Author: Shelby Grad

  • Glendale feeling an identity crisis, bringing in consultants

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/photos/uncategorized/2008/11/16/americana.jpg

    A firm hired to develop a strategy to promote Glendale as a destination for businesses, visitors and potential residents expects to begin a research effort this month that may last until October and involve a series of surveys and focus groups, an executive said.

    City officials agreed to terms with the firm, North Star Destination Strategies, in November, hoping it would help give Glendale a recognizable identity or brand.



    “It’s basically trying to put us back on the map,” Deputy Development Services Director Emil Tatevosian said of the planned marketing effort.




    Glendale’s mix of business districts and its urban expansion in recent years has left it without a clear identity to the outside world, something that an organized marketing plan could change, officials say.

    Read the full story here.

    — Zain Shauk

    Photo: The Americana mall in downtown Glendale. Credit: Los Angeles Times

  • LAPD beefs up patrols in Mid-Wilshire area after fatal shooting of gang intervention worker [Updated]

    Anti-gang leader shot dead

    The Los Angeles Police Department is stepping up patrols in a Mid-Wilshire neighborhood where a popular gang intervention worker was fatally shot after confronting a tagger on West Pico Boulevard.

    Ronald Lamonte Barron was leaving a bar in his old neighborhood Sunday night with his
    girlfriend when he noticed a tagger defacing a wall on Pico. Detectives
    said he confronted the tagger, who fatally shot
    him as his girlfriend and others looked on.

    [Updated at 8:39 a.m.: A previous version of this post dropped Barron’s last name on first reference.]

    LAPD Cmdr. Andy Smith said officials were beefing up patrols in the area to help ensure the safety of the community and to prevent retaliatory violence.

    “From what we can tell it looks like he was trying to do the right thing and senselessly shot because of it," Smith said.

    The LAPD said surveillance video from nearby
    businesses captured the killing in the 5000 block of West Pico
    Boulevard in the Mid-Wilshire district.





    The footage appeared to show a gunman wearing dark-colored clothing
    arguing with Barron in front of "numerous witnesses," LAPD detectives
    said.





    The suspected gang member, a Latino 20 to 25 years old, approximately 6
    feet tall and 180 pounds, then pulled out a pistol and shot Barron
    multiple times at point-blank range before calmly walking off.





    Shot in the head and chest, Barron fell in the middle of the busy
    thoroughfare. The 40-year-old was pronounced dead at a local hospital a
    few hours later.





    His slaying stunned colleagues at Amer-I-Can, where Barron had worked for more than a decade.





    The loss was also felt at City Hall and LAPD headquarters, where
    officials rely on gang interventionists like Barron to help reduce the
    grip of gangs in some neighborhoods.





    Barron was considered a veteran in the field. A former member of the Mansfield Crips gang that claims territory around
    Pico Boulevard and La Brea Avenue, Barron was one of a few gang outreach workers who
    was trusted enough by Los Angeles authorities to counsel young offenders in the
    jails.





    "Very few people reach that level," said attorney Connie Rice, a
    prominent civil rights attorney and leader of the Advancement Project,
    which is providing formal training for gang outreach workers.





    "There are a lot of con artists who claim to be interventionists," Rice
    said. Barron "was one of the genuine ones. He was dedicated. He was
    trusted enough to go into the jails. That’s a pretty rare status."





    Authorities don’t believe his work in gang intervention played any role in the killing.

    — Andrew Blankstein

    Photo: A memorial lies in the 5000 block of West Pico Boulevard, where Ronald
    Lamonte Barron was killed Sunday night after arguing with a tagger
    outside a bar. Surveillance tape captured the slaying. Credit: Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times

  • Judge backs financial disclosures for LAPD gang officers

    Officials for the union representing Los Angeles police officers said Monday they were considering their legal options after a federal judge upheld a key provision of the federal consent decree that required financial disclosures by gang and narcotics officers.

    The 35-page order by U.S. District Court Judge Gary Feess turned away a challenge by union officials who went to court to block a provision requiring officers joining anti-gang and narcotics units that frequently seize cash or contraband to disclose to department officials an array of personal financial information every two years.

    The roughly 600 officers already assigned to the units were granted a two-year grace period in February 2009 before having to complete the records, although that could be delayed because of legal challenges.

    In an e-mail sent to members, Los Angeles Police Protective League President Paul M. Weber called the disclosure provisions an “unnecessary and dangerous invasion into the personal finances of our members and their families” and held out the possibility of further legal challenges to the provisions. 

    — Andrew Blankstein

  • Hollywood sign coverup part of campaign to purchase Cahuenga Peak

    Hollywoodsign

    A nonprofit group plans to cover the Hollywood sign with a banner urging "Save the Peak" this week, announcing its effort to purchase nearby Cahuenga Peak from private developers for $11.7 million.

    La-me-cahuenga-peak9 The leaders of Public Trust for Lands intend to disclose their acquisition effort publicly for the first time Thursday morning in Hollywood. They say they have raised about half of the asking price for the 138-acre mountaintop parcel from a Chicago investment group.

    They have an April 14 deadline to seal the deal.

    The investors purchased the mountain site west of the Hollywood sign from the estate of Howard Hughes in 2002 for about $1.7 million.

    The aircraft and filmmaker tycoon bought the mountaintop in the 1930s and planned to build a love nest there for actress Ginger Rogers.

    Investors had hoped to sell the land for as much as $40 million for home sites. Their plans prompted Hollywood-area City Councilman Tom LaBonge to ask for the San Francisco-based land trust to help preserve the mountaintop.

    But police took the edge off the trust’s planned surprise by announcing that the Hollywood sign would be covered Thursday as part of “an international campaign” and would remain draped “until further notice.”

    The e-mailed “community alert notification” to Hollywood residents urged that they “not be alarmed” because the 450-foot-long landmark “will remain in place and there will be no changes done to the sign.” Police said the notification was issued “so we do not receive phone calls from worried citizens.”

    A spokesman for the San Francisco trust, Tim Ahern, said Monday afternoon his group was still awaiting permission to cover the sign from Los Angeles officials and the Hollywood Sign Trust, which maintains the sign. “The police department jumped the gun,” he said.

    Monday night, Ahern released details of the proposed acquisition.

    — Bob Pool in Hollywood

    Photo: Reed Saxon / Associated Press

  • Hollywood sign to be temporarily covered — LAPD tells residents not to worry

    http://latimes.image2.trb.com/lanews/media/photo/2009-02/45229132.jpg

    Los Angeles police Monday pulled the wraps off a surprise that an environmental group was planning for Thursday.

    Authorities disclosed that the Hollywood sign will be covered Thursday as part of “an international campaign” and will remain draped “until further notice.”

    The e-mailed “community alert notification” to Hollywood residents urged that they “not be alarmed” because the 450-foot-long landmark “will remain in place and there will be no changes done to the sign.”
    Police said the notification was issued “so we do not receive phone calls from worried citizens.”

    The temporary alteration is being planned by the Trust for Public Land, which is scheduled to announce a land preservation initiative Thursday.

    A spokesman for the San Francisco trust, Tim Ahern, said late Monday that his group was still awaiting permission to cover the sign from Los Angeles officials and the Hollywood Sign Trust, which maintains the sign. “The Police Department jumped the gun,” he said.

    — Bob Pool in Hollywood

    Photo: L.A. Times file

  • L.A. seeing a bonanza of local TV newscasts

    http://www.inmag.com/mediawatch/graphics/ktla1.jpg Last year, local television stations were criticized for not devoting more broadcast time to the Station fire. But it turns out that they are scheduling more time for local news now than perhaps ever.

    Mark Lacter explores the local TV scene in the new issue of Los Angeles magazine, reporting on the ever-expanding number of newscasts. It’s all about economics: News is cheaper to produce than purchasing the most popular syndicated fare.

    Reports Lacter: "L.A. is being bombarded with news — it’s on virtually nonstop, starting
    each morning at 4 a.m. (KNBC, Channel 4) and running throughout the day
    and late into the night. The stretch from 5 to 7 a.m. is especially
    intense: Besides KCBS and KNBC, there is news on KTLA (Channel 5), KABC
    (Channel 7), and KTTV (Channel 11). All told, 32 hours of local
    news every day, and that doesn’t count non-English stations or the
    morning gabfests on channels 5 and 11. Expect additional slots to be
    filled in the coming months."

    He also says ratings for news are on the decline. Read more here.

    — Shelby Grad

    Photo: KTLA Morning News

  • Michael Jackson’s doctor faces four years in prison if convicted on involuntary manslaughter charge; pop star’s family arrives in court [Updated]

    Murray Prosecutors on Monday charged Michael Jackson’s personal physician with involuntary manslaughter in connection with administering a combination of surgical anesthetic and sedatives blamed in the music legend’s death last summer.

    The complaint filed by the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office alleges that Dr. Conrad Murray “did unlawfully and without malice kill Michael Joseph Jackson, a human being, in the commission of an unlawful act not amounting to a felony; and in the commission of a lawful act which might have produced death, in an unlawful manner, and without due caution and circumspection.”

    [Updated at 2:10 p.m.: Murray arrived in court and pleaded not guilty. Bail was set at $75,000.]

    Jackson’s parents, Kathryn and Joe, as well as some of his brothers arrived at the courthouse shortly after the charge was filed.

    In a news release, the district attorney’s office said Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren, a prosecutor in the major crimes division, would try the case. Walgren is also handling the attempt to extradite movie director Roman Polanski to face sentencing in a three-decade-old child-sex case.

    The release credited the LAPD and the county coroner’s office for building the case against Murray. "Both agencies worked diligently and exhaustively to collect the evidence leading to the filing of the case,” the statement said.

    [Updated at 1 p.m.: Murray walked into the courthouse at 12:55 p.m. to shouts of “murderer” from a handful of Jackson fans whose presence was dwarfed by an international contingent of media who began camping out at the courthouse last week. He is scheduled to be arraigned at 1:30 p.m.]

    Brian Oxman, Joe Jackson’s attorney, said some family members were disappointed that the physician was charged only with involuntary manslaughter.

    The criminal case comes after a seven-month investigation that stretched from the master bedroom of Jackson’s Holmby Hills mansion to the heart clinic Murray ran in a poor neighborhood of Houston. The focus, however, rarely left Murray.

    Within weeks of Jackson’s death, detectives described the doctor as a manslaughter suspect in court papers that said he admitted leaving the singer alone and under the influence of propofol — a powerful anesthetic used to render surgical patients unconscious — in a bedroom of the sprawling home. 

    The coroner’s office ruled Jackson’s death a homicide and said the cause was “acute propofol intoxication” in conjunction with the effect of other sedatives Murray acknowledged providing.

    Despite the almost immediate focus on Murray — authorities first questioned him in the hospital where doctors were working in vain to revive Jackson — the multi-agency probe that included federal and local investigators progressed slowly, and the doctor was not formally accused of wrongdoing until the district attorney’s office filed its complaint.

    Involuntary manslaughter is the least serious homicide charge available to prosecutors, its maximum punishment of four years in prison far less than the life sentence for murder or the 11 years for voluntary manslaughter. The charge, which applies to an unlawful killing committed without malice or intent to kill, turns on Murray’s possible negligence in allegedly giving Jackson propofol for an unapproved purpose — the treatment of insomnia — and outside of the normal operating room setting.

    The drug, one of the most widely used general anesthetics in the nation, is so dangerous that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says only those trained in anesthesia should administer it.

    Murray told police that he had been giving Jackson nightly intravenous doses of propofol for six weeks, about the time he began working for the performer, according to police affidavits filed in court. Murray, who was in debt and behind on child-support payments, earned $150,000 a month treating Jackson and closed practices he operated in Las Vegas, where he lived, and Houston to join the performer in Los Angeles for rehearsals.

    According to the affidavits, Jackson told the physician that for years other doctors had treated his chronic insomnia with doses of propofol, a white liquid the singer called “milk.”

    Murray eventually became concerned that the singer was addicted and tried to wean him off the anesthetic, according to the affidavits. On the day Jackson died, Murray tried to get the performer to sleep using Valium and, later, two other sedatives, according to the affidavits. But Jackson remained awake for 10 hours, demanding propofol.

    According to the affidavits, Murray said he relented and sat next to Jackson’s bed as the propofol took effect. He told police he left for two minutes to use the restroom, and cellphone records indicate he also talked on the phone for 45 minutes, according to the affidavits. When he returned, Jackson was not breathing.

    Through his attorney, Murray has maintained his innocence and said he did nothing that should have caused Jackson’s death. In his only public comment — a one-minute video released in August through his lawyer — a somber-looking Murray expressed confidence that he would be exonerated. “I told the truth, and I have faith the truth will prevail,” he said.

    — Harriet Ryan and Victoria Kim in Los Angeles; Jack Leonard and Richard Winton at the Airport Courthouse

    Photo: Dr. Conrad Murray is escorted by a law enforcement officer into the Airport Courthouse for his arraignment. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

  • Michael Jackson family members wanted harsher charges against his doctor, attorney says

    Members of Michael Jackson’s family entered the courthouse near Los Angeles International Airport on Monday to attend the court hearing for the pop star’s doctor, Conrad Murray, who has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with Jackson’s death.

    Parents Joe and Kathryn Jackson as well as brother Jermaine were seen entering the courthouse.

    Brian Oxman, Joe Jackson’s attorney, said some family members were disappointed that the physician was charged only with involuntary manslaughter.

    He said he had spoken Monday to the singer’s father and his sister, LaToya, and that they both feel more serious charges should have been filed. “There was danger to human life,” Oxman said. “I knew it; everyone else who knew about the prescription medication knew it. To say the perpetrator didn’t know it I find to be unacceptable.”

    “They thought the charges should be more serious than involuntary manslaughter,” he said of Joe and LaToya Jackson. “There was disregard for the safety of human life.”

    — Victoria Kim and Richard Winton at the Airport Courthouse

  • Michael Jackson’s doctor charged with involuntary manslaughter in pop star’s death

    http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/images/200907/aptopix_michael_jackson_cad.6_330.jpgProsecutors on Monday charged Michael Jackson’s personal physician with involuntary manslaughter in connection with administering a combination of surgical anesthetic and sedatives blamed in the music legend’s death last summer.

    The complaint filed in Superior Court accused Dr. Conrad Murray, a cardiologist caring for the 50-year-old pop icon during an ambitious comeback attempt, of causing Jackson’s June 25 death by acting “without due caution and circumspection.” 

    The criminal case comes after a seven-month investigation that stretched from the master bedroom of Jackson’s Holmby Hills mansion to the heart clinic Murray ran in a poor neighborhood of Houston. The focus, however, rarely left Murray.

    Within weeks of Jackson’s death, detectives described the doctor as a manslaughter suspect in court papers that said he admitted leaving the singer alone and under the influence of propofol – a powerful anesthetic used to render surgical patients unconscious – in a bedroom of the sprawling home. 

    The coroner’s office ruled Jackson’s death a homicide and said the cause was “acute propofol intoxication” in conjunction with the effect of other sedatives Murray acknowledged providing.

    Despite the almost immediate focus on Murray – authorities first questioned him in the hospital where doctors were working in vain to revive Jackson – the multi-agency probe that included federal and local investigators progressed slowly, and the doctor was not formally accused of wrongdoing until the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office filed its complaint.

    Involuntary manslaughter is the least serious homicide charge available to prosecutors, its maximum punishment of four years in prison far less than the life sentence for murder or the 11 years for voluntary manslaughter. The charge, which applies to an unlawful killing committed without malice or intent to kill, turns on Murray’s possible negligence in allegedly giving Jackson propofol for an unapproved purpose – the treatment of insomnia – and outside of the normal operating room setting.

    The drug, one of the most widely used general anesthetics in the nation, is so dangerous that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says only those trained in anesthesia should administer it.

    Murray told police that he had been giving Jackson nightly intravenous doses of propofol for six weeks, about the time he began working for the performer, according to police affidavits filed in court. Murray, who was in debt and behind on child-support payments, earned $150,000 a month treating Jackson and closed practices he operated in Las Vegas, where he lived, and Houston to join the performer in Los Angeles for rehearsals.

    According to the affidavits, Jackson told the physician that for years other doctors had treated his chronic insomnia with doses of propofol, a white liquid the singer called “milk.”

    Murray eventually became concerned that the singer was addicted and tried to wean him off the anesthetic, according to the affidavits. On the day Jackson died, Murray tried to get the performer to sleep using Valium and, later, two other sedatives, according to the affidavits. But Jackson remained awake for 10 hours, demanding propofol.

    According to the affidavits, Murray said he relented and sat next to Jackson’s bed as the propofol took effect. He told police he left for two minutes to use the restroom, and cellphone records indicate he also talked on the phone for 45 minutes, according to the affidavits. When he returned, Jackson was not breathing.

    Through his attorney, Murray has maintained his innocence and said he did nothing that should have caused Jackson’s death. In his only public comment – a one-minute video released in August through his lawyer – a somber-looking Murray expressed confidence that he would be exonerated. “I told the truth, and I have faith the truth will prevail,” he said.

    — Harriet Ryan and Victoria Kim in Los Angeles, Jack Leonard and Richard Winton at the LAX courthouse.

    Photo: Family members at Michael Jackson’s memorial service. Credit: Los Angeles Times

    Read more about Michael Jackson’s case on the Homicide Report, including links to The Times complete coverage of his life and death

  • Under house arrest, Polanski manages a personal premiere of his new movie

    Roman Polanski is under house arrest at his Swiss chalet, but he still has managed to hold his own personal premiere for his new movie, "The Ghost."

    Polanski, who faces extradition to L.A. to face sentencing in a three-decade-old child-sex case, could not attend the gala premiere of the movie at the Berlin Film Festival. But he watched the movie on DVD with "The Ghost" co-writer, Robert Harris, at the chalet.

    “He was very happy with it, which was wonderful, but of course I am hugely biased,” Harris told the Telegraph in London.

    “I don’t know if he is disappointed not to be able to attend the premiere. I imagine he has been to quite a few premieres in his time.”

    Under the terms of his bail, Polanski is allowed to have visitors at his chalet and do work. He has been reportedly working on new film projects and holding meetings at his home.

    Polanski is fighting extradition after being arrested last year in Zurich. L.A. prosecutors want him back in the U.S. to be sentenced for sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl. Swiss authorities said it could be a year before justice officials decide whether to send Polanski back to L.A.

    — Shelby Grad

  • Is the federal government responsible for mudslides? Local officials want feds to pay. Do you agree?

    La Canada Flintridge digs out

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0120a7ff41ff970b-pi

    Who should pay for the damage in the La Cañada Flintridge mudslide?

    Forty-three homes in the communities were damaged, and nine were red-tagged, preventing residents from entering until the structures can be stabilized.

    Mudflows also damaged at least 25 vehicles. The force of debris streaming down the mountain pushed a 10-ton boulder into the drain of a critical catch basin in La Cañada Flintridge, stopping it up and propelling mud and debris two miles downhill to Foothill Boulevard.

    La Cañada Flintridge Mayor Laura Olhasso said the mud flowed from burned federal lands and therefore the U.S. government should take full responsibility.

    Do you agree? Share your thoughts below.

    Photo: Nanette Gregorian, 13, wades through muddy water Sunday in her yard in La Cañada Flintridge, where residents face a massive cleanup job. Credit: Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times

  • Should L.A. give cyclists more space on the road? Share your thoughts

    http://www.westsidebikeside.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/labbp_map_central2.png


    Ari logo In a region known for traffic-jammed freeways, a group of cycling advocates has developed a plan for a freeway system for bikes.

    The Backbone Bikeway Network would create miles-long east-west and north-south corridors for cyclists along some of the county’s largest streets and heaviest-traveled corridors.

    The network is one part of the plan offered by The L.A. Bike Working Group and was created as an alternative to the city of L.A.’s proposed bicycle plan.

    What do you think about the proposed bike plan? Do cyclists deserve a larger chunk of the road? Can motorists share the road? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

    — Ari B. Bloomekatz

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

    Dr. Conrad MurrayConrad Murray, who may be charged today in the death of Michael Jackson, first met the pop star four years ago when he treated the singer in Las Vegas.

    When Jackson later asked Murray, 56, to become his personal doctor, it was a lifeline for a man struggling financially, according to an investigation by The Times’ Harriet Ryan.

    Courts in Las Vegas, where he lived with his physician wife,
    19-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter, had ordered him or his
    business to pay $435,000 to creditors, including a student loan.





    His home near the 18th hole of a country club was in jeopardy. Property
    records showed he had refinanced the mortgage at least three times in
    five years and owed close to $1.7 million on a property now assessed at
    $1.08 million. By the time the Jackson job came along, it had been
    months since Murray had paid the mortgage, and foreclosure proceedings
    loomed, according to court records.

    He had also fallen behind on child support payments. Birth certificates
    and other public records indicate that in addition to the two children
    he had with his wife, Murray had fathered at least four children with
    three other women.

    Files from Las Vegas family court proceedings show he owed thousands of
    dollars to a California woman with whom he had a son, now 11. He also was helping to support two daughters, ages 16 and 8, who lived with their
    mother in Las Vegas, according to the records. And last March, an
    actress from Santa Monica gave birth to Murray’s son, according to a
    California birth certificate.

    Read the full profile of of Murray here.

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

    Jackson

    After days of delays, L.A. prosecutors are expected to file a criminal case against Michael Jackson’s doctor, Conrad Murray, in connection with the pop star’s death.

    Charges would cap an eight-month police investigation into the circumstances of Jackson’s death,

    There was intense speculation that Murray would be charged Friday — and for a while, his attorneys said he’d show up to court even if he were not charged.

    On Friday around noon, the district attorney’s office said a case pertaining to Jackson’s death will be filed at that courthouse, but did not name Murray or specify the charges. Numerous sources with knowledge of the case said the cardiologist will be charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with administering the combination of sedatives and anesthetic blamed in the singer’s June death.



    Prosecutors originally planned to file the case Friday, according to law enforcement sources, who said the case was delayed after a dispute arose with Murray’s defense team Thursday over the details of his surrender.



    Murray, who owns a home in Nevada and works in Houston, has been staying in the Los Angeles area as he awaits charges. Through his attorney, the doctor has said he wants to turn himself in rather than be arrested and has made arrangements for surrender, including gathering his passport and meeting with bail-bond companies.

    But how bail should be set became a sticking point during negotiations between prosecutors and the defense, according to two law enforcement sources and Murray’s lawyer, Ed Chernoff.

    Murray acknowledged to police that he gave Jackson an intravenous dose of the powerful anesthetic propofol shortly before his death, according to court documents. The drug is intended for use in operating rooms by anesthesiologists. Murray told police the singer had a long history of using the drug to sleep, and Murray was trying to wean Jackson from it the week he died, the documents state.

    — Harriet Ryan and Jack Leonard

    Photo: A small forest of TV truck antennas sprout around the Airport Courthouse in anticipation of the  arraignment of Dr. Conrad Murray. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

    More breaking news in L.A. Now:

    Charlie Sheen faces arraignment on charges of assaulting his wife

    New storm headed to Southern California

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

  • Residents, governor assess mudslide damage in Station fire burn area

    Mud roars down a street in La Cañada Flintridge, where at least 41 hillside houses have been damaged or destroyed. <a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/02/mandatory-evacuations-la-canada-flintridge-la-crescenta-acton-rain-mudslides.html"><b>Full story at L.A. Now</b></a>

    Residents and officials were assessing the damage this morning after mudslides damaged 43 homes in the foothills hit by the Station fire.

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was scheduled to tour the Ocean View Boulevard area this morning.

    Most of the evacuations of residents were lifted, and most of the canyon roads closed by mud damage Saturday were now open.

    The mudslides occurred during an intense storm early Saturday morning. The power of the debris flowing off the mountain pushed a 10-ton boulder into a crucial catch basin in La Cañada Flintridge.

    The boulder clogged the drain like a giant stopper, and the ashen muck had nowhere to go but through the Paradise Valley neighborhood on the northern end of Ocean View Boulevard. Mud flowed two miles downhill, all the way to Foothill Boulevard.

    "It looked like the Niagara Falls was coming down the street," said Amanda Manukian, who lives in the 5400 block of Ocean View Boulevard. She said she saw firefighters scramble out of her neighbor’s home when a burst of rainfall poured down, threatening the crew.

    The mudflow twisted garage doors into dented accordions, disintegrated walls of sandbags and knocked over 4,000-pound concrete barriers that lined the road to divert water away from homes. About 25 vehicles were damaged, flowing down the street and smashing against walls, trees and one another.

    Despite the damaging flows, there were no reports of deaths or serious injuries. 

    Read the full story here.

    — Rong-Gong Lin II, Victoria Kim and Ruben Vives

    Cars damaged from the mudflows in La Cañada today.

    FULL COVERAGE OF THE MUDSLIDES

    — Times photo gallery from the scene

    — Interactive map of evacuations by The Times’ Rong-Gong Lin II

    — The latest rain news as it happens on L.A. Now

    Photo credit: Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times

  • Videos show destructive path of foothill mudslides

     


    The destructive power of the mudslides that hit La Cañada Flintridge this morning can be seen on videos being posted on the Internet. Here is footage from KTLA News.




    KNBC-Channel 4 has several videos, including this one above, said to be shot by residents in the mudslide area.





    This video was posted by the Melrose Action community group and laist, showing flooded businesses on Melrose Avenue.



    FULL COVERAGE OF THE MUDSLIDES

    –Times photo gallery from the scene

    –Interactive map of evacuations by The Times” Rong-Gong Lin II

    –The latest rain news as it happens

    — Shelby Grad

  • Storms bring high rain totals to L.A.: 4 inches in Hollywood Hills; 3.2 in Santa Monica

    Precipitation Forecast

    The latest series of rainstorms to hit Southern California dumped the greatest amount of rain in L.A.’s Westside and Hollywood Hills areas, according to numbers from the National Weather Service.

    The Hollywood Reservoir recorded more than four includes of rain between Thursday night and 10 a.m. Saturday.  Sierra Madre had 3.6 inches, and Santa Monica had 3.2 inches. The high desert and some inland valley areas got significantly less rain.

    The storms appear to have packed more of a punch than initially forecast, and more rain is expected Saturday afternoon and into Sunday morning, according to the NWS. (The map above show forecast rain totals by Sunday at 4 a.m.)

    Here are the rainfall totals for selected areas of Southern California:

    AVALON… 2.79

    DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES…2.84

    LONG BEACH .. 2.75

    SANTA MONICA .. 3.24

    BEL AIR HOTEL….. 3.86

    HOLLYWOOD RSVR….. 4.06

    HANSEN DAM……. 2.11

    CLAREMONT….. 2.54

    MOUNT WILSON …. 1.83

    SIERRA MADRE… 3.62

    LANCASTER…. 0.62

    — Shelby Grad

    Image: Rain forecast map through Sunday at 4 a.m. Credit: National Weather Service

    FULL COVERAGE OF THE MUDSLIDES

    –Times photo gallery from the scene

    –Interactive map of evacuations by The Times” Rong-Gong Lin II

    –The latest rain news as it happens

  • Shoes on a wire — is this the new graffiti? California cities crack down.

    All tangled up

    Critics call it "shoefiti," and some cities, including Long Beach, are beginning to liken the problem to graffiti and other types of vandalism

    If you look up, you might spot them hanging from telephone wires and power lines by their shoelaces.

    Some people say the suspended sneakers, high-tops and boots mark a
    place where drugs are sold. Other lore holds they commemorate a
    killing, mark gang territory or vow retaliation.

    Others insist throwing shoes tied together by their laces over a wire
    is just a child’s prank, an effort to leave a mark that’s as pointless as
    sticking gum under a table.

    Long Beach wants to get a handle on what has been a persistent blemish
    on the urban landscape. City leaders this week requested a
    system to remove shoes from utility lines within 72 hours.

    Read the full story here.

    — Tony Barboza

    Photo: "Shoefiti," complicated by bureaucracy, has plagued Long Beach for years. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

  • Charges in Michael Jackson death will be filed Monday, prosecutors say

    After days of speculation and confusion, L.A. County prosecutors said Friday they will charge Michael Jackson’s personal doctor in connection with the pop star’s death on Monday.

    The announcement came after reports throughout the week that prosecutors would file involuntary manslaughter charges against Dr. Conrad Murray sometime this week.

    "Nothing will be filed today in the Michael Jackson death case. A case will be filed on Monday, Feb. 8, at the Airport Court, 11701 S. La Cienega Blvd. Information on charges and the scheduled arraignment at the Airport Court will be released after the case is filed," the district attorney’s office said in a statement.

    Negotiations between prosecutors and attorneys for Murray to secure his surrender broke down late Thursday.

    — Harriet Ryan and Jack Leonard

  • Ferrari owner’s dream garage grinds neighbors’ gears

    Ferrari in the living room

    His pristine Ferrari 512 BBi "Boxer" sits in the middle of Holger Schubert’s living room in Brentwood, right next to stylish furniture, a built-in bookcase and a flat-screen TV that slides on tracks past walls of glass that frame an ocean view.

    But Los Angeles officials are about to slam shut forever the garage door that leads to the city’s most extravagant parking space

    City planners have withdrawn permission for Schubert to use a bridge to connect his Ferrari’s third-floor resting spot with North Tigertail Road.

    The ruling by the West Los Angeles Area Planning Commission tosses a mechanic’s wrench into Schubert’s hopes of using the showpiece garage that last year won Architectural Digest magazine’s Design Driven contest.

    Neighbors complained about the bridge, alleging that the city erroneously approved its construction to create both a safety hazard and a development precedent that could degrade hillside neighborhoods throughout the city.

    Schubert, a 43-year-old product designer, contends that neighbors turned against the bridge in retaliation for his home remodeling project taking so long — about five years, so far. The ruling sets the stage for the city to issue an enforcement order that will force Schubert to tear down the 10-foot-long, 15-foot-high bridge if he does not obtain a zoning variance for it or win a court reprieve that preserves it.

    Read the full story here.

    — Bob Pool in Brentwood

    Photo: Holger Schubert looks at his Ferrari 512 BBi "Boxer" parked in the living room of his Brentwood home. Credit: Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times