
18-year-old vanishes as friends try to pull him from lake, CA fraternity says
A 911 caller reported that Simon Daniel, 18, of Pinole, California, went underwater and did not resurface near Copper Canyon on the lake at about 3 p.m. Saturday, May 17, the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said in a news release.
Daniel, a first-year student at California State University, Fullerton, visited the lake with fellow fraternity and sorority members, the Sigma Pi fraternity at the college said on Facebook.
The swimmers did not realize that recent heavy rains had created dangerous conditions in the water, the fraternity said.
Other fraternity members entered the water to assist the swimmers, but a wave separated Daniel from the others and he vanished underwater, the fraternity said.
A dive team using sonar and a remote-operated vehicle found his body just before 9 a.m. Sunday, May 18, the sheriff's office said.
He was known for his 'love of music, boundless energy and kind spirit,' the fraternity said.
The fraternity described Daniel as a computer science major and 'a respected leader on campus' at the Los Angeles-area university.
'He was the heart of the fraternity - genuine, joyful and someone who brightened every room with his brilliant smile,' the fraternity said.
Deputies ask anyone with information to call Cpl. Brandon Abell at 760-326-9200.
Lake Havasu is about a 300-mile drive east from Los Angeles.
Hashtags

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


CBS News
2 hours ago
- CBS News
Los Angeles police arrest Montebello man in $4.5 million cargo theft bust
Los Angeles police raided a small hardware chain and recovered $4.5 million worth of stolen merchandise, including power tools from Milwaukee, DeWalt and Makita. Detectives served search warrants at two locations connected to DJ General Tool and Wire on Aug. 14 and Aug. 19. They arrested Dojoon Park, 41, for receiving stolen property, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. Officers recovered home appliances, e-bikes and other stolen cargo in addition to the allegedly stolen power tools. "Organized cargo and retail theft strikes at the heart of our economy, impacting local businesses, workers, and everyday families," LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell said. "Working alongside our partners at Union Pacific Police and the Los Angeles Port Police, we've not only recovered millions in merchandise but also sent a clear message: if you traffic in stolen property, we will find you and hold you accountable." LAPD said it is working with the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office to file charges. "Please know that when organized crime rings exploit our transportation system, we will identify them, dismantle the operations, and hold individuals fully accountable for their actions," District Attorney Nathan Hochman said. "To be crystal clear, if you steal in Los Angeles County, we will come after you."


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
Ousted Fire Chief in L.A. Demands Formal Apology in Legal Filing
Kristin Crowley, the former chief of the Los Angeles Fire Department, filed a legal claim against the city and Mayor Karen Bass on Wednesday, accusing city leaders of destroying her decades-long career after she spoke out about missteps relating to the catastrophic wildfires in January. Ms. Bass abruptly removed Ms. Crowley from her post in February, blaming the chief for failing to properly warn the mayor about the scope of the threat before the fires broke out, an assertion Ms. Crowley has disputed. Ms. Crowley filed a tort claim, which is often a precursor to a lawsuit, for emotional distress and lost wages of more than $25,000. She is also demanding that city leaders retract 'false and defamatory statements,' formally apologize to her and stop all ongoing retaliation. 'Integrity, truthfulness, and serving others before self have guided me throughout my career,' Ms. Crowley said in a statement. 'Doing the right thing even when it is hard is always the right decision and that is why I am continuing to fight for the resources our firefighters need to keep us all safe.' In a statement, David Michaelson, counsel to the mayor, said that Ms. Bass would not comment on personnel matters and that she was busy focusing on 'preparations for the hottest temperatures of the year and the potential for regional fire danger.' The day before Ms. Crowley filed her claim, the mayor made an appearance alongside leaders of the Fire Department to detail how it was positioning itself to respond quickly in the event of fires during the expected heat wave in Southern California this week. Earlier this year, as Los Angeles leaders and firefighting officials faced intense criticism for their handling of the deadly Palisades fire, Ms. Bass and Ms. Crowley engaged in a public battle over who was to blame for what many said was an insufficient firefighting response. The mayor stirred outrage in Los Angeles because she was in Ghana when the fires broke out. While she eventually admitted she had made a mistake in leaving the country, she blamed Ms. Crowley for failing to make the severity of the fire threat clear to her. She also accused Ms. Crowley of refusing to prepare a report for the city's fire commission on the department's actions during the blaze. Veteran fire officials in the Los Angeles area also suggested that Ms. Crowley's preparations were inadequate compared with what other local departments had done and with what the city Fire Department's own playbook called for. Ms. Crowley disputed those claims and instead blamed the mayor and city leaders for refusing to properly fund the department in a time of growing need, as climate change has made weather extremes more dangerous. In the legal claim she filed, she mentioned more than a dozen instances over the past couple of years when she pleaded to get enough money to repair aging equipment and to fill her ranks. Instead, she said, the city cut her budget. The mayor and city budget officials have denied that the department was underfunded. The acrimony between the two officials continued to escalate until Feb. 21, when Ms. Bass removed Ms. Crowley from the department's top job, although she was able to stay with the department at a lower rank. Ms. Crowley then embarked on a protracted campaign to get her job back. Days after her removal, the former chief appealed her dismissal. The next month, she pleaded her case before the City Council. Scores of firefighters in T-shirts packed the chambers, as Ms. Crowley defended the department's response to the fire and disputed the mayor's claims. The former chief told city leaders then that her staff 'engaged in all of its standard communication,' including with the mayor's office, to warn officials about the red flag conditions. And she said she had not refused to prepare the report the mayor had requested, but rather had recommended working with external investigators who were already looking into the response. Two City Council members, Monica Rodriguez and Traci Park, sided with Ms. Crowley. Ms. Rodriguez said at the time that the dismissal amounted to 'political expediency overshadowing the service of a decorated civil servant.' Ms. Park, who represents Pacific Palisades, said that she was worried about the shortage of firefighters and critical failures in the community's water infrastructure, but that 'accountability doesn't just stop with one person or one department.' But the rest of the 15-member City Council voted to uphold the mayor's decision. Shawn Hubler contributed reporting.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Columbus mother and daughter among 15 indicted in pandemic unemployment assistance scheme
Three Columbus-area women, including a mother and daughter, are among 15 people who have been indicted by a grand jury in connection with a sprawling COVID-19 unemployment assistance scheme that prosecutors say resulted in the fraudulent release of more than $7 million in benefit payments. netted them millions of dollars. Markeya Smith, 28; her mother, Brandy Smith, 45, both of Columbus; and Shirkara Reggins Cochran, 42, of Canal Winchester, face a slew of charges in connection with the scheme, including engaging in corrupt activity, money laundering, theft, and telecommunications fraud, according to Franklin County Common Pleas Court filings. The grand jury also indicted 12 other co-conspirators in connection with the scheme. According to the Ohio Office of the Inspector General, the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services hired outside contractors to help process claims and release money for the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program, which was "inundated" with unemployment compensation claims during the COVID-19 pandemic. In October 2022, the ODJFS launched an investigation and discovered what it called suspicious activity concerning Markeya Smith, who worked for Randstad as a contractor and was assigned to the Ohio PUA program. The ODJFS accused Markeya Smith of improperly clearing application issues and fraudulently inflating the incomes of PUA applicants so they could receive larger weekly payouts, according to the state Inspector General's office. During that same month, the ODJFS also found that Brandy Smith, a former ODJFS customer service representative, improperly approved PUA claims even after she was no longer a customer service representative with the department. After reviewing ODJFS records, investigators said they found "significant overlap" on the PUA claims accessed by the two women. Additionally, investigators found that both women were acquaintances of Cochran, who worked as a subcontractor to ODJFS with Insight Global, an employee staffing agency. Cochran is also accused of improperly accessing PUA claims and disbursing money that applicants were not entitled to, and using a fake name during her employment with Insight Global. Prosecutors allege that she used her mother's name, "Cherita," during her employment. During the course of their investigation, authorities say they found that the three women would receive cash or electronic payments from PUA applicants in exchange for improperly releasing PUA funds. Investigators also found that the trio would use recruiters to find additional PUA applicants who wanted to have issues removed from their PUA applications or who wanted their claims to be fraudulently inflated, according to the inspector general's office. Investigators also noted that even after Markeya Smith was terminated from her position as a customer service representative with Randstad, she still had access to the ODJFS benefits system and released nearly $3 million in PUA benefits before her access was revoked, according to the inspector general's office. The three women have not entered a plea yet, and no attorney is listed for any of them. Reporter Shahid Meighan can be reached at smeighan@ at ShahidMeighan on X, and at on Bluesky. This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Columbus mother, daughter among 15 indicted in $7M pandemic aid scheme