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  • From Bakersfield to speaker of the House: Kevin McCarthy's D.C. career in photos

    From Bakersfield to speaker of the House: Kevin McCarthy's D.C. career in photos

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    Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s last day in Congress was Sunday. The Bakersfield Republican congressman and former speaker’s career in Washington, D.C., spanned more than a decade and a half.

    Always a prodigious fundraiser, McCarthy rose quickly through the ranks of the House GOP after winning election in 2006. His first attempt to secure the speakership, in 2015, ended in failure. He finally achieved his longtime goal in 2023, after a historic 15-ballot fight. But his grasp on the gavel was short-lived. In early October, eight rebel Republicans joined with Democrats to oust him from the speaker’s chair. In December, he announced he would retire before the end of the year, bringing his congressional career to a close.

    Here’s a photographic look at some of the highlights of McCarthy’s time on Capitol Hill.

    California’s state Assembly members Dario Frommer, left, Speaker of the Assembly Fabian Nunez, Assembly minority leader Kevin McCarthy and Darrell Steinberg chat before the 2004 budget bill vote in the state Capitol building in Sacramento on May 28, 2004.

    (Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    Two men in suits each hold up a hand and rest the other hand on a book held by a woman between them in front of flags.

    House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) performs a mock swearing in for Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) on Jan. 3, 2013, on Capitol Hill in Washington as the 113th Congress began.

    (Charles Dharapak / Associated Press)

    A woman in a red dress with a gavel shakes hands with a man in a suit in front of a U.S. flag.

    House Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), who will lead the 116th Congress, shakes hands with Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) as he hands her the gavel at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Jan. 3, 2019.

    (Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press)

    Then-President Trump and Rep. Kevin McCarthy disembark from an airplane.

    Then-President Trump and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) disembark from Air Force One at Los Angeles International Airport on April 5, 2019, in Los Angeles.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    A man in a suit speaks at a lectern while flanked by several people in front of the U.S. Capitol building.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill on March 11, 2021, in Washington, D.C., about the situation at the U.S. southern border.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    Three men walk down a hall in a building.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) leaves a news conference with two unidentified people Nov. 3, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    A man in a suit speaks at a lectern while bright lights shine down on him.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) speaks during a press conference on Capitol Hill on March 18, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    Several people in suits walk down stairs outside a building while people in military garb are in the foreground.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) and other members of the House Republican leadership walk down the steps of the House of Representatives, where members of the National Guard from California were standing at the base of the steps on Capitol Hill on March 11, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    A man walks down stairs among other people near a logo that says Take Back the House.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield), center, prepares to depart after addressing a crowd during an election night watch party at the Westin, City Center, on Nov. 9, 2022, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi poses for photos with others near a painting of her in an ornate room.

    Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) poses with Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), former House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield), her husband, Paul Pelosi, and others near her portrait following an unveiling ceremony in National Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol Building on Dec. 14, 2022, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    A man in a suit pumps his fist as others around him clap.

    Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) pumps his fist as he votes for himself a 10th time in the House chamber as the House meets for the third day to try to elect a speaker and convene the 118th Congress in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 5, 2023.

    (Alex Brandon / Associated Press)

    A man faces several people and bright lights in a room.

    Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) speaks with reporters as he departs a GOP Caucus meeting in the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 3, 2023, in Washington, D.C. That day members of the 118th Congress would be sworn in and the House of Representatives would hold votes on a new speaker of the House.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    President Biden speaks as Vice President Kamala Harris, left, and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy stand behind him.

    President Biden speaks as Vice President Kamala Harris, left, and Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield), right, listen during a State of the Union address at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 7, 2023, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    Several men in suits sit around a table and talk.

    President Biden, left, Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) and Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar attend the annual Friends of Ireland Caucus St. Patrick’s Day Luncheon in the Rayburn Room of the U.S. Capitol on March 17, 2023, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    Two men in suits stand near the White House in front of several other people.

    Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) speak to reporters after meeting with President Biden, Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) at the White House on May 9, 2023, in Washington, D.C.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

    A man in a suit walks away from several people standing outdoors.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) turns to walk away after speaking to the media outside the West Wing after meeting with President Biden and other congressional leaders in the White House on Nov. 29, 2022, in Washington, D.C. Biden met with Senate and House leaders to discuss the legislative agenda for the remainder of the year.

    (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)

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    Times Photo Staff

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  • Torrance police activity prompts street closures around Del Amo Fashion Center

    Torrance police activity prompts street closures around Del Amo Fashion Center

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    The Del Amo Fashion Center and streets around the mall were closed on Saturday night while Torrance police officers responded to reports of growing crowds of juveniles.

    At about 12:42 p.m., Torrance police officers who were patrolling the mall saw a large group of juveniles fighting and vandalizing, said Sgt. Ron Salary, a spokesman for the Torrance Police Department.

    Police officers escorted the juveniles off the mall’s property. Torrance police requested assistance from neighboring police agencies because of the juveniles’ “aggressive behavior” toward the officers, Salary said.

    After the fight broke out earlier in the afternoon, crowds of juveniles increased at different spots at the shopping center.

    “Some of them are different crowds of juveniles and it started to grow over time,” he said.

    Several arrests were made, according to the Torrance police department.

    Carson Street was closed from Madrona Avenue to Del Amo Circle East, Torrance police said in a Facebook post. Del Amo Circle East was closed from Carson Street to Fashion Way, and Fashion Way was closed from Madrona Avenue to Amie Avenue, the post said.

    The Torrance Police Department on Saturday told the public to avoid the area and said the length of time streets would be closed is unknown.

    “We still have the neighboring police officers who are assisting us and our Torrance police officers on scene at the mall,” Salary said.

    The Daily Breeze reported that the mall shut down early after police arrived at the shopping center at around 5 p.m. The mall was scheduled to close at 9 p.m. on Saturday. Salary confirmed the mall closed earlier than scheduled.

    The policy activity on Saturday isn’t expected to impact the mall’s hours on New Year’s Eve, Salary said. The mall is scheduled to be open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday, according to the shopping center’s website.

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    Queenie Wong

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  • Heavy surf pounds the Southern California coast, prompting warnings and shutting down piers

    Heavy surf pounds the Southern California coast, prompting warnings and shutting down piers

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    Some of the heaviest surf in years pounded the Southern California coast on Saturday, while high tides triggered warnings of flooding and closures of beaches and piers.

    Waves as high as 20 feet were forecast in Ventura and Los Angeles, while larger swells were rolling in along the Central Coast and in Northern California. Officials warned that the powerful waves and strong currents could sweep people onto rocks and jetties and into the ocean.

    “It is generating extremely dangerous conditions at beaches,” said Rose Schoenfeld, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

    “This is the highest surf we’ve had in the last year,” Schoenfeld said. “It’s definitely more like once every few years.”

    The huge swells rolled in while rain swept across Southern California on Saturday.

    An initial round of strong waves pummeled the Ventura coast on Thursday, sending onlookers scrambling as the waves swept past seaside barriers and barreled down city streets. At least eight people were injured and several businesses were damaged as the waves broke windows and flooded buildings.

    Saturday brought a second peak of hazardous waves. Residents with homes along Pacific Coast Highway in part of Ventura County were under an evacuation warning “due to high surf impacting structures in the area,” the Ventura County Fire Department said in a post on social media.

    All beaches and coastal parks in Ventura County were closed Friday and will remain closed over the New Year’s weekend, including the Ventura Pier, seaside campgrounds and harbor entries, officials said.

    The surging water flooded some parking lots in the area. And piers were closed in places from Ventura to Manhattan Beach.

    As powerful waves pummeled the shore, officials closed the Venice Pier on Saturday. Crowds gathered along the sand berm, watching the biggest sets scrape the bottom of the pier. Huge walls of waves broke across the beach as storm clouds gave way to sunny skies.

    “Definitely some of the biggest in years,” Venice surfer Tim Sullivan said of the heavy swell.

    The pier is a popular surf spot, but no one dared to venture out — except an L.A. County lifeguard. The lifeguard maneuvered a jet ski across the whitewater and rode some of the larger waves, apparently practicing his rescue skills.

    Officials also warned people to be wary of “sneaker waves,” much like the one that caught Ventura beachgoers by surprise this week. The powerful waves are created by larger-than-average swells that can suddenly surge much farther inland than expected, breaking over rocks and lifting logs or driftwood onto the beach with deadly force.

    The swells were generated by a low-pressure system to the north, west of Oregon, a few days ago. And the big surf combined with elevated high tides, which have been gradually decreasing after peaking Dec. 26, Schoenfeld said.

    “It’s that combination of the really high surf with the fact that our tides are elevated in the lunar cycle right now,” Schoenfeld said. “We’ve gotten reports of pretty significant coastal flooding all up and down the coast.”

    Warnings for heavy surf and coastal flooding were in effect throughout Southern California and the Central Coast. Forecasters said the highest surf and surges would hit west- and northwest-facing beaches, such as Hermosa Beach and the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

    In Ventura and elsewhere, some surfers ventured into the giant waves, while lifeguards kept watch.

    Near San Francisco, the waves grew to massive over the past few days. The National Weather Service said breaking waves were forecast to reach as high as 33 feet along some Bay Area beaches on Saturday.

    In Half Moon Bay, at the renowned surf break known as Mavericks, spectators gathered along the bluffs to watch surfers ride the giant waves. Nearby, at the Old Princeton Landing restaurant and bar, employee Jon Dorn said surfers were continuing to paddle into waves on Saturday, though “it’s a little smaller than Thursday.”

    Meanwhile, Saturday’s storm brought up to three-fourths inches of rain to Los Angeles and Ventura counties, while nearly 2 inches fell in Santa Barbara County, according to the weather service. Patchy showers were fading, while forecasters said mainly light rain is expected Sunday night into Monday.

    In addition to the heavy surf, the rain also brought other potential hazards at beaches. L.A. County’s Department of Public Health advised people to avoid contact with water through Tuesday because flowing storm drains and creeks can lead to higher levels of bacteria and chemicals.

    Times reporters Karen Garcia, Christian Martinez, Ashley Ahn and Nathan Solis contributed to this report.

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    Ian James, Robert J. Lopez

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  • Man and 5-year-old dead in suspected murder-suicide in Long Beach

    Man and 5-year-old dead in suspected murder-suicide in Long Beach

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    A man and a 5-year-old child were found dead in a suspected murder-suicide in a Long Beach home after police spent hours outside the residence trying to make contact with the occupants.

    Long Beach police said they responded to a “domestic dispute” call at a house in the 3400 block of Adriatic Avenue on Thursday around 2:40 p.m. When they arrived at the scene, the house was on fire, according to a post from the department on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Firefighters responded and extinguished the flames, but police believed the suspect in the domestic disturbance incident might be inside the home, authorities said.

    A SWAT team responded to the scene, establishing a perimeter around the house and warning neighbors to either evacuate or shelter in place, police said.

    SWAT negotiators then attempted to contact the person in the home. Although it is not clear how long the SWAT team was outside the home, police obtained a search warrant and entered the home about 12:15 a.m. Friday. Inside, they found a man dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound and a 5-year-old child who was also dead, authorities said.

    “Homicide detectives are on scene and are investigating this as a murder-suicide,” Long Beach Police Department said in a statement.

    The investigation is ongoing.

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • University of California poised to buy former Westside Pavilion

    University of California poised to buy former Westside Pavilion

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    The University of California appears poised to buy the former Westside Pavilion, which was once one of L.A.’s hottest malls but later converted to office space for rent to companies such as Google, according to state records and two real estate sources with knowledge of the deal.

    One of the sources, who was not authorized to speak about the project, said the deal had closed.

    The 584,000-square-foot office complex, which has been renamed One Westside, sits on prime real estate in the heart of the Westside, about two miles from the UCLA campus. Officials have been looking for ways to expand the school’s capacity.

    The University of California seeks to acquire and improve three adjoining commercial properties along Pico Boulevard that make up the old mall, an environmental notice posted with the state showed. The efforts were first reported this week by the commercial real estate news site Urbanize L.A.

    UCLA spokeswoman Mary Osako declined to confirm or deny reports of what she called a “rumor” about the potential transaction.

    A purchase would mark the third major acquisition for the public university system in Los Angeles in less than two years.

    UCLA is the most-applied-to university in the nation, but its Westwood campus is among the smallest of the nine UC undergraduate campuses, leaving it limited room for growth.

    Seeking to expand its footprint, UCLA announced this summer it acquired the Art Deco-style Trust Building in downtown Los Angeles and renamed it UCLA Downtown. Just nine months prior, UCLA spent $80 million to buy two other major properties owned by Marymount California University, a small Catholic university that shuttered last year. The purchase included Marymount’s 24.5-acre campus in Rancho Palos Verdes and an 11-acre residential site in nearby San Pedro.

    Designed by prominent 20th century mall architect Jon Jerde, the Westside Pavilion was both hailed and reviled by locals who saw it as commercializing their community when it opened in the 1980s. The three-story mall buzzed with shoppers. But decades later the rise of e-commerce and changing consumer tastes helped bring a slow death that was hitting brightly lit indoor shopping centers across the country.

    Hudson Pacific Properties, a Los Angeles-based owner of office and studio properties, acquired control of the bulk of Westside Pavilion in 2018 and announced it would turn the sprawling three-story mall into offices.

    At the time, experts and elected officials touted the Westside Pavilion’s rebirth into office spaces as an example of West Los Angeles’ growing appeal to media and technology companies.

    Google signed a 14-year lease in 2019 and had plans to build out a massive campus there. Then COVID hit. Those ambitions were never realized amid a crash in the office market, and more recently an overall pullback of tech companies on real estate expansions and rising interest rates.

    Earlier this year, Alphabet Inc., Google’s parent company, announced it would cut 12,000 jobs, or 6% of its workforce, amid “a different economic reality.”

    In the environmental document, the university system didn’t say what it wants to do with the property, but states it will not make a decision until state regulation is complied with and an overall site development plan has been approved.

    At the time UCLA purchased the landmark downtown property, Chancellor Gene Block said it would offer extension classes there but it also hadn’t “precluded” the potential of undergraduate and graduate classes.

    Staff writer Teresa Watanabe contributed to this report

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    Rachel Uranga, Roger Vincent

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  • Street vendor activists kept in jail on charges tied to protests

    Street vendor activists kept in jail on charges tied to protests

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    A Superior Court judge on Thursday denied bail again for a group of activists dubbed the “Justice 8” who have been in jail for two weeks facing charges stemming from protests in San Bernardino County and elsewhere.

    Prosecutors allege Edin Alex Enamorado and other street vendor advocates have carried out intimidation tactics, showing up at workplaces and homes of people targeted in his social media campaigns, which are intended to publicly shame customers who attack vendors or those who make racist comments.

    Enamorado, 36, and seven other activists were arrested Dec. 14 amid what authorities described as a months-long assault investigation after a Sept. 3 protest in L.A. County and another in Victorville on Sept. 24. The investigation grew to involve police from other cities in the Inland Empire, including Upland, Fontana and Pomona, who contended that the suspects were involved in other “violent acts during protests” in those cities.

    On his Instagram accounts, which have hundreds of thousands of followers, Enamorado has shared videos of street vendors being harassed, elected officials making racist comments and police making violent arrests.

    But San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said after their arrest that the group members had manipulated videos to make themselves look like crusaders. And in doing so, Dicus said, they harassed the subjects of their videos to gain attention, views and financial profit.

    “This group is not about substance for the human condition,” Dicus said during a news conference earlier this month, “but rather clickbait for cash.”

    Charges against the group include false imprisonment, kidnapping, assault, vandalism and unlawful use of tear gas , according to court documents.

    In addition to Enamorado, those arrested were his partner, Wendy Lujan, 40, of Upland; David Chavez, 28, of Riverside; Stephanie Amesquita, 33, of San Bernardino; Gullit Eder Acevedo, 30, of San Bernardino; Edwin Pena, 26, of Los Angeles; Fernando Lopez, 44, of Los Angeles; and Vanessa Carrasco, 40, of Ontario. All have been charged with carrying out violent attacks against three victims, according to court documents.

    Luhan was not in court Thursday; she is scheduled to appear next week.

    Prosecutors have repeatedly sought to keep the individuals behind bars, saying they pose a danger to the public. Last week, a judge ordered the group held without bail. At a hearing Thursday, the San Bernardino County district attorney’s office made the same argument.

    Judge Melissa Rodriguez granted bail to only one defendant: Acevedo. The schoolteacher was ordered to have no contact with anyone else involved the case, including any alleged victims. Acevedo will be required to wear an ankle monitor and stay off social media.

    “No contact means no contact,” Rodriguez said.

    The rest of the defendants were held without bail after being found to be a danger to the community as well to as the victims in the case. Prosecutors referenced one image of a piñata with a victim’s face superimposed on the object. Another victim fears that protesters will show up at their home and has gone into hiding, according to prosecutors. A new hearing was scheduled for Jan. 3.

    Enamorado’s attorney, Nicholas Rosenberg, said outside the courthouse Thursday he did not agree with the judge’s assessment of his client, calling Enamorado an important member of the community.

    “Look, the fight is not over,” Rosenberg said.

    Carasco’s attorney, Damon Alimouri, called the court’s no-bail decision “outrageous” and unconstitutional.

    Enamorado started out as a political organizer but is known for his activism around street vendors. In June, he posted a TikTok video that since has been removed showing the mess created after a pair of food carts were overturned outside a concert at SoFi Stadium.

    Enamorado told The Times he did not witness the incident but the vendors told him a stadium worker instructed them to step back off the street and then lost his temper when they ignored his directives. The worker, who SoFi Stadium officials said was employed by a third-party vendor, was later fired.

    In September, Enamorado organized a large protest on the steps of the Santa Barbara Police Department after a viral video showing a racist exchange between a white woman and a Latino man roiled the city.

    He and the others in the group face 17 charges in San Bernardino County — the majority of which are felonies — from two September incidents. On Sept. 3, prosecutors say several members chased a security guard into a supermarket and pepper-sprayed him while he was on the ground. They then beat the guard, authorities said. On Sept. 24, Enamorado and the others organized a protest after a viral video showed a San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy slamming a girl to the ground during a brawl at a high school football game.

    Attorneys representing Enamorado and the other defendants say they were protesting police violence and the harassment of a street vendor at the time.

    Times staff writer Jeremy Childs contributed to this report.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Treacherous surf pounds California amid flood advisories and coastal evacuations

    Treacherous surf pounds California amid flood advisories and coastal evacuations

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    California’s first huge swells of the winter are wreaking havoc on the state’s coastline as an incoming atmospheric river storm is forcing evacuations amid flooding of beach and coastal roads.

    Marin County residents in the Calles Pinos, Pradero, Sierra, Onda Resaca, Ribera and Embarcadero areas as well as Calle de Arroyo were ordered to temporarily evacuate Thursday morning due to high risk of wave damage and coastal flooding. Evacuated residents were told to head to the Stinson Beach Community Center.

    Santa Cruz County issued an evacuation warning Thursday on X, formerly known as Twitter, for coastal areas near Seacliff State Beach because of flooding.

    Within the evacuation area, the tourist hot spot known as the Rio del Mar Esplanade is currently flooded with several inches of storm water. On X, the California Highway Patrol cautions that residents avoid the area and not attempt to drive across or through.

    According to the National Weather Service’s coastal flood warning for the Bay Area, large breaking waves are causing significant flooding of beach and coastal roads. The waves are depositing large amounts of debris and causing road closures.

    A surfer rides a wave at Surfer’s Point on Thursday in Ventura.

    (Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

    The San Francisco Bay Area coast could see waves up to 40 feet in some locations. The National Weather Service issued a warning for residents to stay away from rocks, jetties, piers and other waterside infrastructure.

    In Southern California, the waves aren’t expected to be as big, but high surf is expected through Saturday, meteorologists said. In Ventura County, waves of up to 12 feet have already been reported, and the Central Coast has seen 18- to 20-foot swells, said Mike Wofford with the National Weather Service’s Oxnard office.

    In a beachside community in Ventura, residents watched as waves washed trash bins away, sending foaming streams of seawater into neighborhood streets.

    A high surf advisory went into effect at 4 a.m. Thursday for Point Conception in Santa Barbara County and Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach and Palos Verdes Peninsula beaches in Los Angeles County, all of which can expect sets of 15- to 20-foot waves and dangerous rip currents.

    “We’re expecting the highest waves today to be arriving either late morning or early afternoon and then, maybe some drops in height tomorrow, but still well above normal,” Wofford said.

    The waves will pick back up Saturday when another surge of higher swells arrives.

    There have been really strong storms over the Pacific Ocean that “we don’t necessarily see because they move up to the north or go in some other direction,” Wofford said.

    While the storms are moving through, strong winds can form big waves, which “propagate out along, and the waves just come barreling right in,” he said.

    A Harbor Patrol lifeguard jumps a wave near Ventura Pier on Thursday.

    A Harbor Patrol lifeguard jumps a wave near Ventura Pier on Thursday.

    (Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

    Along with the high surf advisory, the National Weather Service issued a coastal flood advisory through 10 p.m. Saturday.

    Although no structural or road damage is expected, there is an increased risk for drowning, the agency warned. Rip currents can pull swimmers and surfers out to sea, and large breaking waves can cause injuries, wash people off beaches or rocks and capsize small boats.

    “Never turn your back to the ocean,” the National Weather Service said on X.

    Rain won’t be compounding the waves in the Los Angeles County area, as the forecast doesn’t call for rain until early Saturday and will continue for most of the day until it tapers off, Wofford said.

    There’s a 30% to 40% chance of rain Sunday into Monday, but it will be in the form of light showers.

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    Karen Garcia

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  • Photos: Volunteers put final touches on 2024 Rose Parade floats

    Photos: Volunteers put final touches on 2024 Rose Parade floats

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    Volunteers help decorate the 2024 Rose Parade floats to prepare them for their New Year’s Day debut.

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    Brian van der Brug, Irfan Khan

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  • At a Filipino-Cuban Nochebuena celebration, cultures blend — but karaoke is a must

    At a Filipino-Cuban Nochebuena celebration, cultures blend — but karaoke is a must

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    At a Nochebuena celebration hosted by Filipino American Archie Cubarrubia and his Cuban partner, T.J. Morales, in their North Hollywood home, karaoke is a must for everyone. That includes an 89-year-old Cuban immigrant who had never performed such an act in his life.

    Frank Navarro, who came from Miami to visit his 45-year-old daughter, did not know what to do as the melody of Edith Piaf’s “La Vie en Rose” played over the television. When Cubarrubia, 44, handed Navarro a glowing microphone, Navarro put his arms down and shushed the room.

    “You have to sing. This is karaoke,” Marie, Cubarrubia and Morales’ friend, told her father as the melody to his favorite song played. Frank simply grinned and covered his forehead.

    But after Marie started singing, Frank and his 74-year-old Cuban wife, Maria, were off and running. They laughed and belted out the song as they embraced each other underneath the picture frame of a mascot of Jollibee, a fast-food chain beloved by Filipino Americans.

    The whole room of about a dozen people joined in to sing along.

    “This is amazing to me,” Frank said after his performance.

    Marie, left, Maria and Frank Navarro pull numbers for a white elephant gift exchange from Archie Cubarrubia, right, during a Nochebuena celebration.

    (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

    Because of the centuries of Spanish colonization, which brought Catholicism to the Philippines, Filipinos share many cultural customs with Latinos. Nochebuena is no exception. In both communities, families and friends bond over a shared meal, exchanging gifts and playing games. Filipinos and Cubans, specifically, also share the tradition of eating lechón, or roast pork, on Christmas Eve.

    There are some differences — Karaoke is much more prominent in Filipino Nochebuena, for instance. Cubarrubia and Morales’ celebration featured a wide array of dishes, such as Filipino sour and savory soup of sinigang as well as Cuban picadillo and ham croquettes.

    Still, for a Filipino-Cuban couple such as Cubarrubia, a deputy director at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Morales, a 39-year-old who handles corporate partnerships at Live Nation, Nochebuena is another reminder of how close both communities are, even as their roots are far apart geographically.

    “Whenever we go to each other’s families, it is actually just like being part of our own home cultures,” said Cubarrubia, who met Morales through Match.com in 2008. They have been married and have celebrated Nochebuena together for 10 years.

    1

    T.J. Morales unveils his white elephant gift during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve.

    2

    A crowd of friends serve their dinners during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their friend's home .

    3

    Damian White, left, and Todd Sokolove, right, chat during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their home.

    4

    Maria Navarro serves her dinner during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at her daughter's friend's home.

    1. North Hollywood, – December 24: T.J. Morales unveils his white elephant gift during a Nochebuena celebration at he and his husband’s home. Nochebuena is celebrated across Filipinos and Latinos alike. 2. A crowd of friends serve their dinners during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their friend’s home. 3. Damian White, left, and Todd Sokolove, right, chat during a Nochebuena celebration. 4. Maria Navarro serves her dinner during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at her daughter’s friend’s home. (Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

    Anthony Christian Ocampo, a sociologist who grew up in Northeast L.A., saw firsthand the cultural similarities between Filipinos and Latinos, such as having large multigenerational families and strong connections to their ancestral homelands.

    “By no means do I want to romanticize colonialism in any way, shape or form, but the truth is the shared history of Spanish colonialism has played a major role in why Filipinos and Latinos feel connected,” Ocampo said.

    In interviewing Filipino Americans for his book exploring these similarities, “The Latinos of Asia,” he learned that many were often mistaken for Latinos in their schools, workplaces, and on the street. Latino immigrants would often speak Spanish to them, he said.

    “Many of us are Catholic, we have the same last names, there are many words in Tagalog that are similar to ones in Spanish,” Ocampo said. Basura, for instance, means garbage in Tagalog and Spanish. “This is the influence of Spanish colonialism, and this is what bonds us with Latinos and their culture, even if we are technically not checking the same box on a form.”

    In that context, it’s no surprise both communities celebrate Nochebuena, even if the origin of why they celebrate Christmas Eve much more than Christmas is somewhat unknown, said Kevin Nadal, the president of the Filipino American National Historical Society.

    Nadal has called on people to think critically about Nochebuena, given its origin from the Spanish colonization. Still, he understands why the celebration matters to the Filipino diaspora.

    “It’s an opportunity for people to share their love and to share their gifts and to be kind, which is very much aligned with Filipino culture,” he said. “It just becomes this huge celebration of love.

    Eric Medina, 51, grew up celebrating Nochebuena with his Filipino family. Married to a Salvadoran American woman, he now celebrates it with her side of the family with pupusas or panes con pavo (turkey sandwiches). He always makes sure to bring a Filipino dish. It’s often biko, which is sticky rice cake with coconut milk and brown sugar.

    The couple spends Christmas Day with his side of the family, watching the Lakers and eating traditional Filipino dishes like pancit, a stir fry noodle dish, and crispy spring rolls known as lumpia. There’s also Jollibee fried chicken.

    “It’s kind of hard to explain. I felt really comfortable amongst Latinos. By happenstance, I ended up marrying a Latina,” said Medina, who met his wife at a nonprofit where they both worked.

    For Filipino-Latino couples, Nochebuena is also an opportunity for them to learn more about each other’s cultures.

    Nico Blitz, a 30-year-old Filipino DJ and producer, and Jackie Ramirez, a 25-year-old Mexican radio host for Real 92.3, have spent Nochebuena together for four years, alternating each year between Blitz’s family in the San Francisco Bay Area and Ramirez’s in East Los Angeles.

    At Blitz’s family’s Nochebuena, Ramirez learned how to karaoke, singing a 2000s R&B song with what she called a bit of “liquid courage” — Hennessy, the cognac of choice for many Filipinos.

    At Ramirez’s family’s Nochebuena, Blitz learned how to play Loteria, a Mexican take on Bingo. He also tried pozole for the first time.

    “When I had pozole for the first time, I said, ‘Oh my god, where have I been my entire life,’ ” said Blitz, who lives in North Hollywood and hosts “Mexipino Podcast” with Ramirez. “I got three servings to myself, and they said, ‘Keep going if you want.’”

    There were some awkward moments — Ramirez’s uncle would randomly bring up Filipino comedian Jo Koy and Blitz’s father would talk about the Aztec calendar — but once the two families got to know each other, they realized they share a lot in common. Both families have big gatherings on Christmas Eve, where dozens come together, often in pajamas, to exchange gifts and play games.

    “It honestly just feels like a copy and paste,” Blitz said of the two celebrations.

    Back at Cubarrubia and Morales’ house, with his right hand on Cubarrubia’s right shoulder, Morales gives a toast with a glass of Kylie Minogue-branded wine.

    The crowd cheers as Christian Pino, a 30-year-old medical resident who was born in Cuba and moved to L.A. just six months ago from Philadelphia, perfectly flips a flan out of a pot and onto a plate.

    “That’s the real flan!” Marie Navarro tells her dad as she sniffs the dish.

    Damian White, a 44-year-old friend of Morales’, serves tiki glasses with Don Papa rum from the Philippines and Bacardi Gold.

    “Bacardi is a Cuban company,” Pino tells the room. “Don’t forget.”

    And when the karaoke rolls around, Cubarrubia and Morales break out dancing as they sing Olivia Newton-John’s “Xanadu.” Marie follows along, sashaying in front of a Christmas tree as her parents look on.

    “We got the karaoke,” Cubarrubia says. “But the dancing part, the Cuban Americans have down pat.”

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    Jeong Park, Alejandra Molina

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  • California Pizza Hut franchises to lay off more than 1,100 delivery drivers ahead of wage hike

    California Pizza Hut franchises to lay off more than 1,100 delivery drivers ahead of wage hike

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    Ahead of statewide minimum wage increases for fast-food workers, hundreds of California Pizza Hut franchises announced cuts in their delivery services, laying off more than 1,100 drivers, according to federal and state filings.

    The Pizza Hut locations, run by two different franchise operators, reported the change to their business models for restaurants from Orange to Stanislaus counties, according to Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notifications filed to the California Employment Development Department.

    The layoffs of more than 1,100 delivery drivers are expected to go into effect as soon as February, just weeks before the state’s $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers is set to go into effect.

    The pay increase is the result of Assembly Bill 1228, which applies to California workers employed by any fast-food chain that has more than 60 locations in the United States. California’s minimum wage is currently $15.50 for all workers. Statewide, the increase is estimated to affect more than 500,000 workers. The legislation also created a council of representatives of workers and employers to partner with state agencies to recommend minimum standards for work hours and other working conditions. Restaurant owners opposed the legislation, arguing they couldn’t bear the increased costs without raising prices for their customers.

    It wasn’t immediately clear if the new wage requirements were a factor in the move, but the notifications said the companies “made a business decision to eliminate first party delivery services and as a result the elimination of all delivery driver positions.”

    Officials with the two Pizza Hut operators, PacPizza affiliates and Southern California Pizza Company, did not immediately respond to questions from The Times. The PacPizza operators include Southern PacPizza, CalPac Pizza II and Cal PacPizza.

    The restaurants affected include those in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Sacramento, Tulare and Kern, among others.

    The parent company of Pizza Hut, in a statement to Business Insider, said it was “aware of the recent changes to delivery services at certain franchise restaurants in California.”

    “Our franchisees independently own and operate their restaurants in accordance with local market dynamics and comply with all federal, state, and local regulations while continuing to provide quality service and food to our customers via carryout and delivery,” according to the statement.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • Don't let your Christmas tree become a fire hazard. Recycle it now. Here's how

    Don't let your Christmas tree become a fire hazard. Recycle it now. Here's how

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    Now that St. Nick has delivered his Christmas gifts, it’s your job to toss the discarded wrapping paper, cardboard boxes and ribbons and vacuum up the tinsel scattered around the house.

    As for the wilting yuletide pine that has been shedding needles for days, you have several options for disposing of it.

    Fire officials warn that dry Christmas trees can pose a fire hazard so don’t put off your disposal chore for too long.

    Within the city of Los Angeles, Los Angeles Sanitation and Environment is offering curbside collection for Christmas tree recycling through the end of January, according to the city’s website.

    Several options are available for scheduling a pickup, such as creating a ticket on the MYLA311 website, submitting a ticket request on the L.A. Sanitation and Environment homepage, or calling the 24-hour customer service line at (800) 773-2489.

    Before your tree can be hauled away, the sanitation department requires the removal of all decorations, tinsel and stands. Additionally, you need to cut the trees into pieces, place them in the green bin and set them out for regular collection on trash day.

    Residents of multifamily buildings can place trees on the curb for regularly scheduled collection days.

    The city will not accept artificial trees and trees layered in fake snow for recycling. If your tree is covered in fake snow, you should put it in the black trash can designated for landfill disposal.

    The city’s sanitation department uses recycled Christmas trees to produce compost and mulch, which residents can obtain for free.

    If you want to drop off your tree for mulching, the city offers two locations.

    The Gaffey Street SAFE Center at 1400 N. Gaffey St. in San Pedro will accept trees from Jan. 2 to Jan. 31, Monday through Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Lopez Canyon Environmental Education Center in Lake View Terrace will accept trees on the same dates and hours.

    The Los Angeles Fire Department urges people to immediately remove and recycle natural trees. The department warns that dry Christmas needles can turn a small fire into an inferno in less than 7 seconds.

    In addition to the mulching facilities, you can also drop your trees off at 13 Los Angeles city fire department stations until Jan. 12. Participating stations include:

    108 N. Fremont Ave., 90012 — Civic Center / Bunker Hill

    1192 E. 51st St., 90011 — South Los Angeles

    11641 Corbin Ave., 91326 — Porter Ranch

    4029 Wilshire Blvd., 90010 — Hancock Park

    1005 N. Gaffey St., 90731 — North San Pedro

    1410 Cypress Ave., 90065 — Cypress Park

    10811 S. Main St., 90061 — South Los Angeles

    1801 E. Century Blvd., 90002 — Watts

    9224 Sunland Blvd., 91352 — Sun Valley

    14355 Arminta St., 91402 — Panorama City

    5101 N. Sepulveda Blvd., 91403 — Sherman Oaks

    4470 Coliseum St., 90016 — South Los Angeles

    23004 Roscoe Blvd., 91304 — West Hills

    Several L.A. recreation centers and parks will also offer a one-day drop-off event on Jan. 7, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The locations include: the Los Angeles Zoo parking lot; the Rancho Cienega Recreation Center in Baldwin Hills; the Balboa Sports Center in Encino; the Cheviot Hills Recreation Center in Rancho Park; Sunland Park near Sun Valley; and the Westchester Municipal Building near the Los Angeles International Airport.

    Long Beach

    The Long Beach Public Works Department is offering its annual “Treecycling” disposal program for residents until Jan. 12. The city has a dozen free drop-off locations available Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on the weekends from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    If you are unable to drop off your old tree, the city will pick up it for one day only on Jan. 13. Long Beach residents must place their trees on the curb by 7 a.m.

    Don’t forget to remove all decorations and stands and cut any tree over 12 feet in half. Flocked trees will be accepted.

    Santa Monica

    Santa Monica’s holiday tree collection will run until Jan. 31. The city advises residents to place bare trees on the curbside or alleys ready for pickup and to avoid placing trees in parking lots or parks. Calling 311 is not necessary for tree pickup.

    Pasadena

    Pasadena offers curbside pickup for bare trees to all solid waste customers on their regularly scheduled trash days from Jan. 2 to Jan. 16.

    If you prefer to drop off your Christmas trees, locations are open daily from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eaton Blanche Park and Robinson Park until Jan. 2.

    Newport Beach

    Residents of Newport Beach have until Jan. 15 to place their cut-up trees in the green recycling bins. The local sanitation company, CR&R Environmental Services, requests that all ornaments, tinsel, lights and tree stands be removed.

    Artificial trees and those with fake snow should be placed in black trash bins in Newport Beach, as they will not be recycled.

    Laguna Beach

    In Laguna Beach, Waste Management will for the next three weeks collect and recycle holiday trees. Trees taller than 6 feet must be cut in half and placed on the curb during a regular collection day.

    Waste Management transports the trees to Tierra Verde Industries in Irvine for composting.

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    Anthony De Leon

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  • Another storm is coming to Southern California. Could it rain on the Rose Parade?

    Another storm is coming to Southern California. Could it rain on the Rose Parade?

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    The Los Angeles area is heading for a wet end to the year, with rain showers forecast for later this week, raising the possibility that Rose Parade attendees might need a poncho or umbrella on New Year’s Day.

    This week will be overcast, and a light storm is expected to arrive in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties by Wednesday, dropping a quarter of an inch of rain or more, according to the National Weather Service. Los Angeles and Ventura counties could receive a quarter of an inch of rain Friday heading into Saturday and likely clearing up by Sunday.

    Last week, a winter storm drenched Southern California and dropped a month’s worth of rain in some areas. The latest storm passing through the region this week pales in comparison.

    “Not even close. This is not even in the same realm as that one,” said meteorologist Mike Wofford of the National Weather Service office in Oxnard. “This storm system will be much weaker.”

    Temperatures are expected to drop to below normal for most areas heading into the weekend, hovering around the 60s in the coastal and valley areas and the 50s in the Antelope Valley.

    Forecasts are still too far out to determine what the weather holds for New Year’s Day in Southern California. But there is still a slight chance of rain for the Los Angeles region, including right over the Rose Parade route in Pasadena — though it should not be anything close to the downpour that drenched the area in 2006, raining on the parade for the first time in 51 years.

    Los Angeles Unified School District band director Tony White remembers that soggy parade route — it rained when his students got off the bus and kept going all while they marched down Colorado Boulevard.

    “That was a tough parade,” said White, who has led the district marching band for the last 22 years.

    This year, 330 students will march with the L.A. Unified band and will likely start getting prepared by 2:30 a.m., White said. A bit of rain shouldn’t be too much of a problem; brass instruments, cases and drums made of wood can take a beating during a rainy march.

    “There’s excitement and enthusiasm from students whenever they participate. They see the people cheering them on,” White said. “If it rains, we’ll make the best of it.”

    Another group gearing up for the parade, rain or shine, includes a shiba inu with an underbite, a Chihuahua, a pug, a Pomeranian, and a mixed pit bull terrier. The dogs will ride aboard the Pasadena Humane Society’s first Rose Parade float in 20 years, said President and Chief Executive Dia DuVernet.

    “We’re ordering rain ponchos for the dogs just in case, and even for the humans too,” DuVernet said.

    The timing of a New Year’s Day storm is still uncertain, Wofford said; the rain could arrive later Monday after the parade is over, but the forecast will become clearer heading into the weekend. The Rose Parade sets off at 8 a.m., followed by the national semifinal Rose Bowl Game between Michigan and Alabama at 2 p.m.

    “You can’t rule out that there could be some light rain during the parade,” Wofford said.

    Southern Californians will also be under a high surf warning or advisory over the next few days, depending on where they live. Residents along northwest- and west-facing beaches can expect to see large swells, reaching 3 to 5 feet in Los Angeles County on Wednesday, but giving way to much larger swells starting Thursday with some waves around 10 to 15 feet, and peaking around 15 feet and over Saturday. Surfers along the Central Coast might also spot waves around 13 to 15 feet, according to the National Weather Service.

    Hermosa, Santa Monica, Venice, Dockweiler and Redondo beaches will be among those with the most wave activity, said Kealiinohopono “Pono” Barnes, spokesperson for the L.A. County Fire Department’s Lifeguard Division.

    “This will be the first relatively big swell event of the year,” Barnes said.

    The widespread high surf is expected to coincide with high morning tides on Thursday, bringing an increased threat of coastal flooding and beach erosion and flooded beach-side parking lots. The advisories and warnings will end Saturday or Sunday, depending on the location, so residents are advised to stay up to date with their local areas or Los Angeles County lifeguards.

    Coupled with the high surf, large tidal swings are expected to reach around 5.5 feet. Anyone heading out to the beach this weekend should check in with an on-duty lifeguard, officials said.

    “Let them know you’re there and the lifeguard can point you in the direction of the best spot to put you in the water,” Barnes said.

    Moderate swimmers should be cautious when heading to the water during the advisories this weekend.

    “You should swim, surf or board within your abilities,” Barnes said. “This may not be the best time to try and flex your skills.”

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Metrolink service closes for four days, starting today

    Metrolink service closes for four days, starting today

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    The transportation system of Los Angeles has been beset by labor unrest, arson, presidential motorcades, civil disobedience and just too much traffic. But a four-day stoppage affecting train service this week is more mundane — and perhaps even beneficial in the longer run.

    Beginning today, Metrolink service will be suspended for maintenance and enhancements, capping a three-year modernization project.

    Trains will not run on any part of Metrolink’s six-county system through the end of Friday and will resume normal service on Saturday.

    The disruption was scheduled to coincide with a lighter period for those who commute to work — precisely unlike the disruption this month when demonstrators pressing for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war blocked the 110 Freeway and then, later, blocked access to Los Angeles International Airport.

    “We scheduled this work on dates of historically low ridership and are working hand-in-hand with our transit partners to identify alternate transportation options for those who will be impacted,” Metrolink CEO Darren Kettle said in a statement.

    Metrolink has provided customers with alternative routing options on its website.

    Metrolink and other public transit systems have struggled to recover ridership since the COVID-19 pandemic — and a better, more efficient ride is part of the plan.

    “Placing our system temporarily out of service was necessary,” Justin Fornelli, Metrolink’s chief of program delivery, said in a statement. “This unique break in service will allow us to tackle state-of-good-repair projects across multiple lines.”

    Metrolink is operated by the Southern California Regional Rail Authority and serves Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura and North San Diego counties.

    The service is a major cog in a local public transit system that is trying to overcome problems that include inadequate regional coverage as well as crime and drug use.

    The required modernization work will restrict access in and out of downtown’s Union Station, the terminus for six of Metrolink’s seven service lines, as well as the agency’s Central Maintenance Facility, where passenger cars are cleaned and locomotives are serviced daily.

    The work will encompass replacing 1930s-era signal relay technology with a “state-of-the-art, microprocessor-driven signal system, allowing Metrolink to simultaneously run multiple trains on multiple tracks as they enter and depart,” the agency said. The increased capacity is expected to reduce delays and improve safety.

    Among other planned projects are repairing concrete on platforms, painting, cleaning canopies and gutters, adding more emergency lighting, and servicing high-voltage components.

    Teams also will replace rail on the curvy, mountainous Antelope Valley Line, reducing the need for “slow orders,” which can lead to delays.

    “By modernizing our rail network, we are preparing our system for the World Cup, Olympics and Paralympics,” the agency said.

    During the closure, Amtrak’s Pacific Surfliner will bypass Union Station entirely.

    “Passengers traveling to or from LAX can utilize bus connections from either Glendale or Fullerton, depending on the specific train they are traveling on,” Amtrak advised. “Bus seats are limited.”

    Union Station will not be in total shutdown. Other transit providers will continue to operate, including the L.A. Metro light rail and subway service, Amtrak bus connections, LAX FlyAway bus service and LADOT and municipal bus routes. Union Station restaurants and other businesses also will remain open.

    Metrolink has posted online a page with answers to questions riders are likely to have.

    The agency has secured $2.4 billion for recent and ongoing improvements — part of a $10-billion wishlist for priority projects. The Southern California Regional Rail Authority relies on local, state and federal funding sources for its projects.

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    Howard Blume

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  • At a Chinese restaurant in Pico-Robertson, it's the usual Christmas frenzy

    At a Chinese restaurant in Pico-Robertson, it's the usual Christmas frenzy

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    Allyn Woghin was introducing her boyfriend, Robert Gleim, and his 12-year-old daughter, Lucy, to Christmas, the Jewish way.

    They’d spent the morning in the San Gabriel Valley — the heart of Chinese L.A. and its cuisines — before landing at Twin Dragon in Pico-Robertson for the holiday meal.

    Blending her Jewish traditions and Gleim’s Christian ones was especially meaningful because of Lucy.

    And this year, with the Israel-Hamas war and the rising threat of antisemitism at home, there was an undercurrent of fear.

    “It’s scarier to be in the place Jews go on Christmas,” said Woghin, 49. But the pull of barbecue pork ribs won out.

    For many American Jews, Christmas simply isn’t Christmas without kung pao chicken and afternoon tickets to the latest holiday blockbuster.

    For Twin Dragon, a 61-year-old landmark in the heart of Jewish L.A. and one of the oldest Chinese restaurants in the area, that makes Dec. 25 nothing short of the Super Bowl.

    “It’s the busiest day of the year,” manager Amanda Tang said.

    The Wren family has dinner at Twin Dragon on Christmas.

    (Michael Blackshire/Los Angeles Times)

    The ritual emerged around the turn of the 20th century with Jews on New York’s Lower East Side, around the same time as the Yiddish term for dining out, oysessen.

    Back then, Chinese restaurants were some of the few eateries open on Christmas. Today, they’re some of the hardest to get into, with restaurants from Flatbush, N.Y., to Fairfax booked solid for holiday meals.

    The Chinese feast is not a universal Jewish custom. Relatively few Orthodox Jews observe it. Nor is it particularly widespread among L.A.’s large Persian, Israeli and Russian Jewish communities.

    Still, red and white takeout carriers are now as much a part of Christmas in Los Angeles as tamales and artificial snow.

    Many non-Jews — including atheists, Buddhists and Christians too lazy to cook — also congregate at Chinese restaurants on the holiday.

    Twin Dragon has neither the Michelin listing of Chengdu Taste nor the winking, in-on-the-joke kitsch of neighboring Genghis Cohen. Its most beloved dishes are Americanized favorites, its lion statues and elaborately painted pagoda facade at once charming and a little cringe.

    But that’s the point, adherents say. The key to a great Chinese meal on Christmas isn’t authenticity, or exclusivity, or glamour — although fans insist their favorite has all of the above.

    Older Angelenos are strictly loyal to their neighborhood spot, longtime residents said, whether Twin Dragon, Fu’s Palace or a kosher Chinese eatery. In Pico-Robertson, the preference often stems from when someone put down roots in the area.

    Most people who come to Twin Dragon on Christmas keep coming because they always have. They count their loyalty in decades. To paraphrase Tevye the Milkman, it’s tradition.

    “This is something we do every year,” said Gaye Wren, whose extended family was gathered in Twin Dragon’s dark, neon-trimmed dining room for an early lunch on Christmas Day. “It was their grandmother and great-grandmother’s idea, since no one wanted to cook.”

    Like many patrons, Wren’s family has been coming to the restaurant almost since it first opened in 1962. Family members travel from Inglewood, Glendale and Canoga Park. For about the last decade, they’ve made it their Christmas ritual as a Christian family, exchanging Secret Santa gifts and sharing their favorite dishes. Monday was one of their first Christmases without their beloved matriarch, Sandi Wren.

    “Coming here has made it a favorite,” said Gaye Wren’s granddaughter, Jazmen Thomas, 28.

    “And they’re open,” cut in her mother, Deanna Webb, 50.

    “It’s consistency in a world that’s constantly changing,” Thomas said.

    That’s also what brought Clifford Slobod, 81 and Kit Hudson, 77, for their annual Christmas meal of hot and sour soup and kung pao shrimp.

    Two people seated at a restaurant table.

    Clifford Slobod, 81, left, and Kit Hudson, 77, have lunch on Christmas Day at Twin Dragon.

    (Michael Blackshire/Los Angeles Times)

    “We’ve been coming here for 40 years,” Slobod said.

    While most patrons had come to take part in the tradition, others were surprised — and in some cases, modestly inconvenienced by it.

    On Christmas Day, frustrated drivers circled the block for parking, a few abandoning their cars in the walkway alongside the disabled spot or directly in front of the curb to pick up takeout orders.

    “We know it’s a thing in New York, so we literally got here right at 11 when it opened,” said LaKisha Tillman, 51. “We were the first to put in our order. People were already sitting inside, caterers picking up their orders. It’s already busy.”

    Some found special significance in the ritual this year — particularly in a neighborhood where antisemitic incidents have surged since the Israel-Hamas war started.

    At the same time, it was part of an irreverent and lighthearted tradition, following a Hanukkah season that was both religiously and politically fraught.

    The holiday, which ended Dec. 15, celebrates Jewish victory in a war for control of Jerusalem more than 2,000 years ago. Its central miracle — the persistence of holy light through darkness — felt especially urgent to many amid the war in Gaza.

    Many Jewish Angelenos shied away from public displays and celebrations out of fear of antisemitic violence, and several large public menorahs were vandalized or destroyed.

    “Everything feels different this year,” said Shuli Kupchan, who was dining at Twin Dragon with another Jewish family on Christmas Eve.

    For her, the Christmas ritual is a way to connect with the majority without assimilating into it.

    “It’s our version of celebrating along with the rest of the world,” the educator said. “It’s a way of doing it without having a Christmas tree in our house.”

    Still others were adopting the custom anew.

    “I’ve actually never done it before,” said Jewish New Yorker Philip Santos Schaffer, who ate at Twin Dragon on Christmas Eve. “I’m reclaiming it.”

    What tied Woghin and the Gleims to the Wren family to the Kupchans was not a particular dish or a drink or a table, but an experience passed from one generation to the next.

    On Christmas Eve, a few bewildered would-be diners loitered outside under the floodlights in the Twin Dragon parking lot, stomachs growling as they scanned the paper menu and waited for a free moment to put in their order.

    Hazard lights twinkled in the darkness, the sounds of laughter and car horns mingling in the air as families spilled onto West Pico Boulevard, their arms laden with grease-stained cardboard boxes and a century of holiday tradition.

    “We like to destroy a restaurant — it’s our minhag,” said Molly Hoffman of Eagle Rock, who had just dined with the Kupchan family, using the Hebrew word for a Jewish custom not rooted in religious law.

    “It’s something we did with our parents,” her wife, Yael Zinkow, explained, as their daughter Norah Hoffman Zinkow, 2, flounced through the parking lot in her Elsa dress and teal crown, tired but delighted at the conclusion of yet another winter festival.

    Chag sameach!” the toddler called, waving happily to a stranger — happy holiday!

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    Sonja Sharp

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  • Time to get real on the bullet train: California is building it, so let’s make it work

    Time to get real on the bullet train: California is building it, so let’s make it work

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom got the Christmas present he desperately wanted from President Biden: the crucial piece of a train set.

    It’s a relatively small piece that’s vital to eventually making this fancy electric train work.

    I’m referring to the much-maligned bullet train that three California governors have been trying to build .

    When complete, it will carry passengers from Los Angeles to San Francisco in less than three hours at speeds of up to 220 mph. That’s the sales pitch, anyway.

    Biden’s gift is a $3.1-billion grant that’s badly needed to continue work on the high-speed rail line’s initial segment in the San Joaquin Valley.

    The ambitious project has been widely lampooned over the years by many, including me, as a too-costly boondoggle and off track from the start.

    But let’s get real: This giant adult toy is going to be constructed one way or another, whether at reasonable speed or in pokey chug-chug fashion. It’s time we acknowledge that and focus on making it work the best for everyone. And sooner the better.

    You don’t spend $11 billion on a project, as California already has, then abandon it.

    Critics consistently have asserted that bullet train money should be shifted to more essential projects — reducing homelessness, educating kids, widening freeways. But that’s practically impossible. Most bullet train money — state bonds and federal grants — can be used only for high-speed rail.

    Ardent supporters just as erroneously constantly point out that California is the world’s fifth-largest economy. And if nations with smaller economies — in Europe and Asia — can afford bullet trains, they argue, California certainly can.

    Wrong. Those are nations, not states. They heavily subsidize high-speed rail and can do that because their purse strings are much looser. States have budget-balancing requirements. And they can’t print money.

    It would be politically impossible for California alone to finance the Los Angeles-to-San Francisco high-speed rail line that’s currently projected to cost a gargantuan $110 billion. And that estimate keeps growing. It’s now roughly three times what voters were told the line would cost when they approved a nearly $10-billion bond issue for the bullet train in 2008.

    “The longer it takes to build, the more expensive it is,” says Brian Kelly, chief executive officer of the California High-Speed Rail Authority.

    “But it’s a lot cheaper than expanding freeways and airports.”

    Could the work already done be converted to use by conventional, non-electrified passenger trains? That would be a lot less expensive.

    “I suppose so,” Kelly says. “But to continue to run yesterday’s technology would not be in the state’s interest. It would be a disaster.”

    The appeal of electrified trains — besides their zippy speed — is that they burn clean energy, not climate-warming fossil fuels.

    But like bullet trains in Europe and Asia, California’s need generous federal funding — lots of it.

    Several years ago, the feds gave California $3.5 billion for the project. That’s long gone. And it’s all the money Washington has sent — in no small part because former Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield hated the bullet train because its tracks cut through his constituents’ farm fields.

    But now, Biden’s Christmas present to Newsom will allow him to continue erecting the project’s first 171-mile segment from Merced to Bakersfield. The line is supposed to be operational by 2030.

    “The train to nowhere,” critics long have cried.

    “That’s wrong and offensive,” Newsom responded in his first State of the State Address in 2019. “The people of the Central Valley … deserve better.”

    A 2022 poll by the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies found wide public support for continuing to build the rail line regardless of whether it initially operates only in farm country. Among registered voters, 56% favored it, with 35% opposed.

    But there was a huge partisan difference: 73% of Democrats favored construction and 66% of Republicans were opposed.

    Newsom said the federal gift amounts to “a vote of confidence … and comes at a critical turning point, providing the project new momentum.”

    OK, but the question still remains: Why would anyone bother to take a bullet train from Merced to Bakersfield?

    Kelly answers that Amtrak already draws 1.5 million passengers annually in the valley. And high-speed rail is projected to attract 7 million.

    The next links will be into the San Francisco Bay Area by 2033 — it’s promised — and later into Los Angeles and Anaheim. No one has a clue when the entire line will be complete.

    The total projected cost of just the San Joaquin Valley line is up to $32 billion. That money is far from lined up.

    Kelly’s goal is to get an additional $5 billion from the same kitty that provided the Christmas gift: the $1.2-trillion infrastructure package that Biden pushed through Congress and signed in 2021.

    Newsom’s rail project simultaneously got a second boost from the Biden administration — indirectly, at least — when it approved a $3-billion grant for a planned bullet train between Las Vegas and Southern California.

    Kelly intends to connect California’s bullet train to the Vegas line and make it easier for Central Valley residents to travel by rail to Sin City.

    “This is a great opportunity for high-speed rail — to buy trains together and be more efficient,” Kelly says.

    But California’s electric train remains tens of billions of dollars short of enough money for completion — with no additional dollars in sight.

    Private investors haven’t shown any interest. It’s doubtful California taxpayers would dig deeper. Washington is where the money is. How does Sacramento keep tapping into its vaults?

    “What they really want to see is people working,” Kelly says. “We’ve got to keep grinding, keep advancing.”

    If Newsom’s a good boy, maybe Washington’s Santa will give him another piece of the train set next Christmas.

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    George Skelton

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  • Thinking of lighting a fire for Christmas? Not with this ban in Southern California

    Thinking of lighting a fire for Christmas? Not with this ban in Southern California

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    A crackling fire on Christmas Day might feel cozy, but for air quality officials in Southern California, the pollution ain’t worth it.

    All wood burning, both indoor and outdoor, is banned on Monday for everyone living in the South Coast Air Basin, which includes Orange County and nondesert portions of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

    Manufactured fire logs, such as those made from wax or paper, also are banned while the 24-hour No-Burn Day Alert is in effect.

    Officials from the South Coast Air Quality Management District emphasized that these alerts are mandatory — and that they are issued when public health is at higher risk.

    The particles in wood smoke — also known as fine particulate matter or PM2.5 — can bury deep into your lungs, trigger asthma attacks and cause a surge in emergency hospitalizations.

    Mountain communities above 3,000 feet in elevation are exempt from the ban, as well as homes that rely on wood as a sole source of heat.

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    Rosanna Xia

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  • Medi-Cal will soon be open to all, 'papers or no papers.' She wants her neighbors to know

    Medi-Cal will soon be open to all, 'papers or no papers.' She wants her neighbors to know

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    As parents hustled to pick up their kids from a school in South Los Angeles, Juana Dominguez greeted one after another with the same question in Spanish: “Do you have Medi-Cal?”

    “Don’t be afraid to get it,” she urged mothers pushing strollers in the afternoon sun. She paused to chat up street vendors hawking raspados and hot dogs, encouraging them as well, as she handed out fliers.

    Many already knew Dominguez from the brightly painted Paloma Market nearby, where she can regularly be found selling tacos at a table out front. On this stretch of Main Street, she also dishes out health information through a program that turns vendors into “community messengers.”

    Dominguez is on a mission to make sure her neighbors know that “papers or no papers, you’re going to get help from Medi-Cal.” That’s because in January, the state will open its Medicaid program to anyone whose income is low enough to qualify, no matter their immigration status.

    It’s the culmination of a steady expansion of the California health insurance program, which has already grown to include children, young adults and seniors regardless of their legal status. As of last year, the uninsured rate among immigrants in California without U.S. citizenship was estimated to be 21% — lower than in 36 other states, according to a KFF analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

    Next year, California will extend Medi-Cal benefits to the last remaining group of undocumented people — those ages 26 to 49 — in what is expected to be its biggest expansion of coverage since key provisions in the Affordable Care Act were implemented in 2014. State officials have estimated that more than 700,000 people will be eligible to gain “full scope” coverage for the first time, helping them access important services such as preventative care and treatment for chronic conditions.

    Juana Dominguez hands out information about Medi-Cal in South Los Angeles. The government health insurance program gears up for an upcoming expansion to serve eligible people of all ages regardless of immigration status.

    (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

    Dominguez wants people to be aware of the opportunity, and to make use of their new coverage. In California, people who lack valid visas, green cards or U.S. citizenship have been less likely than other immigrants to go to the doctor, with 29% saying they had never gotten or tried to get medical care in the U.S., a KFF/L.A. Times survey this year found.

    Fear is rampant in the community, Dominguez said, as people worry that signing up for or using such benefits could jeopardize their chances of getting a green card or citizenship. Under the “public charge” rule, people can be blocked from legal status if they are likely to become “primarily dependent” on government aid.

    Medi-Cal benefits do not factor into those decisions except in cases involving long-term stays in mental health or nursing institutions, advocates said. As Dominguez made her rounds on Main Street, she repeatedly reassured people: “It’s not a public charge for the government.”

    Dozens of vendors such as Dominguez have been talking up Medi-Cal as part of an unusual program that mobilizes street vendors around public health issues that are important to them. The program, run by the community health network AltaMed in partnership with the nonprofit Inclusive Action for the City, launched nearly two years ago and provides vendors a quarterly stipend for their efforts.

    The street vendors “identified that their community members are undocumented people who have been historically excluded from all healthcare systems,” said Rosa Vazquez, manager for community mobilizing for the AltaMed Institute for Health Equity. Their biggest goal has been ensuring the people they reach get information “so that they can make the best choices for their own health.”

    This year, that “has meant a particular focus on Medi-Cal expansion,” Vazquez said.

    Rosa Vazquez talks with vendors Aurora Alejo and Juana Dominguez during a training for street vendors on Medi-Cal expansion.

    Rosa Vazquez, right, talks with Aurora Alejo, left, and Juana Dominguez during a training for street vendors by the AltaMed Institute for Health Equity.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    In November, the vendors gathered at a Boyle Heights office to learn about the state effort. Vazquez laid out details about income limits for the program, what it would cover, and how people could apply.

    In the KFF/L.A. Times survey, more than a third of California immigrants who are probably undocumented — those who said they did not have valid visas, green cards or citizenship — said they steered clear of public programs that help pay for food, housing or healthcare because they didn’t want to draw attention to their own immigration status or that of a family member.

    The survey also found that 70% were unsure if using such programs could decrease their chances of getting a green card, while another 16% believed that it would.

    Under the Trump administration, a new rule added Medicaid to the list of assistance programs that could factor into public charge determinations. The rule was challenged in court and President Biden officially removed it shortly after taking office, but apprehension has remained.

    Sarah Dar, a policy director with the California Immigrant Policy Center, said that “especially under the previous presidential administration, there was a message being sent to these communities that you’re not deserving of public benefits and you shouldn’t access services.”

    For the Medi-Cal program to “all of a sudden be available to people, it’s going to take really trusted messengers to reach these folks,” she said during a November webinar hosted by the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute and the California Endowment.

    In Fresno, those trusted messengers could include Centro La Familia Advocacy Services, a nonprofit founded more than half a century ago to help immigrants apply for government programs that had forms only in English. The nonprofit will be extending its hours on Saturdays to accommodate farmworkers, who often can’t make it to their centers during the week, as well as sharing information on Spanish-language Univision and heading directly to the fields to meet workers.

    “It is still difficult” for many immigrants who lack the literacy skills to navigate Medi-Cal paperwork, even when translated into Spanish, said its executive director, Margarita Rocha.

    TODEC Legal Center, an immigrant advocacy organization, provides similar outreach in the Inland Empire. Farmworkers there “don’t come to government institutions for aid because of the fear,” said Luz Gallegos, the group’s executive director. “We have to go to them.”

    Gallegos said TODEC has been trying to raise awareness about Medi-Cal for years, starting with the first expansion that covered children regardless of immigration status. It has recruited farmworkers who signed up for coverage for themselves or their kids to encourage others to apply. Now these volunteers show off their Medi-Cal cards and share stories about how they benefited from the program.

    The group has also brought Riverside and San Bernardino county officials out to work sites to register farmworkers for Medi-Cal, with its own volunteers on hand to help establish trust.

    And in Mendocino County, workers at Anderson Valley Health Center in Boonville have been heading out to local vineyards, asking companies to tuck informational fliers alongside pay stubs, and phoning uninsured patients to let them know about the upcoming expansion.

    “This group is probably the hardest” to reach compared with those who have gotten Medi-Cal so far, said Chloe Guazzone, executive director of the health center. As patients, “they don’t tend to come to us unless there’s an urgent issue because they’re uninsured,” she said, “so finding them in the first place” can be difficult.

    In Los Angeles, Dominguez said she was motivated to bring information to her community by the death of her friend Angel Vasquez, a kindly jokester who lived near Paloma Market.

    When Vasquez got COVID-19 the first winter of the pandemic, he held off on calling for an ambulance, Dominguez said. She says she believes he was worried about the cost. His son, also named Angel Vasquez, said family members in Guatemala told the man to go to the hospital, but Vasquez initially insisted it was just a fever.

    “He went to the hospital very late — I think too late,” his son said.

    Juana Dominguez hands out information about Medi-Cal along Main Street in South Los Angeles.

    Juana Dominguez hands out information about Medi-Cal along Main Street in South Los Angeles.

    (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

    Vasquez died in May 2021 at the age of 55, his son said. Dominguez was haunted by the thought that if he had gone to the hospital sooner, her friend might have lived.

    “My kids miss him a lot,” she said.

    As she finished up her rounds on Main Street, she paused to point out where Vasquez had once lived. When she had the opportunity to reach out to neighbors about Medi-Cal, “I thought, ‘Juana, your community needs this information.’ … This gives me the drive to persist with it.”

    California officials have estimated that more than 700,000 people will be able to transition from “restricted scope” to “full scope” Medi-Cal next year. Being in “restricted scope,” which helps reimburse hospitals for emergency care, means “they’re in the system, we know who they are … we know that they’re income-eligible for Medi-Cal,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of the healthcare consumer advocacy group Health Access California.

    “It is an incredibly useful way to automatically enroll” people who will now gain coverage for a range of care needed beyond the emergency room, Wright said. “We’re really glad the state has taken efforts to try to do this as automatically and seamlessly as possible.”

    California’s Department of Health Care Services said it’s unknown how many people who aren’t already in the “restricted scope” program will be newly eligible for Medi-Cal. The state has budgeted $1.4 billion for the expansion this fiscal year and $3.4 billion annually when it is fully implemented.

    Researchers at UC Berkeley and UCLA estimate that among Californians under the age of 65, the Medi-Cal expansion will reduce the uninsured rate among immigrants without legal status from 58.4% to 27.8%. Despite that sharp reduction, it would still remain far higher than the estimated uninsured rate of 7% for all Californians in that age group.

    Experts said hundreds of thousands of immigrants will remain uninsured because they make too much money to qualify for Medi-Cal, but don’t have affordable coverage through their employers.

    Wright said people in that situation can buy health insurance on their own, “but then the question is, is it accessible? Is it affordable? Is it administratively easy?”

    Those without legal status will remain ineligible for financial assistance to buy health coverage through Covered California, the state marketplace for insurance coverage. He and other advocates are now pushing the state to come up with an option to help them as well.

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    Emily Alpert Reyes, Melissa Gomez, Priscella Vega

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  • Authorities bust cocaine delivery service operation in Los Angeles, Ventura counties

    Authorities bust cocaine delivery service operation in Los Angeles, Ventura counties

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    Ventura County sheriff’s narcotics investigators busted a “large-scale transnational drug trafficking organization” this week that was operating a cocaine delivery service in Ventura and Los Angeles counties, authorities said.

    Detectives made eight arrests and seized more than 5 pounds of cocaine, five firearms and “a significant amount of suspected drug proceeds,” sheriff’s officials announced in a news release Friday. The bust followed a five-month investigation into the drug trafficking operation.

    The delivery service used drivers to supply cocaine to hundreds of people in Ventura and Los Angeles counties on a daily basis, authorities said.

    The investigation launched earlier this summer revealed that 40-year-old Joel Cruz Ayala and 28-year-old Elmer Ayala-Ayala, both of Bakersfield, “were working for the organization as full-time dispatchers,” according to the news release.

    The pair, detectives said, were tasked with taking incoming orders and dispatching drivers to customers.

    Luis Cruz, 33, was identified as the dispatch house manager, “who was in direct communication with high-ranking members of the organization in El Salvador,” according to the sheriff’s news release.

    The organization also employed multiple delivery drivers, including Wilfredo Castillo, 24, Lisandro Moreno, 22, Kevin Bonilla, 20, Jose Ayala Hernandez, 40, and Noel Cruz, 31.

    All five were arrested at their residences in Panorama City and North Hills “in possession of a large amount of pre-packaged cocaine ready to be delivered, as well as large sums of suspected drug proceeds.”

    Cruz Ayala, Ayala-Ayala and Cruz were located and arrested at their residences and the dispatch house in Bakersfield.

    “A significant amount of evidence was located, exposing their large-scale transnational drug trafficking organization, including money transfers to higher ranking members of the organization in El Salvador,” the release states.

    Detectives from the Ventura County Sheriff’s Narcotics Unit believe the arrests will greatly disrupt the larger organization. “However, detectives continue to investigate numerous other leads which will aid them in their pursuit of dismantling it completely,” according to the release.

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    Brennon Dixson

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  • San Diego police investigating after body found in freezer

    San Diego police investigating after body found in freezer

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    San Diego homicide detectives are investigating after out-of-town family members found a body in a freezer at a home in Allied Gardens on Friday morning, police said.

    The family immediately called police after making the discovery about 11:45 a.m. in a home on Zion Avenue near Eldridge Street, San Diego police Lt. Jud Campbell said.

    It’s unclear whether the dead person suffered any traumatic injuries, but the department’s Homicide Unit is investigating, Campbell said. No details such as age or race could be confirmed, but the body appears to be that of a female person.

    The Medical Examiner’s Office will determine the cause of death.

    Anyone with information about the incident was asked to call homicide detectives at (619) 531-2293 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at (888) 580-8477.

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    Lyndsay Winkley

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  • Former L.A. County sheriff's deputy, sentenced to death for murder, dies in prison

    Former L.A. County sheriff's deputy, sentenced to death for murder, dies in prison

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    A former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy convicted and sentenced to death for murder died in custody Thursday, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

    Stephen M. Redd was pronounced dead after prison staff found him unresponsive in his cell at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, where he’s been incarcerated since 1997. He was 78.

    His cause of death remains under investigation.

    Redd was sentenced to death after being convicted in 1997 of first-degree murder, first-degree robbery, second-degree burglary, second-degree robbery and attempted murder.

    The sentence stemmed from a robbery Redd committed at a Yorba Linda supermarket in 1994.

    During the robbery, Redd shot and killed the store’s manager, 34-year-old Timothy McVeigh. Redd evaded arrest for eight months before he was arrested in San Francisco.

    Redd’s death sentence has been suspended since 2006, the year California last executed a prisoner. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a formal moratorium on the death penalty in 2019.

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    Jeremy Childs

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