Los Angeles, California Local News | ReportWire publishes the latest breaking U.S. and world news, trending topics and developing stories from around globe.
The SoCal Indie Bestsellers List for the sales week ended March 10 is based on reporting from the independent booksellers of Southern California, the California Independent Booksellers Alliance and IndieBound. For an independent bookstore near you, visit IndieBound.org.
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. The Women: Kristin Hannah
2. The Hunter: Tana French
3. Wandering Stars: Tommy Orange
4. The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store: James McBride
5. North Woods: Daniel Mason
6. Good Material: Dolly Alderton
7. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow: Gabrielle Zevin
8. Prophet Song: Paul Lynch
9. Demon Copperhead: Barbara Kingsolver
10. Anita de Monte Laughs Last: Xochitl Gonzalez
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
1. The House of Hidden Meanings: A Memoir: RuPaul
2. The Creative Act: A Way of Being: Rick Rubin
3. The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder: David Grann
4. Grief Is for People: Sloane Crosley
5. Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones: James Clear
6. Burn Book: A Tech Love Story: Kara Swisher
7. Hits, Flops, and Other Illusions: My Fortysomething Years in Hollywood: Ed Zwick
8. Alphabetical Diaries: Sheila Heti
9. Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring: Brad Gooch
10. Supercommunicators: How to Unlock the Secret Language of Connection: Charles Duhigg
MASS MARKET
1. Dune: Frank Herbert
2. Dune Messiah: Frank Herbert
3. 1984: George Orwell
4. Hyperion: Dan Simmons
5. Mistborn: The Final Empire: Brandon Sanderson
6. Children of Dune: Frank Herbert
7. Slaughterhouse-Five: Kurt Vonnegut
8. Animal Farm: George Orwell
9. Elvis and Me: Priscilla Presley, Sandra Harmon
10. The Catcher in the Rye: J.D. Salinger
TRADE PAPERBACK FICTION
1. Dune: Frank Herbert
2. A Court of Thorns and Roses: Sarah J. Maas
3. Bride: Ali Hazelwood
4. I Have Some Questions for You: Rebecca Makkai
5. The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo: Taylor Jenkins Reid
The previous jackpot stood at $735 million with a cash option of $354.3 million. The winning numbers were 2, 16, 31, 57, 64 with a Mega Ball of 24. The Megaplier was 3X.
The cash option for Friday’s drawing is an estimated $381.8 million.
Although most take the cash option, winners can choose the annuity payment option, which gives one immediate payment and continues to give annual payments over the next 29 years. The payments increase by 5% each time in the annuity option, however most choose the cash option.
Winnings also come with a chunk going to Uncle Sam.
There’s a mandatory 24% federal withholding for winnings above $5,000 that goes straight to the IRS. Some states tax lottery winnings as well, but states that do not impose an income tax on lottery winnings include California, Texas and Florida.
Mega Millions is played in 45 states as well as Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Drawings take place every Tuesday and Friday at 11 p.m. EST.
The Powerball jackpot also climbed to $559 million for Wednesday’s drawing after no jackpot winner was drawn for Monday’s $534 million drawing.
Millions, if not billions, are up grabs once a winning lotto ticket goes unclaimed. What to know about who gets to keep it.
Josh Flagg, one of the most recognizable luxury brokers in Los Angeles as a long-time star of Bravo’s “Million Dollar Listing” series, is moving from Douglas Elliman to Compass, the company announced Tuesday. He will work in Compass’ Beverly Hills office.
Flagg made more than $3 billion in residential real estate sales in the past decade, according to his website. Last summer he brokered the sale of Rihanna’s $10.3 million Beverly Hills home to UTA agent Tracy Jacobs. He also represented the sellers in StubHub founder Eric Baker’s purchase of 1001 North Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills for $40 million in 2020.
He joined Douglas Elliman in 2021. Upon his exit, Flagg said his colleagues at Elliman were “like family” and he loved the agency, but added “I am finally ready to embark on my next venture.”
Judy Garland and 1231 Stone Canyon Road
As for the timing of his move, “the market is really not down, there’s just not a lot of inventory,” he said in a statement.
Flagg began his career in luxury real estate after graduating from Beverly Hills High School in 2004, according to his autobiography “Million Dollar Agent: Brokering the Dream.”
He was a member of the original cast for reality TV show “Million Dollar Listing,” which premiered in 2006.
His clients include A-list celebrities and luxury brands, including the late actor Matthew Perry, Universal Music Group CEO Lucian Grange, the Getty family, the DeBartolo family, Van Cleef & Arpels and Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.
Flagg brings more than $400 million in listings to Compass, including a $28.9 million Beverly Hills property at 9463 Sunset Boulevard; Pasadena’s most expensive home at 2 Oak Knoll Terrace, priced at $32 million; and Judy Garland’s former home in Bel-Air at 1231 Stone Canyon Road, with an $11.5 million price tag.
Last year, he launched a real estate media platform called Estate Media, which offers a combination of entertainment and education content and is aimed at real estate professionals.
Compass, a New York-based publicly listed brokerage, has more than 1,400 agents in the Los Angeles market.
The brokerage posted a $320 million loss last year and in the fourth quarter reported negative cash flows for the first time in six months. Its headcount growth has slowed as well. Compass grew its average total agent count by 1 percent in 2023 compared to 22 percent the year before.
Lillian Yan Vice President – West Division Sales Officer HNTB Corporation
Lillian brings nearly 30 years of leadership experience in delivering infrastructure solutions, including program management, alternative delivery, project implementation from planning through construction. As part of the division management team, Lillian leads the division with office leaders to drive sales and revenue growth through strategic planning, client development and effective execution of HNTB’s Sophisticated Sales Approach.
Lillian’s background includes a variety of transportation, rail and transit projects, serving clients in Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, and Chicago. Lillian has managed over $4 billion capital programs and is well versed in community and stakeholders’ engagement. She has worked successfully across many key HNTB markets including bridges, highway, tollway, transit, rail, aviation and alternative delivery with many of HNTB’s largest clients.
Her varied portfolio of experiences affords her the insights necessary to understand our different clients, pursuits, and how to best help our client service teams position and deliver for success.
Lillian is a California licensed professional engineer and is actively serving in many professional organization boards, such as WTS International, Advancing Women in Transportation, Los Angeles Business Council and Equity in Infrastructure Projects.
J+R Group wants to convert an eight-story office building in Irvine into 76 homes.
The locally based developer led by Morgan Zhang has filed plans to turn part of the 178,000-square-foot office building into apartments at 1901 Main Street, the Orange County Business Journal reported.
The proposal would turn “several floors” of the building to residential units near MacArthur Boulevard and Main Street, a few blocks from John Wayne Airport.
The office property, which includes a five-story parking garage and a parking lot, covers nearly 5 acres. Construction of a separate apartment complex next to the office building is also an option.
A timeline for the office-to-home conversion or apartment building were not disclosed.
J+R bought the fully leased office property in 2016 for $66 million, or $371 per square foot — among the biggest office deals in OC that year.
The building, built in 2002 and later renovated, is now 80 percent leased to such tenants as J+R, on the ground floor, Morgan Stanley, BSH Home Appliances and Synaptics, a semiconductor firm. The parking garage is used as storage for new Tesla cars.
The OC office market contains 104 million square feet and ended last year with a vacancy of 17.3 percent, according to Voit. The Irvine airport market has 24 million square feet and a vacancy of 17 percent, with Class A buildings containing the county’s largest number of high-rise offices at 22 percent.
At the same time, the vacancy of apartments across OC is less than 5 percent, according to RentCafe — with few office-to-home conversions.
In 2022, Calabasas-based Alliant Strategic Development turned a 10-story office building used by the Social Security Administration on North Main Street in Downtown Santa Ana into 148 apartments. Rents for a one-bedroom unit now start at around $2,200.
J+R Group, founded in 2000 in the Pacific Northwest, recently helped develop Collage, a two-story, 16,000-square-foot collection of restaurants near Bloomingdale’s at South Coast Plaza in Santa Ana.
The firm, which has ties to China, has developed 19 commercial properties containing 464,000 square feet on 14 acres, according to its website.
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (KGO) — Convicted murderer Scott Peterson appeared virtually before a San Mateo County judge Tuesday as part of his effort to get a new trial.
He was back in court in Redwood City as the Los Angeles Innocence Project takes up his case.
Peterson was convicted in 2004 of murdering his wife Laci and their unborn son Conner in 2002.
Now, the Innocence Project says newly-discovered evidence supports Peterson’s claims of innocence.
In an exclusive interview with ABC News, a former California Fire official says key evidence wasn’t properly investigated in Scott Peterson case
In the courtroom, the Los Angeles Innocence Project said they wanted evidence as soon as possible and that there were deficiencies in the evidence provided to the defense at the time of trial.
They say Peterson’s been waiting 20 years to get some of the audio recordings and police reports.
But the state explained they need more time.
The LA Innocence Project is focusing on a burglary in a home across the street from the Peterson’s home and claims from witnesses that they saw the burglars speaking with Laci.
“What if he’s not guilty OK, what if he had an affair and was a crappy husband, but what if he didn’t kill her,” legal analyst Paula Canny said. “What if that van shows it’s Laci’s DNA? Two things happen, 20 years of his life or 23 years of his life is gone. His family has bankrupted itself trying to exonerate him and Laci and Connor’s killers have walked free for 20 years. So think about that.”
Future court dates were set for April and May as Peterson said he prefers to continue to show up virtually.
Peterson’s half-brother Joe and his wife Janey, who is the family spokesperson, were at the hearing but didn’t talk on camera.
Kunal Shah President/CEO, Electrical Engineer PBS Engineers, Inc
Kunal Shah, P.E., leads PBS Engineers as President and CEO, several offices across the United States. As Chair of the Board, his influence permeates every facet. Committed to excellence, he fosters a culture of empowerment and inclusivity, driving perennial growth through innovative design and compassionate leadership.
Marcela Oliva Professor of Architecture and Environmental Design Los Angeles Trade-Technical College
For over a decade, she led as the Knowledge Architect for the $9 billion Building Program at the Los Angeles Community College District, pioneering the development and rollout of the nation’s largest Digital Twin/Virtualization BIM/GIS System, aligned with National Intelligence Standards. As a Professor of Architecture and Environmental Design at LATTC, she founded UCLA Extension Courses: Transforming Community and Design for Social Justice, showcasingexpertise in Omniverse/Metaverse/Digital twins and their societal impact. Her pivotal role at NASA’s Knowledge Management and as principal investigator for the Cyber-Physical Systems NSF Grant underscore her leadership in the field.
Honored with the California Governor’s Award in Geospatial Technologies, she is a sought-after speaker addressing education, technology, and social justice forums worldwide. Awards such as the Alpha Rho Chi Medal from USC and the 2012 Educator of the Year highlight her innovative integration of biomimicry with digital twins. With a background in Architecture and Building Science from USC and Columbia University, respectively, and ongoing initiatives like the Mayor’s Workforce Initiative for the Green New Deal, she remains a trailblazer in AEC education and practice. Recognized with the 2022 AIA LA Presidential Award for Educator of the Year, her impact continues to resonate across academia and industry.She serves as Board Member and Board of Directors for USGBC LA, Pando Populus and Architecture and Advocacy.
Evan Kim is not sure what she wants to do when she grows up. She might want to be an elementary school teacher. Or perhaps an Olympic long-distance runner.
She’s working on the running thing.
The 5-foot-tall sixth-grader placed second among all girls and women at the Ventura Marathon in February when she ran the 26.2-mile course in 2 hours 58 minutes, averaging less than 7 minutes per mile. Her goal this year is to run the fastest recorded marathon for a 12-year-old of either gender — she’s only four minutes away. Her trainer (also known as her dad, who goes by MK) says the equation is simple: Just follow the workout plan and the record will be hers.
Evan was in some ways destined for a life of long-distance exercise. Born into a family of athletes in 2012, she was named after Cadel Evans, the cyclist who won the Tour de France the year prior. Her father MK, 49, was a pole vaulter at Duke University and now trains runners. He’s run a 2-hour, 51-minute marathon himself, but his daughter will probably pass him this year when she tries for a 2:48 time at the California International Marathon in December. Her older brother Cole and sister Haven also run marathons.
To be a 12-year-old marathoner, you need a level of grit that many 12-year-olds lack.
Evan Kim, 12, front, runs with family members and a running group to train for marathons on March 10, 2024 in Irvine, California.She ran a 2:58 in the Ventura marathon recently, making her the fastest girl or woman age 1-19 and the second fastest overall.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
For example: When Evan Kim was running the Ventura Marathon and trying to hit her goal of 2:58, she developed a foot cramp around Mile 20 that lasted a few miles. She wanted to give up. She wanted to stop running. But she didn’t.
“Suck it up,” she told herself over and over, repeating the mantra to help her complete the marathon and beat all other under-20-year-old female runners by a full hour.
Evan’s goal is to qualify for the 2028 Olympics. To qualify for the 2024 U.S. Olympic team in the women’s marathon, she’d have to run a 2:37 marathon, and that’s a bridge too far, even for someone whose record is as astonishing as Evan’s. Kenyan runner Peres Jepchirchir took home gold in the women’s marathon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics with a time of 2:27:20.
How ridiculous are Evan’s times? Consider this: Only 21% of women finish the marathon in under four hours. Just 1% of women finish in under three. The fastest marathon ever run by a 12-year-old of either gender, according to the Assn. of Road Racing Statisticians, was a 2:54 run by German runner Manuela Zipse in a 1986 race.
What separates Evan from her siblings, MK says, is that Evan started at an earlier age. She is not particularly physically gifted. She doesn’t have more lung capacity than other kids. She just has a reservoir of strength built from years of training seven days a week. When MK’s kids were young, they would all go for walks in the morning and the walks eventually became runs. Cole was 11 at the time. Evan was 6. It started with a mile, then two and kept gradually building until Evan asked for what any 10-year-old might ask their father for: permission to run in a marathon.
OK, maybe not just any 10-year-old.
“I wanted to run because my brother was running,” Evan explained. “It’s fun to compete, and I wanted to race like Cole did.”
Evan is competitive with Cole, who beat her by a minute in the Ventura Marathon. “I’m a little bit jealous,” she acknowledged, but said that she expects to “hopefully” beat him soon.
Evan ran her first marathon at a glacial 3:50 pace — glacial for 12-year-old Evan, that is.
Evan won’t be running in the Los Angeles Marathon on Sunday, though her father and sister will, because she’s still recovering from the Ventura Marathon. She’ll eventually start building up her base again before getting in shape for the California International Marathon in December, where she hopes to break the record for 12-year-olds.
MK is fighting for his daughter to break a barrier in a different, more famous race than the L.A. Marathon. He wants the Boston Marathon to allow his daughter to race in April, even though the minimum age is 18.
So far he has received no responses to his entreaties to have his daughter join what he calls the greatest race on Earth.
“We feel discriminated against since Evan has proven to be more than capable of safely competing in the event by completing four marathons and Boston-qualifying in three of them,” MK said. To qualify for the 2025 Boston event, an 18-year-old woman would need a marathon finish time of 3:30 between September 2023 and September 2024.
MK said that the rule barring younger runners is similar to what women faced before the Boston Marathon went coed in 1972.
The Boston Athletic Assn. did not explain why it has its age requirements.
“Athletes must be 18 years of age on race day to enter the Boston Marathon. This age requirement falls in line with age requirements across all B.A.A. mass-participatory races, where athletes must be 14 years old to run the Boston Half Marathon; 12 for the Boston 10K, and 10 for the Boston 5K,” spokesman Chris Lotsbom said in an email.
Pediatricians say there is not enough information to say definitively whether marathons are safe for kids whose bodies are still growing. There are two major concerns for child marathoners. First, is it physically safe for kids to run marathons? Second, can children mentally handle the physical strain of the race?
A study by the Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine of the Twin Cities Marathon between 1982 and 2007 found that of 310 minors between ages 7 and 17 who finished the race, only four had “medical encounters,” a lower rate than adult finishers. None of the injuries were serious. MK says that Evan has never had any injury.
Dr. Brian Krabak, a sports medicine physician, said that the risks to a child running marathons depend on many factors, but that it can be OK as long as the child is closely monitored and the running lengths are gradually increased.
One other important factor, he said, is that “it’s the child who is motivated to do this and not just the adults around them. That’s a key component overall.”
Although Evan’s marathon finishes have so far flown under the radar, other instances of children running marathons have gone viral and led to online debate about whether kids should be participating and whether they understand what they are doing.
In 2022, 6-year-old Rainier Crawford finished the Flying Pig Marathon in Cincinnati. But when his parents posted a documentary about his run on YouTube, his family became the target of intense scrutiny.
Olympic marathoner Kara Goucher chimed in on the issue on X, formerly Twitter, saying, “A six year old does not understand what embracing misery is. A six year [old] who is ‘struggling physically’ does not realize they have the right to stop and should.”
Evan is undaunted.
As the Kim family took a casual seven-mile run Sunday on trails and bike lines in Irvine, cruising along at a relaxed 9 minutes per mile, people recognized the running family and waved as they passed. MK, a single father, has been operating a daily vlog documenting the family’s running for more than a year.
Evan is candid about her competitiveness and the fact that she did not always like running. The sport, however, has taught her that just because something is difficult does not mean it is bad. Just like running, telling the truth can be hard, doing all her homework can be hard, but she still does those things.
“During the race it feels really bad,” she said, “but after you finish it and you cheer everybody else on and meet each other at the end it feels really nice.”
As companies continue to call retail crime an industrywide dilemma, CNBC has spent about eight months investigating organized retail crime rings, getting a rare glimpse into the complex layers of the organizations.
In some cases, CNBC witnessed low-level shoplifting incidents involving people who appeared to be homeless, and in other cases saw takedowns of alleged organized theft groups that police said were reselling stolen merchandise at flea markets.
One group, in operation for more than a decade, made millions reselling stolen cosmetics on Amazon, police said.
In a tony suburban enclave in the San Diego foothills, police say, an organized retail crime “queenpin” had built an empire.
Tucked behind the stone walls of her 4,500-square-foot Spanish-style mansion, Michelle Mack had stockpiled a small fortune in cosmetics that had been stolen from Ulta and Sephora stores across the country, authorities said.
Police don’t suspect that Mack, 53, tookthe items herself. Instead, they say, she pulled the strings from the shadows, employing a network of around a dozen women who stole the items for her so she could resell them on Amazon.
CNBC
Michelle Mack’s home in Bonsall, California, Dec. 6, 2023.
With their airfare, car rentals and other travel expenses paid by Mack, the suspects committed hundreds of thefts up and down the California coast and into Washington, Utah, Oregon, Colorado, Arizona, Illinois, Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Ohio, investigators said. Mack selected which stores to target and what merchandise to take and the women were sent to clear out entire shelves of merchandise before making off with thestolen goods stuffed into Louis Vuitton bags, investigators said.
Investigators began referring to the theft group as the “California Girls” and considered Mack the crew’s ringleader. She made millions reselling the stolen items on Amazon to unwitting customers at a fraction of their typical retail price, investigators said, before she was arrested in early December.
CNBC
Michelle Mack is taken into custody, Dec. 6, 2023.
Law enforcement officials say Mack’s alleged theft ring is just one of the many that are plaguing U.S. retailers and costing them billions in losses annually. Their rise has led many companies to lock up merchandise, hire security guards and lobby lawmakers for stricter regulations.
These organized theft groups don’t typically carry out the splashy “smash and grab” robberies seen in viral videos. Instead, they pilfer goods quickly, quietly and efficiently. They often function within elaborate, organized structures that in some ways mimic the corporations they’re stealing from, police said.
CNBC has spent about eight months embedding with various law enforcement agencies and investigating theft groups to understand what organized retail crime looks like from the ground. In some cases, CNBC witnessed low-level shoplifting incidents involving people who appeared to be homeless or mentally ill. In other instances, CNBC saw takedowns of alleged organized theft groups that police said were reselling stolen merchandise at flea markets. Mack’s group,from her alleged network of professional thieves to her lucrative Amazon marketplace, was by far the most sophisticated one CNBC tracked alongside police.
CNBC
California Highway Patrol officers arrest a retail crime suspect.
But federal agents with Homeland Security Investigations, the Department of Homeland Security’s law enforcement branch, said some crime groups are even more elaborate — and theft is just one facet of their enterprises.
“We’re talking about operations that have fleets of trucks, 18-wheelers that have palletized loads of stolen goods, that have cleaning crews that actually clean the goods to make them look brand new,” said Adam Parks, an assistant special agent in charge at HSI, which is the main federal agency investigating retail crime.
“Just like any business, they’ve invested their capital into business assets like shrink wrap machines, forklifts,” Parks, who works out of HSI’s Baton Rouge, Louisiana, office, told CNBC in an interview. “That is what organized theft looks like, and it actually is indistinguishable from other e-commerce distribution centers.”
These theft groups in their myriad forms have become a thorn in the side of retailers big and small, prompting retailers to cite crime as the reason for lower profits, the inability to hire and retain staff, and the degradation of the in-store experience. They have also united politically divided Americansin their disdain for seeing everyday products locked up behind glass cases and witnessing brazen theft gone unchecked in stores.
CNBC
Suspected stolen cosmetics found inside Michelle Mack’s home.
The National Retail Federation estimates that retailers lost $40.5 billion to external theft, including organized retail crime, in 2022. That represented about 36% of total inventory losses — slightly lower than the 37% in 2021.
Even if theft has not meaningfully reduced some retailers’ profits, many have warned that crime can threaten the safety of workers and shoppers.
“The financial impact is real, but way more important is the human impact, the impact it has to our associates, the impact it has to our guests,” Ulta CEO Dave Kimbell told CNBC in a rare sit-down interview.
“It also impacts the communities in which we live,” he said. “If people don’t feel safe going in to shop in certain areas of a community, it really has an impact and can change neighborhoods and change communities over time.”
The government response to the issue has grown in turn. Both local and federal agencies have stepped up enforcement of laws targeting organized retail crime, and lawmakers are proposing and passing more measures that stiffen penalties for theft offenses.
HSI initiated 59 cases against organized theft groups in fiscal 2021, resulting in 55 indictments and 61 arrests, the agency said.
By the end of fiscal 2023, cases had more than tripled, to 199. Indictments spiked more than fivefold to 284, while arrests soared to 386, more than six times the number in 2021.
California Highway Patrol, which runs one of the most active retail crime task forces in the country, reports it made 170% more arrests for organized theft offenses in 2023 than it did in 2022.
It’s not clear whether organized theft offenses increased in that time or officials ramped up enforcement as the issue got more public attention and the retail industry’s lobbying engine pressed them to make it a priority.
CNBC embedded with teams from HSI and California Highway Patrol to witness four organized retail crime operations for this investigation. The probe is also based on more than a dozen interviews with law enforcement officers, retail leaders andcustomers, along with records, including court filings, company reports and property records.
New Orleans
On a sweltering Monday morning in July, about a dozen agents from HSI New Orleans gathered behind the U.S. Custom House, preparing for Operation French Quarter.
The officers were instructed to pose as shoppers inside three Walgreens stores and one CVS store in the area seeing high rates of theft, sometimes as many as 20 to 30 incidents per day, agents said.
As federal law enforcement agents who typically investigate terrorism, sex trafficking and gang leaders such as Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the officers weren’t there to arrest people for petty theft. They had a clear directive: Find out who’s stealing and follow them out of the store to determine who else they may be working with.
“Obviously, the name of the game, guys and girls, is trying to get the bigger and better fish,” Assistant Special Agent in Charge Scott Robles, who led the operation, told the assembled officers. “We’re trying to identify the people who are in charge of this organized crime.”
CNBC
Assistant Special Agent in Charge Scott Robles of Homeland Security Investigations addresses a team of undercover agents in New Orleans, July 17, 2023.
At the bottom of organized retail crime rings are boosters — the people who go into stores and take the items. Robles was hoping the serial thieves targeting the drugstores could lead them to a larger operation.
“It can be anybody. It could be the mom with five kids just looking for extra money. It can be somebody that’s part of a team. … They may be getting paid with food, they may be getting paid with beer or drugs,” Robles said. “Some people get paid cash or they’re trying to work off a debt.”
Throughout the hourslong operation, agents identified at least one case that they sayplainly showed organized theft.
Surveillance footage of the incident shows a man enter one of the Walgreens stores, head to the cosmetics aisle, remove a plastic shopping bag from his pants and calmly load it up with 17 jars of nail polish, valued at around $200. He then walked about a half mile away to the New Orleans Public Library’s main branch, where he sold the nail polish to a security guard, police said.
Federal agents briefly questioned the security guard,and the incident remains under investigation.
Beyond that instance, the vast majority of the thefts agents witnessed during the operation were low-level and petty, involving people who appeared to be homeless, mentally ill or transient. One man stole paper towels and then walked into a homeless shelter. A group took a case of beer and later went to a park to drink it. A woman stole a case of water, set up a stand to resell it and then defecated on the sidewalk.
Operation French Quarter showed how the lowest level of a retail crime operation can function, and how even small thefts can involve coordination among bad actors. Still, the incidents underscore the challenges investigators face when trying to build cases; they also demonstrate just how petty many thefts are, especially in urban areas with high rates of homelessness and addiction.
A Walgreens spokesperson told CNBC that the chain is “focused on the safety of our patients, customers and team members” and is taking steps to “safely deter theft” and “deliver the best patient and customer experience.”
“We are working closely with law enforcement, elected officials and community leaders to draw greater attention to and improve our response to retail crime,” the spokesperson said.
San Jose
Crates filled with unopened jugs of Gain, Tide and Downy detergent. Boxes stuffed with Gillette razors, Olay moisturizer and Allegra allergy pills. A pile of sparkly silver boots in sizes 8, 9 and 10 with the T.J. Maxx tags still on.
This is just some of the merchandise that California Highway Patrol found inside a home and storage container belonging to suspected members of an organized retail crime ring during a raid in November.
Gabrielle Fonrouge
A bin filled with sparkly silver boots that police suspect an alleged San Jose, California, crime ring stole from T.J. Maxx.
In all, investigators uncovered nearly 20,000 items valued at more than $550,000 across five locations connected with the group, according to CHP. Police suspect the majority of the items were stolen from T.J. Maxx stores and a variety of drugstores and grocery stores in and around the Bay Area.
CHP’s probe began in September, when investigators from TJX Companies, the owner of T.J. Maxx, reached out to the agency’s organized retail crime task force with information about a crime ring that it said was buying and reselling stolen goods — a “fencing” operation.
When boosters need to cash in on the items they take, they turn to fencers, who buy the products for pennies on the dollar and resell them at a margin Wall Street could only dream of, retail crime investigators have said.
Experts said retailers can have a hard time persuading law enforcement to investigate theft at stores because it is often considered a property crime, which police tend to see as less urgent than homicides, shootings and narcotics crimes.
To show law enforcement the scope of the problem, TJX investigators began conducting surveillance on the alleged crime ring. CHP agreed to take the case. Sgt. Manny Nevarez, who oversees all organized retail crime investigations in the Bay Area for CHP, told CNBC the group had hit stores in multiple countiesin an effort to evade detection.
“They are not catching on that some of the retailers have their own loss prevention personnel and typically, if you target one store in San Jose, then the word gets out and then the next store is notified,” said Nevarez.
CNBC
Sgt. Manny Nevarez oversees organized retail crime investigations in the Bay Area for California Highway Patrol.
Police learned that alleged members of the group were reselling the suspected stolen merchandise out of their homes and at the local Capitol Flea Market — a sprawling swap meet on the outskirts of San Jose. Officers also witnessed members of the crew receiving suspected stolen merchandise, transferring those goods to others in their network and exchanging money.
At the end of November, dozens of CHP investigators working with TJXdescended on the five locations connected with the alleged fencing ring and carried out search warrants in a raid cops dubbed “Operation Kingsfall.” The locations included numerous homes along with a storage unit.
“Nosotros somos policia,” the officers shouted in Spanish outside one of the homes. “Police, search warrant. Open the door with your hands up,” they continued, switching between English and Spanish before using a battering ram to knock down the door.
CNBC
Officers from California Highway Patrol approach a home suspected to be connected with an organized retail crime ring in San Jose, California, Nov. 28, 2023.
The location, an innocuous single-family home with Christmas decorations out front, looked like any other on the block. But on the sidewalk and grass near the property line sat dozens of discarded clothing tags, anti-theft devices, hangers and other retail store detritus.
Inside the home, CHP officers and TJX personnel found mountains of goods they suspect were stolen to resell, including bags of apparel with the tags still affixed, boxes of Huggies diapers, liquor and power tools.
By the time authorities completed the raids, they had enough suspected stolen merchandise to fill three 20-foot-long U-Haul trucks. A spokesperson for the Santa Clara County District Attorney said it is charging nine defendants in connection with the alleged crime ring.
CNBC
Investigators examine suspected stolen merchandise connected with an alleged organized retail crime ring in San Jose, California.
The law enforcement operation witnessed by CNBC showed the breadth of some of the fencing rings in the U.S. and how flea markets can play a role in the sale of stolen goods. Capitol Flea Market didn’t respond to a request for comment.
“There’s certain crimes that come up where the public reaches a point where they’re like, ‘We have had enough of this,’ right?” Lt. Michael Ball, who helped oversee the operation, told CNBC. “And this is one of those that’s reached that level where people are saying widely and shouting it all the way up to our governor’s office that they have had enough of this.”
In a statement, a TJX spokesperson said the company is “thankful” for CHP’s efforts and is taking organized retail crime “very seriously.” The spokesperson said TJX is “laser-focused on ways to mitigate theft in our stores.”
The company told CNBC it will not resell the recovered merchandise. If TJX considers the items to be in suitable condition, it will donate them to charities in the area where they were found, the company said. If it deems the products unsuitable, it will work to dispose of them “responsibly,” it said.
San Diego
When Donna Washburn started shopping for a Christmas gift for her daughter in December, she wanted to “splurge” and buy her a bottle of Nars foundation. But she couldn’t find it in stock at a store close to home.
So, like many consumers, she Googled the product. She saw it was available on Amazon and cost around $38 before tax, nearly 30% cheaper than its typical retail price of $52.
“I said, you know, ‘It’s Amazon, it’ll come fast.’ It was the beginning of December. So I really didn’t want to wait too much longer for Christmas,” Washburn told CNBC in an interview, adding she was told it would arrive by Dec. 11.
CNBC
Donna Washburn bought a beauty product from Michelle Mack’s Amazon store that police suspect had been stolen.
Unknown to Washburn, police say, that bottle of foundation had likely been stolen by the crew of boosters allegedly employed by Mack — the suspected retail crime mastermind accused of running an illicit business from her San Diego mansion.
The Christmas gift ultimately never arrived, because Mack was arrested before she could ship the package, which was one of many found in Mack’s residence by investigators.
“I pay attention, but not that much, you know?” said Washburn, a 63-year-old clinical education associate in St. Augustine, Florida. “I’m shopping from Amazon. Hopefully you can trust it. So now that we know better … we’ll think twice.”
Washburn had bought the foundation from an Amazon storefront dubbed Online Makeup Store, which Mack had opened in 2012. CNBC viewed it before it was taken down in late 2023.
CNBC
Suspected stolen cosmetics found inside Michelle Mack’s home.
On its face, Mack’s storefront looked no different from the millions of others on Amazon’s marketplace. It had 4.5 stars on more than 100 reviews, and featured cosmetics from popular brands such as Mac, Tarte and Charlotte Tilbury that shoppers can find in neighborhood beauty stores.
There was just one red flag: the prices. Many of the products for sale at Mack’s store were listed at a fraction of the typical retail price, including a $25 bottle of Estee Lauder foundation that typically retails for $52 and Too Faced mascara that typically goes for $29 and was being sold for $17.
The store brought in millions. Since 2012, Mack sold nearly $8 million in cosmetics through the storefront before it was shut down, and she brought in $1.89 million in 2022 alone, Amazon sales records provided to investigators show.
Mack could offer such low prices, police suspect, because her crew of boosters had stolen the products in hundreds of incidents over more than a decade. Some of the thefts brought in around $2,000 in merchandise while others netted as much as $50,000 worth of merchandise, prosecutors said.
Mack’s business was humming along ahead of the holiday shopping seasonuntil the carefully crafted empire police say she built crumbled. On a cool December morning just before dawn, a convoy of CHP and HSI agents, armed with a search warrant, raided her sprawling mansion.
Mack, dressed in a baby pink pajama set and a pair of fuzzy mule slippers, was handcuffed and put into a police car as her teenage daughters stood in the driveway, watching.
Inside her garage, investigators found what they described as a “mini-store” — shelves and shelves of beauty products, sunglasses and designer bags organized in neat bins and categorized by product. They also found hundredsof postmarked yellow envelopes destined for unwitting customers, including Washburn, with “Online Makeup Store” marked as the return address.
Police recovered nearly 10,000 items worth a total of more than $387,000,CHP said.
Source: California Highway Patrol
A California Highway Patrol evidence photo of suspected stolen goods taken from the garage of Michelle Mack, who is accused of masterminding an organized retail crime network from her home in San Diego.
Source: California Highway Patrol
A California Highway Patrol evidence photo of suspected stolen goods taken from the garage of Michelle Mack, who is accused of masterminding an organized retail crime network from her home in San Diego.
Source: California Highway Patrol
A California Highway Patrol evidence photo of suspected stolen goods taken from the garage of Michelle Mack, who is accused of masterminding an organized retail crime network from her home in San Diego.
In February, California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a total of 140 felony charges against Mack; her husband, Kenneth Mack; and seven other alleged members of the crew. The charges included conspiracy to commit organized retail theft, grand theft and receipt of stolen property.The defendants have all pleaded not guilty. CNBC contacted each defendant multiple times for comment, but none of them responded.
“This is a multimillion-dollar criminal scheme. It was complex. It was orchestrated,” Bonta said when announcing the charges. “We are not talking about garden-variety shoplifting.”
Court records filed in connection withthe caseprovide a rare glimpse into the inner workings of an alleged organized retail crime ring. They show text messages between the suspects and details about the operation.
“I’m not stealing regular I’m going to start filling up my bag quick. So I want to know stuff I can grab in bulks too,” Kimora Lee Gooding texted Michelle Mackon Jan. 7, 2023.
Between Jan. 30 and Feb. 16, 2023, Gooding committed at least 10 separate thefts at Ulta stores across California, prosecutors allege in court records. In each case, Gooding took more than $950 worth of goods, the records say.
On Feb. 21, a few days after Gooding’s string of thefts, Mack sent her a screenshot of “Online Makeup Store” with an address she could ship the stolen products to. It was the same business address that was listed on Mack’s Amazon page before it was shut down, and traced back toa post office box a few miles from her home.
“Even without lancome we still did well,” Michelle Mack texted her husband two days later, allegedly referencing a prestige cosmetics brand owned by L’Oreal.
Soon, orders were pouring into Michelle Mack’s Amazon store.
Scott Zamost
California Highway Patrol Officer Andrew Barclay outside Michelle Mack’s home during her arrest.
“Lots of orders let’s get shipping,” Kenneth Mack texted Michelle Mack alongside an image that showed a bin full of paper.
By July 8, it appeared that the haul Gooding and others had allegedly brought in had dried up. Michelle Mack needed more things to sell.
“Did you get some new girls?” Michelle Mack texted Alina Franco, another person charged in connection with the theft crew. “I really need product so if you have anything please let me know.”
A day later, two more thefts connected to the ring were committed and many more followed, prosecutors said.
In addition to Ulta and Sephora, the theft organization targeted a range of other retailers, including Macy’s-owned Bloomingdale’s, Prada, Bath & Body Works, Victoria’s Secret, and Luxottica’s Sunglass Hut and LensCrafters, prosecutors said.
Sephora and Bath & Body Works declined to discuss the case with CNBC. Victoria’s Secret, Macy’s, Prada, Sunglass Hut and LensCrafters didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Despite the recent surge of headlines and commentary on the topic, organized theft groups have long operated around the world. But retail industry leaders and some law enforcement officials argue the rise of online marketplaces and e-commerce has caused such incidents to increase or have made it easier for theft groups to operate.
“There’s an ease of distribution that has become even more prevalent for stolen goods through online marketplaces. … You used to have to sell stolen goods at flea markets or out of the trunk of your car or maybe just locally,” said Ulta’s Kimbell. “Now, you have more sophisticated tools to have a broader reach across the country or even internationally.”
CNBC
Ulta Beauty CEO Dave Kimbell said online marketplaces need to do more to prevent the sale of stolen goods.
While Kimbell didn’t name Amazon specifically, he said online marketplaces are “part of the problem” and should be using the data, analytics and other technology available to them to be more “proactive” in shutting down bad-actor sellers.
“We shouldn’t have an environment where it’s possible to steal from one retailer and [have it] end up on any other platform, any other large-scale, mainstream platform” that people consider legitimate, said Kimbell.
Bonta called on Amazon and other marketplaces to “do more.” He said they could inform law enforcement, or at least talk to a seller, when red flags such as unusually cheap goods pop up.
“If you freeze out the demand and remove the market by closing out the marketplace where the stolen goods are so easily sold, you make organized retail crime as an organized crime less attractive. And we need to create barriers, instead of ease, for the ability to commit these crimes,” Bonta said in an interview.
CNBC
California Attorney General Rob Bonta discusses Michelle Mack’s case in an interview on Feb. 16, 2024.
In response, an Amazon spokesperson said that the company has “zero tolerance for the sale of stolen goods” and that the company invests more than $1 billion annually in preventing fraud and abuse.
“We leverage sophisticated detection and prevention solutions across our stores and fulfillment operations, allowing us to quickly spot a range of organized retail crime (ORC) schemes,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
The spokesperson said Amazon supports efforts to trace items throughout the supply chain and investigates allegations of stolen merchandise to find out how products were obtained.
“When we identify an issue, we work closely with law enforcement, retailers, and brands to stop bad actors and hold them accountable, including withholding funds, terminating accounts, and making law enforcement referrals,” which have led to arrests, product seizures and the disruption of retail crime rings, the spokesperson wrote.
The company said it assisted with the investigation into Michelle Mack’s alleged theft crew and provided evidence to investigators. It said it’s “pleased” the suspects were arrested because it “sends a strong message that the sale of stolen goods has severe consequences.”
Consumers, many of whom are hungry for deals as they contend with lingering inflation and high interest rates, may feel that buying stolen goods is a victimless crime, experts say.
Michael Krol, HSI’s special agent in charge, disagrees with that idea. He said not only does theft lead to higher prices for consumers but also the items they’re buying could be unsafe because of how they were stored or otherwise manipulated.
“Those items might not have the quality assurance and compliance that we expect in the United States. Baby formula, your medicines … [Consumers] could be buying baby formula that’s expired by three months,” said Krol.
The Inform Consumers Act, which took effect in June, was designed to curb the sale of stolen, counterfeit or otherwise harmful products on online platforms by requiring marketplaces to verify and share identifying information on certain third-party sellers.
The law was designed to prevent the exact type of illicit business Michelle Mack is accused of conducting on Amazon. If sellers are required to provide their contact information to marketplaces and on their listings, bad actors may be deterred from selling illicit goods.
However,Michelle Mack’s business name and an address belonging to it had been verified and was publicly available on her seller’s page. She’d already been on the platform for more than a decade by the time the Inform Act rolled around.
The verification process that Amazon conducted for Michelle Mack’s store after the Inform Act passed wasn’t enough to raise the company’s suspicions, either.
“In this instance, we did not receive signals to identify the seller was engaged in selling stolen goods,” Amazon said.
As part of the law, marketplaces are also required to provide a way for people to report suspicious product listings. But the law doesn’t require the marketplaces to do anything with that information.
“Amazon works hard to ensure our store is a safe and trusted place for shoppers,” Amazon says on a page where people can report suspicious listings. “If you believe any product, seller or other activity in our store is suspicious, please report this using one of the below methods.”
“While we are not able to respond directly to each report,” it says, “we appreciate your feedback.”
— Additional reporting by Ali McCadden
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Gabrielle Fonrouge,CNBC, Scott Zamost,CNBC and Courtney Reagan,CNBC
Shoppers are seen in a Kroger supermarket in Atlanta on Oct. 14, 2022.
Elijah Nouvelage | AFP | Getty Images
Rising gasoline prices likely put a floor under inflation in February, potentially reinforcing the Federal Reserve’s decision to take a go-slow approach with interest rate reductions.
Economists expect that prices across a broad spectrum of goods and services rose 0.4% on the month, just ahead of the January pace for 0.3%, according to the Dow Jones consensus. Excluding food and energy, the increase for core inflation is forecast at a 0.3% gain, also one-tenth of a percentage point above the previous month.
On a year-over-year basis, headline inflation is expected to show a 3.1% gain and core inflation a 3.7% increase when the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its latest reading on the consumer price index Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. ET. The respective 12-month readings in January were 3.1% and 3.9%.
Though it has fallen sharply since its peak in mid-2022, inflation’s resilience almost certainly will assure no Fed rate cuts at its next meeting March 19-20, and possibly into the summer, according to current market pricing. Markets were rattled in January when the CPI data came in higher than expected, and Fed officials shifted their rhetoric afterward to a more cautious tone about easing policy.
“While we do not expect the trend in inflation to re-accelerate this year, less clear progress over the next few months is likely to keep the Fed searching for more confidence that inflation is on course to return to target on a sustained basis,” Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo, said in a recent client note.
Energy prices had eased earlier in the winter, putting some downward pressure on headline readings.
But Wells Fargo estimates that energy services rebounded 4% in February, leading to an increase at the pump, where a gallon of regular gas is up about 20 cents, or more than 6%, from a month ago, according to AAA.
The bank also estimates that goods prices have held their ground despite an easing in supply chain pressures and pressure from higher interest rates. On the brighter side, the House said lower prices on travel, medical care and other services helped keep inflation in check.
Still, Wells Fargo has raised its full-year inflation forecast.
The bank’s economists now expect core CPI to run at a 3.3% rate this year, up from the previous 2.8% estimate. Focusing on the core personal consumption expenditures price index, the preferred Fed gauge, Wells Fargo sees inflation at 2.5% for the year, versus a prior estimate of 2.2%.
Wells Fargo isn’t alone in expecting a higher pace of inflation.
In its February survey of consumers, the New York Fed found that while respondents held to their one-year outlook for inflation at 3%, their expectations at the three- and five-year horizons accelerated to 2.7% and 2.9% respectively, both well ahead of the central bank’s 2% target.
While increases in gas prices can play an outsize role in monthly fluctuations for the survey, the outlook for gas price increases was actually relatively benign.
An Atlanta Fed measure of “sticky price” inflation held at 4.6% on a 12-month basis in January. The gauge is weighted toward items such as housing and insurance, and Fed officials are hoping that shelter costs decrease through the year, taking some pressure off the cost of living gauges.
On Thursday, the BLS will release the February producer price index, which measures what producers get for their goods and services at the wholesale level. The two indexes will be the last inflation data the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee will see before it meets next week.
He was Alejandro Campos Rios, 50, the Fullerton Police Department said Monday. The agency said Rios had a P.O. Box in Buena Park but was homeless.
Rios died at a hospital following the early morning encounter in the 1300 block of South Brookhurst Road, near Orangethorpe Avenue, on Wednesday, March 6.
Rios was hit with at least one of bean bag round, police said, which hit him in the chest and penetrated his skin. He was also shocked with a stun gun during the encounter.
Two officers who were at the scene were placed on administrative leave “per standard practice” of the Fullerton Police Department, said Sgt. Ryan O’Neil.
“They should be returning to work to work later this week,” O’Neil said.
Police went to the McDonald’s after a manager called them reporting two men outside the restaurant acting erratically. Footage obtained by OC Hawk showed Rios and the other man, who has not been identified, gesturing and apparently dancing, but otherwise not acting aggressively.
The footage then cuts to the police response, with at least one officer pointing a handheld device at Rios, shirtless and swinging a belt wildly.
One of the officers fires a series of bean bag rounds at Rios — from the footage, at least six were fired. At some point during the encounter, police said a stun gun was also fired.
After the sixth bean bag round was fired at Rios, the man could be seen in the footage getting on one knee while clutching at his chest. The other man who was with him runs past the officers who are slowly advancing on Rios.
The footage then cuts again to officers and paramedics tending to Rios as he lie on the ground with bandages covering his chest.
O’Neil said the man who ran from the scene was later found and interviewed by officers.
The Orange County District Attorney’s office is investigating the encounter and has already interviewed both officers, O’Neil said.
The Burbank Animal Shelter is joining the North Shore Animal League America, the world’s largest no-kill animal rescue and adoption organization, to celebrate the start of the 24th annual TOUR FOR LIFE. From Tuesday, March 12 through Saturday, March 16, the shelter will be offering 50% off all adoption fees!
The shelter is open from 10 am to 5pm Tuesday through Saturday. Come in and adopt your new best friend!
City Market of Los Angeles has moved forward with approved plans to turn three blocks in Downtown L.A.’s Fashion District into an urban-retail village with nearly 1,000 homes.
The Downtown-based former wholesale produce retailer has secured a revised development agreement with the city to build City Market Los Angeles between East 9th, East 11th, San Pedro and San Julian streets, Urbanize Los Angeles reported.
The 1.7 million-square-foot development, approved in 2018, would replace a more than century-old produce market that closed in 2009, including 91,700-square feet of commercial buildings, according to an environmental review.
Plans for the project, in the works since 2013, include 945 homes, a 210-room hotel, a 312,000-square-foot school or office campus, 272,000 square feet of offices and 224,900 square feet of shops and restaurants, including a movie theater with 744 seats, according to its website.
City Market, which would take two decades to complete, would feature 455-foot-tall buildings of up to 38 stories, divided by courtyards and paseos across 10 acres.
The revised development agreement, approved by the City Council, calls for 94 affordable apartments, including 47 for moderate-income families and 47 for low-income households.
The revised development agreement was borne out of the city’s widespread public corruption scandal.
Garcetti had objected to changes to the agreement by former City Councilman Jose Huizar, since sentenced to prison for racketeering and tax evasion charges tied to Downtown developments.
Huizar’s plan would have redirected developer payments intended for citywide funds into the Council District 14 public benefit trust fund.
The revised agreement, introduced by Councilman Kevin de León, retains funding for initiatives in the 14th Council District, including $1.9 million for homeless health services, $1.9 million for street improvements, $1.9 million for public transportation and a $1 million contribution to the Parks Department for Pershing Square.
But instead of a $3.9 million payment into the Council District 14 affordable housing trust fund, the City Market project would set aside 10 percent of the 945 apartments as on-site affordable housing, for rent below market rate.
When the project was announced in 2013, it was expected to be completed in phases over two decades. Now 11 years later, the project has been granted a 20-year period to complete the terms of the development agreement.
The City Market of Los Angeles was founded in 1909 as the central produce distribution market for Los Angeles. The real estate investment trust now owns 17 buildings on more than 12 acres in Downtown, according to its website.
In 2017, it opened City Market South, with offices, shops and restaurants in 75,000 square feet of converted warehouses on 2.5 acres of the original produce market at 1100 San Julian Street.
LOS ANGELES — Once the Oscars end, it’s always time to celebrate in true Hollywood fashion: the star-studded after-parties.
Dozens of celebrities made their way out to the various celebrations all over Los Angeles to celebrate another successful show, ditching their red-carpet attire for new party-ready looks.
Vanessa Hudgens arrives at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Sunday, March 10, 2024, at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, Calif.
Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
So where did they go? What were some of the looks? We take you inside the 2024 Oscars after-parties.
Vanity Fair Oscars Party
This year’s Vanity Fair party returned to the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills.
Stars began arriving even as the awards ceremony was ongoing, including Jennifer Coolidge, Donald Glover, Sofia Vergara, Jon Hamm, parents John Legend and Chrissy Tiegen, and singer Kylie Minogue.
“I feel like it’s not work for me tonight, it’s fun,” said Minogue. “Like, what do I have to do at the Oscars? Nothing! But I’m looking forward to catching up with some friends, people I know in the business … Just feeling the general sparkle.”
“Abbott Elementary’s” Sheryl Lee Ralph attended the Vanity Fair party with her stylist daughter Ivy-Victoria Maurice.
“You can never go wrong with sparkle and shine when it comes down to the original ‘Dreamgirl,’” said Maurice about her mom. “I just knew that silver was really on trend, and it definitely matches her personality.”
Star of “Abbott Elementary,” Sheryl Lee Ralph, was joined by her daughter at the Vanity Fair party to speak on dressing her mother for the 2024 Oscars.
The Vanity Fair after-party is known as one of the ultimate Oscars parties, often bringing out plenty of A-listers, like the Kardashian-Jenner family.
Kendall, Kylie and Kris Jenner all attended the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Sunday, March 10, 2024.
AP / Getty
Oscars Governors Ball
You can’t forget the Oscars Governors Ball!
It’s one of the biggest parties after the Academy Awards.
The Governors Ball always brings out A-list celebrities, fabulous food and entertainment all in one room. This year, Master chef Wolfgang Puck is celebrating an “Oscar” milestone as he marks his 30th year catering the event.
For three decades, Puck has returned to serve up his delicious creations at start-studded ball.
It’s also a great time to catch up with the celebs to hear about their favorite moments from the show.
On The Red Carpet’s George Pennacchio caught up with Oscars host Jimmy Kimmel at the Governors Ball, who said he felt great about how the show went.
“I feel good,” he said. “I’m very critical of myself, but I feel like mostly everything worked pretty well.”
Elton John’s Oscar party
Elton John’s Academy Awards after-party is perennially one of the hottest tickets in town, and this year was no different.
It was the 32nd year the singer has hosted a viewing party to raise money for his Elton John AIDS Foundation.
“I’ve been a patron of the Elton John AIDS Foundation for a very long time, and just to watch what Elton and David have achieved over the years is so special,” said actress and guest Elizabeth Hurley. “It means so much. They’re so passionate about their cause, they’ve made everybody around them passionate, and they couple it with one of the best nights of the year. It’s great.”
Now that all the Academy Awards have been handed out, it’s time to party!
Watch “Live With Kelly and Mark: After the Oscars,” live from the Oscars stage at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood on Monday at 9 a.m.
It’s kind of hard not to be smitten with the burrowing owl.
Standing just 9 inches tall and weighing less than a cup of coffee, these owls prefer to live in the ground, where they feed mainly on insects and small rodents, rather than in trees. Their miniature size, feathery floof and comically big eyes give these birds of prey a charisma that captivates the lens of wildlife photographers and the hearts of even the most clinical environmental scientists.
“Once you see a burrowing owl, you just fall in love,” said Catherine Portman, president of the Burrowing Owl Preservation Society.
But their cuteness hasn’t protected this grassland species from a dangerous decline in population. This month, several wildlife conservation groups petitioned the California Fish and Game Commission to list these owls as endangered or threatened under the California Endangered Species Act.
Their report cites a 2007 statewide survey that measured an 11% decline in burrowing owls since 1993; although no comprehensive population count has be done since, they point to regional studies that show troubling numbers. Researchers Robert L. Wilkerson and Rodney B. Siegel counted 6,408 burrowing owl pairs in the Imperial Valley from 2006-07, but according to another study done by Jeffrey Manning, more than 1 in 4 breeding pairs had disappeared.
Shani Kleinhaus, a resident of Santa Clara Valley and environmental advocate with the local Audubon Society, remembers a time when it was easy to spot these raptors bobbing their heads all across the Bay Area, even in their camouflaged plumage.
“In 2009 we still had burrowing owls in the county that were very accessible to the public so people could see them,” Kleinhaus shared. But now, she said, most if not all of these birds rely on local conservation efforts to help protect their dwindling habitat in the Bay Area and help them pair when they reach reproductive maturity.
But it’s a little more complicated than rapacious developers versus hapless birds; there’s plenty of blame to spread around.
Burrowing owls rely on ground squirrels to help build their nests, but farmers often kill them as pests because they nibble on electrical wiring and feed on produce. Feral cats and roving hounds have been known to hunt them down. Invasive grasses brought by Spaniards during the late 1700s to feed their livestock have made grasslands less habitable for ground squirrels and burrowing owls alike.
There are mitigation fees that developers pay if they are encroaching on burrowing owl habitats. And the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the California Fish and Game Commission codes afford protections to burrowing owls, but advocates say it’s not enough.
A burrowing owl in a busy park in Contra Costa County keeps watch as dozens of dogs explore just feet away.
(Lauren Bettino)
The decline of the owl is ‘death by a thousand cuts’
These environmentalists have petitioned to protect the burrowing owl before, most recently in 2003 when scientists like Lynne Trulio noticed a worrisome decline in the population of burrowing owls across the state. That petition was rejected because the state noted that the owls were flourishing in the Imperial Valley with the increase in agriculture in the 1990s.
“[Burrowing owls] should have been listed back then, in my opinion,” said Trulio, chair of the environmental studies department at San Jose State University. “What’s different 20 years on is that the trend that we saw in 2003 decline has steepened, and has gotten worse.”
Esther Burkett, senior environmental scientist at California Department of Fish and Wildlife, admits there aren’t enough legal protections for the owls and that the state bureaucracy can make it difficult to act quickly. (Her department is not to be confused with the Fish and Game Commission; her team does the research that informs the policy and rules that the Fish and Game Commission decides.)
“You got to know what you’re looking for. So, ideally, for any species, the actual surveyor needs to be trained on how to do that,” said Burkett. “[If] you miss a review of that [California Environmental Quality Act] document you don’t get another chance at it. And then we’re gonna lose three [breeding] pairs and it’s just death by a thousand cuts over time.”
Burkett manages a wide array of species in the state and said she’s overwhelmed by the need and the lack of resources she has to address the problems facing many of these animals. The last time they put together a comprehensive report on burrowing owls was in 2012, and even that report took four years to put together. She likens the situation to a hospital where they’re trying to address many patients — species tagged as “special interest” like the burrowing owl are in the ICU, but most of their resources are going toward endangered and threatened species in the emergency room.
Activists intervene on the owls’ behalf
Portman spends a lot of her time teaching Californians how to apply the California Environmental Quality Act to protect burrowing owls. The statute, which Gov. Ronald Reagan signed into law in 1970, requires developers to gauge the environmental effects of their projects and plan how to mitigate them — and allows the public to challenge them. But it’s not always easy to make sure these agencies are doing their due diligence.
“I don’t put that on the developer. I put that on the land use jurisdictions,” said Portman. The agency tasked with preparing the environmental impact report usually makes the developer bankroll it, and it’s in the developer’s interests to hurry the project toward completion. “The city councils, the county Board of Supervisors, whoever the lead agency is, gets to decide how that land is used,” Portman said, but they “do not take full advantage of the authority that they had.”
Other scientists are working to increase the chances burrowing owls can survive and successfully reproduce. For example, the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, which has been collaborating with agencies and municipalities to save the burrowing owl, recently released some owls that had been rescued from near-certain death as chicks.
Jeff Miller, senior conservation advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity, was author of both petitions; he’s one of the few activists who remembers when biologists started sounding the alarm in the 1990s. Miller believes the outcome of this petition could be different because the priorities of the commission have shifted over time.
Back when the Fish and Game Commission began, Miller said, “everything was managed as to be fished or to be hunted.” Today, more board members have expertise in environmental issues, he said, and “there’s a lot more emphasis on conserving imperiled species.” The commissioners did not respond to The Times’ request for comment.
A burrowing owl in a busy park in Contra Costa County dozes off while devoutly standing guard outside his burrow.
(Lauren Bettino)
Burrowing owls and California’s grasslands
Burrowing owl advocates said the goal of listing the bird as an endangered species is to eventually get it off the list. But Trulio thinks listing the bird under California’s Endangered Species Act could be the key to preserving the state’s grasslands.
Trulio’s speciality is urban species, and she’s contributed to the research that underpins Santa Clara County’s habitat conservation plan on burrowing owls. But before that she was also the lead scientist for the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project, one of the largest tidal wetland restoration projects on the West Coast.
“One of the things that drove the effort was the fact that there were endangered species” in wetlands, said Trulio. She said it took years to change the perception of the wetlands as a dumping ground and to get a ballot measure to fund its preservation.
Where developers might look at grasslands as vast empty landscapes to build on, Trulio said, she sees their value to the public as spaces for outdoor recreation and sequestering carbon to fight climate change. It’s not just about protecting this one species of bird, but the ecosystem they inhabit, Trulio said.
“We need to protect burrowing owls before urbanization takes hold,” Trulio stated. “Once urbanization takes hold, what really happens is land values become so high that you can’t protect them.”
The double-edge nature of visibility
Lauren Bettino, a Bay Area wildlife photographer, had never seen a burrowing owl before she set out to Point Isabel Regional Shoreline to snap a photo of these rare birds.
Bettino was taking a break from her search and sat down on a rock only to realize she happened to share a perch with a burrowing owl. “He was not concerned about me at all,” Bettino recalled. “I spent probably an hour and a half to two hours just sitting next to him and watching him.”
Bettino tries not to advertise exact locations of where she photographs wildlife because it could attract over-zealous photographers who could disturb them. But she’s believes sharing pictures of the burrowing owls is an important way to encourage people to care more about their natural neighbors; she knows most people are not field biologists.
The Audubon Society’s Instagram page often features burrowing owls where they are liked by thousands of viewers. To Kleinhaus it makes sense why there’s such an outpouring of love. “Seeing an owl opens your eyes to something very mythical or primordial,” she said. “It elicits emotion not just from me, but anyone who sees them.”
Governor Gavin Newsom’s Proposition 1, a mental health bond measure that would provide $2 billion to build housing that was presented to voters on the California ballot last week, is leading by a whisker.
Newsom had trumpeted the measure as a way to get “people off the streets, out of tents and into treatment.”
Prop. 1 would direct $4.4 billion to fund 10,000 mental health beds and $2 billion for homeless housing projects, half of which would be reserved for veterans with mental illness or issues with drugs and alcohol.
The measure would also require the state’s 58 counties to spend 30 percent of Mental Health Services Act tax dollars on housing. Last year, the mental health revenue was $1 billion.
It would require the state’s counties to spend half of that money on the chronically homeless or people living in tents.
The governor said the initiative would create 11,000 new homes through new housing construction or by converting hotels, motels and other buildings into homes.
The Yes on Prop 1 campaign raised nearly $21 million, and included backing by the National Alliance on Mental Illness California, California Teachers Association and California Chamber of Commerce.
In comparison, the “No on Prop. 1” campaign raised very little, and was led by mental health advocates such as Disability Rights California, who fear that changing funding priorities for the Mental Health Services Act will result in service cuts. They also fear new treatment beds will compel people into involuntary treatment.
Some six years after the devastating Thomas and Woolsey wildfires began to wreak havoc on the bottom line of Southern California Edison, the end is finally in sight on two fronts for the utility subsidiary of Rosemead-based Edison International.
In its latest quarterly and annual earnings release last month, Edison revised upward once again by $67 million its estimate of the combined claims costs for both wildfires (and mudslides resulting from the Thomas Fire) to a new total of roughly $9.4 billion, with more than 90% of those claims expected to be resolved by the end of this year.
Edison also revealed that it plans to seek California Public Utility Commission approval to pass roughly $6.4 billion of that cost on to its ratepayers over the next several years. The company has already recovered from its insurers and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission some $2.4 billion of that $9.4 billion cost.
Edison also updated its progress on its main effort to prevent future wildfires sparking from its equipment: the installation of insulation on – or undergrounding of – nearly 17,000 miles of distribution wires in high-fire-risk areas. As of the end of last year, 76% of those wires had been hardened to resist sparking fires, including nearly 5,600 miles of covered conductor installation; by the end of next year, Edison expects that figure to rise to 90%.
Edison technicians work with cable on a project.
“SCE’s industry-leading covered-conductor program continues to make tremendous progress,” said Pedro Pizarro, Edison’s chief executive. “In just five years, SCE has installed more than 5,580 circuit miles of covered conductor. When combined with enhanced vegetation management, asset inspections and other programs, this has significantly reduced the need for public safety power shutoffs.”
Edison’s progress on these two fronts prompted one of the major bond rating agencies to take notice.
In rating Edison’s plan to issue and refinance bonds, Fitch Ratings in January gave a stable rating outlook.
“With the large majority of 2017/2018 wildfire liabilities resolved, Fitch expects (parent Edison)’s and SCE’s 2023-2026 credit metrics to improve significantly,” Fitch wrote in its commentary.
And in addressing the utility’s grid-hardening efforts, Fitch had this to say: “SCE has made meaningful progress strengthening the grid’s fire resilience in light of materially reduced wildfire activity over the past five years despite challenging wildfire conditions.”
Catastrophic wildfire losses
The December 2017 Thomas Fire, which burned nearly 282,000 acres in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, destroyed 1,063 structures. At the time, it was the largest wildfire in California by acreage since at least 1932; since then, however, seven wildfires have each consumed more acreage.
Six weeks later, in January 2018, after an intense downpour, mudslides started on slopes burned by the Thomas Fire; as the slides roared into the Montecito community in Santa Barbara County, they damaged or destroyed more than 400 homes and killed 23 people.
Southern California Edison’s own internal investigation and the Ventura County Fire Department both determined that SCE’s equipment likely sparked one of two ignition points for the Thomas Fire, on Koenigstein Road east of Ojai.
Then in November 2018, the Woolsey Fire burned nearly 97,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, destroying 1,643 structures. Investigations by the California Public Utilities Commission and the Ventura County Fire Department pointed to Southern California Edison equipment having a role in triggering that fire.
In the months and years since these fires and related events, thousands of damage claims have poured into Southern California Edison. As more claims came in and as more settlement agreements took shape, Edison executives kept upping their total financial impact. In mid-2021, the figure stood at about $6 billion, with a major upward revision later that year bringing the total to about $7.5 billion.
In its most recent earnings report, Edison upped the loss figure again by $65 million to $9.4 billion, with a total of about 12,000 claims resolved. And that figure could still go up: the final deadline for Woolsey Fire claims resolution packages was last month and Edison executives were still evaluating the responses from the estimated 1,300 outstanding Woolsey Fire claims.
With the exception of one claim settlement that came in significantly larger than expected, Pizarro told analysts during Edison’s most recent earnings teleconference call that “overall claims are settling in line with expectations.”
Who will pay the claims costs?
As the claims settlements mounted, Edison took a series of write-downs, with the largest being a $1.8 billion charge against earnings in the fourth quarter of 2018. More recently, though, Edison has entered the long regulatory process with the state Public Utilities Commission to try to get $6.4 billion of these losses covered through several years of surcharges on ratepayer bills.
Hundreds of lawsuits have been filed against Southern California Edison seeking damages from the Woolsey Fire.
In August, Southern California Edison filed an application with the commission to have $2.4 billion in costs associated with the Thomas Fire and resulting mudslides passed on to ratepayers. In its earnings presentation, Edison said a final decision on this request could come “as soon as first quarter 2025.”
That same earnings presentation said Southern California Edison is preparing to file its application to pass on $4 billion-plus in Woolsey Fire claims costs to the utility’s ratepayers. The application would likely be filed this summer; the exact timing will depend on when the utility achieves the milestone of resolving 90% of the outstanding claims from that fire. If the timeline for the Thomas Fire application is any guide, it would likely take the Public Utilities Commission two years to reach a decision on this second application.
As these cases are considered by the commission, Edison will likely face an uphill battle to get approval to pass on the entire $6.4 billion cost to ratepayers. Whatever doesn’t get passed on to ratepayers could ultimately come out of shareholder returns.
Most grid-hardening completed
In its earnings presentation, Edison said that workers with its utility subsidiary have installed insulation covers on nearly 5,600 miles of distribution wires over the last five years. Another 1,070 miles of wires are expected to be insulated by the end of this year.
After that, the pace is expected to slow, since only about 1,800 miles of high-risk wires will remain and Southern California Edison plans to take four years to insulate these wires. By 2028, the utility projects that all of its power lines in high fire-risk areas will either be insulated or moved underground.
The insulation is designed to reduce the chances of the wires sparking and then igniting blazes. The utility noted that in the five years since the program began there has not been a single instance of an insulated power line causing a fire.
With this track record, Southern California Edison has not had to resort to power shutoffs nearly as frequently. Power shutoffs are meant to be a tool of last resort, since they are so disruptive to the affected residences and businesses.
According to Edison spokesman Jeff Monford, even when power shutoffs do occur, they are now much more targeted than they once were, thanks to improvements in circuitry technology. This means fewer residences and businesses are impacted.
Despite all these efforts, Edison isn’t completely out of the woods. Besides the risk of the remaining claims costing more to resolve than expected and the possibility that Edison won’t be able to pass as much of the claims costs to ratepayers as hoped, there’s still the possibility of more destructive fires.
Walking through the frosty, snow-covered hamlet of Arendelle from “Frozen,” or the bustling, critter-filled metropolis of “Zootopia” might be possible one day for visitors to Disney’s California theme parks.
That’s only if Disney wins approval from local officials to expand its Anaheim resort over the next four decades.
The proposed expansion wouldn’t increase Disney’s 490-acre footprint in Southern California or change what the company already has permission to build. But it could help the company develop new attractions. They could place rides and entertainment options on what is currently a sprawling, 50-acre parking lot — and move parking for Disneyland to a multistory structure — all while keeping within the boundaries of a resort surrounded by residential neighborhoods.
“We know there are stories out there we haven’t told yet, like ‘Wakanda’ or ‘Coco’ or ‘Frozen’ or ‘Zootopia’,” said Rachel Alde, Disney’s senior vice president of global development and finance. “We know what kind of stories we would love to tell. We need to get the guidance on what we can build there so we can understand how.”
A map shows the DisneylandForward expansion proposal. Credit: City of Anaheim (Click for larger version)
The city of Anaheim’s planning commission is scheduled Monday to review the proposal for Disneyland, dubbed the “happiest place on Earth.” The project — which would require Disney to invest at least $1.9 billion in the theme park, lodging, entertainment and related uses over the next decade — still must be approved by the city council before taking effect.
Disney’s goal is to create what it calls more immersive experiences for tourists, similar to the attraction Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, which opened in California in 2019. The company said it doesn’t yet know which stories would be central to the new developments, but the idea is to create areas like “Zootopia” in Shanghai Disneyland, where animal characters walk through a vibrant cityscape that resembles the setting of the film.
Right now, there isn’t enough room in the original Disneyland in California to build something on a large scale without affecting existing attractions, which are relished by loyal, long-time visitors to the company’s oldest theme park, Alde said.
It’s the first time Disney has sought a major change to its California theme parks since the 1990s, when the company obtained approvals to turn its first park into a resort hub. It later added a second park, Disney California Adventure Park, and a shopping and entertainment area called Downtown Disney.
Disneyland, which dates back to 1955, was the second-most visited theme park in the world in 2022 with 16.8 million people coming through the gates, according to a report by the Themed Entertainment Association and AECOM.
Disney’s parks are a tourism magnet for Southern California and especially for Anaheim, which is Orange County’s most populous city and home to more than 345,000 people as well as a major league baseball team and national hockey league team. Hotel revenue typically makes up about half of Anaheim’s revenue, and is expected to climb to $236 million this year, according to city estimates.
“Visitors generate a tremendous amount of revenue for our city that allows us to invest in our neighborhoods,” said Erin Ryan, a spokesperson for the city of Anaheim. “Disney brings a lot of tourists here.”
The plan also would require the company to invest tens of millions of dollars in street improvements, affordable housing and other infrastructure in the city. Disney has held workshops to address residents’ questions about the proposal, including concerns about the company’s plan to absorb a local road into the theme park.
Two Ventura County multifamily assets have traded hands for $153 million, totaling 409 units.
The properties are Oakview Apartment Homes, a 242-unit asset located in Westlake Village that was built in 1970, and The Biltmore at Thousand Oaks, a 167-unit apartment complex constructed in 1965. Together, they make up a significant portion of housing stock for the area.
Institutional Property Advisors, a division of Calabasas-based brokerage firm Marcus & Millichap, represented the seller, and facilitated the buyer, San Francisco-based real estate investment firm FPA Multifamily, in the sale.
“This marks the fourth deal in Ventura Country our team has closed with FPA Multifamily since December, totaling $325 million across all properties,” said Kevin Green, executive managing director of investments at IPA. “Our partnership with FPA Multifamily continues to yield success, highlighting the strong demand and active investor interest in the multifamily market.”
Green worked alongside IPA’s Joseph Grabiec and Gregory Harris in the transaction.
“Well maintained for over 50 years, the majority of the units at both properties are in classic condition with no upgrades or have received minor refurbishments over the last years,” Grabiec said. “Collectively, the portfolio represents nearly 10% of the market-rate apartment housing stock in Thousand Oaks and Westlake Village.”
Oakview Apartment Homes, located at 645 Hampshire Rd., is within a short drive to shopping at Westlake Plaza and North Ranch Shopping Center. The complex has a number of one-bedroom and two-bedroom units available.
The Biltmore at Thousand Oaks, located at 555 Laurie Lane, is walking distance to Whole Foods Market, Janss Marketplace shopping mall and local boutiques along Moorpark Road. Floorplans range from one- to three-bedroom units.
Both properties have upgraded clubhouses and leasing centers, as well as two resort-style pools, spas and outdoor lounge areas with barbecues and seating.