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  • Attorneys for man killed by off-duty ICE agent call on California A.G. to investigate

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    Attorneys for a Los Angeles man shot and killed by an off-duty federal agent on New Year’s Eve are asking the California Attorney General to take over the case, alleging recent comments by LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell show a bias toward the Trump administration.

    In a Tuesday afternoon news conference, attorneys Ben Crump and Jamal Tooson called on Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta to investigate the fatal shooting of Keith Porter at his San Fernando Valley apartment building.

    The request, they said, was based in large part on their lack of confidence in the LAPD and the U.S. Justice Department.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security initially said an off-duty Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who lived at same apartment complex was responding to a suspected “active shooter” when he opened fire. Porter’s relatives have said they believe he had been firing a gun into the air to ring in the new year.

    Tooson said witnesses have come forward saying that Porter, 43, appeared to be walking back to his apartment when he was shot, and was not a threat to anyone. Tooson also pointed out that witnesses didn’t hear the federal officer identifying himself before firing three shots.

    “So, forgive us, if we have skepticism of any claims of self defense,”according to Tooson, who is representing Porter’s mother, Franceola Armstrong.

    Crump — who previously represented the families of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, among other high-profile civil rights cases — said he is supporting Porter’s family but not acting as their legal counsel.

    “The family has not been confident that LAPD, with their close relationships with the ICE officials, that there’s going to be a fair and transparent investigation,.” Crump said. “Because them trying to whitewash the investigation into the death of Keith Porter is a nonstarter. We’re not going to allow that to happen.”

    A Los Angeles police spokesperson responded to an inquiry about the remarks with a statement Tuesday afternoon that said: “The LAPD’s Robbery Homicide Division-Homicide Special Section, continues its investigation into the death of Keith Porter. At this time, there are no additional details available for public release.”

    The fatal incident occurred at the Village Pointe Apartments on Roscoe Boulevard around 10:30 p.m. on Dec. 31, 2025. Local police have refrained from using the Department of Homeland Security’s characterization of Porter as an “active shooter.” Nobody else was reported injured at the scene.

    Tooson and Porter’s relatives have repeatedly said that even if he was shooting a gun into the air — an activity that can bring felony charges and is discouraged as dangerous by city leaders — he was not threatening anyone and contended the agent who opened fire should have waited for LAPD to respond.

    Stacie Halpern, an attorney for the ICE agent, has said there is evidence that Porter shot first. A law enforcement source, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, echoed those claims to The Times last month.

    Halpern didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment left after Tuesday’s press conference.

    In a statement, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office said it was confident that the LAPD was “conducting a thorough and independent investigation.”

    “Once the case is presented to our office, we will carefully examine the evidence, review the facts, and apply the law to determine whether criminal charges are appropriate,” the statement read. “This is the same rigorous, impartial process we use in every use-of-force case submitted to the District Attorney’s Office.”

    Porter’s death has become a rallying point locally for activists, who regularly invoke his name at Police Commission meetings and protests. Hours before the press conference, numerous speakers showed up to the Commission’s meeting to demand that the federal agent responsible be arrested.

    Last month, The Times identified the officer as Brian Palacios. Palacios lived in an apartment a short distance away from where Porter was killed, and has previously been accused during a custody dispute of child abuse and making racist remarks about Black and Latino men, according to court records reviewed by The Times. Records provided by Halpern show the child abuse allegations were deemed unfounded by police and the L.A. County Department of Child & Family Servies. Halpern also denied her client ever used racist language.

    In a statement issued in late January, a manager for the apartment complex said “the ICE agent is no longer a tenant and has permanently vacated the property.”

    In his call for an outside investigation, Tooson argued McDonnell is too cozy with ICE and other federal agencies to oversee an impartial investigation of Palacios’ conduct.

    Despite months of federal immigration raids causing chaos in and around Los Angeles, the chief has largely avoided criticizing the Trump administration, at times boasting about the strength of LAPD’s ties to federal law enforcement. He said last week he would not enforce a new California law — which is already being challenged in court — that bars ICE agents from wearing masks while on-duty.

    McDonell has stood by LAPD’s policy of not getting involved in civil immigration enforcement. When he served as L.A. County sheriff during President Trump’s first term, McDonnell took criticism for allowing ICE to access the jails when seeking inmates for deportation. His position on immigration was viewed a factor in the 2018 sheriff’s race, which saw McDonnell lose in an upset to Alex Villanueva.

    Addressing reporters on Tuesday, Armstrong, Porter’s mother, said she remained heartbroken by the thought of waking up everyday without her son, who was a Compton native and father of two.

    “I can’t bring my son back, but I want justice for him. I want justice for my child,” she said.

    Times Staff Writer Richard Winton contributed to this report.

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    James Queally, Libor Jany

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  • Gunman dies after being shot by off-duty ICE agent; LAPD investigating

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    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.

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    Jeanette Marantos

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  • Reiner Medical Examiner Records Under Wraps After Court Order – LAmag

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    Son Nick Reiner was charged with their murder on Dec. 16

    Rob and Michele Reiner’s medical examiner records are under a security hold due to a Dec. 24 court order initiated by the Los Angeles Police Department.  

    “While the cause and manner of death were previously released on these cases, due to the court order, the information is no longer available,” the Los Angeles County medical examiner shared in a statement. “No other case information or records, including the medical examiner report, can be released or posted on the website until further notice.” 

    It continued: “The department understands the public’s interest in these cases and remains committed to transparency when possible. Information will be made available once the court order is lifted.”  

    The Reiners were found fatally stabbed in their Brentwood home on the afternoon of Dec. 14. By approximately 9:15 p.m. that night, the LAPD tracked down and arrested their 32-year-old son, Nick Reiner, near Exposition Park.  

    Nick was booked and later charged with two counts of first-degree murder.  He is being held at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in Downtown Los Angeles without bail and is being represented by lawyer Alan Jackson, who is also defending the 24-year-old charged in a fatal car crash that killed four Pepperdine University students. 

    “Prosecuting cases involving family violence are some of the most challenging and heart-wrenching we face because of the intimate and often brutal nature of the crimes,” District Attorney Nathan Hochman said on Dec. 16. “Rob Reiner was one of the greatest filmmakers of his generation. His murder and his wife of more than 35 years, Michele Singer Reiner’s murder, are shocking and tragic. We owe it to their memory to pursue justice and accountability for the lives that were taken.” 

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    Haley Bosselman

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  • Grand Jury May Indict D4vd in Celeste Rivas Hernandez Murder

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    Singer D4vd could be expected to face possible murder charges in the death of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, according to sources familiar with the case who spoke to TMZ. As Los Angeles Magazine previously reported, prosecutors are presenting evidence to a Los Angeles grand jury that could lead to an indictment. Earlier reports described the grand jury as “investigative,” a panel that can subpoena witnesses and gather evidence without returning criminal charges, but sources told TMZ the panel in this matter is expected to vote on an indictment. The grand jury was reportedly convened in mid-November and was expected to last weeks or even months.

    High-profile criminal defense attorney Mark Geragos previously told Los Angeles that he’s not sure the type of grand jury matters anymore, given the major secrecy around the case. “The cynic in me says the reason they’re using the grand jury is to figure out what’s happening without public scrutiny and to identify who, if anyone, is criminally liable,” he said. “They want this close to the vest.” 

    Rivas’s remains were discovered on September 8th inside the front trunk of a Tesla registered to David Anthony Burke, 20, the performer known professionally as D4vd. The Los Angeles Police Department has confirmed the case is now being treated as a murder investigation, though authorities have released few details publicly. 

    Witnesses, including D4vd’s day-to-day manager, Robert Morgenroth, have testified before the panel. Morgenroth reportedly was on the stand for three days, being questioned intensely by prosecutor Beth Silverman on “why he didn’t call the police.” 

    The case has drawn intense scrutiny amid delays in public disclosures and conflicting information about the relationship between Burke and Rivas, who had been reported missing in 2024.  Private investigator Steve Fischer is working on behalf of D4vd’s former property owner, and has publicly shared additional uncollected evidence and raised questions about the investigation’s pace. Fischer was also believed to be a grand jury witness and did not express hope that anyone would be arrested anytime soon.

    To be clear, the LA District Attorney’s office has not confirmed whether an indictment has been returned, with TMZ sources claiming grand jury proceedings could continue into February with more witnesses.

    The post Grand Jury Considering Possible Indictment of D4vd in Celeste Rivas Hernandez Case appeared first on LAmag.

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    Lauren Conlin

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  • SNL Writer Appeals for Help in Search for Sister Missing

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    Jimmy Fowlie posted on multiple social media platforms asking Angelenos if they have seen his sister Christine Lynn Downey who vanished in late November

    A writer for Saturday Night Live is asking Angelenos to help the search for his sister, Christina Lynn Downer, who was last seen in Koreatown.

    Jimmy Fowlie, who also works as an actor, wrote on social media that his family is “worried that my sister isn’t safe,” and urged Angelenos to call police if they see her.

    The LAPD says it has opened a case into the 38-year-old woman’s disappearance. “Christina Lynn Downer was last contacted on December 10, 2025, via text message with a friend. Her last known location was in the Koreatown area of Los Angeles. She has not been seen or heard from since,” the LAPD said in a statement, adding, “The family wants the public to be aware that Christina Downer has no known medical conditions and has not gone missing before.”

    Christina Downer is described as a 38-year-old female with black hair and brown eyes. She stands five feet one inch tall and weighs approximately 115 pounds. Anyone with information regarding her location is asked to contact the Los Angeles Police Department’s Missing Persons Unit at (213) 996-1800.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Group tries to break into Bel Air home while residents were present

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    A group of suspected burglars attempted to enter a private home Monday night but were unable to get in, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. 

    Officers with the LAPD responded to the multi-million dollar home on Rosecomare Road at around 9:30 p.m.

    According to police, a group of about 3-4 people were trying to enter the home after jumping over a wall and trying to break the window. 

    However, they were unable to break through the safety glass of the window and left before police arrived.

    The residents of the home were present at the time of the attempted burglary and were said to be OK. 

    No further details were immediately available.

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    Génesis Miranda Miramontes

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  • Increased Security at LA Hanukkah Events After Australia Shooting

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    The holiday runs through Dec. 22 

    The mass shooting in Australia on Sunday has prompted Los Angeles law enforcement to intensify protection of local Hanukkah celebrations.  

    “The Los Angeles Police Department is deeply saddened by the tragic mass shooting attack that occurred during a Hanukkah celebration in Sydney, Australia,” it shared in a statement on Sunday. “We stand in solidarity with the Jewish community in Australia and here in Los Angeles, and our thoughts are with the victims, their families and all those impacted by this senseless act of violence.”  

    The Dec. 14 massacre left 15 people dead and dozens injured. People had gathered that afternoon for a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach when suspected father and son gunmen, 24-year-old Naveed Akram, who is in custody, and 50-year-old Sajib Akram, who was shot and killed by officers, attacked. 

    At the time of posting, the LAPD noted there was no known threat to Los Angeles but assured its commitment to “protecting our diverse communities. As part of this commitment, the LAPD will provide extra patrols at Jewish facilities, schools, synagogues and at Hanukkah events throughout the city” and that it “will continue to work closely with our local, national and international partners” to monitor developments and ensure the safety of our city. Together, we can honor the spirit of Hanukkah by standing united against hate and violence.”  

    Hanukkah runs from Dec. 14 to 22. 

    Similarly, the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department shared its plans to closely monitor and increase patrols of Jewish community spaces and Hanukkah gatherings. “If you see something, say something,” the LASD said in a statement.  

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    Haley Bosselman

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  • Former LAPD Captain Cory Palka Will Not Face Prosecution

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    A veteran Los Angeles Police Captain who was accused of leaking information about women who filed sexual abuse allegations against ex-CBS President Les Moonves – will not be prosecuted because the statute of limitations had run out connected to his alleged crimes, according to court records released by Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman’s office Friday.

    Retired LAPD Captain Cory Palka was accused by New York Attorney General Leticia James of tipping off executives at CBS about a confidential sexual assault complaint against Moonves that was filed on Nov. 10, 2017. The alleged victim told a female LAPD officer “she had been sexually assaulted by Moonves” and pleaded with the investigators to keep the report confidential, Leticia said in a 2023 complaint.

    But on that same day, James alleged, Palka called CBS’s Senior Vice President of Talent Relations and Special Events Ian Metrose and left a voicemail regarding the confidential complaint. 

    “Somebody walked in the station about a couple hours ago and made allegations against your boss regarding a sexual assault. It’s confidential, as you know, but call me, and I can give you some of the details and let you know what the allegation is before it goes to the media or gets out,” Palka said on the call, according to the AG’s office. According to James, Palka then shared the report, which had been marked confidential three times.

    Metrose had worked with the Hollywood Division’s top officer after Palka had been hired for outside employment to work for CBS at the Grammy Awards ceremony from 2004 to 2008.

    Text messages that were recovered by investigators between the LAPD captain, a CBS executive, and Moonves reveal that the captain had not only shared confidential information; he also “worked with CBS executives for months to prevent the complaint from becoming public,” James said.

    Several CBS executives then began circulating the report, which contained the accuser’s name, and started to investigate the “victim’s personal circumstances and that of her family, including her children, her brother, and her former spouse,” James said. They went as far as to see if the neighborhood in which she resides would indicate a need for money, according to the report.

    Former LAPD Chief Michael Moore called Palka’s alleged behavior a breach of trust and vowed to launch an investigation into whether any other active or former officers may have been involved in the cover-up. When the accusations against the LAPD captain were made public in 2023, Palka had been retired for two years. Still, his case was referred by the LAPD’s Internal Affairs unit to the Justice System Integrity Division within the L.A. District Attorney’s office in 2023, recommending charges for Penal Code charges of soliciting a bribe, disclosure of confidential information for a financial gain, and obstructing a police investigation.

    “What is most appalling is the alleged breach of trust of a victim of sexual assault, who is among the most vulnerable, by a member of the LAPD,” Moore said at the time. “This erodes the public trust and is not reflective of our values as an organization.”

    But, according to court records, the alleged breach cannot be prosecuted because of “insufficient evidence,” and the filing of the complaint to the Los Angeles District Attorney in 2023, when the crime occurred in 2017.

    The court records pertaining to Palka’s case were first reported by the Los Angeles Times.

    Palka has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and was well known in the entertainment industry. He was nicknamed Captain Hollywood, and he fit the image. Tall and swarthy with wavy dark hair and a toothy white smile, he got small roles in TV series like Bosch, playing a police commander, and moved about his celebrity-choked division like a diplomat. He was behind the velvet rope at Hollywood star unveilings, an LAPD commander who could speed-dial celebrities and corporate titans alike.

    The allegations against him arose during James’s investigation into insider trading at CBS under Moonves’s tenure. The New York case was sparked when the late Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Communication Officer Gil Schwartz, who knew about the allegations against Moonves, dumped 160,700 shares of CBS stock six weeks before the allegations swirling around Moonves became public. In making that move, which netted Schwartz close to $9 million, the executive “intentionally concealed those allegations from regulators, shareholders, and the public for months.” Schwartz died in 2020 of natural causes. That investigation uncovered Palka’s troubling behavior.

    “CBS and Leslie Moonves’s attempts to silence victims, lie to the public, and mislead investors can only be described as reprehensible,” James said of the interactions between Palka and CBS.

    As the #MeToo movement grew over the next few months, Palka actively worked with CBS to contain the woman’s allegation from both the media and fellow LAPD investigators, James said. Palka went as far as to provide “status updates” on the woman’s accusation, she added.

    “He assured CBS executives that he had spoken to his contacts within the LAPD and implemented controls to prevent news of the police report from leaking to the press from the LAPD,” James said.

    As the #MeToo movement spread, Palka reassured his contacts, writing: “I think at this point CBS should feel better than they did last week. The key is that NO other accusers come forward.” James added that Palka told the detective assigned to the woman’s complaint to admonish her against talking to the press, according to the report; the woman complied with this advice from authorities.

    Moonves stepped down from the helm of CBS on Sept. 9, 2018. 

    Palka sent a text message to Metrose that same day, writing: “I’m so sorry to hear this news Ian. Sickens me. We worked so hard to try to avoid this day. I am so completely sad.” He also reached out to Moonves that week, writing: “Les–I’m deeply sorry that this has happened. I will always stand with, by and [sic] pledge my allegiance to you. You have embodied leadership, class and the highest of character through all of this. With utmost respect…”

    But Moonves was not the only man in Hollywood Palka was accused of working to protect, and CBS was not the only entity he enjoyed questionable relationships with, a Los Angeles investigation uncovered. The Hollywood Division also covers the Church of Scientology’s Celebrity Center, and they donated extensively to various activities run by the LAPD’s Hollywood Division. When accusers went to the LAPD with allegations against Scientologist Danny Masterson, one woman testified, those accusations were immediately relayed to church officials.

    Danny Masterson mugshot released on Dec. 27
    Danny Masterson wants out of prison and has filed a habeas corpus
    Credit: Courtesy California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation

    One accuser, Jenn B., testified that she walked into the Hollywood Division on June 6, 2004, to report that Hollywood star Danny Masterson had drugged and raped her. And within minutes, the Church had been notified by someone in the LAPD, and many, including former Scientologist Leah Remini, pointed to Palka. He denied interfering in the case.

    But the accuser testified, she had barely made it out of the building when her phone rang. It was a church ethics officer telling her that “police officers from the Hollywood Division had just called.” Not only had she gone outside the church to make an accusation against a prominent Scientologist, but she had also given up the names of the high-ranking Church leaders whom she went to for help. And someone at the Hollywood Division dropped a dime to the very people she says were protecting Masterson.

    Masterson wouldn’t be arrested until June 2020 – sixteen years later. It remains unclear who in the LAPD called the Church. A Scientology spokesperson declined to answer questions about the Church’s long relationship with the LAPD’s Palka. He was found guilty on rape charges in 2023 and is serving a 30-year sentence.

    He continues to insist on his innocence on the decades-old rape claims, and last month, he filed a writ of habeas corpus saying his attorneys provided ineffectual counsel.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Singer Ray J arrested on Thanksgiving Day on suspicion of making threats in Los Angeles

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    R&B singer Ray J was arrested early Thanksgiving morning, according to jail records and a police spokesman.

    The 44-year-old artist — whose legal name is Willie Norwood — was arrested on suspicion of making criminal threats, according to Los Angeles Police Department Capt. Mike Bland.

    Jail records show Norwood was arrested around 4 a.m. by officers from LAPD’s Devonshire Division, which patrols parts of the San Fernando Valley including Chatsworth and Northridge.

    Bland could not provide details on the incident or say exactly where Norwood was arrested. He was released on $50,000 bond a few hours after his arrest, according to jail records.

    The younger brother of actress and singer Brandy, Norwood is best known for the tracks “One Wish” and “Sexy Can I.” He was sued for defamation in October by his ex-girlfriend, Kim Kardashian, over comments he made in a TMZ documentary.

    Ray J is married to actor and producer Princess Love Norwood, whom he co-starred with on the reality show “Love & Hip Hop,” which showcased an often contentious relationship. The two, who share two children, are in the process of a divorce, as People reported last year.

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    James Queally

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  • D4vd Case: Internet Sleuths Zero In on “Second Suspect”

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    A wave of internet sleuths believe they’ve uncovered who moved the Tesla where Celeste Rivas Hernandez’s body was found; plus TMZ unearths disturbing information about her corpse

    On the November 22nd episode of the “2 Angry Men” podcast, Harvey Levin and Mark Geragos indicated that LAPD may have their sights set on a “second suspect” in connection with the death of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, found in the frunk of singer D4vd’s Tesla on September 8, 2025. The second person may not be directly connected to the actual homicide of Rivas Hernandez (Levin claims that although the M.E.’s office hasn’t officially classified the case as a homicide, his LAPD sources confirmed it has been investigated as one thus far); however, previous reports from October indicate that a person was identified moving D4vd’s Tesla without the singer present. Los Angeles PI Steve Fischer, who was hired by the Hollywood Hills homeowner where D4vd previously resided, told host Jesse Weber on Law & Crime that he had neighbors’ surveillance footage showing the Tesla being moved. More specifically, Fischer stated “he believes he knows who drove the car to the final parking spot.” He confirmed that this information was relayed to the LAPD.

    In the comments section of the podcast, multiple online sleuths surmise that the second person is a close friend of D4vd (real name David Anthony Burke), known as “Neo the Asian.” Click here to review the comments in their entirety for many more questions surrounding Neo.

    Both D4vd and Neo no longer follow each other on Instagram, and Neo appears to have reportedly wiped any trace of D4vd from his Instagram account. D4vd, however, has a July 30th, 2025, Instagram post with photos of himself and Neo at his Hollywood Hills home, with the caption, “TOUR STARTS TODAY BABY I’M GETTING NAKED ON STAGE.”

    While D4vd’s “Withered Tour” did officially begin on July 30th, sleuths have speculated that the photos were taken the day prior on July 29th. Fischer told Weber on Law & Crime that the Tesla was last moved in “late July,” and not by D4vd, leading many to guess that it was Neo based on prior knowledge of their friendship and the fact that he was at the singer’s home in late July. Fischer also stated that he did not see anyone coming or going from the Hollywood Hills home via surveillance footage after the Tesla was moved. Neo did not respond when Los Angeles reached out for a comment. Threads on Reddit have also made claims that Neo was a possible personal assistant for D4vd, and is currently out of the country.

    Additionally, according to a TMZ exclusive on November 22nd, sources connected to the investigation say the body of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez was discovered in a partially frozen (it had been thawing), dismembered state inside the front trunk of a Tesla registered to D4vd. Pieces of the torso and limbs reportedly showed the victim had been frozen for a period before being left in the car, with her head detached as well. The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office may be unable to determine an official cause or manner of death, with a permanent listing as “undetermined” because the body was in such bad shape.

    This past week, TMZ’s Harvey Levin revealed new and unsettling details, claiming an LAPD source confirmed that investigators have “tracking information” placing Burke in a remote area of Santa Barbara County in the middle of the night during spring 2025-an unexplained trip now under a microscope for a possible connection to the teen’s disappearance and the later discovery of her remains. Some are speculating that Rivas Hernandez may have died around that time, and that the trip could be a critical piece of the timeline. Levin added that his source said something along the lines of “logic doesn’t exist when it comes to this case.”

    Rivas Hernandez, a 14-year-old from Lake Elsinore reported missing on April 5, 2024, was last seen in photos in early 2025, according to private investigator Steve Fischer. Her decomposed remains were located on September 8, 2025, inside the front trunk of a Tesla registered to Burke after the vehicle sat abandoned on a Hollywood street for weeks, collecting parking tickets before being towed. Early reports suggested the body was “wrapped in plastic” and possibly dismembered, though the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner has deferred both cause and manner of death pending toxicology, which could point to overdose, foul play, or something in between. LAPD has released very little information, and the case remains active and developing. D4vd previously cancelled his tour, his “Withered” album release, moved out of his Hollywood Hills home, hired celebrity attorney Blair Berk, transferred his Houston TX homes to his mother, and has not made any public statement since the discovery of Rivas Hernandez’ body.

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    Lauren Conlin

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  • Suspect on mountain bike arrested in east San Fernando Valley business burglaries

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    A 26-year-old man on a mountain bike was arrested over the weekend in connection with a series of burglaries at restaurants and other business on Ventura Boulevard in the east San Fernando Valley.

    The area has been plagued by the crimes for a few weeks, the LAPD told NBC4 Investigates.

    The arrest came Saturday at about 3 a.m. after officers noticed a mountain bike, which appeared to match a bike seen on security camera video in previous burglaries, outside a restaurant. The 26-year-old suspect was found nearby and arrested on suspicion of burglary in a break-in at Reno’s Pizzeria.

    He is believed to be connected to more than 30 burglaries, hitting riding his mountain bike to multiple locations per night, the LAPD said. He was on probation for previous burglaries, according to police.

    The case was presented to the district attorney’s office to consider criminal charges.

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    Dennis Broad and Jonathan Lloyd

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  • City Council committee advances measure to limit LAPD’s less-lethal weapons at protests

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    The Los Angeles City Council will consider an ordinance that would prevent the LAPD from using crowd control weapons against peaceful protesters and journalists.

    Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez, who represents District 13, is pushing for regulations that would prohibit the Los Angeles Police Department from using “kinetic energy projectiles” or “chemical agents” unless officers are threatened with physical violence.

    The Public Safety Committee unanimously approved the proposal and forwarded a vote with all council members on Wednesday. The items would be considered by the council in November or December, said Nick Barnes-Batista, a communications director for District 13.

    The ordinance would also require officers to give clear, audible warnings about safe exit routes during “kettling,” when crowds are pushed into designated areas by police.

    After the first iteration of the “No Kings” protest over the summer that saw multiple journalists shot by nonlethal rounds, tear-gassed and detained, news organizations sued the city and Police Department, arguing officers had engaged in “continuing abuse” of members of the media.

    U.S. District Judge Hernan D. Vera granted a temporary restraining order that restricted LAPD officers from using rubber projectiles, chemical irritants and flash bangs against journalists.

    Under the court order, officers are allowed to use those weapons “only when the officer reasonably believes that a suspect is violently resisting arrest or poses an immediate threat of violence or physical harm.”

    LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell called the definition of journalist “ambiguous” in a news release Monday, raising concerns that the preliminary injunction could prevent the LAPD from addressing “people intent on unlawful and violent behavior.”

    “The risk of harm to everyone involved increases substantially,” McDonnell wrote. “LAPD must declare an unlawful assembly, and issue dispersal orders, to ensure the safety of the public and restore order.”

    The L.A. Press Club, plaintiffs in the lawsuit that led to the injunction, has alleged journalists were detained and assaulted by officers during an immigration protest in August. The Press Club is also involved in a similar lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

    “This case is about LAPD, but if necessary, we are ready to take similar action to address misconduct toward journalists by other agencies,” the organization wrote in a news release from June.

    Vera ruled in September that “any duly authorized representative of any news service, online news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network” would be classified as a journalist and therefore protected under the court’s orders. Journalists who are impeding or physically interfering with law enforcement are not subject to the protections.

    Any ordinance passed by the City Council would apply to the LAPD but not other agencies that could be responding to protests that turn chaotic, such as the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department or California Highway Patrol, thereby complicating operational procedure.

    Barnes-Batista, the District 13 spokesman, said the City Council would need to discuss how to craft the rules.

    “There are definitely unanswered questions about [how] the city wouldn’t want the city to be liable for other agencies not following policy,” he said. “So that will have to be worked out.”

    Last month, the City Council, led by Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, voted unanimously to deny a request by the city attorney, Hydee Feldstein Soto, to push for Vera’s injunction to be lifted.

    “Journalism is under attack in this country — from the Trump Administration’s revocation of press access to the Pentagon to corporate consolidation of local newsrooms,” Hernandez said. “The answer cannot be for Los Angeles to join that assault by undermining court-ordered protections for journalists.”

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    Christopher Buchanan

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  • Man killed in police shooting after swinging metal chain at people in Watts, LAPD says

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    A man who was swinging a metal chain at drivers Tuesday on a street in a Watts neighborhood was shot and killed by police, the LAPD said.

    Officers responded late Tuesday morning to the area of 103rd and Kalmia streets after reports of a man armed with a metal chain that he was swinging at drivers and people as they passed. It was not immediately clear whether anyone was injured.

    Police confronted the man, still armed with the chain, on Kalmia Street. The man was hit by police gunfire and transported to a hospital, where he died, the LAPD saied.

    The chain was recovered at the scene.

    Details about the man’s identity and what led to the shooting were not immediately available.

    Nearby streets were closed for the shooting investigation.

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    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • Brother of Chargers’ Daiyan Henley Shot Dead in L.A.

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    Jabari Henley, the brother of LA Chargers linebacker Daiyan Henley, and son of the music executive indicted this spring, was executed on Halloween night

    In March, Daiyan Henley – a standout linebacker for the L.A. Chargers – saw his father Eugene “Big U” Henley locked up on federal charges that accuse the celebrated music executive behind a slew of West Coast rappers, including Snoop Dogg, Kurupt and the late Nipsey Hussle, of using his anti-gang nonprofit as cover for a ‘Mafia-like’ criminal enterprise.

    On Halloween night, Daiyan Henley’s big brother Jabari, 34, was gunned down in South Los Angeles.

    But on Sunday, the football player still hit the field, and helped L.A. topple the Tennessee Titans with seven tackles and a quarterback hit. He tearfully told reporters after the game that it had been “a long year” and that he wished he could talk to his brother “one more time.”

    “It was an emotional moment for me, just to be able to make a play on a day like this — just losing him so soon. It’s been a long year for me, so I just sent a prayer up and hopefully he heard it. I just went out there,” Henley told reporters after the game, adding: “Right now, I’m just floating and the only thing that’s consistent right now in my life, and this is crazy to say, is football. So for me, that’s why I’m out there is because this is the most consistent thing I’ve got in my life right now is football. And I’m just trying to make the most of it.”

    LAPD officials do not have any suspects in Jabari Henley’s murder. The Los Angeles County medical examiner said he was declared dead on the sidewalk, shot multiple times. The cause of death was determined to be homicide. 

    A law enforcement source told Los Angeles that since the elder Henley was hit with a sprawling 43-count federal indictment accusing him of extortion, human trafficking, fraud and the 2021 murder of an aspiring rapper, the LAPD gang unit has been on heightened alert. “A young crew is trying to take control due to Big U’s fed problems.”

    Department of Justice

    Henley, known as an “OG” or an original gangster for the Rollin’ Crips, was most recently the leader of a nonprofit known as Developing Options, which was marketed as a youth program that offered teens alternative choices to gang violence, drugs, and other criminal activity. The program is primarily funded by the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program overseen by L.A. Mayor Karen Bass’ office. According to the complaint, the nonprofit was awarded $2.35 million in city funds from July 1, 2018, to June 30, 2023, even though Henley “allegedly used it as a front for fraudulent purposes and to insulate its members from suspicion by law enforcement.” 

    He is also accused of embezzling donations from celebrities, NBA players, and large companies that donated to the nonprofit, but Henley immediately put the money that was supposed to help his community into his own bank account.  

    The music executive steadfastly denies wrongdoing, denied the accusations in videos posted on social media before he turned himself in, where he insisted: “I ain’t did nothing” and “I ain’t been nothing but a help to our community.”

    Henley is being held without bail at the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Henley and his codefendants are slated to appear in federal court in Little Tokyo on Wednesday for a status conference hearing.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • 14 Arrested at Downtown L.A. ‘No Kings Day’ Protest

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    After a mostly peaceful ‘No Kings Day’ protest in downtown Los Angeles, 14 people were arrested.

    After a generally peaceful ‘No Kings Day’ demonstration in downtown Los Angeles, 14 people were arrested by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD).

    According to the LAPD, twelve adults and two minors were taken into custody after the protest on Saturday.

    Reports say that small crowds lingered into the night after the daytime demonstration. The LAPD formed skirmish lines and issues dispersal orders, preparing for arrests. Demonstrators were reportedly warned by officers that if they did not disperse, they would be taken into custody. No serious injuries were reported or released.

    The protest was primarily peaceful throughout the day, with the crowd chanting and marching together. Aside from the handful of arrests, the event progressed smoothly. LAPD officers moved on horseback and in police vehicles downtown, pushing the live crowd back.

    The LAPD agreed in a tweet from their account that most of the demonstrators were peacefully protesting, and that a small group of ‘agitators’ were dealt with. Authorities alleged that some of the ‘agitators’ used lasers and flashing lights against LAPD officers, leading to arrests, though it is unclear what charges the defendants are facing currently.

    Saturday marked a nationwide day of ‘No Kings Protests’ against Donald Trump and his current administration. Cities across the United States gathered in the thousands to express their critiques of the administration, which many demonstrators call tyrannical.

    Many participants said that Trump administration’s recent push for deportation efforts is a top concern and priority in recent protests. Other concerns include the protection of the personal freedoms and constitutional rights of Americans. This is especially relevant across California, were the LAPD last clashed with protesters over similar issues.

    “I can’t go to Home Depot without fearing for my life now,” said Javier Zumaeta of South Pasadena to ABC 7 Los Angeles. “At any moment, we could get black-bagged. We’re forced to carry around our passports now. We’re not living in a free country anymore.”

    OCT 4, 2025 – Demonstrators protest recent ICE raids in California
    Credit: Photo by David McNew/Getty Images

    In Los Angeles, thousands of residents organized to practice their first amendment rights. The demonstration included thousands of individual signs, a large banner that read ‘No Kings’, and a 20-foot-tall balloon of Trump wearing a diaper.

    The recent wave of protests is the latest in a series of tense clashes between protestors and law enforcement across the nation.

    The Los Angeles demonstration was organized by 50501 SoCal and Service Employees International Union Local 721, in partnership with Black Lives Matter Grassroots Los Angeles, Working Families Party, Black Women for Wellness, the TransLatin@ Coalition, the Human Liberation Coalition, the Removal Coalition, Clergy Laity United for Economic Justice, Democracy Action Network, among others.

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    Natalia Oprzadek

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  • Police declare ‘unlawful assembly’ at downtown L.A. protest, use tear gas to disperse crowds

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    Police on Saturday evening declared an unlawful assembly and issued a dispersal order for a small portion of downtown Los Angeles next to the Metropolitan Detention Center where demonstrators from “No Kings Day” protests had converged.

    Tense standoffs took place between police and the crowd in the area of Alameda Street and Aliso Street, with demonstrators accusing law enforcement of escalating tensions amid the carryover from peaceful daytime rallies.

    “A dispersal order for the area of Alameda between Aliso and Temple has been ordered … All persons in the area of Alameda and Aliso/Commercial must leave the area,” the LAPD posted on social media at 6:55 p.m. “All persons in the area have 15 minutes to comply. If you remain in the area you may be subject to arrest or other police action.”

    The day’s protests, which drew throngs of crowds in Southern California and across the nation, made pointed critiques of President Trump’s actions on transgender rights, foreign policy, the federal government shutdown, university funding and other matters. Protesters also took on the the the White House’s push to deport immigrants without legal authorization to be in the U.S. by undertaking raids in U.S. cities including Los Angeles. The Metropolitan Detention Center, a federal facility, has become a focal point over anti-ICE sentiment.

    On Saturday, tensions grew around 7 p.m., after LAPD declared the unlawful assembly and began to press a line of protesters outside the facility. Police shot multiple nonlethal rounds, used tear gas and brought in a fleet of horses in an attempt to push back crowds.

    By 8:30 p.m., protesters had largely abandoned their stand near the detention center while police tried to reestablish a line on the street in front of federal building.

    As of 9 p.m., LAPD had reported no arrests.

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    Jaweed Kaleem, Christopher Buchanan

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  • Evacuation Warning Issued for Pacific Palisades Burn Areas

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    Rainfall and thunderstorms are expected overnight, with the National Weather Service warning of possible flooding in burn scarred areas prompting evacuation warnings

    Mayor Karen Bass announced an evacuation warning for the burn-scarred areas of Los Angeles after the National Weather Service forecasted rain and potential thunderstorms through Tuesday.

    The NWS also issued a Flood Watch impacting burn scar areas including the Pacific Palisades, Hurst and Sunset burn scars that will go into effect at 10 p.m. Monday night, as peak rainfall is expected to hit its peak Tuesday morning.

    “The City is prepared and we are ready to respond during this storm,” Bass said in a statement Monday afternoon.

    “The City has bolstered the hillsides and vulnerable areas from potential debris flows in recent burn scar areas – these resources remain in place. Today, we have strategically deployed resources for the Palisades and across the city, including strike teams, rescue teams and helicopters.”

    Bass urged caution on the roads and told Angelenos that free sandbags are available to secure properties. The LAPD will be contacting residents at roughly 60 properties that are especially vulnerable to any potential debris flows Monday evening, Bass said.

    R

    In addition, the City’s Emergency Operations Center was activated this morning and the Mayor’s Office of Public Safety is coordinating with the Emergency Management Department, LAFD, LAPD, L.A. County Public Works, the State of California and relevant City Departments to ensure all personnel are ready to respond as needed to keep Angelenos safe. 

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Six people who tried to hang a banner on the Hollywood sign are arrested, officials say

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    Six people were arrested Sunday after they tried to hang a banner on the Hollywood sign, according to authorities.

    The group allegedly trespassed in the area of the landmark around noon and tried to hang a banner on one of the “O’s,” according to a Los Angeles Police Department Instagram post.

    The people were detained without incident, police said.

    It was unclear what sort of banner the group was trying to hang — or what message they were trying to send. A photo the LAPD shared on social media showed that the banner included what appears to be a green-and-white pill capsule, but the entire banner is not visible.

    L.A. city park rangers took over the investigation and the LAPD referred further questions to the agency, which didn’t immediately respond to a request for more information Wednesday.

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    Summer Lin

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  • Polarizing L.A. police official keeps post by default after City Council fails to vote

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    A polarizing figure on the Los Angeles Police Commission will retain his seat despite having never received an approval vote from the City Council.

    Erroll Southers, who previously served as president of the civilian panel that watches over the LAPD, has taken criticism for what critics say is his unwillingness to provide oversight of police Chief Jim McDonnell, while also facing renewed scrutiny in recent months for his past counterterrorism studies in Israel.

    For the record:

    9:33 a.m. Oct. 1, 2025An earlier version of this story reported that Erroll Southers’ nomination was not on the City Council’s agenda last week. Southers was on the agenda but the council continued the matter and took no vote.

    New members of any city commission must typically be approved by a City Council vote within 45 days of their nomination. Mayor Karen Bass put forward Southers in mid-August, but his first scheduled vote was delayed because he was traveling, and the council continued the matter without explanation at a meeting Friday in Van Nuys.
    Now that his 45-day window has elapsed, multiple officials told The Times that city rules allow Southers to continue in the position by default for a full five-year term because he was already serving on an interim basis.

    Around City Hall, news of the council’s inaction set off speculation about whether it was the result of a scheduling mix-up — or because Southers’ backers didn’t believe he could get enough votes.

    Failing to vote on a member of one of city’s most important and high-profile commissions is almost unheard of, said Zev Yaroslavsky, a former councilman and L.A. County supervisor now at UCLA.

    “They have responsibility to confirm or not confirm,” he said of the council. “I never understood why you would campaign for office, as hard as you campaign to get there, and not vote on something that’s as important to the public.”

    Appointed by the mayor, police commissioners act much like a corporate board of directors, setting the LAPD policies, approving its budget and providing oversight, including reviews of officer shootings and other serious uses of force.

    Southers, 68, has been a member of the panel since 2023, when Bass picked him to serve out the term of a departing commissioner.

    A former FBI agent and Santa Monica cop turned top security official at USC, Southers helped lead the nationwide search for the next LAPD chief. The position eventually went to McDonnell — who like Southers served as director of the school’s Safe Communities Institute.

    His backers say that Southers has been committed to his role, participating in numerous listening sessions with Angelenos to learn what qualities they wanted in a police chief. He has also become a regular presence at LAPD recruitment events and graduations.

    Zach Seidl, a mayoral spokesperson, praised Southers for his stewardship of the commission, saying the career lawman “brings deep knowledge of the police department’s operations, a commitment to the continued development of policies that further transparency and accountability, and trusted relationships with community members and law enforcement.”

    Teresa Sánchez-Gordon, a retired L.A. County judge, replaced Southers as commission president last month, after he served more than a year in the role.

    But more than any other commissioner, Southers has accumulated a loud chorus of detractors who oppose keeping him in the key oversight role.

    Although it has long been part of his resume, Southers’ work in the mid-2000s in Israel has especially become a lighting rod due to the ongoing crisis in Gaza.

    Last month, a United Nations commission accused Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas militant attacks that left 1,200 dead and 251 others kidnapped on Oct. 7, 2023.

    Israel’s military campaign has so far killed more than 66,000 people, the vast majority of them civilians, according to Gaza health officials and international aid groups.

    Although Southers has said little publicly about the conflict, he has previously described traveling to Israel and studying with the Israel Defense Forces to learn about anti-terrorism strategies for his academic work.

    His opponents have argued his writings suggest that authorities should use an individual’s public support for controversial causes as a potential warning sign of extremism. Such arguments, they say, can be used to justify the criminalization of minority groups or silence dissent.

    Southers weathered calls for his resignation from the commission last year after he was among the USC officials responsible for clearing encampments occupied by pro-Palestinian protesters on the school’s campus.

    Others have focused on his oversight of McDonnell. Far too often, critics say, he has let the chief off the hook after recent controversies. Most recently Southers and his fellow commissioners have faced calls to put more checks on aggressive behavior by LAPD officers toward journalists and nonviolent protesters.

    Shootings by police have also been a point of contention with Southers. LAPD officers opened fire 31 times in the first nine months of this year, already surpassing the total number of shootings in 2024.

    The commission ordered the department to present a report on the shootings, but that was not nearly enough to satisfy Greg “Baba” Akili, a longtime civil rights advocate with Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles who has frequently spoken out against Southers’ nomination.

    As commission president, he said, Southers seemed more willing to shut down public speakers at the board’s meetings than to question the department’s narrative of recent events.

    “It’s like having a member of the police force on the commission,” Akili said of Southers. “We don’t want to see just Black faces in high places: We want people who actually … uplift the public.”

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    Libor Jany

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  • Best-Selling Author Jillian Shriner Sentenced to Rehab Over LAPD Gun Incident

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    Jillian Lauren Shriner, 52, a best selling author and former member of Middle Eastern harem, will not do jail time for squeezing off a round at LAPD officers chasing a suspect in an unrelated crime

    Jillian Lauren Shriner, 52, avoided any jail time for firing a shot at the LAPD earlier this year, prosecutors announced this week
    Credit: Faye Sadou/MediaPunch/IPxvia via AP Photos

    Best-selling author and wife of Weezer bassist Scott Shriner has been spared jail time and ordered to instead enter a two-year mental health program in connection with the charges that came after she fired a gun at LAPD officers who were engaged in a foot chase for a suspect in an unrelated crime, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said.

    New York Times best-selling author Jillian Lauren Shriner was shot by the LAPD in April after she fired a gun at officers and refused to drop it despite several commands, police say. She was arrested on attempted murder charges after the wild event in April that unfolded during a chaotic foot pursuit prompted by a three-car freeway crash that led cops to the couple’s Eagle Rock neighborhood in a search for suspects.

    The bizarre Hollywood-style action was caught on a neighbor’s surveillance video and posted on X.

    During the foot chase, Shriner, according to police reports, emerged from her home with a .9 millimeter handgun and approached a neighbor’s yard where LAPD officers were about to apprehend one of the three men suspected in the hit-and-run on the freeway. That man, police say, had stripped down to his underwear, jumped into a backyard pool, and was watering plants in an attempt to blend in. 

    Shriner was sentenced to a report to a two-year mental health program instead of serving jail time as long as she stays sober, despite the serious attempted murder charges she was facing for shooting a firearm at LAPD officers.

    “Any violation reported to the court may result in potential termination of the diversion. If she successfully completes the conditions of the diversion, the case will be dismissed by the court,” a spokesperson for the D.A.’s Office said.

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    Michele McPhee

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