Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 6, 2018

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Tristan Beaudette, 35, was fatally shot in front of his two young daughters while on a camping trip in Southern California

 (GoFundMe) Two young girls, 2 and 4, witnessed in horror as their father was shot and killed while on a camping trip in Southern California, according to reports

Tristan Beaudette, 35, of Irvine, Calif., was bleeding from a chest wound when deputies found him in a tent early Friday at a Malibu Creek State Park campsite

The girls were unharmed.  "Tristan was out doing something he adored in life being in the outdoors with his two young girls," a GoFundMe page for the Beaudette family says

 He took the girls camping so his wife, a doctor, could study for an exam, according to the reports

He worked as a scientist for a pharmaceutical company and he and his wife were about to move to the Bay Area

 BRONX BOY, 15, KILLED IN 'BRUTAL' STABBING, NYPD SAYS; HELP SOUGHT IN ID'ING ALLEGED ATTACKERS  "And then it was all taken away, by a fatal gun shot in the middle of the night, in front of his two young daughters," the GoFundMe page said

"Not a second goes by that we aren't grappling with the senselessness of this crime

"  Deputies said they had no leads, no suspect and no motive, KCBS Los Angeles reported

 "We are working this as a homicide at this point," Lt. Rodney Moore of the L.A

County Sheriff's office told The Los Angeles Times. "We are gathering evidence . It will take some time

"  NEW VIDEO SHOWS WOMAN TRYING TO RESIST YOUTUBE STUNT THAT KILLED BOYFRIEND  The paper reported that the area where the shooting unfolded is frequented by hikers and day trekkers

 The park was the backdrop for the TV series "M.A.S.H.," as well as the movies "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and the original "Planet of the Apes," according to the paper

For more infomation >> Scientist shot dead in front of daughters, 2 and 4, during California camping trip - Duration: 2:26.

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What If California Left The USA? - #CaliExit - Duration: 4:15.

After Donald trump wont he US election, The Yes California independence campaign wanted

to begin an initiative to make it so that California became separate from the rest of

the united states.

The hashtag caliexit began trending worldwide.

Its extremely unlikely that California would separate from the united states, but lets

imagine, at least for the next few minutes, what would happen if it did?

Today, Life's biggest questions asks, what if California left the united states?

Hello and welcome back to lifes biggest questions, the channel that imagines the impossible.

I'm your host, charlotte dobre, make sure you leave a like, subscribe and ask us a question

in the comments below.

California would not be the first state to leave the united states.

Back in the 1860s, 11 southern states seceded from the union, but then they re-joined after

the civil war.

For califoria to leave the united states, they would have to vote on a ballot in favour

of leaving the united states.

What the Yes California Independence campaign wanted California to be recognized as a nation

within a nation.

The example they used was Scotland within the united kingdom.

But for the sake of this video, we will examine the possibility of California becoming its

own sovereign nation.

Instead of paying their taxes to the American government, they would keep all the taxes

collected within their own state.

This would result in a substantial budget increase because Californians have paid more

taxes than its received in federal payouts every year since 1995.

That probably has to do with the fact that there are a large number of millionares and

billionares living within California.

Hollywood and silicon valley provide a large fraction of tax dollars to the American government..

The tax dollars that were formerly sent to the us government would be used to build better,

futuristic infrastructure.

Imagine this, High speed hyperloop trains would be built across the country, making

long commutes a thing of the past.

The country would be adorned with skyscrapers that use green energy, with vegetation and

plants growing within them.

Californians would probably develop their own form of currency, perhaps a crypto currency.

But as we saw with brexit, leaving the European union drastically affected the UK economy.

The pound dropped to a 31 year low.

As a result, Britains economy was no longer the 5th biggest in the world, it became the

6th.

That being said, the US dollar as a whole will also go down in value.

One downside to California leaving the rest of the us, is that Californians actually don't

get their water from their own state.

Most of the water Californians drink comes from Colorado, specifically the Colorado river.

The snow and rain falls in the Colorado mountains, then flows down to California.

Its been that way for 94 years.

But if California left the united states, who knows what would happen, Perhaps Colorado

would divert the water back to its own state, leaving California with the task of finding

a different source.

Perhaps all those billions of tax dollars would have to be spent on importing water

from Colorado, or even Canada.

Perhaps California and Canada will become close trade partners, and import food, water,

gas and other goods within them.

That being said, Californias agriculture industry is huge, the biggest in the united states.

It supplies much of the food the rest of Americans eat.

If America shut off their water, California could respond by shutting off the food supply,

creating a trade war.

This would cause the price of fruits and vegetables for the rest of America would skyrocket.

Furthermore, the taxes the rest of americans pay will also skyrocket to make up for the

fact that they aren't receiving taxes from the wealthy Californians anymore.

Maybe another economic recession would also take place.

Furthermore, Not everyone would give up their American passports willingly.

Like with other examples where countries have broken apart, there would likely be many Californians

who would flee California to keep being americans.

The thing is, the united states doesn't even recognize secessionists.

Following the civil war, in1869, the supreme court made it so that any state that rebelled

against the united states would have to win a war against the rest of the country, in

order to be considered its own sovereign nation.

And although California does have a huge military presence, its an American military presence

all the same.

California would have to commandeer US bases like the Vandenberg air force base and threaten

the united states with ballistic missiles.

Yes, California does have its own state military reserve, but it likely couldn't win in a

war against America as a whole.

In conclusion, A caliexit probably wouldn't happen in real life, but that's what people

said about brexit and a donald trump presidency.

Who knows what the future will bring.

For now, I'm charlotte dobre, and you've been watching lifes biggest questions.

If you liked this video, you'll love our playlist, biggest what ifs.

For more infomation >> What If California Left The USA? - #CaliExit - Duration: 4:15.

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Incidente deja un muerto y dos policías heridos en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:35.

For more infomation >> Incidente deja un muerto y dos policías heridos en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:35.

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California, choc in campeggio: 35enne ucciso a colpi di pistola davanti alle sue bimbe - Duration: 2:45.

Lo hanno ucciso a colpi di pistola, davanti alle sue bimbe di due e quattro anni, mentre si trovava nella propria tenda in un'area di campeggio all'interno di un parco naturale

Così è morto venerdì scorso, in circostanze decisamente misteriose, il 35enne Tristan Beaudette

Era mattina presto quando si è consumato il delitto, all'interno del Malibu Creek State Park, in California

Tristan è stato freddato da almeno un colpo di pistola che lo ha raggiunto alla schiena, esploso da qualcuno che si trovava nei pressi della tenda che l'uomo aveva montato per sé e per la sua famiglia

Come riporta l'edizione originale dell'Huffington Post, le due figlie non sono rimaste ferite ma potrebbero essere rimaste in stato di choc dopo aver assistito alla morte del padre

L'area di campeggio, insieme ad altre strutture adiacenti, è stata chiusa almeno fino al prossimo 28 giugno per consentire le indagini

Gli inquirenti sembrano brancolare nel buio: pur senza rilasciare dettagli, è stato infatti reso noto che al momento non ci sono sospetti, tracce o un possibile movente per l'omicidio

Tristan, laureato in chimica e dipendente di una grande azienda farmaceutica, lascia la moglie Erica e le due bimbe

La sua famiglia ha lanciato una raccolta fondi sulla piattaforma GoFundMe per pagare le spese del funerale

 

For more infomation >> California, choc in campeggio: 35enne ucciso a colpi di pistola davanti alle sue bimbe - Duration: 2:45.

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Thousands Flee As Flames Race Across Dry Rural California - Duration: 4:02.

For more infomation >> Thousands Flee As Flames Race Across Dry Rural California - Duration: 4:02.

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California's Supreme Court can kill Cal-3 quickly and save us all a lot of trouble - Duration: 7:01.

The Cal-3 ballot measure set to be voted on in November needs a mercy killing from the California Supreme Court, and if it comes fast enough, it could save a lot of expense and wasted effort

 The proposition, designed by venture capitalist Tim Draper to split California into three states, may or may not be the most sensible way to divide up our diverse and powerful state

But the legal barriers to its enactment are overwhelming. Advertisement  For example, will Congress, which must approve the creation of new states out of an old one, go along, given the partisan politics of everything these days and the impact of four new senators on the balance of power in the U

S. Senate? Will consent of the state Legislature be required (and forthcoming), or would voter approval through the initiative process suffice?  The legal fate of the initiative will probably never even get to questions of legislative approval

One way or another, the California Supreme Court will be called upon, and it will almost certainly rule that the way in which Draper is trying to create three Californias violates the state Constitution and has no place on the ballot to begin with

Advertisement  First, the California Supreme Court has long recognized a rule that voters cannot approve as a constitutional amendment any measure that "revises" rather than "amends" the state Constitution

The line between revision and amendment can be murky in some cases, but it is not murky here

As the state Supreme Court explained in a 1990 case, Raven vs. Deukmejian, "far-reaching changes in the nature of our basic governmental plan" amount to a revision rather than an amendment

The proposal to create three Californias is about as far-reaching a change in the nature of the state as one can imagine

Share quote & link  The nonpartisan state Legislative Analyst's Office has analyzed the Cal-3 measure and its report makes the "far-reaching" consequences of the proposal clear

 The fiscal effects of the split would be enormous because of disproportionate per capita personal income (the Bay Area is rich; the San Joaquin Valley is poor)

There would be major difficulties concerning state universities, prisons and public education

The split would also prompt fundamental changes in the provision of health and social services, not to mention a cataclysmic battle over water

Advertisement  In other words, the proposal to create three Californias is about as far-reaching a change in the nature of the state as one can imagine

If it were to succeed, the state would cease to exist.  The second legal flaw, as attorney Bob Wolfe first pointed out, is technical but important

Two types of initiatives are allowed to go on the California ballot, those that add new state statutes and those that amend the state Constitution

An initiative that adds a new statute needs fewer signatures to qualify for the ballot than one that amends the Constitution

When Draper first tried to split the state — into six parts — his measure was framed as a constitutional amendment, and he failed to gather enough signatures to qualify it for the 2016 ballot

He changed tactics with the Cal-3 initiative; it is a proposed statute, and it met the lower threshold of petition signatures

Enter the Fray: First takes on the news of the minute from L.A. Times Opinion »  Now, if California voters cannot "revise" the state Constitution through a constitutional amendment, they also can't do it through a mere statute

Monumental changes to the nature of the state require more than just 50% + 1 of the votes cast in a single election for a measure that qualified for the ballot with a relatively low number of signatures

"Revisions" instead require a state constitutional convention.  The California Supreme Court allows for pre-election review of ballot measures, and it is possible to file a challenge directly in that court

Removing a measure from the ballot before a vote is appropriate when a measure cannot legally be put before the voters, as is manifestly the case with Draper's initiative

 Let's hope someone files that suit and spares everyone a potentially expensive and nasty campaign for nothing

 Richard L. Hasen is a professor at UC Irvine School of Law and the author of "The Justice of Contradictions: Antonin Scalia and the Politics of Disruption

"

For more infomation >> California's Supreme Court can kill Cal-3 quickly and save us all a lot of trouble - Duration: 7:01.

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California retirement home shooting: Firefighter killed, 2 others wounded | American Today... - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> California retirement home shooting: Firefighter killed, 2 others wounded | American Today... - Duration: 2:26.

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California wildfire burns 12 buildings, threatens hundreds - Duration: 2:59.

 CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif. –  A wind-driven wildfire destroyed a dozen buildings and threatened hundreds of others Sunday as it raced across dry brush in rural Northern California

 The Pawnee Fire, which broke out Saturday near the small community of Clearlake Oaks, was one of four wildfires burning in largely rural areas as wind and heat gripped a swath of California from San Jose to the Oregon border

 The blaze destroyed 12 buildings and threatened an additional 600 as it burned out of control across about 2

5 square miles (6.5 square kilometers). It is north of the wine country region where devastating wildfires killed 44 people and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses last October

 Authorities ordered people to evacuate all homes in the residential area of Spring Valley and surrounding areas

Evacuation centers for residents and animals were being opened. No injuries were reported

 "What we're stressing is that people, when they get the evacuation order, they heed it immediately and get out and stay out until it is safe to return," California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Battalion Chief Jonathan Cox said

 "This is one of four large fires burning in Northern California. It's a good reminder that fire season is upon us," he said

 Another blaze consumed 5.5 square miles in nearby Tehama County but did not burn any buildings

Some homes were threatened and some had been evacuated, Cox said, although he did not have specific numbers

It was partially contained.  Another smaller fire, also in Tehama County, was nearly halfway contained after consuming less than a mile of brush

The fourth fire, in neighboring Shasta County, smaller still, was three-fourths contained

 The Pawnee Fire was being driven by erratic winds, low humidity and high temperatures

Firefighters battled it in a rugged area that made it difficult to get engines and other equipment up close

 "It's kind of the worst possible combination," Cox said.  Fire officials had no estimate on when it might be contained and didn't yet know what caused it

 Matthew Henderson, who was in the area taking photographs, said he saw the fire jump a road at one point, briefly cutting off access to part of Spring Valley until firefighters pushed it back

 More than 230 firefighters using helicopters, bulldozers and other equipment were battling the blaze

For more infomation >> California wildfire burns 12 buildings, threatens hundreds - Duration: 2:59.

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Thousands flee as flames race across dry rural California - Duration: 4:12.

Thousands flee as flames race across dry rural California

CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif.

–  Wind-driven wildfires destroyed buildings and threatened hundreds of others as they raced across dry brush in rural Northern California.

The Pawnee Fire, which broke out Saturday near the community of Clearlake Oaks, has destroyed 12 buildings and threatened an additional 600.

As of Sunday, there was no containment and it burned across about 12 square miles.

Authorities ordered people to evacuate all homes in the Spring Valley area, where about 3,000 people live.

"What we're stressing is that people, when they get the evacuation order, they heed it immediately and get out and stay out until it is safe to return," state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Battalion Chief Jonathan Cox said.

"This is one of four large fires burning in Northern California.

It's a good reminder that fire season is upon us.".

Erratic wind and heat gripping a swath of California from San Jose to the Oregon border drove the flames, which were north of the wine country region where devastating wildfires killed 44 people and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses last October.

Farther north, a fire spanning about three-quarters of a mile in Tehama County destroyed "multiple residential and commercial buildings," Cal Fire said.

But firefighters appeared to be making good progress — the Stoll Fire was halfway contained and some evacuees were allowed to return home, authorities said.

A second fire in Tehama County consumed 5.5 square miles, but no buildings were reported burned.

The so-called Lane Fire threatened 200 structures and some homes had been evacuated, Cox said.

It was 10 percent contained.

A fire in neighboring Shasta County grew to 1.6 square miles and was 20 percent contained.

The so-called Creek Fire had damaged no structures but did prompt evacuations.

The cause of each blaze was under investigation Sunday.

No one was reported hurt.

More than 230 firefighters using helicopters, bulldozers and other equipment were battling the Pawnee Fire in a rugged area that made it difficult to get equipment up close.

"It's kind of the worst possible combination," Cox said.

Matthew Henderson, who was in the area taking photographs, said he saw the fire jump a road at one point, briefly cutting off access to part of Spring Valley until firefighters pushed it back.

For more infomation >> Thousands flee as flames race across dry rural California - Duration: 4:12.

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Volkswagen California - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen California - Duration: 1:02.

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Officials report "zero containment" of 1,500-acre blaze Pawnee Fire in California - Duration: 1:06.

The Pawnee Fire in Lake County, California has rapidly outpaced efforts to combat it, according to CBS San Francisco

The inferno spread rapidly early Sunday morning, consuming 1,500 acres and razing at least a dozen structures

A spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection told CBS San Francisco there is "zero containment" of the blaze that threatens an additional 600 structures, forcing the evacuation of the entire Spring Valley development

 Accelerated spreading of the flames has been attributed to extremely high temperatures, low humidity and whipping winds

Resources dispatched to the disaster include firefighters on the ground, bulldozers and air tankers

 Emergency crews from the nearby Bay Area have been called for reinforcements

For more infomation >> Officials report "zero containment" of 1,500-acre blaze Pawnee Fire in California - Duration: 1:06.

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With A Deported Father, California Teen Lives Life Between Borders - Duration: 8:10.

With A Deported Father, California Teen Lives Life Between Borders

Every other weekend, I pack a suitcase: a sketchbook, laptop, homework, clothes and my navy blue U.S.

passport.

That's my ticket to see my dad, who has been living alone in Tijuana, Mexico, for the past six years.

Apá, as I call him, was deported when I was 11 years old and my family's life has never been the same.

Separation defines our routine — the stress, the traffic, the hellos and the goodbyes.

Every time I see my dad, I get emocionada — like excited but emotional at the same time.

Apá is 46 years old.

He's not very tall, but he didn't seem so short six years ago.

That's when my childhood ended.

I was 10, asleep in bed, when the sound of police sirens outside my home woke me up.

A friend started a fight while visiting my aunt at the house.

The "compadre" got rowdy and threatened my mom.

That's when my dad grabbed a gun to protect us and got in trouble.

It's hard to talk about this night with my family.

My dad was arrested and charged with assault with a firearm and possession of an unregistered weapon.

He was married to my mother, an American citizen born in New York, but Apá says he never applied for citizenship, which he now regrets.

"You think you are established [in the country] and that nothing can happen," he says.

"I never thought.".

My dad was tried and found guilty in June of 2010 of being in possession of and brandishing an unlawful weapon.

It was the day of my fifth-grade graduation.

Within a year, Apá was deported to Tijuana.

Back then, U.S.

deportations were on the rise and peaked in 2012 when more than 400,000 people were deported.

Apá doesn't have family in Tijuana, but he chooses to live there to be as close as he can to us in Los Angeles.

He worries about us a lot.

"It's just living in a constant fear.

not being able to do anything in case anything happens," he says.

It's also really hard for my mom, Misty.

All of her family lives on the East Coast, so when Apá was deported, her life changed dramatically.

"I would talk to him about everyday things, like the house needs fixed, problems that would arise with the car," she says.

"He was part of my backbone to rely on, and now I became like the head of the household.".

And I became the person she leans on.

When she comes home, she tells me about her day at work.

My mom works two jobs.

Some nights she gets home after 11 p.m., which means I babysit my 11-year-old brother after school.

I have had to take on more responsibility in the household and have had to be strong for both my mom and my brother.

I grew up with both parents at home, but our dad living across the border is all my brother, Tines, knows.

It doesn't seem to bother him.

"It's not a bad or good feeling," he says.

Tines says he doesn't feel any different from other kids.

"No, because I feel the same," he says.

A lot of kids travel back and forth to Mexico, he says, and that's true, but not as often as we do.

My parents have talked about moving to Spain, so we can be together again, but with school and money, that's still up in the air.

So we keep on living life between borders using daily morning phone calls, text messages and weekend visits to hold us together.

This is our normal.

The daily calls are nice, but I don't get hugs.

We can't stop for breakfast together before school anymore.

Living without us these past six years has also taken its toll on my dad.

Yet as soon as we greet each other, it's like we were never apart.

Apá calls us mis enanos, or "my shorties.

He always asks about school.

My dad wants to know about my future and the letters from colleges.

With college ahead and a career, I don't know if I will ever live with my father again.

And on June 9, Apá won't get to see me walk onstage at my high school graduation.

But I'm going to pack my cap and gown that weekend, so we can celebrate together in Mexico when I see him again.

For more infomation >> With A Deported Father, California Teen Lives Life Between Borders - Duration: 8:10.

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Democrat Harley Rouda will take on California GOP Rep. Dana Rohrabacher after opponent concedes - Duration: 0:37.

Gov. Jerry Brown will decide whether to put an initiative on the ballot that could put California on daylight saving time year-round (Elise Amendola / Associated Press) Californians would be asked in a November ballot measure whether to end the biannual practice of moving their clocks ahead and back to comply with the Daylight Saving Time Act, under a bill the Assembly approved Thursday and sent to Gov

Jerry Brown for consideration. If an initiative is approved by voters, the Legislature would be given the power, with a two-thirds vote, to initiate an end to the practice of advancing the clock by one hour on the second Sunday each March, and moving the clock hands back an hour on the first Sunday in November

For more infomation >> Democrat Harley Rouda will take on California GOP Rep. Dana Rohrabacher after opponent concedes - Duration: 0:37.

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Making a Will in California - The Law Offices of Andy I. Chen - Duration: 8:32.

Hey everybody, it's Andy and welcome again to my office in Modesto, California. I'm

an attorney licensed to practice law in California as well as New York. In this

video I am going to go over how you make a will in California. So, just to be very

clear, when I talk about wills, I'm referring to, you know, basically, the

document that people create when they get to the end of their life, when they

think they're about to pass away, and in the document, or in their will, they talk

about who they want to leave stuff to, how much to leave each person, etc. So

this video is going to go over how you generally create a document like that in

California. This is actually the second, er, sorry the first video rather, the

first video in a series of two that where I go over the validity of wills

generally. This video is going to go over how to create a will in California. The

second video which I'm going to play a little bit of actually right over here.

I'll link it down with the description for you also, but in the second video, I

go over how California law determines whether or not a will is valid or not.

So if you're watching this video, it might be worth it I think to watch this

video as well as this one, like the one that I'll link down below, to get the

full picture of how to create a will in California that, you know, is going to be

correct. So, I think, well, in general, this is true, but I think in particular it's

true for wills. Whenever you write a document like a letter, a contract, an

email or something, it's important to get it right, but the thing is at the end of

the day, you will hopefully be around to clarify whether any sort of,

you know, misunderstanding, to explain things if it weren't clear. A will is

obviously going to be very different because, you know, if you don't make your

will clear, for instance, or you don't comply with what, you know, you're

supposed to do, you know, in order to make a well valid, you will basically not be

able to fix it, you know, because you're obviously deceased. And the kind of

ramifications of that generally will be left to your heirs, your friends ,your

family, your children, etc to deal with. So a will in particular is a document that

you definitely want to get correct because if you don't, then the stuff that

you want to leave to your spouse, your children, etc. possibly might not go to

your spouse or your children. So, a will, you know, basically it's

something that you definitely want to get correct and do as much research as

you can. Hire a lawyer, etc., whatever works for you. So all of

that said then, this video is going to go over two sections of the California

Probate Code and they are going to be section 6110 as well as section 6111.

6110 is going to be the more heavily used section, I think. 6111 is much

shorter. Actually they're both short. 6110 is like that. 6111, I think

is a little bit shorter, but 6111 is not going to be used probably as

frequently I guess in my experience, but you know your experience might be

different. So, anyway, all of that said then, let's go ahead and delve into

section 6110. So 6110 has several criteria that a will has to meet in

order to be recognized as valid in California. Number one is that the will

has to be in writing. 6111 goes over handwritten wills, but,

you know, when I see in writing it could be handwritten, it could be typed, etc., but

basically it cannot be oral. An oral will is called, you know just in case you're

interested, a nuncupative will. California does not

recognize those, but other states do recognize them for whatever reason. So,

but California does not. So anyway, the first kind of criteria is that the will

in question has to be in writing. Number two is that the will has to be signed by

either the testator, the testator's conservator, or by somebody in the

testator's presence at the testator's direction. What does all that mean? So

first things first, the testator is the person who is creating the will. So the

thing is, if you're creating a will for yourself,

you're the testator. If you're helping your mom or your dad or whoever

create a will, they are the testator. So the testator is going to be the

person who is making the will. So the will, you know the writing in

question, has to be signed by the testator themselves, by the testator's

conservator if, you know the testator has been conserved, or by somebody acting

in the testator's presence and at the testator's direction. So what that last

one means basically is imagine somebody who's trying to make a will who is going

to be mentally present, like mentally they're still fine, but due to

perhaps old age or due to other kind of, you know, medical problems, they are not

physically able to pick up a pen and sign their name anymore. So what they

basically do, hopefully if they still can, is to kind of tell somebody Hey, you know

point to them, like, you know, they point to somebody said 'Hey this is my will. I need

you to sign this for me. Do it in front of me, etc.' That's what, you

know, that's what that third criteria basically means. So talking about

wills I guess is a little bit strange because you do have to account for the

fact that, you know that the person who's making the will might not be physically

able to sign their name, you know, in the way that they otherwise would. So a lot

of times, you know, when you're talking about testators, you're talking

about at the direction of a testator, acknowledgement by the testator, etc. So

anyway back to back to the criteria, number one has to be in writing and

number two has to be signed. So number three I actually get a lot of questions

about and it's actually the witness requirement. So California Probate Code

section 6110 says there has to be at least two witnesses to the signing that

also sign their names to the will. And the witnesses actually have very

specific criteria. So number one they actually have to witness either the

testator signing the will themselves or the testator acknowledging to the

witnesses that this is my signature. So again, think back to somebody who is

elderly, you know, incapable of signing their name, but if they can somehow

communicate that 'Hey, you know, this is my signature on this will' that would be

sufficient. So the witnesses have to witness the, you know, witness all this stuff

happening during the testator's life obviously,

if, you know, the testator has to sign or the testator has to acknowledge. The

last part about witnesses is that the witnesses also have to understand that

what they're signing off on is a will and it's not a permission slip for a

child, it's not a pizza delivery order. It is it will and it's significant because,

you know, it's a testator's last will and testament. So that's what 6110

basically goes over. 6111, um, it basically says that if if a will, for

whatever reason, does not meet any of the criteria that I just described, but the

will is handwritten in the testator's own handwriting, that's fine also. That's

actually called a Holographic Will and California will recognize those just

fine. Probate Code section 6112 I'm not

going to go over, but it kind of presents in a nutshell what happens if,

you know, the there's a dispute about the will, what happens if one of the

witnesses falls away because they're declared invalid for some reason. Yeah, so

6112 I'm not going to go over. If you want to, get in touch and I can, you know,

try to help you with 6112 if you like, but 6112 I'm not going to go over in

this video because problems about how to argue and stuff those are very, very

specific. I can't, you know, tell the camera right now how you should

do your own particular situation. So anyway, yeah, I guess hopefully all of

that makes sense. The second video where I cover validity of wills, that's

actually Probate Code section 6113. That one's actually not

terribly complicated. That last criteria, I think, is going to be kind of a mouthful to

describe, but hopefully, you know, I got I got it out, I guess. We'll see. So anyway,

but in terms of how to make a will, Probate Code section 6110 and

California Probate Code section 6111. Yeah so, anyway, I'm going to link both of

those down in the description for you so go ahead and take a look at that and go

ahead and comment, share, like, subscribe, you know, all that kind of social mediay

stuff and I will talk to you guys next time.

Thanks

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