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CLEARLAKE, Calif. – An Oakland man has been arrested in connection with an alleged kidnap and rape of a 22-year-old Clearlake woman.
Luis Antonio Calvillo, 22, faces felony charges of kidnapping, rape and other sexual assault charges, according to Capt. James Bauman of the Lake County Sheriff's Office.
Bauman said the sheriff's office responded to the alleged victim’s home in Clearlake late Saturday night, where she told deputies she had just been returned from a labor camp in Kelseyville where she had been held against her will and sexually assaulted.
The alleged victim reported that on Nov. 19 at about 4:30 p.m., a friend of hers – 32-year-old Julio Cesar Lopez of Clearlake – asked her to accompany him to Kelseyville to pick up a car he had bought so she could drive the car back to Clearlake for him, Bauman said.
Bauman said the woman said she agreed to go and left with Lopez to get the car at what was referred to as a “labor camp” on Sylar Lane in Kelseyville.
After arriving at the labor camp, Lopez told the woman he had to drive to Lakeport and he left her there with several other unidentified men, Bauman said.
The woman said she voluntarily went into a dwelling on the property to smoke some marijuana with the three men while waiting for Lopez to return, according to Bauman's report.
Bauman said that at least one of the men in the dwelling began asking the victim for sexual favors and when she attempted to leave the room, the men stood in the only doorway out and blocked her from exiting.
The alleged victim was reportedly held at the camp against her will throughout the night and into the next day, Bauman said.
During her alleged captivity, she was allegedly molested by one or more of the men and raped by at least one of them, according to Bauman.
Bauman said one of the men drove her to a Kelseyville gas station the following day and from there, she managed to get a ride to her home in Clearlake, where she then notified the sheriff’s department.
Deputies worked the case throughout Saturday night and into Sunday morning, when detectives were called in to assist with the investigation and secure a search warrant for the labor camp, Bauman said.
During the search warrant service, Calvillo was found at the camp and identified as one of the suspects, Bauman said. Calvillo was booked at the Lake County Jail with a $250,000 bail and an immigration hold.
Bauman said the identities and anticipated arrests of other suspects in the case are pending further investigation.
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Two cases of stranded travelers were reported on Sunday.
Just after noon on Sunday, three people were reported to be suffering from exposure to the new-fallen snow in the forest area above Upper Lake, according to radio reports.
Ken and Karen Petz of Northshore Fire Protection District tried to make their way up to assist.
“We could not reach them,” Karen Petz said Monday, noting, “We got as far as we could.”
However, Petz said that U.S. Forest Service personnel were able to assist the three individuals.
Lake County News left a message for a forest spokesperson at the headquarters office in Willows which was not returned before the end of business Monday.
On the Mendocino County side of the forest, 12 people had to be rescued after becoming stuck in the snow, according to Capt. Kurt Smallcomb of the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office.
Shortly before 7 p.m. Sunday the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office was advised that 12 people had traveled from the Willits and North County area to the Anthony Peak Range, located on the Mendocino National Forest east of Covelo, Smallcomb said.
Once in the Anthony Peak Range area, the dozen individuals became stuck in the snow and called for help from their cell phones, according to Smallcomb. Mendocino County Search and Rescue were dispatched to the location.
At 11 p.m. Sunday four of the stranded subjects were able to walk to the location where Search and Rescue group was staged, but Smallcomb said the weather and road conditions were such that the remaining eight couldn't be reached safely until it was daylight and there was a break in the weather.
He said the stranded subjects were advised to stay inside of their vehicle until help reached their location.
At 7:30 a.m. Monday deputies, along with Ross Liberty, utilized Mendocino County Sheriff's Office snowmobiles and were able to access the remaining eight individuals who had remained at their vehicles, he said.
Smallcomb said all 12 travelers were safely returned to their families.
With winter weather conditions able to change quickly, Smallcomb advised area residents and travelers to take the necessary precautions when visiting the Mendocino National Forest in the winter time.
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The fire was reported at the Lucerne on the Lake Park, located at 5877 Lake Street, shortly before 11 p.m.
Smoke initially was reported, and Northshore Fire Protection District responded to the scene.
Battalion Chief Steve Hart said the fire was confined to a bed and a wall in a bedroom.
“The cause was water leaking into an electrical outlet from the storm,” Hart said, with the water causing a short in the outlet, which threw a spark into the mattress.
The fire took about 30 minutes to contain and clean up, he said.
Hart said there were no injuries, and he estimated total damages at about $500.
E-mail Elizabeth Larson at

In keeping with its mission of saving lives, the California Highway Patrol (CHP) is reminding motorists the Thanksgiving holiday is also a Maximum Enforcement Period (MEP).
The CHP’s holiday enforcement effort begins Wednesday, Nov. 24, at 6 p.m. and continues through 11:59 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 28.
Throughout the MEP all available officers will be looking for motorists who are a danger to themselves or others on our state’s roadways.
“During the holiday season many people are in a hurry and eager to get to their destination,” said CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow. “It’s important to remember that safety should never take a back seat; be safe, pay attention to the road, never drink and drive and always buckle up.”
Last year during CHP’s Thanksgiving holiday enforcement effort, 37 people were killed in collisions statewide; this represents a 12 percent increase from the previous year.
Among the 19 vehicle occupants who were killed in CHP jurisdiction, 26 percent were not wearing seat belts.
The Thanksgiving MEP coincides with the statewide “Click It or Ticket” campaign which runs through Nov. 29 and includes more than 150 law enforcement agencies in California.
“Seat belts save lives, and the majority of motorists in this state are buckling up,” said Commissioner Farrow. “However, there’s a small percentage who aren’t securing themselves or their child passengers inside their vehicle, and they’re putting lives at risk.”
In addition to motorists who fail to buckle up or drive at a safe speed, officers will be seeking to remove impaired drivers from the roadways.
Last year during the Thanksgiving MEP, CHP officers made 1,461 arrests for driving under the influence.
“Start the holidays off right; designate a non-drinking driver ahead of time and always wear your seat belt,” added Commissioner Farrow.
With the Christmas and New Year’s holiday right around the corner, the CHP is planning for similar maximum enforcement efforts next month.
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MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Middletown Mustangs continued to roll through their football season, winning the first round of the North Coast Section (NCS) Division IV Tournament – their 10th victory in a row – and handing the St. Helena Saints a season-ending 56-0 trouncing Friday night in Middletown.
The shutout victory – the Mustangs' fourth in a row and their seventh in the last 10 games – was capped by a 66-yard David Pike run in the second quarter that gave him the all-time Lake County scoring record.
Middletown has outscored their opponents by a whopping 473-28 in their last 10 outings.
“We’ve had it fairly easy for the last nine weeks,” Mustangs Head Coach Bill Foltmer said after the game.
“We were overmatched,” a circumspect St. Helena Head Coach Brandon Farrell said about the Middletown squad. “They’re an awesome football team, and they’re well-coached, and they do everything right.”
Things started going right for the Mustangs early, when Pike reversed direction on Middletown’s opening possession of the game and swept 82 yards downfield for a touchdown and a 7-0 Mustang lead.
Before the first half ended, Pike had scored three more touchdowns – on carries of 37 yards, four yards and the 66-yard dash that landed him in the Lake County record books.

“Well, obviously, Pike had a great game,” Foltmer said about the prolific running back. “And if Pike has a good game, that means your line is playing well. Defensively, I thought that we played solid across the board.”
Adding to the first half scoring total of 49 points for the Mustangs were scores from Jacob Davis (from 16 yards out), a 56-yard completion from quarterback Kyle Brown to John-Wesley Davis and an Andres Fernandez interception – initially deflected by Davis – run back 16-yards for a Middletown touchdown.
After Danny Cardenas went a perfect 7-for-7 in extra point attempts, the Mustangs took a commanding 49-0 lead going into halftime, and played their second string offense for the remainder of the game.
“They’re just a better football team,” Farrell said about Middletown. “There’s not much else you can say.”
Junior running back Nolan Tkachenko had the only touchdown of the second half – a 28-yard run – and backup kicker Tyler Drew made the point after to bring the final score of the night to 56-0.
“They did everything that we thought they were going to do,” Farrell said about the Mustangs. “They just did it really well.”

Middletown finished the night with 449 yard total offense, led by Pike’s 133 yards in seven carries for three touchdowns, and Jacob Davis’s 110 yards in seven carries, with one touchdown.
“I think this might be the breakout game for Jake Davis,” Foltmer said about his running back. “He was much more physical and much more noticeable out there than the last couple of games. Hey, he’s playing on all cylinders along with Pike, so we’re where we need to be for the next phase.”
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The Mustangs play the second round of the NCS tournament starting at 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 27, when they’ll face off against the El Molino Lions (seeded fifth in the tournament), who are 7-4 following their first round win Saturday night over the Kelseyville Knights (now 7-4 and seeded 12th in the tournament).

“Getting by the second round has been a little bit tough for me,” Foltmer said, noting his team has lost in the second round of the NCS tournaments the last two seasons.
He added, “But you do what you can do, you prepare like you’ve been preparing all year long, and you hope that, later in a game, because they’re seniors, they’re going to step up.”
“I’m going to expect a little bit more out of them,” Foltmer said.
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