F. Reagan’s Klakmas County Sheriff Craig Roberts said Wednesday that law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, are running a myriad of conspiracy theories that Antifa extremists are setting fires and cutting power lines.
“Every tip that comes in, we follow it to the end,” Roberts said, but investigators have generally indicated that the tipers’ information came “from a friend of a friend” who has no evidence. In one case, Roberts said reports that a group tied up a gasoline can to start a forest fire were actually “good Samaritans” who helped emergency workers move fuel.
Roberts said there are legal concerns around the fire. “Fifteen people have been arrested in connection with the looting in the evacuated areas – not with any extremist affiliation,” he said. He also reiterated that it was illegal for individuals to set up their own armed outposts.
“We don’t want armed civilians to stop people unjustly,” he said.
The governor says the fire is a sign of climate change
“The basic facts cannot be denied,” Newsme said. “The trendline is not going in the right direction.”
Newsome said Wednesday it had “directly confronted the president” about climate change – although a video of a press briefing earlier this week showed a mild exchange between leaders.
“I think people have a way to get in touch and good people can disagree,” Newsme said. “And I maintain that we are making progress and to the extent that we are listening, I believe we are.”
However, he said he did not expect Trump to “change radically.”
He said, “I’ll be a fanatic because I imagine it will be, too. It’s not a recognition system, it’s data.” “Science. You have to accept the facts.”
California ‘ready for wildfires’
The California Gust Complex Fire is the largest in California history, consuming more than 817,000 acres, and is still burning. And with a reverberating trend of returning over the weekend, officials said he probably won’t be going anywhere anytime soon.
“With no significant rainfall in sight, California is ripe for dry and wildfires,” said Cal Fire.
The state was hit by the drought last month, when a huge heat wave caused a fire. 136 million trees It didn’t last as the lack of rain acted as a “kindling”.
Thousands of homes were destroyed in the flames. One of them was Brian Marzoian’s dream home.
But Northern California is seeing an improvement in smoking conditions and visibility, the Bay Area Office of the National Weather Service said.
The office tweeted, “There is still smoke in parts of northern and inner #cornifornia but parts of the #SanFrancisco area are finally seeing the blue sky – and it will not be allowed.”
The school resumed as Reg Reagan’s fight continued
Christie Perry, superintendent of Salem-Kaiser Public Schools, said the wildfires have created “everything a little rocker” for the district going into inst online notification due to the coronavirus epidemic.
The school district has about 41,000 students. Perry told KPTV that the lives of the students were largely affected by smoking. He said some staff members were forced out.
“I told my mentor kids this many times today, as if it would be ok,” said teacher Macy Bosser. “It will all work its way up.”
The crew collapsed to the ground exhausted after fighting a 14-hour Lionshead fire in Dallas, Reagan. Crew boss Theodore Hinar said they collected the music for the songs with parody of “Take Me Out to Play a Game” using fire-fighting words.
With an unprecedented fire, some residents worked to save their homes.
“My house is still there, my whole barrier, because we went there and fought,” Richardson told KATU. “I’ve been there, I’ve seen this city burn down, I’ve been there for 14 hours trying to get out with the others.”
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