Yuma Sun

Region Glance

-

Washington man pleads guilty to groping woman on San Diego to Seattle flight

SEATTLE — A Washington state man pleaded guilty on Thursday to groping a woman during an Alaska Airlines flight from San Diego to Seattle last year.

Desmond Bostick, 25, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Seattle to assault, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Washington said in a news release.

While seated in the last row of the plane during the flight on June 20, 2023, Bostick repeatedly touched the thigh of a woman in the middle seat next to him, prosecutor­s said. He also grabbed her buttocks twice when she stood up to let a passenger in the window seat exit and reenter the row.

After the plane landed, the woman reported his actions to the flight crew and law enforcemen­t began investigat­ing. Bostick, by that time, had left the airport and prosecutor­s said his location was unknown.

A federal grand jury returned an indictment in the case last September and Bostick was located and arrested by the FBI on Feb. 9. Bostick admitted as part of the plea agreement that he touched the woman with sexual motivation, prosecutor­s said.

Attorneys will recommend a 9-month prison term when he is sentenced in July.

Oakland officials vote to include ‘San Francisco’ in airport’s name

SAN FRANCISCO — Oakland officials have voted in favor of changing the name of the city’s airport to San Francisco Bay Oakland Internatio­nal Airport, despite San Francisco threatenin­g a lawsuit over what it says is a trademark violation.

The Board of Commission­ers for the Port of Oakland voted unanimousl­y Thursday to move forward with the name-change and scheduled a second vote for final approval on May 9. The airport is currently called Oakland Internatio­nal Airport.

Oakland airport officials have said travelers unfamiliar with the region fly into San Francisco’s airport even if their destinatio­n is closer to the Oakland airport across the Bay. Modifying the name to San Francisco Bay Oakland Internatio­nal Airport will change that, they say. The airport’s three-letter code OAK would not change.

“We are standing up for Oakland and the East Bay,” Port Commission President Barbara Leslie said in a statement after the vote. “This name will make it clear that OAK is the closest major airport, for 4.1 million people, three national laboratori­es, the top public university in the country, and California’s Wine Country.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States