ReportWire

Tag: authority

  • Uninvolved driver killed when high-speed pursuit ends in violent crash in South L.A.

    Uninvolved driver killed when high-speed pursuit ends in violent crash in South L.A.

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    A burglary suspect being chased by law enforcement crashed into two vehicles in South Los Angeles early Wednesday, killing one of the innocent drivers.

    The pursuit started around 1:30 a.m. after the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department responded to a burglary call in Rancho Palos Verdes, the department said in a news release.

    Deputies saw at least four suspects get into a white Lexus and a black Porsche, authorities told KTTV Channel 11. Deputies chased them onto the 110 Freeway, where the suspects drove with their headlights off.

    The Porsche exited the freeway during the pursuit, and deputies continued to chase the Lexus. Deputies called off their car pursuit because of excessive speeds but followed from the air and notified the California Highway Patrol, which picked up the chase on the freeway, according to the Sheriff’s Department. The CHP did not immediately respond to requests for comment from The Times.

    Not long after, the Lexus crashed into two other vehicles near the intersection of Imperial Highway and Olive Street in Broadway-Manchester, the Los Angeles Police Department said. Around 2:20 a.m., firefighters responded to reports of one person ejected from their vehicle in the crash and another person trapped in their car.

    A driver not involved in the pursuit was killed in the collision, according to Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson Brian Humphrey, and three ambulances took patients to hospitals. There was no immediate information about their ages or genders.

    Three people in the Lexus were taken into custody and also treated for their injuries, according to news reports.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Authorities release photo and description of ‘person of interest’ in 10 Freeway arson fire

    Authorities release photo and description of ‘person of interest’ in 10 Freeway arson fire

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    The California State Fire Marshall’s office released a photo and description of a “person of interest” in connection with the massive arson fire that burned beneath Interstate 10 south of downtown Los Angeles leading to the closure of the freeway.

    Photographs from the scene taken at 12:31 a.m. on Nov. 11 show a man walking in the vicinity of Alameda Street and the 10 Freeway. He is wearing blue shorts and a black jacket and carrying a black backpack and a green scarf. He also has a knee brace on the right knee, and what appears to be burn injuries on his left leg.

    The fire, which closed both the westbound and eastbound lanes of the freeway affecting 300,000 vehicles who use the route daily, began under the overpass at Alameda Street and was fueled by wood pallets stored there.

    The freeway — one of the most heavily used routes in the country — is expected to open to traffic on Tuesday.

    Not long after the fire was extinguished did authorities determine that it was caused by arson. Although the exact cause of the fire was not revealed, Gov. Gavin Newsom at a news conference on Monday said that “there was [malicious] intent.”

    In addition to pallets, sanitizer accumulated during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic was stored under the overpass and helped fuel the flames, according to sources familiar with the probe who were not authorized to discuss details of the investigation.

    The office of the State Fire Marshal, which has jurisdiction over the property, which is owned by Caltrans, appealed for witnesses to call a tip line with information and noted those tips could be given anonymously.

    “We have identified the point of origin of the fire,” State Fire Marshal Daniel Berlant said.

    If the suspect is identified, authorities are asking the public to contact the State Fire Marshall’s arson and bomb unit at arsonbomb@fire.ca.gov or contact the Cal Fire arson hotline at 800-468-4408.

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    Thomas Curwen

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  • Bystander fatally shot during street takeover in South Los Angeles

    Bystander fatally shot during street takeover in South Los Angeles

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    A 23-year-old male bystander was shot and killed Friday night during a South Los Angeles street takeover, police said.

    Officers responded to an assault with a deadly weapon call near 54th Street and Manhattan Place about 11:55 p.m. Friday, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

    They arrived to find a man on the ground suffering from a gunshot wound as numerous vehicles and pedestrians were leaving the area, police said.

    Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics responded and pronounced the victim dead at the scene. The victim’s identity is being withheld pending next of kin notification, authorities said.

    In recent years, street takeovers have become a regular occurrence in neighborhoods across Los Angeles County, where drivers perform stunts in the middle of busy intersections or race their vehicles in residential streets as spectators look on, posting videos on social media. These gatherings have on occasion turned deadly, with shootings and vehicle crashes.

    The Los Angeles Police Department has joined other California law enforcement agencies in stepping up efforts to crack down on the illegal phenomenon, including impounding vehicles of anyone caught participating or attending street takeovers. Authorities are also pushing for state legislation calling for stiffer penalties for those who engage in such activities.

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    Brennon Dixson

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  • Son of Hollywood exec tried to get day laborers to move body parts, officials say

    Son of Hollywood exec tried to get day laborers to move body parts, officials say

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    The son of a Hollywood executive first tried to get day laborers to remove bags from his Tarzana home with what they realized were body parts and, when that failed, he was caught on video dumping them out of the back of his Tesla in Encino, authorities said.

    Samuel Bond Haskell IV is slated to be charged Monday afternoon after being behind bars on suspicion of murder following the gruesome discovery of dismembered body parts last Wednesday. Los Angeles police investigators say those remains are likely those of his wife, Mei Haskell, and both his in-laws remain missing.

    LAPD Robbery Homicide Division detectives arrested Haskell after working through the weekend, gathering evidence from his home at the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana and around the Encino dumpster at a strip mall where a man found a suitcase with fresh human remains. Investigators found evidence of body disposal inside the home and brought a dog that tracks human remains to check the surrounding area.

    Haskell tried last Tuesday to pay day laborers $500 to take away bags he first said were full of rocks, and then said were Halloween decorations, the workers told a reporter for NBC4. But the day laborers told NBC4 the contents felt like meat inside. “When we picked up the bags, we could tell they weren’t rocks,” one of the workers said in Spanish.

    The men described the bags as soft and soggy, weighing about 50 pounds. They stopped their truck a block away, checked inside and saw human remains, identifying a belly button. They returned the remains and reported the discovery first to CHP and then to the LAPD. But the bags were gone when authorities went to check it out, police said.

    Haskell was then apparently captured on security cameras opposite an Encino strip mall. The video obtained by Fox News shows a man hauling a large and seemingly heavy sack over his shoulder from the back of his Tesla at about 4:45 p.m. Tuesday and dumping it into a trash bin.

    An unhoused man Wednesday morning found a human torso stuffed into a duffel and thrown in a trash bin in a parking lot near Ventura Boulevard and Rubio Avenue — about five miles away from Haskell’s home, police said.

    LAPD Capt. Scot Williams of the Robbery-Homicide Division said the torso is assumed to be that of Haskell’s wife, Mei Haskell, who has not been located. But forensics will be needed to confirm the identity.

    Haskell, his wife and her parents, Yanxiang Wang and Gaoshen Li, all lived in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana. The couple’s three children were in school the day their father was arrested, authorities said.

    Williams said detectives will present a criminal investigation to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office Monday afternoon for filing. None of the missing persons have been located.

    LAPD Det. Efren Gutierrez told reporters last week that efforts to reach Mei Haskell’s parents had yielded no results. “They would normally be home in these hours, and attempts have been made to contact them by phone, by cellphone, and no answer. And the same with Mei. She is unaccounted for.”

    Inside Haskell’s house, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with killing and dismemberment, according to investigators.

    Haskell is being held in lieu of $2 million bail.

    Court records show that in December 2008, Haskell was arrested and charged with two counts of assault with a deadly weapon. He pleaded no contest to battery and was placed on probation in 2010.

    Records show that Haskell is the son of Sam Haskell, the former executive vice president and worldwide head of television for William Morris who represented a slew of A-list stars and is still listed as head of Magnolia Hill Productions, which has produced several specials featuring Dolly Parton.

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    Richard Winton

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  • A 1-year-old boy died of severe burns. Were warning signs of abuse ignored?

    A 1-year-old boy died of severe burns. Were warning signs of abuse ignored?

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    The injuries to little Henry Wheatley Brown were horrific.

    The 1-year-old had suffered burns that his mother, Samantha Garver, and her boyfriend, Sergio Mena, told authorities were the result of him being left in a hot bath. Garver said the baby had been fine just 40 minutes before paramedics arrived Oct. 1 at their home in Sugarloaf, near Big Bear.

    But paramedics found Henry cold to the touch. He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    A trove of investigative records released to The Times revealed a troubling history of allegations of child abuse and neglect stretching back more than a decade against Garver, 33, including another case involving burns to one of her other children in 2013. Garver had four children; Henry was the youngest.

    The San Bernardino County Department of Children and Family Services did not provide comment regarding the documents.

    Both Mena and Garver told authorities that Garver was not home at the time Henry suffered his fatal injuries — second-degree burns from his shins down to his feet as well as “isolated” second-degree burns on his genitals consistent with having been “dipped in hot water,” according to an investigation by San Bernardino County Department of Children and Family Services.

    But even if the doomed baby’s mother was not home, an investigation released to The Times by CFS found that she did little to save her child.

    “The mother allowed the child to suffer for several hours before he eventually died,” according to the report, submitted October 25.

    For more than a decade, police and child services investigators repeatedly responded to calls for service to Garver’s home, though it was not clear what exactly was done to ensure the safety of her children.

    The records documenting the visits and investigations were released to The Times by San Bernardino’s Department of Children and Family Services following a request for information about the death of Henry. While all the names in the report released to The Times were redacted, the facts in the allegations line up with public information released in the case of Garver and Mena. The victim, referred to only as H, is Henry.

    “The investigation conducted by San Bernardino County Children and Family Services regarding the aforementioned decedent is complete. A determination has been made that abuse or neglect led to the child’s death,” said Jeany Zepeda, director of San Bernardino CFS in an emailed statement that names Henry.

    Garver has been on the radar of San Bernardino County Children and Family Services — with some gaps — since 2009, when she was first reported for general neglect, the records show.

    She was reported again in 2010, when she told a doctor she had “felt like putting a pillow over” one of her children’s faces because the child “wouldn’t stop crying.” Another report was filed against Garver in 2013, investigative documents show.

    After Henry’s birth, Garver was reported again, and an investigator found on Aug. 19, 2022, that her children were at “high risk” of abuse and neglect, records show. Despite that, another investigator found that the children were “safe.”

    “No safety threats are present,” the investigator wrote in the same report.

    Henry’s grandmother, Sierra Rivers, told The Times she was the one who reported Garver to authorities.

    “I called after Henry was born. I was not convinced” he was safe, Rivers said.

    Rivers had been concerned about Garver’s children ever since she saw Garver slap one of her other kids hard in the face, she said.

    But when she confronted Garver about the slap, Rivers said, Garver was not remorseful.

    “I got abused as a kid and I got hit as a baby, and I turned out fine,’” Rivers recalled Garver telling her.

    In 2013, a person reported Garver to Children and Family Services after she posted troubling comments in a Facebook group chat that was meant for people to ask and debate questions, according to investigative documents.

    The person who ran the Facebook page said Garver posted on Jan. 10, 2013, asking whether “duct taping a child’s mouth is abusive,” the report says. At the time, Garver had an 8-month-old baby as well as two older toddlers, according to investigative documents.

    A few weeks later, Garver posted on the Facebook page again saying that a friend of hers was watching one of her babies while she went to the store and that when Garver returned home, the baby was suffering from “blistered burns on her thighs.”

    Garver posted that she was scared of CFS and did not want to take her daughter to the hospital out of fear that the burns would be reported to the agency, according to the party who reported her.

    On Jan. 31, 2013, authorities conducted a wellness check based on a report about the burns to the daughter, according to documents that don’t identify the source of the report.

    Garver told investigators that the baby suffered the burns after getting “stuck between the wall and a heater,” according to the documents.

    The child was hospitalized but child service investigators found another sickening scene at the home.

    There was “fecal matter all over the bedroom that the children sleep in and it appears as though it has been there for quite some time. There are also roaches all over the place. Mother will not be arrested but she will be charged with felony child neglect,” wrote an investigator with CFS in a report.

    Garver was charged that day with felony willful cruelty to a child with possible injury or death. The charges were dismissed, and she later pleaded guilty to lesser charges of misdemeanor willful cruelty to a child, according to court documents. It was not clear whether she admitted to burning the child.

    She was sentenced to 100 days in jail, but she failed to turn herself in that July and was listed as a fugitive by a judge, court documents show.

    Garver and her boyfriend Mena, 32, have both been charged with murder and child abuse in connection with Henry’s death.

    Both told child welfare investigators that Garver was not home when Henry suffered his fatal burns. Garver told investigators that Mena was using methamphetamine at the time of the burns, but he did not admit to the CFS investigators to purposefully injuring the baby.

    Investigators also found that Henry had other injuries that had gone untreated and unreported — a dislocated arm and marks and bruises on his face, according to investigative documents.

    “The mother failed to seek medical attention for previous injuries that are indicative of possible physical abuse that occurred,” the investigator wrote.

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • Suspect charged in killing of man whose body was found in Malibu Lagoon barrel

    Suspect charged in killing of man whose body was found in Malibu Lagoon barrel

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    A 32-year-old man is in custody after being charged in the murder of a musician whose body was found inside a barrel at Malibu Lagoon State Beach this summer.

    Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives arrested Joshua Lee Simmons earlier this month. He is charged in the killing of Javonnta Murphy, who authorities say was fatally shot before his body was dumped into the lagoon inside a 55-gallon plastic drum.

    Prosecutors allege that Simmons shot Murphy to death on July 27, three days before a maintenance worker first spotted the barrel in a shallow water inlet.

    The maintenance worker paddled out in a kayak and pulled the container to the shore, but didn’t open it. The next day, a lifeguard saw the same barrel — now back in the lagoon — and swam out and brought it onto the beach, where he opened it and discovered the body.

    Joshua Lee Simmons is one of two men arrested and charged in connection with the killing of a man whose body was found in a barrel at Malibu Lagoon State Beach.

    (El Monte Police Dept.)

    Simmons is also charged with making criminal threats against a second man on the same day he is accused of killing Murphy. That man, Brandon Gray, was taken into custody at the Malibu/Lost Hills sheriff’s station on Oct. 5, but was not charged.

    Prosecutors allege that an accomplice, Dennis Eugene Vance, helped cover up the fatal shooting and have charged him as an accessory after the fact.

    Simmons is also the suspect in an attempted robbery at Meza Jewelry in El Monte that was thwarted by a store owner. Surveillance cameras captured the burglary suspect around 2 p.m. on Sept. 2 as he walked down Main Street — dressed in all black, wearing a face mask and carrying a cardboard box. Israel Mesa was sprayed with bear repellent by the suspect.

    A video identifying Simmons as the suspect was circulated by detectives seeking to apprehend him just days after the attempted robbery.

    Simmons and Vance were arrested on Oct. 3. Two days later, Simmons was charged with murder, criminal threats, attempted robbery and two counts of criminal threats against the store owner.

    Simmons is being held on $3.275-million bail in L.A. County’s Men’s Central Jail and is due back in court on Nov. 3. He has yet to enter a plea. Vance has been released on bond listed as $50,000 and is also set to appear that day.

    Simmons has a history of violent offenses, including a 2019 conviction for assault with a deadly weapon in connection with a crime in 2013.

    Murphy, 32, was living in Sylmar at the time he was killed and was pursuing a career in music, according to authorities and a family friend. He grew up in South Los Angeles with his four brothers — two older and two younger, said Patrick Nelson, 46, a family friend who dated Murphy’s mother and considered himself a stepfather of sorts to Murphy.

    After the death of Murphy’s grandmother, who anchored their family, Murphy moved into an apartment of his own in Sylmar, Nelson said. He was pursuing a career in rapping and dreamed of becoming a successful artist, Nelson said.

    Murphy spent his free time lifting weights and running, Nelson said, and was father to a young son.

    “He was a good kid, good person. He didn’t gang-bang. What happened to him, I just don’t understand,” Nelson said.

    Murphy’s naked body was inside a barrel that contained markings suggesting it came from a printing company.

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    Richard Winton

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  • Oh my gourd! Truck fire chars 5,000 pumpkins on 5 Freeway

    Oh my gourd! Truck fire chars 5,000 pumpkins on 5 Freeway

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    Oh my gourd. Are those blazing jack-o’-lanterns on the road or did 5,000 pumpkins go up in flames on the 5 Freeway?

    It’s the latter.

    Only days before Halloween, a truckload of gourds sizzled on the side of the freeway near the Smokey Bear Road exit in Lebec around 2 a.m. Wednesday after a truck carrying them caught fire, according to authorities. The California Highway Patrol said nobody was injured.

    The pumpkins were on their way south from Van Groningen & Sons farm in Manteca to a buyer in Los Angeles when the blaze broke out.

    When the company’s president, Ryan Van Groningen, heard about the loss of gourds, he said he was concerned only about the driver of the truck.

    “Pumpkins can be replaced but human lives can’t,” he said.

    Halloween enthusiasts who have yet to buy a pumpkin for carving need not worry: Van Groningen said his farm has a scary amount of pumpkins to replace those lost in the fire.

    “In the overall scheme of things there is definitely plenty more to go,” he said.

    Video taken at the scene shows firefighters from the Los Angeles County Fire Department battling the flames amid the charred Halloween gourds.

    The pumpkins spilled out of the back of the truck onto the road, blocking the exit. Authorities shut down a lane of the southbound 5 Freeway due to the fire.

    It was not immediately clear what caused the blaze, but the firefighters seemed to be enjoying themselves, with one first responder smiling and carrying two pumpkins, one in each hand, away from the scene, video showed.

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • First suspect identified in shootout with Riverside County deputies

    First suspect identified in shootout with Riverside County deputies

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    Riverside County officials have identified one of the people allegedly involved in a shootout Wednesday evening with sheriff’s deputies that sent one suspect and one deputy to the hospital.

    Authorities announced Saturday they had charged Jose Eduardo Rosales Perez, 34, of Desert Hot Springs, with three counts of attempted murder of a peace officer. He was booked into John J. Benoit Detention Center.

    Officials said the second suspect and the deputy were still hospitalized, and that an investigation into the shooting is ongoing. Officials declined to release the names of either the wounded deputy or the wounded suspect.

    The incident began shortly after 7 p.m. Wednesday when sheriff’s deputies arrived at the intersection of Ramon and Robert roads in unincorporated Thousand Palms and tried to detain a person suspected of in a felony hit-and-run case.

    The man refused to exit the vehicle, officials said, and deputies called in the Sheriff Office’s Special Enforcement Bureau and the California Highway Patrol to assist.

    At some point, a passenger in the vehicle began shooting at deputies, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office, sparking a shootout.

    A law enforcement source who was not authorized to speak publicly had previously told The Times that the deputy was in the office’s field training program, meaning the deputy was either a new academy graduate or was being transferred from a correctional facility to patrol duty.

    Times staff writer Noah Goldberg contributed to this report.

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    Jessica Garrison

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  • Teenage girl suspected in mass shooting in Denver arrested in San Bernardino County

    Teenage girl suspected in mass shooting in Denver arrested in San Bernardino County

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    A teenage girl accused of shooting five people outside a Denver club last month was arrested this week in San Bernardino County, according to authorities.

    The girl, whose age was not released by police, was arrested Thursday in Barstow, about 115 miles from Los Angeles, according to a Denver Police Department news release. She was arrested on eight counts of first-degree attempted homicide.

    She is accused of shooting five people on Sept. 16 in the 1900 block of Market Street, authorities said. All five people survived their injuries.

    Police said the girl had tried to get into a bar but was rejected by the club’s security personnel because they thought she wasn’t using her real ID. She left the line and then shot toward the club as she was leaving, authorities said.

    Police believe that she had tried to shoot toward security personnel and that those who were wounded were not the intended targets.

    The Denver Police Department worked with the FBI’s L.A. SWAT team, the FBI’s L.A. Desert Cities Safe Streets Task Force and the Barstow Police Department to apprehend her. Because she is a minor, her booking photo and arrest affidavit were not released.

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    Summer Lin

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  • LAUSD teacher arrested on suspicion of sharing child pornography

    LAUSD teacher arrested on suspicion of sharing child pornography

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    A Los Angeles Unified School teacher was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of sharing child pornography with a county government worker, authorities said.

    Detectives with the San Bernardino Police Department arrested Rene Gregorio Estrella on the 210 Freeway around 6:30 a.m. on suspicion of distributing and receiving child pornography. Estrella, 60, is a teacher at the School of Business and Tourism at the Miguel Contreras Learning Complex, according to the school’s website.

    Investigators said Estrella exchanged multiple images of child pornography with 62-year-old Steven Frasher, who worked as a public information officer with the Los Angeles County Public Works Department.

    Investigators with the San Bernardino Police Department’s Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and Specialized Crimes Unit served search and arrest warrants on Estrella at a residence in Claremont and a second location in the city of Los Angeles. Police found several electronic devices that were taken as part of their investigation, according a news release from the police department.

    In a statement, the Los Angeles Unified School District said it was notified about an employee’s arrest by San Bernardino police, but it did not name Estrella. Officials said the employee will be blocked from entering any LAUSD sites.

    “All District protocols are being followed, and we remain in cooperation with local authorities,” the statement said. “Due to the ongoing investigation by law enforcement, we are unable to disclose additional details about this matter. Please be assured that the safety of our students continues to be our utmost priority. Students and the greater school community are always encouraged to share any and all concerns with their school or with local authorities.”

    Jail records show that Estrella was booked into custody on Wednesday but released later that day.

    Frasher, a resident of Redlands, was arrested Oct. 3 after investigators received a tip indicating that he was downloading illicit child porn on the internet and saving it in an internet storage account, police said.

    Frasher, a candidate for the Redlands City Council in 2020, worked for the Riverside Police Department as a public information officer and also served as a public information officer for the Glendale Unified School District.

    The San Bernardino Police Department posted a video on its Instagram account of Frasher’s arrest, showing officers entering and searching his home. The video also shows Frasher being led away in handcuffs.

    Times staff writer Summer Lin contributed to this story.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Why Writing a Book Is the Ultimate Way to Showcase Your Authority | Entrepreneur

    Why Writing a Book Is the Ultimate Way to Showcase Your Authority | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    With distrust around social media growing and de-influencing all the rage, it’s getting harder to determine who to believe and who to blow off.

    But one activity still provides credibility, and it’s far from new — it originated in the 14th century.

    Writing a book.

    A book, you say. Wouldn’t publishing social media content be much easier and more effective?

    Not really. A few years ago, prioritizing social media made sense. But as time passes, business owners are better off focusing on showcasing their authority.

    “Social media fame can create so-called experts who aren’t actually experts,” says business strategist Maresa Friedman. “I went viral for not wanting to give up my seat on a plane. I am hardly an expert on plane seating, yet now that’s something I’m known for.” She adds, “A book gives you the opportunity to show that your knowledge exceeds a 90 second video made by a guru who two years ago wasn’t even in the industry.”

    Look at it this way: Would you be more likely to trust James Clear (#1 New York Times bestselling author of Atomic Habits, with over 5 million copies sold) or Tai Lopez (someone with 2.8 million Instagram followers who became known for raving about how everyone should read while standing in front of a Lamborghini)?

    In a day and age when someone can take a summer class at Harvard and then list on LinkedIn that they’re Harvard alumni, even the sort of credibility that institutions used to provide has been leveled.

    Related: 5 Reasons Why Writing a Book Is a Smart Move for Entrepreneurs

    Lack of trust makes us feel less safe

    Influencers have been caught doing everything from making racial slurs to shilling mascara while actually wearing fake lashes. And yet entrepreneurs spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on social media marketing.

    Given what we’ve experienced in the past few years, it makes sense that we’re primed to prioritize actual authorities over fake authorities. “When you live in a society that considers people who aren’t always educated about a topic ‘experts,’ it makes us feel unsafe,” says dual board-certified psychiatrist Dr. Josh Lichtman. “After surviving a pandemic, people are tired of feeling unsafe, and so they’re turning back to actual authorities for guidance.”

    Books are the ultimate authority builders

    “A book is like the world’s best’s best business card. It gives you that topical authority,” said Nick Loper recently on the Write About Now podcast. “It signals this is what I know about because I wrote a book on the topic.”

    Using a book to establish authority is nothing new. Even before the time of the seven-second attention span, how-to books were the sort of currency that bestowed immediate legitimacy on the author. After all, Robert Kiyosaki went from struggling entrepreneur to expert in real estate investment when he released Rich Dad Poor Dad in 1997.

    Tim Ferriss, meanwhile, transformed from a behind-the-scenes entrepreneur to someone who would probably pass the “Does my mom know who he is” level of fame after releasing The 4 Hour Workweek in 2007. Even though he appears to work at least 400 hours a week, the book made him an expert in spending four hours doing anything (including cooking and working out).

    What a book gets you

    Most business owners aren’t going to skyrocket into top podcasts, TV shows, and the most widely read blog on the internet.

    But any founder or CEO who creates a book that demonstrates how they were able to build their business will, with a high-quality book, be able to enter the public discourse.

    “Every single time, event bookers will pick a published author over someone who hasn’t written a book,” says speaking coach and author Topher Morrison, “even if the other person is a better speaker and has a better demo reel and is more entertaining.”

    The same is true when it comes to traditional media. When I published a humorous novel about my recovery from addiction in 2007, I immediately found myself on the Today Show and CNN as an expert.

    I don’t see trust in influencers increasing any time soon. And given that books have been building authority for almost 600 years, I don’t see that decreasing anytime soon.

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    Anna David

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