WARDROBES » PAGE 10 MINNESOTA CALLS IN THE NATIONAL … · 1 day ago · By Theresa Walker...

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Twitter feud: Trump signs executive order to challenge social media protections. A13 By Tony Saavedra [email protected] @tonysaavedra2 on Twitter An Orange County jail inmate has testified in court that a sher- iff’s deputy gave him a home- made knife with instructions to stab former inmate Joshua War- ing, the son of a “Real Housewives of Orange County” star. Korrell Cole, testifying un- der penalty of perjury, said he kept the knife but did not fol- low through on the attack. War- ing eventually was slashed with a razor by another inmate and has sued deputies for allegedly trying ORANGE COUNTY Testimony by inmate supports jail attack He says ‘Real Housewives’ son targeted by deputies Lottery ..............................A2 Local ..................................A3 Obituaries ........................ A11 Business ......................... A14 Opinion ............................ A15 Dear Abby......................... B5 Puzzles ....................... B5,7,8 Comics .......................... B6,7 INDEX By Theresa Walker [email protected] @TellTheresa on Twitter In late February, Working Wardrobes founder Jerri Rosen sounded optimistic. In theory, she had little reason. Her 30-year-old nonprofit had just been hit in the kneecap by a fire, losing thousands of pieces of donated business attire and accessories along with the head- quarters and warehouse. And in an unrelated move, soon after the fire, the organization’s for- mer controller was charged with one felony count of grand theft by embezzlement. Even so, Rosen noted, the wider nonprofit community was step- ping in to help. Working Ward- robes was offered temporary of- fice space. Clothing donations were pouring in, as were offers to replenish lost supplies. And, Rosen said, she was closing in on WORKING WARDROBES Nonprofit rebounds from fire, pandemic Longtime charity has found a new donation center and offices; thriſt stores to reopen in July TODAY’S FORECAST Coastal: Inland: High 69/Low 60 High 78/Low 57 Full weather report A16 PHOTO COURTESY OF NICHOLAS P. KOHAN Former inmate Joshua Waring and his injuries from a jailhouse attack. Working Wardrobes founder Jerri Rosen stands in February at the temporary Working Wardrobes location at the Goodwill of Orange County in Santa Ana. The nonprofit will soon move into new buildings and open four thriſt stores. STAFF FILE PHOTO This washed out mountain section of Baldy Notch Road is where the pursuit of the Norco bank robbers came to an end. Deputy Jim Evans was ambushed here. The four robbers still alive at this point fled into the wilderness. PHOTO COURTESY OF RIVERSIDE SHERIFF’S OFFICE By Peter Houlahan Rising abruptly from the coastal flatlands, the San Gabriel Moun- tains, through which Lytle Creek has carved itself, quickly soar to el- evations of over 10,000 feet at the summit of Mount Baldy. As dangerous as it is beauti- ful, Lytle Creek Canyon can be extremely uninviting terrain. Earthquakes, rockslides, wild- fires and flash floods are com- mon. The steep hillsides are cov- ered with California chaparral made up of scrub oak, manza- nita, buckbrush, sumac and sage. At higher elevations, the ecosys- tem changes to scattered pine groves of Douglas fir, ponderosa and sugar pine. The place has always attracted NORCO ’80, PART 11 In mountain terrain, bandits fire on officers This is the 11th installment from Peter Houlahan’s 2019 book, “Norco ’80: The True Story of the Most Spectacular Robbery in American History,” an account of a South- ern California bank robbery that occurred 40 years ago this month. Editor’s note: NORCO » PAGE 9 By Tim Sullivan and Amy Forliti The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS » Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called in the National Guard on Thursday as looting broke out in St. Paul and a wounded Minneapolis braced for more violence after riot- ing over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man in police cus- tody, reduced parts of one neigh- borhood to a smoking shambles. Protesters angered by the death of Floyd gained access to a Minneapo- lis police precinct on Thursday, the third straight night of violent pro- tests spreading beyond the city. Livestream video showed the pro- testers entering the building, where fire alarms blared and sprinklers ran as blazes were set. Police appeared to have left the building located in the neighborhood not far from where Floyd died Monday. A spokesman GEORGE FLOYD AFTERMATH MINNESOTA CALLS IN THE NATIONAL GUARD Looting, torching: Protests of Monday’s death of black man take a violent turn CARLOS GONZALEZ — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP A car burns in a Target parking lot Thursday in Minneapolis. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called in the National Guard on Thursday as looting broke out in St. Paul and Minneapolis braced for more violence aſter rioting over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody. FLOYD » PAGE 10 WARDROBES » PAGE 10 INMATE » PAGE 13 By Christopher Rugaber and Dan Sewell The Associated Press WASHINGTON » The novel coro- navirus crisis threw at least 2.1 million Americans out of work last week despite the gradual re- opening of businesses around the country, stoking fears Thursday that the scourge is doing deep and potentially long-lasting damage to the U.S. economy. Amid a few glimmers of hope, most of the latest economic news from around the globe was like- wise grim, as some of the world’s U.S. ECONOMY Job losses still mounting even as businesses slowly reopen JOBS » PAGE 11 By Jonah Valdez and Elizabeth Chou Staff writers Dozens of people gathered Thursday in downtown Los Angeles during a second night of demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd, a black man whose death in police custody in Minneapolis earlier this week has sparked protests across the coun- try. More than 70 protesters congregated in front of the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters on First Street starting about 5 p.m. Some kneeled, while others banged skateboards on the ground or stood to chant “Black lives matter.” Public safety: Demonstrators bringing attention to police violence against blacks return to the streets of downtown L.A. Protesters return for a second night Thursday evening in downtown L.A. in response to police violence in Minnesota that leſt George Floyd dead. KEITH BIRMINGHAM STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER L.A. » PAGE 10 » ocregister.com Friday, May 29, 2020 $2.00 FOUNDED IN 1905 FACEBOOK.COM/OCREGISTER TWITTER.COM/OCREGISTER 7 10150 00001 9 Volume 114, issue 150 Customer Service: 714-796-7777

Transcript of WARDROBES » PAGE 10 MINNESOTA CALLS IN THE NATIONAL … · 1 day ago · By Theresa Walker...

Page 1: WARDROBES » PAGE 10 MINNESOTA CALLS IN THE NATIONAL … · 1 day ago · By Theresa Walker thwalker@scng.com @TellTheresa on Twitter In late February, Working Wardrobes founder Jerri

Twitter feud: Trump signs executive order to challenge social media protections. A13

By Tony [email protected] @tonysaavedra2 on Twitter

An Orange County jail inmate has testified in court that a sher-iff’s deputy gave him a home-made knife with instructions to stab former inmate Joshua War-ing, the son of a “Real Housewives of Orange County” star.

Korrell Cole, testifying un-der penalty of perjury, said he kept the knife but did not fol-low through on the attack. War-ing eventually was slashed with a razor by another inmate and has sued deputies for allegedly trying

ORANGE COUNTY

Testimony by inmate supports jail attack He says ‘Real Housewives’ son targeted by deputies

Lottery ..............................A2Local ..................................A3

Obituaries ........................A11Business .........................A14

Opinion ............................ A15Dear Abby......................... B5

Puzzles ....................... B5,7,8Comics .......................... B6,7

INDEX

By Theresa [email protected] @TellTheresa on Twitter

In late February, Working Wardrobes founder Jerri Rosen sounded optimistic.

In theory, she had little reason.

Her 30-year-old nonprofit had just been hit in the kneecap by a fire, losing thousands of pieces of donated business attire and accessories along with the head-quarters and warehouse. And in an unrelated move, soon after the fire, the organization’s for-

mer controller was charged with one felony count of grand theft by embezzlement.

Even so, Rosen noted, the wider nonprofit community was step-ping in to help. Working Ward-robes was offered temporary of-fice space. Clothing donations were pouring in, as were offers to replenish lost supplies. And, Rosen said, she was closing in on

WORKING WARDROBES

Nonprofit rebounds from fire, pandemicLongtime charity has found a new donation center and offices; thrift stores to reopen in July

TODAY’S FORECASTCoastal:Inland:

High 69/Low 60High 78/Low 57

Full weather report A16

PHOTO COURTESY OF NICHOLAS P. KOHAN

Former inmate Joshua Waring and his injuries from a jailhouse attack.

Working Wardrobes founder Jerri Rosen stands in February at the temporary Working Wardrobes location at the Goodwill of Orange County in Santa Ana. The nonprofit will soon move into new buildings and open four thrift stores.

STAFF FILE PHOTO

This washed out mountain section of Baldy Notch Road is where the pursuit of the Norco bank robbers came to an end. Deputy Jim Evans was ambushed here. The four robbers still alive at this point fled into the wilderness.

PHOTO COURTESY OF RIVERSIDE SHERIFF’S OFFICE

By Peter Houlahan

Rising abruptly from the coastal flatlands, the San Gabriel Moun-tains, through which Lytle Creek has carved itself, quickly soar to el-evations of over 10,000 feet at the summit of Mount Baldy.

As dangerous as it is beauti-ful, Lytle Creek Canyon can be extremely uninviting terrain.

Earthquakes, rockslides, wild-fires and flash floods are com-mon. The steep hillsides are cov-ered with California chaparral made up of scrub oak, manza-nita, buckbrush, sumac and sage. At higher elevations, the ecosys-tem changes to scattered pine groves of Douglas fir, ponderosa and sugar pine.

The place has always attracted

NORCO ’80, PART 11

In mountain terrain, bandits fire on officers

This is the 11th installment from

Peter Houlahan’s 2019 book, “Norco ’80: The

True Story of the Most Spectacular Robbery

in American History,” an account of a South-

ern California bank robbery that occurred

40 years ago this month.

Editor’s note:

NORCO » PAGE 9

By Tim Sullivan and Amy ForlitiThe Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS » Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called in the National Guard on Thursday as looting broke out in St. Paul and a wounded Minneapolis braced for more violence after riot-ing over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man in police cus-tody, reduced parts of one neigh-borhood to a smoking shambles. Protesters angered by the death of Floyd gained access to a Minneapo-lis police precinct on Thursday, the third straight night of violent pro-tests spreading beyond the city.

Livestream video showed the pro-testers entering the building, where fire alarms blared and sprinklers ran as blazes were set. Police appeared to have left the building located in the neighborhood not far from where Floyd died Monday. A spokesman

GEORGE FLOYD AFTERMATH

MINNESOTA CALLS IN THE NATIONAL GUARD

Looting, torching: Protests of Monday’s death of black man take a violent turn

CARLOS GONZALEZ — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP

A car burns in a Target parking lot Thursday in Minneapolis. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called in the National Guard on Thursday as looting broke out in St. Paul and Minneapolis braced for more violence after rioting over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody.

FLOYD » PAGE 10

WARDROBES » PAGE 10

INMATE » PAGE 13

By Christopher Rugaber and Dan SewellThe Associated Press

WASHINGTON » The novel coro-navirus crisis threw at least 2.1 million Americans out of work last week despite the gradual re-opening of businesses around the country, stoking fears Thursday that the scourge is doing deep and potentially long-lasting damage to the U.S. economy.

Amid a few glimmers of hope, most of the latest economic news from around the globe was like-wise grim, as some of the world’s

U.S. ECONOMY

Job losses still mounting even as businesses slowly reopen

JOBS » PAGE 11

By Jonah Valdez and Elizabeth ChouStaff writers

Dozens of people gathered Thursday in downtown Los Angeles during a second night of demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd, a black man whose death in police custody in Minneapolis earlier this

week has sparked protests across the coun-try.

More than 70 protesters congregated in front of the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters on First Street starting about 5 p.m. Some kneeled, while others banged skateboards on the ground or stood to chant “Black lives matter.”

Public safety: Demonstrators bringing attention to police violence against blacks return to the streets of downtown L.A.

Protesters return for a second night Thursday evening in downtown L.A. in response to police violence in Minnesota that left George Floyd dead.

KEITH BIRMINGHAM STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

L.A. » PAGE 10

» ocregister.comFriday, May 29, 2020 $2.00 FOUNDED IN 1905 FACEBOOK.COM/OCREGISTER TWITTER.COM/OCREGISTER

7 10150 00001 9Volume 114, issue 150

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