The Pala Band of Mission Indians has installed what the tribe says is the first Naloxone vending machine ever placed on tribal land in the United States, it was.
The Pala Band of Mission Indians has installed what the tribe says is the first naloxone vending machine ever placed on tribal lands in the U.S., officials announced Thursday.
The Pala Band of Mission Indians has installed what the tribe says is the first Naloxone vending machine ever placed on tribal land in the United States, it was announced Thursday.
Shooting leaves man wounded in Pala [The San Diego Union-Tribune]
Sheriff’s deputies were investigating a shooting that left a man wounded in Pala on Saturday afternoon.
The man, whose age was not released, was dropped off by an unidentified person at the Pala Tribal Law Enforcement station on Pala Temecula Road near Pala Mission Road.
Pala Fire Department personnel triaged the man, who was suffering from a gunshot wound on his thigh, before he was flown to a hospital. Sgt. Frank Leyva said the man’s wound was not life-threatening.
The shooter ran away after the shooting, which happened about 5 p.m. Leyva said deputies were able to pinpoint the crime scene but did not disclose its location.