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Fort Myers fallen officer honored with blood drive
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Opinion: After sending innocent people to prison, prosecutors don t bother to trace mistakes
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Clear Alliance moves to Prineville April 27 2021
The non-profit that moved into the historic building by Men s Wear in April, provides substance abuse and impaired driving education programs for youth and adults
CLEAR Alliance, an Oregon nonprofit, recently occupied a new office space at 247 N. Main St., in the location of the oldest of three historic buildings in downtown Prineville.
The office space and the building that was once home to First National Bank and Bank Drug has recently been renovated. CLEAR Alliance is located between Edward Jones and Prineville Men s Wear. We have risen to the occasion to adjust the delivery of our educational programs in order to increase outreach, said John Trumbo, board president of CLEAR Alliance. We aim to be good stewards of our funds, and it became apparent that CLEAR Alliance could more efficiently serve and expand to local, state and national audiences with fewer overhead costs being spent on a larger office space.
Bay Briefing: The coldest case in San Francisco
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Jae Stevens (left) was a drag entertainer allegedly killed by the Doodler. The killer, shown in a police sketch, was never caught.Chronicle photo illustration / The Chronicle
Good morning, Bay Area. It’s Tuesday, March 16, and last year, one man re-entered the world just as everything was shutting down. Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
The Doodler
During a tumultuous time in San Francisco more than 45 years ago, a serial killer called the Doodler sketched gay men in bars before stabbing them.
Plagued by a complicated investigation, a frightened public and sparse mainstream press coverage of LGBTQ murder victims, the case went cold and a killer walked free.
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He was freed after 19 years in prison for a murder he didn t commit. Then came the COVID lockdown
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March has brought both sorrow and salvation for Jeremy Puckett.
Consider his history: On March 14, 2002, Puckett, then 25, was sentenced to life in prison for a murder he didn’t commit. The victim’s body had been discovered on a Rancho Cordova (Sacramento County) road four years earlier, to the date. Puckett proclaimed his innocence for two decades, but justice true justice didn’t come until March 13, 2020.
On that date, Puckett stepped through a hidden door into a cage in a downtown Sacramento courtroom. He wore street clothes and the half-haggard, half-wired look of a man lacking sleep. Through bars, Puckett saw family and friends packed tight on the benches of the low-slung gallery. He saw a grown daughter and son who were just toddlers when sheriff’s deputies arrested him 19 years earlier.
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