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"Salinas, Gilbert"
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EX-GANGSTERS SHOW WOUNDS
2000
\"You might look at a gang member and think: He's cool, he's riding in a nice car, selling drugs, he has a nice-looking girl,\" said Gilbert Salinas, the Teens on Target Program Coordinator who was paralyzed by a gunshot wound at 16. \"But this is the other side. If you are involved in the gang lifestyle, you will eventually pay a price. You will end up dead, in jail, paralyzed or blind.\" Though gang violence is not as severe in Santa Clarita as it is elsewhere in Los Angeles County, Salinas reminded the group that a 20- year-old member of a Newhall gang was gunned down by rival gang members in front of his apartment two years ago. photo; Photo: (color) Gilbert Salinas, 25, paralyzed by a gunshot at 16, speaks to youths about the dangers of gang life Saturday in Newhall. Tom Mendoza/Staff Photographer
Newspaper Article
Daughter says her mom was swindled out of her home in Salt Lake City
2010
\"[Jennifer Thamert] could have gone and rented an apartment and had nearly $50,000 in the bank,\" said Abraham Bates, [Josie Thamert]'s lawyer. \"Instead, (the defendant) sold her home and made a $70,000 profit.\" \"She told me someone had kicked her out of her house. I assumed she had borrowed money and couldn't pay it back,\" Josie Thamert said. \"It disgusted me to find out that somebody can do that as a living. That they can go home and sleep knowing they've ruined someone's life.\" [Gilbert Salinas] referred all comments to his attorney but told KSL \"there are two sides to every story\" and called the suit \"frivolous,\" \"ridiculous,\" \"unfounded,\" and based on \"circumstantial\" evidence.
Newspaper Article
This is how they roll
2007
\"We're right in their faces,\" says [Gilbert Salinas]. \"We're in chairs. We got shot. We're in chairs because we made bad decisions.\" \"When I worked in other schools, we'd have presentations and they were not that effective,\" [Irella Martinez] says. \"But with them, it's not a presentation, it's a real intervention.\" \"You make the best of your situation,\" Salinas says of being in a wheelchair. \"Some people say it's the worst situation, but I say it's the best.\"
Newspaper Article
Homeless ex-cowboy gets early Christmas gift ; Two local men give him a bicycle to help him collect aluminum cans
2003
[Ron Teel] paid $25 for an old three-wheel bicycle and realized it needed repairs he couldn't afford. He called Tom Neagli, owner of Bay Area Schwinn, and told him about the bike, and about Cowboy. Neagli repaired the bike at no charge, estimating the value of the service at $233. When Cowboy first saw the bike, he was excited. He told Neagli and Teel he was glad to see it had a basket where he could store cans. [Adam Cuellar], a homeless man known as Cowboy, uses the bike given to him by two residents last week as an early Christmas gift to collect aluminum cans.
Newspaper Article
Military notes
2005
Christian is the daughter of Rosie Palmatier of Alice and a 1998 graduate of Alice High School. Smith is the son of Denita Smith of Ingleside. [Felix R. Hogan] is the son of Myra Adami of Alice and the grandson of Ray Adami of Freer. Petty Officer 2nd Class Gilbert Salinas, as part of Medical Department personnel from USS Abraham Lincoln, and helicopter crewmembers teamed up to transport injured Sumatran civilians in the wake of the deadly tsunami on the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group personnel supported disaster relief and humanitarian assistance efforts in Aceh Province, Sumatra, from the start of the new year until the end of the first week in February. Training Squadron 27 had a Change of Command ceremony Thursday at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi. Cmdr. John P. Griffin was relieved by Cmdr. Matthew P. Ahern as commanding officer of VT-27.
Newspaper Article
One final salute Police from across state hear eulogies for helper, mentor, friend
2009
George Gongora/Caller-TimesHundreds of officers from law enforcement agencies statewide leave Bay Area Fellowship church after services for Lt. [Stuart J. Alexander] Monday morning, preparing for a procession to San Antonio for burial at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery.; George Gongora/Caller-TimesPallbearers wheel the casket of Lt. Stuart J. Alexander to the hearse Monday, preparing to go to San Antonio for burial at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery.; As the casket carrying the casket of police Lt. Stuart J. Alexander was wheeled outside Bay Area Fellowship, hundreds of people lined both sides of the sidewalk and some saluted. The body was taken to Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery.; A Corpus Christi police officer leads a riderless horse past officers who gathered for the funeral of Lt. Stuart J. Alexander at Bay Area Fellowship and after the casket was in the hearse.; A procession about two miles long including officers from throughout the state passes the Crosstown-SPID interchange. Police from Galveston, Dallas, Irving, Arlington, Kingsville and Houston were among those paying respects to Lt. Stuart J. Alexander, who died in the line of duty Wednesday.George Gongora/Caller-Times; As taps played in the background during the funeral service ceremony for Lt. Stuart J. Alexander, many people saluted.; The Patriot Guard Riders and the Reguladores line the sidewalk leading to Bay Area Fellowship with American flags as police officers, family and friends attending the funeral service for Lt. Stuart J. Alexander walk by. This group of police officers were on their way into the service.; Todd Yates/Caller-TimesA Galveston police officer joins officers from throughout the state saluting Lt. Stuart J. Alexander while taps plays after his funeral services at Bay Area Fellowship on Monday.; Todd Yates/Caller-TimesA Galveston police officer joins other officers from all over the state saluting Lt. Stuart J. Alexander while taps plays after his funeral services at Bay Area Fellowship on Monday.; Todd Yates/Caller-TimesJeff Knobeloch of Corpus Christi, a volunteer with the Patriot Guard Riders, stands at attention along Interstate 37 near Mathis on Monday as the funeral procession of Lt. Stuart J. Alexander goes by en route to Fort Sam Houston.; Todd Yates/Caller-Times Members of the Patriot Guard Riders pack up their American flags after the start of funeral services for Lt. Stuart J. Alexander on Monday at Bay Area Fellowship. The riders placed a volunteer and a flag at every mile for 93 miles along Interstate 37 starting at Highway 77 Monday to honor Alexander.; Todd Yates/Caller-TimesVolunteers and members of the Patriot Guard Riders line the entrance to Bay Area Fellowship with 93 American flags as mourners enter the church for the funeral services of Lt. Stuart J. Alexander on Monday.; Todd Yates/Caller-TimesCorpus Christi Police officer J. Tello is comforted by police chaplain [Chuck Freeman] after the funeral service for Lt. Stuart J. Alexander on Monday.
Newspaper Article
Dictan formal prision a complice de \Gero Gil\
1999
MEXICO.- El juez Decimo Segundo de Distrito, Gerardo Davila Gaona, dicto ayer auto de formal prision al policia judicial de Quintana Roo, Jorge Perez Macias, senalado como un trabajador del narcotraficante norteamericano Gilbert Salinas o Gilberto Garza Garcia, alias \"El [Gero Gil]\". Para acompanar a Gilbert Salinas, Perez Macias recibio una pasaporte alterado con el nombre de Jose Martinez Pena -expedido en la Delegacion Gustavo A. Madero-, una licencia de conducir y dos tarjetas de credito. Jorge Perez fue en algun tiempo policia judicial federal comisionado en Tamaulipas.
Newspaper Article