Authorities from various agencies served several search warrants across the East Bay Wednesday in connection with an ongoing criminal investigation into organized fuel theft, officials said.
The alleged fuel theft has been affecting communities across multiple counties, according to the Greenfield Police Department, the lead agency in the investigation.
“Organized fuel theft operations often involve the illegal resale of stolen fuel and pose serious public safety risks due to unsafe handling and storage of highly flammable materials,” Greenfield police said in a statement. “These crimes are commonly associated with broader organized criminal activity.”
Wednesday’s search warrants were served at the following locations:
4200 block of Alameda Avenue, Oakland
1000 block of 45th Avenue, Oakland
1600 block of 6th Street, Richmond
3100 block of Alvarado Avenue, San Leandro
The law enforcement activity was not related to immigration enforcement and did not involve U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Greenfield police said.
In addition to Greenfield police, the following agencies were involved in serving the search warrants: FBI Monterey Bay Safe Streets Task Force, Monterey Police Department, Monterey County Sheriff’s Office, Oakland Police Department, San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office, California Highway Patrol, and San Leandro Police Department.
An investigation into the alleged fuel theft operation is ongoing. Anyone with information is urged to contact their local law enforcement agency.
VANCOUVER, WA – The U.S. Department of Education has launched a federal civil rights investigation into Vancouver Public Schools, examining whether the district’s policies on transgender student athletes violate Title IX, a federal law barring sex-based discrimination in educational programs that receive federal funding.
The inquiry, led by the Department’s Office for Civil Rights, is part of a broader wave of probes involving 18 school districts, colleges, and state education agencies nationwide that permit students to compete in school sports based on gender identity rather than biological sex.
Federal officials say policies that allow transgender girls to compete in girls’ athletic competitions could discriminate on the basis of sex by disadvantaging female athletes, potentially violating Title IX protections. The complaint against Vancouver and other districts alleges such policies “jeopardize both the safety and equal opportunities of women and girls” in school programs and athletics.
In Washington state, Vancouver is joined in the investigation by Cheney, Sultan and Tacoma public schools, among others.
In a brief statement to media outlets, Vancouver Public Schools spokesperson Jessica Roberts confirmed the district received notification of the federal investigation and is reviewing the allegations. However, district officials have not provided further public comment while the review is ongoing.
The rollout of these investigations comes amid heightened national debate and legal scrutiny of transgender participation in school sports. This week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in cases challenging state laws that ban transgender girls and women from competing in girl’s sports teams — a decision that could shape the legal landscape for school athletics nationwide.
Observers note that the federal government’s approach reflects a broader push to interpret Title IX strictly, particularly under the current administration’s policies, which critics say seek to redefine how gender identity factors into civil rights protections. If institutions are found in violation, they risk losing federal funds.
The investigation has drawn attention from educators, parents and advocacy groups on both sides of the debate over transgender rights and competitive fairness. Supporters of inclusive policies argue that allowing students to participate consistent with their gender identity is essential for their well-being and protected under civil rights law, while opponents argue it undermines protections intended for female athletes.
As the process unfolds, Vancouver Public Schools and other districts under scrutiny will likely face intense public interest and legal pressure. Federal officials have not released a timeline for concluding the investigations or commented on their current status.
A Tuesday afternoon crash in central Aurora killed a motorcyclist and sent three motorists to the hospital, police said.
The fatal crash, which involved a motorcycle and a car, happened at S. Dunkirk Street and E. Colorado Drive, near the Buckley Space Force Base, according to a 2:37 p.m. post from the Aurora Police Department.
Paramedics took three people in the car to the hospital with minor injuries, police said. The motorcyclist was also taken to a hospital, where the motorcyclist later died, according to a 3:05 p.m. update.
Southbound Dunkirk Street was temporarily closed Tuesday afternoon for the crash cleanup and investigation, police said. The road reopened shortly after 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison was charged with misdemeanor trespassing after being arrested early Monday morning in Tampa, Fla., according to multiple reports Tuesday, marking his third encounter with law enforcement in less than three years.
Monday’s incident occurred at an address associated with the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. He was charged with a first-degree misdemeanor of trespass in an occupied structure or conveyance and released on a $500 bond Monday afternoon.
Addison was arrested in July 2024 near Los Angeles International Airport after police found him asleep at the wheel of his Rolls-Royce, which was blocking a lane of traffic on Interstate 105. He resolved his legal case by pleading no contest to a lesser charge. He was placed on 12 months of probation and ordered to pay a fine and complete two online courses.
For that offense, the NFL suspended Addison for three games without pay for violating the substances of abuse policy.
After a July 2023 incident where Addison was cited for driving 140 mph on a Minnesota freeway, he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor speeding charge, with a charge of reckless driving dismissed, and paid $686 in fines.
The news of his latest arrest became public just ahead of the Vikings’ annual end-of-season news conference. Minnesota general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and coach Kevin O’Connell said they had only recently learned of the incident and declined to comment on the organization’s potential response to the arrest of Addison, who is eligible for a contract extension this spring.
‘Jordan is unique because 99% of the days that Jordan Addison is a Viking, he’s a joy to be around,’ Adofo-Mensah said. ‘He’s incredibly intelligent, confident, responsible. And then it’s like all of us: What are you like on those 1% of days? Is it the type of thing that draws attention or not? Obviously that’s something we have to consider when you’re talking about long-term ramifications of a contract extension and different things like that, or letting somebody like Jalen Nailor leave.’
The Vikings No. 3 receiver, Nailor is a pending free agent.
‘We’ll have those conversations, obviously,’ Adofo-Mensah said. ‘Just a few days after the season and obviously this event just happened. But always supportive of Jordan Addison. We’ll continue to fact-find and see what actually happened, and then we’ll have those conversations in the future.’
Representatives at Younger & Associates said Addison’s lawyers are looking into the incident.
‘On Jordan’s behalf, his legal team has already initiated the investigation, identified witnesses, and we are reviewing the viability of a claim for false arrest,’ Addison’s agency said on X. ‘He looks forward to the legal process and upon full investigation, we are confident Mr. Addison will be exonerated.’
Addison caught 42 passes for 610 yards and three touchdowns in 14 games (12 starts) during his third season in 2025.
The 2023 first-round draft pick (23rd overall) has 175 receptions for 2,396 yards and 22 TDs in 46 games (41 starts) in his career.
Two people were found dead inside a burning Westminster home early Tuesday morning, fire officials said.
Heavy flames were already coming from the Westminster home near Marshall Court and W. 72nd Drive when firefighters arrived at the deadly blaze shortly after midnight on Tuesday, according to the city’s fire department.
That intersection is in northeast Jefferson County, on the edge of Adams County.
U.S. equity futures fell sharply Sunday night after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell confirmed that he is under investigation related to testimony he gave last June concerning the renovation of Federal Reserve buildings.
The New York Timesreport breaking news of the investigation and Powell’s subsequent disclosure rattled markets, reviving fears that years of President Donald Trump pressuring the Federal Reserve could now be realized into a direct assault on its independence.
Futures tied to the Nasdaq 100 led the decline, falling about 0.8%, as interest-rate-sensitive technology stocks bore the brunt of the selloff. S&P 500 futures were down roughly 0.5%, while Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell about 0.4%, according to late-evening pricing.
Investors sought protection in the traditional safe-haven assets. Gold futures rose 1.7% to around $4,578 an ounce, while silver jumped more than 4%, reflecting renewed demand for protection against political and monetary instability. The U.S. dollar weakened modestly against several major currencies, including the Swiss franc and Japanese yen.
After years of largely staying silent while Trump repeatedly mocked and threatened him, Powell appeared to have reached a breaking point, issuing a rare and pointed statement.
He wrote that while “No one—certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve—is above the law,” the attack should be seen in the “the broader context of the administration’s threats and ongoing pressure.”
“This new threat is not about my testimony last June or about the renovation of the Federal Reserve buildings…Those are pretexts. The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.”
Economists warn that if the executive branch successfully co-opts the Fed, it could create a “self-fulfilling prophecy” of higher long-term inflation.
As Oxford Economics recently noted, any “cracks in the Fed’s independence” could spread rapidly through markets and ultimately raise borrowing costs for the businesses the administration seeks to protect with low interest rates.
In a note published last July, when Trump publicly threatened to fire Powell, Deutsche Bank warned that such a move could spark severe market disruption.
“Both the currency and the bond market can collapse,” the bank wrote, citing heightened risks of inflation and financial instability. “The empirical and academic evidence on the impact of a loss of central-bank independence is fairly clear.”
Wall Street executives have echoed those concerns. Brian Moynihan, chief executive of Bank of America, said recently the erosion of Fed independence would carry serious consequences.
“The market will punish people if we don’t have an independent Fed,” Moynihan said.
The Florida Highway Patrol is investigating after a driver was found in nearby bushes after a hit-and-run crash in Brevard County.Troopers responded to the crash involving a Toyota Corolla and a semitruck along I-95 in Titusville just before 2 a.m. Sunday.Troopers said the 32-year-old driver of the Corolla was located in the bushes across from his car.The driver, along with a 23-year-old passenger, was taken to the hospital with serious injuries.The driver of the semitruck was unharmed, and the crash remains under investigation.Troopers said charges are pending against the driver of the Corolla.
The Florida Highway Patrol is investigating after a driver was found in nearby bushes after a hit-and-run crash in Brevard County.
Troopers responded to the crash involving a Toyota Corolla and a semitruck along I-95 in Titusville just before 2 a.m. Sunday.
Troopers said the 32-year-old driver of the Corolla was located in the bushes across from his car.
The driver, along with a 23-year-old passenger, was taken to the hospital with serious injuries.
The driver of the semitruck was unharmed, and the crash remains under investigation.
Troopers said charges are pending against the driver of the Corolla.
MORGAN HILL — One person was killed and three others were injured in a crash Wednesday morning in Morgan Hill, police said.
The two-vehicle collision happened just before 6:10 a.m. at the intersection of Condit Road and Diana Avenue, the Morgan Hill Police Department said in a news release.
One person died from their injuries at the scene, police said, adding that three others were taken to area trauma centers “with varying degrees of injuries,” police said.
The Santa Clara County Medical Examiner-Coroner’s Office will release the identity of the person who died after it is confirmed and their next of kin is notified.
The crash is under investigation, but police said preliminary findings suggest that alcohol and drug impairment did not play a role.
“The department extends its deepest condolences to the family and friends of the decedent,” police said. “We remind all motorists to remain vigilant, wear seatbelts and exercise heightened caution at intersections, particularly during low-light, early morning hours.”
Anyone with information related to the case can contact Detective Sgt. Sean Bayard at 408-607-3032 or sean.bayard@morganhill.gov, or the anonymous tip line at 800-222-8477 (TIPS).
One year after two of the most destructive wildfires in California’s history erupted just hours apart, survivors commemorated the day in Altadena and Pacific Palisades with a mixture of anger and somber remembrance.
At the American Legion veterans post in the Palisades, hundreds gathered at a military-style white-glove ceremony to pay respects to the 12 families who lost loved ones in the Palisades fire.
Just down the street, an even larger crowd shouted the rally cry “They let us burn,” to demand comprehensive disaster planning, relief for families working to rebuild and accountability for government missteps that they say enabled the disaster and have slowed the recovery.
In Altadena, survivors congregated at the Eaton Fire Collaborative’s community center with a clear message: They were not backing down in the fight to return home.
“This year has been the hardest year of our lives,” said Joy Chen, executive director of the Eaton Fire Survivor Network. “Unimaginable grief. The 31 people who died that day, and the hundreds who have died prematurely since. Home lost. Jobs lost. Incomes lost. A sense of safety and identity stripped away.”
In the evening, Atladenans plan to gather at a beloved family-owned burger joint that miraculously still stands amid a sea of empty lots. The restaurant, Fair Oaks Burger, reopened an outdoor kitchen for residents and recovery workers just weeks after the fire and has become a lifeline for the neighborhood.
Jessica Rogers, who lost her home in the Palisades fire and has since become the executive director of the Palisades Long-Term Recovery Group, which organized the remembrance ceremony, said that people are still processing what happened over the last year.
“The five different stages of grief — you can feel them. Sometimes people can feel them almost all at the same time,” she said. “There is no right or wrong way to process grief. Everybody processes it in their own way, at their own speed and their own time. And some need to do it at home, behind closed doors; others need to do it very vocally, out in public.”
Pacific Palisades resident Julia Citron, right, cries with her mother, Lainie, in Palisades Village on Wednesday. The Citrons lost their home in the fire. “It was the only house our children knew,” said Lainie Citron.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
Very different communities, the Palisades and Altadena share similar frustrations — with insurance companies, government agencies and disaster scammers. But on Wednesday, they directed their wrath on contrasting targets. In Altadena, activists are focused on real estate speculators and Southern California Edison, suspected of triggering the Eaton fire. In the Palisades, anger continues to mount against Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, the city’s Fire Department and state agencies.
Inside the Palisades Legion Post, the 11-year-old daughter of Jim Cragg, the Post’s former commander, handed white roses to the families of fire victims. One of these was a family member of Rory Sykes, who perished in the blaze, who told Cragg: “He would have loved this.” Both held back tears.
The families then led hundreds of Palisadians waiting outside — many wearing “They Let Us Burn” T-shirts — in a procession down to a small community park, where the legion had placed 13 memorials: One for each victim, and one for the many uncounted lives lost in the fire’s wake.
In a moment of silence, Palisadians called out the names of loved ones who had died in the aftermath. Many sobbed.
Researchers estimate the January fires resulted in upward of 400 excess deaths in L.A. County beyond the official death toll.
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1.Steve Salinas shields from intense heat as he hoses down a neighbors rooftop on Sinaloa Ave. as the Eaton Fire continues to grow, January 8, 2025.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)2.The view from the same rooftop, one year later.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
“People burned alive in their homes. There was nobody going to get them,” Kathleen Boltiansky said through tears as she watched the ceremony.
Boltiansky, who lost her house in the fire, planned to attend the “They Let Us Burn” rally after the service. “Public safety should be item No. 1 — if they cannot provide public safety, what are they doing?”
Just across the street, Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” played over a loudspeaker as protesters gathered in front of the burned husk of the historic 1924 Business Block Building.
Rally organizer Jeremy Padawer, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, took the stage. “The days of gaslighting should be over,” he called out.
Padawer asked the audience to raise their hands if their home burned or remains contaminated.
Hundreds of hands shot up.
Josh Lederer, clutching a “They Let Us Burn” banner, described how he, his wife and 2-year-old daughter moved five times since the fire and are still unable to return to their home amid fights with their insurance company. He’s glad his child is too young to really understand what’s going on.
“You feel, when there’s an emergency, your city’s going to be there to protect you, and we had nobody,” said Lederer, 42. “And since then, we’ve had nobody helping us. All we get is lip service from Karen Bass and Newsom that it’s somebody else’s fault or we’re trying to profit off this. We’re not trying to profit off anything. We want our lives back.”
Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonald, left, speaks with Mayor Karen Bass after a private ceremony where they remembered the fire victims with faith leaders, LAPD officers and city officials as flags were lowered outside City Hall.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
When ABC 7 Eyewitness News asked Bass if she thought the “They Let Us Burn” rally is how residents should commemorate the one-year anniversary, she dismissed the event.
“I don’t think so,” she said. “But again, I think there are people who are profiting off this, and that is what I find very despicable.”
Padawer said he had invited Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom to the rally to listen to survivors and accept accountability, but neither joined.
A spokesperson for Newsom’s office said the governor would meet directly with survivors in Los Angeles this week. Bass started the day at a private vigil at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine in Pacific Palisades, then presided over a flag-lowering ceremony at City Hall to honor the victims.
Jessica Rogers with the Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, third from left, hugs Marina Shterenberg, who lost a loved one in the Palisades fire, during a community ceremony in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283, marking the one year anniversary of the fire on January 7, 2026. The ceremony honored those who lost their lives in the fire, including Mark Shterenberg.
(Christina House/Los Angeles Times)
Several elected officials attended the American Legion ceremony — including state Sen. Ben Allen and county Supervisor Lindsey Horvath — but only one attended the rally too: City Councilmember Traci Park. She stepped on stage at the rally in a far less somber tone than at the memorial.
“Let’s end this culture of half-assed solutions,” she said — also noting that there were “some folks” who “didn’t want me to come here today.”
“What happened on Jan. 7 was catastrophic failure and to pretend otherwise is just insulting,” she told the crowd. “You did not imagine what happened, and you are right to be angry.”
In Altadena, a coalition of lawmakers, survivors and advocates at the Collaboratory community center set the tone for the second year of recovery.
Recently, a survey from the nonprofit Department of Angels found that more than 7 out of 10 Altadena residents remain displaced from their homes. Nearly half have exhausted their savings, and over 40% have taken on personal debt to survive, said Miguel Santana, co-founder of the nonprofit.
Among them are people like Ada Hernandez, who owned a 1950s home on Mountain View Street with her husband, Miguel, where they lived with their 5-year-old son, Mason, 2-year-old Sadie and 14-year-old dog Bentley. They moved into their home in 2018, on the same day she lost her firstborn son. But in the fire, she said, she lost every physical memory of him, including his neonatal intensive care unit pillow and handprint.
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Now, the pain has compounded as her family has been forced to move three times over the last year. They have spent the last two months in an Airbnb with help from the Salvation Army, she said, but that runs out next Wednesday.
“We feel forgotten,” Hernandez, 37, said. “We feel like we’re at a standstill.”
Bass and Newsom have touted L.A.’s recovery as one of the fastest in modern California history. Bass, in particular, points to her work in cutting red tape at the Department of Building and Safety, which is reviewing and signing off on the rebuilding plans. But to many survivors, recovery still feels painfully slow.
Avaristo Serrano helps build a home on Highview Street, one year after the Eaton fire.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
As of December, L.A. County had issued rebuilding permits for about 16% of homes destroyed in Altadena, and the city of L.A. issued permits for just under 14% for the Palisades, The Times found. Many whose homes survived the fire but were contaminated by smoke and ash are still fighting with their insurance companies to remediate their homes. Many homes in Altadena remain contaminated even after remediation.
Mark Mariscal, a longtime Altadena resident, said he faced months of delays by his insurance company but, with help from the Eaton Fire Survivors Network, finally got a check in the mail. He became emotional as he remembered the lives lost and everything that transpired since Jan. 7.
“It’s just a battle, a good one because we’re pretty sure we’re never moving again,” he said. “After we build this house the way we want it, we’re not moving again. Unless I’m sent up to my higher power.”
For many survivors, finding a sense of peace in their healing journeys one year into recovery has proved difficult without closure. Investigations and reports into the failures that led to and exacerbated the disasters have left residents with more questions than answers.
Meanwhile, emergency officials failed to issue evacuation orders for west Altadena, a historically Black enclave, until five hours after the fire began to engulf homes in the neighborhood. An investigation by The Times found that even as the fire progressed far into the west side of town, the majority of Los Angeles County Fire Department resources remained elsewhere.
“So many different layers of mistakes had to be made for this to occur,” Padawer told The Times. He said the rally was intended to highlight both the “gaslighting” and “solutions that can help our neighbors come home.”
The Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283 hosts a community ceremony with white glove presentation of flags for the families of those lost, marking the one year anniversary of the Palisades fire on January 7, 2026.
(Christina House/Los Angeles Times)
Sue Kohl, president of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, said she had mixed feelings early Wednesday as reporters gathered for a news conference on the barren front lawn of what will be her new home on Iliff Street in the decimated Alphabet Streets neighborhood.
Construction on her two-story home — surrounded by empty lots — is well underway. But she has no memories here, she said. It’s not the place where she lived for 32 years and raised five children and three stepchildren.
The anniversary, she said, is “like emotional ping pong. You want to be positive. But at the same time — I mean, look around. At least now you see a lot of construction.”
Many survivors say a hope for the future is the one thing that motivates them. In five years, or maybe ten, Rogers looks forward to all the little things that make the Palisades the Palisades.
“I’d like to see children running down the streets happily. I’d like to hear them, see them on their bikes, watch the teenagers hang out at CVS, in the parks. I’d like to see all Angelenos from all parts of Los Angeles back up in our hiking trails,” she said.
“That would bring me a lot of joy, to see our schools thriving again, and I’d love to complain about the 3 p.m. traffic — the kids’ pickup time from schools in the village,” she said. “That’s what I’d like to see come back in our community as soon as possible.”
A fatal head-on crash near Silverthorne in Colorado’s mountains shut down a state highway Tuesday morning, according to the Colorado State Patrol.
State patrol troopers responded to the two-truck crash near milepost 115 on northbound Colorado 9, west of Silverthorne, just before 8 a.m. Tuesday, according to a news release from the agency. A Dodge Dakota pickup truck and a Ford F350 collided head-on, killing one person, state patrol officials said.
The victim will be identified by the Summit County Coroner’s Office. Additional injuries were not reported by Colorado State Patrol, and information about the cause of the crash was not immediately available on Tuesday.
Anyone who witnessed the crash and has not yet spoken to investigators is asked to contact the Colorado State Patrol dispatch at 970-249-4392 and reference case VC260009.
A 38-year-old man was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of murder in a fatal Denver stabbing, police said.
Denver officers responded at about 9:51 p.m. Monday to a stabbing in the 4200 block of North Lipan Street in the city’s Sunnyside neighborhood. Paramedics took the man who was stabbed to the hospital, where he later died from his injuries.
Christopher Fielder was arrested Tuesday in Glendale and booked into the Denver Downtown Detention Center on Wednesday on investigation of second-degree murder, according to jail records.
The man who was stabbed to death will be identified by the Denver Office of the Medical Examiner.
Investigators believe Fielder and the victim had been in an on-again-off-again relationship, and police said there had been prior conflicts between the two. Denver police did not specify what conflicts had been documented.
The smell of smoke lingered in the streets of Denver’s Washington Virginia Vale neighborhood on Tuesday afternoon, where the charred wreckage of a partially built apartment complex continued to smolder.
Denver Fire Department crews have not left the the property at 5337 Leetsdale Drive since it caught fire Friday night, quickly growing into the worst blaze Denver firefighters have faced in decades.
The cause of the five-alarm fire is still under investigation, and on Tuesday the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives’ Denver field office requested a national response team assist with the case, Denver Fire Department Division Chief Robert Murphy said at a news conference.
Human remains search dogs on Monday searched the debris for several hours and did not find any bodies, Murphy said.
The 283-unit Harker Heights apartment complex, valued at $23.2 million and owned by Texas-based real estate investment company Embrey, was set to open in May, according to a design firm involved in the project.
A fire investigation continued along Leetsdale Drive between South Forest Street and South Hudson Street in Denver on Jan. 6, 2026. Denver Fire Department officials said during a press conference that the federal government will assist in the investigation of the large apartment construction fire. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
“This fire threatened the safety of our community and injured a firefighter,” ATF Special Agent in Charge Chris Ashbridge said in a statement. “The (national response team) is bringing federal resources and expertise to this complex investigation. It is a top priority for us because we understand the immense challenges this fire has created for residents and businesses.”
The response team — which investigates major fires, explosions and bombings across the country — consists of federal agents, fire investigators, explosives specialists, fire protection engineers, electrical engineers, forensic chemists, intelligence research specialists, digital forensic specialists, a medic and an explosive detection dog, according to ATF.
It’s not clear how long the investigation and clean-up will take, Murphy said, but the “enormity” of the building and the massive amounts of debris will likely make the process difficult and lengthy.
Several businesses in the area were still closed Tuesday, and homes along East Dakota Avenue, which borders the burned area to the north, were visibly damaged.
The fire melted and burned off siding, shattered stone privacy walls and broke windows as flames came within feet of neighboring homes.
Several lanes of Leetsdale Drive remained closed Tuesday, including the right northbound lane and two right southbound lanes between South Holly and South Forest streets, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.
Fully reopening Leetsdale Drive is contingent on demolishing parts of the charred apartment complex that are still standing, Murphy said. That will likely happen in the next few days, or within a week at most.
Fire investigators have not ruled out any potential causes and are investigating all tips, including reports of a homeless person being in the building and fireworks seen in the area when the fire began, he said.
“We are looking at everything right now,” Murphy said.
Firefighters and investigators still haven’t been able to enter the burned area because of how unstable the debris are and because the fire is still burning, Murphy said. While waiting for the fire to be fully extinguished, investigators have relied on witness accounts and surveillance video from neighboring businesses.
“Some of this fire we just can’t get to,” Murphy said. “It’s covered up, it’s hidden by collapse. I can’t send firefighters in there because of the danger of more collapse.”
A Denver firefighter heads down a ladder during a fire investigation along Leetsdale Drive between South Forest Street and South Hudson Street in Denver on Jan. 6, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Fire crews put an estimated 18 million gallons of water on the flames between Friday night and Monday, Murphy said, and firefighters continued to monitor the scene from a bucket raised high above the wreckage on Tuesday afternoon.
In a statement, Embrey spokesperson Jeff Cowart thanked emergency responders who worked to contain the fire and are working to secure the site.
“Our priority remains working collaboratively with Denver Fire, investigators and the community as the investigation continues to determine the cause and next steps,” Cowart said.
A five-alarm fire that tore through a partially built Denver apartment complex Friday was still burning Monday as investigators worked to uncover the cause of the city’s worst blaze in decades.
The fire still burned underneath massive piles of debris at the destroyed apartment complex at 5337 Leetsdale Drive in Denver’s Washington Virginia Vale neighborhood, Denver Fire Department Division Chief Robert Murphy said Monday.
The development was planned as a 283-unit luxury apartment complex called Harker Heights before the fire sparked Friday night.
Fire investigators are considering what started the blaze and have not yet landed on one clear cause, Murphy said. Investigators are looking into the possibility that a homeless person was in the building when the fire began, but have not yet confirmed anyone was present, he said.
Rumors that the fire was sparked by vagrants have not been proven, Murphy said.
“It wouldn’t surprise me,” he said. “We’ve also heard the firework theory. And then as ever, there are things construction people do that have caused fires before. We are really looking at all angles.”
Fire officials still aren’t sure whether anyone was killed in the blaze, Murphy said. Crews haven’t been able to search through the debris for any bodies.
“I really hope there is nobody in there,” he said. “We are not getting any reports of anybody missing.”
Investigators are relying on witness accounts and ample surveillance video from neighboring businesses as part of the investigation, he said. The “enormity” of the building and the massive amounts of debris complicate the investigative work, Murphy said.
“It is going to be difficult and not timely,” he said.
The property’s ownership will bring in the heavy equipment to dig through the debris, he said, but firefighters will be present during that process to quickly knock down any fire that flares up as the debris is removed.
“There is going to be active fire there, not crazy, but smoldering and smoking until we can get an excavator in there and open it up,” Murphy said. “Some of that fire, we can’t reach it; it is hidden.”
Just one or two fire companies remained at the scene Monday — down from a peak of about 175 firefighters and support personnel who responded to the blaze Friday.
Fire officials hoped to further reduce on-scene crews by Monday night, keeping just a few uniformed personnel on site to keep control of the area during the ongoing investigation into the fire’s cause.
A man has been taken into custody by police after officers and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.William DeFoor, 26, has been charged with criminal damaging/endangering, obstructing official business and criminal trespass, all misdemeanors, as well as one count of vandalism, a fifth-degree felony, according to a police report.Cincinnati Police say DeFoor is accused of being seen by a Secret Service agent and on security footage walking onto the property without permission and damaging four windows, as well as a vehicle. Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house. The Secret Service said the incident happened shortly after midnight early Monday morning. The Secret Service is coordinating with CPD and the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon. This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.
CINCINNATI —
A man has been taken into custody by police after officers and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.
William DeFoor, 26, has been charged with criminal damaging/endangering, obstructing official business and criminal trespass, all misdemeanors, as well as one count of vandalism, a fifth-degree felony, according to a police report.
Cincinnati Police say DeFoor is accused of being seen by a Secret Service agent and on security footage walking onto the property without permission and damaging four windows, as well as a vehicle.
Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.
Hearst Owned
WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene in the East Walnut Hills area for several hours, going in and out of the house.
The Secret Service said the incident happened shortly after midnight early Monday morning. The Secret Service is coordinating with CPD and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon.
This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.
Police respond to Ohio home of VP JD Vance as part of hours-long investigation
PEOPLE LINE UP TO WATCH THE HISTORIC ARRAIGNMENT. THIS IS WLWT NEWS 5 LEADING THE WAY WITH BREAKING NEWS. LET’S GET RIGHT TO THAT BREAKING NEWS. WE ARE STILL WORKING TO GET ANSWERS AFTER CINCINNATI POLICE AND THE U.S. SECRET SERVICE RESPONDED TO THE HOME OF JD VANCE OVERNIGHT. THEY WERE THERE IN EAST WALNUT HILLS FOR SEVERAL HOURS. WLWT NEWS FIVE’S NICOLE APONTE LIVE FOR US THERE THIS MORNING. NICOLE, WHAT CAN YOU TELL US? KELLY, WE’RE IN THE VICINITY OF WHERE JD VANCE HOME IS IN EAST WALNUT HILLS. THERE IS STILL VERY LIMITED INFORMATION RIGHT NOW, BUT WE DO KNOW THAT CINCINNATI POLICE AND SECRET SERVICE AGENTS RESPONDED TO VANCE’S HOME OVERNIGHT. IN THIS VIDEO, RIGHT HERE, OUR PHOTOGRAPHER CAPTURED WHAT APPEARS TO BE DAMAGE TO THE WINDOWS. OFFICERS WERE ON SCENE IN THE AREA FOR SEVERAL HOURS, GOING IN AND OUT OF THIS HOME, BUT POLICE HERE COULD ONLY TELL US THEY, QUOTE, HAVE A SUSPECT. IT’S NOT CLEAR IF THAT PERSON IS IN CUSTODY, WHAT THEY’RE CHARGED WITH, OR IF THEY’RE CONNECTED TO THIS INVESTIGATION. VICE PRESIDENT VANCE WAS IN CINCINNATI FOR THE LAST WEEK AND LEFT YESTERDAY AFTERNOON. WE’VE SPOKEN WITH SECRET SERVICE AGENTS HERE ON THE SCENE. THEY TELL US THAT THERE SHOULD BE A STATEMENT MADE LATER THIS MORNING. MEANTIME, WE’LL STILL MONITOR THE SITUATION HERE IN EAST WALNUT HILLS AND BRING YOU THESE UPDATES AS THE
Police respond to Ohio home of VP JD Vance as part of hours-long investigation
Police and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.Cincinnati police there could say only that they “have a suspect.”It’s not clear if that person is in custody or what they’re charged with.WLWT has spoken with Secret Service agents who say a statement will likely be made later Monday morning.Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon. This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.
CINCINNATI —
Police and Secret Service agents responded to the Cincinnati home of Vice President JD Vance overnight.
Sister station WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene for several hours, going in and out of the house.
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WLWT’s cameras captured what appears to be damage to the windows of the home. Officers were on scene in the East Walnut Hills area for several hours, going in and out of the house.
Cincinnati police there could say only that they “have a suspect.”
It’s not clear if that person is in custody or what they’re charged with.
WLWT has spoken with Secret Service agents who say a statement will likely be made later Monday morning.
Vance had been in Cincinnati for the last week. He left Sunday afternoon.
This is a developing story and will be updated when we learn more.
Calls started coming in about a structure fire along Leetsdale Drive, between South Forest and South Hudson Streets, at 6:45 p.m. Friday, Denver Fire Department Chief Desmond Fulton said.
The cause of the fire remained under investigation on Sunday.
Most of the building at 5337 Leetsdale Drive, which property records show was set to be a 283-unit luxury apartment complex called Harker Heights, had collapsed Saturday afternoon.
The fire is expected to continue burning inside the building through the weekend, blocking firefighters from entering to investigate the cause or search for victims, Division Chief Robert Murphy said during a Saturday news conference.
“I don’t know if any of us have seen a fire on this scale in our careers,” Murphy said. “I’m in the 30th year of my career, and this is the first five-alarm, almost six-alarm fire that we’ve ever had. We have had other large fires, like the Glendale fire and Emerson Street fire, but they never reached the capacity in terms of firefighters that this one did.”
Eric Neff’s tenure at the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office ended after he was placed on administrative leave in 2022 over accusations of misconduct in the prosecution of the CEO of Konnech, a software company that election conspiracy theorists said was in the thrall of the Chinese government.
Now, three years later, Neff is serving as one of the Trump administration’s top election watchdogs.
Late last year , his name began appearing on lawsuits filed by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, listed as “acting chief” of the voting section.
Neff’s appointment, first reported by Mother Jones, has prompted renewed scrutiny of his work at the L.A. County district attorney’s office.
The Times interviewed several of Neff’s former colleagues, who revealed new details about claims of misconduct that emerged from the Konnech case, and said they were alarmed that someone with almost no background in federal election law was named to a senior position.
Neff led the 2022 investigation of Konnech, a tiny Michigan company whose software is used by election officials in several major cities. In a criminal complaint, Neff accused the company’s CEO, Eugene Yu, of fraud and embezzlement, alleging the company stored poll worker information on a server based in China, a violation of its contract with the L.A. County registrar’s office.
Six weeks after a complaint was filed, prosecutors dropped the case and launched an investigation into “irregularities” and bias in the way evidence was presented against Konnech, the D.A.’s office said in a 2022 statement.
The internal probe was focused on accusations that Neff misled supervisors at the district attorney’s office about the role of election deniers in his investigation, according to two officials with direct knowledge of the case who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly.
Neff also allegedly withheld information about potential biases in the case from a grand jury, according to the two officials.
In a civil lawsuit filed last year, Neff said the internal review by the D.A.’s office cleared him of wrongdoing. The two officials familiar with the probe who spoke on the condition of anonymity disputed Neff’s characterization of the findings.
A spokesman for Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman declined to comment or provide the results of the investigation into Neff, which the officials said was conducted by an outside law firm that generated a report on the case. Neff’s attorney also did not provide a copy of the report.
A Department of Justice spokesman declined to comment.
Neff’s attorney, Tom Yu — no relation to the Konnech CEO — said his client had no obligation to provide background information about the origins of the case to the grand jury.
Neff’s appointment comes as President Trump continues to remake the DOJ in his own image by appointing political loyalists with no criminal law background as U.S. attorneys in New Jersey and Virginia and seeking prosecutions of his political enemies, such as former FBI Director James Comey.
Trump has never recanted his false claim that he won the 2020 election.
When then-L.A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón announced the charges against Konnech in 2020, Trump said the progressive prosecutor would become a “National hero on the Right if he got to the bottom of this aspect of the Voting Fraud.”
The Konnech case was centered on contract fraud, not voter fraud or ballot rigging. Six weeks after the charges were filed, the case disintegrated.
The D.A.’s office cited Neff’s over-reliance on evidence provided by True the Vote, the group that pushed the unfounded Chinese government conspiracies about Konnech and also appeared in a film that spread claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
Gascón initially denied that True the Vote was involved in the case, but weeks later, a D.A.’s office spokesman said a report from the group’s co-founder, Gregg Phillips, sparked the prosecution. Phillips testified in court in July 2022 that it was Neff who first contacted him about Konnech.
The two officials who spoke to The Times said that Neff withheld True the Vote’s role from high-level D.A.’s office staff, including Gascón, when presenting the case.
Gascón declined an interview request, noting he is named in Neff’s pending lawsuit, which is slated for trial in early 2026.
Neff’s attorney insisted the case against Konnech was solid.
“He was let go because Trump tweeted a statement of ‘Go George Go’,” the attorney said. “That’s why Eugene Yu was let go. Because Gascón was so scared he was going to lose votes.”
Calls and emails to an attorney who previously represented Eugene Yu were not returned.
In his lawsuit, Neff claimed he had evidence that “Konnech used third-party contractors based in China and failed to abide by security procedures” to protect L.A. County poll worker data. The evidence was not attached as an exhibit in the lawsuit.
A DOJ spokesperson declined to describe Neff’s job duties. His name appears on a number of lawsuits filed in recent months against states that have refused to turn over voter registration lists to the Trump administration.
Neff is also involved in a suit filed against the Fulton County clerk’s office in Georgia seeking records related to the 2020 election, records show.
“We will not permit states to jeopardize the integrity and effectiveness of elections by refusing to abide by our federal elections laws,” Asst. Atty. Gen. Harmeet Dhillon, the California conservative who now leads the civil rights division, said in a recent statement. “If states will not fulfill their duty to protect the integrity of the ballot, we will.”
Dhillon declined to comment through a DOJ spokesman.
The voting section “enforces the civil provisions of the federal laws that protect the right to vote, including the Voting Rights Act,” according to the DOJ’s website.
It does not appear that Neff has any background working on cases related to federal election law. He first became an L.A. County prosecutor in 2013 and spent years handling local crime cases out of the Pomona courthouse. He was promoted and reassigned to the Public Integrity Division, which investigates corruption issues, in 2020, according to his lawsuit.
While there, he handled only two prosecutions related to elections. One was the Konnech case. The other involved allegations of election rigging against a Compton city council member.
In August 2021, Isaac Galvan, a Democrat, was charged with conspiring to commit election fraud after he allegedly worked to direct voters from outside his council district to cast ballots for him. Galvan won the race by just one vote, but was booted from office when a judge determined at least four improper ballots had been cast.
Galvan’s criminal case is still pending; he recently pleaded guilty to charges in a separate corruption and bribery case in federal court. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles said there was no overlap between the D.A.’s election rigging case and the bribery case against Galvan. Federal prosecutors are not reviewing the Konnech case, the spokesman said.
Court filings show Neff was involved in Galvan’s L.A. County case, but the prosecution was led by a more senior attorney.
Justin Levitt, a constitutional law professor at Loyola Law School who served in the civil rights division during the Obama administration, said section chiefs normally have decades of experience in the area of law they’re meant to supervise.
“The biggest problem with somebody with Neff’s history is the giant screaming red flag that involves filing a prosecution based on unreliable evidence,” Levitt said. “That’s not something any prosecutor should do.”
Neff’s attorney, Yu, scoffed at the idea that his client was not experienced enough for his new role in the Trump administration, or that he was selected due to his involvement in the Konnech case.
“Eric got the job because he’s qualified to get the job. He didn’t get the job for any other reason. He got the job because he’s an excellent advocate,” Yu said. “I think the Justice Department is very fortunate to have Eric.”
Times Staff Writer Seema Mehta contributed to this report.
A New Year’s Eve confrontation between an off-duty ICE officer and a man who was firing a gun at an apartment complex has left the gunman dead and prompted an investigation by the Los Angeles Police Department, according to a statement from the Department of Homeland Security.
“On December, 31st, an off duty ICE Officer bravely responded to an active shooter situation at his apartment complex. In order to protect his life and that of others, he was forced to defensively use his weapon and exchanged gunfire with the shooter,” read an emailed statement from Tricia McLaughlin, the department’s assistant secretary of public affairs. “Fortunately, our brave officer was not injured while protecting his community.”
The Homeland Security statement said the ICE officer contacted police following the incident.
“This is an ongoing investigation being conducted by the LAPD, and we refer any further questions to them,” the statement said.
According to a City News Service report, police responded to the Valley Pointe Apartments complex at Roscoe Boulevard and Amestoy Avenue in Northridge at 11:37 p.m. Wednesday. The news service quoted an unnamed LAPD officer as saying the man who was killed was firing an assault rifle into the air. The victim was pronounced dead at the scene.
Video taken at the scene by KTLA News showed a white privacy canopy set up on a walkway at the apartments to shield view of the body.
Neither the identity of the dead man nor the ICE officer has been released and no arrests were reported.
The Clermont Police Department is advising the public to avoid the area near 12th and Lake Minneola Drive on Thursday. An investigation is being conducted in the area known as West Park, CPD said. This may lead to traffic restrictions in the area.>> This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.
CLERMONT, Fla. —
The Clermont Police Department is advising the public to avoid the area near 12th and Lake Minneola Drive on Thursday.
An investigation is being conducted in the area known as West Park, CPD said.
This may lead to traffic restrictions in the area.
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>> This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.
Vancouver police officers are now on administrative leave, while investigators look into a shooting of man during a recent domestic incident.
VANCOUVER, OR – Three Vancouver Police Officers, two of whom were involved in the shooting of a man and one officer who witnessed the shooting, have been placed on leave during an investigation.
On December 27, 2025, at approximately 11:55 p.m., officers responded to a disturbance with a weapon near the 13200 block of NE 46th Street in Vancouver. The initial call involved a man outside a home who had pointed a gun at a woman inside the home and had fired at least one round, according the VPD.
The officers say once they arrived at the home, the man confronted them with a firearm. Two Vancouver Police Officers at the scene discharged their firearms, striking the male, who was transported to an area hospital where he was pronounced deceased.
The Washington State Office of Independent Investigations will be investigating the shooting. As part of the Vancouver Police Department’s Body Worn Camera Program, video captured by body-worn cameras and in-car cameras will be reviewed and released later.