Volume 6, edition 11

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FOOTBALL COMMITS: MORE ARC PLAYERS HEAD FOUR-YEAR COLLEGES INCLUDING ONE TO CAL PAGE 4 Vol. 67, Ed. 11

NINE ACCUSERS

CURRENT ARCURRENT.COM

The American River

/ARCurrentcom

Although there were several more accusers who came forward only the nine most provable were used.

@ARCurrent

HEARING PUSHED BACK

In light of new accusations, the court date was moved to a month out on May 24.

@ARCurrent

‘PUBLIC SAFETY’

DA requested a increased bail from $100,000 to $250,000 as a precautionary measure.

99 CENTS STABBING:

SUSPECT STILL AT LARGE IN ALTERCATION OVER BIKE NEARBY ARC CAMPUS PAGE 3 April 13, 2016

Reefer, booze and GA SENATE PRESIDENT FLIP-FLOPS ON WEED USE AT CONFRENCE By Robert Hansen w1090476@apps.losrios. edu

Courtroom illustration by Allante Morris / Staff

A courtroom sketch shows Chris Hirtzel at his hearing on Tuesday. Hearing was pushed back to May 24. Cameras were not allowed inside the courtroom.

Potential rape charge delays sextortion case NEW ACCUSER CLAIMS HIRTZEL COERCED HER INTO PERFORMING SEXUAL ACTS WITH HIM By Jordan Schauberger jschauberger94@gmail.com

Screencapture from Hirtzel’s Facebook

Hirtzel was a prominent actor in the ARC theater department while he attended the college.

A potential rape charge that the Sacramento County District Attorney’s office says will likely be added to the case of former American River College student Christian Brian Hirtzel, who was arrested on Jan. 22 on 18 counts of six different felonies stemming from sextortion allegations, pushed back his hearing date to May 24.

James Wax, deputy district attorney in the cyber crimes unit, said that an additional accuser came forward between court dates and presented allegations that led the DA to pursue a rape charge. Wax said the accuser claimed that Hirtzel hacked into online accounts and stole nude photos of her that he then used under a pseudonym to extort her to “have sex with Chris Hirtzel.” Under his pseudonym, Hirtzel demanded her to videotape her-

StarCrafted lovers

self performing sexual acts with him on several different occasions before eventually having sex with him, Wax said. Wax added that when Hirtzel was initially approached by the accuser he acted unaware to the situation and said “well, we’re both being extorted, so we should just do it.” Wax said the rape charge was by duress and being considered because the accusers said that she was coerced into perform

Hirtzel | Page 3

In 2014, American River College student government members David Hylton and Jeremy Diefenbacher were sent home from the Student Senate for California Community Colleges General Assembly (GA) in Los Angeles due to a substance use issue. Hylton admitted shortly afterward to being sent home for a marijuana-related incident. Diefenbacher declined to comment at the time. Hylton has apologized for his actions at the fall 2014 GA and also repaid a food stipend of about $80. Adviser Juan Blanco announced at Thursday’s Senate meeting that Hylton will be attending the spring 2016 GA. Hylton plans on not repeating the same mistakes as in fall 2014. “I will not be bringing marijuana to the General Assembly,” Hylton said at a recent Senate meeting. “I will not smoke reefer, I will not drink booze.” He said he acknowledged the responsibility that as Senate President his behavior should be held to a high standard. “I’m not taking this lightly,” Hylton said. “This has been going on for over a year. I said I was sorry.” GA for the spring semester will be held in Ontario, California from April 29 through May 1. Hylton is considering getting a cannabis card, however, that would not allow him to smoke marijuana at GA according to its conduct policy. “I’ve been thinking of getting my (marijuana) script,” Hylton

ASB | Page 2

COUPLE REPRESENTS ARC AT COLLEGIATE STARCRAFT TOURNEY By Jordan Schauberger jschauberger94@gmail.com On the backs of games like League of Legends, StarCraft and Counter Strike, eSports has slowly integrated into the traditional sports scene. Two American River College students were a testament to that when they took part in the Tespa Collegiate StarCraft Series over the past three months.

Eric Key and Becky Harris represented ARC as the only community college team to compete in the playoffs, where they entered ranked third in the west before being ousted in the third round by the University of Washington. Sixty teams competed in the west group and 174 teams competed overall. The tournament started with a month of group play before the top 128 teams competed in bestout-of-five single elimination

matches. ARC had a record of 6-1 in group play and 2-1 during the single-elimination rounds. Key first played StarCraft when he was six years old, and has experienced a sizable amount of success in recent years. He currently holds a ranking of master, which represents the top two percent of StarCraft players. Now an up-and-coming competitive player, Key is a part of

StarCraft | Page 5

Photo by Jordan Schauberger

ARC student Eric Key smiles during a win against the University of Utah. Key and teammate Becky Harris, representing ARC, won the game three matches to none but was knocked out of the tournament in the next round.


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