Dumb PGMS Burglars Lead Cops To Them By Bloody Trail

PGMS J Woods Flowers

At approximately 7:40 AM on July 17, 2025, Pacific Grove Police Officers responded to a report of a burglary that had occurred during the early morning hours at Pacific Grove Middle School, located at 835 Forest Avenue. Upon arrival, officers discovered signs of forced entry into the school’s cafeteria through a broken window.
The suspects—later identified as 23-year-old Gabriel Mario Guertin and 22-year-old Zachary Shelby Malone (residents of Pacific Grove) were arrested later that afternoon and charged with felony violations of California Penal Code Section 459 (Burglary) and Section 182 (Conspiracy).
Both Guertin and Malone have extensive prior arrest histories, and both were on active probation and/or supervised release. Guertin has been previously arrested for felony and misdemeanor domestic violence, false imprisonment, violations of probation, DUI, providing false information to a peace officer, and resisting or delaying an officer.
Malone’s history includes arrests for vandalism, DUI, resisting or delaying an officer, disorderly conduct, battery, loitering, child abuse, and criminal conspiracy. Notably, Malone had also been arrested just two days prior in connection with an unrelated battery investigation.

The investigation revealed that several money tills inside the cafeteria had been opened and ransacked, though no money was reported stolen. However, a large quantity of food and food products was found to be missing from a walk-in refrigerator. The officers later located the large quantity of food that was dropped near Hillcrest Avenue.

Dumb PGMS Burglars Lead Cops To Them By Bloody Trail

California Is Not “Stolen Land”

Land Acknowledgement – empty virtue signaling.

PG City Council Agenda, July 16, 2025

City Council Regular Meeting
Meeting Date: 07/16/2025
From: Chaps Poduri
RECOMMENDATION
Motion to direct the Task Force on Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) to develop language for a Land and Ancestral Peoples Acknowledgment. Upon completion of their work, Council will review policy framework and specific acknowledgment language for formal consideration and adoption.
DISCUSSION
Background
The City of Pacific Grove recognizes the historical and ongoing significance of the Indigenous peoples who are the original stewards of this land. Acknowledging the traditional territories of Indigenous communities is a growing practice among governmental bodies and organizations as a step towards reconciliation, cultural recognition, and fostering respectful relationships.To establish a formal Land and Ancestral Peoples Acknowledgment requires careful research, thoughtful consideration, and engagement with relevant communities and best practices. The Taskforce for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) is uniquely positioned to lead this critical development phase due to its mandate to foster a more inclusive and equitable community. Tasking the DEI with this specific work will leverage their expertise and ensure that the proposed policy and statement are thoughtfully crafted and reflect a deep understanding of the historical and cultural context.Upon completion of their work, the DEI Board’s recommendations for the specific acknowledgment language will be submitted to Council to review the policy framework and specific acknowledgment language for formal consideration and adoption.
OPTIONS
  1. Do not authorize staff to direct the DEI: This would potentially delay an opportunity for meaningful reconciliation and cultural recognition.
  2. Provide alternative direction for statement development: Alternatives may require staff work to implement the revised direction.

FINANCIAL IMPACT:
There is no fiscal impact.

GOAL ALIGNMENT: Not Applicable.

Attachments
Public Comment
Public comment consisted of seven copy/paste emails.

Tribal Truths and Modern Myths: Why California Is Not “Stolen Land”
The slogan is simple, the sentiment sweeping: “No one is illegal on stolen land.” It festoons placards, hashtags, and classroom walls from Sacramento to Santa Cruz. But as with most slogans meant to end debate, this one also seeks to preclude history. It presumes that California was once peaceful, indivisible, and unjustly snatched from its rightful stewards. But history, and a robust respect for indigenous agency, tells a far more complex story, one in which conquest, conflict, diplomacy, and trade all played a part. To claim that the land was “stolen” and never rightfully acquired is not only historically inaccurate, it infantilizes the very indigenous groups it purports to defend.
California, contrary to modern myth, was never a harmonious Eden of united tribes singing songs of peace until the Spanish came ashore. The truth is that for over 12,000 years, more than 500 tribal societies occupied the region, often in brutal competition. These tribes warred incessantly over territory, trade routes, slaves, and honor. The Haida and Tlingit, although northern, share cultural practices that echoed throughout the West: the capture of slaves, the killing of rivals, the assimilation or extermination of the weak. Entire tribes were wiped from existence. Lands changed hands not once but dozens of times, often through bloodshed.
By the time Spanish missionaries arrived in the late 1700s, the number of distinct tribes had already plummeted. Epidemic disease, internecine warfare, and resource exhaustion had reduced the original 500-plus tribal entities to fewer than 100. This attrition wasn’t the result of colonial intervention but of indigenous struggle itself. The myth of the peaceful native collapses under the weight of archeological and ethnographic evidence. Tribal societies in California, like in the East, exhibited the full spectrum of human behavior: noble and cruel, artistic and violent.
Spain held California for 52 years. Mexico claimed it next, for a meager 27. Neither power treated the land as eternally sacred tribal territory. Nor did any surviving tribal leaders challenge their sovereignty in the language of permanent stewardship. When the United States acquired California in 1848 as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, it did so not by force but by payment: $15 million in cash and $3.25 million in assumed debt. This was not theft, it was a transaction recognized under international law.
The real moment of moral scrutiny came not with the acquisition, but with the American decision to negotiate directly with the tribes. Between 1851 and 1852, the US signed 18 treaties with the remaining major tribal entities, including the Luiseño, Cahuilla, Serrano, and Diegueño. These tribes voluntarily ceded vast territories in exchange for designated reservation lands, livestock, food, and goods. The Treaty with the Dieguino, for instance, exchanged lands for 1,800 head of beef cattle, blankets, and clothing. Critics call these treaties unjust, but if one argues the tribes were too weak or simple to make such agreements, one strips them of their dignity, their rationality, and their sovereignty.
@amuse

How Ben Harvey “Finds $8 Million Dollars” Sure.

Click the picture for the pdf of the claim filed

Ben Harvey “Finds $8 Million Dollars”

A few months after he started, Harvey told City Councilmembers that he had “found $8 million” that had been missing in the City’s budget, thereby casting aspersions of financial fraud and lack of transparency on Claimant and the previous City administration. He would periodically repeat this falsehood over the next months. Harvey’s allegation was a complete fabrication, without any foundation whatsoever, as there was no way to just “find $8 million” in the City coffers. Even if a mayor, City manager, finance director or someone else had, somehow—for some reason, concealed the funds, outside auditors regularly audited City accounts and would have certainly noticed $8 million of unaccounted-for City funds.Harvey would also often mention his “$8 million of found money” in City Management meetings (with all department heads). Claimant was surprised to hear that and asked Harvey where he found the money so she could correct any classification errors per GASB 54 reporting of fund balance requirements.In response, Harvey would ignore her request—and he would remain silent—until someone would break the awkwardness caused by his silence. Soon, when the issue came up again and Claimant asked about it, Harvey and the Public Works director, Lindy Palmer (“Palmer”), noticeably exchanged smirks and rolled their eyes. Soon, other senior City staff, to curry favor with them, joined in the mockery.

Eardley Ave Resident Busted For Guns And Drugs

Stoopid tattoo.

Mario Jose Villagrana

Mario Jose Villagrana

On Feb. 15, 2022, the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office searched Villagrana’s home near 700 Eardley Avenue and located eight firearms, numerous firearm magazines and ammunition, tools to manufacture firearms, 13,439 “M30” pills containing fentanyl, and $23,105. The firearms recovered by law enforcement included assault rifles, ghost guns, and a Glock pistol converted to fire ammunition fully automatically, with an extended 30-round magazine.

Eardley Ave Resident Busted For Guns And Drugs

Ojai’s Ben Harvey Is In Legal Trouble Already

over ordering a “hush money” severance package deal.

And possible unprofessionalism for expense reimbursements.

In February 2024, in response to Harvey’s request for reimbursement of expenses, Claimant asked to see his signed employment agreement to confirm that the expenses were authorized by his contract. Harvey asked Claimant, “Why can’t you just process the reimbursement?” At first, Claimant thought Harvey was joking and explained that City policy required supporting documentation to justify any payment to employees beyond their regular paycheck. She soon realized, however, that she was dealing with a different kind of city manager,

Click to download entire pdf
Ojai finance director seeks $1M,

Ojai’s Ben Harvey Is In Legal Trouble Already
Ojai Valley News

Jenny Helps Hide Illegals

Got to keep them children working at the marijuana farm.Jenny Helps Hide Illegals

With search warrants in hand, federal agents raided two Central Coast cannabis farms on Thursday – one in Carpinteria and the other in Camarillo – resulting in a protester pointing a gun at agents, a farm worker’s death and the discovery of 10 children at one of the cannabis facilities.

All of the children were undocumented and eight were unaccompanied, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott. The owners of Glass House Farms are now facing allegations he violated child labor laws.

While cannabis is legal to use and grow in California, it is against the law for anyone under 21 years of age to be on the premises of a cannabis business, even if they are a family member.

gavins farm

Jenny Helps Hide Illegals

Weak Peak Begs To Not Ink

Don’t sign, he does not want the admit that there are as many people opposed to the sneaky way the raise was approved.

“We’re about 40% over the required 10% [of signatures],” said Coletti, who went on to say that the council went around state law to grant themselves the raise.

Addressing the rest of the Pacific Grove City Council during the meeting on June 18, Mayor Bill Peake urged for people’s support by not signing the petition.

“Don’t sign the petition… council has a lot of obligations and it’s not always easy,” he said. “So, show your support for council, don’t sign it.”

Weak Peak Begs To Not Ink

Carl’s Jr Site To Be Cleared Soon

Last fast-food place in PG.

Carl's Jr flames

Demolition of the Carl’s Jr. restaurant in Monterey that was destroyed by fire in April will begin in a couple of weeks, a city official said this week. At about 6:35 a.m. on April 3, a large blaze engulfed the fast-food eatery at 902 Lighthouse Ave., causing the building to collapse. Firefighters from numerous jurisdictions responded to the dramatic blaze, which did not injure anyone.

Carl’s Jr Site To Be Cleared Soon