11 burglars repeatedly ransacked a California woman's home. Then the bears came
On Friday, the Butte County district attorney's office announced charges against 11 suspects accused of repeatedly breaking into and stealing from a 64-year-old woman's home. Six additional suspects have also been identified in connection with the burglary ring and have charges pending against them, prosecutors said.
The woman first reported that her home — which is located in a remote area of Lovelock, north of Magalia — was burglarized on April 17.
Then the burglars kept coming back. And back. The situation grew so dire that the homeowner, fearing for her safety, stopped staying in her own house, according to authorities.
The repeated robberies caused so much damage to the woman's home that bears were able to enter the property, prosecutors said. The wildlife intrusion only served to exacerbate the structural disrepair and the woman's financial loss.
Read more: After Eaton fire, bear makes home its own, swimming in pool, dining from trash can, 'definitely not moving'
Investigators from the Butte County Sheriff's Office arrested 10 Magalia residents and one Paradise resident accused of participating in the incursions. Each has been charged with first-degree residential burglary:
Sean Anthony Crua, 43, of Magalia
Nicholas Brown, 37, of Magalia
Mary Ricca, 59, of Magalia
Sefo Sipa, 37, of Paradise
Gavin Dominguez-Feathers, 25, of Magalia
Joey Kupiheanapeahi, 42, of Magalia
Breanna Maier, 32, of Magalia
Michael Barnett, 29, of Magalia
Matthew Bacon, 44, of Magalia
Lindsey McLaughlin, 37, of Magalia
Kayla Goebel, 34, of Magalia
Several of the alleged burglars were released on their own recognizance, despite prosecutors' objections. Crua, Maier, Dominguez-Feathers and Kupiheanapeahi remain in custody at the Butte County Jail with bail set at $50,000.
Barnett and McLaughlin were set to be arraigned Friday afternoon. The identified defendants are due back in court on July 9 and 10.
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 days ago
- Newsweek
Woman in US for Nearly 3 Decades Arrested by ICE After Traffic Stop
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Mirta Amarilis Co Tupul, a 38-year-old Phoenix resident who has lived in the United States for almost 30 years, was detained after a traffic stop and nearly deported immediately thereafter before her lawyers helped move her into standard removal proceedings, the Los Angeles Times reported. The Guatemalan immigrant was initially transported to the Florence Processing Center. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) records show Co Tupul is currently being held at the Eloy Detention Center in Eloy, Arizona, roughly 65 miles from Phoenix. Newsweek reached out to ICE and the Department of Homeland Security via email for comment. Why It Matters Co Tupul's case highlights questions about the government's use of expedited removal, a procedure that her attorneys and advocates say is meant for recent arrivals, but they allege it has been more broadly applied by Trump administration immigration officials. In January, the Trump administration expanded expedited removal to its full extent to apply to undocumented persons who are apprehended anywhere in the U.S., cannot prove they have resided in the U.S. for at least two years, and, entered the U.S. between ports of entry or were paroled into the U.S. and have their parole status revoked, according to the National Immigration Forum. Civil rights lawyers said the episode illustrated legal and humanitarian risks for long-term residents who lack counsel when immigration officers move quickly to remove people without a court hearing, an issue that has drawn renewed attention amid increased immigration enforcement actions. Law enforcement officers search the inside of a car during a traffic stop on August 14, 2025, in Washington, D.C. Law enforcement officers search the inside of a car during a traffic stop on August 14, 2025, in Washington, To Know Co Tupul was stopped by a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agent while driving to work at a laundromat on July 22 in a predominantly Latino area of Phoenix, according to her attorneys in court documents. She entered the U.S. at age 9 and has lived continuously in the country since that time. She is a single mother of three children (ages 8, 16 and 18), all U.S. citizens. Three days after the traffic stop, legal counsel for Co Tupul was informed that she was placed in expedited removal proceedings and would be removed in one to three weeks. The removal officer reportedly explained ICE had a "new policy" of utilizing expedited removal for noncitizens with "their first contact with ICE." Lawyers submitted evidence of her decades-long presence in the U.S., including vaccination records, other official records and sixteen signed affidavits. Their legal complaint on her behalf claimed that the traffic stop of Co Tupul violated her Fourth Amendment rights "as it lacked reasonable suspicion and, as a result, any evidence obtained must be excluded from her immigration proceedings." They also said in legal briefs that she was statutorily ineligible to be placed in expedited removal proceedings due to being physically present in the U.S. for 30 years. Her placement in expedited removal proceedings violated her due process rights, they also argued. On Wednesday, August 13, she and her attorneys received positive news when a U.S. district court judge in Arizona dismissed the case and moved Co Tupul to regular deportation proceedings. It was also agreed that the government would not attempt to remove her expeditiously again. The judge in that case granted the lawyers' emergency request due to the timing of the matter. The federal government subsequently moved Co Tupul into regular removal proceedings and committed in writing not to pursue expedited removal in her case, after which the judge dismissed the lawsuit, according to the attorneys and DHS. Attorneys said a deportation officer had told Co Tupul that a "new policy" allowed immigration officials to use expedited removal at the first interaction with immigrants, a practice they argued conflicted with long-standing limits on expedited removal. Federal law enacted in the 1990s established expedited removal procedures intended to apply primarily to recent arrivals, a point raised by Co Tupul's lawyers as they challenged the government's actions. Department of Homeland Security officials later confirmed that ICE filed Co Tupul into regular removal proceedings after reviewing the case. What People Are Saying Eric Lee, a lawyer for Mirta Amarilis Co Tupul, in an X post on August 4: "Good news: Our demand that the court halt Trump from deporting Ms. Co Tupul without due process as just GRANTED by U.S. Dist. Ct. for District of Arizona! Judge says Trump admin is 'enjoined from removing Petitioner Mirta Amarilis Co Tupul from the United States...'" Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons on Fox News on Thursday: "I don't think the American public as a whole realizes just exactly who ICE is going after every day." What Happens Next The government's next steps in the matter remained unclear after the district court dismissed the suit. Co Tupul's attorneys warned that similar attempts could recur in cases where immigrants lacked legal representation.


Los Angeles Times
2 days ago
- Los Angeles Times
Ana Ceballos to join the Los Angeles Times as a Washington correspondent
The following announcement is sent on behalf of Washington bureau chief Michael Wilner and assistant managing editor Steve Clow: We are pleased to announce that Ana Ceballos, a prize-winning state government and political reporter for the Miami Herald, is joining the Los Angeles Times as a Washington correspondent. Ceballos will bring over a decade of experience at the forefront of investigative political journalism to The Times' Washington bureau, where she will focus on stories affecting our readers coming out of the Trump administration and the California congressional delegation. Ceballos shared a Polk Award in 2022 for her reporting on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' program flying migrants across the country, and was part of a Herald team that won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news that same year for its coverage of a devastating condo collapse in Surfside. Her enterprising work covering Florida politics often drives national headlines. Ceballos' reporting last month on conditions at 'Alligator Alcatraz' broke news that, despite statements to the contrary, the Trump administration held a minor there alongside hundreds of immigrants without criminal records. Her reporting also led to the Herald publishing an exclusive list with the names of hundreds of immigrant detainees at the site, which to date is the only public accounting of who is being held there. Ceballos grew up in Southern California reading The Times and graduated from San Diego State University with a degree in journalism before starting her career covering murder trials, local corruption and wildfires at the Monterey County Weekly. She starts Sept. 2.


Fox News
2 days ago
- Fox News
Man struck, killed on freeway while fleeing immigration agents during Home Depot raid
A man died in California after being struck by a vehicle on the 210 Freeway while trying to flee an immigration enforcement operation at a Home Depot, officials said. The fatal incident unfolded Thursday morning in Monrovia, a city outside of Los Angeles, after police received reports of immigration agents approaching the Home Depot, Monrovia City Manager Dylan Feik told the Los Angeles Times. A day laborer who frequents the location in search of work said to the newspaper that people there started yelling "Immigration, run!" One man then fled the store on foot, jumped over a concrete wall and entered the eastbound lanes of the 210 Freeway, according to the Los Angeles Times. The newspaper reported that a few minutes later, Monrovia Fire & Rescue responded to a call of a vehicle striking a pedestrian. That individual was taken to a hospital and succumbed to his injuries. The Department of Homeland Security told Fox News Digital, "This individual was not being pursued by any DHS law enforcement." "We do not know their legal status. We were not aware of this incident or notified by California Highway Patrol until hours after operations in the area had concluded," a spokesperson added. Monrovia resident Karen Suarez told the Los Angeles Times that she went to the Home Depot and found the daughter of the man "visibly very upset." "I feel so bad for her. I feel so bad for the families. These are people trying to escape whatever horrible atrocities they came from for a better life," Suarez added. A crowd of about 50 people later gathered in front of the Home Depot last night, waiving Mexican flags and holding signs that said "ICE out of L.A.," the Los Angeles Times also reported.