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Mendocino County officials investigate death of man rescued from the ocean

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 16 January 2025
NORTH COAST, Calif. — Officials in Mendocino County are investigating a Tuesday water rescue that ended in a Mendocino man’s death.

The victim has been identified as 65-year-old Douglas Craig Shapiro, according to a report from Sgt. Ze Lima.

Just after 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, the Mendocino Volunteer Fire Department was dispatched to a possible water rescue in the area of Portuguese Beach in Mendocino.

A citizen in the area of Main Street in Mendocino called emergency services to report a subject along the coastline who may have fallen from the cliffs above. The sheriff’s office said the reporting party informed emergency responders the subject on the beach below was not moving and called to request assistance.

Mendocino County Sheriff's Office Deputies arrived to assist, along with Adventist Health Mendocino Coast Ambulance Paramedics.

Lima said Shapiro was located on the beach below the steep cliff south of Kasten Street. The Mendocino Volunteer Fire Department water-rescue team deployed a pair of their jet-skis from the Big River Boat Launch and quickly arrived in the area where Shapiro was located and packaged for transport.

Shapiro was transported via jet-ski from the beach to the north boat launch at Big River Beach in Mendocino, Lima said.

An off-duty emergency room physician happened to be near the boat launch and immediately conducted an assessment of Shapiro upon arrival at Big River Beach. The physician pronounced Shapiro deceased just after 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Lima said.

Lima said deputies observed injuries on Shapiro’s body consistent with a great fall and began a coroner's investigation into Shapiro's death.

Deputies determined foul play was not suspected and Shapiro's cause and manner of death will be later determined by a forensic pathologist.

It can take multiple months to receive all associated reports to finalize the coroner's investigation and determine the official manner and cause of death.

Shapiro's next of kin was contacted and notified of his death.

Anyone with information regarding this coroner’s investigation is requested to contact the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office Dispatch Center at 707-463-4086.

Insurance for natural disasters is failing homeowners − I don’t have the answers, but I do know the right questions to ask

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Written by: Jay Feinman, Rutgers University
Published: 16 January 2025

 


The wildfires that have devastated large parts of Los Angeles County have drawn fresh attention to the struggles many Americans face insuring their homes.

Since 2022, seven of the 12 largest insurance companies have stopped issuing new policies to homeowners in California, citing increased risks due to climate change. California isn’t alone: The same thing has happened in other vulnerable states, including Louisiana and Florida. The proportion of Americans without home insurance has risen from 5% to 12% since 2019. Meanwhile, those fortunate enough to have insurance are paying more than ever: Premiums in California, like elsewhere, have increased dramatically over the past five years.

When the private insurance market fails to provide coverage, the government often comes in to fill the gap. For example, the National Flood Insurance Program was established back in the 1960s because almost all private insurers excluded flood coverage. Meanwhile, the California FAIR Plan, which serves more than 450,000 Californians, is a typical state-created insurer of last resort. Such programs, which are available in many states, offer limited coverage to people who can’t get private insurance.

But the sheer scale of need means it’s hard for public programs to stay afloat. It’s not inconceivable that the recent wildfires could exceed the reserves and reinsurance available to the California FAIR plan. Because of the way the plan is set up, that would force other insurers – and ultimately homeowners – to make up the difference.

These are tricky problems, and – speaking as an expert in insurance – I can’t say I have answers. But I do know the right questions to ask. And that’s a crucial first step if you want to find solutions.

What is insurance for, anyway?

One of the most important questions is also the most basic: What are the goals of insurance?

Insurance is a financial product that allows people to share risk – meaning that if a catastrophe strikes any one person, they won’t have to bear the costs alone. But it’s not just about money. Even if most people don’t realize it, every form of insurance embodies values and serves public policy goals. This often requires making social, political and even moral trade-offs.

What is the problem we’re trying to solve?

The first step in solving a problem is to identify it. When it comes to insurance, this isn’t always easy. For example, “Homeowners need insurance coverage that they can’t afford in the private market” might seem like a good description of the problem. But it’s not. This is because some homes in disaster-prone areas are simply too risky to insure.

Imagine a home in a coastal area that floods over and over, for example. If you were an insurer, how much would you charge for that policy? When a house is subject to repeated losses, it makes more economic sense to buy and demolish it instead.

Defining the problem carefully also helps to clarify the values at stake. For example, one value is protecting the investments of current homeowners – particularly, say, long-time, elderly residents. But another value is pricing risk correctly, so people don’t move into dangerous developments.

Put more broadly, one value is recognizing society’s collective responsibility toward people who suffer financial distress, and another is promoting fair and efficient use of social resources. These values can be in conflict.

What does the government have to do with insurance?

Back in 1881, in his classic lectures on The Common Law, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. said:

The state might conceivably make itself a mutual insurance company against accidents and distribute the burden of its citizens’ mishaps among all its members. There might be a pension for paralytics, and state aid for those who suffered in person or estate from tempest or wild beasts.

Holmes’ own position was clear: “The state does none of these things,” he wrote – and it should not. This strain of individualism has remained strong in U.S. politics: Individual liberty, personal responsibility and economic opportunity are the foundations of American life, individualists say, so each person should win or lose on their own.

Under this approach, the private insurance market bases its pooling, risk classification and pricing mostly on how much risk each policyholder presents, so that homes in wildfire-prone areas are charged higher premiums. In theory, this is both morally sound and economically efficient, since each policyholder bears the cost of their own risks. But when the private market fails – as happened with flood insurance – the government has a strong incentive to step in.

Today, as an empirical matter, Holmes’ statement couldn’t be more wrong. The state does, in fact, make itself “a mutual insurance company against accidents” and provides a “pension for paralytics,” through Medicaid, Social Security Disability Insurance and other programs. And in California, as elsewhere, the government does provide aid for those who “suffered in estate … from tempest,” through the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other entities.

Since at least the New Deal, there has been broad recognition that some level of collective responsibility is essential; the only questions are where and how much. In the health insurance realm, for example, the Affordable Care Act provides subsidized health insurance for many Americans, and changing Medicare is a political third rail.

Public policy on disaster losses is situated between the two extremes of letting losses lie and having the state assume all of the burdens of those losses. Often policymakers and researchers see insurance or insurance-like plans as solutions – whether provided by a public entity or involving a mixed public-private program. FEMA, for example, operates the National Flood Insurance Program in cooperation with private insurers and also gives direct grants for mitigation of flood damage.

What should a public insurance solution look like?

Sometimes one question leads to another, and that’s the case here. In my research, I’ve identified more than a dozen questions that policymakers must answer in order to design an effective public solution to disaster insurance. Three questions are most important:

• What are the goals of the insurance?

• Who is being insured?

• How are policyholders and their risks classified?

Let’s start with the first question: What are the goals of the insurance? As I mentioned earlier, any form of insurance faces trade-offs and limits.

When an insurance solution has been adopted rather than some other form of intervention, a primary goal is to compensate the policyholder for a loss. But that’s not the only goal. For example, insurance often aims to reduce losses in addition to paying if they occur. Insurers have many ways to shape behavior, such as charging lower premiums for homeowners who keep their property free of flammable brush. Because many of these behaviors affect other people as well, they generate a social benefit. And since insurance has social benefits, how those benefits are distributed – along race, gender, class and other lines – is also important.

The remnants of a house and a car are seen engulfed in flames.
A home in Altadena, Calif., is consumed by flames due to the Eaton Fire on Jan. 8, 2025. Jon Putman/NurPhoto via Getty Images

That leads to the second key question: Who is being insured?

Insurance involves transferring risk from an individual to a larger group of people who can share the risk. Insurance experts call this “risk pooling.” Pools that are too small will struggle because there aren’t enough people to share the burden.

In public solutions to catastrophe problems, getting more people in the pool could be especially useful in expanding coverage. For example, the National Flood Insurance Program brings many homeowners across the country into a pool, but it also excludes some, such as those who suffer damage from wind during a hurricane. In contrast, the proposed INSURE Act, introduced in the last Congress, would effectively put the entire nation in a pool to cover a variety of catastrophic risks, including flood, wildfire, earthquake and others.

Still, just because you’re in the same pool as someone else doesn’t mean you’ll be treated the same – people with the same insurance can be charged different premiums and receive different amounts of coverage.

That leads to the third question: How are policyholders and their risks classified?

If insurers treated everybody exactly the same, they would quickly go out of business. That’s why they analyze huge amounts of information about past losses, current conditions and future predictions, trying to determine the risks posed by each member. This work is done by actuaries and underwriters, but it’s not just a matter of math: Insurers classify policyholders in ways that reflect the goals and values of the insurance, which typically include balancing widespread availability, broad coverage and affordable pricing, and the social benefits the insurance generates.

One view of this process is that more precise risk classification and pricing are good. Because insurance involves risk transfer, the more accurately risks can be calculated and priced, the better the process works.

But there’s a deeper problem, which has to do with values. Sometimes accuracy in underwriting can conflict with larger social goals. With catastrophes in particular, broad coverage may be a top priority, since many people believe the state has a responsibility to protect its people. Moreover, protecting people’s investments in their homes is important, and suddenly raising the premiums of homeowners at high risk would threaten their investments. Disasters also cause communal responses – many unaffected Americans donate to the Red Cross and other nonprofits to support victims – and a strict focus on accuracy in underwriting could undermine that sense of community.

As floods, storms, wildfires and other catastrophes become increasingly common, the availability and affordability of property insurance has become a high-profile political issue. Politics involve choices. Asking better questions will help politicians – and the rest of us – make better choices.The Conversation

Jay Feinman, Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, Rutgers University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Lakeport Police logs: Friday, Dec. 27

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Written by: Lakeport Police Department
Published: 16 January 2025
Friday, Dec. 27, 2024

00:12 SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES 2412270002
Occurred on Clear Lake Av. RP JUST HAD SOMEONE KNOCK ON HER DOOR VERY LOUDLY APPX FIVE MINS AGO - NO ONE WAS THERE WHEN THEY ANSWERED / RP IS REQUESTING AN AREA CHECK. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

00:36 PEDESTRIAN CHECK 2412270006
Officer initiated activity at Lake County Sheriff's Office, Martin, Lakeport, CA. IFO. Disposition: ARREST MADE.

03:21 NOISE DISTURBANCE 2412270018
Occurred at Skylark Motel on N Main. PER EMP / OUT IN PARKING LOT - SEVERAL SUBJECTS BEING LOUD AND PLAYING MUSIC. Disposition: GONE ON ARRIVAL.

06:44 SUSPICIOUS PERSON 2412270026
Occurred at Us Postal Service-Lakeport on 11TH. PER EMP / TRANSIENT MALE IN THE LOBBY, YELLING AND TALKING TO HIMSELF, POSS SCHIZOPRENIC / MAKING PEOPLE NOT FEEL COMFORTABLE AND RP WANTS HIM TRESSPASSED / UNK HNS OR HBD / NO WEAP / DESC WMA, 50'S / LSW ALL BLK. Disposition: WARNING.

07:38 SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES 2412270029
Occurred at Cvs Pharmacy on 11TH. PER EMP / HEARD ONLY INFO - UNK MALE IS SCREAMING IN THE BATHROOM / NFI. Disposition: WARNING.

10:43 FAMILY DISTURBANCE 2412270043
Occurred at Aqua Village Mobile Home Park on S Main. RPS CLIENT AND FEMALE WERE IN A 415, WAS PHYSICAL, NO LONGER PHYSICAL,. Disposition: REPORT TAKEN.

11:05 SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES 2412270047
Occurred at Xabatin Community Park on N Main. TRANSIENT MALE IS CAMPING INSIDE THE MEN'S BATHROOM TAKING UP THE WHOLE THING / NFI. Disposition: WARNING.

11:07 SHOTS FIRED 2412270048
Occurred at 13TH/N High. 3 SHOTS HEARD IAO / RP WAS ADV CHAPEL WAS DOING A VETERAN SERVICE AROUND THIS TIME. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

11:48 FOLLOW UP 2412270052
Occurred at Wiggles And Wag on N High. HAS QUESTIONS RE INC, IT'S A 242 THAT OCC AT WIGGLES AND WAG. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

11:54 ALARM 2412270053
Occurred at La Fiesta Market on S Main. AUD, FRONT WEST DOOR, NO CONTACTS LISTED. Disposition: FALSE ALARM.

12:21 FOLLOW UP 2412270058
Officer initiated activity at Aqua Village Mobile Home Park, S Main, Lakeport, CA. Disposition: REPORT TAKEN.

14:11 WIRELESS 911 HANG UP 2412270067
Occurred at Howard Av/Rainbow Rd. CULVERT IS ALMOST FLOODING AND TRYING TO CAVE IN / INFO GIVEN TO 3F PUBLIC WORKS. Disposition: REFERRED TO ANOTHER AGENCY.

14:39 WIRELESS 911 HANG UP 2412270071
Occurred on N Forbes. CAN HEAR SHUFFLING AROUND AND DISTANT CONVERSATION,. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

14:47 LPD ANIMAL CONTROL ISSUE 2412270073
Occurred at Lake County Fair Grounds on Martin. WHITE/TAN FEMALE K9 LAYING IFO THE GATE / HAS A PINK HARNESS AND COLLAR BUT NO IDENTIFICATION , BEEN THERE FOR A WHILE / RP WILING TO WAIT ON SCENE. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

15:56 911 HANG UP 2412270082
Occurred at Rocky Point Care Facility on 16TH. TXF TO CDF. Disposition: REFERRED TO ANOTHER AGENCY.

16:01 TRAFFIC STOP 2412270083
Officer initiated activity at 8TH/N Forbes, Lakeport, CA. Disposition: WARNING.

16:02 TRAFFIC STOP 2412270084
Officer initiated activity at 10TH/N Forbes, Lakeport, CA. Disposition: WARNING.

16:35 CITIZEN ASSIST 2412270086
Occurred at Lakeport Police Department on S Main. WANTS TO KNOW IF HE CAN PARK HIS RV ON THE ST FOR 7 DAYS. Disposition: GONE ON ARRIVAL.

16:40 SUSPICIOUS VEHICLE 2412270087
Officer initiated activity at N MAIN/1ST, Lakeport, CA. Disposition: WARNING.

17:00 THEFT 2412270088
Occurred at Residence on S Main. RPS PHONE AND BANK CARDS WERE STOLEN THIS MORNING BY KWN FEMALE / REQ IN PERSON RESPONSE. Disposition: REPORT TAKEN.
20:08 WIRELESS 911 HANG UP 2412270111
Occurred at Cvs Pharmacy on 11TH. OPEN LINE, HEARD 2 FEMALES TALKING, SOUNDS LIKE SOMEONE CHECKING OUT, ON CALL BACK LEFT VM. Disposition: CHECKS OK.

21:00 EXTRA PATROL 2412270117
Occurred on Martin. NOBODY SHOULD BE AT THE RESD, RP IS OWNER OF THE RESD. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

21:31 FAMILY DISTURBANCE 2412270121
Occurred on North. SUBJ PUT HANDS ON SISTER / PARTIES SEPARATED - RESP IS INSIDE REFUSING TO LET RP IN - RP IS OUTSIDE /NEG WEAP / RESP IS HBD / RP STOPPED RESPONDING TO CENTRAL. Disposition: REPORT TAKEN.

21:34 WIRELESS 911 HANG UP 2412270122
Occurred on Clear Lake Av. REPORTING 415 - UNITS ALREADY ENRT INC 2412270121. Disposition: GENERAL SERVICES RENDERED.

22:06 THEFT 2412270124
Occurred at Safeway on 11TH. PER SECURITY - 2 UNK MALES STOLE FROM STORE BEFORE DRIVING OFF TWDS 11TH / RP HAS SURVEILLANCE / BOTH RESPS DESC: WMA / ONE LSW: BLK HOODIE SHORTS /VEH DESC: WHI CHEVY STATION WAGON. Disposition: REPORT TAKEN.

Sheriff’s office expands efforts to find missing Middletown woman

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Written by: LINGZI CHEN
Published: 15 January 2025
Anne Jamieson. Photo courtesy of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Sheriff’s Office is seeking public assistance in locating a Middletown woman missing since the fall.

Anne Marie Jamieson, 58 — also known as Anne Marie Mancini — was reported missing on Nov. 29, the sheriff’s office said.

A Tuesday press release said detectives have been investigating the case, collaborating with Jamieson’s family and surrounding law enforcement agencies.

Jamieson is described as 6 feet, 2 inches tall, approximately 200 pounds, with blonde hair and hazel eyes.

Authorities said she is known to frequent the Middletown, Cobb and Calistoga areas.

Detectives determined that she was last heard from in May or June of 2024. However, “We can’t say whether or not that’s when she went missing,” said Sheriff’s Public Information Officer Lauren Berlinn.

The case was reported to authorities in late November, about six months after Jamieson’s last known contact, Berlinn said.

Jamieson’s case was posted on the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Facebook page on Monday and a press release was issued the following day — which created a 45-day delay in seeking public assistance.

“We were doing the investigation, we were trying to get the pieces together of whether or not she was actually missing since the last known contact was June,” Berlinn explained.

Berlinn said the length of that gap varies in such cases. “It really depends on the situation and the person and their lifestyle and the information that we’ve able to gather immediately or if we need the community’s assistance.”

Jamieson has been added to the California Department of Justice’s Missing Persons Database.

Lake County now has a total of 12 active cases of missing persons in that database, with the oldest case stretching back to 1980.

If anyone was in contact with Jamieson during mid to late 2024 or has any information regarding her whereabouts, please contact the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Unit Tip Line at 707-262-4088.

Email staff reporter Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
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