“I wanted to see it, to see what it was like to live there and to look at the forces that made this happen.”Īfter studying maps and visiting several potential ground zeros, Levine said the aftermath of Victorville’s boom and bust cycle easily edged the High Desert’s Key City to the front of the line for an experiment in immersion writing. “The housing collapse began to fascinate me,” said Levine, who was born in St. One editor is now dispatching from Florida and another from New York, contributing regular updates to. When the Russian government shut the alternative paper “The eXile” down for being just a little too outspoken, Yasha Levine and his cohorts left Moscow and hit the road with their gonzo-style journalism.Observing Victorville: Gonzo journalism from the “Key City” Edwards, and then go to the Daily Press site to see Levine get bashed by the local right-wing comment troll militia. Read the full article below, written by the lovely and talented Brooke K. After all, the man is about to celebrate the six month anniversary of his self-imposed Victorville exile. Occifer, Sir? Nothin’ but Pabst Blue Ribbon, Marlboro Reds, and lots of crumpled paper in the Levine household, sir. What helps make the Levine front-pager so juicy are the other headlines it shares the page with, like, “Man arrested after home is discovered to be a meth lab.” No, that’s not about Mr. ![]() A full-color photo of Levine is splashed marquee-like on the front page, of course. The front page of Victorville’s Daily Press newspaper featured a profile of our fearless Domestic War Correspondent, his life, his wisdom, and his work, as well as a Q&A sidebar to help locals get to know the celebrity in their midst. Young fired several shots at her, the release said.Exiled editor Yasha Levine has officially hit the Big Time. The suspect stands up, extends his right arm and fires in the direction in which Forsberg fled. Forsberg gets up and quickly moves out of camera view to the right. Another shot is fired, and the suspect takes the gun away. The suspect then holds down Forsberg’s arm with both hands. A shot goes off as an unknown woman screams and a woman in a pink outfit walks by. Forsberg falls on her back, her right armed raised with her gun in hand. It opens with the suspect repeatedly punching Forsberg in the head and face, and Forsberg attempting to ward him off. What the Sheriff’s Department said happened next was captured in a video that showed Forsberg fighting for her life. The first deputy to arrive, Meagan Forsberg, contacted that man, identified by authorities as 21-year-old Ari Young, outside the home. ![]() in the 13000 block of Cabazon Court with a 911 call from a woman yelling “Oh my God, oh my God, send the police, I need my son removed from my home,” a sheriff’s news release said. That confrontation began just after 8:30 a.m. The injuries to the deputy in the first incident were not considered life-threatening, and the man accused of attacking her was expected to recover from his gunshot wounds, according to the Sheriff’s Department. A San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy was injured in a fight for her gun, and later a man was shot to death by deputies in the second officer-involved shooting of the day on Wednesday, Sept.
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