Warrant Suspect Flees Vehicle Following McKinleyville Traffic Stop; Deputies Arrest Him Following Short Pursuit
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 12:10 p.m. / Crime
PREVIOUS LAMBERSON:
- Wanted Suspect Arrested in McKinleyville in Possesion of Meth and Ammo, Says HCSO
- Five Arrested on Drugs, Weapons Charges in Morning Melee at Downtown Arcata Gas Station
# # #
Press release from the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:
On Feb. 4, 2023, at about 3:41 p.m., Humboldt County Sheriff’s deputies on patrol in the McKinleyville area conducted a traffic stop for a vehicle code violation on Central Avenue near Little River Drive.
The vehicle yielded and a passenger, 25-year-old Andrew James Lamberson Jr., immediately exited the vehicle and fled. Deputies recognized Lamberson, as he was wanted on multiple warrants and had previously fled from deputies the day prior. Deputies pursued Lamberson into a nearby green belt. Lamberson violently resisted arrest and was uncooperative while being taken into custody. During a search of Lamberson incident to arrest, deputies located drug paraphernalia.
Lamberson was booked into the Humboldt County Correctional Facility on charges of resisting a peace officer with violence (PC 69), resisting a peace officer (PC 148(a)(1)), possession of a controlled substance paraphernalia (HS 11364(a)) and violation of probation (PC 1203.2(a)(2)), in addition to warrant charges of driving under the influence of alcohol (VC 23152(a) & (b)), driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol (VC 23152(g)), driving with a blood alcohol level over .15 (VC 23578), driving with a suspended or revoked license (VC 14601.5(a)) and Post Release Community Supervision (PRCS) revocation (PC 3455(a)).
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.
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Man Found Dead Outside Garberville Ray’s Market Appears to Have Injured Himself While Attempting to Gain Entry to the Business, Sheriff’s Office Says
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 10:40 a.m. / Crime
Press release from the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:
On Feb. 5, 2023, at about 11:27 p.m., Humboldt County Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to a grocery store on the 800 block of Redwood Drive in Garberville for the report of an injured man.
Deputies arrived in the area and located a 43-year-old man with significant head injuries in the loading dock area of the business. The man was declared deceased on scene. The Humboldt County Sheriff’s Major Crimes Division was dispatched to investigate.
Upon further investigation, including reviewing surveillance footage from the business, Sheriff’s Investigators determined the man had climbed the fence separating the loading dock from an elevated alleyway. The man was possibly attempting to vandalize the business’ security camera when he appears to have slipped from the fence, falling several feet and sustaining fatal injuries.
The decedent has been identified; however, his identity is being withheld pending next of kin notification. An autopsy is in the process of being scheduled.
Anyone with information about this case 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.
Rules for Thee: How California Legislature Skirts Its Own Laws
Sameea Kamal / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 7:57 a.m. / Sacramento
New California legislators stand to take the oath of office in the Senate chambers in the state Capitol on Dec. 5, 2022. Photo by Martin do Nascimento, CalMatters
California legislators pass hundreds of laws every year. But sometimes, they free themselves from following them.
On one emblamatic issue, however, this may be the session when that changes: Lawmakers, who have pushed through major bills to support unions throughout California, may finally let their own staffers organize.
For at least the fifth time in the last 25 years, the effort came to an anticlimactic end last year as a legislative unionization bill passed the state Senate, but failed in an Assembly committee on the last day of the session.
This year, there are a lot of pieces in place that could help the new push. For one: the amount of turnover in what is now California’s most diverse Legislature ever .
The legislation was revived — and highlighted as Assembly Bill 1 on the first day of the current session Dec. 5 — by new Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, who leads the committee where it has died four out of the five times it has been proposed.
“It is hypocritical as legislators that we ask our employees to staff committees and write legislation that often expands collective bargaining rights for other workers in California, but we intentionally prohibit our own workers from having the same right,” the Inglewood Democrat said at a press conference introducing the bill in December.
In addition, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon supports the idea of staff unionization. The incoming speaker, Assemblymember Robert Rivas, who is set to take the top leadership post on June 30, is one of 20 Assemblymembers and seven senators whose names were on the bill at introduction.
A wave of unionization in Democratic state legislatures across the country, plus among some congressional staff, could also help the cause. Oregon became the first state to allow legislative staff to unionize in 2021. Similar efforts were started in Massachusetts, New York and Washington state.
Then-Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher speaks at a rally in support of a worker rights bill on Aug. 28, 2019. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters
Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher — one of the most prominent union champions in the Legislature from 2013 until last year, when she resigned from the Assembly to become head of the California Labor Federation — says there’s no legitimate reason for legislative staff to be blocked from collective bargaining.
“It’s an argument that we hear always in unionizing efforts: Our place of work is special, it’s different, we have unique challenges,” she told CalMatters. “We have unions that are used to dealing with a variety of sticky situations. That’s something that can be worked out.”
At last count, there are more than 1,800 full-time staffers in the Assembly and Senate, including legislative directors, district coordinators, secretaries and aides.
Unionization isn’t the only area where the Legislature exempts itself. The state Senate and Assembly also set rules for other state agencies and businesses that they don’t require themselves to follow: minimum wage, whistleblower protections, public access and more.Dan Schnur, a politics professor at UC Berkeley, USC and Pepperdine University, says there’s “no coherent argument” to be made on why legislators should not abide by the laws they pass for other Californians. He also argues that “rules for thee” damages civic engagement.
“This is exactly the type of double standard that makes voters across the ideological spectrum absolutely despise politics and politicians,” he said.
Legislative staffers unite
State employees other than legislative staff were granted the right to collective bargaining in the Ralph C. Dills Act, signed into law by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in 1977.
Of the 200,000-plus state workers, more than 80% are represented in one of 21 bargaining units; managers, supervisors and some others are excluded. Last week, for instance, the union representing more than 2,700 state scientists rejected a contract offer from the Newsom administration. The union, which has been without an agreement since July 2020, is seeking 43% raises.
Concerns about past staff unionization bills have included treating the Assembly and Senate as one joint employer though they operate independently, as well as potential timing conflicts between labor contracts and legislative terms.
Other lawmakers have also flagged concerns about outside interests such as unions having a say in the Legislature’s operations, where constituents’ voices are meant to be prioritized above all else.
“People are comfortable trying to exploit our passions for public service. That’s why a union is absolutely needed.”
— Aubrey Rodriguez, a legislative director
But staff members say long hours and low pay can also be damaging to democracy.
“People are comfortable trying to exploit our passions for public service,” said Aubrey Rodriguez, a legislative director. “That’s why a union is absolutely needed.”
Unionization isn’t the only labor law the Legislature exempts itself from. Lawmakers also aren’t required to pay minimum wage — though many choose to do so — or to pay overtime. And until 2018, legislative staff weren’t included under the Whistleblower Protection Act, which prohibits retaliation against state employees who report misconduct.
A foggy glass house
The Legislature wasn’t immune from the Me Too movement, which raised awareness into rampant sexual harassment and abuse in workplaces. In 2018, leaders released a decade’s worth of records that included 18 cases of alleged sexual harassment and that named four lawmakers then serving — but only after public pressure and the threat of court intervention.
Also in response, Senate and Assembly leaders created the Workplace Conduct Unit in 2019. Last December, the unit released its first report, which said that since February 2019, 91 cases were substantiated and 86 resulted in disciplinary action, including nine dismissals.
The goal was to clear up the “erroneous assumption that allegations are not being substantiated or that discipline has not been imposed,” according to an August 2022 letter from legislative leaders to fellow lawmakers and staff.
But beyond the high-level numbers, the letter didn’t provide a lot of detail. It did not include names or specify disciplinary actions, other than the terminations.
That’s concerning to Ruth Ferguson, a former legislative staff member who helped start the Stop Sexual Harassment in Politics coalition after her unsatisfactory experience with the Workplace Conduct Unit.
“It appears they haven’t kept that promise of reporting out high-level staffers or members who have been found to have done something inappropriate,” Ferguson told CalMatters. “It makes me wonder: Why hasn’t the public been given an explanation as to why?”
Newly elected legislators are sworn into office in the Senate chambers at the state Capitol on Dec. 5, 2022. Photo by Martin do Nascimento, CalMatters
The Legislature is exempt from the Public Records Act that applies to other state agencies. Instead, it’s covered by the Legislative Open Records Act, which does not require the release of misconduct reports.
The anti-sexual harassment coalition will focus this year on trying again to pass a bill to amend the Legislative Open Records Act to require the release of those records, using language similar to a law passed in 2021 that applies to disclosing police misconduct.
“The justification [for those bills] was that there’s this lack of trust and transparency and that greater transparency would result in a fair and more just system,” Ferguson said. “I think similarly that’s really true in this case. For staffers in the legislature and the public, there’s no accountability mechanism.”
Public meetings are another area where the Legislature doesn’t have to be as transparent as other elected officials. The 1953 Ralph M. Brown Act and the 1967 Bagley-Keene Act require local governments and state agencies to conduct business at open meetings, with some exceptions for closed sessions requiring confidentiality, such as personnel issues.
The logic: “The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know.”
But that doesn’t apply to the Legislature. Under a 1973 law, legislators can gather privately in partisan caucuses. For example, Assembly Democrats met behind closed doors for six hours at the state Capitol last spring on the speakership fight, then hammered out the deal for Rivas to succeed Rendon as speaker in another six-hour private meeting in November at the Sacramento Convention Center.
“The most angry and resentful populists in both parties are driven by the accurate belief that most politicians think that they’re better than the rest of society,” Schnur said. “Every one of these double standards reinforces that belief.”
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CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
OBITUARY: Heather Jenae Ash Bishop, 1969-2022
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Heather Jenae Ash Bishop
March 1, 1969 - November 4, 2022
Heather passed on November 4 after several weeks at UCSF ICU due to complications from a kidney transplant that took place in May 2022. She was surrounded by her husband and children as she passed with love and peace.
When she was young she loved soccer and running. Growing up with five brothers, she was thoroughly a tomboy and proud of it. She grew up in Utah in the 1970s and 1980s and moved to California when she was 16. Summer in Utah was spent celebrating the summer rains by jumping through puddles or floating down the local canal on inner tubes. She moved to the Humboldt area in 1989, attending College of the Redwoods, where she met Clarke Bishop in a photography class. They were married on December 17, 1990.
She would have celebrated 32 years of marriage to Clarke Bishop on December 17, 2022. She was very proud of this commitment and always worked to show that going through life together meant going through many different lifetimes and iterations of self. She was deeply grateful for the support of her husband through the years of kidney disease and especially the care he provided doing in-home dialysis for 3 years. The experience of their challenges is not what defined them, but their great love for each other, their children, and their lives together.
Heather gave birth in 1991 and 1993, first with Shenae, then her son Wohali. She gave her all to her children, sacrificing time and sleep to get them to all their sports practices and travel to races, games, and tournaments. These sacrifices led to many academic and athletic accomplishments for both Shenae and Wohali. Knowing how proud she was of them will give them strength in their lives forever.
The similarities between Heather and her children include a deep and sensitive heart, goofiness, kindness, a strong spirit, a love for cooking, and a love for the world. Along with some healthy stubbornness and a strong sense of self.
She loved to play with clay, making sculptures and designs. She was an artist in many mediums including collage, clay, painting, and photography. Artists and teachers run in the family and Heather was no exception. She constantly taught patience and joy by bringing art into all activities.
Heather was a gregarious joyful person that always strived to see the good in any situation. She spent nearly two decades working with the children of the Humboldt County community, from her time at Healthsport Kid’s Corner to working at a children’s center temporary shelter in Eureka, and everywhere she found some need.
Over the years while attending College of the Redwoods she earned an Associates Degree in Fine Art Photography, an Associates Degree in Business, and a certificate in Addiction Studies.
She worked for the County of Humboldt as a Substance Abuse Counselor for seven years, specializing in women’s groups and group art therapy. Supporting her clients through recovery while dealing with her chronic kidney failure was a major accomplishment. She led her life in a way that always served those in need, leaving a legacy her children are determined to live up to.
She is survived by her husband Clarke Bishop, her daughter Shenae Bishop, her son Wohali Bishop, her brothers Jonathan Ash, Adam Ash, Nathan Ash, Joseph Ash, and William Ash; her father Fred Ash, her step-mother Louella Jean Ash, and her mother Teresa Whitehawk; her nieces and nephews Issac Ashlind, Eliot Ashlind, Genevieve Ash, Jalen Ash, Makani Ash, Jiaxin Ash, Nakai Ash, Mikel Ash, Emma Ash, Esme Ash, Alia Ash, Joey Ash, Olivia Ash, Penni Ash, and Sophi Ash.
The family would like to invite anyone whose life was touched by Heather, to come for the memorial service and reception that will be held Saturday, March 4, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., at the Arcata First Baptist Church 1700 Union St. Arcata. This commemorates her birthday on March 1, 1969.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Heather Bishop’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
OBITUARY:Lisa Carole Feraru, 1959-2023
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Lisa
Carole Feraru was born to Gloria Jackson McDowell and John Levaditis,
on February 20,
1959. She was raised in Brisbane, Calif.
by her mother Gloria and her step father Jose Reyes Rodriguez. She
was called home to her lord and savior on January 23, 2023. She is now reunited with her youngest daughter in heaven, who’s
spirit she saw sitting beside her just hours before her passing.
Lisa accomplished many things in her life. She graduated from Humboldt State University in 2005, with a Bachelor of Arts and Major in Psychology. She was an advocate for people with developmental disabilities, and she served as Regional Center President from 1999-2001 and from 2005-2007. She was recognized twice for outstanding service by the Redwood Coast Regional Center as director and president of the board. As well, she served on the executive budget, election, personnel consumer advisory, client benefit fund, and board procedures committee. She also received the C. Raymond Hudson award by the Area 1 Developmental Disabilities Board for outstanding and significant contributions toward the enhancement of education for persons with developmental disabilities.
Lisa was a firm believer in our lord and savior Jesus Christ and was a devoted member of the Galilee Baptist Church. She also served as chief financial officer and Agent for Service of Process for the church. She was baptized by Galilee in 2010. She went to church every Sunday and bible study every Wednesday rain or shine. Lisa had a beautiful singing voice and she often blessed her fellow church members by singing at her church. She made numerous contributions to Galilee Baptist Church during her time with the congregation. The church was like a second home to her, and Pastor Michael Burke was her very good friend.
Lisa loved living in Humboldt County and enjoyed the beauty it had to offer. Lisa enjoyed singing karaoke with her friends. She could often be seen wearing Holly Yashi earrings and her extravagant church hats. She had golden brown eyes and beautiful curly brown hair. She absolutely loved the holiday season and would host family dinners at her home in Arcata. She always made sure everyone she knew got a present on Christmas, and she often bought presents for the children of families who couldn’t afford them.
Lisa touched many lives and her generous soul knew no limits. She will always be remembered for making sure that the people she loved had a place to stay and food to eat, no matter what. Because of her enormous heart her list of family is very extensive. She was known to take people in and add to her family as she had so much love to give.
Lisa was a proud mother to four children: Glenn Whitfield, Amy Feraru, Ashley Davis and Courtney Feraru. She was like a mother to Ella Davis and Jessica Sousa. She was a loving grandmother to Glenn Arthur Whitfield, Logan Whitfield, Annabell Davis, Ripley Davis, Quentin Davis, Kaiya Davis, Luka Davis, Aurora Sousa and Damian Paz. She loved her children and grandchildren with all her heart, and there was nothing she wouldn’t do for them.
She was sister to Sheila Eacret, Deanna and Raymond Anthony Rodriguez, and Jerry Savage. She was Aunt to Ronald Wayne Morrow, Walter Morrow, Leanna Morrow, Jamie Lopez, Angela Reed, Raymond Eacret, Janell January, Kindy Cloaky, Travis Steel, Juston Steel, Brian Steel, Mailisa and Vanessa Levaditis, and Mariah Snowton. She was mother-in-law to Eion Davis and Jennifer Whitfield. Lisa’s extended family includes, Lacy Moore, Shana McLain, Shannon and Tracy Steel, Dixie Savage, Vickey Levaditis, Brenda and William Levaditis, Deon Schori, Victoria Vargas, Arlene Lopez, Robert Feraru, Brian Feraru, Monica O Grady, Arthur and Anne Feraru, Brandi Bettencourt, Malcolm and Lenora Combs, Deenie and Paddy Davis, Megan and Mike Horcasitas, Niamh and Lilliana Horcasitas, Erin Davis, Orlagh Powell, Jennifer Cejas, Megan Cejas, John and Linda Fraley, Gary and Lepeical Upshaw, Monica and Octavia Upshaw, Willie Michael Jr. and Princess Burke, Monique Smith, Malary and Debra Morrow, Zu Kenya Zawadi, Cathy White, Haley Castillo, Tanya Christian, Kym January and her children. Lisa is loved by so many and she is dearly missed.
The
Lord
is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He
maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the
still waters.
He
restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for
his name’s sake.
Yea,
though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
Thou
preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou
anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely
goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I
will dwell in the house of the Lord
for ever.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Lisa Feraru’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
OBITUARY: Georgia Lee (Bucknell) Hespen, 1937-2023
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Georgia Lee (Bucknell) Hespen
November 8, 1937 - January 17, 2023
Georgia Lee Hespen passed away, at St. Joseph Hospital, in Eureka with her family by her side at the age of 85. She was born in Upper Lake, California to George and Royce (Lightfoot) Bucknell. As a baby, her family moved to Larabee near the small school house. Then moved to a ranch, where they had a myriad of animals. She enjoyed working side by side with her father on the ranch. Georgia attended Fortuna High School.
Georgia met the love of her life, Walter Hespen in Alderpoint at her sister, Barbara’s home. They were married in 1954 and began their life in Alderpoint. They had three children, Jackie Lee (b. 1954), Connie June (b. 1955-d.1955), and Delores Diane (b.1957-d. 2019).
Georgia was always a huge part of her community. She belonged to the American Legion Hall, was on the board for the Alderpoint Water District, and always participated in community events. She also worked as a carrier for the United States Postal Service for many years until her transition to an assistant Postmaster. After her retirement from the Post Office, Georgia spent her retirement years supporting her children and grandchildren.
She enjoyed hunting, fishing, gardening, playing games, and taking care of her family. Georgia’s years in Alderpoint gained her many friendships. They would go hunting and fishing together. They would also spend hours playing games including cribbage, yahtzee, dominoes. With friendships also came many shenanigans, including “borrowing” a kitten from outside the Brass Rail, in Redway, being chased by a bear while hunting, being a willing participant in wild hairstyles and color changes. Georgia’s home was always open to family and friends and would many times be the center for gatherings.
In June of 2020, Georgia moved to Fortuna to be closer to her family.
Georgia was preceded in death by her daughters Delores Heil and Connie June, her husband of 44 years, Walt, her sister’s Beverley, Barbara, and brother, Butch.
Georgia is survived by her son, Jack Hespen of Fortuna, her four granddaughters, Sabrina Young of Fortuna; Jamie Heil of Garberville; Tiffany Heil of Rohnert Park; Tabitha Cheadle of Norman, Oklahoma;, nine great-grandchildren, Annabell and Titus Young of Fortuna; Sean Akselsen of Garberville; Piper and Tanner Hernlund (Lance Hernlund) of Hidden Valley; Angel, Lily and Alexis of Norman, Oklahoma; her sister, Pattie Johnson of Fortuna; numerous nieces and nephews, cousins, and many friends.
A Celebration of Life will be held March 25, 2023 at 2 p.m. at The Monday Club, 610 Main Street, Fortuna. Guests are encouraged to bring a potluck item and share memories of Georgia.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Georgia Hespen’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
OBITUARY: Douglas J Hall, 1949-2022
LoCO Staff / Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Douglas J Hall, 73, of Eureka, passed away the morning of December 22, 2022, in Daly City. Doug passed due to complications of Parkinson’s Disease, Stage 4 lung cancer, and Covid-19.
Doug was born in November 1949, to Chester Lee and Wilma Leona Hall (née Parsons) in Eureka.
Doug finished High School at Eureka Senior High in 1967, and worked summers thereafter as a commercial fisherman based in Kodiak, Alaska, with his father, Chet, and brothers Gary and David, and would often return to Eureka between fishing seasons. On one of his return trips to Eureka, Doug fell for and soon married Susan Sarlund in the summer of 1969. They had one child together, Robert, born in March of 1970.
Doug was drafted into the US Army in 1969, and later moved his young family down to Fort Davis in Colón, Panama, where he was stationed until his honorable discharge in May of 1971.
Soon after his discharge, Doug and his family relocated to Kodiak so he could pursue his career in commercial fishing with his father and older brothers. Doug and Susan divorced in 1973, and Doug never remarried. He eventually moved back to Humboldt County and mostly split his time between Eureka and Blocksburg, until his passing.
Doug was an avid reader of all things science and science-fiction, and was particularly intrigued by astrophysics and the prospect of human, interstellar space travel. He also loved fishing and hunting, and was an accomplished horticulturist and proponent of small-plot farming.
Doug is survived by his former wife, Susan, son Robert, sisters-in-law Louise and Yvonne, nephews Mark and Bryon, and niece Megan.
Doug is preceded in death by his parents Chester and Wilma, and older brothers David and Gary.
A memorial and celebration of life will be held for Douglas Hall at the Eureka Elks Lodge, located at 445 Herrick Ave. in Eureka, on April 1, 2023, from 2-4pm. And, yes, he would absolutely chuckle at the idea of a Memorial in his honor being held on April Fools Day. Some light food will be provided. Please come with any stories or anecdotes about Doug that you’d like to share…the funnier and more irreverent, the better. He was quite a character, and he wouldn’t expect or want a somber or sad get-together in his honor. Please join us in humor and love as we remember and celebrate the life of this singular, much-loved member of our family.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Douglas Hall’s loved ones. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.


