like a foreign language to incumbent starter Ethan Garbers. Martin didn’t force throws or make bad decisions while playing in one of college football’s most unforgiving environments against one of its best teams. There would be no storybook ending. Martin could not engineer a comeback, even if he did display plenty of grit on his team’s final drive. The quarterback showed

‘Dangerous’ heat expected in these areas through Monday

SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — An Excessive Heat Warning is in effect for San Diego County’s inland valleys and the low deserts, according to the National Weather Service. This means dangerously hot conditions with temperatures between 90 to 100 degrees are expected. NWS said this is 10 to 20 degrees above normal. The low temperatures are only anticipated to drop between 65 and 75 degrees. Some of the impacted areas include the cities of Escondido, Poway, Santee, San Marcos, La Mesa and El Cajon. Borrego Springs and Ocotillo Wells are also included. This San Diego road is considered to be among the ‘most haunted’ in US (National Weather Service) Hotel Del Coronado workers vote ‘yes’ to authorize strike: what this means Weather officials have encouraged the public to drink plenty of fluids, stay in air-conditioned rooms if possible, stay out of the sun and check up on relatives and neighbors. Meanwhile, the region’s mountain areas, such as Julian and Pine Valley, are under a Heat Advisory. In these areas, temperatures between 90 and 100 degrees can be expected throughout the weekend. The Excessive Heat Warning

Hotel Del Coronado workers vote ‘yes’ to authorize strike: what this means

SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — Over 800 Hotel Del Coronado workers held a strike authorization vote, with 95% voting “yes,” the UNITE HERE Local 30 union announced Saturday. A number of greeters, concierge staff, housekeepers, front desk agents, cooks, stewards, dishwashers, servers, bussers, bartenders, bellmen, engineers, phone operators, doormen and valet workers all showed overwhelming support for the move.  This San Diego road is considered to be among the ‘most haunted’ in US This means the union’s negotiating committee now has the authority to call a strike at any time after the contract expires on Oct. 31, so this isn’t something that will happen immediately. Hotel workers voted by an overwhelming 95% to authorize a strike at the Hotel Del Coronado. (Courtesy of UNITE HERE Local 30) The employees are advocating for increased wages and improved workloads, emphasizing that the hotel has failed to respond to their requests for negotiation dates. Should a strike occur, these workers would join more than 700 employees from the Hilton San Diego Bayfront, who have been striking since Sept. 1 over similar concerns. “Respect Our Work” and “Respect Our Guests” are the

LAPD arrests man with ‘lighter in the design of a pistol’

A man armed with a lighter resembling a firearm near a community pool was arrested in Hollywood earlier this week, police said. According to a media release from the Los Angeles Police Department, officers first received a call regarding a man with a gun near the L.A. Department of Recreation and Parks Hollywood Pool, located near Cole and Lexington avenues, at 5 p.m. Thursday.  Responding officers located the man, Darrell Morgan, who was walking on the sidewalk adjacent to the pool with “an article in his waistband.”  Morgan ignored the officers’ verbal commands and fled the area on foot, briefly losing the police in the process; however, an assisting air unit tracked him near Vine Street and La Mirada Avenue, LAPD said.  Shooting outside St. John Bosco High School kills at least 1 “Officers attempted to make contact with Morgan as he crossed to the east side of Vine Street,” police stated, adding that he was holding “an object resembling a handgun” at the time.  It was at this point that Morgan appeared to point the object at the officers, which resulted in the officers

‘This is Bear territory!’: Cal displays collective passion, creativity in first GameDay experience

BERKELEY — The cameras stopped rolling at nine o’clock exactly — showtime demands the strictest of punctuality — but Rece Davis and Pat McAfee still had more to say to the thousands in attendance at Memorial Glade once the world stopped watching. So much had already been said over the course of ESPN’s College GameDay broadcast on Saturday morning, the first time Cal hosted the spectacle in the show’s 37-year history. There were cheers. There were boos. There were chants of “Roll on you Bears” and Marshawn Lynch yelling, “Show love to the home team!” There were demands for Stanford Steve to remove his cardinal zip-up and there was the catharsis of a sophomore nailing a kick for $100,000. And there were signs. So many beautiful, boisterous, brilliant signs. But at the conclusion of the three-hour broadcast, the official end to a 12-plus hour marathon that truly began around midnight, yes, Davis and McAfee had more to say. There were still flowers to distribute. Cal alumni Stephanie Choy, left, and her partner Brian Kawahara as the “Oso Famoso” (famous bear) participate during the College GameDay, ESPN’s college

The Supreme Court opens its new term with election disputes in the air but not yet on the docket

By Mark Sherman | Associated Press WASHINGTON — Transgender rights, the regulation of “ghost guns” and the death penalty highlight the Supreme Court’s election-season term that begins Monday, with the prospect of the court’s intervention in voting disputes lurking in the background. The justices are returning to the bench at a time of waning public confidence in the court and calls to limit their terms to 18 years that have wide support, including the backing of Democratic President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the party’s White House nominee. Whether by design or happenstance, the justices are hearing fewer high-profile cases than they did in recent terms that included far-reaching decisions by the 6-3 conservative majority on presidential immunity, abortion, guns, and affirmative action. The lighter schedule would allow them to easily add election cases, if those make their way to the high court in the run-up to the Nov. 5 election between Republican Donald Trump and Harris, or its immediate aftermath. “I think there are legal issues that arise out of the political process. And so, the Supreme Court has to be prepared

After the deluge, the lies: Misinformation and hoaxes about Helene cloud the recovery

By David Klepper | Associated Press WASHINGTON — The facts emerging from Hurricane Helene’s destruction are heartrending: Businesses and homes destroyed, whole communities nearly wiped out, hundreds of lives lost, hundreds of people missing. Yet this devastation and despair is not enough for the extremist groups, disinformation agents, hucksters and politicians who are exploiting the disaster to spread false claims and conspiracy theories about it and the government’s response. According to former President Donald Trump, the federal government is intentionally withholding aid to Republican disaster victims. Far-right extremist groups warn on social media that officials plan to bulldoze affected communities and seize the land from residents. A tale straight from science fiction asserts that Washington used weather control technology to steer Helene toward Republican voters in order to tilt the presidential election toward Democratic nominee Kamala Harris. The claims, according to experts and local officials dealing with disaster response, say less about the reality of the widespread damage from Helene than they do about America’s fractured politics and the fear and distrust shadowing an election year marked by assassination attempts and escalating global tension. Debunking

Biden pledged to campaign hard for Harris. So far, he’s been mostly a no-show

By Will Weissert and Bill Barrow | Associated Press WASHINGTON — On the last day of August, President Joe Biden was asked about his fall campaign plans. He promised a Labor Day appearance in Pittsburgh and said he would be “on the road from there on.” Biden did campaign with Vice President Kamala Harris on Labor Day, but he largely has been a campaign no-show since. Beyond that, sometimes his official events push hers to the background. Case in point: After Hurricane Helene, Harris scrapped campaign events in Las Vegas to hurry back to Washington for a briefing at the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But as Harris stepped to a podium in the command center, Biden was delivering his own storm response comments from the Oval Office, pulling the political spotlight away from his intended successor. The lack of presidential campaigning and occasional schedule clashes could matter not just for Harris but as Democrats try to hold control of the Senate and retake the House and compete in races further down the ballot. Even former President Barack Obama announced he will campaign for Harris. Obama

Sharks’ defense prospect practices with team for first time in camp

SAN JOSE – Shakir Mukhamadullin joined the Sharks for their optional skate Saturday morning, marking the first time the 6-foot-4 prospect defenseman has been on the ice with his teammates during training camp. Mukhamadullin, 22, did not participate in the Rookie Faceoff event in El Segundo in mid-September and missed the first two weeks of training camp with a lower-body injury. However, he began skating on Monday and has been progressing in recent days without any setbacks. It was not immediately known if Mukhamadullin would play Saturday night when the Sharks face the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena in their sixth and final preseason game. But considering Saturday was his first practice with the group, such a move would be unusual. Mukhamadullin spent most of last season with the Barracuda of the AHL and had 34 points in 55 games. He was part of the AHL’s All-Star Classic in San Jose, replacing injured Barracuda teammate Danil Gushchin. The Sharks acquired Mukhamadullin in Feb. 2023 as part of the massive trade that sent Timo Meier to the New Jersey Devils. Mukhamadullin was taken 20th overall

Long Beach food bank closes amid investigation into misuse of public funds

The Foodbank of Southern California — a grocery-and-meal distribution hub serving hundreds of food pantries in Long Beach and South Los Angeles — has closed its doors amid a state investigation into a possible multimillion-dollar fraud and embezzlement scheme, according to state officials and a nonprofit executive. The closure is expected to severely affect thousands of low-income families, seniors and homeless people who rely on food distribution sites for their nutritional needs. Brian Weaver, the food bank’s chief executive, said he suspended operations and furloughed about two dozen employees after losing funding when state police and investigators conducted a search warrant at the Long Beach-based organization on Sept. 26. In addition to removing documents and records, Weaver said state officials took pallets of food stored in a warehouse, transporting them to the L.A. Regional Food Bank. Weaver called the investigation a “black eye” on the nearly 50-year-old nonprofit, which serves about 2 million people. Weaver said the food bank supplies groceries and meals to about 300 pantries in Long Beach and South L.A., at least half of them are churches. “Rent is high in L.A.,”

Shooting outside St. John Bosco High School kills at least 1

At least one person died after a shooting at a Los Angeles County high school on Saturday morning, authorities confirmed. The shooting was reported at about 8:20 a.m. outside of St. John Bosco High School in Bellflower, according to the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department. The victim, who remains unidentified as of 11:30 a.m., was pronounced dead at a local hospital. According to the L.A. County Fire Department, two victims were transported to a local trauma center. The condition of the second victim was not immediately known. Illegal street takeover ends in fiery mess in San Fernando Valley  The suspect fled the scene before authorities arrived. The sheriff’s department said the suspect was a Black man wearing a black hoodie and gray sweatpants. He was seen shooting into a white sedan before fleeing in what appeared to be a white Dodge Charger sedan. A shooting outside of the football stadium at St. John Bosco High School in Bellflower left one dead on Saturday morning. (KTLA) Images captured by KTLA at the scene showed a white sedan with a black hood that appeared to be shot into.