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News

Lakeport man pleads not guilty to April 5 drive-by killing of friend’s mother

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 29 April 2024
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A Lakeport man has pleaded not guilty to the April 5 killing of a Clearlake woman in a drive-by shooting.

Nathaniel Ladre Hueners, 21, was in court for arraignment last week in the killing of 45-year-old Elizabeth Williams, the mother of one of his close friends.

New Chief Deputy District Attorney Rich Watson said Hueners pleaded not guilty to 10 counts and numerous special allegations and waived his time for preliminary hearing in a Tuesday court appearance.

The charging document mentions a second victim in the shooting, with Hueners also charged in the attempted killing of Nino Davis.

Hueners is set for preliminary hearing on July 24. He’s being defended by Ray Buenaventura, the county chief public defender.

Also charged in the case is David Sandoval with two counts, one for concealing the 9 millimeter Glock handgun used in Williams’ killing, along with a special allegation that “the defendant threatened witnesses, unlawfully prevented and dissuaded witnesses from testifying, suborned perjury, or in any another way illegally interfered with the judicial process.”

Police said Williams was driving in a vehicle near Pacific Avenue and Konocti View Road in Clearlake on the night of Friday, April 5, when another vehicle pulled up next to hers and one of the occupants of the second vehicle shot at Williams' vehicle, striking her one time, before fleeing the scene.

A short time later, just before 11 p.m., police were dispatched to the 15300 block of Pacific Avenue on the report of multiple gunshots being heard in the area.

On the way there, they were notified that the shooting victim, Williams, was being transported to Adventist Health Clear Lake Hospital. She died there a short time later.

Clearlake Police identified Hueners as the suspect shortly after the shooting.

Then, at around 1 a.m. Monday, April 8, Lakeport Police officers responded to a hotel in Lakeport for a noise complaint and contacted three people, including Hueners and Sandoval.

Watson said they also found a firearm there in a parking lot away from the room where the men were found. It is believed that the 9 millimeter handgun was previously in the Hueners’ possession and it matched the caliber of the firearm used to kill Williams. Watson said it is still under investigation as to whether this was the same gun used in the killing.

Regarding the relationship between Sandoval and Hueners, “It’s believed that they are friends. That's still under investigation as far as what they were doing together,” said Watson.

As to the motive for Hueners’ killing of his friend’s mother, “That’s still under review,” said Watson.

While there are theories, nothing has been concluded upon and an intensive investigation is continuing, Watson added.

Court documents show that Hueners has a previous felony conviction from January of 2022 for assault with a firearm in Lake County.

The charges against Hueners are murder; the attempted murder of Nino Davis; assault with a firearm on Williams; assault with a firearm on Williams; assault with a firearm on Davis; discharge of a weapon at an occupied vehicle; two counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm; two counts of being a felon in possession of ammunition; and making criminal threats against Spencer Williams.

He’s also facing special allegations of personally and intentionally discharging a firearm to kill Elizabeth Williams, use of a firearm, personal use of a firearm, personally inflicting great bodily injury on Williams and having been convicted of a prior serious or violent felony — the January 2022 assault with a firearm conviction.

The charging document also offers a special allegation of having several factors in aggravation, including that the crime involved great violence, that Hueners was armed, the victim was particularly vulnerable, he induced others to participate in the commission of the crime, that he threatened witnesses or otherwise interfered with the legal process, and that he was convicted of other crimes for which consecutive sentences could have been imposed but for which concurrent sentences are being imposed instead.

Other aggravating factors included in the charging document are that the manner in which the crime was carried out indicates planning, sophistication and professionalism, the conduct was violent and indicates a serious danger to society, Hueners’ prior convictions as an adult or sustained petitions in juvenile delinquency proceedings are numerous or of increasing seriousness, he was on probation or parole when the crime was committed and his prior performance on probation or parole was unsatisfactory.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with additional information about the firearm believed to have been used in the crime.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

East Region Town Hall meets May 1

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 29 April 2024
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The East Region Town Hall, or ERTH, will meet on Wednesday, May 1.

The meeting will begin at 4 p.m. at the Moose Lodge, located at 15900 Moose Lodge Lane in Clearlake Oaks.

The meeting will be available via Zoom. The meeting ID is 830 2978 1573, pass code is 503006.

ERTH’s guest speaker on Wednesday will be Lake County Community Development Director Mireya Turner, who will discuss the Shoreline Area Plan update, which will guide county decisions on land use, open space, circulation, housing, conservation, safety, noise and environmental justice.

Agenda items also include a special presentation by Northshore Fire Protection District Chief Mike Ciancio.

ERTH’s next meeting will take place on June 5.

ERTH’s members are Denise Loustalot, Jim Burton, Tony Morris and Pamela Kicenski and Maria Kann.

For more information visit the group’s Facebook page.

How ‘going under’ is getting greener

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Written by: Laura López González
Published: 29 April 2024
Anesthesia can be up to 2,500 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. UCSF doctors are leading a national movement to protect patients – and the environment.



UC San Francisco Sustainability Director Gail Lee, REHS, MS, HEM, sat before her laptop and clicked open a file. At first, it didn't seem like much. Just one of a dozen medical supplies purchasing reports she read regularly as part of tracking sustainability efforts throughout UCSF and its associated health facilities.

But then, something caught her eye.

The data was from 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, UCSF Health medical centers, like others, followed public health guidance to postpone non-emergency surgeries.

Surgeries had plummeted but, looking at the report in front of her, it appeared that orders for the anesthesia gas nitrous oxide had not. That was odd.

“It seemed like we were still buying a lot of it – and right in the middle of COVID when we’d reduced elective surgeries,” remembers Lee, who also holds a U.S. Green Building Council LEED Green Associate certification in sustainability practices. “I thought, how can that be?”

She pulled UCSF Health purchasing reports for the last few years and, opening up her email, attached them to a message. She began to type.

“Seema, could you look into this? Why we are purchasing so much nitrous oxide even though we stopped elective surgeries?”

No surprise, a mystery

Modern anesthesia is a San Francisco invention. In 1962, UCSF Anesthesiology Professor Edmond “Ted” Eger II, MD, and colleagues developed the first dosing method. Still the gold standard today, Eger took the guesswork out of anesthesia by establishing the concentration of any gas needed to “put a patient under.”

But the ethers Eger made a career out of measuring are also potent greenhouse gases, trapping heat in our atmosphere like a thick blanket. In California, this fuels more frequent and deadlier wildfires and heat waves, for instance. Globally, health care makes up about 5% of greenhouse emissions. The U.S. churns out more of these emissions than any other nation.

It’s why UCSF Anesthesiology Professor Seema Gandhi’s fight against climate change began nearly a decade ago in the operating room.

What started as small pilot projects conceived of during long nights as the anesthesiologist on duty have blossomed into new ways of reducing anesthesiology’s greenhouse emissions. Today, Gandhi is UCSF Heath’s first medical sustainability director. The techniques she and colleagues have developed help UCSF prevent hundreds of metric tons of emissions a year and have saved the university millions of dollars. Her work to green her field is also helping other University of California campuses curb their emissions and is shaping anesthesiology care nationally.

So, it was no surprise when Lee reached out about the mysterious discrepancy between the number of surgeries and amount of anesthesia being purchased.

Why tackling emissions is part of quality care

Anesthesiologists often rely on a handful of gases to “put patients under.” Which gas they choose depends on a patient’s health and the surgery.

Take three of the most commonly used gases: sevoflurane, desflurane and nitrous oxide. An hour’s use of sevoflurane lets off about as much greenhouse emissions as an 18-mile commute from Orinda to San Francisco. Driving 200 to 400 miles produces about the same emissions as an hour’s use of desflurane. Nitrous oxide is particularly nefarious. It is nearly 300 times more potent than the most common greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, and also nibbles away at the ozone layer in the atmosphere, which protects us from some of the sun’s harmful rays.

“Some of the choices we make as anesthesiologists contribute to emissions and climate change, which affects the patients we swore to take care of," says Gandhi. “As a doctor, I took the Hippocratic oath, which says ‘Do no harm.’”

Pipes and plot twists

By 2019, Gandhi had already successfully advocated for UCSF Health to stop using desflurane widely, a move bolstered by research showing that most patients didn’t need it when other anesthetics were available. Today, UCSF’s decision to discontinue widespread use of desflurane is equivalent to taking 240 cars off San Francisco streets every year.

Around the same time, Gandhi and her colleagues developed a system to alert clinicians to sevoflurane overuse while in surgery: If doctors used too much or too high a flow, a bright yellow box popped up on operating room monitors, allowing doctors to dial back the flow unless medically needed.

So, in 2022, when the mysterious discrepancy caught Lee’s eye, she emailed Gandhi figuring she might have ideas.

Gandhi, it turned out, had been reading new studies on nitrous and saw a potential connection. As the COVID-19 pandemic dominated headlines, researchers globally began releasing startling findings about the gas. “Evidence was coming out that, even in state-of-the-art hospitals with the latest technology, the majority of nitrous oxide was leaking and wasted.” Gandhi says. “Some hospitals were losing up to 98% of the gas they were purchasing.”

Gathering a team, Gandhi decided to dig back into UCSF Health’s digital archives. They wanted to compare nitrous oxide purchases with clinical use over five years, from 2018 to 2022.

The work was long and tedious.

“We looked into our electronic health records system, which is the most granular, purest data we could get on how much nitrous oxide was actually delivered to the patient,” Gandhi says.

The case of the disappearing nitrous

By February 2023, she finally had an answer.

“Between 80% to 90% of the nitrous was never reaching patients,” she says. “There was no problem in the system, it was just the nature of the compressed gas.”

Hospitals store nitrous in large canisters in storage rooms. Pipes in the walls ferry the gas from these cylinders through facility pipes to operating rooms and, finally, to patients. Gandhi’s research confirmed what others were seeing: Nitrous was escaping at every twist, turn and nozzle.

In short? Lee’s blip in the data was the tip of the iceberg. It was a global problem.

Shut off valve

In San Francisco’s Western Addition neighborhood, UCSF’s Mount Zion Medical Center peppers six city blocks. Its glass and stucco buildings rise above sidewalk cafes and old Victorian homes.

Inside, Gandhi and UCSF sustainability analyst Kaiyi Wang walk down a long, white and brown hospital hallway, followed by a local CBS television news crew. The duo turn a corner and Gandhi reaches for her badge, unlocking heavy steel double doors.

Entering an operating room, Gandhi and Wang stop below a series of hoses dangling from the ceiling. The camera pans upwards. A green hose delivers oxygen to surgery patients, a white hose acts as a vacuum during procedures. One hose, a blue one, the newscaster explains, is missing.

Nitrous oxide.

Writing the next chapter: UCSF is first U.S. academic medical center to stem leaks

In June 2023, UCSF Health became the first academic medical center to shut down its nitrous oxide pipes for good based on Gandhi’s findings, switching to less leak-prone portable cylinders.

The shift, captured by the television cameras, has reduced emissions by the equivalent of 2.69 million miles driven, or 340 trips around the Earth, and saved the university $1.2 million so far.

With the support of UCSF Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care Chair Michael Gropper, MD, PhD, Gandhi has worked with architects and planners to ensure new UCSF hospitals forgo piped nitrous infrastructure.

She is now creating a manual to help smaller health systems throughout the country do the same. Meanwhile, Gandhi’s low flow alert system for sevoflurane has been adopted at four other University of California health systems, including UCLA Health, UC Davis Health and UC San Diego Health – helping the University of California reduce emissions even further.

In October 2023, the American Society of Anesthesiologists unanimously endorsed the use of the lower doses of sevoflurane on which Gandhi’s alert system is based. The move paves the way for tens of thousands of anesthesia providers across the country to adopt Gandhi’s approach to reducing emissions from sevoflurane in their facilities.

If UCSF’s pioneering discoveries of the 1960s penned modern anesthesiology’s introduction, Gandhi, her colleagues and UCSF anesthesiology trainees are writing its future. Today, no anesthesiology resident graduates without taking classes in environmental stewardship.

And in a world full of big problems like climate change, Gandhi likes to remember she started small.

“I began with pilot projects. Now those pilots have grown into programs used by hospitals across California and are shaping health care nationally,” she says. “One project can have a huge impact.”

“What I have learned in my journey of sustainability is that people want to do the right thing. Sometimes, they just need the tools to do it.”

Laura López González writes for the University of California San Francisco.

Cybersecurity researchers spotlight a new ransomware threat – be careful where you upload files

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Written by: Selcuk Uluagac, Florida International University
Published: 29 April 2024

 

Avoiding iffy downloads is no longer enough to ensure this doesn’t happen. Olemedia/iStock via Getty Images

You probably know better than to click on links that download unknown files onto your computer. It turns out that uploading files can get you into trouble, too.

Today’s web browsers are much more powerful than earlier generations of browsers. They’re able to manipulate data within both the browser and the computer’s local file system. Users can send and receive email, listen to music or watch a movie within a browser with the click of a button.

Unfortunately, these capabilities also mean that hackers can find clever ways to abuse the browsers to trick you into letting ransomware lock up your files when you think that you’re simply doing your usual tasks online.

I’m a computer scientist who studies cybersecurity. My colleagues and I have shown how hackers can gain access to your computer’s files via the File System Access Application Programming Interface (API), which enables web applications in modern browsers to interact with the users’ local file systems.

The threat applies to Google’s Chrome and Microsoft’s Edge browsers but not Apple’s Safari or Mozilla’s Firefox. Chrome accounts for 65% of browsers used, and Edge accounts for 5%. To the best of my knowledge, there have been no reports of hackers using this method so far.

My colleagues, who include a Google security researcher, and I have communicated with the developers responsible for the File System Access API, and they have expressed support for our work and interest in our approaches to defending against this kind of attack. We also filed a security report to Microsoft but have not heard from them.

Double-edged sword

Today’s browsers are almost operating systems unto themselves. They can run software programs and encrypt files. These capabilities, combined with the browser’s access to the host computer’s files – including ones in the cloud, shared folders and external drives – via the File System Access API creates a new opportunity for ransomware.

Imagine you want to edit photos on a benign-looking free online photo editing tool. When you upload the photos for editing, any hackers who control the malicious editing tool can access the files on your computer via your browser. The hackers would gain access to the folder you are uploading from and all subfolders. Then the hackers could encrypt the files in your file system and demand a ransom payment to decrypt them.

Today’s web browsers are more powerful – and in some ways more vulnerable – than their predecessors.

Ransomware is a growing problem. Attacks have hit individuals as well as organizations, including Fortune 500 companies, banks, cloud service providers, cruise operators, threat-monitoring services, chip manufacturers, governments, medical centers and hospitals, insurance companies, schools, universities and even police departments. In 2023, organizations paid more than US$1.1 billion in ransomware payments to attackers, and 19 ransomware attacks targeted organizations every second.

It is no wonder ransomware is the No. 1 arms race today between hackers and security specialists. Traditional ransomware runs on your computer after hackers have tricked you into downloading it.

New defenses for a new threat

A team of researchers I lead at the Cyber-Physical Systems Security Lab at Florida International University, including postdoctoral researcher Abbas Acar and Ph.D. candidate Harun Oz, in collaboration with Google Senior Research Scientist Güliz Seray Tuncay, have been investigating this new type of potential ransomware for the past two years. Specifically, we have been exploring how powerful modern web browsers have become and how they can be weaponized by hackers to create novel forms of ransomware.

In our paper, RøB: Ransomware over Modern Web Browsers, which was presented at the USENIX Security Symposium in August 2023, we showed how this emerging ransomware strain is easy to design and how damaging it can be. In particular, we designed and implemented the first browser-based ransomware called RøB and analyzed its use with browsers running on three different major operating systems – Windows, Linux and MacOS – five cloud providers and five antivirus products.

Our evaluations showed that RøB is capable of encrypting numerous types of files. Because RøB runs within the browser, there are no malicious payloads for a traditional antivirus program to catch. This means existing ransomware detection systems face several issues against this powerful browser-based ransomware.

We proposed three different defense approaches to mitigate this new ransomware type. These approaches operate at different levels – browser, file system and user – and complement one another.

The first approach temporarily halts a web application – a program that runs in the browser – in order to detect encrypted user files. The second approach monitors the activity of the web application on the user’s computer to identify ransomware-like patterns. The third approach introduces a new permission dialog box to inform users about the risks and implications associated with allowing web applications to access their computer’s file system.

When it comes to protecting your computer, be careful about where you upload as well as download files. Your uploads could be giving hackers an “in” to your computer.The Conversation

Selcuk Uluagac, Professor of Computing and Information Science, Florida International University

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

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