Three women opposed to President Trump’s intense immigration raids in Los Angeles were indicted Friday on charges of illegally “doxing” a U.S. Customs and Immigration agent, authorities said.
Ashleigh Brown, Cynthia Raygoza and Sandra Carmona Samane face charges of disclosing the personal information of a federal agent and conspiracy, according to an indictment unsealed late Friday.
Brown, who is from Colorado and goes by the nickname “AK,” has been described as one of the founders of “ice_out_ofla” an Instagram page with more than 28,000 followers that plays a role in organizing demonstrations against immigration enforcement, according to the social media page and an email reviewed by The Times.
According to the indictment, the three women followed an ICE agent from the federal building on 300 North Los Angeles Street in downtown L.A. to the agent’s residence in Baldwin Park.
They live-streamed the entire event, according to the indictment. Once they arrived at the agent’s home, prosecutors allege the women got out and shouted “la migra lives here,” and “ICE lives on your street and you should know,” according to the indictment.
“Our brave federal agents put their lives on the line every day to keep our nation safe,” Acting U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli said in a statement. “The conduct of these defendants are deeply offensive to law enforcement officers and their families. If you threaten, dox, or harm in any manner one of our agents or employees, you will face prosecution and prison time.”
An attorney for Samane, 25, of Los Angeles, said she intends to plead not guilty at an arraignment next month and declined further comment.
The Federal Public Defender’s Office, which is representing Brown, 38, of Aurora, Colo., did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Court records did not list an attorney for Raygoza, 37, of Riverside.
Footage published to the ice_out_ofla Instagram page seemed to capture Brown’s arrest earlier this week. The video shows a man in green fatigues and body armor saying he has a warrant for her arrest, while reaching through what appears to be the shattered driver’s side window of her car. Brown asks what the warrant is for while the man can be seen holding a collapsible baton. Then the video cuts out.
Posts on the Instagram page describe Brown as a “political prisoner.”
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Los Angeles did not immediately respond to questions about whether the women specifically shouted out the agent’s address online or what the defendants specifically did to “incite the commission of a crime of violence against a federal agent,” as the indictment alleges.
Federal law enforcement leaders have repeatedly expressed concern about the “doxing” of agents with ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol as residents of Los Angeles, Chicago and other cities continue to protest the Trump administration’s sprawling deportation efforts.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem threatened to prosecute people for publishing agents’ personal information last month in response to fliers in Portland that called for people to collect intel on ICE.
But the indictment returned Friday appeared to be the first prosecution related to such tactics.
Critics of the Trump administration’s operations have expressed outrage over ICE and CBP agents wearing masks and refusing to identify themselves in public while hunting undocumented immigrants throughout Southern California.
Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law a bill that forbids federal law enforcement from wearing masks while operating in California. The supremacy clause of the U.S. Constitution dictates that federal law takes precedence over state law, leading some legal experts to question whether state officials can actually enforce the legislation.
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — Kathleen Tiernan was born on September 22, 1921.
The Philadelphia woman has a lifelong love of song and dance. So there was no better way to celebrate her upcoming 104th birthday.
Friends, family, and staff at Immaculate Mary Center for Healthcare Facility surprised her with a birthday party full of singing and dancing.
Tiernan’s family recalls her being an avid dancer with her husband, Joe. Unfortunately, he passed away at the age of 50.
A couple years later, Tiernan met another man, coincidentally named Joe as well, who became her longtime boyfriend and dance partner. They enjoyed the next 47 years engaging in various styles from disco to country-western line dancing until his passing.
Tiernan is now cared for by the team at Immaculate Mary Center for Healthcare in Northeast Philadelphia.
There, she is still waving her arms and tapping her feet to the sound of music.
Watch the video above to see how Tiernan celebrated her upcoming 104th birthday.
Ten days after a California state lawmaker announced legal action against the city of Sacramento over DUI claims, an attorney representing her released video of the crash and excerpts from bodycam footage of her interaction with officers. State Sen. Sabrina Cervantes got into a crash on May 19 at 14th and S streets while on her way to work at the Capitol. The Sacramento Police Department initially said that Cervantes showed signs of intoxication, which led to her being cited. A toxicology report later came back negative. Since then, Cervantes has filed a government claim, which is the first step toward a civil lawsuit. She claims that police arrested her without probable cause in violation of state and federal protections against unlawful search and seizure.On May 30, the police department said it would release bodycam footage but later said it would not do so because it was part of an investigation. However, an attorney representing Cervantes released a heavily edited and narrated video that went into further details about the crash, police reports and the lawmaker’s arrest. The video is part of a supplemental letter sent to the attorneys by the city of Sacramento.The roughly 15-minute video begins with surveillance footage of the crash, showing a gray vehicle not coming to a complete stop before crossing the intersection and eventually colliding with Cervantes’ state-owned vehicle.Next, the video text narrative states a police affidavit claims Cervantes had an “unsteady gait,” showing a part of the report that has that wording. A clip of Cervantes walking is shown next, and she can be heard telling officers, “My back is starting to really get to me.”In the following clip, an officer is heard asking her what hurts, and she can be heard saying her back and spine. But then video text claims police did not disclose her injuries when they requested a warrant from a judge, citing the “unsteady gait.”Another part of the police report is shown, with X marks under “slurred speech” and “slow speech.”More bodycam footage is shown, with an officer asking Cervantes to perform a “horizontal gaze” field sobriety test.”So I guess the question is, can’t I just do a blood test, though?” Cervantes said in response.”I could,” the officer said.As the officer responded to Cervantes’ request for a blood test, text on the screen reads “Perjury by officer,” with the video later revealing part of the report claiming that Cervantes refused requests to do a blood test.Bodycam from an Officer Foster is shown next, where he appears to be taking a phone call, in which he at some point said Cervantes was acting defensive. The clip ends with an audible click and video text claiming Foster had just turned off his bodycam.The video cuts to black and text that reads, “Missing 5 minutes of footage – body cam appears to be turned off.”Following that statement, bodycam from an Officer Williams is played next. He can be heard saying that Cervantes sounded “a little lethargic” but that he could not smell alcohol on her breath.”If I had to, you know, make a wild guess, there is a possibility — I have a reasonable suspicion that she has something on board that’s causing impairment,” Williams said in the video.The video narrative then alleges that officers treated the other driver, who was not named, better compared to Cervantes when interviewing her, stating that she was asked a minimal number of questions.According to the video, the woman was not asked to exit her vehicle or perform a field sobriety test. She is also heard saying she did not have her driver’s license or insurance when asked.After being asked if she has any complaints of pain, the officer is heard concluding his interview with the woman with the following four questions:If she was on her phoneIf she had her seatbelt onIf the airbags deployedIf she was drinkingShe said no to all of those questions.Bodycam footage from three days after shows an officer calling the other driver back with follow-up questions from the crash.”There’s body camera footage of us and things that are written in the report that are slightly different,” the officer said in the video.He asks the woman about Cervantes’ demeanor after the crash, to which she said that she appeared shaken up.The officer then repeatedly asked if Cervantes appeared to have any injuries or signs of blood. The woman again said no to those questions.Video text afterward reads, “Attempts to suggest Senator Cervantes was somehow suspicious for calling for help from inside her vehicle.”The officer noted multiple times that Cervantes was in her vehicle for a while after the crash.Following that phone call, video text states that four days after the crash, Officer Williams filed a report to the DMV that Cervantes refused to do a blood test after her arrest.An excerpt from the report shows “Chemical Test Refusal” is marked with an X. The entire video highlights much of why Cervantes is seeking legal action, alleging false sworn police statements for her arrest warrant, false sworn statements to the DMV and the leaking of false claims to news outlets that she was driving under the influence.The senator also alleges that police retaliated against her “due to her introduction of legislation to curb abuse by police of Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) systems and due to bias related to her identity as an openly LGBTQ+ Latina elected official.”You can watch the entire video here.Cervantes’ attorneys told KCRA 3 they would not release the raw footage. Asked about how much was edited, they said: “The video has been edited for privacy purposes to protect clients, patients, and others.”KCRA 3 has issued a public records request for the raw footage, which police denied. Police declined again to release the full footage when asked on Thursday.A police representative said that KCRA 3’s public records request did not meet the criteria for mandatory to release to the media, and cited a California code for investigatory records exemption, 7923.600 (a) and related provisions.Police said they would not comment on the case due to pending litigation. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
Ten days after a California state lawmaker announced legal action against the city of Sacramento over DUI claims, an attorney representing her released video of the crash and excerpts from bodycam footage of her interaction with officers.
State Sen. Sabrina Cervantes got into a crash on May 19 at 14th and S streets while on her way to work at the Capitol.
The Sacramento Police Department initially said that Cervantes showed signs of intoxication, which led to her being cited. A toxicology report later came back negative.
Since then, Cervantes has filed a government claim, which is the first step toward a civil lawsuit. She claims that police arrested her without probable cause in violation of state and federal protections against unlawful search and seizure.
On May 30, the police department said it would release bodycam footage but later said it would not do so because it was part of an investigation.
However, an attorney representing Cervantes released a heavily edited and narrated video that went into further details about the crash, police reports and the lawmaker’s arrest. The video is part of a supplemental letter sent to the attorneys by the city of Sacramento.
The roughly 15-minute video begins with surveillance footage of the crash, showing a gray vehicle not coming to a complete stop before crossing the intersection and eventually colliding with Cervantes’ state-owned vehicle.
Next, the video text narrative states a police affidavit claims Cervantes had an “unsteady gait,” showing a part of the report that has that wording. A clip of Cervantes walking is shown next, and she can be heard telling officers, “My back is starting to really get to me.”
In the following clip, an officer is heard asking her what hurts, and she can be heard saying her back and spine. But then video text claims police did not disclose her injuries when they requested a warrant from a judge, citing the “unsteady gait.”
Another part of the police report is shown, with X marks under “slurred speech” and “slow speech.”
More bodycam footage is shown, with an officer asking Cervantes to perform a “horizontal gaze” field sobriety test.
“So I guess the question is, can’t I just do a blood test, though?” Cervantes said in response.
“I could,” the officer said.
As the officer responded to Cervantes’ request for a blood test, text on the screen reads “Perjury by officer,” with the video later revealing part of the report claiming that Cervantes refused requests to do a blood test.
Bodycam from an Officer Foster is shown next, where he appears to be taking a phone call, in which he at some point said Cervantes was acting defensive. The clip ends with an audible click and video text claiming Foster had just turned off his bodycam.
The video cuts to black and text that reads, “Missing 5 minutes of footage – body cam appears to be turned off.”
Following that statement, bodycam from an Officer Williams is played next. He can be heard saying that Cervantes sounded “a little lethargic” but that he could not smell alcohol on her breath.
“If I had to, you know, make a wild guess, there is a possibility — I have a reasonable suspicion that she has something on board that’s causing impairment,” Williams said in the video.
The video narrative then alleges that officers treated the other driver, who was not named, better compared to Cervantes when interviewing her, stating that she was asked a minimal number of questions.
According to the video, the woman was not asked to exit her vehicle or perform a field sobriety test. She is also heard saying she did not have her driver’s license or insurance when asked.
After being asked if she has any complaints of pain, the officer is heard concluding his interview with the woman with the following four questions:
If she was on her phone
If she had her seatbelt on
If the airbags deployed
If she was drinking
She said no to all of those questions.
Bodycam footage from three days after shows an officer calling the other driver back with follow-up questions from the crash.
“There’s body camera footage of us and things that are written in the report that are slightly different,” the officer said in the video.
He asks the woman about Cervantes’ demeanor after the crash, to which she said that she appeared shaken up.
The officer then repeatedly asked if Cervantes appeared to have any injuries or signs of blood. The woman again said no to those questions.
Video text afterward reads, “Attempts to suggest Senator Cervantes was somehow suspicious for calling for help from inside her vehicle.”
The officer noted multiple times that Cervantes was in her vehicle for a while after the crash.
Following that phone call, video text states that four days after the crash, Officer Williams filed a report to the DMV that Cervantes refused to do a blood test after her arrest.
An excerpt from the report shows “Chemical Test Refusal” is marked with an X.
The entire video highlights much of why Cervantes is seeking legal action, alleging false sworn police statements for her arrest warrant, false sworn statements to the DMV and the leaking of false claims to news outlets that she was driving under the influence.
The senator also alleges that police retaliated against her “due to her introduction of legislation to curb abuse by police of Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) systems and due to bias related to her identity as an openly LGBTQ+ Latina elected official.”
Cervantes’ attorneys told KCRA 3 they would not release the raw footage. Asked about how much was edited, they said: “The video has been edited for privacy purposes to protect clients, patients, and others.”
KCRA 3 has issued a public records request for the raw footage, which police denied. Police declined again to release the full footage when asked on Thursday.
A police representative said that KCRA 3’s public records request did not meet the criteria for mandatory to release to the media, and cited a California code for investigatory records exemption, 7923.600 (a) and related provisions.
Police said they would not comment on the case due to pending litigation.
A 911 call released Tuesday shows how frantic a couple was as they were trapped inside a car sinking in a canal in Florida.Listen to the 911 call in the video player above. Investigators said the couple was driving in a remote section of northwestern Martin County when they were hit by another car, sending them off the road where they landed upside down in the canal.The other car did not stop.The woman in the car was able to get to her phone and call 911.“Please! We need you!” she said to the dispatcher.The woman, whose name has not been released, explains the situation to the dispatcher who asks if the car is sinking.“Yes!” the woman replied. “That’s what it feels like. The car is sinking, sir.”“Where’s the water now?” the dispatcher asked.“We’re in the ditch outside,” she said.“Is the water in the car and how high is it?” the dispatcher asked.“It’s up to my stomach,” she said. “We don’t know how much time we have!”The woman explained to the dispatcher that the power in the vehicle was out, and they could not open the doors nor the windows.“How far in the water are you?” the dispatcher asked.“We’re deep in the water!”“And there’s no way to get that window down?”“No. We tried everything! We’re scared!”After about 10 minutes, the call appears to drop.“You still there, sir? Ma’am?” the dispatcher asked.There was no reply.Deputies arrived a short time later and were able to bust out the car’s windows and pull the couple to safety.Both people were injured, but investigators said both are expected to recover.The sheriff’s office said they are still looking for the other driver involved in the crash.
MARTIN COUNTY, Fla. —
A 911 call released Tuesday shows how frantic a couple was as they were trapped inside a car sinking in a canal in Florida.
Listen to the 911 call in the video player above.
Investigators said the couple was driving in a remote section of northwestern Martin County when they were hit by another car, sending them off the road where they landed upside down in the canal.
The other car did not stop.
The woman in the car was able to get to her phone and call 911.
“Please! We need you!” she said to the dispatcher.
The woman, whose name has not been released, explains the situation to the dispatcher who asks if the car is sinking.
“Yes!” the woman replied. “That’s what it feels like. The car is sinking, sir.”
“Where’s the water now?” the dispatcher asked.
“We’re in the ditch outside,” she said.
“Is the water in the car and how high is it?” the dispatcher asked.
“It’s up to my stomach,” she said. “We don’t know how much time we have!”
The woman explained to the dispatcher that the power in the vehicle was out, and they could not open the doors nor the windows.
“How far in the water are you?” the dispatcher asked.
“We’re deep in the water!”
“And there’s no way to get that window down?”
“No. We tried everything! We’re scared!”
After about 10 minutes, the call appears to drop.
“You still there, sir? Ma’am?” the dispatcher asked.
There was no reply.
Deputies arrived a short time later and were able to bust out the car’s windows and pull the couple to safety.
Both people were injured, but investigators said both are expected to recover.
The sheriff’s office said they are still looking for the other driver involved in the crash.
MEXICO CITY — Each September, Mexico’s president appears before a crowd of tens of thousands in the nation’s central square to perform the grito, the shout of independence commemorating the country’s break from colonial rule.
This year, for the first time, a woman will lead the masses in chants of “Long live Mexico!”
Monday’s ceremony in Mexico City’s main plaza will be a historic moment for the nation and for President Claudia Sheinbaum, who, in her first year as the country’s first female leader, has maintained remarkably high marks despite a spate of domestic and international challenges.
Supporters take selfies with the new president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, after her swearing-in ceremony in Congress in 2024.
(Felix Marquez / Picture Alliance / Getty Images)
Sheinbaum, 63, who took office last Oct. 1, boasts approval ratings above 70% and has notched multiple victories: winning passage of major constitutional reforms, overseeing unprecedented judicial elections and deftly negotiating with President Trump, making concessions on immigration and security to avert the worst of his threatened tariffs on Mexican goods.
She has also overseen a 25% drop in homicides, an impressive feat in a country exhausted by drug violence that she chalks up to her administration’s aggressive new crackdown on organized crime.
“We’re doing well and we’ll get better,” Sheinbaum said this month during a speech to Congress, where members of her political party, which controls both houses of the legislature, cheered her with shouts of “Long live Claudia!”
But perhaps Sheinbaum’s biggest feat has been emerging from the long shadow cast by her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a hero among the working class whose support was crucial to her election.
As a candidate for López Obrador’s Morena party, Sheinbaum promised to continue his populist project, which sought to reduce poverty and shift power away from traditional economic and political elites.
Mexicans line up at a polling station in Guadalajara on June 2, 2024, the day voters cast ballots to elect Claudia Sheinbaum the president of Mexico.
(Ulises Ruiz / AFP via Getty Images)
After she won in a landslide, she faced criticism that she would be his “puppet,” a discourse she dismissed as sexist.
Still, there’s no question that Sheinbaum has had to walk a tricky line: defining her presidency on her own terms while also demonstrating loyalty to the political movement that got her there.
As López Obrador has retreated from public life, retiring to his ranch in southern Mexico, Sheinbaum has embraced many of his signature policies, including a popular welfare program that distributes cash to youth, people with disabilities and senior citizens.
She has continued López Obrador’s practice of daily morning news conferences, where she often pays lip service to the former president and repeats his signature phrase: “For the good of all, the poor first.”
Political analyst Jorge Zepeda Patterson said that Sheinbaum has successfully outmaneuvered other Morena party members, including several former political rivals, to be seen as the new voice of López Obrador’s movement.
“She is the heir, she is the interpreter of the entire movement, and that is no small thing,” he said.
Supreme Court President Hugo Aguilar Ortiz receives a traditional purification ceremony from representatives of Indigenous communities during the swearing-in ceremony at the Supreme Court building on Sept. 1 in Mexico City.
(Hector Vivas / Getty Images)
Sheinbaum also muscled across the finish line one of his most controversial undertakings: an overhaul of the judicial system that mandates judges be elected by popular vote. Critics argue the move was designed to concentrate power in the hands of Morena and opens the door to corruption.
“That’s something dictators only invent to control the judiciary,” said Ernesto Zedillo, a former president and leader of the Institutional Revolutionary Party.
But while furthering López Obrador’s agenda, Sheinbaum has also quietly been carving her own path.
While he was combative and highly ideological, railing for hours at his news conferences against neoliberalism and the “power mafia” that he said long controlled Mexico, Sheinbaum has embraced a more diplomatic tone. She says Mexico’s future depends on its entrepreneurs. In her news conferences, she chooses her words carefully, a serene smile on her face.
Her most significant departure from her mentor has been on matters of security.
As part of his “hugs not bullets” policy, López Obrador scaled back security cooperation with the U.S., ordered soldiers to stop confronting cartels and put an emphasis on new social programs. Throughout his six-year term, homicides hovered near record highs and criminal groups expanded their control.
Sheinbaum, under pressure from Trump to clamp down on drug trafficking, has changed tack, dismantling fentanyl labs, carrying out major drug busts and sending dozens of accused cartel leaders to the U.S. to face justice.
Despite those wins, major challenges loom.
The biggest one is Trump.
Trucks queue near the Mexico-U.S. border before crossing the border at Tijuana on March 4.
(Guillermo Arias / AFP via Getty Images)
Mexico’s economy was already on the rocks when the U.S. president began issuing tariff threats, spooking overseas investors who once viewed Mexico as a pipeline to move products into the U.S. tax-free. As a result, growth has slowed.
Sheinbaum and Trump have yet to meet, but have spoken several times in phone conversations both leaders have described as successful. “More and more, we are getting to know and understand each other,” Trump said in August.
Trump recently signed an order allowing the Defense Department to use force against Latin American drug cartels, which he has designated as foreign terrorist groups. The U.S. military recently destroyed a Venezuelan boat it said was trafficking drugs, killing 11.
President-elect Claudia Sheinbaum and President Andrés Manuel López Obrador attend a ceremony on Sept. 19, 2024, commemorating lives lost during major earthquakes that have hit Mexico on Sept. 19 in 1985, 2017 and 2022.
(Guillermo Arias / AFP via Getty Images)
Carlos Bravo Regidor, a Mexican political analyst, said much of Sheinbaum’s first year has been dominated by two men: Trump and López Obrador, who is commonly known by his initials, AMLO.
“She’s trapped between the legacy of AMLO and the reality of Donald Trump,” he said.
Sheinbaum’s posture on possible U.S. military action embodies how she’s dealt with Trump. She’ll speak plainly — “There will be no invasion” and Mexico is “not a colony of anyone” — but resists engaging in tit-for-tat remarks to stoke Trump’s ire.
More than once, when asked to respond to Trump’s latest hyperbolic comment, she’s replied: “President Trump has his own way of communicating.”
President Sheinbaum speaks during the first State of the Union report of her tenure at Palacio Nacional on Sept. 1 in Mexico City, Mexico.
(Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images)
Still, there’s little doubt that Sheinbaum has benefited from the wave of nationalism that has surged here in the face of an American president who persecuted Mexican migrants living in the U.S. and threatened drone strikes on Mexican territory. That sentiment is likely to be on display on Monday, when Mexicans don the red, white and green of their flag and convene in the Zócalo for the independence celebrations.
There will also be a strong current of feminism.
Sheinbaum has often repeated the mantra she first spoke the night she won office: “I didn’t arrive alone, I arrived with all Mexican women.”
For many Mexicans across party lines, her presidency has been transformative.
Mexico City resident Esther Ramos, 40, said she planned to take her young daughters to see Sheinbaum deliver the grito, not as a lesson in politics, per se, but as a lesson in what is possible.
“My two daughters will see that a woman is capable of achieving whatever they want,” she said.
BRIGHTON, Colo. — The 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office on Friday filed multiple charges against a man accused of a woman’s death and a string of incidents that occurred in Brighton and Adams County last week.
The Brighton Police Department said this case started shortly after 11 a.m. on Aug. 28, when officers responded to Murphy’s Express off E. Bromley Lane after receiving reports that a suspect had approached a man at a fuel pump, showed his firearm and tried to steal the man’s car. The man refused, and during their altercation, “a shot was fired,” police said.
The suspect fled on a bicycle. The victim had a minor injury.
Brighton
Suspect arrested after allegedly shooting at Brighton PD, fleeing from police
Police were able to gather a description of the suspect. A few blocks from Murphy Express, they found evidence that was connected with the suspect, but no other details on that were released.
Shortly afterward, police learned that a person had stolen a vehicle from a business near Highway 85 and W. Bridge Street. When officers spoke with witnesses, their descriptions of the suspect matched the suspect from Murphy’s Express. One witness, who knew the suspect, provided information about where he may have gone, police said.
When officers found the stolen car, they saw the suspect, identified as James “Jaime” Benavidez, 50, of Brighton, inside. They tried to stop him, but he drove off and led officers on a pursuit while firing several rounds at police, the department said.
Multiple police vehicles were struck, but no officers were injured.
Denver7
Police returned fire and wounded Benavidez.
The pursuit ended along the 10600 block of Brighton Road close to the interchange of Highway 85 and E. 104th Avenue. Benavidez was taken into custody and brought to a hospital.
Brighton
Brighton man arrested after woman found dead in abandoned vehicle
On Aug. 29, Brighton police officers found the body of Keeley Koff, 32, inside an abandoned vehicle. Preliminary investigation indicated Keeley may have been associated with Benavidez, but no additional details were released.
On Friday, the 17th Judicial DA’s Office charged Benavidez with several offenses, including:
First-degree murder
Eight counts of first-degree attempted murder
First-degree unlawful termination of a pregnancy
Six counts of first-degree assault
Two counts of first-degree motor vehicle theft
Three counts of attempted aggravated robbery
Vehicular eluding
Possession of a weapon by a previous offender
He also faces two crime of violence sentence enhancers.
Benavidez is scheduled to appear in court at 8:30 a.m. Monday.
Denver7’s Stephanie Butzer and Óscar Contreras contributed to this report.
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District Seven Republican Congressman Cory Mills represents all of Seminole and south Volusia County. But it’s a sheriff’s office report out of Columbia County that is raising new questions about his actions. In a report obtained by WESH 2 Investigates, 25 year old Lindsey Langston, a State Committeewoman and last year’s Miss United States, claims to have begun “a romantic relationship with the married Congressman in 2021” and for a time she stayed at Mills’ “New Smyrna Beach residence,” according to the report. But Langston says when she saw headlines in February that Mills had allegedly assaulted his girlfriend – another woman – outside the penthouse apartment he was renting at the time, she says she broke up with Mills. Afterward, she says he began messaging and harassing her. The sheriff’s office report reads, “she says he contacted Lindsey numerous times on numerous different (social media) accounts, threatening to release nude images and videos of her, to include recorded videos of her and Cory engaging in sexual acts.” She also said “Cory threatened to harm any men Lindsey intended to date in the future,” according to the report. In one Instagram “business chat” message, which is being reviewed by the sheriff’s office, Mills wrote, “I’m sorry to see this is how you treat things. Good luck to you. Thanks again for the videos.” In another, Langston wrote, “Please leave me alone.” Mills responded, “Okay Linds. Get me his number and I can send him videos. Take care.” “Anytime we get a report to the sheriff’s office we take that report seriously,” said Sgt. Steven Khachigan with the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office. He says that because this complaint involved Mills, an elected official, they elected to turn the case over to the State, adding, “We felt it was best to forward that information to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for further review. So that’s what was determined and how that was handled.” Through her attorney, Anthony Sabatini, Langston declined comment. We went to Mills’ District Office in Lake Mary, but a woman who answered the door referred us to Mills’ office in DC. Late Wednesday, Congressman Mills texted WESH 2 a statement saying:”These claims are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions. I have always conducted myself with integrity, both personally and in service to Florida’s 7th District. Out of respect for the legal process, I won’t comment further at this time. My team and I will fully cooperate to ensure the truth is made clear.”
District Seven Republican Congressman Cory Mills represents all of Seminole and south Volusia County.
But it’s a sheriff’s office report out of Columbia County that is raising new questions about his actions.
In a report obtained by WESH 2 Investigates, 25 year old Lindsey Langston, a State Committeewoman and last year’s Miss United States, claims to have begun “a romantic relationship with the married Congressman in 2021” and for a time she stayed at Mills’ “New Smyrna Beach residence,” according to the report.
But Langston says when she saw headlines in February that Mills had allegedly assaulted his girlfriend – another woman – outside the penthouse apartment he was renting at the time, she says she broke up with Mills.
Afterward, she says he began messaging and harassing her.
The sheriff’s office report reads, “she says he contacted Lindsey numerous times on numerous different (social media) accounts, threatening to release nude images and videos of her, to include recorded videos of her and Cory engaging in sexual acts.”
She also said “Cory threatened to harm any men Lindsey intended to date in the future,” according to the report.
In one Instagram “business chat” message, which is being reviewed by the sheriff’s office, Mills wrote, “I’m sorry to see this is how you treat things. Good luck to you. Thanks again for the videos.”
In another, Langston wrote, “Please leave me alone.” Mills responded, “Okay Linds. Get me his number and I can send him videos. Take care.”
“Anytime we get a report to the sheriff’s office we take that report seriously,” said Sgt. Steven Khachigan with the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office.
He says that because this complaint involved Mills, an elected official, they elected to turn the case over to the State, adding, “We felt it was best to forward that information to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for further review. So that’s what was determined and how that was handled.”
Through her attorney, Anthony Sabatini, Langston declined comment.
We went to Mills’ District Office in Lake Mary, but a woman who answered the door referred us to Mills’ office in DC.
Late Wednesday, Congressman Mills texted WESH 2 a statement saying:
“These claims are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions. I have always conducted myself with integrity, both personally and in service to Florida’s 7th District. Out of respect for the legal process, I won’t comment further at this time. My team and I will fully cooperate to ensure the truth is made clear.”
After decades of debauchery and an untold number of conceptions, revelers at Burning Man celebrated a rare birth at Black Rock City on Wednesday morning, after a festivalgoer unexpectedly went into labor on the Playa.
Some longtime Burners have dubbed the infant “Citizen Zero.”
“Baby girl arrived weighing 3 lbs 9.6 oz and measuring 16.5 inches long,” the infant’s aunt Lacey Paxman wrote in a GoFundMe appeal for the family. “She is currently in the NICU, gaining strength every day. Mom and baby are both doing OK, but she will need to stay in the hospital until she is ready to come home.”
Family members said the woman did not know she was pregnant until she felt the baby coming early Wednesday morning. According to one Redditor, an obstetrician and a pediatric trauma nurse were both camped nearby and rushed to aid the delivery when she went into labor.
The parents then drove themselves to the campground’s medical facility before being airlifted to a major hospital where the baby could receive specialized intensive care, the Redditor said.
“Since this is their first child and the pregnancy was completely unexpected, my brother and his wife don’t have anything prepared — no baby supplies, no nursery, nothing at all,” Paxman wrote.
“On top of that, the unexpected circumstances have created a heavy financial burden: NICU care (with no release date yet), medical bills, and travel and lodging expenses while they are far from home,” she said.
Surprise deliveries are uncommon but far from unheard of, experts say. About 1 in every 500 pregnant women discovers she’s expecting more than 20 weeks along — a phenomenon known as “cryptic pregnancy.”
Cryptic pregnancies are more common among very young mothers, as well as those who may have other health conditions that mask pregnancy symptoms such as nausea, exhaustion and even missed periods. Like the Burner mother, a subset of such parents only discovers they’re pregnant when they go into labor.
Pregnant women, young children and even babies are a regular feature of the nine-day Burning Man festival, which draws tens of thousands of people each year to a desolate strip of the Nevada desert about 120 miles north of Reno.
Still, births are all but unheard at the celebration of “community, art, self-expression and self-reliance.”
The surprise delivery occurred just hours after a white-out dust storm ground incoming traffic to a halt as festivalgoers streamed in and attempted to set camp on Monday.
The dramatic weather recalled torrential rains that flooded the camp in 2023, leaving thousands stranded in deep, sticky mud.
Republicans are expected to retake control of the U.S. Senate, creating obstacles for Vice President Kamala Harris if she is elected president and a potential glide path for former President Trump’s agenda if he wins the White House.
The GOP’s edge is created by a number of factors. Several of the Democratic senators up for reelection were initially elected during years favorable to their party, such as the 2006 backlash to then-President George W. Bush or during then-President Obama’s successful 2012 reelection campaign — and are facing headwinds for the first time.
“The nature of the calendar of Senate elections almost always gives one party or other an advantage in every cycle. Democrats have a lot more seats up this year and so they’re working at a disadvantage,” said Dan Schnur, a politics professor at USC, UC Berkeley and Pepperdine.
“One other way of looking at it is that 2018 was Trump’s first midterm election, and it ended up being a very good year for the Democrats,” Schnur added. “But now many of the senators who benefited from that climate six years ago are facing a much more difficult challenge this year.”
Additionally, Republicans recruited a number of wealthy candidates who have self-funded their campaigns or raised large sums of money. For example, Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin is being challenged by GOP Sen. Eric Hovde, who has put $20 million into his campaign, more than her last two rivals spent combined, said Jessica Taylor, the Senate and governors editor for the Cook Political Report, a nonpartisan analyst of races.
“Our current projection is Republicans picking up between two and five seats,” Taylor said.
Democrats currently control 51 seats of the 100-member Senate because the three independents in the body caucus with Democrats. Republicans control 49 seats.
Which states are the best pickup opportunities for Republicans?
One of the Senate’s three independents is Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, who is retiring. Republicans are expected to easily win this open seat in a state Trump carried by nearly 70% of the vote in 2020.
Montana, where Republican businessman Tim Sheehy is challenging Democratic incumbent Jon Tester, is also expected to be a likely GOP pickup. Sheehy leads Tester by an average of 6.5 percentage points in recent polling compiled by Real Clear Politics.
Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown was also believed to be vulnerable in a challenge by Republican businessman Bernie Moreno. The race is in effect tied in recent polling. Democrats have been hammering Moreno over a statement he was caught making on camera saying abortion rights shouldn’t be an issue for women over age 50. Taylor points to a new Iowa poll that showed a Democratic shift among older women that could boost Brown if it is happening in Ohio.
What other states are being watched closely?
Wisconsin’s Baldwin has a 1.4-point edge over Hovde in recent polling, according to Real Clear Politics. Contests in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Nevada have similar tight contests, though the two Western states show an interesting dynamic:
Democrats Rep. Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Sen. Jacky Rosen of Nevada have narrow leads over their Republican challengers, but both outpace how Harris is expected to do in their respective states.
GOP incumbents are facing notable challenges in the red states of Texas and Nebraska.
In Texas, GOP Sen. Ted Cruz holds a 4-point lead over Democratic Rep. Colin Allred in recent polling, but the race is tight for such a traditional Republican state.
In Nebraska, incumbent GOP Sen. Deb Fischer narrowly leads independent union leader Dan Osborn.
What does control of the Senate mean for the next president?
Schnur and Taylor agreed that a Republican-controlled Senate would allow Trump to enact the policies he has discussed throughout his campaign.
“If it’s a Republican Senate, you could certainly see Republicans passing a lot of Trump’s priorities — no tax on tips, tariffs, following his foreign policy guidelines,” Taylor said.
Schnur added that the filibuster would almost certainly be eliminated and the body would become “almost an assembly line” for Trump’s judicial nominees.
The exact opposite is true if Harris wins the White House, they said.
“If President Harris was given a Republican Senate, she would be the first president in almost 40 years not to take office with a Congress of the same party,” Schnur said. “So from Day One, it would be much more difficult for her to move her agenda forward.”
A woman who was allegedly kidnapped by her ex-boyfriend in El Monte was released after a 21-mile freeway pursuit through Los Angeles and Orange counties that at one point slowed to a crawl.
According to the El Monte Police Department, the man showed up at the woman’s place of work in the 10300 block of Lower Azusa Road just before 6 p.m. Saturday. The two argued before the man allegedly forced the woman into her car, police said, and drove off without allowing her to exit. The woman called a friend, who tracked the car via the Find My iPhone app and contacted law enforcement.
A Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department helicopter located the car on the 5 Freeway in the area of Commerce and notified California Highway Patrol.
CHP attempted a traffic stop, but the man continued to drive, leading law enforcement on a chase for more than 20 miles.
“Spike strips were utilized to puncture the vehicle’s tires which caused it to become inoperable and yield” near the 405 Freeway and Westminster Avenue, police said in a statement.
But first, multiple law enforcement vehicles slowly tailed the vehicle as it inched onward in a slow-speed pursuit, KCAL News footage showed, until the car finally came to a stop.
The suspect and a woman in the passenger’s seat got out of the car, video showed. The man walked over to the woman and hugged her while she spoke into her phone. He then slowly walked backward toward law enforcement with raised arms and surrendered. The woman was not injured, police said.
The suspect is at a processing facility on $100,000 bail, according to the Sheriff’s Department.
El Monte police said that charges of kidnapping and felony evading would be submitted to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Police Department at (626) 580-2100.
Pregnant woman dies after vehicle sinks in San Joaquin County, CHP says
Updated: 10:43 PM PDT Nov 2, 2024
INVESTIGATION. THE FRONT BUMPER IS STILL FLOATING IN THE WATER WHERE A CAR DROVE OFF THE ROAD OF HIGHWAY FOUR IN SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY AROUND 515 SATURDAY MORNING. CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL SAYS A WITNESS TOLD POLICE THE CAR WAS DRIVING RECKLESSLY, PASSING OVER THE DOUBLE YELLOW LINES AT 65 MILES AN HOUR. THAT’S WHEN CHP SAYS THE CAR DROVE OFF THE ROAD AND WENT UNDERWATER. THE HYACINTH IS SO THICK THAT IT IT’S IMPOSSIBLE TO SEE UNDERWATER. THE 27 YEAR OLD DRIVER WAS ABLE TO GET OUT, BUT HIS SIX MONTH PREGNANT, 21 YEAR-OLD WIFE WAS NOT. HE WAS EXTREMELY DISTRAUGHT. IT TOOK MORE THAN SIX HOURS OF SEARCHING WITH DIVE TEAMS, DRONES AND HELICOPTERS BEFORE CREWS WERE ABLE TO FIND THE CAR FIVE FEET BELOW THE SURFACE OF THE WATER, WITH THE WOMAN INSIDE. HE WAS OUT THERE JUST, YOU KNOW, CRYING AND WAILING, YOU KNOW, LIKE ANYONE THAT WOULD BE THAT WOULD LOSE THEIR WIFE AND CHILD. ANTONIO SIMOES IS A MANAGER AT YOUNG’S BAR AND GRILL, JUST OFF HIGHWAY FOUR. HE SAYS FAMILY MEMBERS WAITED OUTSIDE HIS BUSINESS WHILE CREWS SEARCHED THE SLOUGH. WE TOLD THEM WHATEVER YOU NEEDED. WE’RE RIGHT HERE. HE SAYS CRASHES ON THIS STRETCH OF ROAD ARE COMMON. FROM PEOPLE I’VE KNOWN TO RANDOM STRANGERS, YOU KNOW, THEY’VE GONE OFF THE ROAD, THEY’VE GONE. YOU KNOW, THEY’VE BROKEN THEIR AXLE, THEY’VE BROKEN A TIRE, GOT BLOWN OUT AND EVERYTHING. IT IS VERY UNFORGIVING BECAUSE IT DOESN’T HAVE ANY WIDE SHOULDERS ON EITHER SIDE. SO IF YOU MAKE A MINOR MISTAKE, IT COULD TURN INTO A MAJOR CRASH IN SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY. PEYTON HEADLEE KCRA THREE NEWS, CHP SAYS THAT THE COUPLE WAS DRIVING TO GO FISHING IN THE DELTA. WE’
Pregnant woman dies after vehicle sinks in San Joaquin County, CHP says
Updated: 10:43 PM PDT Nov 2, 2024
A woman died on Saturday after a vehicle crashed into water and sank in San Joaquin County, officials said. The California Highway Patrol’s Stockton division said a person was driving westbound on Highway 4 near Whiskey Slough Road around 5:15 a.m. when they crashed into a body of water for unknown reasons. CHP said the driver was able to make it out of the water but the passenger, a 21-year-old pregnant woman, did not survive. CHP said officers looked for the vehicle after it sank but could not find it.According to CHP, a helicopter and a San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office boating team responded to the rescue effort. Divers confirmed the location of the vehicle, which had the woman’s body inside, CHP said. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
A woman died on Saturday after a vehicle crashed into water and sank in San Joaquin County, officials said.
The California Highway Patrol’s Stockton division said a person was driving westbound on Highway 4 near Whiskey Slough Road around 5:15 a.m. when they crashed into a body of water for unknown reasons.
CHP said the driver was able to make it out of the water but the passenger, a 21-year-old pregnant woman, did not survive. CHP said officers looked for the vehicle after it sank but could not find it.
According to CHP, a helicopter and a San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office boating team responded to the rescue effort.
Divers confirmed the location of the vehicle, which had the woman’s body inside, CHP said.
When Sean “Diddy” Combs was charged last month in a federal sex-trafficking probe, it unleashed a wave of lawsuits detailing how the music industry mogul allegedly drugged and assaulted men and women for years undeterred.
But the piecemeal allegations leveled in the criminal and civil cases stopped short of answering an essential question that’s been hinted at by attorneys, investigators and internet sleuths: Who else was involved?
This week, for the first time, celebrities other than Combs have been accused in civil lawsuits of participating in assaults during parties hosted by the Bad Boy Records founder. The stars, however, have not been identified by name.
A federal lawsuit filed this week in the Southern District of New York involves a woman, identified as Jane Doe, who says she was 13 when she was raped by Combs and a male celebrity, identified only as Celebrity A, while a female celebrity, referred to as Celebrity B in court papers, watched.
The woman alleges in the legal filing that the night of Sept. 7, 2000, began with her outside Radio City Music Hall in New York City, trying to talk her way into the Video Music Awards. She approached several limousine drivers, including one who claimed to work for Combs, she said.
“He told her that Combs liked younger girls and she ‘fit what Diddy was looking for,’” the lawsuit states. The driver invited her to an afterparty and told her to return later that night.
When she did, the driver took her to a large white house with a gated U-shaped driveway and, once inside, she was told to sign a nondisclosure agreement, the suit says. A luxurious party was unfolding inside. Waitstaff carried trays of drinks, loud music blasted throughout the house and partygoers were snorting cocaine and using marijuana, according to the lawsuit.
After finishing one drink — a concoction of orange juice, cranberry juice and something bitter — she says she began to feel lightheaded and found an empty bedroom to rest. Combs walked into the room with two celebrities. He approached her “with a crazed look in his eyes, grabbed her and said ‘You are ready to party!’” the lawsuit states.
The unnamed male celebrity raped the girl, while Combs and the unidentified female celebrity allegedly watched. Combs then raped the girl as the other two celebrities watched, according to the lawsuit.
Combs’ attorneys denied the latest allegations in a statement.
“The press conference and 1-800 number that preceded [Sunday’s] barrage of filings were clear attempts to garner publicity,” they said. “Mr. Combs and his legal team have full confidence in the facts, their legal defenses, and the integrity of the judicial process. In court, the truth will prevail: that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted anyone — adult or minor, man or woman.”
Attorney Tony Buzbee, who is representing more than 100 people who say they were victimized by Combs, has previously vowed to name celebrities who had been involved in the alleged sexual abuse. He said during a news conference last month that the names contained in the suits would “shock.”
“Many of you came here thinking or hoping or perhaps believing that I may start naming names,” Buzbee said last month. “That day will come, but it won’t be today.”
But it hasn’t happened.
Several sources involved in representing Hollywood A-listers told The Times they feared their clients being implicated even by mere association with Combs. Many have clients who went to Combs’ parties.
Buzbee, they allege, is playing on the fear of implication. The Texas-based attorney has already claimed to have made deals with “a handful” of notable individuals who could be linked to Combs.
Buzbee did not return a phone call from The Times seeking additional comment.
David Ring, who has represented sex crime survivors in some of California’s biggest cases, said that not naming celebrities who may have been involved in wrongdoing gives the victims’ lawyers leverage to negotiate settlements.
“If they are publicly identified, the celebrity will likely dig in and deny all charges and fight until the end,” he said. “However, if they are given the opportunity to quickly settle and prevent their name from ever being announced publicly, many of them will jump at that opportunity.”
In another lawsuit Buzbee filed this week against Combs, a personal trainer identified only as John Doe alleges he was drugged and forced to perform oral sex on an unnamed male celebrity during an awards show afterparty at Combs’ house in the Hollywood Hills in June 2022.
“While in and out of consciousness, individuals at the party forced Plaintiff into sexual acts with both men and woman. Plaintiff’s physical disposition made it impossible for him to reject their advances or otherwise control his body. These individuals, including Combs, essentially passed Plaintiff’s drugged body around like a party favor for their sexual enjoyment,” the lawsuit states.
U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman ordered Buzbee this week to file a motion seeking to allow the personal trainer to proceed in the case using a pseudonym. He also required a declaration to be filed under seal “disclosing his identity and the identity of any party that is not named in the complaint to the court.”
Combs, 54, remains in custody at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn and has pleaded not guilty to charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has denied multiple abuse claims that have been outlined in at least 18 civil lawsuits filed against him in the past year.
The criminal case laid out by federal prosecutors alleged an extensive network that would have required multiple people to recruit victims, organize the sex performances called “freak-offs,” clean up and cover tracks to avoid outside scrutiny.
“Combs did not do this all on his own,” Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in announcing the charges. “He used his business and employees of that business and other close associates to get his way.”
Federal prosecutors said early this month that Combs may face a superseding indictment that would open the door to more charges for Combs and possibly other defendants.
A 38-year-old woman was found dead in a backyard trash can in Costa Mesa on Tuesday afternoon, authorities said.
A man was arrested in Glendale on suspicion of murder. Police said he was a friend of the woman.
The victim, whose identity was not released pending notification of her family, was found around 2:27 p.m. at a home in the 1900 block of Maple Avenue, according to a news release.
As Costa Mesa police conducted an investigation Tuesday, the home was cordoned off with crime scene tape. In interviews, neighbors described the area as safe and the incident as shocking.
“Never a problem, never had any type of violence or anything like that, any disturbance,” said a neighbor who gave only her first name, Sherri.
No further details were available.
Anyone who may have additional information is asked to call Det. K. Moore at (714) 754-4986.
A woman who tried to retrieve her lost phone from between boulders in Australia’s Hunter Valley became stuck upside down for seven hours before she was rescued earlier this month.Just the bare soles of the woman’s feet can be seen in photos of the incident posted on social media Monday by the New South Wales (NSW) Ambulance service.The woman had been walking with friends on a private property in Laguna, a country town in the Hunter Valley about 75 miles from Sydney, when she dropped her phone.Somehow, as she tried to retrieve it, she slipped face-first into a nearly 10-foot crevice between two large boulders.Her friends tried for an hour to free her, according to the NSW Ambulance service, but eventually gave up and called for help.NSW Police said emergency services were called at 9:30 a.m. on Oct. 12 about a 23-year-old woman who had become trapped while attempting to retrieve a cellphone.For the next seven hours, police, ambulance, fire and volunteer rescue crews tried to free her, police said in a statement.Several heavy boulders were removed to create a safe access point, then rescuers built a frame to perform what was becoming a very delicate operation, they added.”With both feet now accessible, the team faced the challenge of navigating the patient out through a tight ‘S’ bend over the course of an hour,” NSW Ambulance shared in a post on Facebook.A winch was used to move a 1,100-pound boulder to free the woman, and she was finally released at around 4:30 p.m. the same day.Miraculously, she escaped with only minor scratches and bruising.Peter Watts, NSW Ambulance specialist rescue paramedic, said he’d never seen anything like it.”In my 10 years as a rescue paramedic I had never encountered a job quite like this, it was challenging but incredibly rewarding,” Watts said. “Every agency had a role, and we all worked incredibly well together to achieve a good outcome for the patient.”The woman, whose name has not been made public, was taken to the hospital for observation. Her phone, however, remains trapped between the rocks.
CNN —
A woman who tried to retrieve her lost phone from between boulders in Australia’s Hunter Valley became stuck upside down for seven hours before she was rescued earlier this month.
Just the bare soles of the woman’s feet can be seen in photos of the incident posted on social media Monday by the New South Wales (NSW) Ambulance service.
The woman had been walking with friends on a private property in Laguna, a country town in the Hunter Valley about 75 miles from Sydney, when she dropped her phone.
Somehow, as she tried to retrieve it, she slipped face-first into a nearly 10-foot crevice between two large boulders.
Her friends tried for an hour to free her, according to the NSW Ambulance service, but eventually gave up and called for help.
NSW Police said emergency services were called at 9:30 a.m. on Oct. 12 about a 23-year-old woman who had become trapped while attempting to retrieve a cellphone.
For the next seven hours, police, ambulance, fire and volunteer rescue crews tried to free her, police said in a statement.
Several heavy boulders were removed to create a safe access point, then rescuers built a frame to perform what was becoming a very delicate operation, they added.
“With both feet now accessible, the team faced the challenge of navigating the patient out through a tight ‘S’ bend over the course of an hour,” NSW Ambulance shared in a post on Facebook.
A winch was used to move a 1,100-pound boulder to free the woman, and she was finally released at around 4:30 p.m. the same day.
Miraculously, she escaped with only minor scratches and bruising.
Peter Watts, NSW Ambulance specialist rescue paramedic, said he’d never seen anything like it.
“In my 10 years as a rescue paramedic I had never encountered a job quite like this, it was challenging but incredibly rewarding,” Watts said. “Every agency had a role, and we all worked incredibly well together to achieve a good outcome for the patient.”
The woman, whose name has not been made public, was taken to the hospital for observation. Her phone, however, remains trapped between the rocks.
Two Navy crew members who died in an aircraft crash near Mt. Rainier in Washington last week have been identified as female aviators from California, including one who participated in the first all-female pregame flyover at last year’s Super Bowl.
Lt. Cmdr. Lyndsay “Miley” Evans and Lt. Serena “Dug” Wileman, both 31, were the only aviators aboard a two-seat EA-18G Growler warfare aircraft that crashed during a routine training flight on Oct. 15, the Navy announced in a news release Monday.
The status of the two pair remained uncertain for several days as search and rescue crews scoured the remote wilderness near Mt. Rainier. The wreckage site was reported to be in steep and heavily wooded terrain at an altitude of 6,000 feet.
“More than just names and ranks, they were role models, trailblazers, and women whose influence touched countless people on the flight deck and well beyond,” Navy officials said in a statement.
Evans and Wileman were part of the Electronic Attack Squadron 130 stationed at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island in Washington. Their squadron was referred to as “Zappers.”
On Sunday, the Navy announced that the missing crew members had died in the crash, but did not release their names until Monday.
“It is with a heavy heart that we share the loss of two beloved Zappers,” Cmdr. Timothy Warburton, commanding officer of the squadron, said in a statement. “Our priority right now is taking care of the families of our fallen aviators, and ensuring the well-being of our Sailors and the Growler community. We are grateful for the ongoing teamwork to safely recover the deceased.”
The cause of the crash remains under investigation.
Evans, a naval flight officer, grew up in Palmdale and attended USC. A veteran of two sea tours, according to the Navy, Evans’s participation in the flyover ahead of the 2023 Super Bowl marked the 50th anniversary of women flying in the Navy.
“I joined the Navy to serve my country,” Evans said in a statement at the time. “Serving in the Navy means being part of something bigger than yourself.”
Her experience as a pilot and instructor earned her the title of Growler instructor of the year, according to the Navy.
Both Wileman and Evans participated in combat operations in Yemen in 2023 and 2024. They spent nine months aboard the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower as part of the Carrier Air Wing 3 (or CVW-3) and operating mostly from the Red Sea.
Both earned multiple decorations for their combat performances.
Wileman was just starting her Navy career, according to officials.
“Outside the cockpit, Wileman made everyone smile,” officials with Naval Air Station Whidbey Island said. “She would brighten up any room and was known for her genuine care and compassion for those around her. She always brought a sense of calm, in the good times and bad, whether it was through a joke, a game of cribbage, or a giant bear hug for a Sailor in need of one.”
She was married, having met her husband, Brandon, during flight school, according to the Navy. Her hometown in California was not provided.
Capt. Marvin Scott, commander of CVW-3 who served with both women in training and combat operations, described Evans and Wileman as tenacious and outstanding for their contributions and positive energy they brought to the Navy.
“Every member of the CVW-3 Battle Axe Team is heartbroken at the loss of these exceptional warriors; Dug and Miley truly represent the best that Naval Aviation has to offer, and they will absolutely be missed,” Scott said in a statement.
Irvine police arrested two men this week on pimping and pandering charges after they advertised a brothel on fliers that were placed on neighbors’ cars, a department spokesperson said.
The fliers, in essence, said, “Call for a good time,” she said.
“They were super original and very discreet,” Davies said.
Qiyin Jiaqiyin, 51, of Irvine and Xiaoming Ding, 36, of Whittier were arrested and booked into the Orange County Jail, Davies said, where they’re each being held on $500,000 bail.
Three victims, women in their 20s and 30s, were offered assistance and left the location after the arrests, Davies said.
Even as a young street cop trying to work her way up the ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department in the mid-90s, Kristine Klotz says she was quick to call out sexism on the job. Right is right and wrong is wrong, she used to tell herself, knowing that she would ruffle some feathers in the process.
So she didn’t hesitate to speak up last summer when she learned that a male supervisor in the vaunted Robbery-Homicide Division where she worked had allegedly compared female detectives to sex workers on Figueroa Street.
To make it in the LAPD, department veterans say, you need a thick skin. But Klotz, 54, alleges the Figueroa comments were just the tip of an iceberg of verbal abuse women in the unit faced.
Klotz said that after repeated complaints about her mistreatment at the hands of department officials went ignored, she and another female Robbery-Homicide detective reached out for help from the Board of Police Commissioners, the LAPD’s civilian oversight body. For weeks, they heard nothing.
A response eventually came, just not the one Klotz expected.
In a whistleblower lawsuit filed this year in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Klotz claims the LAPD retaliated against her. She alleges she was demoted, reassigned and put under internal investigation in the span of a few months.
The lawsuit accuses several current senior LAPD officials, including Deputy Chief Marc Reina, and Capts. Scot Williams and Robin Petillo of inflicting emotional distress and creating a hostile work environment. The suit names two women, Petillo and Lt. Blanca Lopez; the rest of the defendants are men. A follow-up letter to the Police Commission names the supervising detective who allegedly made the Figueroa comments, Christopher Marsden.
Emails from The Times to the work accounts of the officials singled out in the suit went unreturned.
The LAPD said it doesn’t discuss pending litigation and referred questions to the city attorney’s office, which didn’t respond to an email seeking comment. A private law firm that is representing the defendants, including the city, has asked a judge for more time before responding to Klotz’s suit in court.
A 29-year department veteran with a long list of high-profile criminal investigations to her name, Klotz said she had no choice but to turn to the court system while fighting to restore both her career and reputation. The months-long ordeal, she said, “opened my eyes to a completely different way of thinking when there was so much pride I had in this organization.”
Tackling persistent sexual harassment complaints will be among the pressing issues facing incoming LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell, who was appointed to the job this month, pending City Council approval. He will also be expected to overhaul a disciplinary system that some argue seems to penalize the accuser more than the accused.
Since 2019, the city of Los Angeles has paid out at least $11 million in damages for cases of discrimination, retaliation and other workplace strife based on gender brought by LAPD officers, according to a Times review of data obtained through a public records request. That figure doesn’t include at least $12 million in damages awarded by juries to women at the LAPD that the city is appealing after having been defeated in court.
In addition, a dozen or so cases involving complaints by female officers about harassment and discrimination are pending. Several claims have previously gone unreported, including a sergeant who says she was denied a transfer in “direct retaliation” for cooperating with an Internal Affairs investigation into a former assistant chief accused of planting a tracking device on the car of his former domestic partner, a fellow LAPD officer.
In another case, an auto theft detective says she was tormented by a male colleague after their relationship fell apart. And in the Hollenbeck Division, which has seen investigations and leadership changes in recent months, several sworn and civilian female employees alleged they faced retaliation for reporting misconduct.
While some longtime LAPD observers argue that decades of damning reports and court orders have forced the department to confront the problem, others, including civil rights attorney Connie Rice, say a crude, misogynistic culture still exists and women in uniform continue to face obstacles to advancement.
Much of the abuse has moved online to pro-LAPD social media groups that feature a “frat-boy sort of MAGA misogyny thing going on,” she said.
“I think that the DNA of the culture is still ‘Women shouldn’t be here,’” Rice said. “There’s not a welcome mat, it’s more like a no-trespassing mat.”
Toward the end of her time at Robbery-Homicide, Klotz said, she felt as though she had a target on her back.
Klotz contends that she was ordered to perform menial tasks and forced to check in whenever she left the office, much like a high-schooler requesting a hall pass. If she stepped away to rinse out her coffee mug or use the copier, she said, her supervisor would text her demanding to know where she was. Then one day last summer, she showed up to work to find that her keycard access had been revoked.
Determined not to take the humiliation “sitting down,” Klotz and a colleague, Det. Jennifer Hammer, wrote a letter to the Police Commission in September 2023 asking it to intervene in “the recent harassment, discrimination, and retaliation she and other female officers had endured.”
“The misconduct has not stopped and has increasingly worsened,” the letter said. Hammer has filed her own complaint against the department.
Klotz has been the subject of at least two internal investigations. She says the complaints against her — one for allegedly making an inappropriate gesture to another officer and the other for accosting a civilian employee — were “fabricated” as a way of punishing her for speaking out.
In January, she was demoted to a lower-ranking detective position, sent to an auto theft unit in the San Fernando Valley. She took an 18% pay cut and now reports to a younger detective previously under her command.
Even after years on the job, Klotz has maintained her uncommonly cheerful manner. But her jaw clenches and voice thickens with emotion when she describes the humiliation she felt walking into the Van Nuys police station for the first time earlier this year, and feeling the stares from her colleagues.
The last few months have taken a heavy mental toll, she said. She started smoking again, nearly a decade after quitting cold turkey. More than once, she said, she has broken down and cried in her car outside of work.
“I didn’t think at the end of my career I would be subjected to the ongoing harassment, the retaliation that I have endured by upper management and command officers,” Klotz said.
Growing up in Long Beach on a steady diet of “Charlie’s Angels” reruns, Klotz dreamed of going into law enforcement from an early age. A high school class on courts and the law further piqued her interest. She said she had job opportunities at other area departments in her early 20s, but she held out for an offer from the LAPD.
Her dream was always to work her way up to detective, preferably investigating murders. She eventually achieved her goal, joining a Valley-area homicide unit. That led to her first encounter with what she alleges is a toxic culture.
Before blowing the whistle at Robbery-Homicide, Klotz was among a group of female detectives who sued over what they described as a frat-like atmosphere in the Valley, where some male colleagues were vulgar and abusive toward women in the office.
Klotz and other women said they were routinely referred to as “tourists” who didn’t belong. One male detective allegedly boasted of sexual exploits with the wife of a now-deputy chief and was accused of sending an inappropriate email from his work account to a female Los Angeles County deputy district attorney.
The city has denied the allegations raised in the suit, which remains under litigation.
Klotz said the experience in that case taught her to document everything, including the numerous pleading emails she sent to department higher-ups asking them to intervene at Robbery-Homicide.
Like other women who have reported misconduct, she said she has mostly learned to tune out the office gossip and rumors about her demotion. Some of the grapevine talk has gotten back to her — how she’s a loose cannon or stirring the pot to cover up for complaints accusing her of misconduct.
None of it is true, she says. And she’s not looking for a payday either, she says, rebutting another common criticism of department whistleblowers.
Corinne Bendersky, a UCLA professor of management and organizations who studied work culture across city of Los Angeles departments, said the poor handling of complaints by women and ethnic minorities is not isolated to the LAPD.
“Race relations are worse in the Police Department, gender relations are worse in the Fire Department,” said Bendersky, who performed surveys, focus groups and interviews with thousands of city employees. She said the surveys revealed strong resentment across gender and racial lines toward the Police Department’s ongoing efforts to hire more women and officers of color.
Klotz said the department conducted investigations into her complaints and deemed them unfounded, despite evidence she presented that she was the subject of retaliation for reporting misconduct committed by higher-ups.
Last week — after The Times inquired about her case — Klotz was summoned to a meeting with Deputy Chief Emada Tingirides. Klotz says she was informed that she was being returned to her previous detective rank, which restores her pay. She remains stationed in the Valley, investigating car thefts.
She is planning to retire at the end of the year, but Klotz said she will continue to fight in court to bring accountability after years of the LAPD failing to improve itself.
“The damage is done, they have harmed me and they can never take it back. They will never be able to repair me,” she said before her old rank was restored. “They’ve ruined me at the end of my career.”
WHEN YOU LOOK AT CHILDREN, MERCY MEDICAL CENTER DOCTOR ALBERT POLITO SAYS ASTHMA HITS ONE GROUP HARDER. IT ABSOLUTELY IS MORE COMMON IN BOYS VERSUS GIRLS. AND THEN YOU GET TO PUBERTY. AND WHEN PUBERTY HITS THE SHIFT HAPPENS. SO WE KNOW THAT THERE HAS TO BE SOMETHING HORMONAL INVOLVED IN THIS. BUT LATER IN LIFE, HE SAYS, THERE’S ANOTHER TREND. SOME STUDIES HAVE SHOWN THAT WITH THE ONSET OF MENOPAUSE, THERE’S ACTUALLY AN UPTICK IN THE DIAGNOSES OF ASTHMA THAT MAYBE THERE’S SOMETHING ABOUT ESTROGEN, WHICH WE KNOW FALLS IN MENOPAUSE, THAT’S PROTECTIVE. PEGGY HARRIS SAYS HER ASTHMA CAME ON JUST A FEW YEARS AGO, GETTING SOME RENOVATION IN MY HOUSE DONE. AND THE FLOORS AND THE DUST AND EVERYTHING. SO I WAS LIKE, OH MAN, I’M FEELING REALLY WHEEZY AND TIGHT IN THE CHEST. DOCTOR POLITO SAYS NOT ONLY ARE HORMONAL CHANGES A FACTOR, BUT WOMEN HAVE SMALLER LUNGS, TOO. HE SAYS GENETICS AND ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES ALSO COME INTO PLAY. BUT HE SAYS, LIKE OTHER CONDITIONS, PATIENTS NEED TO STAY ON TOP OF THEIR MEDICATIONS. I TELL PEOPLE, THINK ABOUT ASTHMA LIKE YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. YOU GET UP EVERY DAY. YOU TAKE YOUR HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE MEDICATION. YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOUR BLOOD PRESSURE IS, BUT YOU HAVE TO TAKE IT. AND PEGGY LOVES BEING OUTSIDE, SO SHE SAYS IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE WHEN YOU STAY ON TOP OF IT. YES. IF I FOLLOW THROUGH LIKE I SUPPOSED TO, THEN YES, IT’S BETTER. REPORTING
Woman’s Doctor: Asthma can be more severe for women than men
Updated: 5:54 PM PDT Oct 7, 2024
Women are more likely to have asthma than men — and it can be more severe.Dr. Albert Polito, medical director for the Lung Center at Mercy Medical Center in downtown Baltimore, explained to sister station WBAL why asthma affects women more than men and how to take care of yourself.”It absolutely is more common in boys versus girls, and then you get to puberty. And, when puberty hits, the shift happens. So, we know that there has to be something hormonal involved in this,” Polito said.Polito said there’s another trend later in life.”Some studies have shown that with the onset of menopause, there’s actually an uptick in the diagnoses of asthma, that maybe there’s something about estrogen, which we know falls in menopause that’s protective,” Polito said.Peggy Harris said that her asthma came on just a few years ago.”I was just getting some renovation in my house done — floors and the dust and everything — so, I was like, ‘Oh, man, I’m not feeling well.’ (I was) wheezing (and felt) tight in the chest,” Harris said.Polito said that not only are hormonal changes a factor, but women have smaller lungs, too. He added that genetics and environmental exposures also come into play, but, like other conditions, patients need to stay on top of their medications.”I tell people, ‘Think about asthma like you think about your high blood pressure: get up every day. You take your high blood pressure medication. You don’t know what your blood pressure is, but you have to take it,’” Polito said.Harris, who loves being outside, said it makes a difference when you stay on top of asthma.”If I follow through like I’m supposed to, then, yes, it’s better,” Harris said.
BALTIMORE —
Women are more likely to have asthma than men — and it can be more severe.
Dr. Albert Polito, medical director for the Lung Center at Mercy Medical Center in downtown Baltimore, explained to sister station WBAL why asthma affects women more than men and how to take care of yourself.
“It absolutely is more common in boys versus girls, and then you get to puberty. And, when puberty hits, the shift happens. So, we know that there has to be something hormonal involved in this,” Polito said.
Polito said there’s another trend later in life.
“Some studies have shown that with the onset of menopause, there’s actually an uptick in the diagnoses of asthma, that maybe there’s something about estrogen, which we know falls in menopause that’s protective,” Polito said.
Peggy Harris said that her asthma came on just a few years ago.
“I was just getting some renovation in my house done — floors and the dust and everything — so, I was like, ‘Oh, man, I’m not feeling well.’ (I was) wheezing (and felt) tight in the chest,” Harris said.
Polito said that not only are hormonal changes a factor, but women have smaller lungs, too. He added that genetics and environmental exposures also come into play, but, like other conditions, patients need to stay on top of their medications.
“I tell people, ‘Think about asthma like you think about your high blood pressure: get up every day. You take your high blood pressure medication. You don’t know what your blood pressure is, but you have to take it,’” Polito said.
Harris, who loves being outside, said it makes a difference when you stay on top of asthma.
“If I follow through like I’m supposed to, then, yes, it’s better,” Harris said.
Detroit has cars. Chicago has slaughterhouses. New Orleans has jazz. We have orange groves.
Had.
For a hundred years, the Bothwell family’s orange grove in Tarzana stood at about a hundred acres. Now only 14 acres remain, the last surviving commercial citrus grove in the San Fernando Valley, and two-thirds of those — let’s call it 10 acres — could soon be plowed under to build 21 high-end houses. They plan to call it “Oakdale Estates.” Not even “Orange Grove Estates” as a memento mori.
By the early 1970s, only 350 acres of commercial orange groves remained in the Valley. Thirty years ago, it had dwindled to about 40 acres. And now 14. My colleague Julia Wick once did the arithmetic and calculated that these 14 acres represent less than one-thousandth of what the Valley possessed at its peak.
Here’s the thing with California’s oranges: The California gold rush, smack in the middle of the 19th century, was an enormous splash in the placer pan. Hundreds of thousands of men inundated the state, and within a fistful of years, they had changed everything — the landscape, the economy, the politics, the fate of Native Americans and of Californios, and of the United States itself. Few of them got rich, but almost nothing thereafter dimmed that lustrous light coming from the Pacific coast.
Then there came the other gold rush — slower, more modest, but with a steady yield that literally could be plucked from trees: the California orange.
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The gold in the ground was already beginning to peter out when the orange fruit rose on the Pacific horizon — a gleaming, glowing citrus sun, a stand-in for the sun itself on fruit crate labels, tourist guides, postcards. It was more than food — it was the symbol of the California lush life, a divine talisman of an otherworldly place. And in this oversold earthly Eden, the fruit of pleasure and delight was the orange, not the humdrum apple.
Even into the 1950s, kids living in snowbound American climes might find an orange — one solitary, precious orange — sagging in the toe of their Christmas stocking.
The Southern California writer Carey McWilliams declared, rightly so, that the orange was the true California treasure, “the gold nugget of Southern California.”
The citrus tree and its fruit had become “the living symbol of richness, luxury and elegance … the aristocrat of the orchards.” And a citrus grower was no Midwestern sun-to-sun laboring farmer, but a member of “a unique type of rural-urban aristocracy.”
On a few backyard trees, and in scores of acres of groves, the orange filled the vast valleys of Southern California across a citrus belt that ran for miles. People often quote the acidulous writer H.L. Mencken, who was a dab hand at writing with great verve about how much he hated just about everything.
He visited Los Angeles in 1926 and declared that “the whole place stank of orange blossoms.” But he was being metaphorical, commenting on the swoony gossip of Hollywood stars’ supposed romances: “I heard more sweet love stories in three weeks than I had in New York in thirty years … the whole place stank of orange blossoms.”
Back then, orange blossoms were the de rigueur flower of wedding bouquets.
But Mencken was also literally right. This whole place was as fragrant as a million nuptials. Coming over the Cajon Pass in the right season — and maybe even over the Tejon Pass too — the scent rose up and enveloped you; far into the 20th century, locals and visitors still spoke wistfully of it.
There are two types of California oranges, and each has its own story.
The Valencia orange came here with the Spanish padres, the seeds planted in the San Gabriel mission garden around 1804. But these transplants were not always the sweet oranges we know, and sometimes their taste had a tinge of the bitter to them, and their rinds could be as tough as the leather vests on the conquering Spanish soldiers, the soldados de cuera.
It was a Yankee fur trader who crossed 3,000 miles of continent to settle here who perfected those mission oranges and made them make money. William Wolfskill was Kentucky-born, and as the snowballing of history and legend goes, he trekked with Daniel Boone, scouted the frontier with the brothers of Kit Carson, and certainly led pack trains on the Santa Fe Trail.
He was a Catholic and became at some point a Mexican citizen, which stood him in good stead, for in California, he was allowed to hunt furs, to hold land, and in time married a daughter of the illustrious Lugo family of Santa Barbara. As “Don Guillermo,” he presided over his properties from the Old Adobe, his homestead near the river.
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1.An advertisement on a vintage postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection.2.What a steal! A vintage postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection depicts a typical scene, apparently, in the “Orange Belt” of Southern California.3.Orange groves used to dominate thousands of acres of land in Southern California.
But back in 1831, he found himself rather hard up in L.A., and took work as a shipbuilder and trapper. Ten years later he was a man of property.
Like his neighbor, the French winemaker Jean-Louis Vignes, Wolfskill planted vineyards along the Los Angeles River. He also grew pears, figs, quinces, lemons and apples — and oranges. His groves lay from Alameda Street to the river, more or less between 4th and 7th streets, near the present-day Arts District.
Wolfskill’s Valencia orange was coaxed into sweeter, sturdier qualities, and he and his son were soon shipping it eastward, and pdq, Americans cultivated a costly taste for the exotic harvests of faraway California.
But still — it had those annoying seeds.
And soon, it had competition.
The navel orange
Eliza Lovell Tibbets was a woman out of her time. She was a few years younger than Queen Victoria, and looked rather like her, in dress and bearing, and took to accentuating the resemblance.
But in virtually everything else, she was ferociously opposite — unorthodox, even radical. She was a revolutionary in a bombazine dress, a committed abolitionist, a social utopian and tireless suffragist who was divorced not once but twice, at a time when a divorced woman was kept as far from proper society as Pluto is from Earth. In a word, Queen Vick would not have received her.
She was also a spiritualist, like many in her circle, and conducted séances. This she did share with Queen Victoria, who held séances, yearning for a little chat with her beloved ectoplasmic late husband, the sainted Prince Albert.
Not long after the Civil War, Eliza and her third husband, Luther Tibbets, moved to a conquered city in Virginia. Luther too was an energetic abolitionist. By one account, he was run out of Tennessee for trying to stop the lynching of a Black man. As far as some Virginians were concerned, he was also an integrationist carpetbagger. The threatening letters he said he got from the KKK, referring to “shed blood” and “assassination,” he handed over to the American military peacekeepers.
It wouldn’t take much for people like the Tibbetses to decide “the hell with that,” and around 1870, they joined like-minded families and came west, to the place we know as Riverside, founded by the abolitionist John Wesley North.
From here on, the origin mythology of the astounding new orange is as serendipitous and chancy as the odds of human evolution happening again.
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1.Men on tall ladders pick oranges on this vintage postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection.2.A 1924-postmarked postcard exaggerates the size, but not the importance, of California citrus.3.A vintage postcard, bearing a 1920s postmark, shows a “modern orange-packing house.”4.Men pack oranges into crates, depicted on a vintage postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection.
Far off, in the Brazilian Amazon, there grew a seedless orange of fabled sweetness. Travelers marveled at it, and word of it reached the desk of William Saunders, an acquaintance of the Tibbetses and the man in charge of horticultural experiments at the gardens of the newly created U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Saunders had, at President Lincoln’s request, designed the striking layout of Gettysburg national cemetery. Now, in his new post, he thought this orange “might be of value in this country,” he recalled, and wrote back to the correspondent in Brazil (supposedly a “lady missionary,” or perhaps a woman visiting her brother’s rubber plantation), asking for some plants.
A dozen or so arrived at Saunders’ office — at a propitious time, for Luther Tibbets had just written, asking for suggestions for a crop that would grow in Riverside’s climate.
Saunders had ordered the new arrivals grafted onto some trees in the government’s greenhouses, and now he packed off three of the new trees — or was it five, as some accounts say? — to Riverside. Bahia navels, he called them (for the little protrusion at the bottom, which suggests that the orange had an “outie,” not an “innie.”)
And here’s where the legend gets, yes, juicy.
The Tibbetses planted the little trees out in the front of the house — no, others say, it was the backyard. Eliza Tibbets tended them with care, or no, she just nonchalantly watered them with whatever was left sloshing around in her dishpan.
Let’s say there were three trees. One up and died. Another was chewed up, or trampled, or both, by a cow. But whatever Eliza’s husbandry, and however many trees survived, they took several years to bear fruit, and the first crop might have amounted to a massive 16 oranges.
But that was enough.
There’s a navel joke in there somewhere on this 1907-postmarked postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection.
People went crazy for these oranges. Because they’re seedless, you need buds to grow new trees, and soon so many people were trying to steal “just one” from the Tibbetses’ trees that they had to fence off their yard.
The miraculous orange was renamed the Washington navel orange. This was around the time of the nation’s centennial, and the vogue was for everything Washington, though it does sound a little disrespectful to put the godlike name of ”Washington” and a synonym for “belly-button” in the same phrase.
Eliza Tibbets ran a mail-order business for her buds — five cents each. In time they would go for $5 or $10 apiece. (Three of the Tibbetses’ neighbors happened to be horticulturists. They helped to coax the fledgling trees along and took buds themselves, and soon started up prosperous commercial navel orange groves of their own.)
Thus was the massive Southern California industry born. In time, no American breakfast was breakfast without a glass of orange juice. Riverside got rich. Navel orange groves spread for miles. They ornamented their present and gave a glimpse of a grimier future; the smoking smudge pots that burned in the groves on frosty winter nights to keep the trees from freezing created some of L.A.’s earliest smog.
The original tree, seen here on a postcard from Patt Morrison’s collection, is still there, in front of a home in Riverside.
The last surviving Tibbets tree, the “parent tree” of this billion-dollar business, stands in Riverside today, fenced, guarded and commemorated with a plaque noting it as a California historic landmark.
The tree fared better than the Tibbetses themselves. Eliza fled the scorch of Riverside for the Santa Barbara coast, where she died, in 1898. Luther, never the best of businessmen, lost money in typical SoCal fashion — over water rights.
In 1902, as California thought to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the blessing of the navel orange, as 8,000 railroad cars of oranges were sent to market each year, Luther Tibbets was living in a Riverside poorhouse. His house had been foreclosed on, and he was himself, as the New York Times described him, a “white-haired, tattered public charge.” He died a few months later.
Let’s accelerate to today, to the Tarzana grove. A 2022 deal announced by Councilmember Bob Blumenfield would preserve one-third of the Bothwell property under the aegis of the Mountains Preservation and Conservation Authority. A double lane of citrus trees would march along Oakdale Avenue’s west side.
As of a couple of years ago, in Anaheim — itself a regular money machine of citrus prosperity — two acres only remained of the Pressel family orchards, a place of historic import for the history of citrus and of labor. This survivor, too, was meant to serve as an open-air “tree museum.” In their heads, visitors could try to multiply this meager urban plot times more than 30,000, projecting onto the stucco-to-stucco landscape all of the acres of citrus trees that once spread their branches across Orange County.
In June of 1932, California declared the last surviving Tibbets orange tree to be a state historical landmark. The following year, the Depression-era screwball comedy “Bombshell” was released. Its blonde star, Jean Harlow, is playing a blonde star, Lola Burns, and in one scene, her butler hands her a glass of juice and she takes a sip.
Burns: “Hey! This isn’t orange juice.”
Butler: “No, miss, it’s … it’s sauerkraut juice.”
Burns: “Well, take it away. It’s like dipping your tongue in lox.”
Butler: “But, I’m sorry, miss, but there weren’t any oranges.”
Burns: “No oranges? This is California, man!”
Explaining L.A. With Patt Morrison
Los Angeles is a complex place. In this weekly feature, Patt Morrison is explaining how it works, its history and its culture.
Two people died in North Long Beach on Monday morning, leading to an apparent standoff between Long Beach SWAT officers and a suspected gunman.
The series of events began at 11:15 a.m., when Long Beach police responded to a reported shooting on the 300 block of East 63rd Street.
Upon arriving, they discovered a woman with gunshot wounds to the upper body and a man with unknown injuries, the department said in a statement. The Long Beach Fire Department transported the woman to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead; the man was pronounced dead at the scene.
The victims’ identities have not been released.
A possible male suspect fled the scene to a nearby building, where officers established a perimeter and attempted to contact him, according to the statement. SWAT officers were called in to help, and they were on scene as of 3:30 p.m.
The police had released no further information about the incident as of Monday afternoon.
The motive for the shooting is unknown, and an investigation is ongoing.