Author: Amanda Covarrubias

  • Woman convicted of setting Valley nightclub dancer on fire

    A 28-year-old Tarzana woman was found guilty Thursday of throwing gasoline on a nightclub dancer and setting her on fire.

    A Los Angeles County Superior Court jury found Rianne Celine Theriault-Odom guilty of aggravated mayhem and torture and acquitted her on a charge of attempted murder. She faces a life sentence in prison with the possibility of parole.

    She is scheduled to be sentenced March 4.

    Theriault-Odom was arguing with Roberta Dos Santos Busby early on a morning in February 2009 outside the Babes & Beer nightclub, where Busby worked as a dancer. Theriault-Odom threw a soda bottle filled with gasoline at Busby  then set her on fire, prosecutors said.

    “We think this is an excellent verdict,” said Jane Robison, a spokeswoman for the district attorney’s office. “The victim was badly burned. She still has severe scars over her entire body a year later.”

    — Amina Khan

    Photo of Busby KTLA News

  • Phony doctor who claimed to heal cancer, AIDS sentenced to 9 months in Orange County Jail

    A Las Vegas man who posed as a doctor and claimed to heal cancer and AIDS with natural remedies was sentenced Thursday to nine months in the Orange County Jail.

    Daryn Wayne Peterson, 37, was also banned from working in the medical field and selling vitamins and drugs for five years.

    He pleaded guilty in December to the unauthorized practice of medicine, operating an HMO plan without a license, offering an unapproved drug for cancer treatment and selling misbranded food, according to a statement Thursday by the Orange County district attorney’s office.

    Peterson, who treated patients from his Orange County home, is not licensed to practice medicine in California and told patients he had a doctorate from Canterbury University. But district attorney’s investigators obtained the same diploma from the online Canterbury University for $180.

    The investigation was prompted by a 2009 Orange County Register article about Peterson in which he said his supplements had cured cancer, AIDS, heart failure and peanut allergies. He also encouraged patients to cancel health insurance policies.

    The article, titled “A rejection of Western medicine,” quoted two patients who turned out to be Peterson’s sister and her boyfriend, according to the district attorney’s office.

    — Raja Abdulrahim

  • Southern California ski resorts look for big weekend with lots of snow, clear skies

    Southern California ski resorts are expecting a rush of visitors going into the holiday weekend, with mostly clear skies and plenty of snow making for near-perfect conditions.

    All roads were open Thursday except the Angeles Crest Highway, which was closed during recent storms and has not been reopened.

    Mt. Baldy ski resort received 1 1/2 feet of snow Tuesday night, when the roads were closed to cars and trucks without chains until the roads were cleared.

    “Five feet of snow, roads are clear and there’s plenty of parking,” said Mt. Baldy Manager Mendy Cox. “We’ve got the best skiing I’ve seen in 20 years.”

    She advised skiers and snowboarders to arrive early this weekend to avoid the rush.

    Conditions were similar at Bear Mountain in Big Bear Lake, where Tuesday’s storm dropped 8 to 10 inches of snow on top of the 5 feet already on the ground. Roads were clear Thursday, and no tire chains were required.

    — Raja Abdulrahim

    More breaking news in L.A. Now:

    U.S. gives $2.88 million to Cal States strategic language initiative

    Phony doctor who claimed to heal cancer, AIDS sentenced to 9 months in Orange County Jail

    Some L.A. council members appear irked by controller’s criticism

    Villaraigosa plans new round of L.A. City Hall job cuts, says services will be fewer

    Deal spares Century Plaza hotel from wrecking ball

    Riverside police chief says he was ‘disoriented,’ on medication when he crashed city car

    Part of beach in Playa del Rey fenced off to help save Western snowy plover


  • Woman wounded in South L.A. gang crossfire on verge of losing home

    South L.A. community leaders met Thursday afternoon to demand that the state approve disability assistance for a single mother wounded in a drive-by shooting in July in the Athens area.

    Rashaun Williams, 29, of Lancaster — an innocent bystander caught in gang crossfire on Imperial Highway — was a home health aide and crossing guard but has been unable to work since she was shot in both legs. Williams has been surviving on $328 in monthly CalWorks welfare payments but said she can no longer afford the two-bedroom apartment she shares with her 6-year-old daughter, Ky’mariy Redd.

    Williams said Ky’mariy’s father had been helping with the bills until he was hospitalized last month with a heart attack. She said her only option now is to move in with relatives, probably her mother, who lives in a section of Torrance where Williams said gang violence has surged recently.

    A doctor recently told her she may need additional surgeries on her right leg. She is on Medi-Cal and has been on a waiting list for rehabilitation since the shooting.

    Community activists Earl Ofari Hutchinson and Eddie Jones appeared Thursday at the Lucy Florence Cultural Center in South Los Angeles to demand that state officials approve Williams’ application for Medi-Cal disability assistance.

    “We want to help Rashaun Williams either stay in her place or find another place,” said Jones, president of the Los Angeles Civil Rights Assn.

    He said they have taken up a collection to assist Williams with her rent to avoid eviction.

    “We are also going to investigate the county, Medi-Cal and why she was denied,” Jones said. “They should be assisting her — she deserves emergency assistance. She shouldn’t be homeless.”

    Those who wish to help may contact Jones at (818) 268-9002.

    — Molly Hennessy-Fiske

  • Arrests up and crime down at LAX, airport officials say

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/photos/uncategorized/2008/11/20/lax.jpg

    Arrests were up at LAX in 2009 over the previous year as reported crimes in key categories decreased, an official with Los Angeles World Airports said Thursday.

    Figures compiled by the Los Angeles Airport Police show the number of arrests increased 11%, from 1,263 in 2008 to 1,407 in 2009. The number of reported thefts fell 4.4% over the same period, from 802 in 2008 to 766 in 2009, and the number of aggravated assaults dropped from five to zero.

    A total of 57 million passengers used LAX last year, officials said, and police estimate daily traffic at the airport, including non-traveling visitors and airport workers, to be 209,000 people a day.

    “LAX continues to be one of the safest airports in the world, and one of the safest areas in all of Southern California,” Los Angeles Airport Police Chief George R. Centeno said in a statement.

    Airport police have stepped up their enforcement efforts over the last year, focusing on problem areas, such as baggage claim, that are vulnerable to theft and other crimes, said Albert Rodriguez, a spokesman for Los Angeles World Airports.

    The declining number of travelers at LAX might be making the job easier as well.  The annual number of passengers dropped 5.5%, from 60 million in 2008 to 57 million in 2009. Traffic numbers reached their peak in 2000, when more than 67.3 million travelers passed through LAX.

    But aggressive and unlawful solicitors remain a difficult issue because they often pose as airport ambassadors, using official-looking badges and carrying maps of the airport, he said. Official airport ambassadors wear straw hats and red vests.

    Once the phony ambassadors provide a traveler with information, they will make a “sales pitch,” asking the traveler for money for their cause, Rodriguez said.

    “Some of them don’t have the correct paperwork,” Rodriguez said. “Some are ex-felons, and they’re working that way. Because they’re in the public area … they’re in their rights to be there.”

    If the illegal solicitors delay or prevent passengers from getting to their flights on time, authorities can step in, he said.

    — Amina Khan

    Photo: L.A. Times file, LAX

  • Part of beach in Playa del Rey fenced off to help save Western snowy plover

    In an effort to coax a small shorebird off the federal threatened species list, a historical roosting ground at Dockweiler State Beach in Playa Del Rey has been fenced off to protect it from people and cars, authorities said Wednesday.

    The Western snowy plover has been steadily losing its nesting grounds to beachgoers over the last several decades, said Jane Hendron, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Carlsbad.

    "Historically, we had Western snowy plovers nesting from Southern California up to Oregon, but as you can imagine, we have developed many hundreds and hundreds of miles of beaches," Hendron said. "Their habitat was lost."

    And because the birds are not on the endangered species list, they lack the federal protections afforded other at-risk species.

    "These delightful little birds are in a bit of a politically created dilemma," said David De Lange, president of the Los Angeles Audubon Society. "In a given county, in order for them to get protection of a high sort that’s legally backed, you have to have evidence of nesting…. But to get that nesting occurring, you need to get protections in place so the bird feels safe. That’s the political dilemma the bird faces." 

    The enclosure just north of Imperial Highway is the result of three years of effort by federal and county officials and the Audubon Society. The Fish and Wildlife Service is committed to spending up to $14,000 on the project, officials said.

    Passersby may spot an orange mesh fence surrounding the 300-by-100-feet enclosure, with one side open to the ocean. What they may not see, however, are the Western snowy plovers.

    "You can look right at them and think you’re looking at sand," said De Lange, an experienced birdwatcher.

    Plovers nest in the dunes by scratching an indentation in the sand, sometimes under a piece of debris, and lay their sand-colored eggs inside.
    But their camouflage may also make them vulnerable to unwary foot traffic.

    "The chicks look like little cotton balls on sticks. They are cute," Hendron said. "But it’s very easy to miss them, and if people even let their dogs off the leash, the dogs can step on the eggs. They can kill a chick."

    That could be one reason the birds do not feel safe enough to nest at the Dockweiler site. The plovers will roost or hang out, but once the instinct to lay eggs kicks in, they tend to leave for other areas, birdwatchers say.

    This has become a problem across the county, De Lange said, noting there has not been a confirmed Western snowy plover nesting on an L.A. County beach since 1949.
    Scientists hope that fencing off the area will discourage people from disturbing the birds, allowing them to relax enough to feel secure and build nests.

    Experts have tried this approach at other sites in California, including Huntington Beach, with positive results, Hendron said.

    "The hope is that these birds feel protected enough to breed and to fledge a chick," said Garry George, conservation chairman for the L.A. Audubon Society, which plans to set up telescopes and start a docent program to teach beachgoers about the plovers. "That’s how you get birds off the list."

    Figures show local conservation efforts may be working. The U.S. population of the species in 1993, when it was first listed as threatened, numbered fewer than 1,400. In 2005, the official head count had reached 2,500.

    — Amina Khan

  • Former San Bernardino County supervisor arrested on corruption charges

    Former San Bernardino County Supervisor William Postmus was arrested Wednesday on charges of helping to negotiate an allegedly corrupt settlement worth $102 million between the county and a developer.

    Also arrested was James Erwin, who later worked with Postmus in the county assessor’s office.

    "These individuals engaged in conspiracy, corruption and bribery that cost San Bernardino taxpayers more than $100 million," said Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown, whose office is assisting the San Bernardino County district attorney’s office with the investigation. "This is one of the most appalling corruption cases ever seen in California, and we will aggressively pursue this conspiracy until all of the facts are exposed."

    County spokesman David Wert said officials were reviewing the information provided Wednesday by Brown and District Atty. Michael Ramos.

    "The county has a proven track record of aggressively seeking the recovery of taxpayer money that is lost through corruption," Wert said.

    The accusations resulted from a political corruption probe in San Bernardino County that uncovered evidence of bribery, extortion, theft, forgery and using county staff to do political work. Postmus and Erwin were already named in a complaint alleging criminal activity in the assessor’s office, which Postmus headed from January 2007 until his resignation in February 2009 after authorities said they had found methamphetamine in his home.

    According to prosecutors, Rancho Cucamonga developer Colonies Partners filed a lawsuit against the county in 2002, challenging the local government’s easement rights and seeking to recover $23.5 million it had spent on flood-control improvements on its property. Four years later, against the advice of county counsel and private attorneys, the San Bernardino Board of Supervisors voted 3-2 to approve a settlement of $102 million with the developer, prosecutors said.

    In a complaint filed Tuesday in San Bernardino County Superior Court, prosecutors allege Postmus accepted a $100,000 bribe to vote for the settlement and steer it through the board, which he chaired in 2006. They say the money was deposited in two political action committees, the Inland Empire PAC and Conservatives for a Republican Majority, which Postmus allegedly controlled.

    Prosecutors say Postmus then transferred $50,000 from the Inland Empire PAC into his campaign account and used some of the funds for personal meals and entertainment.

    According to the complaint, Colonies also gave Erwin $100,000, which was deposited into a PAC he allegedly controlled, the Committee for Effective Government. Prosecutors said Erwin, who acted as an intermediary between the company and the board, created political mailers depicting Postmus as a drug addict and homosexual to blackmail him into voting for the settlement.

    In addition to the bribe, Erwin is accused of accepting other gifts, including a private jet trip to New York, meals, lodging, entertainment, prostitutes and a watch. Erwin is facing charges of perjury for failing to report those gifts after he was appointed assistant assessor in 2007. In September 2008, he was named chief of staff for Supervisor Neil Derry.

    Prosecutors are also investigating two more alleged bribes of $100,000 each, and more arrests are possible, Brown said.

    Erwin was charged with nine felony counts, including conspiracy, corruption , bribery, extortion, misappropriation of public funds and forgery. If convicted on all charges, he faces up to 12 years in prison. Postmus faces up to eight years in prison, if convicted on five felony counts, including conspiracy, accepting a bribe, conflict of interest and misappropriation of public funds.

    The arraignment for both men is scheduled Thursday.

    — Alexandra Zavis

  • Lawsuit claims Pomona College student was detained by TSA over Arabic flashcards

    A Pomona College student who says he was detained at a Philadelphia airport because he was carrying English-Arabic flashcards filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday against employees of the Transportation Security Administration, the FBI and the Philadelphia Police Department, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

    Nicholas George, a senior majoring in physics and Middle Eastern studies, was returning to California from Philadelphia in August when he was randomly selected for extra screening at Philadelphia International Airport, the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia states.

    When George emptied his pockets, he took out the flashcards.

    Authorities detained him in the screening area for 30 minutes before he was questioned by a TSA supervisor, the lawsuit states. At one point, the supervisor asked George if he knew who committed the 9/11 terrorist attacks, according to the lawsuit.

    George answered, "Osama bin Laden."

    "Do you know what language he spoke?" the supervisor asked, according to the document.

    "Arabic," George answered.

    The supervisor then held up the flashcards and said, "Do you see why these cards are suspicious?"

    George said he was handcuffed and held for almost five hours, during which time he was questioned by two FBI agents, who asked if George was "Islamic" or a member of a "communist group," according to the complaint.

    One of the agents concluded that George, 22, was "not a real threat," the lawsuit states.

    "I don’t understand how locking me up and harassing me just because I was carrying the flashcards made anybody safer," George said in statement released by the ACLU. "No one should be treated like a criminal for simply learning one of the most widely spoken languages in the world."

    TSA spokeswoman Ann Davis said she could not comment on pending litigation.

    — Raja Abdulrahim

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    Manhattan Beach man arrested after offering cash for urine in school bathroom

    Snow packs a punch in Southern California mountains

    Illegal immigrant population in U.S. plummets, according to a new report

  • Evacuation orders lifted for L.A. foothill residents

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    Evacuation orders were lifted Wednesday morning for more than 500 foothill homes in Los Angeles County as the most recent rainstorm to hit Southern California cleared up.

    There was a 20% chance of showers Wednesday morning, with snow flurries forecast at higher elevations in the Antelope Valley and parts of the San Gabriel Mountains, said Bill Hoffer, a spokesman for the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

    He warned that cold temperatures could produce black ice on the roads. It was so cold in Burbank that passengers at Bob Hope Airport waiting for a 7 a.m. Southwest Airlines flight to Oakland were told they would have to wait until ice on the plane’s wings melted.

    "Folks, there will be a delay," an airline worker said over the intercom. "There’s ice on the wings, and as this is Southern California, there is no de-icing equipment. We will have to wait for the sun to come up to warm the wings."

    By late Tuesday, there were reports of .51 inches of rain in Long Beach, .58 inches in Burbank and .69 inches in Whittier. At the San Gabriel Dam, the measurement was 1.73 inches. At Wrightwood, 9 inches of snow had fallen, with 12-14 inches at Mountain High.

    No major damage was reported from Tuesday’s rainstorm, which officials had feared could cause mudslides on already saturated hillsides that lost vegetation cover in last summer’s Station fire.

    At 8 a.m. Wednesday, evacuated residents were allowed to return to their homes in La Cañada Flintridge, La Crescenta, Soledad Canyon, Acton and Aliso Canyon.

    Temperatures are expected to rise the rest of the week, Hoffer said.

    — Alexandra Zavis and Julie Cart in Burbank

    Photo: Danny Granados checks out a tree that fell on three cars parked in 4000 block of Clinton Street in Los Angeles, blocking the street. Credit: Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times

    Photos: Storms pound the Southland

    More breaking news in L.A. Now:

    Illegal immigrant population in U.S. plummets, according to a new report

    AP test results show California students doing better, but fewer are taking the tests

    Manhattan Beach man arrested after offering cash for urine in school bathroom

    Snow packs a punch in Southern California mountains

    Lawsuit claims Pomona College student was detained by TSA over Arabic flashcards    

  • L.A. foothill residents remain evacuated as rain clears

    Evacuation orders remained in effect Wednesday morning for more than 500 foothill homes, authorities said, as the rainstorm that prompted the orders cleared up.

    There was a 20% chance of more showers Wednesday morning, with snow flurries forecast at higher elevations in the Antelope Valley and parts of the San Gabriel Mountains, said Bill Hoffer, a spokesman for the National Weather Service at Oxnard.

    He warned that cold temperatures could produce black ice on the roads. It was so cold in Burbank that passengers at Bob Hope Airport waiting for a 7 a.m. Southwest Airlines flight to Oakland were told they would have to wait until ice on the plane’s wings melted.

    "Folks, there will be a delay," an airline worker said over the intercom. "There’s ice on the wings, and as this is Southern California, there is no de-icing equipment. We will have to wait for the sun to come up to warm the wings."

    By late Tuesday, there were reports of .51 inches of rain in Long Beach, .58 inches in Burbank and .69 inches in Whittier. At the San Gabriel Dam, the measurement was 1.73 inches.

    At Wrightwood, 9 inches of snow had fallen, with 12-14 inches at Mountain High.

    No major damage was reported from the recent rainstorm, but officials said they were assessing conditions to determine whether it was safe for residents to return to their homes in La Cañada Flintridge, La Crescenta, Soledad Canyon, Acton and Aliso Canyon.

    “We’re hoping to get residents in their homes later today,” said Nicole Nishida, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

    Temperatures are expected to rise the rest of the week, Hoffer said.

    — Alexandra Zavis and Julie Cart in Burbank

  • Former Tustin Hospital executive agrees to guilty plea in skid row patient scheme

    A former top executive at Tustin Hospital and Medical Center agreed in court papers filed Tuesday to plead guilty to charges of paying illegal kickbacks for homeless patients recruited from Los Angeles’ skid row.

    Vincent Rubio, 49, was the chief financial officer when authorities raided the hospital two years ago while investigating a multimillion-dollar scheme to defraud taxpayer-funded healthcare programs by using thousands of patients rounded up from skid row for unnecessary medical tests and procedures.

    Rubio, who faces up to 15 years in prison, is the fifth person charged in the scheme. Federal prosecutors and investigators are pursuing several other targets in the probe.

    "Mr. Rubio is cooperating with the ongoing investigation," said assistant U.S. attorney Consuelo Woodhead.

    Rubio is due in court next month. He admitted in the plea agreement that he helped orchestrate payments to a skid row center operator, Estill Mitts, and another unnamed person, who recruited homeless people and arranged their transportation to Tustin Hospital.

    The hospital would then run up thousands of dollars in medical bills paid by Medicare and Medi-Cal. Under Rubio’s direction, the hospital paid $2.3 million to the skid row recruiters who allegedly guaranteed 40 to 50 patients a month, authorities said.

    The hospital netted $10.6 million from Medicare and Med-Cal from those patients, according to court papers.

    Rubio also acknowledged that he pocketed kickbacks from the skid row recruiters and failed to report taxes on those proceeds. In 2005 alone, he failed to list $38,000 in extra income on his taxes, according to court papers. 

    Mitts, 65, of Los Angeles pleaded guilty in 2008 to conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud, money laundering and tax evasion. He is scheduled to be sentenced June 21.

    Rudra Sabaratnam, 65, one of the owners of City of Angels Hospital in Los Angeles, pleaded guilty in 2008 to paying illegal kickbacks for patient referrals. He is scheduled to be sentenced in April.

    Dante Nicholson, 52, senior vice president of City of Angels, pleaded guilty in 2009 to paying illegal kickbacks for patient referrals and is scheduled to be sentenced in June.

    Robert Bourseau, co-owner of City of Angels, pleaded guilty in 2009 to paying illegal kickbacks and is scheduled to be sentenced Feb. 22.

    Tustin Hospital is a subsidiary of Pacific Health Corp., which also owns Los Angeles Metropolitan Medical Center, Anaheim General Hospital and Bellflower Medical Center.

    Those institutions, along with Rubio, Tustin Hospital CEO Daniel Davis and two admitting physicians have been sued by the city of Los Angeles. The elaborate enterprise was uncovered after the Los Angeles Police Department discovered several ambulances dropping off patients on skid row.

    Investigators soon learned it was more than a case of patient dumping as they tracked patients back to Mitts’ 7th Street assessment center.

    — Richard Winton and Cara Mia DiMassa

  • Few African Americans vaccinated at L.A. County H1N1 flu clinics

    Few African Americans were vaccinated at Los Angeles County H1N1 flu clinics, despite outcry from county leaders last fall and a million-dollar county-funded public outreach campaign.

    “We did not reach the number of African Americans we would like to,” said Dr. Jonathan E. Fielding, the county’s public health director.

    African Americans, who make up 9% of the county population, received 2.96% of the 200,000 vaccinations the county distributed at 109 public clinics through Dec. 8,  according to figures released last week by the county’s Public Health Department.

    At the same time, Asians were “over-represented” at county clinics, Fielding said, receiving 27.62% of the vaccinations, although they make up about 13% of the county population.

    The figures surprised Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who had complained in December that too few African-Americans were getting vaccinated. At his urging, on Dec. 15 supervisors approved plans to double the public health department’s contract with Clear Channel Communications to $1 million to increase H1N1 flu outreach to minorities, especially African Americans.

    Public health officials designed H1N1 billboards, public service announcements that aired on HOT 92.3 FM and Black Entertainment Television, and H1N1 presentations for churches, schools and community groups like Black Women for Wellness. After Dec. 31, those efforts were ramped up.

    But the latest vaccination figures cast doubt on the effectiveness of the department’s outreach, Ridley-Thomas said. He was particularly troubled that H1N1 flu billboards he had seen posted in African American neighborhoods like Crenshaw did not feature African Americans.

    “Their campaign, from my point of view, has been botched,” Ridley-Thomas said. “They need to start from scratch.”

    Residents in the South Los Angeles service area, where African Americans make up 32.4% of the population, received 7.73% of the vaccinations distributed at county clinics, according to public health figures. By comparison, residents in the San Gabriel service area received 24.09% of vaccinations and those in the San Fernando Valley service area received 17.97%.

    Ridley-Thomas said those figures support what he saw at county-sponsored flu clinics in South Los Angeles: Few African American residents lined up for vaccines, while Asians traveled to the area from other neighborhoods to get vaccinated.

    Fielding said public health officials have been surveying county residents by phone to assess the effectiveness of the department’s vaccination outreach. They are also working with officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to evaluate county vaccination efforts, with results expected in coming months.

    Fielding noted that county clinics vaccinated a proportionate number of Latinos and whites, as well as many of those most at risk — including 8,679 pregnant women and 47,672 with chronic illnesses. It was not clear from the figures what the ethnic breakdown was for those at-risk groups.

    “By and large, our approach was a good one in terms of targeting” those most at risk of catching H1N1 flu, Fielding said. “I wouldn’t say there’s any clear lessons except that we want to make sure we get representative numbers” of minorities vaccinated.

    Overall, he said the department’s response was a success.

    “We administered many more doses of vaccine than any other health department at a time when there was a lot of fear in the public and a lot of frustration about not being able to get it,” Fielding said.

    — Molly Hennessy-Fiske

  • San Diego County man to pay $18,000 for stealing electricity to grow pot

    A San Diego County marijuana farmer has been ordered by a court to fork over $18,000 for the electricity he stole to secretly grow his plants in a rented La Mesa home.

    Yeng Vang, 23, of La Mesa was sentenced to 60 months in custody and five years of supervised release in connection with the theft of power he used from 2006 to 2008 to grow about 100 plants in two bedrooms. He also was ordered to repay San Diego Gas & Electric.

    Vang pleaded guilty in July to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana. He admitted to installing a bypass around the home’s power meter so that he would not be billed for using high-intensity grow-lights.

    “We’re pleased with the court’s ruling,” said Denise King, a spokeswoman for the utility. “Not only is energy theft against the law, it is unsafe and potentially dangerous.”

    Authorities arrested Yang in 2008 on suspicion of seven charges, including cultivation of marijuana, possession of a dangerous weapon and grand theft. They discovered Yang’s stash when firefighters went to the home in the 4700 block of Troy Lane to put out a fire caused by one of the grow-lights, according to La Mesa police.

    Vang was convicted of growing at least 100 plants, but at the time of the arrest, police said the crop numbered more than 200 plants.

    “They were at various stages of growth, from brand-new to early stages, up to head-high,” said police Lt. David Bond.

    Along with the pot plants, authorities found an unloaded short-barreled rifle with 10 rounds of ammunition in the master bedroom.

    — Amina Khan

  • L.A. County facing growing poverty, erosion of middle class, United Way report says

    Los Angeles County faces a poverty crisis and an erosion of the middle class that could worsen under the current economic downturn, according to a report by the United Way.

    The county’s poverty rate is now higher than the rest of the nation’s, according to the report, which surveyed the county’s economic situation in 2009. More than 1.47 million people, or 15% of the county’s population,  live on an income of $22,000 a year for a family of four, the report says.  The national average is 13%.

    The full report will be available Tuesday at 3 p.m. at the United Way of Greater Los Angeles’ website.

    Nearly four in 10 people in L.A. County suffer from extreme poverty, the report says; those people live on less than $5,400 a year for a single person or about $11,000 for a family of four.

    The jobless rate had soared to 12.3% by early 2009, wiping out all job growth from the previous decade, the report states. Wages remained stagnant and did not keep up with housing costs.

    The middle class also felt the pinch, the report says. Only 1% of salaried workers saw significant income growth, while the average worker’s pay fell nearly $2 an  hour.

    The United Way survey also said the ranks of the working poor swelled in 2009. Defined as families of four making less than $44,000 a year, that group in Los Angeles County is now 7.5% greater than the national average.

    “One of the things that keeps me optimistic in this downturn is that it has created a sense of urgency for us to accelerate in the areas that need improvement,” said Elise Buik, president and CEO of United Way of Greater Los Angeles, which conducted the study. “My hope is that we can find a way for business, labor, philanthropy and government to come together in areas of education reform, jobs and housing so our middle class doesn’t fall further behind.”

    — Ching-Ching Ni

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    San Diego County man to pay $18,000 for stealing electricity to grow pot

    Police arrest teenage tagger suspected in fatal shooting of veteran L.A. gang outreach worker


  • Former engineer sentenced to 15 years for stealing aerospace secrets for China

    A Chinese-born aerospace engineer who had access to sensitive material while working with a pair of major defense contractors in Southern California was sentenced Monday to more than 15 years in prison for acquiring secret space shuttle information and other documents for China.

    U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney in Santa Ana imposed a 188-month prison term on Dongfan “Greg” Chung, 73, a naturalized U.S. citizen who resides in Orange.

    At Monday’s sentencing, Carney declared that he could not “put a price tag” on national security and sought to send a signal to China to “stop sending your spies here,” according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

    Chung, who worked at Boeing’s Huntington Beach plant, denied being a spy and said he was gathering documents for a book, not for espionage. His attorneys argued that much of the material was already available on the public record.

    At his sentencing, Chung professed his love for the United States, even as prosecutors depicted him as a spy who would compromise U.S. national security.

    “Giving China advanced rocket technology is not in the United States’ national interest,” said Asst. U.S. Atty. Greg Staples. “There is a voracious appetite for U.S. technology in China.”

    Whether loyalty to his homeland or financial gain was Chung’s motive remained unclear.
    The case is one of a number of prosecutions that have shed light on alleged Chinese efforts to gain access to U.S. technology and research through espionage.

    Chung was the first suspect tried with attempting to help a foreign nation under the terms of the 1996 Economic Espionage Act, passed to help prevent pilfering of sensitive economic information.

    When Chung was convicted last year, Carney said the case revealed Chung’s “secret life” as a “spy” for China.
    The case against him arose from an investigation into another engineer, Chi Mak, who worked in the United States and obtained sensitive military information for China.

    Mak and several relatives were convicted of providing defense information to China, the U.S. attorney’s office said. Carney sentenced Mak to more than 24 years in prison in 2008.

    Chung was convicted last year on charges of economic espionage and acting as an agent for more than three decades while employed by Rockwell International and Boeing Co.

    Federal authorities said Chung stole restricted technology and trade secrets, including data related to the space shuttle and the Delta IV rocket, designed to launch military payloads into orbit.

    “This case demonstrates our resolve to protect the secrets that help protect the United States, as well as the important technology advancements developed by scientists working for companies that provide crucial support to our national security programs,” acting U.S. Atty. George S. Cardona said Monday in a statement.

    Chung held a “secret” security clearance when he worked at Rockwell and Boeing on the space shuttle program, authorities said. He retired in 2002 but the next year returned to Boeing as a contractor, a position he held until September 2006, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

    Between 1985 and 2003, Chung made multiple trips to China to deliver lectures on technology involving the space shuttle and other programs, the government said. During those trips, Chung met with Chinese government officials, including military agents, U.S. authorities said.

    — Patrick J. McDonnell

  • Charlie Sheen charged with felony in alleged assault on wife in Aspen [Updated]

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    Actor Charlie Sheen was charged Monday with felony menacing, third-degree assault and criminal mischief stemming from a Christmas Day incident in which he allegedly held a knife to his wife’s throat in their rented Aspen home.

    Colorado 9th District Court Judge James B. Boyd allowed Sheen to return to Los Angeles with his wife, Brooke Mueller, and modified a protective order that had prohibited Sheen and Mueller from seeing each other.

    Sheen is scheduled to return to court March 15. He and Mueller embraced after the hearing in Aspen and left the courthouse in separate vehicles.

    The “Two and a Half Men” star was arrested Dec. 25 in Aspen after Mueller called police, saying she feared for her life.
    Sheen and Mueller had been arguing early that morning when she said she wanted a divorce, according to an affidavit.

    Mueller, 32, told police that Sheen, 44, had pinned her to the bed, gripped her neck with one hand and held a knife to her throat with the other as he straddled her.

    After Sheen was arrested, Boyd had ordered Sheen not to come into contact with his wife or possess or consume alcohol or other controlled substances. He was released that night from Pitkin County Jail on $8,500 bail.

    Sheen requested and was allowed to visit Mueller in a Sherman Oaks hospital in late January after she suffered complications from oral surgery.

    Sheen and Mueller married in May 2008, and Mueller gave birth to twin boys in March 2009.

    Sheen previously pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of battery with serious bodily injury after a 1996 incident in which he was accused of knocking then-girlfriend Brittany Ashland to the ground.

    The company that makes Hanes underwear, Hanesbrands, said in January that it had dropped Sheen from its advertising campaign because of the domestic violence-related charges against the actor.

    Last Friday, burglars stole Sheen’s Mercedes-Benz after he left his garage door open with the keys in the car, which ended up crashed and abandoned in a ravine off Mulholland Drive.

    Police have yet to find the burglars, who also stole items from other homes in Sheen’s gated community in Sherman Oaks.

    — Amina Khan

    [Correction: An earlier version of this headline incorrectly said that Sheen had been charged with three felony counts. He was actually charged with one felony count and two misdemeanor counts.]

    Photo: Charlie Sheen, right, arrives at the Pitkin County Courthouse in Aspen, Colo. Credit: David Zalubowski / Associated Press


  • L.A.’s anti-poverty resource centers now open

    Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced Monday that all 21 resource centers in the city’s anti-poverty program are now open, offering a one-stop location for government assistance in connection with housing, nutrition, health insurance, tax information and other needs.

    The locations offer a single application for many of the federal, state, county and city assistance programs and are located in neighborhoods hardest hit by the recession.

    Of the 21 FamilySource Centers in L.A., 16 are being run by community organizations and five by the city.

    The program is being funded through an $18-million federal community development grant and federal stimulus money. As of December, Los Angeles had an unemployment rate of 13.2%, a slight dip from the month before but still higher than rates in the county, which is at 12%, and statewide at 12.1%.

    — Phil Willon at L.A. City Hall

  • Coroner: Michael Jackson given amount of anesthetic used in ‘major surgery’ [Updated]

    In the last hours of his life, Michael Jackson was given a powerful anesthetic at a level equivalent to what would be used in a “major surgery” and in a manner that did not live up to medical standards, according to the autopsy report on the pop icon released Monday by the Los Angeles County coroner’s office.

    “The standard of care for administering propofol was not met,” coroners’ examiners wrote in the report. “Recommended equipment for patient monitoring, precision dosing, and resuscitation was not present.”

    The report said Jackson died of “acute propofol intoxication” administered by another. Coroner’s officials described a scene around Jackson’s bedside that showed a host of problems in using propofol at such a high level.

    An oxygen tank was empty and equipment disconnected, and there were no monitors or controlled infusion pump for intravenous administration, they wrote.

    They also found that an anesthesiologist would have noted the other sedative drugs in Jackson’s system would have increased the propofol’s effect on the singer’s lungs and heart. In addition to propofol, Jackson’s blood contained lidocaine, diazepam, nordiazepam, lorazepam, midazolam and ephedrine.“

    [Updated at 2:08 p.m.: There are NO reports of [propofol’s] use for insomnia relief, to my knowledge,” anesthesiology consultant Selma Calmes wrote in the report, underlining and capitalizing the word "no."

    “The only reports of its use in homes are cases of fatal abuse (first reported in 1992), suicide, murder and accident,” she wrote.

    Because of the risks associated with the drug, it should be administered only by anesthesiologists or other supervised anesthesia providers, trained to recognize respiratory or cardiac problems that can arise, Calmes wrote.

    “Full patient monitoring is required any time propofol is given,” she wrote.

    Precision in the drug’s dosage through a controlled pump is necessary because “of the narrow margin between mere sedation and full general anesthesia,” she wrote. “The levels of propofol found on [the] toxicology exam are similar to those found during general anesthesia for major surgery (intra-abdominal) with propofol infusions.”] 

    — Victoria Kim at the L.A. County coroner’s office

    Photo: Murray arrives in court. Don Bartlelli / L.A. Times

  • Man arrested in San Diego firebomb spree

    A man who allegedly hurled firebombs at five different targets in San Diego, including two police stations and a middle school, has been arrested after a high-speed chase ended in Riverside County.

    Edward Batties, 26, was arrested about 5:30 a.m. Sunday in Temecula and jailed on a count of suspicion of arson, a count of evading a police officer, two counts of burglary and two counts of possession of a destructive device, authorities said.

    The spree began Friday evening when the suspect, from San Diego, tossed a Molotov cocktail into the fenced yard at the San Diego Police Department’s Mid-City station, where it rolled under a car but did not set it on fire, said Maurice Luque, spokesman for the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.

    Minutes later, police received a report that someone had thrown a bomb at nearby Monroe Clark Middle School. No damage was reported.

    The arsonist lay low until 4 p.m. Saturday, when a firebomb was lobbed at a pickup truck in Mission Bay, destroying the vehicle, officials said.

    "When we got there, the thing was fully engulfed in fire," Luque said. Witnesses reported the suspect was driving a white Ford Explorer.

    The suspect fired a Molotov cocktail at the Eastern Division police station about 7:30 p.m., but it did not cause any damage, and then tossed another at a Serra Mesa home, where it broke a window but bounced away and burned out in a yard, Luque said.

    On Sunday at about 5:04 a.m., an officer investigating reports of a vehicle burglary in Del Mar Heights spotted the suspect’s pickup and began chasing him. Batties raced away on the northbound 15 Freeway at more than 100 mph, tossing a gas can and what appeared to be Molotov cocktails out the window, officials said.

    The CHP joined the chase about 20 minutes later, laying a spike strip ahead of the suspect at a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint in Temecula. After he sped over the spikes, puncturing his tires, Batties managed to continue for about a mile before careening into the center divide, where he was arrested, CHP officials said.

    Batties was being held at San Diego County Jail on $160,000 bail. He was scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday in San Diego.

    — Amina Khan

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  • Charlie Sheen faces arraignment on charges of assaulting his wife

    Charlie_Sheen Actor Charlie Sheen is scheduled to be arraigned Monday afternoon in an Aspen, Colo., courtroom on charges related to his Christmas Day arrest for allegedly holding a knife to his wife’s throat after she reportedly threatened to leave him.

    Pitkin County prosecutor Arnold Mordkin will announce whether he will file felony charges stemming from the Dec. 25 incident, in which Sheen’s wife, Brooke Mueller, told police she feared for her life. He was arrested on charges of criminal assault, menacing and criminal mischief.

    Sheen and Mueller, married since 2008 and parents of twin boys, had been arguing early Christmas morning when Mueller said she wanted a divorce, according to the affidavit in the case. Mueller said Sheen had pinned her to a bed and held a knife to her throat as he straddled her.

    Sheen was released that night from Pitkin County Jail on $8,500 bail.

    Sheen’s lawyer, Richard Cummins, would not comment on reports that Sheen and Mueller were making efforts to reconcile. Mueller’s attorney, Yale Galanter, has not responded to phone calls seeking comment.

    Sheen previously pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of battery with serious bodily injury after a 1996 incident in which he was accused of knocking then-girlfriend Brittany Ashland to the ground.

    Burglars stole his Mercedes-Benz on Friday after he left his garage door open with the keys in the ignition, and the car ended up crashed and abandoned in a ravine off Mulholland Drive. Police have not found the burglars, who also stole items from other homes in Sheen’s gated community in Sherman Oaks.

    —  Amina Khan

    Photo: Charlie Sheen in January 2009. Credit: Chris Pizzello / Associated Press

    More breaking news in L.A. Now:

    New storm headed to Southern California

    Michael Jackson’s doctor struggled with financial woes, support for six children

    Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray expected to be charged this morning