RLn 5-13-21

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The regenerative power of seaweed p. 2 The real crime is what’s perfectly legal p. 10 Following Mike Sager: The path of the unusual storyteller p. 11

What’s old is cool again

p. 13

‘I Felt Hate More Than Anything’

How an active duty airman tried to start a civil war This story is part of a collaboration between ProPublica, Berkeley Journalism’s Investigative Reporting Program and FRONTLINE that includes the documentary American Insurrection, which aired on PBS.

Tracking Paul Flores —

Like a Good Neighbor, San Pedro Minds Its Own Business Crime and Justice Edition

Primary suspect in the Kristin Smart disappearance 25 years ago, Paul Ruben Flores, during arrest on April 13. File photo

COVID-19 Deaths in the US as of May 11, 2021: 596,265 • Calif.: 62,322 • LA County: 24,026 Total Vaccinations in Calif.: 32,669,323 (46% fully vaccinated) For the latest stats: randomlengthsnews.com

May 13 - 26, 2021

[See Paul Flores, p. 6]

We usually consider the term Crime and Punishment like the novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky. However, in light of the recent conviction and federal charges in the murder case of George Floyd and the insurrection of Jan. 6 the question has emerged as to “What exactly is justice in America?” You will find in the stories here examples of some of these crimes but the idea of justice remains elusive. We’re calling this week’s publication the “Crime and Justice” edition to shine a light on various kinds of crime happening in and around our community, our city, our state and our world. But the focus is on justice and how justice is attained. With so many people connected by social media, policy disagreements are marked by buzzwords and outrage. They are driven by a partisan or self-interested agenda, rather than the facts. —The Editors

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor From the famous to the infamous, San Pedro has always been a place people come to blend in and disappear — writers, artists, gangsters, fraudsters, accused war criminals and apparently, accused murderers. Paul Flores didn’t exactly have the luxury of anonymity when he escaped to San Pedro trying to flee the cloud of suspicion over the disappearance of Kristin Smart 25 years ago. Flores arrived to find the telephone poles hung with wanted posters that featured side-by-side photos of him and Smart and a $75,000 reward for information about Smart’s disappearance or Flores’ involvement. Jason Herring saw the posters and recognized Flores as a nearby

Real People, Real News, Really Effective

It was 2:20 p.m. on June 6, 2020, and Steven Carrillo, a 32-year-old Air Force sergeant who belonged to the anti-government Boogaloo Bois movement, was on the run in the tiny mountain town of Ben Lomond, Calif. With deputy sheriffs closing in, Carrillo texted his brother, Evan, asking him to tell his children he loved them and instructing him to give $50,000 to his fiancée. “I love you bro,” Carrillo signed off. Thinking the text message was a suicide note from a brother with a history of mental health troubles, Evan Carrillo quickly texted back: “Think about the ones you love.” In fact, Steven Carrillo had a different objective, a goal he had written about on Facebook, discussed with other Boogaloo Bois and even scrawled out in his own blood as he hid from police that day. He wanted to incite a second Civil War in the United States by killing police officers he viewed as enforcers of a corrupt and tyrannical political order — officers he described as “domestic enemies” of the Constitution he professed to revere. [See Hate More, p. 15]

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