LASD investigating after man killed in South L.A. shooting
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
Authorities are investigating after a man was killed in a shooting in South Los Angeles on Thursday evening. According to the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, deputies responded to the 1100 block of East 93rd Street around 7:55 p.m. on calls of a gunshot victim. Upon arriving on scene, they located a Black male adult suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. Los Angeles County Fire Department personnel rendered aid to the victim at the scene before he was transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced deceased. Neither the victim nor a suspect has been identified. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the LASD’s Homicide Bureau at 323-890-5500. Tips can be submitted anonymously by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477. Anonymous tips may also be submitted online by visiting the Crime Stoppers website.Elias: Redefining homelessness for Medi-Cal coverage bold but may not fly
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
Settled in for his second and last term in Sacramento, not needing to worry about re-election and possibly looking to establish himself as America’s leading progressive long before a potential future run for president — that’s Gov. Gavin Newsom, who lately does not hesitate to push on many fronts for the priorities he vocally espoused back in 2018 during his first run for governor.Related ArticlesLocal Opinion | Elias: Beware yet another customer-paid utility bailout by state Legislature Local Opinion | Elias: Friction between state and cities such as Atherton intensifies over ‘builder’s remedy’ provision Local Opinion | Elias: California’s new housing laws, green energy mandates in conflict There was his call for reviving much of the state mental health program and infrastructure that was dismantled for financial reasons in the 1960s and ’70s by Govs. Ronald Reagan and Jerry Brown.There’s his sometimes he...California jury returns $63 million verdict against Chevron over chemical pit
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
A California jury has returned a $63 million verdict against Chevron after finding the oil giant covered up a toxic chemical pit on land purchased by a man who built a house on it and was later diagnosed with a blood cancer.Kevin Wright, who has multiple myeloma, unknowingly built his home directly over the chemical pit near Santa Barbara in 1985, according to his lawsuit.Starting in 1974, Chevron subsidiary Union Oil Company of California had operated a sump pit for oil and gas production, a process that left the carcinogenic chemical benzene on the property, court papers said.Wright bought the land and built the house in 1985. Nearly three decades later, he was diagnosed with the cancer that attacks plasma cells in the blood and can be caused by benzene exposure, court documents said.Related ArticlesBusiness | Opinion: Consumer convenience is key to making bottle bills work Business | Flooding from dam break strands hundreds and leaves thousands with no ...Highway 1 crash claims life of 34-year-old motorcyclist
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
SANTA CRUZ — A 34-year-old Santa Cruz motorcyclist died Wednesday evening after a two-vehicle collision on Highway 1.According to a release from the California Highway Patrol, Juan Manuel Maldonado Carranza was driving a 2013 Kawasaki motorcycle southbound along the highway. He began passing traffic on the left by crossing the solid double yellow lines and traveling in the northbound lane. Ahead of him, the driver of a 2001 Toyota Solara slowed and began making a left turn into a private driveway.Related ArticlesCrashes and Disasters | 18-year-old passenger killed in Interstate 880 car wreck Crashes and Disasters | Wrongful death lawsuit filed in connection with Redwood City street-racing crash that killed parents of twin girls Crashes and Disasters | Public’s help sought in identifying woman killed in San Jose crash Crashes and Disasters | Person dies at East Bay BART station, causing shutdown Crashes and Disasters | ...Who is Jack Smith, the special counsel behind the Donald Trump classified documents indictment?
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
(CNN) — Special counsel Jack Smith’s monthslong investigation into Donald Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents has entered a new chapter with the indictment of the former president, sources familiar told CNN Thursday.Trump has been charged with seven counts in the indictment, according to another source familiar with the matter. The former president wrote on Truth Social that he had been informed by the Justice Department he was indicted and that he was “summoned to appear at the Federal Courthouse in Miami on Tuesday, at 3 PM.”Smith, appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, was tasked in November to look into whether Trump or his aides committed crimes by taking classified documents to his Mar-a-Lago resort after he left the White House and whether they obstructed the investigation. The probe had escalated in recent weeks with several high-profile interviews and a former White House official telling prosecutors that Trump knew the proper process for declassifyi...El Chapo’s wife transferred to Southern California halfway house to complete prison sentence
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
Emma Coronel Aispuro, the wife of drug kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, has been transferred to a halfway house in the San Pedro area to carry out the rest of her prison sentence for helping Guzmán’s massive drug empire, officials say.Coronel Aispuro was transferred on May 30 from the Federal Medical Center at the Carswell Air Force Base in Fort Worth, Texas to the Bureau of Prisons’ Long Beach Residential Reentry Management Office in San Pedro, according to a spokesperson from the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Where the halfway house is located was not specified.The facility is known as “community confinement,” or a halfway house, a type of supervised release that is reserved for inmates at the tail end of their sentence.Related ArticlesCrime and Public Safety | Baking instructor arrested on suspicion of bringing drugs into Bay Area jail Crime and Public Safety | Cardiologist now faces 34 felony counts for drugging or sexually assaulting 16 women Crim...Hanson: Remembering the horrors of the World War II D-Day invasion
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
Seventy-nine years ago this week, the Allies assaulted the Normandy beaches on D-Day, June 6, 1944.Their invasion marked the largest amphibious landing since the Persians under Xerxes invaded the Greek mainland in 480 B.C.Nearly 160,000 American, British, and Canadian soldiers stormed five beaches of Nazi-occupied France. The plan was to liberate western Europe after four years of occupation, push into Germany, and end the Nazi regime.Less than a year later, the Allies from the West, and the Soviet Russians from the East, did just that, utterly destroying Hitler’s Third Reich.Ostensibly, the assault seemed impossible even to attempt.Germany had repulsed with heavy Canadian losses an earlier Normandy raid at Dieppe in August 1942.The Germans also knew roughly when the Allies were coming. They placed their best general, Erwin Rommel, in charge of the Normandy defenses.The huge D-Day force required enormous supplies of arms and provisions just to get off the beaches. Yet the Allies had...Review: ‘Rise of the Beasts’ fails to energize the franchise
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
By Mark Kennedy | Associated PressWith the “Transformers” franchise clearly at a crossroads, its latest protectors have turned to their deep bench of characters. But just adding more robots won’t transform this tired series.“Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” returns the franchise to its galaxy-wide self-importance after taking a nice detour with 2018’s smaller “Bumblebee.” We have a new cast of animal robots and a very evil enemy in the planet-eating Unicron, but they’re not used right and the movie limps from fight to fight.The key to the film is actually a key, some sort of ancient glowing shaft that will open a portal in space and time. Everyone wants it — to go home, to kill planets or to save planets. The audience may also want to use it to beam into a more interesting movie.Directed by Steven Caple Jr. — using a screenplay by Darnell Metayer, Erich Hoeber, Jon Hoeber and Josh Peters based on a story by Joby Harold — “...Collins: It’s only June, but the Republican silly season has begun
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
Whenever I want to put myself to sleep at night, I run through the names of all the former vice presidents. OK, sorta peculiar. It might be time for a break. Maybe I’ll just try making a list of Republican candidates for president.Back when Donald Trump announced it all seemed sorta life-as-usual, but now the race is definitely on. There are currently somewhere between 12 and 400 Republicans eyeing the White House.All the major names are men except Nikki Haley, who’s arguing that “it’s time to put a badass woman in the White House.” Well, yeah. There’s very little chance Haley’s campaign is going anywhere, but I think we can all agree she could really perk things up.We’re also expecting some energy from the newly announced candidate Chris Christie. Rather than dodging the whole Donald Trump matter whenever possible, Christie stresses that he’s running to save the country from a former close colleague who he now calls a “lonely, self-consumed, self-serving mirror hog.”And that’s just...Review: Eva Longoria directs a spicy origin story
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 05:41:58 GMT
By Mark Kennedy | Associated PressFlamin’ Hot Cheetos get an origin story worthy of any Marvel superhero with Hulu’s totally engrossing “Flamin’ Hot.” It’s the tale of how a struggling Mexican American janitor came up with the idea of adding spice to the cornmeal, forever saving after-school snacking.Is it true? Probably not. Don’t let that stop you.You’ll wish “Flamin’ Hot” was accurate because it’s a winning tale of perseverance, family love, proud heritage and blue-collar success, told with a wink, some Cheetos dust and a ton of love by Eva Longoria, in her directorial debut.Jesse Garcia stars as Richard Montañez, a one-time Frito-Lay floor-sweeper in southern California who convinced his bosses to make a snack that celebrates the flavors of Mexico despite a seven-layer dip of sceptics.“New products take years to develop, cost millions to launch and they do not get created by blue-collar hoodlums, who p...Latest news
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