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Tag: mayor karen bass

  • ‘I Will Not Be Silenced,’ Defiant Don Lemon Tells Scrum Of Reporters After Release – LAmag

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    The former CNN journalist was called ‘One of the most well-known figures in the world’ by his defense attorney before he was released on personal recognizances

    Former CNN host Don Lemon said he was arrested in “the middle of the night,” woken in by federal agents who stormed his Beverly Hills hotel room where he was staying to cover this week’s Grammy Awards show.

    Lemon, 59, came into court wearing a cream-colored suit and blew a kiss to his husband Tim Malone, who was seated behind LA Mayor Karen Bass and her team before taking a seat next to his defense attorney Marilyn E. Bednarski. Bass had expressed outrage at Lemon’s arrest on social media Friday morning writing: “Don Lemon, an internationally known and renowned journalist and friend, was arrested last night by federal agents and is now in custody in Los Angeles – simply for doing his job and following a protest into a church in Minneapolis while reporting the story.”

    Mayor Karen Bass leaves a Little Tokyo courthouse after showing support for Don Lemon, who was federally charged with civil rights violations in Minnesota
    Credit: Michele McPhee

    Lemon spent the night in a lockup, charged in a federal indictment out of Minnesota, connected to a Jan. 18 protest at a church that forced parishioners to leave in tears. An indictment describes activists planning the disruption at a place of worship that came after protestors learned one of its pastors, David Easterwood, also works as an Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency official in St. Paul.

    Upon his release, he held hands with his husband and faced a scrum of journalists – as the sound of protestors who were part of a national anti-ICE walkout bellowed in the backdrop – and vowed that he “would not be silenced.”

    “I have spent my entire career covering the news. I will not stop now,” Lemon said. “In fact, there is no more important time than right now, this very moment, for a free and independent media that shines a light on the truth and holds those in power accountable.”

    Lemon prosecutors say, “knowingly joined a mob to terrorize” members of Cities Church in St. Paul. L.A.’s top federal prosecutor was in court as Assistant United States Attorney Alexander Robbins argued that preventing parishioners from worshipping was “a very serious felony.” Robbins argued for a $100,000 bond, which  Magistrate Judge Patricia Donahue denied, and requested that Lemon surrender his passport.

    His attorney called that request unnecessary, calling Lemon “one of the most well-known figures in the world,” a man who was not a flight risk.

    Lemon was charged after a grand jury heard evidence in the case. The Justice Department had drafted a criminal complaint to charge a total of eight people, including Lemon, but the federal magistrate judge who reviewed the evidence approved charges against only three of the people — civil rights attorney Nekima Levy Armstrong, Chauntyll Allen and William Kelly, who had taunted Attorney General Pam Bondi on social media.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Trump rails against low-income housing in Pacific Palisades. But officials say no projects are planned

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    President Trump’s foray this week into the fire rebuilding process in Pacific Palisades has been met with confusion and rolled eyes from local officials who say he’s now railing against projects that have never even been proposed.

    Trump said Thursday he planned to stop a low-income housing project from being developed in Pacific Palisades. His promise, made during a Cabinet meeting, marked the second time this week he has weighed in on local housing issues in the fire-scarred Palisades.

    “They want to build a low-income housing project right in the middle of everything in the Palisades, and I’m not going to allow it to happen,” Trump said. “I’m not going to let these people destroy the value of their houses.”

    The comments left politicians around Los Angeles and California scratching their heads: what low-income housing project was the president referring to?

    Both Councilmember Traci Park and Mayor Karen Bass said they did not know of a major, low-income housing project coming to the Palisades.

    “There are no plans to bring low-income housing to the Palisades,” Bass said in a phone interview with The Times on Thursday from Washington, D.C. “It’s not true. There couldn’t possibly be a project that neither the councilmember nor the mayor would have any knowledge of.”

    Trump also took aim at Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday as he announced an executive order to “preempt” the city’s permitting process to make it easier for fire victims to rebuild.

    The order, if implemented, would allow residents to self-certify to federal authorities instead of going through city bureaucracy for permits.

    Bass said Thursday that she would welcome an executive order that would bring the insurance and banking industries together to help Angelenos whose houses burned down get more significant insurance payouts and longer-term mortgages.

    The Governor’s Office also said they had no idea what low-income housing project Trump was referring to on Thursday.

    “The president of the United States is a bumbling idiot and has no idea what he’s talking about,” said Izzy Gardon, a spokesperson for Newsom. “This narrative that Gavin Newsom is trying to build high-density, low-income housing in the Palisades and turn them into ‘Newsomvilles’ is absurd.”

    Gardon said the state is providing resources for developers to rebuild below-market-rate housing that was destroyed in the Palisades fire, which tore through the beach-side enclave in January 2025, killing 12 and destroying thousands of homes and structures.

    In July, the governor committed $101 million to help rebuilding efforts of “affordable multifamily rental housing in the fire-devastated Los Angeles region.”

    The financing was for areas affected by both the Palisades and Eaton fires.

    The program allows affordable housing developers to apply for financing and prioritizes projects that are near wildfire burn areas, ready for immediate construction.

    The program required the developments to remain affordable for more than a half-century to receive the funding.

    Trump did not specify Thursday whether he was speaking about the July announcement or about a specific project.

    “That was money that went to the L.A. area for the four communities impacted by the fires to help developers to rebuild low-income mixed-use housing that was destroyed by the fires,” Gardon said.

    Maryam Zar, a Palisades resident, said that many in the Palisades feared a new project on the site of a Shell gas station that developer Justin Kohanoff said he wanted to build into an eight-story, 100-unit, low-income building.

    Kohanoff’s father, Saeed Kohanoff, declined to comment beyond saying the family has no immediate plans to develop the property.

    The Trump administration did not immediately specify what low-income housing project, if any in particular, the president was speaking about.

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    Noah Goldberg, Ana Ceballos

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  • Rick Caruso Eyes Run For… Well, Something – LAmag

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    The real estate mogul signals a major political move as he reflects on the Palisades fire and his future in public life

    Developer Rick Caruso spent his 66th birthday last Jan. 7 watching helplessly as a hurricane of flames devoured his beloved Pacific Palisades, a community where he both worked and lived. His home was heavily damaged, but it is still standing. His daughter, Gigi, and son, Justin, were not as fortunate, with each of them losing their homes in the flames.

    On Wednesday, Caruso’s birthday celebration was decidedly more hopeful. Surrounded by his wife Tina and their four children, along with his Saint Monica’s Catholic Parish Monsignor, and a rabbi to “cover all the bases,” he joked, Caruso dedicated a display similar to the one that lights up the night sky in lower Manhattan every September 11 to commemorate the tragedy at the twin towers. Only “Three Beams of Light,” which Caruso calls a symbol of “reflection, gratitude and hope,” commemorate the 31 lives lost across Los Angeles County – a dozen of those victims killed in the Palisades fire that ravaged his neighborhood – along with all of those whose possessions, memories and livelihood remain in limbo after wind-fueled firestorms ripped through their lives in fires that began on Jan. 7 and were not completely extinguished until Jan. 31, 2025.

    The three beams represented symbols of unity between the impacted communities and of the strength and resilience of all Angelenos. 

    “Three Beams of Light” will illuminate the night sky until Jan. 31 at Palisades Village
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Wednesday evening’s dedication ceremony in Palisades Village, which was completely unscathed by flames, came on a day that hundreds of the Caruso family’s neighbors took to the street for protests and fury. During a “They Let Us Burn” event, one of its organizers, lifelong resident of the Pacific Palisades Spencer Pratt, announced that instead of complaining about Mayor Karen Bass and pointing out the city’s failures in handling the Palisades fire, he was going to run to replace her. “I wish him all the best,” Caruso told Los Angeles in an interview on Wednesday night about Pratt’s Mayoral candidacy. “I think it’s great that people are getting into races.”

    But when asked about his own political aspirations, Caruso said that the grim anniversary of the deadly fire was “not a day for politics,” but that an announcement is imminent. All signs are pointing to a Gubernatorial run for the billionaire real estate developer. He has hired a political staff that works primarily in state, not local politics, and has indicated to deep-pocketed donors that he is eyeing a seat in Sacramento.

    In the Los Angeles interview, Caruso seemed to support that he plans to run for California’s highest office, saying: “If I am going to go do this, I want to go to a place where I am going to get the most done and have the greatest impact to help people.” Caruso added that his announcement will be made within the next two weeks. “When I announce, I will give up my logic.”

    One thing that is off the table, however, is not running for anything at all, Caruso said.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Mayor Bass Says City Hall Menorah Vandalism Not a Hate Crime

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    A New Year’s Day break in led to damage in City Hall rotunda, broken windows and the destruction of a menorah display, Mayor Karen Bass says

    A Los Angeles man was arrested for smashing into City Hall, where he allegedly went on a destructive rampage, breaking windows and destroying a historic menorah in the building on loan for the holidays, Mayor Karen Bass said.

    Bass emphasized that she does not believe the menorah vandalization constituted a hate crime, but that she was “deeply disturbed” that the Katowicz menorah on display in the third-floor rotunda was damaged. Bass said that windows, a glass display case, and computer equipment were also damaged in the break-in.

    “While there is no indication that the vandalism to the menorah was a hate crime, I was deeply disturbed that this historic menorah was damaged,” Bass said. “I personally called the Cunin family, who each year generously loan the menorah to City Hall and the people of Los Angeles, to inform them of the incident.

    Police have arrested a suspect, Jose Gonzalez Chavez, who is now awaiting charges pending a mental health evaluation. It is unclear how Chavez was able to not only access a sensitive building, but to create havoc for such a long period of time, which led the Mayor to say that she has ordered a full evaluation of security at City Hall.”

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Downtown Decay Threatens L.A.’s Legacy Sandwich Shops

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    The smell hits before the lights come on.

    At Cole’s French Dip, a 117-year-old landmark on Sixth Street, employees start each morning not by slicing roast beef but by scrubbing the sidewalk. Shoveling debris. Power washing waste they pray isn’t human steps away from the doorway. Checking the stoop for needles before unlocking the door. Downtown L.A.’s oldest restaurant has survived Prohibition, recessions, and a pandemic—but it can’t survive this. The owner said it plainly: the neighborhood died around us.

    A few miles west, at Langer’s Deli near MacArthur Park, the famous No. 19 pastrami sandwich still draws lunchtime pilgrims. But the owner, Norm Langer, admits he’s no longer sure how long he can keep going. “We’re doing what the city should be doing,” he told reporters earlier this year, describing the daily ritual of cleaning drug paraphernalia from the curb before customers arrive. “You just hope nobody gets hurt.”

    These aren’t newcomers complaining about downtown grit; they’re institutions that fed this city for generations. Their exits and doubts aren’t about fickle customers, they’re about survival in a civic environment that’s turned toxic.

    According to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, homelessness within the city rose about 10 percent in 2023, reaching roughly 46,000 people. In the downtown core, encampments grew another 15 percent in the same period, overwhelming sanitation and safety resources. Illegal-dumping complaints citywide rose 5 percent in 2024. Street sweeping that once happened weekly now occurs every other week, and to business owners, that’s an eternity.

    The city insists it’s responding. Mayor Karen Bass’s Inside Safe program has moved thousands from encampments into temporary housing, while the Bureau of Street Services and L.A. Sanitation tout expanded cleanup teams and 311 pickup requests. Yet downtown still depends heavily on its Business Improvement Districts, which now spend more than $20 million a year on private cleanup and security. The message to small businesses is clear: survival is a DIY project.

    Downtown’s legacy restaurants were never hardened gems; they’ve always been more like the delicate loaves of sourdough every Instagrammer embraced during lockdown, delicious acts of labor that need warmth, timing, and care. They’ve fed office workers and night-shift cops, tourists and tenants.. But bread goes stale and molds when left out too long, and downtown has been left out for too many years.

    Since 2023, at least five downtown mainstays, Cole’s French Dip, Nickel Diner, Yxta Cocina Mexicana, Guerrilla Tacos, and the Original Pantry Café, have shuttered or announced closures, citing crime, encampments, and relentless upkeep costs. The survivors are exhausted, fighting to keep their doors open in a city that’s given up on keeping its sidewalks clean.

    At closing time, when the last of the staff leaves Cole’s, the lights go out, and the smell of roasted beef disappears from Sixth Street. What lingers is the bleach, the dust, and the question hanging over every block of downtown Los Angeles:

    How do you bake anything fresh in a city so rotten?

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    Alexandra Kazarian

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  • Evacuation Warning Issued for Pacific Palisades Burn Areas

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Pacific Palisades Residents Blast LAFD Report

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    The arrest of a suspected arsonist did little to assuage the fury of Pacific Palisades residents who continue to grapple with insurance company stonewalling and other issues connected to their devastating losses that came with LAFD missteps

    The announcement that an arsonist was responsible for starting a fire a full seven days before her home – and nearly 6000 others – were destroyed in the Pacific Palisades, the coastal neighborhood where Allison Polhill has lived for three decades, did little to bring her any answers about why her house burned.

    “It gave me a pit in my stomach,” Polhill told Los Angeles on Wednesday, the day that federal prosecutors announced charges against a 29-year-old former short-term Pacific Palisades resident who “maliciously” set brush ablaze in Topanga State Park in the early morning hours of New Year’s Day. “It didn’t bring peace, it opened a wound because him setting that fire is not an explanation as to why my house burned down.”

    Those answers, Polhill and other residents who surrounded City Councilwoman Traci Park at the Palisades Village Green, the eerie hull of a smoke-stained foundation of a Romanesque building that anchored the downtown area behind them a stark reminder of the devastation the community suffered, lie with the city of Los Angeles and missteps, the LAFD has now acknowledged in an After-Action Review Report released hours after the arrest of Jonathan Rinderknecht was announced.

    The report details the department’s challenges with staffing and communication — and acknowledges a lack of readiness among the seasoned veterans of the LAFD. The report found that inadequate resources were dedicated to the initial firefight and that evacuation orders were delayed, causing roads to be clogged with abandoned vehicles left behind by fleeing, panicked residents.

    Mayor Karen Bass – who was criticized for being on an overseas junket on behalf of former President Biden when the inferno began to rage, leveling 6800 homes in one of L.A.’s toniest zip codes and killing twelve – said the LAFD has begun to implement changes for the department, while highlighting the “relentless heroism of firefighters responding to the blaze.”

    Among those changes, Bass says, is “strengthened interagency coordination, upgraded communications technology, enhanced wildfire training and evacuation drills and improved pre-deployment protocols.”

    Still, thousands of families are still displaced, like Polhill’s. Park said “It’s a start, but not closure,” adding that the report raises even more questions. The LAFD After Action Report released this afternoon raises more questions.

    “I intend to get those answers,” Park said. “I’ll keep fighting for every resident to have a path back home.”

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    Michele McPhee

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  • City Hall Evacuated After Driver Crashes Car Into Steps

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    Mayor Karen Bass said City Hall was evacuated while the LAPD says it is dealing with a barricaded motorist who intentionally slammed into the building Friday afternoon.

    The LAPD has responded to City Hall where a barricade motorist apparently deliberately drove onto the steps of City Hall
    Credit: Los Angeles file photo

    City Hall was evacuated Friday afternoon after an unknown motorist barreled a vehicle into the steps of the building just after 4 p.m., Mayor Karen Bass said. The driver remains barricaded inside the car, the LAPD said, and the area has been lockdown leading to a chaotic commute.

    Officers are trying to contact the driver who remains inside what appears to be a black Ford sedan. The California Highway Patrol has sent units to close the off-ramps leading to downtown LA., officials said.

    This is a developing story. Check back for continuing details at lamag.com

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    Michele McPhee

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  • CBS Updates “Face the Nation” Interview Policy After Kristi Noem Dispute

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    Secretary of DHS Kristi Noem’s interview aired on the program last week. The administration accused CBS of deceptive editing and ‘whitewashing’, prompting an update to their interview policy

    Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    On Friday, CBS News announced a significant change to its interview policy for the Sunday show “Face the Nation” following backlash from DHS Secretary Kristi Noem over editing her recent interview.

    The news network states that “Face the Nation” will start airing its interviews unedited or aired “live-to-tape”, an industry term meaning recorded in real-time. This change comes less than a week after Kristi Noem appeared on the show and criticized CBS for their edits upon its release.

    In a statement from the DHS, Noem criticized CBS, claiming the interview was “shamefully edited” to “whitewash the truth.” The interview, which aired on August 31, partially covered Kilmar Abrego García, a Maryland man who was illegally deported to El Salvador despite a 2019 court order barring his deportation due to fear of persecution.

    In the DHS’ recent statement about the interview, Noem says “CBS shamefully edited the interview to whitewash the truth about this MS-13 gang member and the threat he poses to American public safety.”

    The press release said CBS cut “nearly four minutes” of Noem’s 16 minute speech on air and “in doing so, removed more than 23% of [her] answers exposing the truth about criminal illegal alien Kilmar Abrego García, President Donald Trump’s lawful actions to protect the American people, and Secretary Noem’s commitment to fight on behalf of the American people and their tax dollars.”

    CBS responded by defending its procedure, stating that the interview was “edited for time and met all CBS news standards.” They added that the full interview and transcript were uploaded online the same morning the interview aired. The four-minute cut included claims or allegations made by Noem that have not been proven true in court.

    Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on a federal raid in Highland Park in the hours after a U.S. Senator was forcibly removed from her press conference in Los Angeles this week
    Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem with federal agents during a raid in Highland Park
    Credit: Department of Homeland Security

    However, on Friday, CBS took further action, announcing that “in response to audience feedback” they have “implemented a new policy for greater transparency” in interviews. Now, interviews for the Sunday show will be aired in full and unedited.

    This is not the first time CBS has received criticism from the Trump administration over an interview. Notably, Trump sued CBS last fall during his campaign over a “60 Minutes” interview with Kamala Harris, where he alleged that CBS edited the footage in Harris’ favor.

    Though experts considered Trump’s suit to have legal weaknesses, CBS’ parent company, Paramount Global, agreed to a $16 million settlement in July. The settlement was announced as Paramount sought approval from the Trump administration for a planned merger with Skydance Media.

    Some critics think the settlement was influenced by the merger and are concerned about news organizations facing litigation from political figures. CBS News is currently looking to hire an ombudsman, a designated official appointed to investigate complaints such as Noem’s.

    Since her start as Secretary, Noem has remained at the center of controversial headlines and in conflict with news networks. In 2024, she appeared on Fox News and blamed “fake news” for putting the “worst spin” on her memoir, referring a Guardian article that covered the chapter where Noem writes of her decision to shoot and kill her dog, and then her goat.

    In June 2025, Noem claimed that LA was a “war zone” and “would have burned down if left to the devices of the mayor and governor”, which Mayor Karen Bass called an “outright lie.” With litigation issues on the rise, journalistic integrity and independent press remain hot topics of debate.

    Due to pressure from the administration, news channels such as CBS are undergoing additional measures to revisit their reporting policies.

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    Natalia Oprzadek

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  • Rick Caruso Undecided on 2026 Bid: L.A. Mayor or Governor?

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    Rick Caruso told Bloomberg TV on Wednesday that he has not decided whether he will run for the position of Mayor of Los Angeles or Governor of California.

    Rick Caruso ran against Karen Bass in the elections for Los Angeles mayor in 2022.

    On Wednesday, businessman and philanthropist Rick Caruso told Bloomberg TV that he has not decided whether he will run for California Governor or Los Angeles mayor.

    If he chose to run for mayor, Caruso would be running once again, following his loss to Karen Bass in 2022. Since Bass’s election, Caruso has been critical of the mayor’s actions regarding the 2025 Palisades fires, as he felt that she carried out a negligent response to the fires.

    Though Caruso was not in office as mayor, he took the initiative to respond to the fires himself, creating his own nonprofit called Steadfast LA, which was aimed at speeding up the recovery and rebuilding process for Los Angeles communities that were impacted by the fires.

    Caruso’s passion for rebuilding LA after the devastating fires extends to his criticism against the governor, whom he may run to replace in the elections. Current Governor Gavin Newsom has asked for $40 billion for California to rebuild after the fires from the federal government, but the motion has not passed through Congress. The businessman called on Newsom to stop bickering with Trump and instead to work with him on getting the money to California. 

    “We need federal funding and we’re getting none of that,” Caruso stated. “I don’t think the bickering and name-calling that’s going on serves any purpose of advancing the negotiations or discussions in getting federal help in Los Angeles.”

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    Ava Mitchell

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  • LAPD, CHP Protect Harris After Secret Service Ends Detail

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    The Los Angeles Police Department and the California Highway Patrol provide security to Harris in Los Angeles after her Secret Service security detail was rescinded on the 1st

    As a homeowner in Brentwood, Los Angeles, Kamala Harris is being provided with security detail through local law enforcement.
    Credit: (Photo by Getty Images)

    The Los Angeles Police Department and the California Highway Patrol have provided former Vice President Kamala Harris with a security detail, according to the LAPD’s Metropolitan Division. As many as 14 LAPD officers have been pulled from active cases to provide security for Harris.

    On September 1st, Trump’s directive to end Secret Service protection for Harris went into effect. Throughout his second term so far, Trump has ended Secret Service protections for other former government officials and their children, including John Bolton, Hunter Biden, and Ashley Biden. 

    In 2008, a law was passed that provided vice presidents, their spouses, and their children who are under the age of 16 with Secret Service protection for 6 months after they serve. Biden signed an executive order in early January that extended Harris’s protections for 18 months after her term ended.  Harris’s legally guaranteed 6 months of protection ended on July 21, but in recent years, vice presidents have been provided with protections for longer than 6 months due to heightened political tensions in the US.

    To end Harris’s protections, Trump ordered Kristi Noem to rescind the protection through an executive order that amended Biden’s protective directives, according to two senior officials at the Department of Homeland Security. 

    The U.S. Secret Service ran an assessment on Harris and did not find anything alarming that would warrant extending her protection past the six months. Therefore, they are proceeding with the president’s directive to end protections for Harris.

    Local Los Angeles officials are speaking out against Trump’s decision to rescind security detail for Harris.

    “This is another act of revenge following a long list of political retaliation in the form of firings, the revoking of security clearances and more,” Democratic LA Mayor Karen Bass told Fox 11 in a statement. “This puts the former vice president in danger and I look forward to working with the governor to make sure Vice President Harris is safe in Los Angeles”.

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    Ava Mitchell

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  • LA Mayor Says ‘Ongoing Federal Investigation’ Into Deadly Palisades Fire Pauses City Report – LAmag

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    LAFD Captain Frank Lima spotted embers flying into the window of a house on Marquez Avenue
    Photo: Irvin Rivera

    An ongoing federal investigation into the deadly Palisades Fire that killed twelve and devoured miles upon miles of the Pacific Palisades and Malibu has led Mayor Karen Bass to pause the release of an after-action report examining the city’s response.  

    Per state regulation, the city is required to answer questions about what went wrong – like fire hydrants being tapped dry and why fire apparatus couldn’t access the fast-moving, wind-fueled inferno – as a way to address problems that could be prevented at future fires. But Bass said in a late afternoon press statement that federal prosecutors asked the city “late last week” to hold off on the release of the report. 

    It’s unclear why Bass released the information, and a request for clarification on her announcement was not immediately answered by her media representatives. Her statement indicated that the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California wants to “avoid interference with the ongoing federal investigation.”

    Once that report is complete, Bass said, “the after-action report will be released in coordination with the United States Department of Justice.”

    The cause of the destructive blaze remains undetermined more than seven months after an arson investigative task force for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms began to pore through the rubble searching for clues. A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office had no comment Tuesday night. A spokesperson for the ATF’s field office in Los Angeles has not returned several requests for comment. 

    There were a slew of arrests made in the aftermath of the Palisades Fire, among them arsonists and criminals who impersonated firefighters. In late January, Los Angeles reported the arrests of an Oregon couple who were arrested after they drove a fake firetruck emblazoned with the name of a nonexistent fire company into the Palisades. 

    The driver, Dustin Nehl, is a convicted arsonist. His wife, Jenni Nehl, is a wind and fire expert who volunteered for a program run by the National Weather Service. The couple is expected in a Van Nuys courtroom for a pretrial hearing in early October, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office confirmed. 

    Jenni Nehl, left, and her husband Dustin Nehl, right, used a fire truck purchased at an auction and emblazoned with the name of a bogus Oregon fire company to sneak into Palisades fire evacuation zone
    Jenni Nehl, left, and her husband Dustin Nehl, right, used a fire truck purchased at an auction and emblazoned with the name of a bogus Oregon fire company to sneak into Palisades fire evacuation zone
    Courtesy of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department
    Photo: Courtesy of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department

    A day after the Nehl’s arrest, the FBI renewed its hunt for a fugitive ecoterrorist, also from Oregon, named Josephine Sunshine Overaker, who was part of a domestic terrorist outfit known as “the Family.” The terrorists were responsible for a slew of arson attacks, including the burning of a ski resort in Vail, Colorado. 

    The FBI renewed its manhunt for Josephine Sunshine Overaker a day after a convicted arsonist and his wife, a weather and fire educator, were arrested in the Palisade fire evacuation zone dressed as firefighters in a decommissioned fire truck 
    The FBI renewed its manhunt for Josephine Sunshine Overaker a day after a convicted arsonist and his wife, a weather and fire educator, were arrested in the Palisade fire evacuation zone dressed as firefighters in a decommissioned fire truck 
    FBI
    Photo: FBI

    There is a $50,000 reward being offered for information about Overraker. Dustin Nehl told Los Angeles in a phone interview that he did not know anyone in the Family. Nehl also described himself as a “Trump supporter” before asking, “do you know any conservative ecoterrorists?” 

    Josephine Sunshine Overaker and her compatriots in a ecoterrorism outfit burned down a resort in Vail as part of its activism the FBI says
    Josephine Sunshine Overaker and her compatriots in a ecoterrorism outfit burned down a resort in Vail as part of its activism the FBI says
    FBI
    Photo: FBI

    In late April, the ATF conducted a controlled burn along the Temescal Ridge Trail between Skull Rock and Green Peak starting Tuesday, which had been the site of a fire days before the historic winds pushed the Palisades Fire all the way to coastal Malibu. That fire near a hiking trail was ignited on New Year’s Day, sparked by fireworks that may still have been smoldering, officials believe.

    The post LA Mayor Says ‘Ongoing Federal Investigation’ Into Deadly Palisades Fire Pauses City Report appeared first on LAmag.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

    Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

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    When Mayor Karen Bass laid out her budget proposal for the Los Angeles Police Department last year, she had big plans for rebuilding the size of that agency’s workforce.

    The mayor’s budget called for the LAPD to end the 2023-24 budget year with about 9,500 police officers — a target that would require the hiring of nearly 1,000 officers over a 12-month period.

    Now, a new assessment from City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo — the city’s top budget analyst — shows the department is falling well short of its staffing goal. By June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the department is expected to have 8,908 officers, according to Szabo’s projections.

    That would leave the LAPD with its lowest sworn staffing levels in over two decades.

    Szabo’s report, issued Tuesday, is likely to fuel calls for the council to scale back the LAPD’s hiring goal. Even before it was released, some at City Hall had begun arguing that the annual budget calls for hundreds of officer positions that have little to no chance of being filled.

    “I do not think 9,500 is realistic,” Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez said Wednesday. “We can’t be in denial about this. It is not realistic. And the reason it’s not realistic is because … people who are entering the workforce do not want to be police officers.”

    Soto-Martínez has long argued for the idea of shifting certain duties out of the LAPD and into agencies with unarmed responders. He asked for the LAPD’s 12-month hiring projections last month, just as the council began the process of cutting an as-yet-unknown number of civilian city positions — part of a larger effort at reining in a budget shortfall.

    Meanwhile, police staffing is continuing its year-to-year slide.

    The LAPD had about 10,000 officers in 2019, the last full year before COVID-19. In June 2020, not long after the murder of George Floyd, the City Council voted to scale back the deployment to about 9,750.

    Bass took office in 2022. By the time her first budget went into effect, the number of officers had fallen to 9,027. In an attempt to reverse those trends, she negotiated a four-year package of pay increases and higher starting salaries.

    That deal, approved in August, is now a major contributor to the city’s budget shortfall, which could reach as much as $400 million in the coming fiscal year.

    De’Marcus Finnell, a spokesperson for Bass, said Wednesday that the salary agreement with the police officers’ union is producing results, helping to spur recruitment and lower attrition.

    “According to conversations with LAPD, retirement rates could’ve been much higher if we hadn’t taken the action we did,” Finnell said in an email.

    Councilmember Nithya Raman, who voted against the salary agreement last year, has been offering a different assessment, calling the police contract financially irresponsible. Raman, now running for reelection with support from the mayor, has repeatedly warned that the police raises will leave the city with insufficient funds for other government programs.

    “I thought that the size of the raise would be so much that it would create significant budget deficits going forward,” she told an audience last month, adding: “So far, the data has proven me correct.”

    Others on the council say they still support the police raises.

    Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, in an interview, said attrition has “slowed significantly” at the LAPD since the contract was approved. The contract, she said, is “doing what we needed it to do.”

    Bass, as part of her budget, had been hoping to hire 780 new officers during the current fiscal year. She also had been looking to bring 200 retirees back to the department.

    So far, only 15 retirees have come back, Szabo said.

    The decrease in LAPD staffing is producing at least one benefit — cutting costs in the city budget.

    The city’s financial analysts are currently projecting an $82-million shortfall in the LAPD’s sworn salary account this year. Had the department had been successful in reaching the mayor’s hiring goals, that number would have grown to more than $118 million, Szabo said in his report.

    Meanwhile, some categories of crime continue to fall.

    Homicides have decreased by nearly 6% compared with the prior year, according to LAPD figures covering the period ending Jan. 27. Burglaries decreased by nearly 7% over the same time frame.

    Other types of crime are on the rise. Assaults have gone up by 12% compared to the same period last year, according to LAPD figures. The number of shooting victims is up 29% so far this year.

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    David Zahniser

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  • City lays out ‘all-hands-on-deck’ plan as second storm heads toward LA; urges residents to prepare

    City lays out ‘all-hands-on-deck’ plan as second storm heads toward LA; urges residents to prepare

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    LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass laid out details of the city’s “all-hands-on-deck” plan as a second and stronger storm makes its way to the city.

    Bass along with city leaders held a press conference Friday afternoon, saying Sunday will be the day Angelenos will need to look out for.

    Forecast: Get the latest weather updates here

    “There are indications that the coming storm could be as strong as Tropical Storm Hilary was in August,” said Bass. “We made it through Tropical Storm Hilary and I am confident that we will weather this storm.”

    The storm is expected to be stronger and slower (meaning it will last longer), leading to flooding risks, heavy mountain snow and strong winds.

    Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass laid out details of the city’s “all hands on deck” plan as a second and stronger storm makes its way to the city.

    The National Weather Service called the weather system “the largest storm of the season” and is expecting the storm to have “dangerous, even life-threatening impacts.”

    By noon on Sunday, heavier rain, maybe some lightning strikes, is expected across Los Angeles and Orange counties. Some showers reach San Bernardino County. In addition, a flood watch will be in effect from Sunday afternoon through Tuesday afternoon for most of L.A. County.

    “The Los Angeles River will fill quickly and become a raging river and a very dangerous place to be,” according to the NWS. “Anyone in that basin should be removed well before the onset of rain. Creeks and streams may rise out of their banks. Flooding may occur in poor draining and urban areas. Low-water crossings may be flooded. Storm drains and ditches may become clogged.”

    Start preparing now

    Bass along with Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley stressed the importance of early planning. If you have any travel plans, you might want to change those now and avoid the roads.

    You should also plan to move your parked vehicles out of flood prone, low-lying areas to avoid any damages. The city also urges people to prepare for any potential evacuation orders, especially if you live near rivers and creeks.

    “We’ve got our swift water rescue apparatus, boats, we also have our teams that will be fully staffed, ready to respond to any water-related emergency,” said Crowley.

    Don’t call 911 for non-emergencies

    Bass urged residents to avoid calling 911 for non-emergencies, such as flooded roads, fallen branches, and flooded gutters. She urged people to use the city’s MyLA311 service to report any incidents that are not life threating.

    Need sandbags? The city can help

    To help residents and businesses prepare, the L.A. City Fire Department will be giving free ready-to-fill sandbags at 106 neighborhood fire stations. Free sand is also available at select locations.

    “All city departments will come together at the city’s emergency operations center to coordinate and all-city approach to enhance our capabilities for preparedness, response and recovery efforts surrounding this storm,” said Crowley.

    WATCH | Farm in Ventura County fears heavy rain will drown their crops

    The owners of Prancer’s Farm in Santa Paula fears heavy rain from this weekend’s storm will drown their crops – again. ABC7’s Leo Stallworth shares more in the video player above.

    How is California preparing for the storm?

    The California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services activated its operations center and positioned personnel and equipment in areas most at risk.

    Brian Ferguson, the office’s deputy director of crisis communications, characterized the situation as “a significant threat to the safety of Californians.” He said an area from the state’s border with Oregon all the way south to San Diego and from the coast into the mountains could be affected over the next 10 to 14 days.

    “This really is a broad sweep of California that’s going to see threats over the coming week,” Ferguson said.

    When will the rain end in Southern California?

    Another storm is expected to move into the region Wednesday, which is expected to be much lighter. The rest of the week has rain in the forecast.

    The Associated Press and City News Service contributed to this report.

    Copyright © 2024 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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    KABC

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  • Opinion: Who gets to live in L.A? A bold plan to create affordable housing has a serious flaw

    Opinion: Who gets to live in L.A? A bold plan to create affordable housing has a serious flaw

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    Last December, Mayor Karen Bass moved to speed up the production of affordable housing in Los Angeles by issuing Executive Directive 1. This measure streamlines the approval of new multi-unit residences by exempting them from the usual slate of hearings, appeals and environmental reviews. The city Planning Commission voted this month to continue ED1, bringing the directive one step closer to becoming permanent.

    On its face, this is the sort of bold housing policy Los Angeles needs. The city is not building nearly enough units to meet demand. In fact, an LAist analysis found that from 2010 to 2019, the city lost eight times more homes that were affordable for low-income residents than it gained.

    This has partly been due to developers being deterred by lengthy, expensive and risky approval processes for new construction. On its face, ED1 is helping to chip away at that problem: The Department of City Planning reported that, as of the end of October, it had approved more than 50 new developments under the directive and had 55 other applications pending, projecting the addition of 12,383 new affordable homes.

    But absent from this success story is the way this directive is reshaping the character and makeup of Los Angeles’ working-class neighborhoods and displacing longtime residents. In her effort to permanently streamline the construction of affordable housing, Mayor Bass is asking the city to weigh in on a bigger question: Who gets to live in Los Angeles?

    According to our analysis of city data, in ED1’s first 10 months, more than a third of new developments filed under the directive have been in South Los Angeles, an area with one of the highest concentrations of Angelenos living in poverty. We also found that one-third of those South L.A. developments require the demolition of existing affordable housing, eliminating at least 62 rent-stabilized units in the area and displacing hundreds of residents, many of whom cannot afford to move elsewhere in their neighborhood or the city. Under the streamlined process, tenants have mere months to find new homes. We’ve talked to many such residents who fear they will become homeless.

    It’s also worth noting where ED1 developments aren’t happening. In June 2023, Mayor Bass revised the directive to exclude parcels zoned for single-family homes — which initially made up more than half of approved projects, according to an analysis by Abundant Housing.

    This change came after the city planning department heard “feedback” from residents it surveyed as well as members of the City Council concerned about apartment buildings “plunked down in the middle of single family neighborhoods.” This exemption prevents the city from streamlining the construction of affordable housing in these “higher-resource areas” with the least density. It also makes multifamily residential zones more of a target for developers.

    If L.A.’s wealthy neighborhoods are preserved at the expense of low-income ones, we will all feel the consequences: rising rents as the number of rent-stabilized units continues to shrink; an increase in homelessness, especially for seniors and renters on fixed incomes who have no other housing options available; less diversity in Los Angeles as residents in the affected neighborhoods, which are predominantly Black and brown, scatter outside the city to afford rent; and more traffic as families have to relocate farther from their schools and jobs.

    Los Angeles urgently needs more affordable housing, and streamlining the development process is a necessary step. But city leaders need to be mindful of what may be destroyed if the approach is not equitable. Before making ED1 permanent, the city should exempt rent-stabilized units from the streamlining process so that a more thorough assessment can take place and tenants have more time to consider their options. The city should further ensure that developers — even those pursuing 100% affordable housing projects, some of which may technically be exempt — comply with the obligations for relocation, right of return and right to remain under California’s Housing Crisis Act of 2019.

    Displaced tenants also should receive more robust relocation services, including help securing comparable replacement housing in the same area. Under the current process, the city provides a list of potential housing providers and tenants are burdened with the search for affordable units.

    Finally, single-family homes should not be exempt from streamlining. Such an exemption reflects the sort of NIMBY position that got us into this affordable housing crisis in the first place. It will only reinforce the inequity that has shaped housing policy in Los Angeles as affluent neighborhoods remain relatively sheltered from change while low-income neighborhoods are dismantled for the sake of growth.

    Los Angeles’ leaders must consider the unintended consequences ED1 could have. Our city has to balance the need to build affordable housing with the need to keep our most vulnerable residents and communities housed and intact. Not doing so risks undermining the efficacy of this directive, which aims to ensure more Angelenos have access to affordable housing, not fewer.

    Maria Patiño Gutierrez is the director of policy and advocacy, equitable development and land use at Strategic Actions for a Just Economy in Los Angeles.

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    Maria Patiño Gutierrez

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