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Canine sports fans
Gang associate sentenced for first-degree murder
Guide Dogs for the Blind visit UCSB Gauchos
Igor Ortiz pleads guilty to killing Santa Alberto Torres By NEIL HARTSTEIN NEWS-PRESS STAFF WRITER
A Westside gang associate was sentenced Wednesday to more than two decades behind bars for the June 2019 stabbing death of a Santa Barbara man just yards from his residence after the victim walked there following his shift at a downtown restaurant. Igor Ortiz pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Santa Alberto Torres. He also admitted he committed the murder as part of his association with a street gang, former District Attorney Joyce Dudley announced on Dec. 28. “(Mr.) Ortiz was sentenced just before noon today to 25 years to life,” Senior Deputy District Attorney Tate McAllister told the News-Press on Wednesday. According to the District Attorney’s Office, Mr. Ortiz
admitted that he used a knife in the commission of the murder and committed the premeditated murder in association with members of the Westside criminal street gang for the benefit of the Westside gang. Prosecutors said the murder occurred during the early morning hours of June 1, 2019 after Mr. Torres walked home to his residence on the 1300 block of Cacique Street after finishing his restaurant shift. He was attacked by Mr. Ortiz and an accomplice outside his home. During the attack, Mr. Ortiz and his accomplice repeatedly stabbed Mr. Torres, killing him, the District Attorney’s Office said. The Santa Barbara Police Department investigated the case. email: nhartsteinnewspress@ gmail.com
Westmont students object to pro-life speech in chapel By KATHERINE ZEHNDER NEWS-PRESS STAFF WRITER
KENNETH SONG / NEWS-PRESS PHOTOS
The UCSB Women’s Basketball team mingles with a group of Guide Dogs for the Blind puppies-in-training after practice at the Thunderdome at UCSB on Wednesday.
By DAVE MASON NEWS-PRESS MANAGING EDITOR
Some of the biggest fans of the UCSB women’s basketball team put their best paws forward Wednesday afternoon. More than a dozen Guide Dogs for the Blind watched the Gauchos’ practice, wagging their tails to cheer on the athletes before their game today against Long Beach State. The canine cheerleading section inspired smiles from the young players. And the experience was equally beneficial for the dogs, who were puppies-in-training. The canines used the experience as an opportunity to brush up on socializing. On top of that, Wednesday’s close encounter of the canine kind served as an effort to raise awareness about Guide Dogs for the Blind and recruit puppy raisers, who coach young dogs on good manners and how to handle situations including gyms and sports arenas.
FYI For more about Guide Dogs for the Blind, go to guidedogs.org.
The GDB-UCSB initiative was made possible by Cheri Owen, a member of the Guide Dogs for the Blind Alumni Board. Besides being a board member, Ms. Owen volunteers as a life coach and mentor to UCSB athletes, including the women’s basketball team. Ms. Owen began to lose her vision after a long career as an
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Based in San Rafael, Guide Dogs for the Blind provides all its services for free to clients. It helps people who are blind or visually impaired to move around safely and confidently, with the help of a faithful, four-legged friend. And that’s something worth howling about. email: dmason@newspress.com
email: kzehnder@newspress.com
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athlete and a coach. That’s when Guide Dogs for the Blind brought her and her first guide dog, Martinez, together. And that made all the difference for Ms. Owen, who found Martinez helped her to be more independent, active and happy. UCSB says you’ll see Ms. Owen and Martinez around the campus and in the community.
More than 100 Westmont College students walked out in protest this week just before a pro-life activist spoke during the Montecito school’s chapel service. Students got up and left after the speaker — Lila Grace Rose, president and founder of Live Action — was introduced. Additionally, students are planning a similar walkout for today’s chapel speaker, Dr. Carl Trueman. Dr. Trueman will be discussing his book, “The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self.” Chapel is required for Westmont students, and the students walked out in protest on Monday, claiming that the invitation of speakers such as Ms. Rose and Dr. Trueman is in violation of Westmont’s diversity policy. An estimated 150 students out of about 1,400 people got up and left. “Westmont’s commitments include diversification of our student body, faculty and staff; justice as demonstrated by righteousness and equity in our programs and community, becoming a more reconciling and unified community,” according to the college’s website. To learn more about Wesmont’s diversity commitment, go to westmont. edu/our-commitment-diversity. “As followers of Jesus Christ, a goal of our Westmont College community is to learn how to live together with differences. In that spirit, we host a variety of guests to campus who express varying perspectives,” Irene Neller, the college’s vice president of enrollment, marketing and communications, told the NewsPress. “Chapel on Monday and tomorrow’s lecture are among those community experiences and conversations,” she said on Wednesday. “Truth-centered
attitudes and others-centered actions remain our core commitments as our Community Life Statement articulates. Our college mission calls us to equip students to think deeply about many topics and issues, helping them wrestle with and seek a fuller understanding of varying issues, encouraging conversations, not limiting them. “As a community, we examine the profound and complex moral and social questions and urge everyone to bring to these discussions a generous and hospitable spirit with respect for all persons, and especially when caught between one’s own personal competing and sometimes contradictory expressions, beliefs or opinions.” Students objected to there being no Q&A period following the speakers. “Following Monday’s chapel, there were several resources including counseling through CAPS (Office of Counseling and Psychological Services), Student Life support, spiritual life staff and a discussion group in the Dining Commons that was coordinated for deeper discussion,” said Ms. Neller. Ms. Rose told the News-Press, “It is not hateful to disagree with a person or to speak against the harm they are committing against others. It is also a basic tenet of the Christian faith, from the Ten Commandments to Christ’s greatest commandment, that we are not supposed to kill innocent people. That we are called instead to sacrificially love our neighbor. “Abortion is the direct and intentional killing of a human being and violates the fundamental human rights of the child it destroys,” Ms. Rose said. Planned Parenthood of California Central Coast declined to comment for this story.
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