Here are the morning’s top stories on Thursday, May 15, 2025…
- Across California, families have had to fight, sometimes for years, just to learn what happened to their loved ones in police custody. Darryl Mefferd wasn’t under arrest when he died after an encounter with Vallejo police in 2016. Local officials ruled his death was an accidental drug overdose and for years, that’s where the story ended. But new records and never before seen body camera footage are challenging that version of events.
- Facing a massive $12 billion dollar budget deficit, Governor Gavin Newsom unveiled his revised budget on Wednesday. It includes scaling back safety-net health insurance for undocumented immigrants, cutting coverage for weight loss drugs like Ozempic and reducing home health services. But the governor also wants to fast-track a contentious project lawmakers have debated in California for over half a century.
Video Shows Death Vallejo Police Concealed For Years
In 2016, Darryl Mefferd encountered Vallejo police officer Jeremy Callinan in the Sutter Solano Medical Center parking lot. He slipped his arms out of a baggy black jacket and waved them around, saying something about epilepsy and operations and people recording him. Callinan told Mefferd to calm down and squeezed his hands behind his back, locking them together with handcuffs.
What happened next in leading to Mefferd’s death is now coming into more detail, thanks to new records and never seen body camera footage. Open Vallejo spoke with forensic experts who said they believe Mefferd’s death was likely a homicide.
In November, the Solano County District Attorney’s Office released to Open Vallejo more than 40 minutes of footage from Callinan’s body-worn camera and in-car camera from the night of the incident, as well as hours of surveillance footage from the scene; more than three hours of audio recordings, including dispatch communications and interviews with Callinan, witnesses, and Mefferd’s family members; and a 577-page binder of investigative reports and autopsy records. The Fairfield Police Department, Solano County Sheriff’s Office, and California Department of Justice have also released records from the Mefferd case in the months since Open Vallejo first uncovered the fatal incident in an investigation published last June, in which three experts said they would have ruled the death a homicide. That story was based on the public records available at the time, interviews with family members, and a confidential source with knowledge of the investigation who was not authorized to speak publicly about it.
The city of Vallejo has yet to release any records from the Mefferd case.
Governor Newsom Unveils Budget Gap, Aims to Cap Undocumented Health Care
California’s fiscal outlook has taken a turn for the worse, Gov. Gavin Newsom said as he unveiled an updated 2025–26 state budget plan on Wednesday with a projected $11.9 billion shortfall.