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  • Dueling protests in Ventura County left a Jewish man dead. What happened remains unclear

    Dueling protests in Ventura County left a Jewish man dead. What happened remains unclear

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    For decades, Paul Kessler had been politically engaged — typically advocating for liberal causes — and often sharing his viewpoints in Thousand Oaks’ local newspaper through witty, strongly worded letters to the editor.

    The 69-year-old most recently answered a call to help mount a counter-protest in support of Israel at a busy intersection where a pro-Palestinian group had been demonstrating regularly in recent weeks since the Israel-Hamas war had intensified and, along with it, Americans’ perspectives on the conflict.

    On Sunday afternoon, Kessler carried an Israeli flag at Westlake and Thousand Oaks boulevards, where almost 100 people between the two dueling protests had spread around the intersection.

    At some point, an altercation broke out between Kessler and one of the pro-Palestinian demonstrators — the details of which remain under investigation.

    Kessler ended up on the ground, bleeding with severe head injuries, officials said, and hours later, the Jewish man was dead.

    No one has been arrested, but Ventura County sheriff’s officials say an investigation into the death — considered both a homicide and a possible hate crime — is ongoing, with a known suspect.

    Witnesses from both sides of the protests shared “conflicting statements” about what led to Kessler’s fatal fall and who the aggressor was, Sheriff Jim Fryhoff said at a Tuesday news conference. Deputies say Kessler fell backward during the altercation, striking his head.

    “What exactly transpired prior to Mr. Kessler falling backwards isn’t crystal clear right now,” Fryhoff said.

    Shoshi Strikowski, center, and Elena Columbo, in cap, join other community members Tuesday at a growing memorial for Paul Kessler in Thousand Oaks.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    An autopsy shows Kessler died from a blunt force head injury, and the coroner’s office ruled the manner of death a homicide, Ventura County Chief Medical Examiner Christopher Young said. However, Young said the manner of death doesn’t necessarily point to criminal intent, only that the “death occurred at the hands of another person or the actions of another person contributed to the death of a person.” Medical determinations of homicide can be legally ruled self-defense or justified.

    Young said Kessler suffered a fatal injury to the back of his head that was “consistent with and typical of injuries sustained from a fall.” Kessler also had “nonlethal injuries” on the left side of his face, which Young said could have been caused by a blow to the face.

    The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office said the incident was reported just after 3:20 p.m. Sunday. Deputies who arrived first found Kessler on the ground, bleeding from his mouth and head, but conscious, Fryhoff said. The Thousand Oaks resident remained conscious through testing and care at a hospital, but his condition quickly deteriorated, Young said. He was pronounced dead just after 1 a.m. Monday.

    Jonathan Oswaks said he went to Sunday’s protest with Kessler. They had met a few weeks earlier when Oswaks posted a message on the website Nextdoor asking people to demonstrate in support of Israel with him. Kessler responded to the message, and this was their second protest together, he said.

    Oswaks, 69, said he saw one of the pro-Palestinian protesters — who he believes is the suspect in this case — hit someone with his megaphone. Oswaks, who was across the street at the time, said he didn’t immediately realize it was Kessler who had been struck and learned later that his friend had been mortally wounded.

    “I was broken when I heard,” Oswaks said while standing near a growing memorial of flowers, candles and Jewish symbols left at the intersection.

    Two people hug outdoors.

    Jonathan Oswaks, right, is hugged at the memorial for Paul Kessler in Thousand Oaks on Nov. 7, 2023.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    And now, he doesn’t understand why the man hasn’t been arrested.

    “They had everything right there,” Oswaks said of the deputies. “The suspect was sitting right there on the curb.”

    Bri Oard, a freelance journalist, was driving past the rally when she noticed ambulances and firefighters there, she said.

    “I was praying in my head, hoping no violence happened,” she said.

    While she did not see Kessler accosted or fall to the ground, she said, she saw paramedics loading a man onto an ambulance. She also saw two law enforcement officers pull a man from the Free Palestine rally, sit him on the curb and speak with him, she said.

    The rallies have been taking place every Sunday, Oard said, but this was the first time there was any violence, as far as she knew.

    Oard said she did not even realize how serious the incident was until she saw posts on social media.

    Kyle Jorrey, a former editor at the Thousand Oaks Acorn, said Kessler had consistently submitted opinion pieces to the newspaper for at least two decades, many of which were published.

    Anat Joseph, draped in an Israel flag, leaves American flags at a growing memorial for Paul Kessler.

    Anat Joseph, draped in an Israel flag, leaves American flags at a growing memorial for Paul Kessler.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    “An ardent Democrat, Kessler had a sharp wit and loved a good takedown,” Jorrey wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    “He was passionate about political issues (liberal causes) and wasn’t afraid to let people know how he felt,” Jorrey said in a statement to The Times. “Doesn’t surprise me at all that he was out there as a counter protestor even at his age. He attended many demonstrations related to progressive causes.”

    In Kessler’s neighborhood in Thousand Oaks, most residents had lowered their blinds and declined to comment.

    Kessler’s death has sparked mourning and alarm in Southern California’s Jewish community, with some leaders and public officials expressing outrage.

    “We demand safety. We will not tolerate violence against our community. We will do everything in our power to prevent it,” the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles said in a statement.

    The Anti-Defamation League called on law enforcement “to launch a thorough investigation to determine who is responsible.”

    The Council on American–Islamic Relations released a statement saying it was “deeply saddened by this tragic and shocking loss. We join local Jewish leaders in calling on all individuals to refrain from jumping to conclusions, sensationalizing such a tragedy for political gains, or spreading rumors that could unnecessarily escalate tensions that are already at an all-time high.”

    “As details emerge and are confirmed, we stand resolute in condemnation of violence and antisemitism,” Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement Tuesday. “This death is a blow to our region at a time when tensions continue to rise worldwide.”

    Community members prepare to address the media at a memorial for Paul Kessler.

    Community members prepare to address the media at a memorial for Paul Kessler.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    Fryhoff said the suspect, identified only as a 50-year-old man from Moorpark, has been cooperative with investigators. He told authorities he was “involved in an altercation” with Kessler before the man fell and hit his head. The suspect was among those who called 911, the sheriff said.

    Deputies on Monday briefly detained the man after a traffic stop in Simi Valley while investigators served a search warrant at his home. He was later released, Fryhoff said.

    Fryhoff said his deputies are committed to providing safety and protecting the rights of all residents, regardless of faith or identity. He said the agency has increased patrols outside houses of worship and community centers.

    The sheriff said surveillance video from a Shell gas station adjacent to where the confrontation occurred did not capture a clear view of the incident. Authorities are asking for the public to submit any video or images from that day. Fryhoff asked anyone with information to contact Det. Corey Stump at (805) 384-4745 or call Crime Stoppers anonymously at (800) 222-8477.

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    Grace Toohey, Jeremy Childs, Richard Winton, Noah Goldberg, Terry Castleman

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  • Four current and former L.A. Sheriff’s Department employees died of suicide in a 24-hour span

    Four current and former L.A. Sheriff’s Department employees died of suicide in a 24-hour span

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    Warning: This story includes discussion of suicide.

    The suicide deaths of four current and former Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department employees over a 24-hour span have prompted a plea from Sheriff Robert Luna urging deputies to check on the well-being of their colleagues and friends.

    “We are stunned to learn of these deaths, and it has sent shock waves of emotions throughout the department as we try and cope with the loss of not just one, but four beloved active and retired members of our department family,” Luna said in an emailed statement Tuesday. “During trying times like these it’s important for personnel regardless of rank or position to check on the well-being of other colleagues and friends.”

    Suicide prevention and crisis counseling resources

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 9-8-8. The United States’ first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline 988 will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

    Luna said he had the “deepest concern for our employees’ well-being,” adding that the department was “urgently exploring avenues to reduce work stress factors to support our employees’ work and personal lives.” He said the department’s Homicide Bureau would investigate the deaths.

    There is no indication that that the deaths were related or that foul play was involved, but department sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation said the third and fourth deaths were discovered as word of the earlier deaths were spreading through the agency.

    Luna’s comments came a day after the suicides of one former and three current employees, which occurred within a 24-hour span that began Monday.

    Among them was Cmdr. Darren Harris, who became a recognizable figure on TV news over a 25-year career during which he served as a chief department spokesperson. Harris was found dead in his home in Santa Clarita on Monday morning, according to multiple sources. He died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, said the sources, who agreed to speak with The Times on the condition of anonymity because his death hasn’t been publicly acknowledged.

    Harris rose steadily through department ranks, with several stopovers in media relations, along with stints in which he oversaw the Transit Services Bureau and ran the Santa Clarita station.

    Sometime after noon Monday, authorities found the body of Greg Hovland, a sergeant who worked in the Antelope Valley before his retirement, at his Quartz Hill home, according to the sources. Another employee was found dead shortly after sunset at a residence in Stevenson Ranch. The fourth death was reported at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, when sheriff’s homicide detectives responded to a hospital in Pomona where an employee died from suicide.

    Observers said the suicides underscored a long-standing problem for law enforcement officers across Los Angeles as elsewhere. In recent years, studies have shown that more officers have died by suicide than the number killed in the line of duty. Officers also have higher risks of suicide than the general population, a disparity that some researchers have attributed to the stresses of police work and heightened public scrutiny over recent high-profile law enforcement killings — combined with their easy access to firearms.

    The risk is particularly acute among members of smaller departments, researchers say, which tend to have fewer resources available for officers struggling with suicidal thoughts. According to the website Blue H.E.L.P., which tracks officer suicides, 81 officers have taken their lives this year across the country; in 2022, there were 172 suicides.

    In his statement, Luna said the department’s Psychological Services Bureau and the Injury and Health Support Unit were working to provide counseling and other resources to the families of the officers.

    “Additionally, the department has a Peer Support Program that members can use for additional assistance,” Luna said in his statement.

    Four other Sheriff’s Department employees died by suicide this year, said Nicole Nishida, an agency spokesperson.

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    Libor Jany, Richard Winton

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  • L.A. County supervisors approve 4% cap on rent increases through June

    L.A. County supervisors approve 4% cap on rent increases through June

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    Los Angeles County supervisors voted Tuesday to extend — and slightly increase to 4% — a soon-to-expire cap on rent increases, sparing tenants in unincorporated areas from a big rent hike for an additional six months.

    In November 2022, the supervisors approved a temporary 3% cap on annual rent increases, framing it as a short-term way to keep rent-burdened residents in their homes as the pandemic-era tenant protections dissipated. The cap applies to all rent-controlled units in unincorporated L.A. County — that means those units built before 1995, as well as all mobile homes.

    The cap was meant to expire at the end of this year, at which point landlords could have hiked rents by up to 8%.

    But on Tuesday, the supervisors voted 4 to 1 to approve the 4% cap and keep it in place through June.

    The board also voted unanimously to direct relevant county departments to look into what a permanent cap should look like for unincorporated areas.

    Supervisor Kathryn Barger voted against the 4% rent increase cap, calling it a “stopgap policy” that placed the burden onto mom-and-pop landlords.

    The motion was crafted by Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and co-sponsored by Supervisor Hilda Solis, who both said they were concerned that dramatic rent hikes would increase homelessness in unincorporated L.A. County, home to more than 1 million residents.

    “We’re not saying don’t increase rents,” said Horvath, the only renter of the five supervisors. “We’re saying to keep it manageable.”

    Horvath’s office said roughly 270,000 households would be affected by the cap.

    The push was met with skepticism from both Barger and Supervisor Holly Mitchell, who said they felt the county was failing its small landlords, who have been forced to pay more and more for insurance, home repairs and energy costs while the rent they rely on has stagnated.

    Mitchell said many of the landlords struggling most were people of color. And some of the houses they owned were the last affordable options around.

    “Walk through Leimert Park, walk through Hyde Park, some of the remaining affordable areas to live in this entire county — and look and see who owns those properties. Those are BIPOC people who either bought them years ago or inherited them,” she said. “So they’re property rich and cash poor.”

    “They have got to be maintained — because if we lose them, we will be further screwed,” she said.

    Rather than limit rent increases, Mitchell and Barger said the county should focus on building more housing and getting money out the door that they’d already marked to help small landlords.

    Last week, Barger and Mitchell demanded an audit of the county’s rent relief program for mom-and-pop landlords after a sluggish rollout.

    The supervisors had teamed up in January to ask the county’s Department of Business and Consumer Affairs to start distributing $45 million to small property owners for back rent owed starting in April 2022.

    Nearly a year later, they say, the department has barely started — a fact that visibly angered Barger on Tuesday.

    “You should be embarrassed,” Barger said, nodding to department director Rafael Carbajal. “We should all be embarrassed.”

    The vote came amid objections from landlords who said they were hurting financially after having forgone any meaningful rent increases since before the pandemic.

    “An extension of this cap would be an outright failure by the Board of Supervisors,” said David Kaishcyan of the Apartment Assn. of Greater Los Angeles, which had rallied its members to oppose the extension.

    Tenant advocates, meanwhile, urged the board to do all it could to prevent landlords from increasing rents by as much as 8%.

    “This level of increase is close to what’s considered price gouging in an emergency, and is far above what is needed to give landlords a healthy return,” said Sasha Harnden of the Inner City Law Center.

    The cap does not apply to any of the county’s incorporated cities, most of which have their own rules for rent increases.

    The city of Los Angeles’ COVID-era freeze on rent increases in rent-stabilized units is set to expire at the end of January. On Wednesday, the City Council will consider a proposal to cap the amount a landlord can raise rent to 4% — or as much as 6% if the landlord pays utilities. If that does not pass, landlords will be able to raise rents by 7% — or up to 9% if the landlord covers utilities.

    Times staff writer Julia Wick contributed to this report.

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    Rebecca Ellis

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  • Key lawyer in DWP scandal gets 33-month prison sentence

    Key lawyer in DWP scandal gets 33-month prison sentence

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    A federal judge on Tuesday sentenced a key figure in the sprawling corruption scandal at the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and the city attorney’s office to nearly three years in prison.

    U.S. District Judge Stanley Blumenfeld Jr. ordered Paul Paradis, a former attorney turned cooperating witness for the federal government, to serve 33 months — more than the 18-month sentence recommended by prosecutors.

    Paradis’ attorneys sought to have their client avoid prison and pointed to the numerous undercover operations undertaken by Paradis for the government that helped lead to guilty pleas in the corruption case.

    The judge’s sentence appears to mark the final chapter in the federal criminal investigation that has engulfed City Hall since FBI agents first raided multiple government offices in the summer of 2019.

    Paradis was one player in the scandal, which focused on a sham lawsuit over inflated DWP bills that was crafted by the city, part of an audacious plan for the city to sue itself in order to quickly settle the slew of claims filed by DWP customers.

    Paradis admitted to taking a nearly $2.2-million kickback from another attorney working on the DWP case. He also took part in other bribery schemes, according to prosecutors.

    Blumenfeld, in delivering his sentence, cited Paradis’ long legal career. He said that Paradis, an aggressive plaintiff’s attorney from New York, had a “keen” intellect and was “blessed with charm and charisma.”

    But ultimately, Paradis went down a path of corruption. “Mr. Paradis was at the center” of a “greedy and corrupt” scheme,” Blumenfeld said.

    Paradis, in his remarks to the judge, expressed remorse over his actions. Standing at the lectern, he also publicly accused former City Atty. Mike Feuer of lying to the grand jury and to investigators, based on statements Paradis said were made by an FBI agent in an affidavit for a search warrant.

    Separately, Paradis has filed various documents, including State Bar and ethics complaints, accusing other attorneys, including Feuer, of lying or other wrongdoing.

    Feuer has long denied wrongdoing in the case.

    Talking to reporters after the sentencing, Paradis said he was “devastated” by the sentence.

    Despite admissions in court documents by prosecutors that the city’s legal scheme was known by other top personnel in the city attorney’s office, the U.S. attorney’s office ultimately charged only two attorneys with crimes.

    Prosecutors have declined to explain their charging decisions, but a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office said earlier this year that, generally speaking, the office doesn’t pursue charges when “every element of a federal offense” isn’t established.

    The DWP estimates that the scandal has cost the city more than $120 million.

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    Dakota Smith

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  • Captain found guilty of negligence in boat fire that killed 34

    Captain found guilty of negligence in boat fire that killed 34

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    After a day of deliberations, a federal court jury in Los Angeles on Monday found former Conception dive boat captain Jerry Boylan guilty of gross negligence in the deaths of 34 people in the fiery maritime disaster.

    The ship caught fire in the early morning hours of Sept. 2, 2019, while it was anchored off Santa Cruz Island, trapping 33 passengers and one crew member in the bunk room.

    Prosecutors said Boylan, who had been a captain for 34 years, was negligent in failing to appoint a night watch or to drill his crew in fire safety. When the fire broke out — possibly originating in a trash can — chaos ensued among Boylan’s inexperienced, ill-trained crew. In the bedlam, a crew member twice ran right by a 50-foot fire hose.

    Boylan, then 66, woke up amid the smoke and flames, called in a mayday and jumped overboard, actions that prosecutors said amounted to abandoning his ship. The 34 people crowded in the windowless bunk room lived for minutes after he did so, but they had no exit — the stairs and the escape hatch were blocked by flames.

    Boylan’s attorneys with the federal public defender’s office argued that there was little he could do by the time he woke up to “an unstoppable inferno,” and that the fire hoses were unusable because they were ablaze.

    Defense attorneys said Boylan learned how to run a boat from Glen Fritzler, the owner of the Conception and the company Truth Aquatics, whose boats did not use an overnight watch.

    Boylan, who had been with the company for decades, did not know that doing things “the Fritzler way” was endangering people, the defense attorneys argued.

    Federal prosecutors derided the argument as the “blaming your boss” defense, and said he had “rolled the dice” with his passengers’ lives.

    The courtroom was packed throughout the two-week trial by families of the fire victims, who have followed the case closely during the four years it took to reach trial.

    After the verdict, the families wept and embraced in the hallway, saying “we did it” and “we got it.”

    “We’ve waited four years for the guilty verdict, and it’s just a feeling like we can move forward a little with our lives,” said Susana Rosas, 65, who lost three daughters and her ex-husband in the fire.

    Rosas sat in the 9th floor courtroom in downtown Los Angeles for every day of the trial, at times listening to graphic testimony about the effort to recover the bodies from the charred wreck of the Conception, 56 feet below the surface.

    She learned that one of her daughters, Evan Quitasol, a 37-year-old nurse, was found huddled tightly with two other victims, Charles McIlvain, 44, and Alexandra “Allie” Kurtz, 26.

    “As hard as it was, it was comforting to know she died embracing someone else,” she said. “They weren’t alone. No one there was alone.”

    Boylan, who did not testify, will remain free until U.S. District Judge George Wu sentences him on Feb. 8. He could face up to 10 years in federal prison.

    Even the maximum sentence feels lenient for Boylan’s crime, Rosas said, adding that it seems “such a short amount of time for him to serve, for 34 people.” Boylan had ignored the Certificate of Inspection hanging in his own wheelhouse, which spelled out the need for an overnight watch in capital letters.

    “He didn’t follow policies and protocols. Other captains in the area weren’t either. They thought it was OK to do that,” Rosas said. “We were the unlucky ones.”

    As a result of the tragedy, the Coast Guard has tightened regulations, and more boats are implementing overnight watches. But “it’s too late for our families,” Rosas said.

    Jurors deliberated all day while the victims’ families waited in the hallway, and a verdict finally came at 4:30 p.m.

    “I was so worried because it went on so long today,” said McIlvain’s mother, Kathleen. “I couldn’t imagine how any jury wouldn’t know he was guilty.”

    She said Boylan had failed the people who had entrusted him with their lives. “He didn’t do his duty as a captain,” she said. “He abandoned ship. He abandoned them, and we never did.”

    She and other families are already trying to write their victim-impact statements, which they will deliver to the judge at Boylan’s sentencing next year. She said she doesn’t know how she will do it.

    “They died such horrific deaths,” McIlvain said. “We couldn’t even see them. We didn’t want that to be the last memory of Charlie.”

    Among the items recovered from the wreck was an iPhone with a 24-second video, recorded by one of the passengers in her final minutes as flames encroached on the bunk room. Prosecutors played it during the trial, but the FBI had allowed family members to see it long before.

    On the video, McIlvain could hear her son exclaiming, “There’s got to be a way out!” and “There’s got to be more extinguishers!”

    “The last voice I have of him is on the video in the bunk room, and he wasn’t giving up,” she said.

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    Christopher Goffard

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  • Highland fire in Riverside County is 100% contained

    Highland fire in Riverside County is 100% contained

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    After burning 2,487 acres, destroying 13 structures and damaging three more, the Highland fire was 100% contained on Sunday evening, according to Riverside County fire officials.

    The fire ignited Oct. 30 in grasses and brush in the Aguanga area and quickly exploded in size, driven by Santa Ana winds that swirled in the Inland Empire. More than 1,100 firefighters were deployed to attack the fire from the air and the ground.

    By Tuesday, around 4,000 people had been ordered to evacuate, and the South Coast Air Quality Management District issued a smoke advisory the following day.

    All fire road closures and evacuation orders have since been lifted, but warnings remain in place for the fire perimeter area.

    Fire officials urged motorists to continue to be cautious while driving near the fire as crews continued to work in the region.

    The cause of the blaze remains under investigation.

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    Dorany Pineda

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  • Two killed when minivan fleeing police hits bus in downtown L.A., police say

    Two killed when minivan fleeing police hits bus in downtown L.A., police say

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    Two people were killed when a minivan fleeing police hit a Metro bus in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday morning, police said.

    Officers assigned to the Los Angeles Police Department’s Newton Division were on patrol about 5 a.m. when they said they spotted someone throw a gun out of the window of a green minivan near Central Avenue and the 10 Freeway, according to Officer Norma Eisenman, a police spokesperson. Officers then initiated a pursuit, she said.

    The pursuit ended one to two minutes later at the intersection of 17th and Main streets when the minivan crashed into the bus, she said.

    Officers performed first aid on the injured, but two occupants of the minivan died — one at the scene, and another at a local hospital, she said. The driver and another minivan passenger were taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, she said.

    The only person aboard the bus was the operator, who did not suffer injuries that required treatment, the Los Angeles Fire Department said.

    Police recovered the handgun, Eisenman said.

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    Alex Wigglesworth

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  • Hundreds rally at Israeli Consulate in L.A., calling for cease-fire in Gaza

    Hundreds rally at Israeli Consulate in L.A., calling for cease-fire in Gaza

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    Hundreds of people participated in a pro-Palestinian rally and march Saturday in front of the Israeli Consulate in West Los Angeles, condemning Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip in retaliation for Hamas’ brutal attack last month on its neighbor.

    Waving Palestinian flags and chanting “Cease-fire now!” the demonstrators rallied in front of the consulate on Wilshire Boulevard in Brentwood at about 1 p.m. They then began slowly marching east under the 405 Freeway and toward the Federal Building in Westwood.

    Though orderly and peaceful, the marchers spread out over the street, leaving one lane open for cars to pass before eventually taking over the entire boulevard. Many motorists rolled down their windows, fists bumping, whistling, and even pulling out their own Palestinian flags in solidarity.

    The protests come amid an escalating war between Israel and Hamas militants, who launched a surprise offensive from neighboring Gaza on southern Israel on Oct. 7.

    Gordan Sal, 30, of Los Angeles, joins other protesters as they march along Wilshire Boulevard toward the Federal Building in Los Angeles, demanding an end to the Israeli invasion of Gaza on Saturday afternoon.

    (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

    Since then, more than 1,400 people have died on the Israeli side, with Palestinian militants continung to hold about 220 people hostage. More than 9,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

    Yessar Takruri, 32, one of the protesters in Los Angeles, said he was born here and raised in the West Bank. He blamed the U.S. for its political and financial support of Israel.

    “I want the U.S. to pressure Israel to cease-fire,” he said. “I don’t want my tax money and American people’s tax money funding military occupation. It should go to healthcare and programs in the U.S., not what is overseas. It’s unacceptable.”

    “I’m safe because I’m not in Gaza, but I don’t have a normal life because of the psychological damage on refugees and Palestinians all over the world,” Takruri said. “How am I supposed to go to work and go about my life when my people are being massacred?”

    Another protester, Wesam Eltohamy, 50, said that for the Israeli government to simply allow Palestinians to flee Gaza is not an acceptable solution.

    “Give them their freedom in their land,” she said, as she waved a Palestinian flag. “It’s like saying, ‘Leave your house and live in the backyard of your neighbors in a tent.’”

    Marchers hold signs, one reading "Free Palestine" and another with a peace symbol.

    Protesters demand an end to the Israeli invasion of Gaza during a rally Saturday outside the Israeli Consulate on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles.

    (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

    Eltohamy said she immigrated to the U.S. from Egypt 17 years ago and is in constant communication with her family in Egypt about the Israel-Hamas war. She said she is calling for a cease-fire and demands that the Biden administration stop supporting Israel.

    “Just give people their freedom,” she said. “They’re not asking for much.”

    Saturday’s demonstration was held in solidarity with other large pro-Palestinian rallies and protests around the world Saturday, including Washington, D.C., where thousands gathered in Freedom Plaza, a block from the White House.

    Also on Saturday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with frustrated Arab foreign ministers in the Middle East. They are calling for an immediate cease-fire, but Blinken said this would allow Hamas to regroup and encourage more attacks.

    Instead, Blinken and the Biden administration are continuing to push for “humanitarian pauses” during ongoing talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has said there would be no cease-fire until Hamas releases all the hostages.

    On Saturday, two Israeli military strikes hit a school that was being used as a U.N. shelter, killing multiple civilians. Gaza’s health ministry said 15 people were killed and another 70 people injured.

    The Israeli military said it would grant a three-hour window on Saturday for residents trapped by the fighting to flee to the southern part of Gaza.

    A supporter at a rally at the Federal Building in Westwood waves a Palestinian flag.

    A supporter at a rally at the Federal Building in Westwood waves a Palestinian flag.

    (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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    Ashley Ahn

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  • Driver wounded as shooter targets cars on 91 Freeway in Corona

    Driver wounded as shooter targets cars on 91 Freeway in Corona

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    Two cars were shot at on the 91 freeway in Corona on Friday night, and the driver of one was hit in the leg by a bullet, law enforcement officials told KTLA.

    The shootings took place around 10:30 p.m. near McKinley St., according to KTLA. A man hit by gunfire was driving east. He was hospitalized and authorities said he was stable. Another car driven by a woman also heading east was hit twice by bullets, but she was not injured, police said.

    No arrests have been made and no information on the shooter has been released, police told KTLA.

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    Jack Flemming

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  • Temple City parrot poacher eludes authorities, enrages bird lovers

    Temple City parrot poacher eludes authorities, enrages bird lovers

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    The throaty squeaks of terror could easily be heard from 20 feet away. A pair of green parrots — likely red-crowned amazons native to northeast Mexico — screeched while hanging upside down inside a clear plastic net.

    They flapped around, the catches of the day, trapped by an unknown fisher of birds who authorities believe has been illegally rounding up parrots throughout Temple City and perhaps the greater San Gabriel Valley for about a week.

    A video captured on Oct. 26 shows a single man pulling down a net nestled amid the city’s leafy London planetrees along Rosemead Boulevard between East Las Tunas Drive and East Broadway. The unidentified man slams the birds against a short concrete wall that he hops over before jumping into his Ford Fusion and driving away.

    The video, the nets in the trees and corpses of dead parrots on the ground make it unclear if the man shown in the video is killing all the birds he traps or is taking some of them with him.

    It is a mystery that the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department acknowledged Friday afternoon it is not close to solving.

    “We have an active investigation and have contacted a few people, but we have no person of interest,” said sheriff’s spokesperson Sgt. Erin Liu, who is based out of the Temple City sheriff’s station. “We are still looking.”

    Liu said the department was “surprised by the emotion” that has fueled calls and letters to the sheriff’s station, City Hall and other governmental agencies.

    A red-crowned amazon is found smashed in Temple City. A man was filmed illegally trapping parrots in a mini mall on Rosemead Boulevard between East Las Tunas Drive and East Broadway Avenue. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is investigating the incident.

    (Courtesy of Ceidy Baker Cordova)

    San Gabriel resident Ceidy Baker Cordova, 44, said the birds — who have their detractors due to their halting early-morning squawking — are “beloved” in the area, which led to her involvement.

    Her husband, Justin Baker, shot the footage as he stopped for coffee around 7:30 a.m. on Oct. 26 while en route to work. Cordova posted the 23-second clip on TikTok, which launched a wave of outrage.

    “In the days leading up to that video, we saw the bodies of dead parrots on our walk near where the guy was setting up nets and it was sick,” Cordova said. “Some of them had little ropes around their necks, and we just had to stop this guy.”

    Cordova said she reached out to Temple City administrators, the Sheriff’s Department, the San Gabriel Valley Humane Society and California’s Fish and Wildlife Department looking for help.

    She hasn’t been able to get any clarity as to who — if anyone — is leading the investigation.

    Temple City Mayor William Man did not respond to a call or email seeking comment. Neither did City Council members.

    In a statement issued by the city, spokesperson Iliana Flores confirmed that residents alerted city personnel about trapped parrots.

    “The City of Temple City is working with the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department to investigate this matter,” the statement read. “City staff surveyed Las Tunas Drive, Rosemead Boulevard and other streets and took down all the nets.”

    A spokesperson for the San Gabriel Valley Humane Society also acknowledged that they had received complaints from the public and forwarded all information to the Sheriff’s Department.

    Liu said one issue that vexed the department during its investigation was whether trapping the parrots violates any law.

    “To be honest, we are learning about the whole situation,” Liu said. “We just can’t arrest somebody without there being a charge.”

    A net that could be used to trap birds hangs in between leafy London trees in Temple City.

    A net that could be used to trap birds hangs between leafy London planetrees along Rosemead Boulevard between East Las Tunas Drive and East Broadway in Temple City.

    (Courtesy of Ceidy Baker Cordova)

    After days of back-and-forth consultation with legal experts from California’s Department of Fish and Wildlife, they found a solution: Code 3005.

    The misdemeanor prohibits the unlawful taking of “birds or mammals with any net, pound, cage, trap, set line or wire, or poisonous substance, or to possess birds or mammals.”

    The birds’ non-native status makes them more difficult to protect, according to retired ornithologist Kimball Garrett, a former collections manager at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

    “Non-native birds are not listed for federal or state protection and so the question comes up of how do conservation agencies protect them,” Garrett said.

    Garrett believed the Southern California population was larger than in the bird’s natural habitat of the northern Mexican states of Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosi and Veracruz.

    He estimated there were only a few thousand in Mexico along with some red-crowns that live in Texas.

    “They’ve been under attack as their habitats have been torn up for agriculture in most cases and also urban development in others,” he said. “Of course, the illegal pet trade has also been fueling their demise too.”

    The birds are legally sold online with a price range of $800 to $2,000.

    Garrett said the red-crowned amazon is one of several exotic birds that have found a home in Southern California, along with the lilac-crowned parrots of western Mexico and the mitred parakeets of South America. “In some ways, it can be argued that protecting the red-crown amazons here might be their last best hope,” he said.

    While there are popular origin myths surrounding the birds’ arrival in Southern California — pet shop fire escapees and abandoned birds from the old Busch Gardens in Van Nuys — Garrett said no single explanation tells the real story.

    “It’s a little bit of all of the above with the exception of Busch Gardens, which is not true,” he said. “But it’s possible that the birds you see today are the descendants of escaped pets decades earlier.”

    Seasonal parrots gather in a roost in Temple City, where their loudness can be overwhelming.

    Seasonal parrots gather in a roost in Temple City this past January. Their loudness can be overwhelming.

    (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

    When David Romero moved to East San Gabriel in 1988, one of the first visitors to his home was a red-crowned parrot.

    “They’re as much a part of the neighborhood as anyone else,” said Romero, 66. “We’re all parrot fans and we want to see them protected.”

    David Nelson, Romero’s partner, said the couple’s Texas umbrella and persimmon trees have attracted a variety of visitors, including yellow-crowned amazons, yellow-chevroned parakeets and other parrots.

    “If I can make a prediction, I think the guy is selling them at swap meets,” said Nelson, 76. “They’re worth money.”

    The news of the bird abductions hit L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, a parrot owner, particularly hard.

    Barger said she wakes up to see several birds, including red-crowned amazons, “feasting on the red berries” of a hedge inside her yard.

    She called amazons and parrots “noble” and said she vowed to check in on the investigation.

    “I couldn’t watch the video because it’s just cruelty,” said Barger, whose district includes unincorporated Temple City. “I don’t know what he’s doing with those birds or why he would trap them, but I know we have to stop this.”

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    Andrew J. Campa

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  • More incidents reported in L.A. after antisemitic graffiti discovered outside Canter’s Deli

    More incidents reported in L.A. after antisemitic graffiti discovered outside Canter’s Deli

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    The same day that antisemitic graffiti was found painted outside Canter’s Deli in the Fairfax district this week, at least half a dozen other similar incidents of vandalism were discovered at Jewish businesses, synagogues and schools around L.A., authorities said.

    Some of the other incidents of vandalism were reported on Wednesday in the Pico-Roberston neighborhood, known for its large Jewish community, and included anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian messages, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The incident outside Canter’s is being investigated as a possible hate crime, Los Angeles police said.

    The graffiti included messages in white paint under the popular Fairfax Community Mural, which faces Canter’s parking lot and features historic figures of Los Angeles’ Jewish community, such as Dodgers legend Sandy Koufax. The graffiti included messages that read, “Israel’s only religion is capitalism,” “How many dead in the name of greed?” and “Free Gaza.”

    Jewish and civic leaders denounced the incidents as antisemitic attacks on their community, which come amid an escalating war between Israel and Hamas militants, who launched a brutal offensive from neighboring Gaza on southern Israel on Oct. 7.

    Since then, more than 1,400 people have died on the Israeli side, with Palestinian militants continuing to hold about 220 people hostage. More than 8,300 Palestinians have been killed in the war, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

    After the Oct. 7 attack, the Anti-Defamation League has said harassment, vandalism and attacks against Jews have surged around the country.

    “Vandalizing and targeting synagogues, Jewish neighborhoods and a mural about local Jewish history on the wall of the iconic Canter’s Deli on Fairfax Boulevard is heinous and antisemitic,” said Jeffrey Abrams, Los Angeles regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Los Angeles.

    In addition to the Canter’s incident, the Los Angeles Police Department also confirmed a second act of vandalism in the 300 block of La Brea Avenue, which is also being investigated as a possible hate crime.

    In all, five additional incidents were reported Wednesday to the Anti-Defamation League and relayed to the LAPD, according to the Jewish civil rights organization. A spokesperson for the LAPD could not confirm that reports were taken for those incidents.

    Two utility boxes located in front of a yeshiva, a Jewish academy of Talmudic learning, in the 1200 block of South La Cienega Boulevard were tagged with “Free Gaza,” according to the ADL. A similar message was found two blocks away, near the intersection of Whitworth Drive and South Orlando Boulevard.

    A poster at a bus stop was also spray-painted with the message “Free Gaza” near the intersection of Pico Boulevard and Alfred Street. A construction site near Melrose and La Brea avenues was vandalized with “I$rael Killers” in white paint.

    And Congregation Bais Yehuda, in the 360 block of North La Brea Avenue, was also spray-painted with “Free Gaza,” according to the ADL.

    The incidents, reported to the ADL, included images of the graffiti, which were reviewed by The Times.

    On the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter, Los Angeles City Councilwoman Katy Yaroslavsky called the incidents “disgusting.” Yaroslavsky, whose districts includes the locations where the graffiti was found, said her staff responded to a total of seven incidents in her district.

    “Jews in L.A. have been sounding the alarm on the rise in anti-semitism for years,” she wrote on X. “It’s disgusting and it has no place in Los Angeles.”

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    Salvador Hernandez

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  • Column: You said you were the anti-De León, Wendy. You’re more like a disappointment

    Column: You said you were the anti-De León, Wendy. You’re more like a disappointment

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    The L.A. politics chisme mill flooded my phone with texts and calls this morning. Was it true that Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo was arrested on suspicion of drunk driving?

    My immediate thought:

    Not Wendy.

    Not the candidate for the L.A. City Council 14th District seat held by Kevin de León in a race that’s roiling Eastside politics.

    Not the Roosevelt High and Cal State Los Angeles graduate who loves to speak to students and community groups to let Latinas know that more of them are needed in politics.

    Not the former radio personality who used to host a public affairs show on Power 106 called “Knowledge Is Power” that profiled local heroes and urged Latinos to uplift our community at all times.

    Not the daughter of Mexican and Salvadoran immigrants who has fought the good fight in Sacramento for undocumented Californians and to get restitution for women sterilized by the state without their consent.

    Yep, Wendy. The chisme turned out to be true.

    Carrillo, 43, was booked Friday morning on suspicion of driving under the influence and being involved in a traffic collision while having a high blood-alcohol count — in other words, double the legal limit or more. A law enforcement source said that police responded around 1:30 a.m. to the 6200 block of Monterey Road near Highland Park, where a motorist had struck two parked cars.

    In a statement released before she left jail, Carrillo apologized, though she didn’t say anything about an arrest or allegedly driving while intoxicated. “I must adhere to a higher standard that demands personal accountability for my conduct and I accept responsibility for my actions,” Carrillo wrote. “I intend to seek the necessary help and support.”

    Oy vey, Wendy.

    Considered one of De León’s two main challengers, her arrest will inevitably launch a sea of “Wino Wendy” opposition mailers from now until the March primary. Whether her chances are kaput is something Eastside voters get to decide — if she stays in the race. But she can no longer claim the moral high ground against De León, who’s still trying to move on after he mocked Black political power on a leaked tape that upended City Hall.

    It’s one thing to be caught talking bigoted trash in a secretly recorded conversation. It’s another to get behind the wheel after too many drinks and crash into the night.

    That stain to Carrillo’s reputation and career is permanent. She’s no longer going to be thought of as just a homegrown champion of the Eastside. She’s the latest Latina politician to make her constituents proud, then embarrass them with stupid falls from grace that never had to happen.

    In 2018, it was Bell-area Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, who was stripped of her committee assignments after being investigated for allegedly sexually harassing a male staffer years earlier. Though cleared of that charge, Garcia was found to have violated the Assembly’s sexual harassment policy for “commonly and pervasively” using foul language.

    Last year, it was then-L.A. City Council President Nury Martinez, the first Latina to hold that position and someone who reveled in presenting herself as la más chingona — the boss bitch — of City Hall. She resigned after she appeared on the same tape as De León, uttering anti-Black and anti-Oaxacan nonsense.

    This summer, Riverside City Councilmember Clarissa Cervantes was arrested for the second time on drunk driving charges just weeks after having told a judge, “Each day I carry remorse and promise to never repeat those actions.” That hasn’t stopped the 32-year-old from continuing to run for the Assembly seat held by her sister, Sabrina.

    Now, Wendy.

    Politicians of all genders and ethnicities mess up, of course. But Carrillo’s arrest is especially disappointing, coming in a year where Los Angeles lost two legendary Latina politicians: former L.A. County Supervisor Gloria Molina and former Assemblymember Cindy Montañez. The two leaned on their backgrounds to fight against a racist, macho world that would be better if only more mujeres had a say in it.

    Molina and Montañez were beloved precisely because they held themselves to a higher standard as Latinas, because allies and enemies alike knew that they were true public servants — no way would they get caught violating the public’s trust, whether on or off the job.

    Driving while boozed up as an elected official is as bad a middle finger to regular folk as you can give.

    You’re always a fool if you drink and drive. In this day and age of Uber and Lyft, you’re a straight-up pendejo. When you’re a politician and do that, you probably shouldn’t be in office. Constituents entrust to you the responsibility of devising policy and making things run right. The last thing they need to worry about is you smashing into their cars early in the morning.

    Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo shows murals that are defaced by grafitti in Boyle Heights

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    It’s especially maddening that Carrillo got caught up in an easily avoidable mistake. In 2020, she was reprimanded by then-Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon for “unwelcome” behavior after she was accused of inappropriately hugging and kissing an employee. Did she not realize that opponents have had her under a microscope ever since?

    It’s even more frustrating when you consider that Carrillo can lean on mentors like state Sen. Maria Elena Durazo and former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, and a roster of friends across the Eastside, whenever she needs help. Did no one in that circle think to have a handler around Carrillo at every public appearance, in the lead-up to one of the most contentious political races to hit the Eastside in decades?

    I’m sadly familiar with drunk driving arrests. Friends have lost their jobs and relationships. My father was collared at least twice when I was a young child, although he’s been sober now for over 40 years. Carrillo should take whatever legal penalties may come her way and not ask for any special treatment. Then, she should spend the rest of her life and career urging everyone not to drink and drive — and offer herself as a cautionary tale.

    Already, calls are coming for Carrillo to drop out of the council race, and even resign her Assembly post. She probably won’t, but she should at least think about it — as a lesson in humility, and as a reminder of what could’ve been.

    I still remember when she and I met at her family home in Boyle Heights in the spring, after she told me she was running for City Council. We walked down Avenida Cesar Chavez, where shopkeepers and pedestrians greeted her with genuine joy.

    She cast herself as the anti-De León, someone who wouldn’t embarrass Latinos and the Eastside with hubris — and she also claimed the Eastside deserved someone who actually cared. We saw streets in disrepair, trash inside planters, historic murals tagged beyond recognition.

    “It’s not even about Kevin,” Carrillo said then. “It’s about respecting this community.”

    A DUI arrest is not respecting the community. All you had to do was call an Uber.

    Ay, Wendy.

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    Gustavo Arellano

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  • Magnitude 4.0 earthquake hits near Ventura

    Magnitude 4.0 earthquake hits near Ventura

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    A magnitude 4.0 earthquake was reported Friday afternoon seven miles from Ventura, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

    The earthquake occurred at 1:12 p.m. and eight miles from Santa Paula, 12 miles from Oxnard, 14 miles from Camarillo and 15 miles from Fillmore.

    In the last 10 days, there have been no earthquakes of magnitude 3.0 or greater centered nearby.

    An average of 234 earthquakes with magnitudes between 3.0 and 4.0 occur per year in California and Nevada, according to a recent three-year data sample.

    The earthquake occurred at a depth of 6.5 miles. Did you feel this earthquake? Consider reporting what you felt to the USGS.

    Are you ready for when the Big One hits? Get ready for the next big earthquake by signing up for our Unshaken newsletter, which breaks down emergency preparedness into bite-sized steps over six weeks. Learn more about earthquake kits, which apps you need, Lucy Jones’ most important advice and more at latimes.com/Unshaken.

    This story was automatically generated by Quakebot, a computer application that monitors the latest earthquakes detected by the USGS. A Times editor reviewed the post before it was published. If you’re interested in learning more about the system, visit our list of frequently asked questions.

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    Quakebot

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  • Catalina Island diner owners underpaid workers, required 18-hour days, D.A. says

    Catalina Island diner owners underpaid workers, required 18-hour days, D.A. says

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    Los Angeles County prosecutors charged the owners of a popular old-school Catalina Island diner and pizza restaurant with withholding over a half a million dollars in wages from their employees and expecting them to work 18-hour days.

    The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office announced Thursday it had charged Jack Arthur Tucey, 80, and Yueh Mei Tucey, 75, with felony grand labor and wage theft, among other charges. The Tuceys, a married couple who run three restaurants and a hotel in Avalon, face a maximum sentence of 22 years in prison if convicted, according to prosecutors.

    The district attorney’s office said the couple would have their workers rotate around their Avalon businesses, regularly working 12-hour days or longer. For the overtime, Dist. Atty. George Gascón said employees would be paid only minimum wage — a violation of California law requiring that workers earn above their hourly rates when they work days longer than eight hours.

    Prosecutors also accused the couple of filing fraudulent statements with the state’s Employment Development Department, concealing the real wages they were paying to their workers.

    “What you will see in this case is individuals that for years have been operating in Catalina Island exploiting many workers,” Gascón said at a news conference Thursday.

    Gascón said the office has identified 18 workers who were victims of wage theft, many of them immigrants who were living on the couple’s property. He said he believed additional workers would soon come forward.

    The Tuceys were arrested Thursday, according to the district attorney’s office, and could not be reached for comment.

    Since 2001, the couple have owned multiple businesses across the tourist town, according to prosecutors, who said they now own a hotel and three restaurants: Original Jack’s Country Kitchen, Mrs. T’s Chinese Kitchen and Avalon Bake Shop and Original Antonio’s Pizzeria and Deli.

    Lilia García-Brower, the California labor commissioner, said her team’s investigation into the owners began in 2017 and determined that everyone from busboys to maintenance workers had been systemically underpaid, with some forced to clock out prematurely in the payroll system to avoid their overtime hours getting documented.

    If they left the job, she said, they faced eviction, which deterred employees from confronting the owners.

    “Many of these employees were also living in the properties owned by these defendants, which placed them in a particularly vulnerable situation,” García-Brower said. “All the workers lived on Catalina Island, they were geographically isolated and feared being blacklisted if speaking up.”

    She said last month her team conducted an audit of wages paid to the 18 workers interviewed and found they were owed more than $1 million in unpaid wages from 2008 to 2022.

    Court records show Jack Tucey had been sued twice over failure to pay wages. In July 2016, his handyman, Francisco Rodriguez, alleged he’d often worked six days a week but was never paid an overtime rate. In January 2021, two employees of Original Jack’s Country Kitchen — Lin Mei Qian and Xiv Peng Sonog — sued the couple, alleging they had never received overtime pay or the meal periods they were entitled to under California law.

    It’s the second case to come out of the district attorney’s Labor Justice Unit, formed in September to prosecute wage theft cases. That month, the office filed charges against owners of two garment businesses in South Los Angeles, who allegedly paid workers as little as $6 an hour.

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    Rebecca Ellis

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  • Gunman shoots one person outside the Grove, flees in Lamborghini, police say

    Gunman shoots one person outside the Grove, flees in Lamborghini, police say

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    A gunman shot one person outside the Grove before fleeing the high-end shopping center in a Lamborghini, according to Los Angeles police.

    Police were investigating the incident, which was reported at 3:22 p.m. Thursday in the parking lot near Beverly Boulevard and the Grove Drive.

    The victim went to a hospital on their own and was later described as stable. Police said the shooter used a handgun, but they had no details of how the shooting occurred. Officers were on their way to the hospital to follow up, a spokesperson said late Thursday afternoon.

    The shooter was described as a man with dreadlocks, standing 6 feet tall and wearing a white shirt and black pants. The license plate of the car he was driving was 8WWS816.

    Police were outside the popular shopping destination for more than an hour to investigate the shooting.

    No additional information was immediately available.

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    Jeremy Childs

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  • A squatter, a shotgun and stolen items: How one man overstayed his welcome in Yosemite

    A squatter, a shotgun and stolen items: How one man overstayed his welcome in Yosemite

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    A man squatting in Yosemite National Park was sentenced to more than five years and three months in prison on Monday for breaking into a private residence and possessing a sawed-off shotgun and ammunition, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Sacramento.

    Devin Michael Cuellar, 29, broke into the home on Koon Hollar Road in Wawona in 2021 and resided there for several months without permission from the owner, damaging and stealing property, according to federal prosecutors. Cuellar was previously convicted of carjacking and possessing controlled substances for sale and was prohibited from possessing firearms and ammunition.

    He is also a longtime gang member who is known to use narcotics such as heroin, prosecutors said.

    Cuellar, who had already been jailed for 11 months, asked to be sentenced to time served with 60 months’ probation and in-patient treatment for his drug abuse, according to a sentencing memo. But prosecutors requested a term of 63 months, noting he had received lenient sentences in the past but still “led his life from one bad decision to another.”

    The National Park Service was assisted in its investigation by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the U.S. Marshals Service, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the California Department of Justice’s Bureau of Forensic Services and the Madera County Sheriff’s Office.

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    Roberto Reyes

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  • ‘Succession’ star Alan Ruck reportedly crashed into Hollywood pizza parlor

    ‘Succession’ star Alan Ruck reportedly crashed into Hollywood pizza parlor

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    The universe apparently wanted “Succession” star Alan Ruck to get some pizza on Halloween.

    Surveillance video shows a Rivian truck — reportedly driven by Ruck — smash into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza in Hollywood. Los Angeles police confirmed to The Times that a crash occurred around 9 p.m. Tuesday at the intersection of La Brea Avenue and Hollywood Boulevard.

    Four vehicles were involved in the collision, according to LAPD Sgt. Hector Guzman.

    “There were injuries reported, but they appear to be minor,” Guzman said. “Nothing life threatening in nature.”

    Surveillance video captured the action. The Rivian is traveling southbound on La Brea approaching Hollywood Boulevard when it rear-ends a vehicle. The impact pushes that vehicle into the intersection, where it then crashes into a another vehicle. The Rivian, meanwhile, has continued in a southwest direction, clipping a separate car before slamming into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza. Photos show the cab of the truck breaking through the building’s exterior.

    A truck slammed into the wall of a pizza shop in Hollywood on Tuesday night.

    (KTLA)

    “The whole building shook and I thought a bomb or something had exploded,” Tim Ratcliff, who owns restaurants close to Raffallo’s, told KTLA.

    Ratcliff told the outlet that he rushed to help the driver, who “appeared more concerned about the well-being of others than his own.”

    No one involved in the incident was arrested for driving under the influence, police said.

    According to TMZ, Ruck stayed at the scene of the crash. He was seen outside of his vehicle, talking on his cellphone while the damage was assessed.

    The police investigation into the crash is ongoing.

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    Emily St. Martin

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  • Antelope Valley expecting 4th morning in a row with freezing temps

    Antelope Valley expecting 4th morning in a row with freezing temps

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    Freezing temperatures are again expected across the Antelope Valley early Thursday, the fourth morning in a row with weather officials warning of the potential for dangerously cold weather.

    Since Monday, the Antelope Valley has been under a freeze warning during the early morning hours, said Joe Sirard, a National Weather Service meteorologist based in Oxnard.

    “This will be the fourth night in a row of subfreezing temperatures out there.”

    Sirard said the freezes were slightly early in the season, but not entirely unprecedented.

    Low temperatures are forecast at 30 degrees from 3 a.m. to 8 a.m. Thursday. The freeze warning is also in effect for the Salinas Valley in coastal Central California.

    “There’s always a chance that pipes could freeze if people don’t prepare,” Sirard said. He said sensitive vegetation could also be at risk in the cold, and the official alert noted that “extended exposure to cold can cause hypothermia for animals and people.”

    It wasn’t immediately clear how shelters in the area were preparing, if at all, for another morning of frigid temperatures.

    The Los Angeles Homeless Service Authority has a winter shelter program that began Wednesday, but the two participating shelters located in the Antelope Valley — one in Lancaster and one in Palmdale — were not scheduled to not be open until later this week or next month.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • Deal struck to remove homeless hotel housing measure from L.A.’s March ballot

    Deal struck to remove homeless hotel housing measure from L.A.’s March ballot

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    Los Angeles City Council President Paul Krekorian has struck a deal with the politically powerful hotel workers’ union to remove a measure from the March election ballot that would have required hotels to participate in a city program to put homeless residents in vacant hotel rooms.

    Under the agreement, the City Council would approve a new package of regulations on the development of new hotels, forcing such projects to go through a more extensive approval process. Hotel developers also would be required to replace any housing that is demolished to make way for their projects, by building new residential units or buying and renovating existing ones.

    In exchange, the union’s proposal for placing homeless residents in vacant hotel rooms would be explicitly listed as voluntary, a move that would cause it to resemble Inside Safe, the program created by Mayor Karen Bass to combat homelessness. Hotel owners are willing participants in that program.

    Unite Here Local 11, which represents 32,000 hospitality workers in Southern California and Arizona, praised the agreement, saying it would ensure that the city places a priority on the creation of housing, not luxury hotels. Many of Unite Here’s members have been unable to find decently priced homes near their jobs, forcing them to endure punishing commutes.

    “We have said all along that our contract campaign has been about two things: housing for our members where they work and a living wage,” Kurt Petersen, the union’s co-president, said in a statement. “With this ordinance, we have done more to protect housing than any single contract demand would have done.”

    The proposal has already received signatures from five other council members — Hugo Soto-Martínez, John Lee, Katy Yaroslavsky, Nithya Raman and Traci Park — putting it two votes shy of passage. Park, who serves on the council’s trade and tourism committee, said she believes the original measure would have had “catastrophic consequences” for tourism locally had it won voter approval, by mandating that hotels take in homeless residents without accompanying social services.

    “The thought of putting individuals, many of whom have very serious mental health and substance abuse issues, [in hotel rooms] without on-site services is a recipe for disaster,” she said.

    Wednesday’s deal comes as Unite Here enters its fifth month of rolling strike actions as its members fight for higher wages and better working conditions. So far, four hotels across Southern California have reached salary agreements with the union.

    Unite Here also has been fighting a number of hotel projects that would result in the elimination of low-cost apartments, particularly those covered by the city’s rent stabilization law, which places a cap on yearly rent increases. Under the Krekorian proposal, the city would need to determine whether there is “sufficient market demand” for a new hotel project, while also identifying whether it would have an impact on demand for housing, childcare and other services.

    Unite Here has become a major force in L.A. politics, putting hundreds of thousands of dollars into a campaign to last year elect Soto-Martínez, a former Unite Here organizer himself. The union is also skilled at gathering signatures for ballot measures in and around L.A.

    Last year, Unite Here qualified a measure for the March ballot requiring the city’s Housing Department to create a new voucher program to serve the city’s unhoused population. Under that proposal, hotel managers would have been tasked with informing the city each day about the number of vacant rooms they had. Hotels also would have been required to accept temporary housing vouchers issued by the city under such a program.

    The hotel industry responded by launching a publicity campaign against the measure, warning that it would put hotel workers in danger. The campaign repeatedly pointed to problems in the city’s Project Roomkey program, which placed homeless residents in hotels after the outbreak of COVID-19.

    Project Roomkey, which is no longer in effect, generated a spate of internal City Hall reports about property damage, drug use and violence at hotels in downtown, Westlake and the San Fernando Valley.

    Heather Rozman, president and chief executive of the Hotel Assn. of Los Angeles, said her organization is still studying the proposal but commended council members for being willing to “listen to all sides of the issue.”

    Inside Safe, the program launched by Bass to combat homelessness, already uses dozens of hotels and motels as temporary housing. Bass, looking to scale back room rental costs, is also working to purchase hotel and motel properties for that program.

    The proposed ordinance would also require that both hotels and hosts of short-term rentals on platforms such as Airbnb secure operating permits from the Los Angeles Police Department. Both Krekorian and the union said such a move would help neighborhoods fight back against short-term rental properties that have “nuisance” activities, such as drug sales or noisy parties.

    “Irresponsible hotel and short-term rental operators cannot be allowed to endanger the public safety or impair the quality of life in our neighborhoods,” Krekorian said.

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    David Zahniser

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  • Photos: WeHo’s Halloween Carnaval returns for the first time since the pandemic

    Photos: WeHo’s Halloween Carnaval returns for the first time since the pandemic

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    They were all there. Elvis, Ken and Barbie, cowboys, you name it.

    One of the wildest Halloween parties in Southern California was back in full force.

    West Hollywood’s Halloween Carnaval returned to a one-mile stretch of Santa Monica Boulevard for the first time since before the pandemic.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    Joe Castro is somewhere among those heads as he joins thousands of revelers at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    A dancer performs in the shadows on stage along with a DJ.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    A dancer performs in the shadows on stage along with a DJ. After a four-year hiatus, tens of thousands of revelers attend the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    An Uber driver dressed as Jack Skellington sits in traffic on Santa Monica Boulevard.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    An Uber driver dressed as Jack Skelington sits in traffic on Santa Monica Blvd. as a long stretch is shut down for the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    A gaggle of "Slappy" dummies parades along Santa Monica Boulevard in support of R.L. Stine's "Goosebumps" series.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    A gaggle of “Slappy” dummies parade along Santa Monica Blvd. in support of R.L. Stine’s, Goosebumps series, joining thousands of revelers at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    The "Psycho Bunnies" join thousands of revelers at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    The “Psycho Bunnies,” join thousands of revelers at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    Daisy Cobos dressed as "Madame Leota," the witch from Disneyland's Haunted Mansion ride.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    Daisy Cobos dressed as “Madame Leota,” the witch from Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion ride.

    Justin Marchert as "Squidward," plays a clarinet as Halloween revelers pass by.

    (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

    Justin Marchert as “Squidward,” plays a clarinet at the corner Hancock and Santa Monica Blvd. as Halloween revelers pass by.

    Brynna Holland with Alex Tomlinson dressed as a convict at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    Brynna Holland with Alex Tomlinson dressed as a convict at the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    Thousands of revelers attend the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval after a four-year hiatus.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    After a four-year hiatus, tens of thousands of revelers attend the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    Cowboys engage in a long kiss in front of religious protesters near the entrance of the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    Cowboys engage in a long kiss in front of religious protesters near the entrance of the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval.

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    Robert Gauthier

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