Jesse DeNatale Takes a Good Look at ‘The Wilderness’

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Musicians don’t like to hear their record described as “Great to put on while I’m making dinner.” Truth notwithstanding, it just isn’t what they want to hear. But how would Jesse DeNatale feel if someone said his latest record, The Wilderness, was “Perfect for those frost-covered mornings when I’m in my truck headed to the jobsite, leaning hard on a cup of coffee, when a mama quail runs her brood across the road and I suddenly wonder about … connections.” Would that rankle? Or was that the intention all along?

A dozen tracks of folky rock chug along with a reliable backbeat, because The Wilderness is the work of an accomplished musician. But beyond that, it’s the work of an honest-to-God country poet. “Beside You,” to choose a favorite, has a bittersweet, Springsteenian holiday feel, full of lonely characters and hard-won redemption with an upbeat tempo. Mary’s in Mexico, a lonely doorman falls in love, someone’s doing hard drugs, and through it all the piano chimes out a carol. Yet the most striking lyrics of all are in the lush, swaying title track:

I’m standing in the forest with no place to hide
They said life is short—but maybe it’s wide
I’m steady as a mountain that’s made up of sand
I look to you now
I look to you now

Sounding high on Van Morrison and homegrown in some moments, clear as beach wind in others, DeNatale has tales to tell. The gravelly “bard of Tomales Bay” is a master of fine-tuned observation—the blur of supernatural into natural, of every day into everything, and so The Wilderness is rich with North Bay place-names: the Great Highway, the Miwok Trail, San Andreas. DeNatale also heeds the call of activists to “say their names” with “The Ballad of Oscar Grant.” “It ain’t nothin’ new, but it’s wrong,” he sings over a deep and meditative bass line. “The camera is a witness, just like you.” It isn’t a record about looking away.

A certain kind of masculine Northern California post-hippie is the type who’s worked pretty hard to protect his own gentle nature. This guy has toughed out his own right to shed a tear sometimes, even nurtured his silly side. Such a character probably drives the above-mentioned truck and self-describes as an artist, an eco-warrior, a pagan, or all three. Maybe this record was made for them; certainly, it was made by a Sebastopol dad. There’s even an ode to strong coffee: “Step Lively” starts out at “that cafe around the corner” and then broadens out into a typically DeNatale philosophical mood. “Step lively, because that’s the way the world’s going to need you. And if you’re undecided, just do what you do best.” It’s not your local redneck’s truck music, but … it’s great truck music.

The gem of the record is the closing track, “Paradise.” A glimmering harmonica waltz, “Paradise” goes to an emotional place California may, at the end of 2020, finally be ready to inhabit. The song is anthemic, with an almost “Auld Lang Syne” feeling. It shepherds the listener through the sorrow and loss the West Coast has collectively experienced and doesn’t shy away from imagery many may have avoided these past few years. Ash. A blackened dream. Treasures lost forever, but in some ways, still right here. The words pierce, but the music carries you. “I’m going out where I belong/I’ll keep you with me in a song/And sing it like a cloud into the air,” he sings through what sounds like a tin can. A bright guitar keeps time under layers of reverb, and the hope-filled chorus floats on a wash of organ. In the end, Jesse DeNatale has earned the right to say “Smoke and flame will always disappear.”

‘The Wilderness’ is out now on Blue Arrow Records, available for download on Bandcamp, Spotify, Apple Music, and more.

Culture Crush: North Bay Groups Open December with Several Virtual Events

As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to make in-person gatherings a tricky endeavor in the North Bay, several local events boasting music, art, literature and other delights are happening online this week. Here’s a round up of what’s worth looking forward to.

Virtual Celebration
On the southern edge of the Point Reyes National Seashore, a community of care givers and conservationists have come together to create Commonweal, an organization dedicated to health, art, education, the environment and justice. Each winter, the community comes together for a festive celebration, though this year’s annual gathering will be “Joining Hands Virtually” with an online event featuring a short video featuring images of the local land, keynote speakers, music and optional small group conversations. “Joining Hands Virtually: Our Commonweal Winter Celebration” takes place on Thursday, Dec. 3, at 5:30pm. Festive dress encouraged. Free, donations welcome. Commonweal.org.

Virtual Concert
Festival Napa Valley, the world-class summertime food and wine festival, has been producing online content and at-home experiences since canceling its in-person events this year. Over 1 million households in more than 50 countries around the globe viewed Festival Napa Valley’s inaugural virtual concert, “One Night, Many Voices,” last month. Now, Festival Napa Valley presents “Songs of Gratitude,” a virtual concert featuring performances by the likes of award-winning mezzo-soprano Kelley O’Connor, the Friction String Quartet and a vocal ensemble featuring Napa County high school students; all recorded at iconic Napa Valley venues. The virtual event streams on Saturday, Dec. 5, at 6pm. Free. Festivalnapavalley.org.

Virtual Recital
For 20 years, Marin’s volunteer Mill Valley Philharmonic has produced professional-quality orchestral programs and performed for people of all ages and means in their own communities. This year, the orchestra decided to postpone live concerts until further notice due to Covid-19, though the group has taken to virtual performances, lectures and more. Next up for the Mill Valley Philharmonic is a live-streaming “Saturday Salon” virtual recital featuring a classical program that ranges from Johann Sebastian Bach to John Williams. The musicians perform as solos and duos live from their own homes when the recital happens on Saturday, Dec. 5, at 8pm. Free. RSVP at Millvalleyphilharmonic.org.

Virtual Auction
The Sebastopol Center for the Arts has supported local artists and the community through exhibitions and educational programs for three decades. With the world in lockdown, the center’s staff knows that people need access to the arts more than ever before, and center is asking for support in offering these programs with its inaugural virtual “SebARTS Auction: Give. Believe. Inspire.” The silent and live auctions will help to fund Sebastopol Center for the Arts’ ongoing offerings, as well as the center’s new distance learning program for local school children that began in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Bid online now in the silent auction and tune in to see local celebrity Ziggly Eschliman lead a live virtual auction on Sunday, Dec. 6, at 5pm. Register at Sebarts.org.

Virtual Class
There’s no better way to appreciate the Laguna de Santa Rosa than to embark on a kayak adventure through the watershed. However, due to the Laguna’s unpredictable nature, it can be difficult to plan a successful trip. Not only does the water level of the Laguna drastically change, its many routes can make it a maze for the uninitiated. That’s why Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation’s Community Education Manager Allison Titus is hosting a “Kayaking the Laguna” webinar, sharing resources, tips and tricks for exploring the Laguna by boat on Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 2pm. Free, registration required. Lagunafoundation.org.

Virtual Reading
Native Californian Obi Kaufmann is an avid explorer and writer whose books examine the state’s most precious resources. His first two books, The California Field Atlas (2017) and The State of Water (2019) presented Kaufmann’s visions of ecological preservation and restoration. Now, Kaufmann offers another bold look into California’s natural wonder in his new book, The Forests of California. The book interlaces accessible writings with Kaufmann’s watercolor maps and trail paintings to bring the state’s forests to life in the readers’ imagination. Kaufmann reads from the new book and discusses his visions in a virtual event with the Marin Art & Garden Center on Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 5pm. Free, registration required. Maringarden.org.

Cannabis Documentary: ‘Smoke: Marijuana + Black America’

As a criminal defense lawyer, my pal, Stewart Hanlon, represented for many years his client, Black Panther Party icon, Elmer Geronimo Pratt. “Geromino” served 27 years in prison, eight of them in solitary, before his release in 1997. As a kid, Hanlon wanted little, if anything, to do with any Blacks. “Growing up, I was afraid of Black men,” Hanlon told me the other day.

What the new, bold, cannabis documentary, Smoke: Marijuana + Black America, makes abundantly clear is that the U.S. government’s propaganda machine demonized Black men at the same time it demonized marijuana. According to the myth, African-American males on dope would assault white women. For decades, way more Blacks than whites have been arrested for possession of small amounts of pot and sentenced to big prison terms.

Smoke (BET.com) tells a very American story with indelible images and memorable voices, plus archival footage (from Reefer Madness, for example) and contemporary clips of Kamala Harris, the Vice President–elect, and New Jersey Senator Cory Booker who gently chides Joe Biden for failing to endorse the legalization of marijuana. Maybe Joe will wise up, aim to redress the “sins of the past,” and help bring “restorative justice” to the nation.

Part of the appeal of Smoke is that it includes a cross-section of Black Americans: senators such as Booker, congresswomen such as Oakland’s Barbara Lee, plus convicts, dispensary owners and hip-hop artists who helped spread the “gospel of weed” through music, lyrics and their own outsized personalities.

The cannabis documentary begins in the present and dips into the past, making mention of performers such as Cab Calloway, Bob Marley, and Peter Tosh, and drug warriors such as Harry Anslinger who started the assault on marijuana in the 1930s when the Prohibition of alcohol ended and G-Men wanted jobs. Some viewers of Smoke might be surprised to hear that the War on Drugs, which President Nixon began in the 1970s and which intensified under Bush I and Bush II, continued under Clinton and Obama.

The film could be depressing, but the music, the narration, and the big, beautiful faces of Black men and Black women provide a sense of joy. On camera, Senator Booker sounds heroic as does Kimberly M. Foxx, the State’s Attorney for Cook County, Chicago, who changed course dramatically after prosecuting Black teens for years. She saw the light.

Also, it’s not possible to listen to Corvain Cooper without a sense of outrage. Cooper was sentenced to life without parole for violating the federal marijuana law. He prays Donald Trump will grant him clemency and that he’ll be a free person again. If you aren’t yet sure if Black lives matter, watch Smoke and get smoked, too.

Jonah Raskin created the story for the marijuana feature, “Homegrown.”

Essential Kitchen Gear: Chefs Recommend Tools of the Trade

Sometime in the early part of the last decade, I had the pleasure of interviewing the late great Anthony Bourdain. I asked the Kitchen Confidential author and TV host if I should step out of the purview of my own palate and try something new.

“I think if I’m an advocate for anything, that would be it,” Bourdain told me. “I mean, everybody else in the world has been cooking longer than us and chances are they’ve been cooking better than us. And what’s the downside, what can you lose in the end, how bad could it be?”

Well, Tony—bad—like, really bad. Especially if I cooked it. That is, prior to my tenure apprenticing with my gourmand father. He taught me how to cook when I came to him in my mid-30s, the prodigal son returned, finally ready to learn his ways. It’s been more than a decade since and now I’m a credible gourmand myself. My pop’s first piece of kitchen gear advice was “Get a good knife, keep it sharp and learn how to actually use it,” which I stand by. I also agree with Julia Child, who famously said, “I think every woman should have a blowtorch.” Actually, I think everyone should have a blowtorch, and perhaps someday we all will.

When it comes to less-flammable kitchen essentials, Joseph Zobel, chef and owner of Fern Bar at The Barlow in Sebastopol, makes a case for mixing it up—literally.

“My favorite kitchen gadget would be the Vitamix,” Zobel says. “It’s a versatile blender that can be used to purée, emulsify and grind. It can be used for a multitude of applications and is invaluable in our kitchen.”

Matt D’Ambrosi, Chef at Blue Ridge Kitchen, also at The Barlow, echoes the sentiment.

“Vitamix is basically a commercial-grade blender,” D’Ambrosi says. “I love the Vitamix because I love making sauces and purées. The Vitamix blends everything so smooth and silky, leaving you with a wonderful texture.”

Blake Dan from GrillSimply.com, a site dedicated to “providing real and genuine advice and guides around cooking, grilling and barbecue” strongly advocates acquiring an instant-read thermometer as part of your kitchen gear tool kit.

“There are so many different ways to test the doneness of meats, some more creative than others,” Dan says. “You might use the finger-touch test to determine steak doneness, for example. However, there is no better, easier or safer way to do it than by using an instant-read thermometer. These are so affordable for the difference they make in the kitchen when it comes to determining the doneness and internal temperature of your food.”

As Dan points out, food cooked at the appropriate temperature will result in a more moist and succulent outcome, which is naturally more delicious than over or undercooked meat.

“Plus, when it comes to food safety, you can always be sure to eat it when it’s above the food safety advised minimum temperature,” Dan says. “Although you might get pretty good using other methods to test meat doneness and temperature, using an instant-read thermometer is always accurate and by far the easiest. Definitely an underrated tool in the culinary world.”

Beyond the tools, there are the tips—Blue Ridge Kitchen’s D’Ambrosi thinks you should spice it up this time of year.

“As for a holiday cooking tip, I would have to say break out your holiday spice such as clove, cardamom cinnamon or star anise,” he says. “Add them to a good braised dish like a short rib or lamb shank. Cooking with any of these spices always reminds me of the holidays.”

And, if you really want to optimize your holiday cooking experience, Fern Bar’s Zobel suggests not stalling when it comes to doing the dishes.

“As far as kitchen tips, keep it simple and clean as you go,” Zobel says. “Don’t let the dishes pile until the end of the meal. You’ll thank yourself when all is said and done!”

Blue Ridge Kitchen offers takeout from 11:30am to 8pm, seven days a week. Visit brkitchen.com. Fern Bar offers takeout for the holidays. Visit FernBar.com.

Open Mic: Some Poems Are Bad

“Some Poems Are Bad” by Saundra Rae Davies

This poem is bad
It’s not sad
Cause I’m mad
Madly madly mad

Been had
By many
Not just poems

Had a lover once
Twice or more
Truth be told
I wasn’t nice

I was seductive
Fake
Like a snake
Writhing toward my victims

Biting a ration of a body
Tastes bitter
No compassion
Just passion

Some poems are bad
They make me tell the truth
Sometimes I’m bad

Saundra Rae Davies lives in San Anselmo.

Letters to the Editor: The Right Line

Shame on you Jonah; a hip cat like yourself should know better than to keep pawning off the myth that B. Dylan wrote the lyrics: “To live outside the law you must be honest.” (“Funny Figures,” Rolling Papers, Nov. 25)

Even a fool like myself knows they were said by Robert Keith (Brian’s pappy) in the 1958 film, The Lineup, directed by Don Segal.

The story goes, after watching the movie and listening to Robert Keith utter the line: “When you live outside the law you have to eliminate dishonesty,” Bob got a big one and after cleaning it up a bit, used it in “Absolutely Sweet Marie.”

But as Paul McCartney once said, “Everybody pinches something from someone.”
I say everybody is right.

David Dale
Sonoma Valley, Sonoma

NorBays Celebrate an Unprecedented Year of Music

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Each year since 2005, the NorBays have recognized and celebrated the best bands of the North Bay as voted by the readers of the Bohemian and Pacific Sun.

In this unprecedented year of 2020, North Bay musicians and bands continue to safely create excellent music online and on record while they endure a pandemic that has wiped out their main source of income, namely concerts and other social activities that continue to be canceled or postponed nine months into the shutdown.

Given the fact that venues have largely been closed to the public since late March, it may seem that 2020 was a quiet year in music, though North Bay musicians were among the first professionals to transition to a virtual platform for live events, and they have continually found ways to entertain the public from a distance. As the year closes out, it’s more important than ever to recognize and support the creative folks who make the North Bay special.

With that in mind, the 2020 NorBays are going live and asking the readers to once again take to the polls to vote for their favorite North Bay bands in several genres.
This year’s NorBays boasts more than a dozen musical categories, including Blues, Country, Folk, Hip-Hop, Jazz, Indie, Rock, Reggae, Punk, Metal, Electronica, Singer-songwriter, Americana and R&B.

Click here to find the 2020 NorBays ballot and enter your favorite local band from Sonoma, Napa or Marin Counties in each category. Please enter one name per category. Multiple “stuffed” votes from the same person will be recognized and thrown out. Voting ends Wednesday, Dec 16, at 12pm. Winners will be announced in the Dec 23rd NYE issue.

For those who need a refresher in North Bay music makers who have kept working in 2020, here are a dozen bands and performers that made headlines in the Bohemian and Pacific Sun this year.

In February, Sonoma County singer-songwriter Gina Marie Lo Monaco unveiled a new series of single releases after a decade away from the microphone.

In March, North Bay singer-songwriter and rancher Ismay merged her folk music and love of nature in an enthralling, full-length debut album, Songs of Sonoma Mountain.

In April, alt-pop quartet Lungs and Limbs released a new album of lush electronica and ethereal vocals, Great Goodbye, that somehow predicted the social isolation the North Bay was about to experience.

Also in April, Marin County musician Colin Schlitt, bassist and occasional vocalist for eclectic alternative-pop ensemble El Radio Fantastique, turned up the reverb with his solo project Peppermint Moon and released a digital EP, A Million Suns.

Former NorBay Award-winner and thoughtful Hip-Hop artist Kayatta released her debut, Beautiful and Messy, on June 19; a date which also marks Juneteenth, the oldest nationally-celebrated remembrance of the ending of slavery in the United States.

Also in June, alternative singer-songwriter and Petaluma native Matt Reischling debuted his new solo project, Matt Reischling & the Black Box, with the album Spirit Holiday; a melodic and lyrically reflective collection of original tunes (and one David Bowie cover) that looks back on Reischling’s adventures and imagines new ones.

In August, the North Bay big band King Street Giants released their third album of New Orleans–style jazz, Everything Must Go, which marked the band’s first release to feature vocals and the first release under the group’s current name.

In September, North Bay classically trained pianist and songwriter Eki Shola concluded a musical journey that began after the 2017 Tubbs Fire with the release of her full-length electronica-jazz album, Essential.

Also in September, San Rafael string band Late for the Train charmed North Bay audiences with their debut album, Plant It or Build It, a folksy collection of romantic songs full of thoughtful lyricism.

September also saw the debut collaborative LP from Marin County-based Rock & Roll Hall of Fame guitarist Elvin Bishop and Sonoma County-based Blues Hall of Fame harmonica player Charlie Musselwhite, 100 Years of Blues. The down-home collection of music features Bishop and Musselwhite trading songs over the course of 12 spirited tracks that consist of nine originals and three reimagined blues classics.

This fall also saw West Marin world music artist Jai Uttal–best known for albums that blend reggae, jazz and rock ’n’ roll–making music, running virtual Kirtan music camps and performing virtual concerts over Zoom.

Finally, Marin-based singer-songwriter Tim Bluhm paid tribute to Merle Haggard with his fourth solo record, Hag Heaven, released in late November.

Surveymonkey.com/r/Norbays2020

State Extends Tax Deadlines, Announces Grants for Small Businesses

The state of California extended income tax deadlines for some small businesses and will issue some $500 million in relief grants to help small businesses stay afloat during the coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday.

The state will extend the income tax deadline by three months for small businesses that are filing less than $1 million in sales tax, according to Newsom.

Companies filing up to $5 million will have access to existing interest and penalty-free payment agreements while larger businesses can access interest-free payment options.

According to Newsom, the deadline extension and penalty-free payment options will save small businesses billions during the pandemic.

“We have to lead with health to reopen our economy safely and sustainably while doing all we can to keep our small businesses afloat,” Newsom said.

Small business owners will also have access to grants of up to $25,000 to help prevent them from closing, according to Newsom. The COVID Relief Grant program, totaling $500 million, will distribute funds to eligible small businesses by early next year.

Some 4.1 million small businesses operate in California, employing 7.2 million workers, nearly half of the state’s workforce, according to Newsom.

“By providing potentially billions in immediate relief and support, our small businesses can weather the next month as we continue partnering with the legislature to secure additional funding and investments in small businesses in the new year,” he said.

‘Winter Lights’ Shines On in Santa Rosa

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Each winter season, downtown Santa Rosa makes the most of its Courthouse Square with a massive tree-lighting ceremony and party dubbed Winter Lights.

This year, the lights are still on, but Santa Rosa’s signature holiday event is a very different experience, one that has adapted to the new Covid-19 reality to keep the merriment socially distant and safe.

“The Winter Lights event, for a number of years, has been centered on lighting up the big tree in Courthouse Square and it brings everyone together to kick off the holiday season,” says Cadance Hinkle Allinson, executive director of the Santa Rosa Downtown District. “As we all know, 2020 has been a difficult year for our community, for every community really. We knew we couldn’t bring people together safely in the same way, but we wanted to still provide that fun, festive atmosphere for everyone.”

For 2020, Winter Lights is a five-week long celebration encompassing the entire downtown Santa Rosa corridor along Fourth Street and surrounding Courthouse Square.

Running now through Jan. 1, Winter Lights features holiday experiences and sights such as festive art installations. To add to the ambiance of the event, there are street buskers and a small local maker market on the Square each weekend.

“It looks different but it’s still a great way for people to come downtown,” Allinson says. “They can dine outside, they can go shopping if they’re comfortable with that, but if not, they can just walk around the area and explore.”

The Winter Lights art installations that are on display now include “Stars of Hope,” created by Santa Rosa artist Jane Ingram Allen, which can be seen at 620 Fourth Street. The lighted artwork features stars hanging in a storefront window, and the piece encourages viewers to reflect on the past year and express hope for the new one.

One block down, at 720 Fourth Street, is Santa Rosa artist Anne Baumgartner’s “Looking for the Light,” which uses light to appear totally different at daytime and at nighttime. Other spots to check out include Jeju Way, next to Russian River Brewing Company, which has been transformed into a Winter Wonderland with lights and art. There is also “Ethereal Strength”(pictured), by Santa Rosa artist Lacy Anderson, that sits between two redwoods in Courthouse Square, and there’s an artsy scavenger hunt in which families search downtown businesses to spot the holiday gremlins created by Sonoma County artist and musician Gio Benedetti.

Downtown Santa Rosa is also offering a full holiday dining and shopping directory online, listing local businesses that are offering Winter Lights–related sales and other seasonal promotions.

“This has been a tough year for our retailers and restaurants, and one of the great things we can do with Winter Lights is try to bring more people downtown so they can experience the local shops we have there,” Allinson says. “From my perspective, watching our business owners, their resolve and resilience has been amazing and I think they have that because of the community that supports them.”

Winter Lights runs through Jan. 1 in downtown Santa Rosa. For details and the downtown holiday directory, visit Downtownsantarosa.org.

Vallejo Settles Excessive Force Case Against Now Sonoma County Deputy for $750,000

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A current Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy with a history of excessive force complaints was the principal officer named in a civil rights lawsuit settled by the City of Vallejo for $750,000 this week.

Attorneys for Carl Edwards sued the City of Vallejo after Spencer Muniz-Bottomley and three other Vallejo police officers severely beat Edwards in July 2017 after allegedly mistaking him for a suspect.

In October 2018, the Vallejo Times-Herald reported that Bottomley was no longer employed by the Vallejo Police Department. Bottomley has been employed by the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office since 2018.

When asked whether any use-of-force complaints have been filed against Bottomley since he joined the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office, spokesperson Misti Wood told the Bohemian, “The Government Code prevents us from releasing information from Deputy Bottomley’s personnel file.”

Senate Bill 1421 is a state law that requires agencies to release some records from an officer’s personnel file if they are involved in an officer-involved shooting or use of force resulting in great bodily injury or death; Wood said that Bottomley has not been involved in any incidents that meet those thresholds.

Court documents reveal that a judge in Edwards’ case against Vallejo granted parts of Edwards’ motion for the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office to turn over Bottomley’s application for employment as well as any subsequent or prior complaints against the officer.

Michael Haddad, Edwards’ attorney, told the Bohemian that those documents were released confidentially and are not available to the public. Still, he added, Bottomely’s track record is troubling.

“Based on the cases I’ve handled against him, seeing how he operated in Vallejo, I am concerned for the residents of Sonoma County that he may encounter,” said Haddad.

The Bohemian asked via email whether the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Department was aware of the use-of-force complaints and lawsuits that occurred against Bottomley when they hired him. Wood responded that the office cannot share that information because it is part of his personnel file.


According to a recent job posting provided by Wood, the agency’s background check process includes an assessment of prior work history, verifying educational experiences, court reports, public records searches, and more. The process can take three to five months and includes gathering a significant amount of information from candidates and speaking to former employers, friends, family members, as well as polygraphs. Deception is grounds for disqualification, even after hire.

Another part of the job posting states that applicants “shall not have been convicted of a felony in this state or any other state or in any federal jurisdiction.”

The Vallejo incident involving Edwards began when a mother called 911 to report that a man dressed in black jeans and a white tank top was shooting rocks from a slingshot at her sons. The caller told officers Mark Thompson and Bret Wagoner that Edwards was not the suspect, but the officers radioed to Bottomley to go contact Edwards, describing him as a man wearing brown pants and a gray shirt. Body-worn camera footage reveals that Bottomley approached Edwards as Edwards repaired a fence on his property and almost immediately placed him in a chokehold.

The other officers then joined Bottomley in beating Edwards as he lay on the ground. At one point, as they move to place Edwards in handcuffs, an officer says, “If you have to break, break it,” referring to Edwards’ arm.

Edwards sustained a fractured nose, multiple lacerations and contusions, and injury to his shoulder. Haddad said, “I’ve been doing this almost 30 years and I can count on one hand the cases I’ve seen where someone got beaten up as badly as Carl did, especially when they were totally innocent.”

Bottomley is the subject of at least three other excessive-force complaints filed during his time as an officer in Vallejo, where he was employed from July 2015 until 2018.

The most high-profile case took place in March 2017, when Bottomley was filmed beating Dejuan Hall, a 23-year-old homeless man who was shouting, “I am God,” before and during the encounter.

Haddad also represented Hall in a civil rights case filed against Bottomley and the other officers involved. In a rare occurrence, city officials settled the case for $75,000 before it advanced to a lawsuit.

Haddad told the Vallejo Times-Herald, “This usually indicates the city realizes there is a significant liability.”

As of June 2019, despite the settlement in the civil rights case, Hall was in county jail awaiting a trial stemming from the incident, for which he was charged with resisting arrest and trespassing. His criminal lawyer Amy Morton told the Vallejo Times-Herald, “Mr. Hall is in custody because he has no place to go. He’s not a danger, just gravely [mentally] disabled.”

In April 2016, Bottomley and four other officers allegedly kicked, punched and struck Derrick Lamoris Shields with flashlights while he was lying face down on the ground.

The case alleged, “As a result of the police beating, plaintiff lost consciousness, experienced bruises all over his body and spine, swollen face, fractured jaw, abrasions, and broken teeth.”

Shield’s lawsuit was dismissed from court in November 2017 after the court could not serve documents to Shields, who failed to provide a change of address.

In August 2015, officers answered two calls for a welfare check on Jimmy Brooks, whose mother reported he was feeling suicidal. According to Brooks’ claim, he saw officers approaching his home and felt unsafe. He walked towards his mother’s house and hid under her porch for two hours. When he regained a sense of safety, he emerged from the porch and was swarmed by a group of officers who struck him with batons.

According to the complaint, “Plaintiff Brooks was then arrested and at no point offered medical treatment for his injuries. As a result of the [officers] use of excessive force, Plaintiff Brooks suffered a fractured right ankle and fractured right fibula. Plaintiff Brooks also received several stitches to mend lacerations on his legs and upper body.”

Bottomley was one of seven officers named in the case, though at the time it was settled for $50,000, his name and two other officers’ names had been removed.

EDITOR’S NOTE, NOV. 27: The ninth paragraph of this article has been updated to clarify Wood’s response to a question from the Bohemian about the Sheriff’s Office’s knowledge of Bottomley’s record when they hired him. Wood says that agency cannot disclose whether they knew of complaints against Bottomley when they hired him. The paragraph previously stated that Wood did not respond to that question.

Jesse DeNatale Takes a Good Look at ‘The Wilderness’

Musicians don’t like to hear their record described as “Great to put on while I’m making dinner.” Truth notwithstanding, it just isn’t what they want to hear. But how would Jesse DeNatale feel if someone said his latest record, The Wilderness, was “Perfect for those frost-covered mornings when I’m in my truck headed to the jobsite, leaning hard on...

Culture Crush: North Bay Groups Open December with Several Virtual Events

Local music, art, literature and other delights can be found online this week.

Cannabis Documentary: ‘Smoke: Marijuana + Black America’

As a criminal defense lawyer, my pal, Stewart Hanlon, represented for many years his client, Black Panther Party icon, Elmer Geronimo Pratt. “Geromino” served 27 years in prison, eight of them in solitary, before his release in 1997. As a kid, Hanlon wanted little, if anything, to do with any Blacks. “Growing up, I was afraid of Black men,”...

Essential Kitchen Gear: Chefs Recommend Tools of the Trade

Sometime in the early part of the last decade, I had the pleasure of interviewing the late great Anthony Bourdain. I asked the Kitchen Confidential author and TV host if I should step out of the purview of my own palate and try something new. “I think if I’m an advocate for anything, that would be it,” Bourdain told me....

Open Mic: Some Poems Are Bad

"Some Poems Are Bad" by Saundra Rae Davies This poem is bad It’s not sad Cause I’m mad Madly madly mad Been had By many Not just poems Had a lover once Twice or more Truth be told I wasn’t nice I was seductive Fake Like a snake Writhing toward my victims ...

Letters to the Editor: The Right Line

Shame on you Jonah; a hip cat like yourself should know better than to keep pawning off the myth that B. Dylan wrote the lyrics: “To live outside the law you must be honest.” (“Funny Figures,” Rolling Papers, Nov. 25) Even a fool like myself knows they were said by Robert Keith (Brian’s pappy) in...

NorBays Celebrate an Unprecedented Year of Music

'Bohemian' readers can go online now and vote for their favorite North Bay bands in several genres.

State Extends Tax Deadlines, Announces Grants for Small Businesses

The state of California extended income tax deadlines for some small businesses and will issue some $500 million in relief grants to help small businesses stay afloat during the coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday. ...

‘Winter Lights’ Shines On in Santa Rosa

Annual holiday event is a very different experience in 2020.

Vallejo Settles Excessive Force Case Against Now Sonoma County Deputy for $750,000

A current Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy with a history of excessive force complaints was the principal officer named in a civil rights lawsuit settled by the City of Vallejo for $750,000 this week. ...
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