As Immigration Customs Enforcement goes on a historic hiring spree, social media posts and other materials contain coded language, experts say.
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Buried in the deeds of homes and subdivisions across San Diego County are racially restrictive covenants that serve as stark reminders of the region’s racist past.
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A new California law will make it easier to remove racially restrictive covenants from the deeds of their homes. However, some homeowners believe the language should remain so San Diego's racist past is not forgotten.
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For nearly a century, Rancho Santa Fe has boasted one of the most expensive and sought after ZIP codes in the country. But the discriminatory document that established the enclave remains a flashpoint.
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The nearly all-white jury has been sent home until Monday, when they're expected to hear closing arguments. Earlier in the day, Travis McMichael, who killed Arbery, underwent cross-examination.
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Two men convicted in the assassination of Malcolm X are set to be cleared after more than half a century.
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Racially restrictive covenants were once common across San Diego County. Though deemed illegal in 1948, the language still appears in many home and property deeds across the county.
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Racial covenants made it illegal for Black people to live in white neighborhoods. Now they're illegal, but you might still have one on your home's deed. And they're hard to remove.
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A city audit says recreation centers in the northern neighborhoods of San Diego are significantly better off than those in the city’s southern neighborhoods.
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The county's ambitious effort to get to a carbon-neutral reality by 2045, hinges on a local blueprint to get there.
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KPBS Midday EditionThe slaying of Ahmaud Arbery and the murder trial of Kyle Rittenhouse underscore the troubled history of vigilantism and race in America.
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