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Page 3 - ஐசனோவர் ஆரோக்கியம் இல் ராஞ்சோ மிராஜ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Wayne Boyd, ex-NCAA wrestler, convicted of assault seeks release pending appeal

City News Service A onetime NCAA champion wrestler convicted of beating up one woman and sexually assaulting another at his Coachella Valley ranch is seeking release from jail pending appeal, prosecutors said Friday. Wayne Eric Boyd, 74, of Sky Valley was sentenced to two years in state prison earlier this month, and remains in county custody at the John Benoit Detention Center in Indio pending transport to a state facility. He is slated to return to the Larson Justice Center in Indio on May 7, where his lawyers are expected to argue he should be granted bail while they navigate the appeals process in a quest to overturn his conviction.

Vaccines updates: Thousands of appointments available in the Coachella Valley for Monday, Tuesday

this week in the Coachella Valley were still available as of 2:30 p.m. Monday. And at the Convention Center in Palm Springs, no appointment is needed.  In Palm Springs, the Curative site had hundreds of slots each day  for doses of the Pfizer vaccine. By Monday afternoon, the site was still listing 410 available appointments until 5:30 p.m. At the Indio Fairgrounds site, 181 appointments for the Moderna vaccine were available Monday, 692 were available for Tuesday with even more available the rest of this week.  One of Riverside County s mobile vaccine teams is in Coachella at Woodspur Farms, 52-200 Industrial Way, with Pfizer vaccines on Monday and Tuesday. Four other mobile teams were in other parts of the county, including in Hemet, Lake Elsinore, Moreno Valley and Perris. 

SoCal Native American families detail life, loss amid COVID-19

 long, strange night in a Temecula hospital bed last summer, losing sleep over her parents.  Her mom, Janice, was in a room down the hall; her dad, Virgil, in another. All three had coronavirus. Staff moved through the hallways in white suits and circular helmets. Once, a doctor paid a visit to Heather’s room virtually, via an iPad on wheels. Heather was released the next day, but her parents had to stay. “Dad, I love you,” she told Virgil before she left. “You re gonna be okay.” Heather touched his hand, promised she’d be back with his hearing aids and a phone charger. By the time she returned his condition had deteriorated. No family members, except for her mom, were allowed in the room.

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