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Sparked by the January 7 killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan Ross, more than 300 demonstrators turned out at Indian Hill and Foothill boulevards Sunday to voice disdain for President Trump’s policies and ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Protection tactics. The protest, organized by Indivisible Claremont/Inland Valley Action Group, followed similar demonstrations that took place nationwide over the weekend. Courier photo/Andrew Alonzo
The Claremont Colleges’ women’s rugby team, the Claremont Foxes, begin their spring 2026 Division I Pacific Desert Rugby Conference season at 11 a.m. Saturday, January 17 against Cal Poly San Luis Obispo at Claremont McKenna College’s Parents Field, 690 N. Mills Ave., Claremont.
Upland resident Tony Ferguson has been named president of the Los Angeles chapter of the Public Relations Society of America.
“How about this for a New Year’s resolution: don’t let anyone steal your money. Simple as it sounds, avoiding financial scams gets more challenging by the day. Our electronic financial lives create a bonanza of opportunity for bad actors to separate us from our cash. The scams get ever more clever and sophisticated, with AI opening still new avenues of fraud.”
Welcome to the 2026 edition of the Courier’s “Where am I?” feature and contest. We’ve been doing this for three years now, and hope you are enjoying it as much as we are. So, “Where am I” this week? Email your answer, full name, and city of residence — and suggestions for future mystery photos — to contest@claremont-courier.com for your chance to win a one-year subscription to everyone’s favorite award-winning local newspaper, the Claremont Courier, in our year-end drawing. Speaking of, congratulations to the winner of 2025’s contest, Kathryn Wesley! Photo/by Naomi Howland
“The hardest discipline, especially now, is resisting the urge to declare truth before it exists. That patience — demanding facts, waiting for verification, and accepting uncertainty — may be the most important civic act left to us.”
Uncertainty still haunts Diego Rios’s family as they continue to push for answers in the 30-year-old Rancho Cucamonga man’s death after a November 28, 2025 traffic stop by Claremont police. Friends and family will gather outside Claremont City Hall from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday, January 10 to push for transparency. A memorial at the site of the incident, pictured here, still stands. Courier photo/Andrew Alonzo
An abundance of new state laws hit the books on January 1, and one, Senate Bill 79, which goes into effect July 1, could have a direct impact on Claremont. It allows high density housing projects as tall as nine stories to be built within half a mile of publicly funded transit hubs such as the Claremont Metrolink station. Courier photo/Andrew Alonzo
The three hikers who died on Mt. Baldy on December 29 have been identified as 19-year-old Marcus Alexander Muench Casanova of Seal Beach, and Juan Sarat Lopez, 37, and Bayron Pedro Ramos Garcia, 36, both Guatemalan nationals said to be residing in Los Angeles. Authorities believe the hikers fell from Devil’s Backbone Trail, pictured here last summer. Courier photo/Peter Weinberger
Conditions remained soaked Monday morning, January 5, but the rain finally ended in the early hours after a week of near-record storms across the region. More than six inches of rain fell in the Claremont area, with even higher totals reported in the mountains. Check out our latest coverage. Courier photo/Peter Weinberger
Jared Sedlis spends his lunch breaks doing jumps — axels, salchows, lutzes, flips and loops — at an ice rink 15 minutes from Pomona College. As a competitive figure skater and full-time student, the Birmingham, Alabama, native can’t afford to waste a minute. Photo/by Jeff Hing
It’s wet out there. A series of atmospheric river storms moved through the region, dropping nearly a half-foot of rain across the Claremont area, with even higher totals in the mountains. The conditions triggered flooding from Mt. Baldy Village up to the ski lifts. As of Friday, Baldy Road at Icehouse Canyon remain closed for repairs. Courier photo/Peter Weinbergter
The City of Rancho Cucamonga and California Culture Festival celebrate the year of the horse with a free and open to the public Lunar New Year celebration from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, January 17 and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday, January 18 at Rancho Cucamonga Sports Center, 8303 Rochester Ave.
Comedy magician Chipper Lowell brings “Step Right Up: A Ridiculous Trunk Full of True Tales and Fake Magic” to Citrus College’s Haugh Performing Arts Center, 1000 W. Foothill Blvd., Glendora, at 7 p.m. Saturday, January 17.
Pilgrim Congregational Church, 600 N. Garey Ave., Pomona, hosts the 44th annual free and open to the public “Where Do We Go From Here” event honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Later this month, 17-year-old Max Leeper will trade the maroon and white of Claremont High School for the cherry and silver of the University of New Mexico, colors fitting of his life’s next chapter. He completed high school a semester early this fall and signed a letter of intent last month to play football at UNM in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Now he’s about to travel some 760 miles east begin the next chapter of his young life as a Lobo freshman majoring in business administration. Photo/courtesy of CUSD




















