![]() ![]() UV index The months with the highest UV index are June through September, with an average maximum UV index of 5. SunshineThe average sunshine in June in Santa Cruz is 11.5h. On the last day of June, sunrise is at 5:51 am and sunset at 8:31 pm PDT. On the first day of the month, sunrise is at 5:49 am and sunset at 8:22 pm. DaylightWith an average of 14h and 40min of daylight, June has the longest days of the year. Even a few minutes in 55.4☏ (13☌) water is uncomfortable, and swimming below 50☏ (10☌) may cause total loss of breathing control and cold shock, depending on a person's physique. Note: Swimming in 54.3☏ (12.4☌) is considered life-threatening. Ocean temperatureIn June, the average ocean temperature in Santa Cruz, California, is 54.3☏ (12.4☌). In Santa Cruz, during the entire year, the rain falls for 77.9 days and collects up to 14.45" (367mm) of precipitation. Rainfall In Santa Cruz, during 2.8 rainfall days, 0.08" (2mm) of precipitation is typically accumulated. HumidityThe average relative humidity in June is 72%. In June, the average low-temperature is 51.4☏ (10.8☌). TemperatureIn June, the average high-temperature is almost the same as in May - an agreeable 70☏ (21.1☌). ![]() Prosecutor Michael Mahan said after Monday’s hearing that Cogliati would have the option of increasing the restitution amount if new projected costs come to light.The first month of the summer, June, is a pleasant month in Santa Cruz, California, with temperature in the range of an average high of 70☏ (21.1☌) and an average low of 51.4☏ (10.8☌). After their restitution hearing in July, Cogliati determined the joint fine would be set at $19,600, should Bochat and Warner be found guilty of their crimes. While attorneys representing the two men have hinted that they would consider taking a plea deal for months, the case drew out in order for the defendants to hear how much in damages they would be expected to pay to repair the defacement. “In general, there’s this sense of annoyance that it took over a year to just have the outcome that could have happened right away.” “I think we assumed at some point that this would happen because there was so much evidence,” Mustapha said after the hearing. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel file) On Monday, defendants Hagan Warner and Brandon Bochat pleaded no contest to felony vandalism and hate crime charges. Tire burnout tracks on Black Lives Matter lettering in downtown Santa Cruz continue to remind the community of that act of vandalism that occurred there, more than a year ago. While favoring a social justice-style sentence that would have had Bochat and Warner apologizing for their actions and facing the community hurt by their actions, Mustapha said she was hoping the case’s outcome primarily would serve as a deterrent for others considering such apparently racist crimes. Community responds to pleaĪbi Mustapha, a Santa Cruz Equity Collab artist who came up with the mural’s concept as a communitywide call to action, said Monday’s plea was not surprising and not entirely pleasing. Santa Cruz became one of the first communities in the nation to have local government sanction such a permanent installation and related annual community celebration as the Black Lives Matter movement gained traction across the country. ![]() The yellow-painted words, stretching for nearly a block in front of Santa Cruz City Hall on Center Street, are part of a community art project owned jointly by the city of Santa Cruz and the Santa Cruz Equity Collab, a group of local residents who came together during the artwork’s installation. She said their vandalism charges may be reduced to a misdemeanor and a suspended 90-day jail term if they successfully complete probation terms. 18 hearing as guilty of their crimes.īochat and Warner are not expected to serve jail time for their crimes, Cogliati indicated Monday. Each of the defendants entered “no contest” pleas to the charges this week, meaning they will be sentenced during a Nov. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)īrandon Bochat, 21, and Hagan Warner, 20, appeared Monday before Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge Syda Cogliati for a resolution in the case, ongoing since the two were arrested the day after the defacement occurred. Hagan Warner appears with his attorney Ed Sidawi on Monday. ![]() SANTA CRUZ - A superior court judge has found two men who left trails of burned rubber across the downtown Black Lives Matter street painting in July 2021 guilty of reckless driving and a hate crime of felony vandalism. Brandon Bochat appears in court on Monday as he and codefendant Hagan Warner pleaded no contest to hate crime vandalism for the July 2021 defacing of the Back Lives Matter street painting in front of Santa Cruz City Hall. ![]()
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