Here are the morning’s top stories on Friday, June 21, 2024:
- FBI agents raided Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao‘s home on Thursday morning. The raid of Thao’s home was just one of a number conducted in Oakland by the FBI. The agency wouldn’t release details of the searches, just saying that agents conducted a court-authorized law enforcement action.
- The California Public Utilities Commission has unanimously voted against a proposal by AT&T to end landline service in much of California. Critics of the proposal argued the move might have left many older people and residents in remote rural areas vulnerable in the event of a natural disaster.
- School districts in California are under pressure to reduce chronic absenteeism. But getting kids back to the classroom can be a challenge for districts with limited resources.
- Baseball fans are saying bye to the “Say Hey Kid” Willie Mays. Thursday night’s San Francisco Giants game was held at the historic Rickwood Field in Birmingham Alabama. It’s the former home of the Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro Leagues, the team which Mays made his professional debut with in 1948. And fans were also able to take in the game back in San Francisco at Oracle Park.
FBI Agents Raid Home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao
Federal agents raided Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao’s home on Thursday morning, throwing the embattled leader into further turmoil as she faces an upcoming recall election.
The FBI conducted “court-authorized law enforcement activity” in an area of Maiden Lane where the mayor lives, a representative for the agency said in a statement, but would not provide more details.
Neighbors heard FBI agents arrive around 6 a.m. and knock loudly on the door of the home, they told a KQED reporter at the scene.
Shortly after 10 a.m., about two dozen agents carried multiple boxes out of the home, put the boxes in cars and left. They did not comment to reporters other than to say they had cleared the scene and no agents remained.
Still Need Your Landline? California Regulators Stop AT&T From Pulling The Plug
California’s Public Utilities Commission rejected AT&T’s application to stop providing landlines and other services in areas where there is no other option.