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Tag: watts

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

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

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

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

    The chain was recovered at the scene.

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

    Nearby streets were closed for the shooting investigation.

    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • Outbursts by Katie Porter threaten gubernatorial ambitions

    Former Rep. Katie Porter’s gubernatorial prospects are uncertain in the aftermath of the emergence of two videos that underscore long-swirling rumors that the Irvine Democrat is thin-skinned and a short-tempered boss.

    How Porter responds in coming days could determine her viability in next year’s race to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to both Democratic and Republican political strategists.

    “Everyone’s had a bad day. Everyone’s done something that they wouldn’t want broadcast, right? You don’t want your worst boss moment, your worst employment moment, your worst personal moment, captured on camera,” said Christine Pelosi, a prominent Democratic activist from the Bay Area and a daughter of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    “I definitely think that it’s a question of what comes next,” said Pelosi, who had endorsed former Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis before she dropped out of the race.

    Porter, the 2026 gubernatorial candidate who has a narrow edge in the polls, came under scrutiny this week when a recording emerged of her brusquely threatening to end a television interview after growing increasingly irritated by the reporter’s questions.

    After CBS reporter Julie Watts asked Porter what she would say to the nearly 6.1 million Californians who voted for President Trump in 2024, the UC Irvine law professor responded that she didn’t need their support if she competed against a Republican in the November 2026 runoff election.

    After Watts asked follow-up questions, Porter accused Watts of being “unnecessarily argumentative,” held up her hands towards the reporter’s face and later said, “I don’t want this all on camera.”

    The following day, a 2021 video emerged of Porter berating a staffer who corrected her about electric vehicle information she was discussing with a member of the Biden administration. “Get out of my f— shot!” Porter said to the young woman after she came into view in the background of the video conference. Porter’s comments in the video were first reported by Politico.

    Porter did not respond to multiple interview requests. She put out a statement about the 2021 video, saying: “It’s no secret I hold myself and my staff to a high standard, and that was especially true as a member of Congress. I have sought to be more intentional in showing gratitude to my staff for their important work.”

    Several Porter supporters voiced support for her after the videos went viral on social media and became the focus of national news coverage as well as programs such as “The View.”

    “In this critical moment in our country, we don’t need to be polite, go along to get along, establishment politicians that keep getting run over by the opposition,” wrote Peter Finn and Chris Griswold, co-chairs of Teamsters California, which has endorsed Porter and represents 250,000 workers in the state. “We need strong leaders like Katie Porter that are willing to call it like it is and stand up and fight for everyday Californians.”

    EMILYs List, which supports Democratic women who back abortion rights, and Rep. Dave Min (D-Irvine), who won the congressional seat Porter left to unsuccessfully run for U.S. Senate last year, are among those who also released statements supporting the embattled Democratic candidate.

    Lorena Gonzalez, president of the influential California Labor Federation, alluded to growing rumors in the state’s Capitol before the videos emerged that powerful Democratic and corporate interests dislike Porter and have been trying to coax another Democrat into the race.

    “The only thing that is clear after the past few days is that Katie Porter’s willingness to take on powerful interests has the status quo very afraid and very motivated,” Gonzalez said in a statement.

    There has been a concerted effort to urge Sen. Alex Padilla into the race. The San Fernando Valley Democrat has said he won’t make a decision until after voters decide Proposition 50, the redistricting proposal he and other state Democratic leaders are championing, on the November ballot.

    A pivotal indicator of Porter’s plans is whether she takes part in two events that she is scheduled to participate in next week — a virtual forum Tuesday evening with the California Working Families Party and a live UC Student and Policy Center Q&A on Friday in Sacramento.

    Democratic gubernatorial rivals in California’s 2026 race for governor seized on the videos. Former state Controller Betty Yee called on Porter to drop out of the race, and wealthy businessman Stephen Cloobeck and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa attacked her in ads about the uproar.

    Former Sen. Barbara Boxer said she saw the same traits Porter displayed in the videos — anger, a lack of respect, privilege — previously, notably in the 2024 Senate contest, which is why she decided to back then-Rep. Adam Schiff, who ultimately won the race. Boxer has endorsed Villaraigosa for governor.

    “I had a bad taste in my mouth from that experience,” Boxer said, growing upset while describing her reaction to the video of Porter cursing at her staffer. “This video tells us everything we need to know about former Congresswoman Porter. She is unfit to serve. Period.”

    Disagreements arose between Boxer and her staff during her more than four decades in elected office, she said.

    But even when “we weren’t happy with each other, there was always respect, because I knew they deserved it, and I knew without them, I was nothing,” Boxer said, adding that men‘s and women’s behavior as elected officials must be viewed through the same lens. “We are equal; we are not better. She’s proof of that.”

    Beth Miller, a veteran Sacramento-based GOP strategist who has worked with female politicians since the 1980s, said women are held to a different standard by voters, though it has eased in recent years.

    “In some ways, this plays into that bias, but in other ways, it unfortunately sets women back because it underscores a concern that people have,” Miller said. “And that’s really disappointing and discouraging to a lot of female politicians who don’t ascribe to that type of behavior.”

    Miller also pointed to the dichotomy of Porter’s terse reaction in the television interview to Porter championing herself in Congress as a fearless and aggressive inquisitor of CEOs and government leaders.

    “You exhibit one kind of behavior on the one hand and another when it affects you,” Miller said. “And you know, governor of California is not a walk in the park, and so I don’t think she did herself any favors at all. And I think it really is a window into who she is.”

    Seema Mehta

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  • ‘I don’t want this all on camera,’ gubernatorial candidate Katie Porter says in testy interview

    Former Rep. Katie Porter, the 2026 gubernatorial candidate who has a narrow edge in the polls, raised eyebrows Tuesday when footage emerged of her apparently ending a television interview after becoming irritated by a reporter’s questions.

    The footage shows CBS Sacramento reporter Julie Watts asking Porter, a Democrat, what she would say to the nearly 6.1 million Californians who voted for President Trump in 2024, and the UC Irvine law professor responding that she didn’t need their support if she competed against a Republican in the November 2026 run-off election to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    After Porter highlighted her experience winning a closely divided Orange County congressional district, she grew palpably irritated by Watts’ follow-up questions about her dismissiveness about needing support from voters who supported Trump.

    “I feel like this is unnecessarily argumentative. What is your question?” Porter said.

    Watts responded that she had asked every other candidate similar questions in relation to Proposition 50, the redistricting ballot measure that Newsom and other California Democrats put on the ballot in a special election in November.

    Porter said she would seek every vote she could win, but then grew testy over follow-up questions.

    “I don’t want to keep doing this. I’m going to call it,” Porter said, saying she objected to multiple follow-up questions. “I want to have a pleasant, positive conversation. … And if every question you’re going to make up a follow-up question, then we’re never going to get there.”

    She later said, “I don’t want this all on camera.”

    Porter, a protege of Mass. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, won election to Congress in 2018 and gained attention for grilling executives and her use of a white board to explain complex policies. The 51-year-old unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate in 2024 and returned to teaching law at UC Irvine.

    On Tuesday night, Porter’s campaign said that the interview continued for an additional 20 minutes after the heated exchange but did not offer further comment.

    The former congresswoman’s Democratic rivals in the 2026 gubernatorial race seized on her comments, and Democratic strategists not associated with any candidate in the race also cringed.

    “When you’re governor, you’re governor of everyone, not just the people in your party. It’s a bad look to say you don’t want or need votes from certain Californians, even those you really disagree with,” said Elizabeth Ashford, who served as a strategist for Govs. Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzenegger as well as former Vice President Kamala Harris when she was the attorney general of California.

    “But, also, even good candidates have bad nights,” Ashford added. “This was a miss for Katie, but not every interview is going to go great.”

    Seema Mehta

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  • YouTuber rescues abandoned dog after owner is killed in Watts hit-and-run

    A social media star famous for the work he puts into his cars is going viral for the work he put into saving a dog after his owner was killed.

    When a hit-and-run driver plowed into a cyclist in Watts on Aug. 18, that driver shattered more than one life. Leaving the cyclist dead and his four-legged companion alone in the world.

    “He kind of just paced around the canopy where they had his owner’s body,” said social media star Alex Choi. “Just started howling and whining, it was really sad.”

    The social media influencer is popular for car content, but also shoots breaking news scenes. He says he came out to the hit-and-run investigation, and after asking around, determined the dog belonged to a man believed to be homeless.

    Choi decided he would help the distraught dog and take him in.

    “It took a lot of convincing at the scene of the accident for him to come with me,” said Choi. “I feel like he thought I was kidnapping him.

    But the pup’s troubles wouldn’t end there. After being taken to Choi’s home, he escaped the same day.

    Choi believes the dog was trying to get back to his owner, showing a trait closely associated with the Akita breed: loyalty.

    The dog was found two weeks after his escape by community members and now hardly lets Choi out of his sight. But much about him remains a mystery, even his name.

    “I just have to whistle or just yell dawg, ‘d-a-w-g,’ dawg!” said Choi.

    The next chapter for the dog? finding him a home. Choi’s three other dogs are not warming up to the new rescue, but at this point, he says he can’t bear to see them go to a stranger

    “I’m trying to convince one of my friends to take him, maybe if this story comes out, one of my closer friends,” said Choi.

    Recently, the YouTuber had charges dismissed by the U.S. attorney’s office stemming from a video Choi posted around July 4, 2023, titled “Destroying a Lamborghini With Fireworks,” that showed two women shooting fireworks out of a helicopter at a Lamborghini in a social media stunt.

    Karma Dickerson

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  • 3 dogs abandoned at Watts park has residents concerned

    A trio of dogs that were abandoned at a park in Watts has neighbors concerned for the animals’ well-being as the sun continues to glare down on Southern California.

    Videos taken of the three large dogs show them roaming around Watts Towers Park on the 10600 block of Graham Avenue. Sharlin Romero, who lives in the community, has been posting videos of the dogs online in hopes someone can help them.

    “It’s been almost two weeks, over two weeks now and they’re here in the sun, hot,” she said. “We try our best to give them food and water but it really just describes how canines are loyal to their owners. They’ve been here waiting for their owner to come back.”

    @sharlin.gomez5

    Please don’t get a dog if you’ll just end up abandoning them 😔 they were dropped off at the park across my house and they’re still waiting for their owner to come back. As much as I want to take them home with me I can’t. I have kids and a dog already. I won’t be able to give them the time that they need. #dogs#help#fyp

    ♬ original sound – Sharlin Gomez

    Romero said she’s been visiting the dogs daily to give them food and leave them buckets of water. The pooches have been taking refuge from the heat under cars and in bushes, and come out at night after temperatures drop.

    Neighbors have described the dogs as friendly. It’s unclear what breed the dogs are exactly, but they are believed to be German Shepherd mixes.

    “Right now, I’m really concerned about the other one, which may be a senior dog,” Romero said. “He’s been vomiting since I’ve been trying to feed him just not too long ago. Last night he was perfectly fine, he was playing with the water as I was giving them water last night but now, he seems to be under the weather. I’m worried he might be more dehydrated than we thought he would be.”

    Romero said she and other neighbors have called local shelters for help in caring for the dogs, but have not heard back. NBC4 has reached out to LA Animal Services for comment.

    Darsha Philips and Karla Rendon

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  • During visit to South LA, EPA head vows to address environmental injustices in Watts

    During visit to South LA, EPA head vows to address environmental injustices in Watts

    The head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has pledged to work alongside Watts residents to address a host of environmental issues in the South Los Angeles community.

    During a visit to the Jordan Downs public housing complex in Watts on Saturday morning, EPA Administrator Michael Regan said the agency is working with state and federal partners to address elevated lead levels in the community’s drinking water and pollution from scrap metal recycler S & W Atlas Iron & Metal Co.

    “For far too long, communities like Watts across the country have had to bear the brunt of environmental injustices – injustices like the unsafe operations from Atlas Metals, burdens like lead in drinking water right here at Jordan Downs,” Regan said.

    More than a month after a team of Southern California researchers released the results of a study finding lead-tainted water in public housing developments in Watts, the Department of Water and Power has provided the city housing authority with more than 2,000 water sampling kits, according to Anselmo Collins, DWP’s senior assistant general manager in charge of the water system.

    Results are trickling in, but early data from testing of kitchen faucets in public housing development Nickerson Gardens finds 43 samples below five parts per billion and 27 samples with undetectable levels, according to data provided by the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles.

    Testing of exterior hose bibs found more elevated lead levels, but after reviewing some results the housing authority said there does not appear to be a correlation between the hose bibs and in-unit sinks.

    No amount of lead in drinking water is safe, and children are especially vulnerable.

    “No family should have to worry that the water coming out of their tap may be unsafe to drink,” Regan said. Once there are more complete results, he said, “we will better understand the extent of this issue and how we go about fixing it.”

    Atlas is located next to Jordan High School, where students and staff have long complained that school grounds have been coated in metallic dust and pelted with metal shrapnel. The EPA in March ordered the scrap yard to take action to prevent chemicals from washing into storm drains and drifting onto campus.

    The company and its owners, Matthew Weisenberg and Gary Weisenberg, were charged last month in Los Angeles County Superior Court with 23 felonies related to disposal of hazardous waste and two misdemeanors related to failure to minimize the risk of explosion or fire. The defendants pleaded not guilty.

    “We already know that Atlas Metals cannot be trusted to do the right thing. We’ve seen how they’ve handled their responsibilities, and it’s clear that they’re willing to put the Watts community at risk,” Regan said. “We’re going to use every tool in our toolbox to hold Atlas Metals accountable.”

    If Atlas moves off its current proprety in the future, he said, the site could be eligible for the EPA’s Brownfield Program, which provides grants and technical assistance to communities to assess, clean up, and sustainably reuse contaminated properties.

    Andrew Anderson, 15, was among a dozen community members who joined Regan, Mayor Karen Bass and Councilmember Tim McOsker of the 15th District for a closed-door meeting at the Jordan Downs community center.

    Anderson, a freshman at Jordan High, said he told Regan that many of his classmates have “trust issues” when it comes to the safety of their drinking water. He mostly drinks filtered water at home.

    Anderson said he’s glad to have the officials’ backing as his community works to address these issues.

    “We were able to feel like we were being heard,” he said.

    Rebecca Plevin

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  • Young Orlando hardcore band Watts release thrilling new album ‘Retribution’

    Young Orlando hardcore band Watts release thrilling new album ‘Retribution’

    click to enlarge

    Photo by Hannah Howells

    Watts release long-awaited recorded debut ‘Retribution’

    With searing heat and velocity, young Orlando hardcore band Watts have been one of the most meteoric forces to rise in the area over the past year. Their following is sizable, rabid and snowballing. With only a couple of singles to their name so far, that red-hot street cred is built almost entirely on their live shows, which are volcanic affairs that incite some of the most extreme pits around. Now get ready, punks, because Watts just dropped their first ever collection and it lands like a grenade.

    With the brand-new six-song Retribution EP, Watts — the quartet of vocalist Brielle Bennett, bassist Chrissy McKeever, drummer Dakotah Walker and guitarist Nickolai Rushka — are notching a lot of firsts. It’s the band’s debut suite and features some of the very first songs they wrote. It also marks the first project that Walker recorded and mixed.

    To Walker’s credit, the record takes an approach that eschews arty indulgence for a directness that’s unvarnished and head-on. By keeping the sound clean in a way that’s more naked than polished, Watts’ brutality hits with full force and legibility. While dirtier, their first two singles (2023’s “Hard Hitter” and “Choke”) aren’t as visceral as anything here. Retribution doesn’t just rip hard, it does it with swashbuckling brinkmanship. It’s a riot of nasty guitars, bludgeoning beats and feral vocals.

    Without question, the Retribution EP is Watts’ most chiseled look to date. With pure muscle and unhinged mania, it packs all the requisite toughness to feed the hardcore need but roars with an intensity that’s refreshingly free of the male edge that’s so institutional to the genre. It’s an exhilarating snapshot of a band who are a beacon of punk’s future and whose time is now.

    Retribution now streams everywhere and atop TLU’s Spotify playlist, but no recording can ever capture the physical insanity of a Watts show. So this week at Will’s Pub, go get the full experience when Montgomery Drive and The Coop present Watts’ release show, also featuring Baltimore’s Gasket and Jacksonville’s Flask. (8 p.m. Monday, July 8, $15).



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    Bao Le-Huu

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  • Shocking video appears to show CHP officer fatally shoot man on 105 Freeway

    Shocking video appears to show CHP officer fatally shoot man on 105 Freeway

    Disturbing video recorded by a bystander appears to show a deadly encounter in which a California Highway Patrol officer shot a man repeatedly after a struggle in the middle of the 105 Freeway in Watts on Sunday afternoon.

    The CHP confirmed Monday that a shooting took place on the freeway, but did not provide basic information.

    The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office confirmed the person had died, though it did not provide identification, pending notification of family. A cause of death was not released.

    CHP officials said they responded to the freeway about 3:15 p.m. Sunday after receiving multiple calls about a man walking through traffic near the Wilmington Avenue exit.

    After the trooper made contact with the pedestrian, “a struggle ensued and an officer-involved shooting occurred,” the CHP said in a release. Authorities said over a police radio that the man had a Taser and fired it at the officer, leading to the shooting, according to audio posted on the Citizen mobile app.

    The CHP directed all inquiries to the California Department of Justice, which investigates police shootings in which unarmed people are killed, according to the department.

    The state DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The video begins with a CHP officer on top of another person as the two struggle on the pavement in the middle of what appears to be a closed stretch of freeway.

    After a few seconds, while the two tussle, a gun seems to go off and a bullet ricochets off the pavement near the body of the man, who remains on the ground.

    The CHP officer then stands up and shoots at least four additional times at the prone man, the video shows.

    The man lies motionless for the rest of the minute-long video. The CHP officer remains by the body with his gun drawn.

    Travis Norton, a law enforcement officer who runs the California Assn. of Tactical Officers After Action Review, said video is a limited way to understand a police shooting.

    “It is hard to diagnose without knowing what the officer saw, experienced and interpreted was happening,” Norton said. “All I see is a very short scuffle. I see the suspect point something that appears to look like some sort of weapon. … From the video, without knowing anything else about it, the use of deadly force appears appropriate.”

    But other experts said the use of force raises many questions.

    Ed Obayashi, a police shootings expert who investigates the incidents for numerous law enforcement agencies in California, said investigators will immediately ask the officer why he was engaging with the person without a partner or backup in the immediate vicinity.

    Obayashi also said that investigators will look into why the officer felt the need to shoot the man after standing up and disengaging from him.

    “Why did you shoot him while he was on the ground?” Obayashi said investigators will ask. “You separated yourself from the individual; why was he still a threat to you?”

    Noah Goldberg

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