MSM Auberry family says Harris and Newsom trespassed in damaged home for photo op

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Scumbags.



Auberry family says Harris and Newsom trespassed in damaged home for photo op
Auberry family says Harris and Newsom trespassed in damaged home for photo op

FRESNO COUNTY, Calif. (FOX26 NEWS) — An Auberry family says California Governor Gavin Newsom and vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris trespassed during their tour of Creek Fire damage.

During the trip, Harris and Newsom were briefed by Cal Fire and U.S. Forest Service officials about the challenges they've faced with this fire.

Newsom and Harris stopped by Pine Ridge Elementary in Auberry, before going across the street to look around a burned down home.

Senator Harris commented that many residential areas had been badly impacted.

"The fire just swept through. So everything is gone except the chimney. Those chimneys, they remind me - when you look at a neighborhood that's been wiped out, those chimneys remind me of tombstones."

In several Facebook posts shared since then, the homeowner's family says neither Harris or Newsom had the right to be on their property.

Trampas Patten says that he is the son of the homeowners and thinks the home was merely used for a photo op.

"What has me really frustrated right now is the fact that these two politicians used my parents loss for a photo opportunity to push their political agenda! Political party wouldn’t have made a difference in this moment. Decent human beings that have character and class, wouldn’t air someone else’s misfortune on national television!" Trampas wrote in a Facebook post.

He says that his parents never gave permission for Harris or Newsom to enter their property.

His sister, Bailee Patten, adds that her family hasn't even had to opportunity to visit the home themselves.

"When we saw those photos, it was - there aren't words, because it's like, we haven't even seen our house. We haven't seen our property. There is no house, we haven't even seen our property."

The home on Auberry Road is still under an evacuation order, so the owners have not been able to check up on their property themselves yet.

"This isn't just devastation, this is our lives. This is where we grew up, these are our memories. And to not have that - to feel so helpless - and I guess that's what we've all been thinking, is that we were so helpless. Because we weren't there, we haven't gotten to deal with our loss. Instead, we're having to watch it play out on social media and news."

Senator Harris told reporters filming her around the property, "These are the stories behind these fires."

She continued, "The people who are victimized by these, they could care less - and their children could care less - who they voted for in the last election."

Patten says that community should not be classified as victims.

"We're survivors. We're gonna get through this, but the whole community has lost. And to just take a picture of one loss, it's not enough."


Full interview between FOX26 News Reporter Marie Edinger and Bailee Patten, the daughter of the homeowners whose house Senator Kamala Harris and Governor Gavin Newsom visited in Auberry
She says that neither Newsom or Harris have reached out to see if the family needs any help.

During the stop, Newsom and Harris placed some of the blame for the Creek Fire on climate change.

"It is incumbent on us, in terms of the leadership of our nation, to take seriously the extreme changes in our climate," Harris said.

"Do you want this kind of leadership, using you and your loss for political gain?!" Trampas Patten asked in his post.

"What you did do is take my families loss and parade it all over social media and news networks to push your agenda," Bailee Patten wrote on Facebook.

FOX26 News has reached out to the Communications teams for both Governor Newsom and Senator Harris.

We haven't heard back from Governor Newsom.

Senator Harris's Communications Director, when asked for a statement, told FOX26 News Reporter Marie Edinger over the phone, "I'm not going to have anything about that," and declined to comment further.
 

blackjeep

The end times are here.
I don't like either Newsom or Harris, but I think the home owner is wound up a bit too tightly. So the politicians got their picture taken in front of the ruins of a home. Is it really that big of a deal??
 

Squid

Veteran Member
I don't like either Newsom or Harris, but I think the home owner is wound up a bit too tightly. So the politicians got their picture taken in front of the ruins of a home. Is it really that big of a deal??
Is it really a big deal? Not in the grand scheme, but it is representative of how the politic create rules for you and I that don’t apply to them. There is an arrogance for many of these politicians that helps to explain their inability to listen or even to care for the people they are supposed to represent.
 

Luddite

Veteran Member
People get possessive of their "stuff" even after it is ruined. Justifiably so.
Saw that first hand after a local flood. Dipshit neighbor/volunteer firefighter came waltzing into a poor guys house while we were doing cleanup. With his hands in his pockets, he TOLD us to put our masks on.
If the homeowner wasn't so tired, I think he would have killed him dead right there.
Stay the heck away from other people's property. Especially when you aren't there to help.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Full interview between FOX26 News Reporter Marie Edinger and Bailee Patten, the daughter of the homeowners whose house Senator Kamala Harris and Governor Gavin Newsom visited in Auberry
She says that neither Newsom or Harris have reached out to see if the family needs any help.
Doesn't serve the Agenda.

Dobbin
 

MountainBiker

Veteran Member
I don't like either Newsom or Harris, but I think the home owner is wound up a bit too tightly. So the politicians got their picture taken in front of the ruins of a home. Is it really that big of a deal??
No, its not a big deal, except that the owners themselves aren't allowed on their own property. If it isn't safe for the owners to be there, then political candidates shouldn't be there either. Harris & Biden are not part of any law enforcement or emergency services group that might justify their presence.

What would be fun would the property owners filing trespass charges against them.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Yeah, it's a big deal since they walked all OVER the property, even up to the pile of ash over the slab or basement, and the photogs were up there shooting pics with their feet at the edge of their home.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
Some of that went on here, too: photo ops in front of all of the derecho damage.

I will say one positive thing about Cindy Axne (D) . . . she didn't do that and got right to work on getting Iowans some relief money. That's what needed to be done most, not going out at the beginning and fist-bumping upset Iowans engaged in clean-up, already strapped by the expenses from the pandemic.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
If they stood in the STREET, no biggie.
If they walked IN TO THE PROPERTY and toed even ONE ash pile it's a HUGE deal because, as the homeowners family points out even WE can't go back but THEY are using us as a prop.

Not to mention the insurance headaches had either one of those idiots were injured while trespassing in a burned out home.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Yeah, it's a big deal since they walked all OVER the property, even up to the pile of ash over the slab or basement, and the photogs were up there shooting pics with their feet at the edge of their home.
Yep, and the insurance company probably won't be happy that the site has been disturbed either, but mainly if the owners are not allowed in, the politicians shouldn't be allowed to stomp all over it - the street sure, the property without permission, no.
 
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