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A fully occupied mixed-use property near the Babylon LIRR station sold for $4.625M, highlighting strong investor demand in Babylon Village.
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David Winzelberg
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A fully occupied mixed-use property near the Babylon LIRR station sold for $4.625M, highlighting strong investor demand in Babylon Village.
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David Winzelberg
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Tenants at the historic Leland House just can’t catch a break.
The electricity that heats the downtown Detroit building malfunctioned early Wednesday afternoon, prompting the city’s fire marshal to order a mandatory evacuation. The outage also knocked out lights and elevators.
“They put us out,” Daryl Stewart, a 67-year-old artist and percussionist who has lived in the building since 2012, tells Metro Times. “The fire department came and knocked on doors. They said, ‘You gotta get out.’”
Tenants say melting ice and snow on the sidewalk leaked into the basement, where the building’s electrical system is located, causing a shortage that left the 20-story building in the dark. A representative for the owner, the Leland House Limited Partnership, is now scrambling to find a solution, but that may be difficult because the company filed for bankruptcy in November.
City Club, a legendary nightclub inside the building, will also be closed until further notice.
Tenants say they received a voucher to stay at a hotel in Southfield.
The outage comes a little more than a week after management notified tenants on Black Friday that they had a few days to move out because DTE Energy planned to cut electricity over unpaid electric bills. But on Dec. 4, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court approved a last-minute arrangement after the Leland House secured a $1.2 million short-term, high-interest loan, and Judge Maria Oxholm barred DTE from cutting off power without her approval. Some of the money, she said, must be used to pay the DTE deposit and maintain casualty insurance.
In a statement Wednesday, DTE Energy said it empathizes with tenants.
“We feel for the residents of the Leland House and know how challenging these past few weeks have been,” the Detroit-based company said. “Unfortunately, this outage was caused by customer-owned equipment that cannot be accessed due to existing structural hazards inside the building. We’re prepared to restore service as soon as the building owner can make the necessary repairs and ensure a safe environment. We are working closely with the city to ensure impacted residents are safe and have access to temporary housing.”
City officials say the fire department “responded immediately to assist and ensure all residents were safely exited” after citing “safety concerns.”
“The City of Detroit’s Housing & Revitalization Department (HRD) has been on-site since the incident, working alongside DTE to support displaced residents,” Alison DeRees, a city spokesperson, tells Metro Times. “DTE is covering the cost of temporary housing, and HRD’s Housing Stability Division is currently supporting 32 residents with temporary housing, while others have chosen to stay with friends or family. HRD continues to offer financial assistance to any residents of the Leland House seeking other permanent housing options, and our team will remain in close contact with impacted residents in the days and weeks ahead to ensure they have the resources and support needed during this transition.”
Metro Times featured the Leland House on the cover of this week’s paper edition. The Leland opened in 1927 as a glamorous Italian Renaissance hotel with more than 700 rooms, an opulent ballroom, and a grand lobby designed by Rapp & Rapp, the Chicago firm behind Detroit’s Michigan Theatre.
The building has been in gradual decline for the past few decades. Michael Higgins, who ran Leland House Limited Partnership, died in September 2023 and never followed through on a promised $120 million renovation that was announced in 2018. In the years since, the building has become mired in lawsuits, code violations, unpaid bills, and mounting debt.
Metro Times is awaiting a response from Luis Ramirez, who represents the Michael Higgins Trust and the Leland House ownership.
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Steve Neavling
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Koreatown resident Scott Lyness was well aware that the city of Los Angeles was looking to tackle its food waste problem.
While bicycling to work, he saw the growing number of green trash bins popping up on curbs. He read the notice sent to his home instructing residents to expect green bins to be delivered at some point.
Still, Lyness was not prepared for what came next: 13 green bins deposited earlier this month outside the apartment building he manages on New Hampshire Avenue.
That’s on top of the three bins that the city delivered the previous week at a smaller building he also manages next door, and the two green bins that those properties were already using.
Lyness, 69, who works as a project manager at USC, said the two buildings don’t have anywhere near the room to store so many full-size cans — and don’t generate enough organic waste to fill them. He’s tried to have his tenants contact city offices to say they don’t need them. He said he’s even thought about throwing them into the street.
“Our neighborhoods are being inundated with green waste bins,” he said.
City officials are working furiously to get Angelenos to separate more of their food waste — eggshells, coffee grounds, meat bones, unfinished vegetables, orange peels, greasy napkins — to comply with SB 1383, a state composting law passed in 2016. They’ve even implemented Professor Green, an online chatbot that can help residents decide what can and can’t go in the green bin.
SB 1383 requires that 75% of organic waste be diverted away from landfills by the end of the year and instead turned into compost. Food and other organic waste sent to landfills is a significant source of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Methane has a global warming potential about 80 times greater than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period.
To reach that goal, crews from L.A.’s Bureau of Sanitation have deposited huge numbers of 90-gallon green bins in front of some apartment buildings, including duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes and larger buildings that have been grandfathered into the city’s curbside trash collection program.
Scott Lyness, 69, stands near green waste bins outside the apartment building he manages in Koreatown.
(Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times)
Residents are already familiar with the green bins, which were long reserved for lawn clippings and other yard waste but now are the destination for food scraps as well.
Most large apartment buildings in L.A. have been spared from the recent round of green bin deliveries, since they participate in recycLA, the city trash franchise program that relies on private waste haulers.
Sanitation officials say that Angelenos who prefer smaller, more manageable containers should fill out a form to get a 30- or 60-gallon replacement. They point out that the bins are part of a much larger effort by the city to reach its zero-waste goals and “lead on sustainability.”
Most of the green bins’ contents are taken to a facility in Bakersfield, where the resulting compost can be used by farmers, said Heather Johnson, a sanitation spokesperson.
“While some may find [the bins] inconvenient at the moment, in the short term they will result in more diverted waste and cleaner air,” Johnson said in an email.
Despite those serious intentions, Angelenos have been poking fun at the “Great Green Bin Apocalypse of 2025,” as journalist and podcaster Alissa Walker framed the situation on Bluesky. Walker recently shared a photo showing what appeared to be 20 green bins in front of one property, right next to a discarded sofa.
“This one is probably my favorite,” she wrote. “I like how they lined them all up neatly in a row and then left the couch.”
Green organic waste bins outside an apartment building in Koreatown.
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
After Walker urged others to send in pictures, Silver Lake resident Tommy Newman posted a photo on Bluesky showing eight bins outside an eight-unit building, just south of Sunset Boulevard.
“Unless they are running a juice bar in there, how could they possibly create this much organic waste on a weekly basis?” wrote Newman, who works at a county housing agency.
Over on X, another observer summed up the absurdity in a different way. “LA gave every multi family unit a green bin due to a bureaucratic fever dream about composting,” the person wrote. “I have 5 personally.”
In recent months, L.A.’s sanitation agency has sent teams of “ambassadors” into neighborhoods to educate residents about the need to throw food in the green bins.
That means keeping food out of the 60-gallon black bins where residents have been accustomed to dumping most of their garbage, which ultimately winds up in landfills. Recyclable items, including glass and aluminum, will continue to go into blue bins.
The changes were also spelled out on fliers sent out by the city last summer, with a clear warning in all capital letters: “Unless we hear from you immediately, we will deliver a 90-gallon green container to your residence.”
Lyness saw those alerts and knew about the change. But he contends that most people would have missed the news or thrown the fliers away. Depositing an inordinate amount of bins around town is just not the way to encourage people to properly dispose of their organic waste, he said.
The city’s new food-waste program, which is projected to cost $66 million a year, is one reason the City Council approved a huge increase in trash fees earlier this year, in some cases doubling them. Each 90-gallon green bin costs the city $58.61, tax included, though residents are not being directly charged for the recent deliveries.
Sanitation officials say they have delivered more than 65,000 green bins across the city, with 4,000 to go. For residents waiting for them to be removed or replaced with a smaller bin, only 1,000 orders can be carried out in a regular workday, those officials said.
Around the corner on North Berendo Street, Lyness’ neighbor Lucy Alvidrez agreed that the green bins were troublesome while dragging in her black bin Thursday afternoon.
“They sure got carried away with it,” she said, pointing across the street to an apartment building with about two dozen green bins on its front curb.
Alvidrez, 69, who has lived in the neighborhood for two decades, never had an issue with trash collection until the city dropped off four green bins, one for each unit in her building. She was more fortunate than Lyness: sanitation workers took two of the bins back, upon request.
Alvidrez said she would prefer that the city “spend our money feeding the homeless” instead of purchasing bins that no one needs, she said.
A dozen green organic waste bins occupy a street in Koreatown..
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
Nearby, Lyness opened a neighbor’s green bin, which was filled to the brim with trash that wasn’t compostable and should have gone in a black bin. If no one knows what to put in the green bins, nothing is going to improve, he said.
“It’s trash,” he lamented. “It’s all trash.”
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Sandra McDonald, David Zahniser
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Two men were injured in an explosion at an apartment building in Poland on Oct. 21
The blast was caused by a World War II artillery shell, according to Głubczyce police
Police also discovered another explosive wartime “souvenir” as they searched the apartment amid their investigation
Two people were injured after a World War II artillery shell exploded inside an apartment building in Poland.
At around 7:30 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Oct. 21, police in Głubczyce received reports that a window in an apartment building on Mickiewicza Street was “hanging unnaturally” as if an explosion had occurred, police stated in a news release.
Upon further investigation, officers discovered that an object had exploded inside an apartment where two men, aged 62 and 65, and a 45-year-old woman had been drinking alcohol. One of the men and the woman had blood alcohol levels 12 times over the legal driving limit in Poland, CBS News reported.
According to the police news release, both of the men sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the blast. One of them had to be taken to the hospital due to their leg wound.
Głubczyce Police
The apartment where a WWII artillery shell exploded in Poland
Other residents of the apartment building and people living in nearby houses were evacuated amid the police’s investigation.
Dogs trained to detect the scent of explosives assisted alongside bomb disposal experts from the Independent Counter-Terrorism Unit of the Police in Katowice at the scene.
Preliminary findings indicate that the explosion was caused by a World War II artillery shell that detonated in the apartment, per the police news release. The owner of the premises allegedly revealed that they brought the object home after finding it in the woods “several years ago.”
Another explosive wartime “souvenir” was discovered as police searched their apartment, which had to be secured and neutralized at a military training ground.
“We remind you that if you discover an object resembling an unexploded ordnance, you must not, under any circumstances, move, touch, or disarm it,” the police warned. “The area where it is located should be secured from access by unauthorized persons, especially children.”
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Głubczyce Police
Police at scene of the explosion
“If you are in an open space or forest, mark the area so that no one enters it and it can be easily found,” the police continued. “Report the discovery to the nearest police station as soon as possible. Officers will secure the area and notify the bomb disposal unit.
“Remember that very large projectiles can have a range of up to several hundred meters,” they concluded.
Głubczyce police officers are working alongside the District Prosecutor’s Office in Głubczyce to investigate the apartment building explosion.
Evacuated residents were allowed to return to their homes after a building inspector approved.
PEOPLE reached out to Głubczyce police on Friday, Oct. 24, but did not receive an immediate response.
Read the original article on People
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An investigation is underway after a fire at a three-story apartment building in Portland early Sunday morning resulted in the deaths of two individuals.
According to the Maine Fire Marshal, the Portland Fire Department responded to the fire at approximately 2:17 a.m. on Sunday at 43 St. Lawrence Street. The building, which housed four units, was fully occupied at the time of the incident.
Firefighters encountered heavy fire conditions on the rear porch of the building and confirmed that evacuation efforts were underway. Despite these efforts, two individuals were found deceased inside the structure.
The deceased were transported to the Office of Chief Medical Examiner in Augusta for autopsies to determine the cause of death and establish positive identification.
The Maine State Fire Marshal’s Office is working in coordination with the Portland Fire Department and Portland Police Department to conduct an origin and cause investigation.
The American Red Cross is providing assistance to tenants displaced by the fire.
The fire remains under investigation, and authorities are seeking information or video related to the incident.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the Portland Police Department or the Maine State Fire Marshal’s Office.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.
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Authorities on Wednesday released 911 calls and body worn camera recordings from a fatal police-involved shooting on Aug. 8 in a New Brunswick apartment building.
Deborah Terrell, 68, of New Brunswick, was shot by an officer in the incident after she advanced towards police with a knife, recordings show.
The New Jersey Office of the Attorney General released body worn camera footage and 911 calls on Wednesday. (WARNING: This link contains videos that include scenes of fatal violence.)
Authorities were initially called to the apartment building on Neilson Street around 4 a.m. on Aug. 8 for a report of a woman disturbing other residents, officials said.
New Brunswick police officers tried to make contact with Terrell but she refused to speak with officers or open her door, authorities said.
Police were called back to the apartment building at 7:32 a.m., according to authorities.
A person who called 911 said Terrell was walking in and out of her apartment with large knife and threatening neighbors, according to a recording of the call.
She said that Terrell threatened a neighbor and tried putting the knife under his door, according to the call.
The caller said this was the second time Terrell had acted this way, having threatened a neighbor earlier the same morning, according to the recording.
Body worn camera recordings show Terrell answering the door with a long knife as police arrive at her apartment door.
She quickly closed the door as police tell her to put the knife down, recordings show. Terrell told police that another person was in the apartment with her, authorities said.
For about eight minutes, officers attempted to convince Terrell to come into the hall and talk to them as she yelled from inside the apartment and periodically slid the knife back and forth under the door, recordings show.
Eventually, Terrell opened the door, holding the knife when officers deployed pepper spray and a taser, recordings show.
She initially turned back into the apartment but then advanced toward the officers who continued using pepper spray and a taser before one officer shot her twice with his service weapon, recordings show.
WARNING: This video includes scenes of fatal violence.
Officers provided medical aid at the scene and Terrell was taken to Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital where she was pronounced dead, officials said.
A 12-inch knife was recovered from the scene, according to authorities.
New Brunswick and state officials faced heated questions from residents and family members during a recent community meeting about the shooting.
The incident is being investigated by the Office of Public Integrity and Accountability under a 2019 directive by the attorney general’s office requiring investigations into fatal police encounters.
Matthew Enuco
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Matthew Enuco may be reached at Menuco@njadvancemedia.com.
Read the original article on NJ.com.
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A gas explosion in a D.C. apartment building left a woman seriously injured Friday morning.
Courtesy D.C. Fire and EMS

Courtesy D.C. Fire and EMS

Courtesy D.C. Fire and EMS
A gas explosion in a D.C. apartment building left a woman seriously injured Friday morning.
Around 9:30 a.m., D.C. firefighters responded to the third floor of a four-story apartment building near the intersection of Columbia Road and Harvard Court in the Columbia Heights section in Northwest after reports of a gas explosion.
A woman inside the apartment was seriously injured and had to be hospitalized, authorities said.
The building was evacuated and all gas lines were secured.
Later Friday, officials said investigators had determined the blast was an accidental gas explosion.
Below is a map of the area where the gas explosion took place:

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Ana Golden
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Police officials are asking for the public’s help in identifying an arson suspect in connection to a fire that started in an abandoned construction site and injured six people and displaced dozens in the Chinatown neighborhood.
On Sept. 13 at 3:43 a.m. the Los Angeles Fire Department responded to a fire that started at a construction site at 712 New Depot Street and then jumped to a nearby three-story apartment building. Three other buildings were exposed to the flames, according to the fire department.
An 80-year-old man experienced smoke inhalation and a female tenant, 55, sustained burn injuries to her hands and arms, according to police.
Two firefighters suffered minor injuries.
“After a thorough investigation, the [Los Angeles Fire Department and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms] officials determined that the fire was deliberately set,” Blake Chow, assistance chief for the police department, told NBC4.
“Investigators have developed a strong lead on a suspect and are hopeful that the arrest will be made soon,” Chow said.
The Times reached out to Chow but did not receive a comment before press time.
Although officials suspect arson, the cause of the fire is still under investigation, according police officials.
Police say tenants in four nearby occupied residential multistory apartment complexes were evacuated from their homes.
In total, 51 people, across all four exposed apartment buildings, were displaced and needed assistance to find housing, according to the Fire Department.
Neighbors had previously raised concerns to Councilmember Eunissess Hernandez’s office and the Los Angeles Police Department of the construction site that had been abandoned since the end of 2022. The following year, neighbors continued to voice concerns of several squatters living on the site.
Police officials previously told nearby resident Katie Antonsson, a former Los Angeles Times audience engagement analyst, that because she doesn’t own the property, she has no say over who can and cannot be on it, so police could not assist her.
She was instead recommended to file a report with the city’s Building and Safety Department. Antonsson filed a report two months ago and hasn’t gotten a response.
Anyone with information is urged to call major crimes detectives at (213) 486-7260. During nonbusiness hours or on weekends, calls should be directed to (877) 527-3247. Anyone wishing to remain anonymous should call the L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477 or go directly to www.lacrimestoppers.org.
Lastly, tipsters may also download the “P-3 Tips” mobile application and select the L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers as their local program.
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Karen Garcia
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Over 100 firefighters battled a “city-block-sized” fire that destroyed multiple homes in South Los Angeles early Tuesday, displacing families and injuring at least three people, fire officials said.
Around 3:20 a.m., crews responding to the 1500 block of East Vernon Avenue in Central-Alameda found an apartment building under construction engulfed in flames and downed power lines, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. Neighboring residents were awakened and told to evacuate as firefighters defended the surrounding buildings.
A 66-year-old man and a 64-year-old woman were taken to a hospital for serious burns, and a 30-year-old man was evaluated at the scene but declined to be taken by paramedics for further treatment, according to authorities.
Nearby residents were evacuated due to the massive fire, which spread to seven other buildings, five of them a total loss.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Seven buildings were damaged in the fire, and five are considered a total loss, the Fire Department said. The American Red Cross and the Los Angeles Emergency Management Department are assisting 17 people whose homes were destroyed.
It took 140 firefighters 78 minutes to put out the fire, with some firefighters from the Los Angeles County Fire Department called in to assist.
Arson investigators are on the scene as part of the city’s protocol for structure fires, but the cause of the fire is still under investigation and it’s not clear when authorities will make a determination, LAFD spokesperson Margaret Stewart said. The blaze tore quickly through the open-sided wooden frame of the building that was under construction.
“When you have a building that’s in the framing stages, it’s going to burn hot and fast because you have all of the wood exposed and nothing stops; there’s no compartmentalization,” Stewart said. “There’s nothing that stops the flame so it goes up very hot, very fast, which then exposes anything that’s around it.”
Gerardo Diaz, 30, heard his father screaming in the early morning. That’s when he saw the flames outside their home.
Diaz dragged his father, whose mobility is limited from a previous stroke, out of the house.
“When we came out the door, we already had the flames on our porch,” Diaz said after the fire was put out. “I don’t know — it’s just like a blink of an eye. All of a sudden it burned down.”
Half of the house burned down and his truck was damaged, Diaz said, but he was grateful that his family was able to escape relatively unharmed. “The heat was so hot,” his 12-year-old niece, Kimberly Erendira, said.
Raymon Chaidec, 58, woke up around 3 a.m. to booms and yells outside his house. He looked out the window and saw an out-of-control fire towering above the utility poles on his street.
“It was way up there, even taller than the poles that you see are now burned,” he said, motioning his hands to the sky.
Chaidec raced out of the house with his daughter, and they watched from their driveway as the fire engulfed the construction site across the street and encroached onto their property.
“We were ready to run,” he said. “We were scared when we saw the fire get a little close to our house, but nothing was damaged. We are so, so lucky.”
Aaron Vazquez, 28, heard explosions and felt his home vibrating. He looked out the window and saw orange, but didn’t think it was a fire.
“I thought it was an ambulance,” Vazquez said. “I look out the kitchen window and all I see are flames. There were dogs in the back, from the neighbors in the back, that were whimpering and crying.”
Firefighters douse the smoldering wreckage of the apartment building that was under construction.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Vazquez was able to get his family out of the home but went back inside for his cat. Intense heat radiated from the fire burning next door as he searched for his cat, which he eventually found.
“It was a huge inferno,” he said.
Vazquez’s home was not destroyed, but he thinks there was some water and smoke damage. The sides of adjacent homes were burned from the heat that radiated off the fire at the construction site.
Several hours after the fire started, neighbors watched from the sidewalk as crews demolished the ruins of the building that had been under construction. A bulldozer knocked over the remaining charred wooden planks to prevent any of the wood from smoldering, LAFD Capt. Carlos Caceres said, after crews convinced city officials that the building was beyond repair.
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Nathan Solis, Irfan Khan, Ashley Ahn, Karen Garcia
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