Eureka Man Charged With Attempted Murder, Accused of Attacking Uncle
Sage Alexander / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 2:39 p.m. / Courts , Crime
Photo: Andrew Goff
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A Eureka man accused of assaulting his uncle with a knife was charged with attempted murder by the Humboldt County District Attorney’s office Thursday.
20-year-old Felix Yancy Arbaugh has pled not guilty.
According to the complaint, Arbaugh is charged with alleged “willful, deliberate and premeditated” attempted murder and felony assault by means likely to cause great bodily injury. He also faces enhancements for the use of a deadly weapon — a knife — and for causing great bodily injury.
Police responded to a Eureka home on Humboldt Hill on Monday night to a report of a physical assault.
There, Humboldt County Sheriff deputies located a 47-year-old male reporting his nephew physically attacked him. The man was bleeding and sustained serious but not-life-threatening injuries and was transported to the hospital, according to HCSO.
Meanwhile, Felix Arbaugh had minor injuries “which did not require immediate medical treatment,” according to HCSO.
HCSO said based upon the victim’s statements, injuries and evidence located during the investigation, deputies determined a violent crime had occurred inside the residence on Wycliff lane.
Arbaugh was taken into custody and booked into the Humboldt County Correctional Facility Monday. He is being held on $500,000 bail, according to court records.
He is represented by the Public Defender’s office.
HCSO, which is investigating the case, encourages those with information to call the office at (707) 445-7251 or the Sheriff’s Office Crime Tip line at (707) 268-2539.
The next hearing is scheduled for March 3.
BOOKED
Today: 7 felonies, 18 misdemeanors, 0 infractions
JUDGED
Humboldt County Superior Court Calendar: Friday, Feb. 27
CHP REPORTS
No current incidents
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A ‘Strong Atmospheric River’ Will Bring Heavy Rain, High Winds to the Coast This Weekend; More Snow Expected Out in the Hills
Isabella Vanderheiden / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 12:32 p.m. / How ‘Bout That Weather
Graphic: Eureka NWS
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Get out and enjoy the (mostly) clear skies while you can, Humboldt! We’re about to get pummeled by another round of heavy rains and strong winds.
Our meteorologist friends at the National Weather Service are warning of a “strong atmospheric river system” headed toward the North Coast, bringing the potential for “prolonged periods of moderate to heavy rain, strong winds and mountain snow.” The storm is expected to hit late tonight and continue through Tuesday.
The NWS Eureka office has issued a high wind warning for inland areas and a wind advisory for the rest of the county. Folks living in higher elevations and along ridgetops can expect 30 to 40 mph winds with gusts up to 70 mph.
Graphic: Eureka NWS
There aren’t any flood advisories in place as of yet, but it’s probably safe to assume that the usual flood-prone areas will flood once the rain hits. You can check LoCO’s weather alerts here to find updated information about your neck of the woods. The NWS also posts regular updates on its Facebook page.
No major road closures are in effect at this time, but the Humboldt County Department of Public Works is asking residents to carry chains on about a dozen county roads out in the hills, including:
- Alderpoint Road
- Shelter Cove
- Kneeland Road
- Fickle Hill Road
- Monument Road
- Bear River Ridge Road
- Showers Pass
- Redwood House Road
- Bald Hills Road
- Titlow Hill Road
- Johnson Road
- Snow Camp Road
- Guy Kerr Ranch Road
- High Prairie Road
You can sign up for county road updates here. More information on local highways can be found on Caltrans’ QuickMap.
If you’re feeling adventurous (and have adequate transportation and snow chains), take a note from these local folks and trek on over to Horse Mountain for a li’l snowy escape. If you choose to do so, please heed the following advice from the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:
With more winter weather ahead this weekend, Humboldt County residents are encouraged to recreate responsibly when visiting areas of our county with snow. Having a safe snow day starts with basic preparedness:
1. Stay Warm – Be sure to bring water-resistant snow clothing, gloves, hats and scarves to protect against hypothermia. Bring a change of clothes for the drive home and pack extra blankets in case your vehicle becomes disabled.
2. Check the Road Conditions – Most public access properties require vehicles equipped to handle the snow. Use a 4-wheel drive vehicle and always carry chains.
3. Utilize Public Recreation Locations – Residents are asked to use public recreation locations only, such as the Horse Mountain Botanical Area in the Six Rivers National Forest. Though there may be snow, the Kneeland-Greenwood Heights area is private property and trespassers can be prosecuted.
4. Bring Provisions – Whether going sledding or just traveling through a snowy area, bring food and water in case your vehicle becomes disabled. Always take your trash with you when you leave.
If your vehicle becomes disabled in the snow and you are not in need of emergency assistance, contact a private towing service. If in need of an emergency rescue, call 9-1-1. Then:
Stay in the vehicle.
1. If you leave your vehicle, you will become disoriented quickly in wind-driven snow and cold.
2. Run the motor about 10 minutes each hour for heat.
3. While running the motor, open the window a little for fresh air to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning.
4. Clear snow from the exhaust pipe to avoid gas poisoning.
Be visible to rescuers.
1. Turn on the vehicle’s parking lights at night.
2. Tie a bright colored cloth, preferably red, to your antenna or door.
3. After snow stops falling, raise the hood to indicate you need help.
Humboldt County property owners in snow-prone areas are encouraged to install visible “No Trespassing” signs to alert snow-goers of private property.
Want to share your winter wonderland photos with LoCO? Drop us a line at news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
(PHOTOS) There’s a Good Few Feet of Snow in The Hills, and People Are Making the Most of It
Dezmond Remington / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 9:58 a.m. / Nature , People of Humboldt
The forest atop Horse Mountain yesterday afternoon. Photos by Dezmond Remington, with help from camera assistant Shea Daly.
It’s been almost a year since snow last quilted the hills and ridges of the eastern three-quarters of the county. This winter has been a dry winter, void of many of the pleasures that allow people cloistered inside respite from battling the short days and grey skies; leaning into the weather and having a good foot or so of snow instead to enjoy is a tradeoff worth making, one whoever is in charge of the weather hadn’t offered Humboldt until Tuesday.
But someone took the deal, and now, it is beautiful. Your Lost Coast Outpost tackled the enjoyable task of documenting a slice of it for you with aplomb.
The view from Highway 299 three miles east of Blue Lake.
A rig with treads on the summit of Lord Ellis.
People play on Lord Ellis.
A well built snowman on Berry Summit…
…And its ailing twin.
An impromptu jam session in the snow.
There’s a long, vibrant history of skiing here!
Cars lined up on Titlow Hill Road.
Views on the way up to Horse Mountain.
Some young rapscallions sledding.
A few groups spent hours trudging up this hill and then throwing themselves down it.
This guy and his girlfriend tried to ride their quad up a steep hill covered in two feet of snow for about half an hour before giving up. Why didn’t he use his snowmobile? The carburetors needed cleaning, he said, and he didn’t bother doing it because he didn’t think it would snow this year.
The snow was three feet deep above 5,000 feet in elevation, and was as light, soft, and compressible as a loaf of angel food cake. Even on a pair of 170 cm cross-country skis, moving through was extremely difficult.
Sun sets on the frozen forest.
U.S. Supreme Court Strikes Down Trump’s Tariffs. Here’s How They’ve Affected California
Levi Sumagaysay / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 9:30 a.m. / Sacramento
The cellar room of Tablas Creek Vineyard in Paso Robles on July 30, 2025. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local
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This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
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In a major blow against President Donald Trump, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Friday that he does not have the authority to impose the wide-ranging tariffs that have caused economic uncertainty in the state, nation and beyond.
Trump cited the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 as he set tariffs on goods from most countries around the world soon after he took office early last year. In a 6-3 decision, the court said only Congress has the broad power to impose taxes on Americans under the act.
“The President enjoys no inherent authority to impose tariffs during peacetime,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito Jr. and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.
The White House did not immediately respond to CalMatters’ questions, including whether it plans to cite other laws. The Trump administration has the power to impose tariffs using other laws, but the president has used tariffs as an economic cudgel largely under the act that the Supreme Court has now said does not give him the broad authority to do so.
American businesses and consumers have paid the bulk of the cost of the president’s tariffs, recent studies by researchers for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and others have shown. In California, the tariffs have affected ports, farms, businesses, workers and consumers in different ways, and have been a factor in persistent inflation.
The state’s trade activity with China dropped so steeply that it is no longer the state’s top trade partner, according to a recent Public Policy Institute of California analysis.
Daniel Payares-Montoya, the researcher for the PPIC who based his analysis on International Trade Administration data, said trade with China has been declining since Trump’s first term, “but to see the dramatic fall, I wasn’t expecting it.”
In 2024, imports from and exports to China comprised 20% of all California trade activity. In 2025, at least through October, that number fell to 13.4%. Mexico became the state’s top trade partner, followed by China and Taiwan.
Payares-Montoya stressed that his analysis wasn’t causal: “I can’t tell what would have happened in the absence of (Trump’s tariff unveiling known as) ‘Liberation Day,’ or if Kamala Harris had won (the presidency).”
The state’s beverage industry was weighed down by tariffs, the analysis showed. California’s beverage exports of brewery, winery and distillery products fell more than 32% compared to the same period in 2024, from over $1.3 billion to $880 million through October, Payares-Montoya found. A big factor was that beverage exports to Canada fell to 16% in 2025 because of a boycott of American products and travel, which also was related to the president’s threats to annex Canada. The big drop came after beverage exports to Canada averaged almost a third of the state’s yearly total from 2010 to 2024. Most recently, Trump threatened 100% tariffs on Canada for striking a trade deal with China.
Overall, the state saw a slight decline, 0.1%, to $459 billion, in the dollar value of imports and exports in the first 10 months of last year, the PPIC analysis found.
Two of the nation’s busiest ports, in Long Beach and Los Angeles, ended up handling their highest and third-highest volumes of cargo, respectively, last year despite the uncertainty around tariffs. But exports decreased as retaliatory tariffs hit American farmers, too.
Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, said in a media briefing this week that soybean exports to China from his port fell 80% last year.
“Virtually every agricultural commodity that we export was affected,” said Noel Hacegaba, chief executive of the Port of Long Beach, in an interview with CalMatters this week.
The Supreme Court decision will spark what could be a chaotic process to return the tax revenue the government has collected, which totaled more than $264 billion in 2025. U.S. corporations including Costco, Alcoa and Revlon have sued the federal government over the tariffs, hoping to be first in line for refunds.
In his dissent, Kavanaugh wrote that the Supreme Court’s decision is likely to lead to “serious practical consequences in the near term,” and that “refunds of billions of dollars would have significant consequences for the U. S. Treasury.”
Trump has fretted on social media about possible refunds, saying that “it would be a complete mess, and almost impossible for our Country to pay. Anybody who says it can be quickly and easily done would be making a false, inaccurate, or totally misunderstood answer to this very large and complex question.”
But U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said that the federal government could issue refunds if needed, though he questioned how businesses would handle possibly getting their money back: “Costco, who’s suing the U.S. government, are they going to give the money back to their clients?”
Costco, which filed its lawsuit in November, did not respond to questions by CalMatters, including about how soon it would seek refunds from the federal government. The Treasury Department did not respond to an email about how refunds would work.
A Fire in an Indianola Mobile Home Was Knocked Down Quickly and No One Was Hurt, But Humboldt Bay Fire Would Like to Use This Occasion to Remind You of a Few Things
LoCO Staff / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 9:18 a.m. / Fire
Photo: HBF.
Press release from Humboldt Bay Fire:
On Thursday, February 19, 2026, at 08:37 hours, Humboldt Bay Fire was dispatched to a reported structure fire at the 7600 block of Myrtle Avenue, in the Indianola area. Humboldt Bay Fire responded with three Engines, one Ladder Truck and a Battalion Chief.
Engine 8114 was the first arriving unit and found smoke coming from single wide mobile home. Engine 8114 pulled a hose line and quickly initiated fire attack. Battalion 8105 arrived on scene and assumed Myrtle Command, declaring an offensive fire attack.
Incoming units were assigned to perform a search for victims, and provide ventilation. A unit was designated as the Rapid Intervention Crew in case of a firefighter emergency. The fire was located and contained to one bedroom, there was smoke damage throughout the residence.
Arcata Mad River Ambulance was on stand-by at the scene. PG&E was requested to the scene to secure gas and electrical utilities. Red Cross was requested to aid the displaced occupant. Humboldt Bay Fire would like to thank these agencies for their response. An investigation was performed to find the cause and origin of the fire. The cause is still under investigation, but believed to be accidental in nature. There were no civilian or firefighter injuries
Humboldt Bay Fire would like to remind everyone the importance of discussing with your family what to do if a fire occurs in your home. Working smoke detectors save lives, also have a pre-determined outside meeting place that everyone in your household knows.
Sheriff’s Office POP Team Arrests Humboldt Hill Man Allegedly in Possession of Fentanyl, Says 10-Year-Old Child in the Home Was at Risk
LoCO Staff / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 8:59 a.m. / Crime
From the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:
On Feb. 19, at 7:42 a.m., Humboldt County Sheriff deputies, assisted by the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Problem Oriented Policing (POP) Team served a search warrant at a residence located in the 2300 block of Lee Ln. in Eureka.
The warrant was the result of an ongoing investigation into the use and possession of narcotics, and suspected child endangerment involving 49-year-old suspect Gilbert Modesto Barff.
Upon service of the warrant, deputies contacted Barff inside the residence, where his 10-year-old son also resides. Barff was found to be in possession of fentanyl and drug paraphernalia. A subsequent search of the residence yielded additional items consistent with the possession and use of narcotics, ammunition, and numerous items containing fentanyl residue located with reach of the child.
Gilbert, who is a convicted felon, was arrested and transported the Humboldt County Correctional Facility where he was booked on the following charges:
- HS 11366: Keep place to sell/etc. narcotic/controlled substance
- PC 273a(a): Child abuse w/possible great bodily injury/death
- PC 30305(a)(1): Prohibited person own/possess/ammunition
Humboldt County Child Welfare Services was notified, and the child was released into the care of his mother.
Anyone with information about this case or related criminal activity is encouraged to call the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office at (707) 445-7251 or the Sheriff’s Office Crime Tip line at (707) 268-2539.
Newsom Appoints a New Utilities Regulator With a Mandate to Cut Costs
Malena Carollo / Friday, Feb. 20 @ 7:40 a.m. / Sacramento
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
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The state’s primary utility regulator is under new management. Gov. Gavin Newsom promoted commissioner John Reynolds to president of the California Public Utilities Commission this week as part of a “new phase” of Newsom’s effort to address sky-high power bills.
Former president Alice Reynolds will be reassigned later this month to a board of governors position at the California Independent Systems Operator. The two Reynolds are not related.
“The appointment underscores a renewed focus on cutting costs and improving performance as extreme heat, wildfire risk and upgrades to the electric grid drive new demands on the system,” Newsom’s office said in a press release.
Reynolds’ focus in this position, the release said, will include lowering utility bills through oversight, making sure money spent on infrastructure does not run aground of affordability and ensuring “utilities deliver results for ratepayers–without slowing California’s clean energy progress.”
California has a mandated goal of reaching 100% carbon-free energy by 2045. At the same time, state residents pay the second-highest electric rates in the U.S. after Hawaii, according to the most recent figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration
Reynolds was appointed by Newsom to the utility commission first in 2021 and again in 2022. Before that, he served as managing counsel for autonomous vehicle company Cruise. Reynolds faced criticism in 2023 for his time at Cruise, when safety incidents led the International Brotherhood of Teamsters to call for his resignation and regulators to revoke Cruise’s autonomous vehicle permits. The commission oversees aspects of autonomous vehicle regulation in California.
Outgoing president Reynolds was appointed the commission’s top position in late 2021 after three years as Newsom’s senior energy advisor. Newsom called her “one of my most trusted advisors on energy policy” in his release.
Newsom also this week appointed Christine Harada to the board to fill the open commissioner seat. Harada was most recently the undersecretary of the California Government Operations Agency, and served as a senior advisor in former president Joe Biden’s Office of Management and Budget.







