Man killed while crossing street A 26-year-old...
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Man killed while crossing street
A 26-year-old Rancho Cucamonga man was killed Sunday after he was
hit by a flatbed truck while crossing Beach Boulevard, police said.
Jason Mullner was hospitalized at U.C. Irvine Medical Center where
he died, police said.
Police and fire arrived at the scene at 2:49 a.m. and found
Mullner in the southbound lanes of Beach Boulevard, near Blaylock
Drive.
Police are not releasing information about the driver of the
truck. The accident investigation is ongoing, police said.
Trial pending in
1969 murder case The prosecution will present further evidence Friday in the
continued preliminary hearing for Donna Pulsifer Prentice, a
Wisconsin woman accused of the 1969 murder of her 3-year-old daughter
in Huntington Beach. The judge heard testimony May 20 from police
officers as well as the victim’s grandmother, Betty Pulsifer,
according to District Attorney Larry Yellin.
If the judge rules there is enough evidence, a trial date will be
set. Prentice, along with then-boyfriend James Michael Kent, was
charged in August 2004 with the murder of Prentice’s daughter,
Michelle Pulsifer. Kent died of natural causes in January at Western
Medical Center in Anaheim while awaiting trial.
Man beaten, food
stolen at drive-thru
A man was beaten and his food was stolen from him in the
drive-through at a restaurant in the 9900 block of Atlanta Avenue
early Sunday, police said.
Huntington Beach Hospital employees notified police of the
incident at 4:30 a.m., said Sgt. Mike Kelly.
The victim told police that four men with spiky hair beat him up
and stole his burritos and tacos, Kelly said. Police did not locate
any suspects.
Hundreds of pins found at playground
A citizen called police at 11 a.m. Sunday when they found what was
described as hundreds of safety and straight pins sticking up from
the sand at a park at Delaware Street and Detroit Avenue.
There were enough pins to warrant concern, said Sgt. Mike Kelly.
“Right now it’s an isolated incident,” Kelly said. “We’re taking
it seriously because of the potential hazard it poses to kids.”
The pins were removed and the area was made safe for children,
Kelly said. People should not be paranoid, but they should be aware
of what happened, Kelly said.
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