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  • The San Diego Metropolitan Transit System plans to spend $34 million for a new “tap-and-go” fare collection system. Plus, despite a new state law aimed at increasing transparency of police investigations, the public will not be able to access records detailing the case of an officer killing a man armed with only a pen. Also on today’s podcast, a large San Diego-based tuna fishing operation is slashing the size of its fleet by more than half and a former La Mesa pastor files a civil rights lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security.
  • All three tech companies confirmed that posts expressing the hope that the president does not recover from COVID-19 will be removed for violating each platform's content policies.
  • The jury is deliberating in the case of a Navy SEAL charged with murder. Also, the book “Sand And Blood” traces the history of U.S. immigration and border policies, a San Diego doctor is under investigation for allegedly using dirty needles on patients, how Redding became an unlikely epicenter of modern Christian culture, Imperial Beach’s Wildcoast is being honored for combating climate change and examining the racial stereotypes of 1932’s “The Mask Of Fu Manchu.”
  • For many of the more than 4,000 asylum seekers that have passed through this church since October, this is the first real meal they have had in days.
  • When the prosecution called a special forces medic to testify, they expected him to bolster their murder case against a decorated Navy SEAL accused of stabbing an Islamic State fighter in his care.
  • The day after graduation, last week, the school’s principal and three vice principals were removed from their positions.
  • As Joe Biden is inaugurated, he is hoping to bring America together. But the country's modern divisions didn't begin and end with Trump.
  • A federal judge will allow evidence of Rep. Duncan Hunter’s alleged extramarital affairs in the congressman’s criminal trial. Also, San Diego leaders praise the Supreme Court decision to block a question of citizenship on the 2020 Census but has the damage already been done? Immigrant entrepreneurs invigorate California’s economy, 95 percent of youth who complete San Diego County’s Alternatives to Detention program are successful and why Harvey Milk still matters to young people.
  • Protesters for Black lives say when they protest for social justice they're met with tanks, rubber bullets and tear gas. Meanwhile, a mob of white extremists storm the Capitol with little resistance.
  • "We do elections well here in Arizona. The system is strong and that's why I have bragged on it so much," said GOP Gov. Doug Ducey. Meanwhile, the state GOP tweeted, "DO NOT CERTIFY A FALSE ELECTION!"
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