Volume 71, Edition 5

Page 1

Wednesday 02.19.20

Will you survive? Tips on how to make it through the semester successfully

Page 4

C URRENT American River College Sacramento, Calif.

The

Vol. 71 Ed. 5

STEM opening ARCs new STEM center set to open June 2020

Page 3

(Police photo courtesy of San Mateo Police Department)

Photo by Adnan Ramic | File Photo

Noah Winchester told the Current in 2014 that he served for the Sacramento Police Department for 10 years before joining the Los Rios Police Department, but other sources say he only served on the Sac PD for two years and left before his probationary period ended.

Former LRPD officer sentenced to 81 years in prison By Ariel Caspar arielcaspar@gmail.com “I will do whatever to keep my students safe,” Noah Winchester, former corporal with the Los Rios Police Department once said. That statement came during a November 2014 ride along with a former American River College Current reporter who observed Winchester conducting an offcampus drug bust. What seemed like a well-intentioned statement six years ago is

now proving to be ironic for students and staff who remember the former cop in light of recent events. On Oct. 9, 2019, Winchester, 35, was convicted in the San Mateo County Superior Court for sexually assaulting three women in San Mateo, after a 20-day trial that resulted in guilty verdicts on 14 charges. He was sentenced 81 years to life in state prison, according to San Mateo District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe, as reported by the Daily Journal. Winchester was arrested in July

2016 and had been in custody on a $3.1 million bail for six months prior to his sentencing. In an email interview with the Current, Gabe Ross, Los Rios Community College district associate vice chancellor, said that after Winchester’s 2019 conviction and sentencing, the LRPD issued a statement that read, in part, “We are extremely happy that justice has been served for Noah Winchester’s victims ... [We are] committed to keeping our college communities safe, and we will vigorously pursue severe con-

sequences for anyone whose actions belie that commitment.” Winchester was charged in 2016 with 22 felony counts of sexual assaults involving incidents as an officer on duty in San Mateo in 2015 and when he was an officer for the LRCCD police department in 2013, according to San Mateo County prosecutors, who also confirmed he had five victims between July 2, 2013 and Oct. 19, 2015. Wagstaffe said those charges included kidnapping with rape, intent to commit rape, sexual penetration and oral copulation

under color authority, battery, criminal threats and forceable sex offenses, as reported by Bay City News, who covered Winchester’s arrests in 2016. According to Winchester’s case file, The People of the State of California v. Noah White Winchester, many of these charges were also enhanced because he had a weapon in his possession during the acts. The case file also noted he was ordered to take an HIV test in November 2019, and those results will be reviewed at his next scheduled court appearance on March 2. WInchester and his attorney, Paul F. DeMeemster, recently put in their notice to file for an appeal regarding his recent prison sentence as of Feb. 4. According to Ross, Winchester served as a police officer for LRCCD, rotating through Los Rios campuses from January 2009 to July 2016, under the authority of former LRPD chief of police, Cheryl Sears, and was the subject of an investigation during his time of employment with the LRPD for unsubstantiated allegations of inappropriate behavior.

Winchester | Page 2

Primary candidates to review before you vote YOUR GUIDE TO THE 2020 PRIMARY ELECTION CANDIDATES By Bram Martinez bramster1@gmail.com The California primary presidential election takes place March 3 in California to select the final candidates for the United States Presidential election, which takes place Nov. 3. The following is a guide to the top six Democratic candidates and the only viable option on the Republican side, as well as the policies that they have addressed regarding healthcare, college

tuition/student loan debt and climate reform. In order to vote, check the voter guides. One can either vote by going to a voting booth depending on one’s area, or one can mail by ballot. This guide does not have any candidates outside of the main two parties. This is up to date as of Feb. 18. The polls/projections are from USA Today’s Jan. 16 projected presidential matchups poll.

(File Photo)

As of Feb. 18, 2020, President Donald Trump is far in the lead for Republican candidacy, and currently Bernie Sanders leads the Democratic candidacy with Joe Biden at his heels.

Primary Guide | Page 3

@ARCurrent

INDEX

@ARCurrent

4 Feature 2&3 News 7 Opinion 6 Sports 5 A&C

/ARCurrent.com

ARC Theatre opens first production of PAGE 4 semester

NORTH STAR


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.