Palm Springs City Council give update on fertility center bombing recovery efforts

Shay Lawson

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ)  – A city still healing.

Palm Springs City Councilmembers voted Wednesday night on new recovery measures aimed at helping businesses impacted by the devastating terror attack earlier this month.

Councilmembers approved Consent Item Q, which establishes a disaster overlay zone around the hardest-hit buildings.

It will provide reduced permit fees and expedited reviews for property owners seeking to repair or reconstruct damaged buildings.

Officials said more than 40 properties sustained damage, with at least 8 buildings deemed unsafe to occupy.

Palm Springs city leaders, police and fire officials also shared a public update on the recovery effort.

Mike Villegas, a Lieutenant at the Palm Springs Police Department, said FBI officials returned to the explosion site to collect further evidence on Wednesday.

“We are meticulously sifting through evidence to determine what products were used in the explosion,” Villegas said.

An economic development spokesperson said the team assisted the American Reproductive Centers owner in finding a temporary location with 8 months of free rent provided by Grit Development for safe storage of non-biological materials.

Jeremy Hammond, Deputy City Manager, said reconstruction is expected to take 6 months.

Stay with News Channel 3 for the full report at 10 and 11 p.m.

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Box office blowout: Memorial Day weekend moviegoing sets new records

Garrett Hottle

LA QUINTA, Calif. (KESQ) The Memorial Day holiday delivered more than just burgers and backyard fun it brought a historic boom to the box office.

Cinemark Theatres reported its biggest Memorial Day weekend of all time, driven by the premieres of Lilo & Stitch and Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning. The company says it ranked among its top ten highest-grossing weekends ever.

The surge in ticket sales was matched by an explosion in concession revenue. Cinemark also broke internal records for food and beverage purchases, including its premium XD and D-BOX motion seat formats.

“What is seeing a movie on the big screen without a Coke and a warm, buttery popcorn?” Caitlin Piper, Communications Director for Cinemark explained.

And Mission Impossible may feel extra familiar locally. Some scenes in the franchise were reportedly filmed in the Palm Springs area in a previous installment in the film franchise.

From the valley to venues nationwide, the weekend marked a strong rebound for theatrical releases and a reminder that the big screen still packs a punch.

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Beaumont man charged with murdering baby

City News Service

BANNING, Calif. (KESQ) – A 40-year-old man accused of inflicting deadly injuries on an infant he was babysitting in San Jacinto was charged today with first-degree murder and other offenses.

Alejandro Cuevas of Beaumont was arrested last week following a months-long Riverside County Sheriff’s Department investigation into the death of the baby girl. 

Along with murder, Cuevas was charged with assault on a child resulting in great bodily injury or death.

The defendant, who is being held in lieu of $1 million bail at the Smith Correctional Facility, was slated to make his initial court appearance Wednesday afternoon at the Banning Justice Center.

According to sheriff’s Sgt. Jarred Bishop, the alleged deadly assault occurred on the morning of Aug. 23, 2024, at a residence in the 2000 block of Whispering Bells Road, near Kirby Street.

Bishop said patrol deputies were sent to the location, along with paramedics, to investigate reports of a 4-month-old girl in respiratory distress.

The sergeant said the deputies initiated resuscitative measures until an ambulance took her to a regional trauma center, where she was placed in the pediatric intensive care unit.

“Over the next several days, the child’s condition continued to deteriorate,” he said.

The baby died on Aug. 29, 2024.   

Due to visible injuries on the infant, as well as other factors, the matter was turned over to the Central Homicide Unit, according to Bishop.   

“After extensive investigation … it was determined the juvenile died as a result of homicidal violence,” the sheriff’s spokesman said, without elaborating further.

Detectives ultimately fixed blame for the alleged attack on Cuevas, whom Bishop described as “an associate of the victim’s family.”

The defendant was taken into custody without incident at his residence on Price Street Friday.

He has no documented prior felony convictions in Riverside County.

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Corporal Hunter Lopez’s service, sacrifice honored in La Quinta post office dedication

Kendall Flynn

LA QUINTA, Calif. (KESQ) – A United States Postal Service Office in La Quinta has a new important meaning. City officials joined fallen Marine Corporal Hunter Lopez’s family members to dedicate the USPS building in his name Wednesday afternoon.

It was an emotional ceremony for family members, but one they say was more than deserved as they look to carry on Hunter’s legacy.

“Our mission from early on was that Hunter’s name remained in the community and for everybody to always remember him,” Herman Lopez, Hunter’s father said. “Whether we’re around or well beyond our lives.”

Lopez, a Coachella Valley native, was one of 13 service members killed in the 2021 attack at the Kabul airport in Afghanistan. His parents say he was continuously dedicated to his duty and service.

“He always wanted to make sure that he was there for his Marines and never let them down,” Herman said. “And I remember getting text messages from Hunter in those days during the evacuation that he was just going to do anything he could to help Americans get back home.”

The USPS office at 79125 Corporate Center Drive will now be recognized as the new Corporal Hunter Lopez Memorial Post Office Building. His parents said the post office is a fitting place for his memorial as he loved to get packages.

His mother, Alicia Lopez, recalls him asking her to order items for him while he was overseas. A fond memory that carried on even after his death.

“Even after his passing, we received his last package that he had purchased when he was overseas,” Alicia said. “It was an Amazon package, but nonetheless, we would get them at the post office.”

News Channel 3’s Kendall Flynn spoke with Hunter’s parents, Herman and Alicia Lopez and Congressman Raul Ruiz on the importance of this dedication.

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Ribbon-cutting ceremony held for $63M affordable housing development in Coachella

City News Service

COACHELLA, Calif. (KESQ) – A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held today for a $63 million affordable housing development in downtown Coachella.   

“This project reflects our deep commitment to creating a community where families can thrive, where our seniors and neighbors with disabilities are supported and where everyone has access to opportunity,” Coachella Mayor Steven Hernandez said in a statement. “We’re building more than homes — we’re strengthening the heart of our families and the foundation of our community.”  

City officials, in collaboration with Chelsea Investment Corporation, were on hand for the event on Cesar Chavez Street in the Pueblo Viejo district.   

Covalda Apartments, formerly known as Tripoli Apartments, is a 2.8-acre site that also features retail space and has 10 units designed for residents with disabilities.   

Funding for the building was provided by the California Department of Housing and Community Development’s Infill Infrastructure Grant program, the Housing Authority of the County of Riverside’s project-based vouchers and Home program and the California Department of Developmental Services’ Community Resource Development Plan Priorities.

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42-year-old arrested in connection with deadly DUI crash in Palm Springs

Jesus Reyes

Editor’s Note: The Palm Springs Police Department listed the suspect as a 29-year-old, however, county jail records show that the suspect is 42 years old. The article has been updated with the correct information

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A 42-year-old man was arrested in connection with a deadly DUI crash earlier this year in Palm Springs.

The suspect, a Cathedral City resident, was arrested Wednesday morning, according to the Palm Springs Police Department. He remains in custody at the John Benoit Detention Center in Indio.

The arrest is in connection with a head-on collision that happened on the afternoon of Feb. 28 at the intersection of E Ramon Road and Grenfall Road. Three people were injured in a crash, including one who was in critical condition after sustaining a severe head injury.

Police said the person was pronounced dead on March 12.

Investigators determined that the suspect was “traveling eastbound on East Ramon Road at a high rate of speed when he veered into opposing lanes and collided head-on with a westbound vehicle.”

Police said toxicology results confirmed the presence of a controlled substance in the suspect’s system at the time of the crash. Investigators also confirmed he had two prior DUI convictions. Based on the totality of the circumstances, including his impaired state and prior DUI convictions, investigators determined the suspect “to be the proximate cause of the fatal collision.”

The suspect remains in custody without bail . He is scheduled to appear in court on Friday.

Stay with News Channel 3 for any updates.

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Forever Marilyn celebration honoring Monroe’s 99th birthday set in Palm Springs

City News Service

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A community celebration in honor of Marilyn Monroe’s 99th birthday and a 26-foot-tall Monroe statue dedication was planned for Sunday in downtown Palm Springs.

“Forever Marilyn Community Celebration” will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday at Downtown Park, between Museum Way and Belardo Road.

The nonprofit tourism group PS Resorts will host the free event, which will feature drag performer Vanity Halston, live music, birthday treats while supplies last and a Marilyn Monroe look-alike contest with prizes.   

Attendees are welcome to take photos of the statue created by artist Seward Johnson, who recreated her pose from the 1955 film “The Seven Year Itch” in which she stood on a windy Manhattan subway grate wearing a white dress.

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DOJ announces Title IX probe over trans athletes in California girls’ sports

City News Service

LOS ANGELES (KESQ) – U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli announced today that prosecutors are investigating whether California law is at odds with federal civil rights guarantees to female students whose athletics programs host biological males identifying as girls, holding out a case in the Riverside Unified School District as an example of alleged violations.

“The law is clear: discrimination on the basis of sex is illegal and immoral,” Essayli said. “My office and the rest of the U.S. Department of Justice will work tirelessly to protect girls’ sports and stop anyone — publicofficials included — from violating women’s civil rights.”

He said legal notices had been served on California Attorney General Rob Bonta, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond and administrators for the California Interscholastic Federation, informing them of the federal government’s intent to proceed with a civil rights action, naming them as defendants, based on alleged discriminatory practices stemming from Title IX.

There was no immediate response from state officials.

According to the DOJ, the investigation specifically targets state Assembly Bill 1266, the 2013 legislation aimed at preventing discrimination against transgender students and ensuring their right to take part in school activities, including athletics.

“Title IX exists to protect women and girls in education. It is perverse to allow males to compete against girls, invade their private spaces, and take their trophies,” Harmeet K. Dhillon, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said in a statement. “This division will aggressively defend women’s hard-fought rights to equal educational opportunities.”

During his previous term as a state assemblyman representing northwest Riverside County, Essayli rallied to the cause of parents, guardians, female athletes and others opposed to school districts that had implemented policies tied to transgender participation in athletics programs previously reserved for biological females only.

Last year, Essayli and Assemblywoman Leticia Castillo, R-Corona, joined in seeking remedies to Assembly Bill 1266, signed into law in 2013, focusing on “pupil rights” by expanding Section 221.5 of the California Education Code regarding students’ participation in courses.

The thrust of AB 1266 was that a “pupil shall be permitted to participate in sex-segregated school programs and activities, including athletic competitions, and use facilities consistent with his or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil’s records.”

AB 1266 remains on the books.   

In coordination with the Title IX investigation, DOJ officials also announced the agency has filed a “statement of interest” in a federal lawsuit filed on behalf of two Riverside high school students who said they faced repercussions for wearing T-shirts opposing a transgender student on the school’s track-and-field team.   

That suit, filed by Murrieta-based Advocates for Faith & Freedom, relates to the treatment of two female athletes, identified in court papers only as “K.S.,” a then-ninth-grade cross country competitor, and “T.S.,” an 11th grader who was the girls’ team captain at King High.

The plaintiffs are seeking injunctions against the school district, particularly King High, alleging First and Fourteenth Amendment violations.   

“The suit contends that RUSD’s policies unfairly restrict their freedom of expression and deny them fair and equal access to athletic opportunities,” according to the plaintiffs.

The two girls wore shirts in early 2024 bearing the messages “Save Girls’ Sports” and “It’s Common Sense — XX (does not equal) XY.” The plaintiffs alleged school administrators ordered the students to remove or conceal the shirts, claiming they created a “hostile environment.”   

“The civil complaint highlights RUSD’s failure to comply with Title IX, which guarantees equal athletic opportunities based on biological sex,” according to the plaintiffs. “T.S. was ousted from her position on the varsity cross country team to make room for a biological male transgender athlete, who did not consistently attend practices and failed to meet the team’s strict qualifying requirements. As a result, T.S. missed opportunities to compete at a high-profile meet, losing valuable chances for college recruitment and recognition.”

King High has been a hotbed of activity connected to the presence of transgender students. In 2023, one of them was reportedly expelled for assaulting a girl in a dispute over the individual’s use of a designated female locker room.

Without using her name, the DOJ’s Title IX letter to CIF specifically referenced transgender Jurupa Valley High School track and field AB Hernandez, who will compete in this weekend’s state championship meet in the triple jump, long jump and high jump events.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump posted on social media that he would withhold federal funding from California if transgender athletes are allowed to compete in girls sports, and he called on local authorities to prevent AB Hernandez from competing in this weekend’s CIF State meet.

“California, under the leadership of Radical Left Democrat Gavin Newsom, continues to ILLEGALLY allow `MEN TO PLAY IN WOMEN’S SPORTS.’ This week a transitioned male athlete, at a major event, won `everything,’ and is now qualified to compete in the `State Finals’ next weekend.”

The athlete Trump is presumably referring to is Hernandez.   

“As a male, he was a less than average competitor. As a female, this transitioned person is practically unbeatable. THIS IS NOT FAIR, AND TOTALLY DEMEANING TO WOMEN AND GIRLS,” Trump wrote. “Please be hereby advised that large scale Federal Funding will be held back, maybe permanently, if the Executive Order on this subject matter is not adhered to. The Governor, himself, said it is `UNFAIR.’ I will speak to him today to find out which way he wants to go??? In the meantime I am ordering local authorities, if necessary, to not allow the transitioned person to compete in the State Finals. This is a totally ridiculous situation!!!”  

The CIF on Tuesday announced a change in the entry rules for the state track-and-field champion meet, essentially expanding the field of competitors in various events to ensure “biological female” athletes are not excluded from the competition, which will be held Friday and Saturday at Buchanan High School in Clovis.   

“Under this pilot entry process, any biological female student- athlete who would have earned the next qualifying mark for one of their Section’s automatic qualifying entries in the CIF State meet, and did not achieve the CIF State at-large mark in the finals at their Section meet, was extended an opportunity to participate in the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships,” according to CIF. “The CIF believes this pilot entry process achieves the participation opportunities we seek to afford our student-athletes.”   

The CIF statement did not specifically mention transgender athletes, although the governor’s office noted the change is aimed at ensuring biological female athletes won’t be displaced from this weekend’s meet, while still allowing transgender athletes to compete.

“CIF’s proposed pilot is a reasonable, respectful way to navigate a complex issue without compromising competitive fairness — a model worth pursuing,” the governor’s office Director of Communications Izzy Gardon said in a statement. “The governor is encouraged by this thoughtful approach.”

AB Hernandez will be the only openly transgender athlete competing at the CIF State Track and Field meet. She is ranked as one of the top athletes in California, ranked by athletic.net No. 1 in the triple jump and No. 2 in the long jump.

Hernandez won the girls invitational portion of the prestigious Mt. SAC Relays in Walnut in April and CIF Southern Section Division 3 titles in May at Moorpark High School in the long jump and triple jump.

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CSUSB-Palm Desert indigenous education grant defunded under Trump administration

Athena Jreij

PALM DESERT, Calif. (KESQ) — A nearly $150,000 National Endowment for the Humanities grant awarded to California State University, San Bernardino Palm Desert Campus has been revoked under the Trump administration.

According to university officials, the NEH grant awarded $149,935 for the “Inland Echoes: Empowering Inclusive Histories of California’s Inland Empire and Coachella Valley in K-16 Education,” project.

Grant writer and assistant professor at CSUSB, Michelle Lorimer, said they chose to spotlight local tribes to give students a sense of pride on where they came from.

“Really what it’s about is having a sense of belonging and wanting to make where you live a better place for yourself and for the future, and that’s through understanding the importance of the history that was already here,” Lorimer said.

She tells News Channel 3 her team was overjoyed once it was awarded, telling News Channel 3 NEH grants are extremely competitive, and that one has an acceptance rate of just 19%.

However, after the grant contract was signed, CSUSB-PDC officials say they received a notice that it was defunded because it didn’t align with the administration’s education goals and was apart of DOGE cuts. Professors say to their knowledge, multiple NEH awards have now been defunded.

“They said our project and similar projects at NEH didn’t align anymore with the priorities of the administration. So that was devastating,” Lorimer said.

In a letter shared with News Channel 3, federal officials said, “NEH has reasonable cause to terminate your grant in light of the fact that the NEH is repurposing its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the President’s agenda. The President’s February 19, 2025 executive order mandates that the NEH eliminate all non-statutorily required activities and functions.”

If it had gone through, the project planned to include hands-on workshops and lesson plans for teachers on local indigenous communities. The goal was for local teachers to then incorporate that education into their K-16 classes.

Professors say they believe it was targeted because of it’s inclusive language.

The New York Times has reported that NEH funding is now being redirected to President Trump’s National Garden of American Heroes.

Now, officials don’t know where to turn and doubt any scholarships will bring in the same amount of money as NEH.

“There’s been, for a very long time kind of culture wars over history education in the United States. However, what is currently happening now is totally unprecedented,” Michael Karp said.

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CAL FIRE: Under Pressure Part II

Karen Devine

COACHELLA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – As we’ve seen in the past, once a wildfire sparks up in the mountains surrounding the Coachella Valley, it can spread fast and in some cases be deadly. 

“It’s one of our biggest concerns. We are surrounded by wild land here and this brush and the forest up on top, that forest up there, it’s been years since it’s burned.  One statistic I heard, it’s over 200 years for Long Valley and those surrounding areas,” said Tim Jones, supervisor for the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway.

Some may recall the Esperanza Fire in October 2006. The arson fire started near Cabazon and spread quickly up the slopes of the San Jacinto Mountains. It burned over 41,000 acres and killed five firefighters.

Closer to the valley, the Mountain Fire in 2013 reached within 2 miles of Palm Springs and threatened the wilderness and state park at the top of the tramway. 

I-Team investigator Karen Devine took a trip up the tram, pushing for answers about managing drought conditions and balance between the federal and state mitigation process. Also addressing one local assemblyman’s concerns about fire management, asking the tough question,  are we doing enough?

Missed the first part? Check it out below:

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