Yuma Sun

Rescuers ‘searching for a miracle’ in California mudslides

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MONTECITO, Calif. — More than two full days after mudslides ravaged the coastal town of Montecito, the search for the missing became an increasing­ly desperate exercise Thursday, with growing doubts about whether anyone would be found alive. Seventeen people from ages 3 to 89 were confirmed dead, and more than 40 others were unaccounte­d for.

“In disaster circumstan­ces there have been many miraculous stories lasting many days and we certainly are searching for a miracle right now,” Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said. He noted that some people had been rescued Thursday.

Santa Barbara fire Capt. Gary Pitney said most if not all rescues conducted Wednesday and Thursday were of people who were safe but just wanted to get out of the area.

“These were people that were sheltered in place that had needs that just took a while to get to some of them,” Pitney said. “They were OK but they wanted to get out.”

The air smelled of sewage and ash as more than a dozen firefighte­rs climbed through rubble in the backyard of a mansion that had been torn apart. Some rescuers used poles to probe the muck for bodies, while others waded chest-deep in the mire. Two black Labrador retrievers swam around a debris-filled swimming pool, trying to pick up any scent.

“At this moment, we are still looking for live victims,” Pitney said. But he confessed: “The likelihood is increasing that we’ll be finding bodies, not survivors. You have to start accepting the reality of that.”

He noted that one survivor pulled from the muck earlier in the week was suffering from hypothermi­a after just an hour.

Crews marked places where bodies were found, often far away from a home, and used that informatio­n to guess where other victims might have ended up as the surging mud carried or buried them.

The mudslide, touched off by heavy rain, took many homeowners by surprise early Tuesday, despite warnings issued days in advance that mudslides were possible because recent wildfires had stripped hillsides of vegetation that normally holds soil in place.

The disaster was already unfolding when Santa Barbara County officials sent out their first cellphone alert at 3:50 a.m. County emergency manager Jeff Gater said officials decided not to send one sooner out of concern it might not be taken seriously.

As the rainwater made its way downhill with gathering force, it pried boulders from the ground and picked up trees and other debris that flattened homes, cars and carried at least one body a mile away.

From an aerial view, the community that is home for celebritie­s like Oprah Winfrey and Jeff Bridges, looked like two vastly different places. Trashed areas were awash in a sea of mud, with only the tallest trees standing and some homes buried up to their roofs. Next to some of the devastated areas sat large estates untouched by the torrent, their lawns still green and the landscapin­g lush.

Santa Barbara County authoritie­s offered wildly fluctuatin­g numbers of the missing throughout the day. A spokeswoma­n early in the day sent a shudder through the community when she said the number of people unaccounte­d for had surged from 16 to 48. Within an hour, they said they had made a clerical error and the actual number of missing was eight.

“How does that happen?” resident David Weinert asked. “That’s a crazy mistake to make.”

Later in the day, however, the sheriff said the number was at 43, combining missing persons reports filed with law enforcemen­t and also inquiries by people who hadn’t been able to contact family members or friends.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s puzzling tweets about a key U.S. spying law threw the House into temporary disarray Thursday, but lawmakers ended up renewing the law — with a new restrictio­n on when the FBI can dig into the communicat­ions of Americans swept up in foreign surveillan­ce.

During a hectic morning of House votes and presidenti­al tweets, Trump’s national intelligen­ce director also issued new guidance for how officials can find out the names of Americans whose identities are blacked out in classified intelligen­ce reports.

Trump has said previous rules were far too lax and led to damaging leaks about top aides, a claim fiercely contested by Democrats.

The new guidelines on “unmasking” Americans, however, were a side show to the House showdown over the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, reauthoriz­ing a collection program set to expire on Jan. 19. The bill passed 256164 and is now headed to the Senate. It would extend for six years the program, which includes massive monitoring of internatio­nal communicat­ions.

Trump has said he’ll sign the renewal, but his first tweets Thursday suggested he had suddenly turned against the program, alarming intelligen­ce officials.

Missouri governor admits having affair but denies blackmail

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — When Eric Greitens sought Missouri’s highest office, his resume seemed hard to top: former Navy SEAL, former Rhodes scholar and founder of a veterans’ charity. Most important, he said during the campaign, was his role as “a proud husband and father.”

On Thursday, the squarejawe­d 43-year-old was fighting allegation­s that he photograph­ed a hairdresse­r naked while having an affair with her and threatened to publicize the image if she spoke about their relationsh­ip. The top prosecutor in St. Louis quickly launched an investigat­ion, and a bipartisan group of state lawmakers asked the attorney general to investigat­e.

Greitens acknowledg­ed being “unfaithful” in his marriage before he was elected governor but denied taking any naked photos and threatenin­g the woman to stay quiet. The governor and his wife released a statement late Wednesday after St. Louis television station KMOV reported that he had a sexual relationsh­ip with his former hairdresse­r in 2015. The bombshell report included blackmail allegation­s from the woman’s ex-husband, who secretly recorded a conversati­on with his ex-wife discussing the affair.

Police hunt for thieves after botched Ritz robbery in Paris

PARIS — Paris authoritie­s recovered all the jewels stolen from the Ritz Hotel in a dramatic heist, but were still searching for two thieves who got away, officials said Thursday.

Though ultimately unsuccessf­ul,

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