Two accused child smugglers arrested at Highway 86 checkpoint

Cynthia White

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – U.S. Border Patrol agents at the El Centro Sector arrested two United States citizens on Tuesday, accusing them of attempting to smuggle two children illegally into the U.S.

Agents report an SUV approached the Highway 86 immigration checkpoint, driven by a woman accompanied by another woman in the front passenger seat. Two girls were sleeping in the rear passenger seats.  

The driver told Border Patrol agents they were traveling from Arizona to California but later admitted they crossed into the United States from Mexico through the San Luis Port of Entry in Arizona. Agents noted the discrepancies in the driver’s story and sent the vehicle to secondary inspection. 

Agents reviewed the children’s documents and determined the children’s photos and names did not match those on the identification cards. They also learned the children were not related to the driver or passenger and the driver did not know the children’s mother. After further questioning, agents discovered the two children, ages 10 and 12, were unaccompanied minors from Mexico.

“And this, folks, is how the trafficking of children starts,” said Chief Patrol Agent Gregory K. Bovino of the El Centro Sector. “It’s almost unbearable to think about what heinous crimes await children who aren’t with their parents. The border environment has been rife with this type of activity over the past several years, however, the focus has now shifted, and heavy sentences await smugglers who hurt kids.”

Both the driver and the adult passenger are facing charges of Alien Smuggling. The vehicle was seized as evidence.

Stay with News Channel 3 for any updates to this story.

Three local siblings share inspiration of working together at PSP

Kendall Flynn

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – The Rodarte siblings are from Cathedral City, and growing up, they never imagined working together. Two of the siblings, Claribel and Enrique, worked together in their youth, but have since been inspired by each other to keep doing so.

The youngest sibling, Yasmin Rodarte, joined Claribel and Enrique just three months ago. Enrique has worked at the airport the longest at nearly 14 years, and Claribel follows with 10.

They said working together is an interesting sibling and coworker dynamic, but one that is comforting.

“If they have a question, they come up to me,” Enrique said. “My younger sister [Yasmin], she just started, so she comes up to us knowing she has someone she can rely on.”

The siblings feel the way they were raised in the Coachella Valley equipped them to work together effectively.

“Thanks to our parents, the way we grew up, they’ve always taught us how the always get along with each other,” Claribel said. “It doesn’t matter what happens. We work together as a team.”

Their inspiration for working together stems from older brother Enrique, who demonstrates immense passion for his job.

“My big brother, he really loves his job,” Yasmin said.

“His professional appearance and the way he conducts himself,” Claribel said. “So I was like, ‘I feel like I can grow too.’ So he inspired me to also become a lead and a supervisor. So now we’re both supervisors.”

As Claribel and Enrique are TSA supervisory officers, Yasmin, being new to the job, is a TSA officer.

While the siblings inspire each other in their jobs, they said it also helps them grow as individuals. Enrique said he is especially proud of his sisters for the work they’ve done at TSA and how they’ve been able to grow personally.

“I used to be super shy before, and now it’s just I’m more out there and I’m able to speak to anybody,” Claribel said. “I have grown a lot in my personal life and as an officer since when I started.”

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear from the Rodarte siblings on National Sibling Day.

How to beat the traffic getting to and from Coachella

Allie Anthony

Weekend 1 of the Coachella Music and Arts Festival officially kicks off today. As festival goers travel in, expect some road closures and delays.

Closures include:

Avenue 49 between Hjorth Street and Monroe Street

Avenue 50 between Madison Street and Jackson Street

Hjorth Street between Avenue 49 and Avenue 50

Madison Street between Avenue 49 and Avenue 52

On each Monday following the festivals, streets surrounding the festival site and Interstate 10 will be busy with more than 40,000 campers leaving the area. Expect delays and be prepared to use these alternate routes.

North and south travel, use Washington Street, Jackson Street, Calhoun Street and Golf Center Parkway

East and west travel, use Highway 111, Fred Waring Drive, Miles Avenue, Dr. Carreon Boulevard and Avenue 54

For festival goers, it’s important to note the best times to travel to and from the festival grounds. According to data collected by DoorDash, the best time to arrive to the festival is before 3 p.m. At 2 p.m. only 1/4 of Lyft-taking Coachella attendees have arrived, but by 4 p.m., the number climbs to 2/3. To avoid a late night, leave by 10 p.m. Otherwise, you might end up waiting in traffic that typically doesn’t die down until 3 a.m

As for the best place to get picked up, DoorDash data shows that the southwest corner of the Coachella venue (at the intersection of Avenue 52 and Madison Street) has the shortest average wait time. Pickups take 50% longer if you call from the upper right-hand corner of the venue (at the intersection of Monroe Street and Avenue 49).

Stay with News Channel 3 all weekend for live updates from the festival.

One Dead, One Injured in Early Morning Palm Desert House Fire

Julia Castro

PALM DESERT, Calif. — One person is dead and another is in serious condition after a fire broke out early Friday morning in a Palm Desert home.

Firefighters responded to reports of a house fire shortly after 1:00 a.m. in the Del Webb community, located off Washington Street, north of the I-10 freeway. The blaze engulfed a single-story residence on Tamarisk Flower Drive, on the eastern side of the development.

Upon arrival, crews found the home fully involved in flames. Firefighters found two individuals inside the burning structure. One was transported to a local hospital in serious condition. The other was pronounced dead at the scene.

Authorities have not yet released the identity of the deceased. The cause of the fire is currently under investigation.

Stay with News Channel 3 for new developments.

Coachella ride-along with IPD, alternate routes for residents

María García

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) — The first day of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival is here, residents are encouraged to take alternative routes.

The Indio Police Department recommends residents to use side streets like: Dr. Carreon Boulevard, Highway 111 and further north. For south of the Empire Polo Grounds it is recommended to use Avenue 53 and Avenue 54.

During peak hours ranging from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. and then 10 P.M. till as late as 3 A.M. there will be delays.

“It is best for residents to plan accordingly, give yourself some extra time to arrive to your destination,” said Public Information officer, Sergeant Abraham Plata.

Stay with News Channel to hear more about alternate routes recommended by IPD.

DAP Health promotes harm prevention during Coachella Weekends

Allie Anthony

As festival season kicks off, DAP Health is taking proactive steps to promote harm reduction by distributing life-saving tools like narcan and fentanyl test strips.

Each day, DAP will be stationed at the Palm Springs Convention Center, where they will be handing out free tools. It expects to hand out over 1,100 doses of narcan and 2,400 fentanyl test strips.

“Best case scenario you’re gonna check the drugs first,” says Neil Gussardo, the Community Health Harm Reduction Supervisor from DAP Health. “You can save a life by using Narcan.”

Drug overdoses remain the leading cause of death for Americans aged 18 to 44, according to the CDC. This year alone, DAP Health has already reported 728 overdose reversals thanks to narcan they’ve provided.

According to Gussardo, here is the proper way to use narcan. “First yell hey wake up. Next, you’re going to want to cause pain, do a hard sternum rub. If they’re still non-responsive, you open Narcan, it’s easy to apply. Once you’ve done one shot, you really wanna call 911.”

Indio traffic plan and street closures for music festival season

Jesus Reyes

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – The city of Indio announced anticipated street impacts, transportation details, and recommended alternative routes in preparation for the 2025 Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals in April.

The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival will be held at the Empire Polo Club on April 11–13 and April 18–20, 2025. Stagecoach: California’s Country Music Festival will follow on April 25–27, 2025.

Avenue 50 between Monroe Street and Madison Avenue will be closed from Monday, March 24, through Monday, May 5. City officials said the closure is necessary to ensure the safety of workers, residents, and commuters.

Drivers are encouraged to use alternate routes, including Highway 111, Dr. Carreon Boulevard, Avenue 48, and Avenue 52, to avoid delays.

The following streets will be primary access routes for the festivals on the following days: April 11-13; April 18-20; and April 25-27, but significant traffic is expected:

Jefferson Street, southbound, from Interstate 10 to Avenue 52

Washington Street, southbound, from I-10 to Avenue 52

Monroe Street, southbound, from I-10 to Avenue 52

Avenue 48 between Jefferson and Jackson streets

Highway 111 at Jefferson Street

Highway 111 at Monroe Street

I-10 exit eastbound at Jefferson Street

I-10 exit eastbound at Monroe Street

I-10 exit eastbound at Washington Street

On each Friday of the festivals through each Monday, the following roads will be closed:

Avenue 49 between Hjorth Street and Monroe Street

Avenue 50 between Madison Street and Jackson Street

Hjorth Street between Avenue 49 and Avenue 50

Madison Street between Avenue 49 and Avenue 52

Expect the following additional delays:

On each Monday following the festivals, streets surrounding the festival site and Interstate 10 will be busy with more than 40,000 campers leaving the area.

Consider the following alternate routes:

North and south travel, use Washington Street, Jackson Street, Calhoun Street and Golf Center Parkway

East and west travel, use Highway 111, Fred Waring Drive, Miles Avenue, Dr. Carreon Boulevard and Avenue 54

Uber Location:

Avenue 49 and Monroe Street on the southwest corner

Friends & Family/Taxi Drop Off & Pick Up:

Avenue 52 and Madison Street on the northeast corner

NO pedestrian or pedestrian festival access:

Monroe Street between Avenue 49 and Avenue 52

Madison Street between Avenue 50 and Avenue 52

Approved pedestrian access:

Corner of Avenue 49 and Monroe Street

Corner of Avenue 52 and Madison Street

Corner of Avenue 52 and Monroe Street

Corner of Avenue 50 and Madison Street

Additional notes:

Golf carts are not permitted on any of the above-listed streets.

Approximately 40,000 guests will be shuttled into and out of the concert venue from various locations throughout the Coachella Valley to help ease traffic conditions.

Noise from the festival site could begin on each Thursday prior to the festival dates, due to sound checks and on-site camping guests.

For concert logistics, questions, or issues, call 760-391-4112 or email concertinfo@indio.org.

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Santa Barbara Bowl set for Full Season and a Variety of Music Styles starting Friday

John Palminteri

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The iconic Santa Barbara Bowl heats up its lights for the new season starting this Friday.

The bowl opens its schedule with the American folk rock band, the Avett Brothers on Friday night during the bands national tour.

Other shows on the schedule include Dwight Yoakam, James Taylor, Jack White, Modest Mouse, Goo Goo Dolls, and Darius Rucker. During Old Spanish Days the bowl hosts the annual Mariachi Festival. Already more than 25 nights of shows are set, with room for up to 37 shows.

“There was a time when the Santa Barbara Bowl was an afterthought and now 20 years later with all the renovations and restorations we are considered when they go on  tour of the West Coast, ” said Bowl CEO Rick Boller.

The Santa Barbara Bowl was built in 1936. It has 4,500 to 5,000 seats depending on the show and whether the front section is open as a General Admission, standing only section or if it is tickets for seats. It is the largest amphitheater of its kind between Los Angeles and San Francisco.

This year guests in the very front floor seating area will be in new padded chairs, just purchased and installed.

The bowl management recently reported to the County Board of Supervisors an update on the facility including information about the community outreach foundation, environmental and sustainable vendor materials, and solar power for the power grid.

The bowl also does an annual open house for its neighbors to have them come on site and see the facility up close. They are also able to ask questions and provide input on any issues in the bowl’s location on upper Milpas Street nestled into a canyon.

Economically many people attending the bowl also go elsewhere for pre or post show food or an overnight stay. “We are able to track the fact that people are coming largely from within Santa Barbara County but they are traveling to Santa Barbara going to a show, going out to dinner and often staying in a hotel and leaving the next day,” said Boller.

There is also a foundation program to give back to the arts in the community, especially for the youth. Boller says, “every time you buy a ticket for a performance here at the bowl, the bowl foundation allocates a dollar of that ticket individually to support these programs.” About 100 organizations received assistance last year.

During Old Spanish Days annually the bowl joins the Fiesta lineup with an annual Mariachi Festival.

All tickets for the Bowl 2025 Season can be purchased at the Bowl Box Office or online: www.sbbowl.com

The bowl shows are booked by Goldenvoice.

(More details, photos and videos will be added later today.)

Gauchos power past Pepperdine behind 3 home runs

Mike Klan

UC SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Ian Fernandez, Xavier Esquer and Cole Kosciusko all slugged solo home runs as the Gauchos beat Pepperdine 9-4.

UCSB also added four doubles as seven of their nine hits went for extra-bases as they improve to 21-10 on the year.

The Gaucho return to Big West play this weekend at UC Riverside.

Cal Poly keeps rolling as they run win streak to 9 games

Mike Klan

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. – Alejandro Garza, with five straight two-hit games, has increased his hitting streak to 14 games in helping Cal Poly (23-8, 12-0 BWC) seal a convincing 8-5 midweek victory over San Jose State (18-15, 6-6 MWC) on Tuesday night at Baggett Stadium.

Garza went 2-for-3 with one RBI and a pair of runs scored in tallying his team-leading 17th multi-hit game of the season. Ryan Fenn, also with a multi-hit game in a 3-for-5 effort, notched his sixth three-hit game this year.

Dylan Kordic (2-for-5, 3 RBIs) accounted for nearly half of the team’s runs. Cam Hoiland continues to enjoy his recent starting looks as a designated hitter and cranked a 415-foot solo homer.

Reece Bueno put together 2 1/3 innings of relief work, allowing three runs but striking out three Spartans and earning the win (2-0). Chris Downs, Jake Torres, and Tanner Sagouspe combined for four complete, scoreless innings as Sagouspe notched his fifth save.

Cal Poly’s RPI now sits comfortably at 17 after sweeping the home-and-home series over San Jose State, as the Mustangs have won nine consecutive games to tie LSU for the third-longest active win streak in Division I baseball.

During the win streak, the Mustangs have tallied double-digit hits in every game. They are currently four away from tying the longest win streak in program history. Cal Poly’s 23 overall wins are tied for the most in the conference, and the Mustangs have yet to lose a midweek game this season.

Kordic quickly put up a pair of two-out RBIs in the first inning, and the Mustangs would not trail in the game after spreading their eight runs among five different innings. San Jose State pulled one back in the second with a trio of consecutive singles, but Hoiland, after reaching from a lead-off fielding error in the bottom of two, scored on Dante Vachini’s ground-out RBI to retake a two-run lead.

A two-out solo shot from SJSU’s Osorio-Agard cut the lead in half at the top of three. In response during the fourth, Cam Hoiland touched home base for the second time after sending a ball 415 feet into right-center for a solo home run, once again giving CP a two-run lead.

Kordic picked up his third RBI of the day in the bottom of five, and Castellon followed that with his own RBI single that nearly scored a second run. Castellon attempted to stretch his single into a double but got caught in a pickle. Kordic thought the defense was distracted and was tagged out trying to steal home in the confusion.

The Spartans dug into the Cal Poly lead during the sixth, grounding out to second base twice to score runners from third. San Jose State added another run on a blooping RBI single to shallow right field, cutting the Mustang lead to one run. Chris Downs read an attempted steal from first to second and closed the inning with a 1-3-6 pickoff to limit further damage.

The Mustangs once again responded as Jake Downing cleanly stole second in the bottom of six, but the throw from home plate pinged off his helmet and allowed him to speed all the way home when the Spartan left fielder had trouble gathering the ball. Fenn tripled directly after and Garza brought him home for the second time as that 8-5 lead would stand for the win.

Continuing with the eight-game home stand will be a much-anticipated conference series against Hawai’i. The Rainbow Warriors are tied with Cal State Fullerton for third in the Big West (9-6). The weekend slate will follow the usual 6 pm, 3 pm, and 1 pm schedule for a Friday through Sunday series at Baggett.(Article courtesy of Cal Poly Athletics).