BLOOD BANK LOW: If You’re Serving Up That Type O, Please Consider Donating ASAP

LoCO Staff / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 10:43 a.m. / Health

Photo via the NCCBB’s Facebook page.

Press release from the Northern California Community Blood Bank:

The Northern California Community Blood Bank urgently needs donations of both type O- and O+ blood, as supplies have reached critically low levels. This shortage is attributed to increased local demand for O blood products.

Type O- blood is especially critical as it is the universal blood type, safe for transfusions to patients of all blood types, making it essential in emergency situations and for patients with unknown blood types. Similarly, O+ blood is in high demand and is crucial for ensuring that patients receive the life-saving care they require.

The Northern California Community Blood Bank strongly encourages individuals with O- and O+ blood types to donate as soon as possible to help replenish supplies and ensure that those in need can receive life-saving transfusions. Donating blood is a simple yet impactful way to give back to the community and potentially save lives.

To schedule a blood donation, please visit the Northern California Community Blood Bank’s website at nccbb.org or call 707-443-8004.


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‘Brighter Days Ahead’: Locals Rally to Save the Historic Fortuna Theatre

Isabella Vanderheiden / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 9:17 a.m. / Community

The Fortuna Theatre, the art deco centerpiece of the city’s Main Street, has sat empty for more than two years. | Photos by Andrew Goff

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PREVIOUSLY: After Suffering Water Damage Caused by the Earthquake, Fortuna Theatre is Still Closed and it Looks Like it Won’t Be Reopening Any Time Soon

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It’s been two and a half years since a 6.4-magnitude earthquake forced the closure of the historic Fortuna Theatre, leaving the Friendly City’s Main Street with a darkened, empty marquee and even fewer local entertainment options than before. Now, a dedicated group of volunteers is rallying support to revive the 86-year-old landmark. 

“I always loved going to movies at the theater,” Linda Rasmussen told the Outpost. “It’s right smack in the middle of our downtown, and there’s going to be death by neglect if something isn’t done. … It’s not okay to have it sitting there going to waste, which is where it is right now.”

In partnership with Fortuna residents Donny Miner and Brian Gonzalez, in September 2024, Rasmussen created a Facebook page — “Save Fortuna Theatre Group” — to drum up local support for the theater and create a space for nostalgic locals to share pictures and fond memories of midnight showings, long-awaited movie premiers, first jobs and first dates. 

“My first official date with my now husband was in this theater,” one resident wrote in the Facebook group. “I’m so sad that it’s still out of commission. Fingers crossed it can come back to us!”

So, what’s the hold-up?

As many Eel River Valley residents know, the Fortuna Theatre endured extensive water damage after the massive December 2022 earthquake, which broke a fire sprinkler head inside the building, causing an estimated $300,000 in damage to the ceiling and drywall. In a previous interview with the Outpost, David Corkill, owner of Cinema West, the Petaluma-based company that owns the Fortuna Theatre, said he wasn’t sure if repairs were worth the investment, noting that the theater wasn’t turning a profit before it closed.

Corkill did not respond to multiple requests for an interview for this story.

“To me, it just seems like it became too much and it didn’t pencil out anymore,” Rasmussen said. “I’ve never met [Corkill] personally, but I know he would love to see something good come out of it. The only thing I really hold him accountable for is you can’t just do nothing with it and just let it sit there and rot, right?”

In December 2024, Humboldt County was rocked by yet another major earthquake, adding to the damage sustained during the 2022 earthquake. The sprinkler head broke again, though the water system was never turned back on, preventing significant water damage in the auditorium. In a post to the Facebook group, Miner reported minor damage from the little bit of water still in the pipes and damage to one of the screens. 

“And sadly, a speaker horn fell and tore the large auditorium screen in a few spots,” he wrote. “Although these setbacks are discouraging, we remain hopeful and committed to restoring our theatre. Thank you for your continued support and belief that brighter days are ahead for this historic treasure. Together, we can overcome anything!”

A sign posted on the door of the vacant theater encourages people to join the “Save Fortuna Theatre” group.


In January of this year, the group took a leap of faith and wrote a letter to Corkill, informing him of their intent to form a nonprofit and asking if he would be willing to donate the theater to the community. 

“We’re excited to share that we have officially started the process of forming a nonprofit organization called ‘Save the Fortuna Theatre, ’” the letter reads. “With this new nonprofit status, we are reaching out to discuss the possibility of you donating all or a portion of the Fortuna Theatre building to our organization. Such a generous donation would allow us to take vital steps toward securing grants, funding, and community support for the restoration. Importantly, this contribution could also provide you with meaningful tax advantages, as donations of real property to a qualified nonprofit are often tax-deductible.”

Corkill declined the request. “Unfortunately, we can’t donate our building loan along with the building, so this isn’t really an option for us,” he wrote in an emailed response to the group, noting that Cinema West has invested over $50,000 per year for the past 20 years to cover costs at the theater. “Hopefully, we can come up with some better ideas this year.”

The group remains undeterred. Earlier this month, they met with Gregg Foster, executive director of the Redwood Region Economic Development Commission (RREDC) and president of the Eureka Theater’s board of directors, to get some tips on creating a nonprofit.

Reached for additional comment, Foster said he advised the group to draw up a detailed business plan to identify the cost of repairs, maintenance and regular operating expenses.

“Take it from me, the cost of maintaining these large old buildings can be daunting,” Foster told the Outpost. “The Eureka Theater is looking at a multi-million-dollar restoration cost to restore the auditorium and save its marquee and tower. Fortunately, much work was done at the Fortuna Theater by the current owner, so the restoration cost is, I’m told, much less.”

“If the owner is unable to make the necessary improvements to reopen the theater, the first step is to gain ownership of it,” he added. “The community group will either have to use an existing entity to do that or create one and then raise the money to buy it.”

The Fortuna Theatre was previously listed for sale, but it looks like it’s been taken off the market. Still, Rasmussen said the owner would “probably be willing to work with whoever wants to buy it.”

Although the City of Fortuna doesn’t really have any say in what happens with the theater, City Manager Amy Nilsen told the Outpost that the city is “very supportive” of the group’s efforts to acquire it. 

“The City has helped Ms. Rasmussen make connections in the community as well as connect her with grant resources,” Nilsen wrote in an emailed response to our inquiry.  “Unfortunately, the City’s finances are extremely limited and prevent the City from becoming financially involved in this endeavor.”

For now, the group is focused on spreading the word as it pursues nonprofit status and potential avenues for funding. In the meantime, the group is encouraging people to advocate for the theater at Fortuna City Council meetings and keep sharing those stories.

“We’ve read so many beautiful stories on the Facebook page of memories and experiences people have with the theater, or even just honoring the building,” Rasmussen said. “We can’t have a building like that fall apart. … It’s a slow-going process, but I’m not letting that stop us.”

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The World’s Largest Free Seed Distributor is Based Out of Arcata

Dezmond Remington / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 8:12 a.m. / Activism

Michael Reeves. Photos by Dezmond Remington.


The promise is strange, but it is true; the promise is good — too good! — but it is real; the promise is there for the taking, there for the brave and the curious and the handy. For no cost at all, anyone that emails the right address and doesn’t ask for more than they deserve can get the gift of life. 

It’s an incredible thing to say, that any curious soul can, with a well-placed request, get the gift of life for free, but it’s not a huge exaggeration. What is probably the largest free seed distributor in the world is based out of Arcata. They offer 687 varieties of just about every vegetable, fruit, flower, and herb growable in North America. Some are common, some are harder to come across than gold in a river, and some — what the hell is a fenugreek?

The man behind FreeHeirloomSeeds.org, Michael Reeves, 48, is also the owner of the Arcata mineral store Stone Spirits (although he’s closing it to focus on the seeds). In 2011, he posted a sign on the outside of the storefront saying he’d give a free strawberry plant to anyone who came in and asked for one. He had 1,000 of them, purchased from a wholesale grower, and the masses swarmed in to take the plants and buy gems. Over the next six years, Reeves gave away an estimated 15,000 strawberry plants. 

It was an excellent way to get people in the store, but there’s more to it than that for Reeves. 

“After years and years of formulating all of these plans to help our society and help guide humanity to be more in harmony with our ecosystem,” Reeves said, “I just felt like I had to do something in some kind of material way that was measurable.”

The table of seeds to be sorted, packaged, and sent off.


Reeves wanted to expand the strawberry giveaways to more stores, but keeping the plants alive for longer than a couple weeks was difficult, and he also thought that putting the burden of taking care of thousands of strawberry plants in a store would be too hard. It wasn’t too big of a deal for him (he’s been gardening since he was a kid), but it’s simple for people without a green thumb to kill them. 

He landed on plant seeds as a solid alternative. In 2017, he spent $300 on 30 different types of plant seeds and found more out in the wild, all of them heirloom varieties, old strains of plants that aren’t usually grown as commercial crops. Reeves started giving them away at his store, and people started sending letters, and then he created a website. It snowballed. 

“As far as I know, we’re probably the world’s largest, most comprehensive free seed service,” Reeves said. “We’re definitely the most comprehensive. There might be somebody out there that’s giving away more in terms of volume than us…There’s a few groups that give away specific seeds for, like, the monarch butterfly or this or that, but there’s not really anybody doing what we’re doing.”

Reeves said he has given away more than 300,000 packs of seeds, all of them donated to him, grown by himself, found out in the wild, or purchased with donations. Reeves suggests that people who want seeds send $10 for every 15 packets of seeds they request. That’s roughly the amount he needs to break even. If someone requests a lot of seeds and doesn’t donate, they probably won’t get any seeds. Right now, about half of the people asking for seeds donates. Earlier in the season, when the serious gardeners are ordering dozens of packets of seeds to prepare for the upcoming growing season, the proportion is much higher. 

The donations also pay for a few full-time employees who help package and send out the seeds. They send out about 200 packages a day. Fortunately, the post office is just down the street. 

The Facebook group Reeves created in 2020 to share heirloom seeds is a few hundred people shy of 155,000 members. They post paeans to Earth’s glorious bounties and requests from other seed-sharers for varieties like “pink lemon blueberry” and “snowball improved cauliflower” and “iso pawpaws,” thousands of people trying and failing and succeeding at turning bare patches of soil and leftover scraps into something delicious and nourishing. 

It is not a cheap venture for Reeves, nor is it a lark. He moved to Arcata from the Midwest in 2008 to sell his gems, and he’s closing the store so he can focus on the seeds. He and his wife and two kids spent a couple years living in a retrofitted school bus before being forced to move off of the land they were parking on. They spent COVID in the bus out on the streets. Vandals broke into the store and destroyed windows and stole gems. Now he’s closing the store and mortgaging his house to fund the purchase of a farm in Ferndale so he can grow more of the seeds he’s going to give away, which is also time-consuming and laborious. 

A few months ago, some TikToker mentioned FreeHeirloomSeeds in a video and they were totally inundated with requests. None of the other people packaging the seeds showed up, but Reeves decided to stick it out and worked a series of 20-hour days to deliver thousands of orders. He’s shut the operation down before, but decided not to that time. 

“When I was very young, I thought, ‘Oh, look at my nieces and nephews there. What kind of world are they gonna have?’” Reeves asked. “And now, I look at my kids, I think the same thing. And it’s not only just the struggle to survive, but I believe the world could be so much more beautiful and so much more fun, so much more loving, and we could all be a lot happier if we just did some things that benefited one another instead of just constantly living for ourselves.”

The store today is about equally divided between space for seeds and space for gems and space for two wild-haired kids to run around, grow their own plants and try making teas out of cilantro and snacks out of raw mustard shoots, but Reeves has dreams beyond even this and the farm. FreeHeirloomSeeds is also a mission of conservation. Rare breeds of fruits and vegetables frequently go extinct, and sharing their seeds is an easy way to ensure that happens less and less. Reeves wants to start a local seed bank to preserve more of those, and make it even easier for people to grow their own plants. Reeves believes that a focus shift from buying produce produced by a globalized economy to a more local one would be better for everyone. 

“You go into the grocery store and you look and see carrots from Colorado,” Reeves said. “This stuff is from all over the place. Go buy a jar of artichokes; they’re probably from Argentina or something, but they grow great around here.”

Despite the huge diversity of seeds on the website, there are a few heavy-hitters that people tend to order over and over again, like butter crunch lettuce or Cherokee purple tomatoes.

He hopes that in Ferndale they’ll be able to produce seeds that are normally fairly expensive only because no one is growing them, like a multi-colored Echinacea that can retail for a dollar a seed but are super easy to grow. Many of these varieties offer less commercial value or aren’t suited to a modern palette, but are valuable parts of history in their own right. 

“These are seeds that can be produced like no problem,” Reeves said. “If you just grow the crop, it only takes a minute.”

“I can say that [getting thousands of orders] is surprising or whatever, but it’s actually not that surprising, because we recognized the need from the beginning. … Anyone can help save a species. Anybody can do something good for their community. We’ve been struggling against homelessness the whole time while we did this — it’s not necessarily been easy — but it’s very gratifying. Basically, what I’m trying to say is: If you try to make a difference, you’d be surprised at the results.”



Biden Let California Get Creative With Medicaid Spending. Trump Is Signaling That May End

Kristen Hwang / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 8:04 a.m. / Sacramento

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

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In 2022, California made sweeping changes to its Medi-Cal program that reimagined what health care could look like for some of the state’s poorest and sickest residents by covering services from housing to healthy food. But the future of that program, known as CalAIM, could be at risk under the Trump administration.

In recent weeks, federal officials have signaled that support for creative uses of Medi-Cal funding is waning, particularly uses that California has invested in such as rent assistance and medically tailored meals. Medi-Cal is California’s name for Medicaid.

The moves align with a narrower vision of Medicaid espoused by newly confirmed Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services head Dr. Mehmet Oz, who said during his swearing-in ceremony that Medicaid spending was crowding out spending on education and other services in states with the federal government “paying most of the bill.”

“This one really bothers me. There are states who are using Medicaid — Medicaid dollars for people who are vulnerable — for services that are not medical,” Oz said.

It also fits with broader GOP calls to slim down the federal government. Medicaid is under scrutiny as part of a GOP-led budget process in the House of Representatives that calls for $880 billion in cuts over 10 years to programs including Medicaid.

“The messaging that we want to go back to the basics of Medicaid puts all of these waiver programs in jeopardy,” said John Baackes, former chief executive of L.A. Care, the state’s largest Medi-Cal health insurer.

CalAIM is authorized under a federal waiver that allows states to experiment with their Medicaid programs to try to save money and improve health outcomes. Under the waiver, California added extra benefits for high-cost users to help with food insecurity, housing instability, substance use and behavioral health challenges.

Roughly half of all Medi-Cal spending can be attributed to 5% of high-cost users, according to state documents.

But in March, the federal government rescinded guidelines supporting Medi-Cal spending for social services. It also sent states a letter in April indicating that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services would no longer approve a funding mechanism that helps support CalAIM, although that money will continue until 2026.

Together, these moves should worry states that operate programs like CalAIM, said Kathy Hempstead, senior policy officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

“Under the Biden administration states were encouraged to experiment with things like that: To prescribe people prescriptions to get healthy food, to refer people to community-based services,” Hempstead said. “This administration is not receptive at all to … that vision of the Medicaid program.”

In a press release, CMS said it is putting an end to spending that isn’t “directly tied to health care services.”

“Mounting expenditures, such as covering housekeeping for individuals who are not eligible for Medicaid or high-speed internet for rural healthcare providers, distracts from the core mission of Medicaid, and in some instances, serves as an overly-creative financing mechanism to skirt state budget responsibilities,” the press release states.

These signals from the federal government apply to future applications for Medicaid changes, and do not change California’s current programs or funding. The state’s CalAIM waiver expires at the end of 2026, and another similar waiver that supports California’s efforts to improve behavioral health care expires in 2029.

According to a statement from the Department of Health Care Services, the agency that oversees Medi-Cal, all programs “remain federally approved and operational.”

“We appreciate our Medi-Cal providers and community partners, and together we will push full steam ahead to transform our health system and improve health outcomes,” the department said.

Physician assistant Brett Feldman checks his patient, Carla Bolen’s, blood pressure while in her encampment at the Figueroa St. Viaduct above Highway 110 in Elysian Valley Park in Los Angeles on Nov. 18, 2022. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local

Paul Shafer, co-director of the Boston University Medicaid Policy Lab, said decades of public health research show that people have worse health outcomes that require more expensive treatment when their social needs aren’t met.

“We’ve spent the last few decades in public health and health policy, arguing that so much of health and medical costs is driven by environmental factors — people’s living conditions, income, etc.” Shafer said.

But, Shafer said, programs like CalAIM are relatively recent and the research hasn’t had enough time to show whether paying for non-traditional services saves money.

For example, California’s street medicine doctors who take care of people who are homeless say that their patients often cycle in and out of the emergency room — the most expensive point of service in the health care system. They have no place to recover from medical procedures, no address to deliver medications, and the constant exposure to the elements takes years off of their lives, doctors say.

CalAIM gives them options to help their clients find housing.

The federal government’s decision not to fund programs like this in the future is a “step backward,” Shafer said.

“I think we can all read the tea leaves and say that that means they’re sort of unlikely to be renewed,” he said.

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Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.



OBITUARY: Dennis Duane Bermers, 1953-2025

LoCO Staff / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of Dennis Duane Bermers at the age of 72.

Dennis was born in Eureka on January 21, 1953 to Otis and Verna Bermers. He passed away in San Francisco at UCSF on April 20, 2025.

Dennis graduated Eureka High School in 1971. In 1974 he married the love of his life, Marcia. They celebrated 50 years of marriage this past September.

Out of high school Dennis was employed by Mack Truck and then went on to work for Redwood Reliance Peterbilt Trucking as a salesman. When the company was purchased by Coast County Peterbilt, he became the general manager. He retired from Peterbilt after 41 years in 2019.

Dennis provided a wonderful life for his family. Dennis and Marcia raised three beautiful children, Troy, Blaine and Kyla.

Dennis had such a special bond with each of his children. He would do and fix just about anything for them. They knew exactly who to call when advice was needed or something was broke and needed fixing.

Over the years Dennis and Marcia loved to travel. Their adventures took them to Tahiti, Mexico, Maui, Kauai, an Alaskan cruise and a Canadian cruise ending in New York City. Iceland, Ireland and Scotland were also among their travels.

They enjoyed many Redwood Region Logging conferences as a family. Dennis had the honor of serving as President of RRLC in 1993. Many social outings with friends over the years will always be cherished.

He loved to meet and visit with his cronies for lunch.

As his boys grew up, they shared a hobby of hunting in Blocksburg with Pop Pop Otis. Dennis loved to cook, entertain friends, and most of all he loved being at his happy place, Ruth Lake. He was often called the “Mayor of Ruth Lake.” Dennis knew exactly what tools or parts neighbors needed to repair things and he usually had it on hand.

Over the past 15 years, Dennis has had the joy of seeing all his eight grandchildren grow into young individuals. He was the best Papa in the world. From snuggling them as little infants, playing, tickling, and wrestling with them on the ground, telling them raccoon, fox stories, and about “the bear that went up in the woods.” Dennis enjoyed watching his grandchildren at all their sporting events as they grew. He was always the kid’s biggest supporter, with grandma Marcia by his side.

He was not only known as Papa D by his own grandkids, but was called that by the many others that he loved so much.

Dennis was one of a kind with the biggest heart and lived life to the fullest.

Dennis is proceeded in death by his parents Otis and Verna Bermers and infant brother Otis David.

He will forever be remembered by his loving wife, Marcia; their first-born son, Troy (Catie) their children Brayden and Blayke Bermers; middle son, Blaine (Jamie) their children Ridge, Ryker, and Rhett Bermers; Dennis’s “baby girl” Kyla (Erik) and their children Eva Mae, Ana, and Carter Bess; his favorite sister, Lana (Dave) Ferreira; brother Ron (Diane) Bermers; sister-in-law Gina Baum and Ken Freeman; brother-in-law Garnet Spaulding (Lori); and sister-in-law Rhonda Readen. Several cousins whom he adored and were more like sisters to him, numerous nieces, nephews, and great-nieces and nephews whom always referred to him as Uncle D.

Dennis was always surrounded by love. We thank the endless number of amazing friends and family who supported and loved this extraordinary man. He will truly be missed.

His family is especially grateful for the exceptional care and kindness provided by the caregivers and heart team from UCSF.

Please join us for a Celebration of Life at The Elks Lodge in Eureka on May 31 at 12 o’clock.

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Dennis Bermers’ loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.



OBITUARY: Marilyn Ann Hagar, 1940-2025

LoCO Staff / Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits

Marilyn Ann Hagar passed away on April 19 at the age of 84. She has been doctoring for her heart most all of her life. Marilyn was born in Eureka, to Walter and Elna Irene Hagar. Both of her parents were natives, having also been born in Eureka.

She had a happy childhood and spent a lot of time at her grandparents’ chicken farm on Hubbard Lane and camping at Riverside Park with the Swede-Finn kids from the Order of Runeberg Lodge. When fifteen years old her parents bought a summer cabin on the Van Duzen River.

Marilyn graduated from Eureka High School in 1958 and attended Humboldt State College, receiving a bachelor’s degree in education in 1962. After teaching at the old Franklin School for two years, she then attended the University of Wisconsin for a masters degree in psychology.

She taught primary children in the Palo Alto Unified School District for thirty-four years, retiring in 2000. Her years in Silicon Valley followed the development of computers as a classroom tool. She was an excellent, caring and much sought-after teacher.

After the passing of her father in 1969, Marilyn lived in two places — working in Palo Alto, visiting in Eureka with her mother. The two of them traveled to Hawaii, Mexico and Michigan. On one very special summer long journey to all of Scandinavia, they met never seen relatives. All of the Swedish speaking grandparents were born in Finland with six or seven siblings each. My what relatives did she find!

After retiring and after her mother’s death, she moved home to Eureka. Nothing delighted her more than traveling the world. She visited sixty-five countries on all continents. Most friends would usually ask, “Where are you going next?” Covid-19 put a halt to her travels.

Between traveling she was active in many organizations such as the Redwood Empire Quilt Guild, the American Association of University Women and the local California Retired Teachers Association to name a few.

Special thanks go out to Timber Ridge Eureka and her next-door neighbor. The Marilyns looked out for each other for twenty-five years.

A graveside memorial service will be held at Sunset Memorial Park at a later date followed by a get together at Marilyn’s house.

In lieu of flowers, donations to Hospice of Humboldt are appreciated.

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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Marilyn Hagar’s loved onesThe Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.



Trial of Man Charged With Making Terrorist Threats to Local Schools Delayed to Evaluate His Competency

Ryan Burns / Thursday, April 24, 2025 @ 11:30 a.m. / Courts

File photo.

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A preliminary hearing for Daryl Jones, the Louisiana Oklahoma man charged with making a series of terrorist threats to local schools, was delayed today after Judge Kelly Neel declared doubt about his competency to stand trial.

Jones | Booking photo courtesy Comanche County, Okla.

Jones was extradited to Humboldt County from Lawton, La., Okla., last month after being identified as the suspect in a string of threats to local schools and businesses, resulting in multiple lockdowns. The District Attorney’s Office has charged him with 19 felonies.

After being brought into the courtroom in a standard-issue inmate jumpsuit, Jones was asked by Judge Neel whether he understood the nature of today’s proceedings.

“Not really, no,” he replied.

Neel then explained the basics and asked his assigned attorney, Meagan O’Connell with Humboldt County Conflict Counsel, for her take on his level of comprehension.

“I think he understands to a certain extent but not fully … ,” O’Connell replied. “My major concern is whether or not he can assist in his own defense.” She asked to have Jones evaluated by a mental health professional.

Judge Neel then declared doubt as to Jones’s competency, suspended the criminal proceedings and ordered an examination by local clinical psychologist Dr. Mark Lamers.

A return date was scheduled for May 15 at 8:30 a.m.

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CORRECTION: This post has been updated to correct the location from which Jones was extradited. 

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