A CalMatters investigation found that courts didn’t report hundreds of vehicular manslaughter convictions to the state, prompting officials to belatedly take many drivers’ licenses.
MORE STORIES
-
Last year saw more fatal car crashes in San Diego than any year since the city adopted its "Vision Zero" goal.
-
A man with a pellet pistol tucked in his pants became hostile and profane toward other passengers on a Coaster.
-
At one point, prosecutors say the man "told the officers to 'stand down,' and warned them, `We're getting in there one way or another."'
-
A California bill would allow private citizens to go after gun makers in the same way Texas allows them to target abortion providers.
-
The governor and California Attorney General Rob Bonta will join local leaders to discuss preventing gun violence and holding the gun industry accountable.
-
Prosecutors say between 2016 and mid-2018, the officers recorded hours of phony overtime while patrolling high-occupancy traffic lanes or providing protection to state transportation workers in construction zones.
-
The district attorney said illegal dispensaries bring the additional concerns of associated crimes such as murders, attempted murders and assaults.
-
The shooting also left a National City police detective assigned to the task force with a gunshot wound described as minor.
-
The San Diego Humane Society started an enforcement program featuring "park patrol" officers.
-
The San Francisco district attorney’s stunning claim that California crime labs are using DNA from sexual assault survivors to investigate unrelated crimes shocked prosecutors nationwide.
Sign up for our newsletters!
Keep up with all the latest news, arts and culture, and TV highlights from KPBS.
- Thousands of San Diego service members deployed to Middle East
- Ariane Fire stopped at 5 acres with all evacuation orders lifted
- In San Diego, rents rise slower where more homes are permitted
- San Diego Council committee passes $25 minimum wage for hospitality workers
- SDPD stops sharing data from controversial surveillance program