Volume 67, Edition 12

Page 1

CURRENT The American River

Vol. 67, Ed. 12

ARCURRENT.COM

@ARCurrent

/ARCurrentcom

KANEKO:

STUDENT WORK WAS PUT ON DISPLAY AT THE LATEST SHOW PAGE 10 @ARCurrent

Former student missing

On asylum from

PAROLEE WAS LAST SEEN ON APRIL 14

Kenya

By Robert Hansen w1090476@apps.losrios.edu

Story by Jordan Schauberger Photo courtesy of Edna Simbi

Edna Simbi stands with her friend Juan Pablo Celis Garcia at the United Nations. Simbi, a former ARC student, came to the U.S. on asylum in 2010.

FORMER ARC STUDENT ESCAPED WIFE INHERITANCE AND FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION ON HER JOURNEY TO THE UNITED STATES

May 4, 2016

I

n 2007, Edna Simbi was running for her life. Now, almost nine years later, the former American River College student remembers the journey that took her from escaping cultural practices in Kenya, such as wife inheritance and female genital mutilation, to working in the office of the attorney general of the United Nations. Before coming to the U.S. on asylum in 2010, Simbi spent several years on the run from what she described as the marginalization of women in the developing world. She grew up in Kenya but had to flee her community because of the practice of wife inheritance.

“It’s a cultural practice and that’s been a huge part of my life,” she said. “I lost several of my sisters to HIV AIDS.” Wife inheritance, also known as widow or bride inheritance, is a cultural practice whereby a widow is required to marry a male relative of her late husband, often his brother. This has often times been linked to an increased spread of HIV and, according to the National AIDS Control of Kenya, over 1.6 million people in Kenya were living with HIV in 2014. She left one harmful cultural practice only to find a community that was practicing another one ‒ female genital mutilation. After fleeing both communi-

Rushing to the NFL

ties, she made her way to Uganda and lived there for three and a half years as a refugee before she was found by the same people she was running from. They kidnapped her daughter and took her back to Kenya. “My daughter was one (year old, when she was kidnapped),” she said. “It’s not something I like talking publicly about since I’m yet to come to terms with what happened that night.” Although she did not want to go into the exact details, Simbi said that the obstacles she faced while trying to find her daughter were extensive. The police wouldn’t help her and thought

SIMBI | PAGE 8

A former American River College student and father of one has been missing since the morning of April 14 and was last seen in the Citrus Heights area, according to his sister. Jacob Linton, 31, showed interest in going to see Los Angeles band Sister Crayon at Harlow’s on April 14, the same day he went missing. According to ARC’s public information officer Scott Crow, Linton attended the college from fall 2001 to fall 2007 and had no declared major. Linton, out of work since January, has been living in Citrus Heights with his older sister Lesa Linton for about one month. He was supposed to check into probation for a DUI the day he went missing. “I woke him up (and) I told him to get dressed,” Lesa said. “He needed to go downtown and take care of his stuff and I left.” Linton was told by his sister’s boyfriend that if he checked into probation and didn’t drink that he was welcome to stay there. Linton never came home. “He left here with just pants and a t-shirt on his back and his shoes, and his wallet and his phone and that was about it,” Lesa said. A missing persons report was filed with the Citrus Heights Police Department by Lesa on April 17. “Some sort of notification (was sent) to neighboring agencies,”

MISSING | PAGE 2

FORMER ARC ATHLETE WAS DRAFTED BY THE SUPER BOWL CHAMPS By Mack Ervin III w1562393@apps.losrios.edu Former American River College running back Devontae Booker was selected by the Denver Broncos with the 136th overall pick in the 4th round of the 2016 NFL Draft. Booker, recruited out of Grant Union High School in Sacramento, played his first two seasons at ARC and racked up 1,472 yards and 15 touchdowns in his last season. He won community college All-American honors before transferring to the University of Utah. Booker sat out a year after an incident involving an allegedly

forged transcript at ARC, but returned to the Utes in 2014. He had a total of 2,773 yards and 21 touchdowns over two seasons before a torn meniscus cut short his senior season. ARC football head coach Jon Osterhout said that Booker was an “unbelievable” player. “He was the most complete back I had ever been around in terms of the variety of combinations you look for in a superstar running back,” Osterhout said. “Tremendous speed, love and passion for the game of football, high football IQ, vision, change of direction, and the ability to put the ball in the endzone.” Osterhout said that Booker played a number of different

roles on the team and is a “ tremendous all around athlete” who has the potential to be a threat in multiple positions. “He can throw the ball 70 yards, he can catch and is a dynamic kickoff returner as well. He was on kickoff coverage and return and scored a couple touchdowns for us on kickoff returns,” Osterhout said. Booker, still rehabbing from the knee injury that shortened his season, hosted a pro day workout on April 12 at Grant Union High for NFL scouts since he was unable to do many workouts at the NFL Scouting Combine. Eighteen NFL representatives, including running backs coaches

BOOKER | PAGE 4

File photo

Booker was drafted in the fourth round of the draft. He recorded 1,261 yards and 11 touchdowns during his senior season at the University of Utah.


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