Month: February 2020

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OPEN DIVISION

Pool play, Tuesday

Pool A

Sierra Canyon 61, St. Anthony 49

Etiwanda 60, St. John Bosco 38

Pool B

Harvard-Westlake 68, Corona Centennial 57

Mater Dei 76, Rancho Christian 71

Pool play, Friday, 7 p.m.

Pool A

#4 Etiwanda (2-0) vs. #1 Sierra Canyon (2-0) at Calabasas

#8 St. John Bosco (0-2) at #5 St. Anthony (0-2)

Pool B

#3 Rancho Christian (1-1) at #2 Corona Centennial (0-2)

#7 Mater Dei (2-0) at #6 Harvard-Westlake (1-1)

Note: Championship, Feb. 28 at Cal State Long Beach, 8:30 p.m.

DIVISION 1

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Windward 67, Mayfair 65

JSerra 61, Bishop Montgomery 59

Damien 84, Valencia 76

Riverside Poly 77, Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 49

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Windward at #4 JSerra

#3 Damien at #2 Riverside Poly

DIVISION 2AA

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Santa Clarita Christian 60, Fairmont Prep 44

Chaminade 73, Capistrano Valley Christian 57

Eastvale Roosevelt 64, Alemany 57

St. Francis 71, Heritage Christian 53

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Santa Clarita Christian at Chaminade

St. Francis at Eastvale Roosevelt

DIVISION 2A

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Ribet Academy 49, Peninsula 46

Hesperia 54, Lynwood 49

Oxnard 61, Palm Springs 54 (OT)

Quarterfinal, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

#4 Bonita vs. Newport Beach Pacifica Christian at Vanguard U.

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Ribet Academy at #4 Bonita/Newport Beach Pacifica Christian winner

#2 Oxnard at Hesperia

DIVISION 3AA

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

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Burbank Providence 71, La Serna 37

Hillcrest 65, Hart 58

Salesian 61, Cerritos 54

Keppel 45, Westlake 42

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Burbank Providence at Hillcrest

Keppel at #3 Salesian

DIVISION 3A

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Price 63, Village Christian 60

Adelanto 49, Santa Monica Pacifica Christian 45

Fountain Valley 61, Yorba Linda 50

Shadow Hills 60, Simi Valley 54

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

Adelanto at Price

#3 Fountain Valley at #2 Shadow Hills

DIVISION 4AA

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Renaissance Academy 74, Jurupa Valley 44

Summit 60, Norwalk 58

Aquinas 71, Indian Springs 63

Montclair 59, Oak Hills 43

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Renaissance Academy at Summit

#3 Aquinas at Montclair

DIVISION 4A

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Oakwood 67, Whittier 52

Yeshiva 62, Buena Park 54

Eastside 54, Lompoc Cabrillo 46

St. Pius X-St. Matthias 60, Loma Linda Academy 46

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Oakwood at Yeshiva

#2 St. Pius X-St. Matthias at Eastside

DIVISION 5AA

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Valley Torah 59, Bassett 57

Arrowhead Christian 93, Victor Valley 84

Vistamar 60, Thacher 57

Bishop Diego 49, Estancia 46

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

#1 Valley Torah at Arrowhead Christian

#3 Vistamar at Bishop Diego

DIVISION 5A

Quarterfinals, Tuesday

Banning 57, Linfield Christian 51

Cathedral City 80, Vasquez 66

Sierra Vista 70, Fillmore 30

Trinity Classical 60, Rancho Alamitos 41

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.

Banning at Cathedral City

Sierra Vista at #2 Trinity Classical

Notes: Championships, Feb. 29 at Azusa Pacific U., Colony, and Godinez.


CITY GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
OPEN DIVISION
Consolation semifinals. Tuesday
Narbonne 49, Taft 36
Crenshaw 72, Legacy 66

Championship semifinals, Saturday at Los Angeles Southwest College
#4 Granada Hills vs. #1 Palisades, 4:30 p.m.
#3 Los Angeles Hamilton vs. #2 El Camino Real, 3 p.m.

Fifth-place game, Feb. 25, 7 p.m.
#6 Crenshaw at #5 Narbonne

Notes: Third-place game, Feb. 25, 7 p.m. at higher seed. Championship, Feb. 29, 5 p.m. at Los Angeles Southwest College.

DIVISION I
Quarterfinals, Tuesday
Westchester 57, Cleveland 31
King/Drew 52, Garfield 51
Eagle Rock 33, Van Nuys 31
Carson 66, Birmingham 65

Semifinals, Friday, 6:30 and 8 p.m. at Birmingham
#5 King/Drew vs. #1 Westchester
#7 Carson vs. #3 Eagle Rock

Notes: Championship, Feb. 29, 1 p.m. at Los Angeles Southwest College.

DIVISION II
Quarterfinals, Tuesday
Los Angeles Marshall 38, Torres 35
Bell 64, West Adams 29
Los Angeles CES 66, Hollywood 26
Granada Hills Kennedy 41, Bravo 36

Semifinals, Saturday at Palisades (times TBA)
#5 Bell vs. #1 Los Angeles Marshall
#6 Los Angeles CES vs. #2 Granada Hills Kennedy

Notes: Championship, Feb. 28, 6 p.m. at Birmingham.

DIVISION III
Quarterfinals, Tuesday
Central City Value 62, Academia Avance 19
Stern 38, Contreras 19
South East 48, Washington 31
Marquez 47, Port of Los Angeles 24

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.
#4 Stern at #1 Central City Value
#3 South East at #2 Marquez

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Notes: Championship, Feb. 27, 5 p.m. at Birmingham.

DIVISION IV
Quarterfinals, Tuesday
Verdugo Hills 76, Fremont 42
Franklin 48, Chavez 40
Los Angeles Kennedy 59, Animo Watts 53
Maywood 44, Animo De La Hoya 18

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.
#5 Franklin at #1 Verdugo Hills
#6 Los Angeles Kennedy at #2 Maywood

Notes: Championship, Feb. 26 at Palisades or Granada Hills, time TBA.

DIVISION V
Quarterfinals, Tuesday
Monroe 58, Math/Science 26
Fulton 42, North Valley Military 34
Girls Leadership 34, University Prep 12
Maywood CES 40, Animo Bunche 17

Semifinals, Friday, 7 p.m.
#4 Fulton at #1 Monroe
#3 Girls Leadership at #2 Maywood CES

Notes: Championship, Feb. 26 at Palisades or Granada Hills, time TBA.


“Go by him,” Woodland Hills Taft High coach Derrick Taylor shouted to one of his guards dribbling on a fast break against King/Drew in a City Section Open Division playoff game.

The player did exactly as he was told, beating his defender and was headed toward making a layup when 6-foot-6, 240-pound Fidelis Okereke suddenly elevated and swatted the ball away.

Seven times the ending was the same: shot rejected. Sometimes Okereke used two hands; other times it was one. His ability to leap quickly and protect the basket repeatedly caught everyone by surprise.

“I’ll stop anything,” Okereke said.

Okereke, whose parents came here from Nigeria, has become the most dominant basketball player in the City Section. He’s averaging 16 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks for 22-7 King/Drew, which plays Westchester in the Open Division semifinals Saturday at 6 p.m. at Los Angeles Southwest College.

Okereke has had five triple-doubles this season in points, rebounds and blocks.

He’s done it in only his third year of organized basketball. He’s an example of why coaches still need to check P.E. classes for potential athletes.

King/Drew coach Lloyd Webster remembers spotting Okereke in a P.E. class when he was a freshman.

“I was walking through the lockers,” Webster said. “I was early and he was early. I noticed his physique. I asked one of the kids, ‘Why is a senior with the freshmen in P.E.? ‘

“‘Coach, he’s a ninth-grader, 13 years old.’ I didn’t believe him. I went to the counseling office and saw his birth certificate.”

Webster immediately wanted him to join the basketball team, but he learned Okereke’s father thought he was too young to play high school sports and wanted him to focus on academics, something very important to the Nigerian immigrant community.

Okereke was finally given permission to play as a sophomore. “We convinced the dad he would be a straight-A student and do well in basketball,” Webster said.

Each season, Okereke has become a better player and more passionate about basketball. His only prior experience was in an after-school program.

His development has helped put King/Drew on a historic path. The Golden Eagles won a Division II championship in 2018 and now are part of an Open Division Final Four that includes longtime powers Westchester, Fairfax and Birmingham.

Webster originally told Okereke he thought he could be an NCAA Division II player. Expectations have soared because of his development. His physicality, ability to block shots and improving skills around the basket indicate he isn’t done improving. Now Division I is possible.

“Honestly, I was thinking I’ve really come far,” Okereke said. “People like me sometimes become stagnant. I’ve pushed past every obstacle. It’s really about going past what people expect.”

King/Drew Medical Magnet allows students to work with hospital personnel and has been attractive to parents from Nigeria hoping their children become a doctor, lawyer or engineer. There are six players on the team with Nigerian backgrounds.

“For Nigerians, grades provide a lot for college success,” Okereke said. “America is seen as a fantasy with a bunch of opportunities. You get all A’s, get into a nice college, then a great job to support your mom and dad. That’s what they want at the end for you to be able to support them. That’s why grades are so important to them.”

Okereke has been under strict guidance to keep his grades high to be able to play. He’d be pulled from practice or games if his grade-point average fell below expectations.

Okereke is planning a future that includes basketball.

“I love basketball,” he said. “Even if I’m sore, I don’t care. Basketball is my path now. It takes you to another place when you’re on the court. It keeps your heart going.”


SAN DIEGO  — 

Since she started her new job in San Diego a couple months ago, Willow the English Labrador has already proven her worth to handler Ron Burleson.

The 2-year-old pup, specially trained to sniff out electronic storage devices, has gone out on a half dozen warrant and probation searches with Burleson, an investigator with the county district attorney’s office.

On one outing, she found a cellphone that law enforcement officers had missed.

“We are confident we are going to be able to find things that were missed before,” Burleson said.

The pair is assigned to San Diego’s Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, a group that draws upon resources from local, state and federal law enforcement agencies to target offenders who use the internet to sexually exploit children.

Decked out in a special vest that touts her electronic detection abilities, Willow looks for a distinct chemical compound used in electronic devices such as cellphones, thumb drives, hard drives and memory cards. Such devices are often hidden by predators and can be difficult for law enforcement officers to find.

“We know when she hits, she’s hitting on storage media because there’s nothing else [the chemical she detects] would be used for,” he said.

When an electronic detection dog determines the unique odor is present, they will sit down to alert their trainers. When the dog is correct, he or she is given a food reward.

These specially trained dogs have assisted in high-profile cases including the arrest of former Subway spokesman Jared Fogle in 2015. He was convicted on child pornography and other charges. A dog named Bear helped investigators find thumb drives hidden at Fogle’s home.

Burleson said 31 dogs have undergone similar training to become electronic detection dogs, and Willow is the first one assigned to Southern California.

According to her online bio, Willow initially trained as a service dog but underwent a “career change” to become an electronic detection K9.

In a video produced by county district attorney’s office, Willow and Burleson are shown searching a room. Storage cards and cellphones are hidden in a box of plastic toys, in a cabinet and underneath a beanbag chair.

“Show me, show me,” Burleson says in the video as the canine investigator makes a find. “Oh, what a good dog!”

Willow, who cost more than $12,000, was paid for by a grant from the San Diego Police Foundation, Burleson said.

When she’s not finding hidden devices, Burleson said, Willow helps in other ways, too.

Sometimes law enforcement officers serve search warrants at a suspect’s home where children are present. “The dog there can act like a therapy dog and can be there to calm the kids down and bring some comfort to them,” Burleson said.

She also serves as an unofficial therapist in the task force’s Kearny Mesa office.

“When I’m not doing a search warrant, she’s there in the office. She goes from cubicle to cubicle, looking for someone to throw the ball for her,” he said. “When we are having a bad day looking at some of this evidence, [the dog] is kind of a nice addition.”

Burleson has three other dogs at home, where Willow lives. Because she’s a working dog, she is treated differently, particularly around mealtime.

Willow eats three cups of dog food a day, all of it from Burleson’s hand.

“She never eats out of a bowl,” he said. “The only time she eats is out of my hand. I’m hiding stuff and we are searching for it and then she gets her reward.

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“I’ve got to do that a couple times a day. It is definitely worth it, but it is a lot of work.”

Kucher writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.


A former drug dealer who played a pivotal role in a deadly arson that claimed 10 lives in a Los Angeles apartment complex in 1993 pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter Tuesday, officials said.

Johanna Lopez, who has been in police custody since 2011, pleaded guilty to two counts of voluntary manslaughter and is expected to be sentenced to 22 years in prison later this year, said Greg Risling, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

Lopez, 54, had been paying the 18th Street Gang for the right to sell drugs in a section of Westlake in 1993 when she ran afoul of an apartment manager who began taking steps to curtail drug sales in her building, according to court records. Lopez urged two gang members to intervene on her behalf, a transcript of a preliminary hearing in her case disclosed.

Soon after, a fire engulfed the complex, which was largely populated by Latino immigrants.

In 2017, Los Angeles Police arrested Ramiro “Greedy” Valerio, 43, and Joseph Monge, 41 and charged them with 12 counts of capital murder. A fourth suspect, whose identity was never revealed, is believed to have fled to Mexico. The murder counts included the 10 people killed in the fire and the fetuses carried by the two pregnant women who died, prosecutors said.

Monge, an 18th Street Gang member, pleaded guilty to manslaughter earlier this month. Valerio is due in court in late March, records show.

The blaze, one of the worst arson fires in the city’s history, killed three women and seven children: Olga Leon, 24, and her three children — Rosia, 7, Jesus and Jose, both 4; Alejandrina Roblero, 29, and her three children — Leyver, 11, William and Yadira, both 6; and Rosalia Ruiz, 21, and Lancy Mateo, 1.

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The fire started on the second floor of the complex and spread rapidly because a number of safety doors had been propped open, fire officials said in the weeks after the blaze. The complex had been repeatedly cited for safety violations, including having dysfunctional smoke detectors.

The inferno’s sudden spread left residents frantic to escape. Some formed human chains to help older neighbors escape, and in some instances, parents threw their children out windows, hoping someone would catch them. One man watched in horror as his wife and three of his children ran into the smoke, where they perished.

More than 100 residents were displaced, and at least 40 were injured.


First group of coronavirus evacuees leaves Miramar

February 19, 2020 | News | No Comments

Those released Tuesday are among 167 from Wuhan and Hubei Province who arrived Feb. 5

SAN DIEGO  — 

After two weeks pent up at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, the first group of coronavirus evacuees to arrive in San Diego finally got to leave Tuesday.

Shortly after a final round of health checks, a procession of white tour buses began rolling out, helping families and individuals quite literally get on with their lives after 14 days spent under constant monitoring by a group of public health workers keen on spotting every sneeze, sniffle or cough.

Two buses arrived at San Diego International Airport about 11 a.m., spilling roughly 100 former evacuees onto the sidewalk. Many were wearing surgical masks as they moved to pull their bags from cargo compartments, every movement recorded by a swarm of television cameras. Others who live within driving distance had a quieter, less public departure, climbing into private vehicles once their time on base was complete.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control said in a short statement that 166 of the 167 people who arrived from Wuhan, China, on Feb. 5 would depart for home Tuesday. One person on those first two flights tested positive for COVID-19 infection and remains in a UC San Diego Health hospital, as does a second who arrived on another flight that landed at Miramar on Feb. 7. There were an additional 65 people on that later flight, and all who pass health checks later this week are expected to depart, ending the current federal quarantine at Miramar.

Simultaneously, evacuees were released from other U.S. military bases, including San Diego resident Yanjun Wei, who finally made it home with her 3-year-old son Rowan Burnett and 1-year-old daughter Mia Burnett and who spent the last 14 days quarantined at Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, Calif.

The CDC stressed that all those who were released Tuesday “pose no health risk to the surrounding community, or to the communities they will be returning to” after either showing no symptoms during what is believed to be the maximum incubation period for the coronavirus or testing negative after showing possible symptoms.

Confronted by a throng of media, many of the arrivals at the airport Tuesday morning declined to give their full names.

One man, who gave his name as John, said he was heading back to Minnesota with his wife. They had both been in Wuhan visiting her family and, when factoring in the Chinese leg of their quarantine, had been isolated almost a month, he said.

“We didn’t leave the house in China for a little more than 10 days, and then Miramar for two weeks,” he said as he left the first bus from Miramar. “So, in total, about 24, 25 days [in quarantine]. It is very difficult. It’s exciting to be back.”

Another man, who said he was from Boston and gave his name as Phil, said he enjoyed the weather in San Diego but found the U.S. government didn’t communicate well with the evacuees.

“The accommodations were nice, the government treated us well,” he said. “It could have been better organized … maybe they’ll have a plan for the next one.”

He said the most stressful part of the ordeal he and his wife went through was just getting out of China.

“I was so paranoid that I wouldn’t be able to get on one of the evacuation planes because of the difficulty getting to the airport from where we were in a car,” he said. “There were roadblocks, there were police everywhere — the highways were empty. It was quite unnerving.”

Toward the end of the quarantine, he said, people started loosening up.

“As our quarantine came to an end, our whole community started to have little social gatherings,” he said. “It started to become fun and sociable. It was nice toward the end.”

Phil agreed with John that communication from officials was lacking.

“We’d ask a question and the answer would be, ‘Well, we’ll get back to you,’ ” he said. “That was a little discouraging, to not know anything. It would have been nice to have known what was going on a few days ahead.”

It was not all evacuees departing at Lindbergh Field on Tuesday.

Kenneth Burnett, a San Diego father and husband who told of the frustration of being in San Diego while his family was so far away, flew to Sacramento so he could accompany his wife and kids home.

Arriving at San Diego International on Tuesday afternoon, Burnett said the joy of reunification sneaked up on him a little bit.

“I wasn’t too emotional until, but now I think it hit me,” he said.

Yanjun Wei smiled wearily at her husband as she pushed their daughter in a stroller, son Rowan excitedly wheeling around a piece of luggage.

“I desperately need some sleep,” she said. “I’m very emotional since the beginning, and now I’m just exhausted. I feel like my emotions have already shut down.”

Wei said that the accommodations at Travis Air Force Base, about 45 minutes south of Sacramento, were extremely comfortable.

But taking care of her two small children in quarantine has left her drained.

“They wake each other up, which has left me with very minimal sleep, like three to four hours at night, sometimes without a nap during the day,” she said. “The desperate need for sleep is the biggest challenge that I have at the moment.”

Wei said a staff member at the base regularly helped her with childcare so she could, among other things, take showers.

“If I wasn’t having two little ones with me, I’d enjoy it like a getaway vacation,” she said.

Wei left her parents in Wuhan when she was evacuated by the U.S. State Department two weeks ago. She said she worries about them as the city of 11 million people continues to operate under quarantine.

While most seemed a bit stunned to find themselves at the center of so much attention after a fortnight in seclusion, some expressed their relief at finally getting to go home.

Some, such as Yu Lin, 48, of Minneapolis had been communicating with the public through social media since shortly after arriving at Miramar on a government-chartered flight from China.

Lin made it clear on Twitter that he, and many who wrote thank you notes for base staff, have appreciated the work that has gone into the quarantine effort. He posted a “graduation” picture Tuesday morning of his fellow evacuees throwing their medical masks in the air after clearing their final health checks, the final step before processing out of the quarantine area.

On Friday evening, UC San Diego Health hospitals were caring for two Miramar evacuees who had tested positive for COVID-19 infection last week, and had five more people in isolation rooms with possible coronavirus symptoms. A UC San Diego spokesperson said in an email Tuesday morning that all five had tested negative, leaving only the two positive cases still in hospital isolation rooms.

Meanwhile, Ben Capon and Nadine Bialostozky, a couple who grew up in the San Diego neighborhood of Carmel Valley and were on the Westerdam cruise ship in the South China Sea when the outbreak started, finally made it back to their apartment in Mexico City after their ship docked in Cambodia on Friday.

Capon said in an email Tuesday that he was stunned to learn that a fellow passenger who had been on the ship had tested positive and that Westerdam passengers still waiting to leave Cambodia would not, for the moment, be allowed to proceed to Malaysia and then on to their final destinations.

As soon as he learned of the passenger who tested positive, Capon said, he tried contacting Holland America, the Westerdam’s owner and operator, to find out if he and his fiancee need to submit to additional testing. But so far, he said, there has been little additional information available.

“Holland America is not responding to our phone calls,” Capon said. “We called the Westerdam emergency crisis line four times and have spoken to four different reps who have ‘escalated’ our requests for contact with a supervisor. We have also emailed multiple times to no avail.”

No Mexican or American health agency has gotten in touch either.

“Since we have returned, we are holing up in our apartment for fear we may have been in contact with someone on the ship with corona,” Capon said.

As they watch the Westerdam situation unfold from afar, the couple has started to wonder about the facts surrounding the single positive case attributed to the ship they were so recently aboard.

“How is it possible that this person shared a cabin with her husband for two weeks, yet he is not sick?” Capon said. “She was presumably in public places during the two-week voyage, but not a single one of the 2,000-plus passengers or crew were also infected? None of it makes sense to us.”

Sisson, Dyer and Smith write for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

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One firefighter was fatally injured and another was missing Tuesday evening after dozens of first responders rushed to put out a fire that engulfed the Porterville, Calif., library.

Officials said at a news conference that they were still working to notify the next of kin of the firefighter who was killed while battling the blaze.

“We also have one additional firefighter who is currently unaccounted for at this time,” said Tulare County Fire Chief Charlie Norman. “We’re working through suppression, and when it’s safe to operate, we will get back in the building and hopefully find that firefighter in very short order.”

At 4:14 p.m., the Porterville Fire Department was dispatched to the fire at the library, which sits one block from a city fire station. Firefighters quickly called for additional resources as flames shot through the roof of the library. More than 50 firefighters from several departments, including Cal Fire and Fresno County Fire, responded to the blaze, which was still burning late Tuesday evening.

Norman said although he wasn’t familiar with the specific building, libraries typically have a significant amount of fuel, and firefighters anticipated being on scene for several more hours.

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The cause of the fire is under investigation, and fire investigators were on the scene looking into any potential criminal element of the fire, said Porterville Police Chief Eric Kroutil.

Officials declined to expand on whether any patrons or staff were inside the library when it caught fire. The library is typically open until 8 p.m. on Tuesdays, according to its website.

The library’s building was built in 1953 and was not equipped with a sprinkler system, said Tulare County Fire Capt. Joanne Bear, the acting public information officer for incident.

About a month ago, local leaders held a special joint meeting of the Porterville City Council and the Library and Literacy Commission to discuss the need for a new library, the Porterville Recorder reported.

At that meeting, Porterville Mayor Martha Flores asked how much the library’s operating costs were, the newspaper reported. City Manager John Lollis said the cost was about $1.25 million. A new library would cost an estimated $33 million, he said.


Charles Portis was not only one of the best writers you probably never heard of — he was almost certainly the best writer who was never taught to you in school either.

Portis, who died Monday at 86, was that good. He was a brilliant storyteller and comic inventor of wildly believable con men, losers and seekers of truth (or maybe just the whereabouts of their errant wives), and it would be hard to find anything about him that could produce a passable academic essay about gender-stereotyping, or deconstructing the western metaphysic. You would simply be too busy having a great time.

If you know his name at all it’s probably from one of the two film adaptations of his bestselling novel, “True Grit.” The 1968 book introduces the intrepid 14-year-old Mattie Ross “from Yell County near Dardanelle” who goes off to avenge the murder of her father by the deeply ungrateful Tom Chaney.

“You killed my father when he was trying to help you,” Mattie tells Chaney, after her first shot from a dinosaur-like old pistol knocks him up against a tree. “I have one of the gold pieces you took from him. Now give me the other.”

It’s not that either of the film adaptations are bad — they’re quite enjoyable. It’s just that the simplified movie through-line (a good girl defeats a bad man) doesn’t convey the genius that drives that marvelous book — which is, as in every Portis novel, the endlessly woolly voices of his characters.

Sure, moviegoers remember the larger-than-life “Rooster” Cogburn (played by John Wayne in 1969 and Jeff Bridges in 2010). But what readers remember is how vividly Portis’ characters arrive in a narrative scene, such as when Mattie first sees Rooster walk into court:

I was surprised when an old one-eyed jasper that was built along the lines of Grover Cleveland went up and was sworn. I say ‘old.’ He was about forty years of age. The floor boards squeaked under his weight. He was wearing a dusty black suit of clothes and when he sat down I saw that his badge was on his vest. It was a little silver circle with a star in it. He had a mustache like Cleveland too.

Every time Rooster speaks, it’s with the inflection of a man trying to speak above his rude beginnings, such as when he refers to a pair of dead outlaws late in the novel: “Their depredations is now come to a fitting end.” What more could any of us hope for on our tombstones than a line like that in all its crude elegance?

Portis was a poet of the vernacular, in the tradition of Twain, Saroyan or Runyan. The odd ways his characters spoke reflected who they were and how they thought, and while they were often thieves, madmen, losers and dreamers, they were rarely cruel, ugly or vulgar.

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Many times I listed my favorite Portis novels — such as “The Dog of the South” (1979) or “Masters of Atlantis” (1985) — on the syllabus of my undergraduate modern novel course at the University of Connecticut, or a graduate seminar in contemporary American fiction. But I could never come up with anything better to tell my students than this: holding up one of his books, I would fan through the pages at random, like a magician fanning a deck of cards, and tell them: “Go ahead. Pick a passage. Any passage. Now read it out loud and tell me, it isn’t brilliant?”

We would take turns reading his paragraphs out loud. We would laugh. We would be moved. The guy never wrote a dull paragraph. And he definitely never wrote a bad opening paragraph, such as this, from “The Dog of the South”: “My wife Norma had run off with Guy Dupree and I was waiting around for the credit card billings to come in so I could see where they had gone. I was biding my time. This was October. They had taken my car and my Texaco card and my American Express card. Dupree had also taken from the bedroom closet my good raincoat and a shotgun and perhaps some other articles. It was just like him to pick the .410–a boy’s first gun. I suppose he thought it wouldn’t kick much, that it would kill or at least rip up the flesh in a satisfying way without making a lot of noise or giving much of a jolt to his sloping monkey shoulder.”

I mean, come on. How can you “explicate” or analyze” a paragraph like that? The story is already banging along well before the paragraph even starts. This Guy Dupree character is a wild man who won’t stop at stealing a wife, a “good raincoat” or a shotgun to rest against his “monkey shoulder” — and our central character is already on his way to get them all back!

There’s a famous passage in J.D. Salinger’s “A Catcher in the Rye” when Holden Caulfield notes how he often wants to meet a writer whose work he enjoys, but that’s not my experience from years of reading Portis. Sure, I would have liked to meet him, or even grab a beer. But the pleasures I enjoyed as a reader of Portis never required his presence. His books were so good that they were all I ever needed to know about him.

Like many of his characters, Portis traveled far when he was young, returned home quickly (to his native city of Little Rock, Ark.), and rarely traveled much again. He seemed to enjoy his reflections on adventuring more than the actual adventuring.

Born in 1933 (“An ominous Dr. Slaughter delivered me.”), he joined the Marines out of high school and later received a journalism degree from the University of Arkansas. He worked for the Arkansas Gazette and Newsweek, often covering stories on civil rights, and once interviewed Malcolm X.

He also worked for the International Herald Tribune, including as London bureau chief. His friends and colleagues included Lewis Lapham, Jimmy Breslin and Tom Wolfe, who later recalled Portis’ sudden departure from the profession in 1964: “Portis quit cold one day; just like that, without a warning. He returned to the United States and moved into a fishing shack in Arkansas. In six months he wrote a beautiful little novel called “Norwood.” Then he wrote “True Grit,” which was a bestseller. The reviews were terrific… A fishing shack! in Arkansas! It was too goddamned perfect to be true.”

Portis rarely left Little Rock again, according to friend Jay Jennings, who edited the excellent “Escape Velocity,” a 2012 “miscellany “of his short stories and journalism. As Jennings writes, Portis led “a fairly ordinary life, which includes having a beer at a local bar and visiting family and watching the Super Bowl and enjoying conversation with friends and going to the library.”

What was always extraordinary, however, was the devotion Portis generated in his readers. One of my favorite quotes about Portis is this one from novelist Ed Park: “He has written five remarkable, deeply entertaining novels (three of them masterpieces, though which three is up for debate.)” But perhaps the truest and most succinct line comes from Jonathan Lethem: “Yes, he’s everybody’s favorite least-known great novelist.”

His admirers have grown over the years, and appreciations have been written by Donna Tartt, Ron Rosenbaum and Nora Ephron. Wells Tower entitled his essay about Portis’ 1991 novel, “Gringos” — about a small-time truck-hauling expat in Mexico consorting with relic hunters, UFOlogists and the usual Portisian grifters — “The Book That Changed My Life.”

It’s pointless to argue about which Portis book was better than any other Portis book, because I challenge you to open any book at any page and find a passage not worth reading. Go ahead, I dare you. Pick a passage, any passage. And read.

You’ll be glad you did.

Bradfield is the author of “The History of Luminous Motion” and “Dazzle Resplendent: Adventures of a Misanthropic Dog.”


What's on TV Wednesday, Feb. 19: 'Stumptown' on ABC

February 19, 2020 | News | No Comments

SERIES

The Goldbergs Pops (George Segal) wants to help his grandson, Adam (Sean Giambrone), prepare for a big party at a friend’s house. Also, Beverly’s (Wendi McLendon-Covey) cookbook has turned her into a minor celebrity, which feeds her appetite for fame. Troy Gentile and Jeff Garlin also star, with guest stars Kenny Ridwan and Chris Parnell. 8 p.m. ABC

Nature This new episode documents the weasel family and includes the adventures of a first-time weasel mom and a fearless honey badger. 8 p.m. KOCE

Expedition Unknown Josh Gates travels to Africa to investigate the mystery of humanity’s origins. 8 p.m. Discovery

Schooled Wilma (Haneefah Wood) tries to help CB (Brett Dier) move on from Lainey (AJ Michalka) with help from coach Mellor (Bryan Callen) in this new episode of the spinoff comedy. Tim Meadows also stars. 8:30 p.m. ABC

Criminal Minds The hit procedural ends its 15-season run with two back-to-back episodes. In the first, Rossi (Joe Mantegna) and the team begin a hunt for Everett Lynch (guest star Michael Mosley). Then, in the finale, the team makes a startling discovery about its quarry. 9 and 10 p.m. CBS

Modern Family Phil and Claire (Ty Burrell, Julie Bowen) take Haley and Dylan (Sarah Hyland, Reid Ewing) to dinner to reassure them that they are not bad parents. Also, Mitch and Cam (Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Eric Stonestreet) chaperone Lily’s (Aubrey Anderson-Emmons) first date. 9 p.m. ABC

NOVA This new episode explores the relationship between humans and their pet cats. 9 p.m. KOCE

Party of Five In a new episode, Lucia (Emily Tosta) continues trying to impress her mentor (recurring guest star Elizabeth Grullon). Also, Natalia (Sol Rodriguez) shares Val’s (Elle Paris Legaspi) secret with Emilio (Brandon Larracuente). Niko Guardado and Audrey Gerthoffer also star. 9 p.m. Freeform

Stumptown Dex and Grey (Cobie Smulders, Jake Johnson) are in Los Angeles, where a client believes her Hollywood script has been plagiarized by a former classmate in this new episode of the private eye series. 10 p.m. ABC

Expedition With Steve Backshall This new episode travels to the Himalayas to navigate an unexplored river in Bhutan. 10 p.m. KOCE

Good Trouble Davia (Emma Hunton) struggles to come up with a way to make amends to Andre (Terrell Ransom Jr.), while Mariana (Cierra Ramirez) comes to grips with her feelings for Evan (T.J. Linnard). Elsewhere, Callie (Maia Mitchell) discovers something about Jamie (Beau Mirchoff) that could change everything. 10 p.m. Freeform

Awkwafina Is Nora From Queens Nora (Awkwafina) impulsively dyes her hair. 10:30 p.m. Comedy Central

Year of the Rabbit Matt Berry stars in this new British comedy as a booze-soaked detective inspector who brings a world-weary perspective to investigations while working with his eager younger partner (Freddie Fox). Susan Wokoma and Alun Armstrong also star. 10:30 p.m. IFC

SPECIALS

Democratic Presidential Candidates Debate Former Vice President Joe Biden, former Mayor Mike Bloomberg (D-N.Y.), former Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D-South Bend, Ind.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) discuss the issues at the Paris Theater in Las Vegas. 6 p.m. NBC and MSNBC

Howie Mandel’s 5th Annual All-Star Comedy Gala This new special, recorded at the Just for Laughs Festival in Montreal, features stand-up performances from Ronny Chieng, Cameron Esposito, Alonzo Bodden, Anjelah Johnson, Rachel Bloom (“Crazy Ex-Girlfriend”), Fortune Feimster and others. 8 p.m. CW

Post-Debate Analysis: Decision 2020 Coverage and analysis of the Democratic presidential debate. 8 p.m. MSNBC and CNN

Black Patriots: Heroes of the Revolution This new documentary chronicles the African American experience during the Revolutionary War. 10 p.m. History

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Artificial diamonds; how Google helps people with ALS. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Harrison Ford; authors Tomi Adeyemi, Jason Reynolds and Kiley Reid. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Brian Van Holt (“Deputy”); LeVar Burton; Ronen Rubinstein (“9-1-1: Lone Star”). (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Live With Kelly and Ryan Nathan Fillion (“The Rookie”); the Impractical Jokers (“Impractical Jokers: The Movie”). (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). (N) 10 a.m. KABC

Rachael Ray Jesse Palmer makes latte art; chef Scott Conant. (N) 10 a.m. KTTV

The Wendy Williams Show Adam Pally (“Indebted”). (N) 11 a.m. KTTV

The Talk Jane Levy; Skylar Astin; NeNe Leakes guest cohosts. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS

Tamron Hall The inspiration for the series “For Life”; celebrities push for criminal justice reform. (N) 1 p.m. KABC

The Dr. Oz Show Lark Voorhies (“Saved by the Bell”). (N) 1 p.m. KTTV

The Kelly Clarkson Show Ken Jeong; Jurnee Smollett-Bell. (N) 2 p.m. KNBC

Dr. Phil A man says an incident when he was young could be why he can’t keep weight off. (N) 3 p.m. KCBS

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Chris Pratt (“Onward”). (N) 3 p.m. KNBC

The Real Matthew Modine (“Miss Virginia”). (N) 3 p.m. KTTV

The Doctors “Roasting” loved ones; the age one is most likely to be miserable; a stress snack. (N) 3 p.m. KCOP

Amanpour and Company (N) 11 p.m. KCET; midnight KVCR

Conan Lizzy Caplan and D.J. Demers. 11 p.m. TBS

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Jennifer Lopez; Lil Rel Howery; Andre D Thompson. 11:34 p.m. KNBC

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Laura Dern; Kesha performs. 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live! Chris Pratt; Huey Lewis; Sam Hunt performs. 11:35 p.m. KABC

The Late Late Show With James Corden Justin Bieber; James Marsden; Anya Taylor-Joy; Jack Peñate. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Late Night With Seth Meyers Tiffany Haddish; M. Night Shyamalan; Shaed performs; Caitlin Kalafus performs. 12:37 a.m. KNBC

Nightline Members of the Guajajara tribe fight to protect the Amazon’s Arariboia Indigenous Reserve. (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC

A Little Late With Lilly Singh Model Ashley Graham. 1:38 a.m. KNBC

SPORTS

College Basketball Butler visits Seton Hall, 3:30 p.m. FS1; Syracuse visits Louisville, 4 p.m. ESPN; Auburn visits Georgia, 4 p.m. ESPN2; Georgia Tech visits Wake Forest, 4 p.m. Fox Sports Net; Providence visits Georgetown, 5:30 p.m. FS1; Duke visits North Carolina State, 6 p.m. ESPN; Kansas State visits Texas Tech, 6 p.m. ESPN2; Miami visits Virginia Tech, 6 p.m. Fox Sports Net

NHL Hockey The New York Rangers visit the Chicago Blackhawks, 5 p.m. NBCSP; the Florida Panthers visit the Ducks, 7 p.m. FS Prime

For more sports on TV, see the Sports section.


Click Here: ADELAIDE CROWS 2019 MEN’S HOME GUERNSEY

Sierra Crane Murdoch’s account of a murder case is about so much more

Lissa Yellow Bird is one of the most fascinating characters I’ve ever read about — and she’s a real person.

She has been a terrible mother, a rebellious daughter, a drug addict, a drug dealer, a prisoner. She has also been the opposite of each of those things: devoted, attentive, sober, free. She smokes constantly, sleeps sparingly and has a generous heart. She is obsessive and relentless.

“Yellow Bird” follows her search for the killer of a man who went missing, a truck driver in the North Dakota oil industry. The account of her one-woman investigation by journalist Sierra Crane Murdoch is ambitious and vast, encompassing tribal politics and family histories, trips to look for a corpse and catfishing text exchanges with a suspect.

Because this happened in the recent past — Kristopher Clarke disappeared in 2012 and two men have gone to prison — anyone could Google the headlines. It’s Yellow Bird’s incremental fight that makes the book addictive, full of twists and turns and surprising choices.

I want to watch a movie of her story, but only if she’s the one who makes money from it.

Lissa Yellow Bird comes from generations of Native Americans who’ve been exploited by white people. That history is another thread in the book — the story of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation being swept into the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, subject to the negligence and betrayals of the U.S. government. The cold North Dakota prairie was poor and forgotten until frackable oil was found beneath, at which point greedy white businessmen showed up in droves.

At this point I should acknowledge that I am a white lady writing about a white lady writing about a Native American lady. Murdoch waits until an author’s note at the end of the book to fully describe her relationship to the story — the years she has spent with Yellow Bird, beginning with a visit to Fort Berthold in 2011, when she was covering the oil boom for Colorado’s High Country News. To me, she seems well-suited to tell this story; your mileage may vary.

Clarke was a 29-year-old driving trucks on the reservation when he disappeared, working for his friend James Henrikson, who had a company that subcontracted with one of the tribes’ leaders. A complicated system of contractors and subcontractors allowed non-Natives to do business on the reservation. Eventually Yellow Bird’s efforts would help law enforcement expose kickback schemes.

In some ways it was like the oil booms of old: wildcats and roughnecks and speculators. In others, it looked like it might be justice delayed: These Native American tribes were finally going to get compensated for the resources on their land. In practice, however, some people got rich and others were left out entirely. “If colonization had begun the stratification of the reservation,” Murdoch writes, “the oil boom was finishing it.”

Clarke disappeared at the height of the boom, when the region was a blur of activity: new roads, temporary housing, environmental regulations ignored, drug use and violence rising. He was last seen with Henrikson at the office; later, Clarke’s empty truck was found off the reservation — keys inside, wallet and gun gone.

It was almost just another missing-persons case, in an area where jurisdiction was confusingly split among tribal, federal and state authorities. But when Yellow Bird saw a Facebook post by Clarke’s mother, she became obsessed. She’d stay up all night on her computer before going to work. She organized searches. Her methods could be brilliant but also shockingly unorthodox.

She was uniquely positioned as both an insider and an outsider. Because of her own experience with law enforcement, she knew her way around the agencies, many of which couldn’t, or didn’t, communicate with each other. As a former drug dealer and addict, she had insight into criminal networks. And as a member of the MHA Nation, she knew its history and had access to the tribal administration.

Yellow Bird soon concluded that Henrikson, a pumped-up dude, and his wife, Sarah Creveling, a polished blond driving a Bentley, were behind Clarke’s disappearance. They seemed to be getting rich from reservation contracts with a tribal leader named Tex Hall. “We need a strategy,” she told Clarke’s mother. “You know what I think? I think these guys built an empire around Tex, and the only way we’ll get inside is if we take it down, brick by … brick.”

Over several months, Yellow Bird found ways to keep people from forgetting about Clarke and Henrikson. She used social media; she created an alternate persona; she secretly partnered with a former investor of Henrikson’s and blanketed Fort Bethold with fliers outlining his long, previously unknown criminal past. This book reveals the extent to which it was Yellow Bird who was behind the efforts to keep pressure on Henrikson.

Even members of her own family didn’t understand her obsession. Yellow Bird had never met Clarke or anyone in his circle. There was nothing to connect her to this particular case. The question of why she became interested, stayed involved and built her life around this murder underlies the entire book. In the end I don’t think Murdoch has found an answer.

In some ways, Yellow Bird is a mirror of Murdoch herself. Why was the author so interested in this story? Why did she keep going back to North Dakota, sleeping on floors, trying to get people to talk to her? It wasn’t because of Clarke or Henrikson or someone she knew personally — it was something ineffable. Sometimes you just find a story that has to be told.

Murdoch reports the hell out of it, digging up text messages and conversations and business dealings and shifts in tribal power. She also gets deep into personal relationships and reveals their richness from all sides. It’s a remarkable accomplishment.

The book is also a little messy — sometimes the details overwhelm when what’s really needed is a better overview. But I like its sprawl, which allows this true-crime story — and it is a great true-crime story — to reach for broader horizons. It’s also a story about a place, the people who lived and tried and failed and died on it, and those who, despite generations of betrayals, are trying still.

Carolyn Kellogg is formerly a books editor of The Times and can be found on Twitter @paperhaus.

Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder, and a Woman’s Search for Justice in Indian Country

Sierra Crane Murdoch

Random House: 400 pp., $28