Friday, August 19, 2011

Stabbing reported on Red Line in Hollywood [Updated]

Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies were searching late Friday for the person who stabbed someone on the Red Line subway in Hollywood, officials said.

It's unclear what the condition of the victim is, or exactly where the stabbing occurred.

Metro trains are continuing to run but are skipping the Hollywood/Vine station, said Sheriff's Lt. John Hocking.

The stabbing took place about 7:30 p.m., he said.

[Updated, 9:18 p.m.: The victim, a man, was pronounced dead at the scene, Hocking said. The suspect is still at large.]

ALSO:

Fullerton police sued over wrongful 2010 arrest

Retailer's 'Graffiti Starter Kit' raises councilman's ire

Driver who killed pedestrian while texting pleads no contest

-- Robert Faturechi

 

Obama plan to review deportation cases stokes heated debate

Secure Communities

The Obama administration's plan to review the cases of 300,000 illegal immigrants currently in deportation proceedings to identify "low-priority" offenders has sparked a debate in Washington and beyond.

Officials said that by launching the case-by-case review, they are refocusing deportation efforts on convicted felons and other "public safety threats." Those who have not committed crimes could be allowed to remain in the U.S.

The move was cheered by some illegal immigrants, notably college students who have been pushing Congress to pass the Dream Act, which would allow them to stay in the country, as well as supporters of the legislation.

Senate Democrats working for immigration reform welcomed the new policy. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) , said it would "alleviate some of the pressure on our broken immigration system." Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), coauthor of the Dream Act bill that would grant a path to citizenship for certain illegal immigrant students, described the policy as "a fair and just way to deal with an important group of immigrant students."

Man stabbed, killed on Red Line in Hollywood

A man was stabbed to death on the Red Line subway in Hollywood late Friday evening, and the assailant  remains at large, authorities said.

Todd Martens, a Times staffer who witnessed the stabbing, said it took place after a dispute on the train.

A rider holding what looked like a bike chain got into an argument with another passenger. The man with the chain "started swinging wildly.... He was flailing his chain, but it wasn't really hitting the guy. He just seemed crazy," Martens said.

The other man, who was holding two skateboards and a bag, then pulled out a small knife, prompting bystanders to scurry to the back of the car. The man stabbed the chain-wielding victim in his chest. The stabber stepped back, and said, "Oh, no, why did you make me do that?" Martens said.

The victim collapsed and began shaking.

The subway operator momentarily stopped the train just after the Hollywood/Western stop. The stabber slumped to the floor of the train, near the door, asking for help.

"You saw him attack me, right? Please say you did," he asked other passengers, according to Martens.

In his bag, the man, who appeared to be in his 20s, had what looked to be a brand new blue shirt in shrink-wrap. Two other passengers encouraged him to change out of his bloodied clothes.

The assailant put on the new shirt and stuffed the bloodied shirt into the bag. The train stopped at the Hollywood/Vine station, the doors opened and he bolted.

"I waited a couple minutes for the cops. They weren't there. Kids were crying. Blood was everywhere," Martens said.

ALSO:

Fullerton police sued over wrongful 2010 arrest

Retailer's 'Graffiti Starter Kit' raises councilman's ire

Driver who killed pedestrian while texting pleads no contest

-- Robert Faturechi (twitter.com/RobertFaturechi)

Border Patrol dog finds big meth load in San Diego County

Meth1 
A Border Patrol drug-sniffing dog is being credited with helping uncover a load of methamphetamine worth an estimated $470,000 at a checkpoint on Interstate 8 near Pine Valley in eastern San Diego County.

The federal pooch was sent to sniff a 2000 Volkswagen Jetta after the driver's nervousness made agents suspicious. The dog gave a "positive alert" to the car's rear bumper, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Inside the bumper were 30 bundles of methamphetamine weighing 23.5 pounds, with a street value of $470,000, officials said.

The driver, a 38-year-old U.S. citizen, was arrested. She was on supervised release stemming from a felony drug conviction at the time of the arrest Thursday, officials said.

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: Bundles of methamphetamine found inside the car's bumper. Credit: U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

 

Stabbing reported on Red Line in Hollywood

Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies were searching late Friday for the person who stabbed someone on the Red Line subway in Hollywood, officials said.

It's unclear what the condition of the victim is, or exactly where the stabbing occurred.

Metro trains are continuing to run but are skipping the Hollywood/Vine station, said Sheriff's Lt. John Hocking.

The stabbing took place about 7:30 p.m., he said.

ALSO:

Fullerton police sued over wrongful 2010 arrest

Retailer's 'Graffiti Starter Kit' raises councilman's ire

Driver who killed pedestrian while texting pleads no contest

-- Robert Faturechi

 

Medical marijuana dispensary ban case headed back to appeals court

One of California’s most-watched medical marijuana cases is headed back to the state Court of Appeal for what could eventually be a crucial ruling on whether cities and counties have the power to ban dispensaries -- as more than 200 cities and 15 counties have already done.

In a case that has bounced around the courts, a Superior Court judge in Orange County decided this week that Anaheim’s 4-year-old ban on dispensaries does not violate state law. After presiding over a trial in May, Judge David Chaffee concluded that neither the ground-breaking medical marijuana initiative passed by voters in 1996 nor the state law that followed seven years later preempt local ordinances intended to regulate the distribution of the drug.

The decision was celebrated by anti-drug activists.

“I think both sides have been watching this case more so than any other,” said Paul Chabot, president of the Coalition for a Drug-Free California. “We are excited about this. We think it’s going to encourage the cities that are on the sidelines to join with the majority of California cities in banning dispensaries.”

But Anthony Curiale, the attorney for Qualified Patients Assn., a dispensary that sued Anaheim in 2007, said he plans to file an appeal.

“Their ordinance is unconstitutional, it’s invalid, it conflicts with state law,” he said. “I believe Judge Chaffee is wrong in his interpretation of law.”

The case has already been before the 4th District Court of Appeal in Santa Ana, but a three-judge panel sent it back to the lower court for a trial, disappointing both sides who had hoped the long-debated issue might be settled.

Curiale said he could not predict when the appellate court might rule again. “Oh, God knows,” he said. “If I knew that I’d be at the racetrack.”

Curiale and Moses W. Johnson IV, the assistant Anaheim city attorney handling the case, both speculated that it could take a year before the appeal court rules, but both also said they would ask the court to speed up consideration of the case.

“I’m pleased. I think I won,” Johnson said.

RELATED:

Appeals court declines to rule on whether California medical marijuana laws bar cities from outlawing dispensaries

Medical marijuana case appears headed back to trial

Judge to rule on closure of Costa Mesa marijuana dispensaries

-- John Hoeffel

Gov. Brown appoints financial expert to bullet train authority

Photo: California Gov. Jerry Brown. Credit: Eric Paul Zamora / MCT One of the vacancies at the agency attempting to build a bullet train was filled Friday, when Bay Area financial expert Dan Richard was appointed to the board of the California High-Speed Rail Authority by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Richard has moved in and out of public projects, serving on groups involved in Bay Area transit and airport projects.

The board position has been empty, and Brown had pledged earlier this week to fill it quickly when he reiterated his support for the rail project. Notably, four of the seven executive staff positions at the agency are also vacant, even as it enters a crucial period to prepare for the possible start of rail construction next year.

Richard had not filed a routine financial disclosure forms as of Friday, and attempts to reach him were unsuccessful. Richard is an attorney by background and one of five attorneys on the nine-member board of the authority.

Critics have complained that the board does not have engineers or rail experts, and members of the state Legislature have moved to revamp the entire board to strengthen its technical expertise.  The existing board includes a former mayor, two labor leaders, an expert on the homeless and a former staffer to Gov. Gray Davis.

Driver who killed pedestrian while texting pleads no contest

Untitled A 21-year-old Tujunga woman pleaded no contest Friday to striking and killing an 80-year-old Glendale man with her car last year while she was texting, officials said.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Patrick Hegarty ordered Ani Voskanian to serve three years' formal probation and 300 hours of community service and to develop a lecture program for junior and high school students on the dangers of texting while driving, officials said.

Voskanian — who pleaded to a felony manslaughter charge for killing Misak Ranjbar — will not be allowed to possess a cellphone while inside a vehicle, officials said. Her license was also revoked for three years, her attorney told the Glendale News-Press.

“In this particular case, there is a tragic loss of a father of a family. On the other hand, another family could have lost their daughter,” said Glendale Police Det. Ashraf Mankarios, who was the lead investigator in the case. “Although she will suffer the consequence as the result of this, in the end, both families came together, hugged and appear to be healing.”

ALSO:

Newport Beach doctor missing in Arizona

Reward offered in case of slain couple dumped in trash

2 tombstones found during drug raid were stolen, police say

--Veronica Rocha, Times Community News

Photo: Ani Voskanian. Credit: Glendale Police Department

Two tales from a passionate L.A. storyteller

http://opinion.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c7de353ef015390272c37970b-800wi A memorial service was held this week in East Los Angeles for veteran L.A. Times reporter and columnist George Ramos, who died last month. At the service, journalists, elected officials and others praised Ramos for his pioneering coverage of the Latino community, which included being among the recipients of a Pulitzer Prize for a series on how Latinos were changing L.A. Below are two Ramos columns cited during the memorial.

This is one in a series of L.A. Now posts highlighting examples of memorable storytelling from the archives of the Los Angeles Times. More examples of such journalism can be found at Twitter by searching #longreads and #lalongreads. Do you have a suggestion for a story from The Times' archives that we should feature? Send us a note at metrodesk@latimes.com

Bashing Illegal Immigrants Is on Today's Menu

Dec. 14, 1992

There's a lot of immigrant-bashing going on these days. L.A. County Supervisor Mike Antonovich blames them for the county's budget woes. Mayoral hopeful Julian Nava gets booed for suggesting that resident immigrants be allowed to vote in city elections. Leticia Quezada got much the same reaction when she proposed the same for L.A. school elections.

Many Latinos also are jumping on the bandwagon. In a recent front page Times story, a majority of 2,800 Latinos surveyed in the United States by the Latino National Political Survey think there are too many immigrants -- illegal and otherwise -- coming to this country.

While I am outraged by this point of view, I'm not surprised by it.

My mother, the daughter of an illegal immigrant, has been saying much the same thing for several years.

At family gatherings over holidays like Thanksgiving, Mom likes to occasionally gauge the state of the world by asking me questions that she knows will provoke. Like, "Well, what do you think about 'Slick Willie?' "

Naturally, I take the bait and the debate is on. This time, no matter how much I talked about the President-elect, Mom wouldn't give up. She took special delight in repeating the derisive nickname given to Bill Clinton by his detractors.

I pointed out that she was fighting a losing cause: Mom was outvoted on Election Day by her two sons, who thought Slick Willie deserved a chance to run the country.

"Well, let me tell you one thing," Mom retorted, not giving an inch.

The discussions are fun because Mom is my version of grass-roots America. She is of a generation that struggled in the Depression, grew up during World War II and shaped the ideals and aspirations instilled in baby boomers like me. When I wonder about the Silent Majority, I think of Mom.

Fullerton police sued over wrongful 2010 arrest

Fullerton police chief Michael Sellers Michael Sellers, the embattled Fullerton police chief currently on leave, and several of his officers have been named in a civil suit to be filed Friday seeking unspecified damages over the wrongful 2010 arrest of a Baldwin Park man.

The city's Police Department acknowledged Wednesday that it mistakenly arrested Veth Mam on suspicion of attacking a police officer in October. An Orange County jury found Mam not guilty last month of assault, battery and resisting arrest.

In addition to Sellers, Officers Kenton Hampton, Frank Nguyen, Jonathan Miller and Daniel Solorio are listed as defendants.

Fullerton’s acting chief, Kevin Hamilton, has ordered an internal investigation into how the mistake occurred.

The investigation and lawsuit come as multiple inquiries are underway into a deadly encounter July 7 between six Fullerton police officers and Kelly Thomas, a 37-year-old homeless man with schizophrenia.

Sellers took medical leave last week following calls for his resignation by two City Council members and members of the public.

Fullerton Police Sgt. Andrew Goodrich said the department received a copy of the suit Friday but is not prepared to comment on it.

At a news conference Friday morning, Mam said the incident has left a lasting emotional impact. “He doesn’t go out anymore,” said attorney Garo Mardirossian, who is also representing the Thomas family in a separate suit he plans to file. “He’s afraid of being harassed by police.”

Mam, 35, said he was walking to his car after 2 a.m. when he saw a friend, Sokha Leng, being arrested by Fullerton police. He said he thought Leng was being mistreated and began recording the arrest with his iPhone.

On the video, Hampton can be seen knocking the phone out of Mam’s hand. Another man picked up the phone and kept recording. The footage shows Mam being wrestled to the ground by officers and placed in handcuffs.

In a police report, Nguyen wrote that Mam jumped on another officer's back and choked him. Nguyen alleged that he pulled Mam off the officer's back and pushed him away. The officer claimed that Mam continued to approach the officers, who arrested him.

During the trial, Nguyen and other officers repeated their version of events to the jury. Goodrich told The Times this week that the officers did not lie about the events, adding that there was another man -- not Mam -- who did jump on an officer's back. But the officers erroneously believed Mam was that attacker, Goodrich said.

ALSO:

Newport Beach doctor missing in Arizona

Reward offered in case of slain couple dumped in trash

2 tombstones found during drug raid were stolen, police say

-- Ricardo Lopez

Photo: Fullerton Police Chief Michael Sellers. Credit: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times

15 in prescription drug smuggling operation are arrested, officials say

Fifteen people have been arrested in a large-scale operation to smuggle prescription drugs from Southern California to Tijuana for sale and then bring the profits to the U.S. to fund other criminal activities, state Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris announced Friday.

The operation involved taking wholesale quantities of prescription drugs such as Oxycontin and hydrocodone to Tijuana. The drugs were acquired from pharmacies in San Diego, Riverside and Los Angeles counties through fraud and other schemes, Harris said.

In San Diego, the operation brought $400,000 from Mexico over six months. The leader of the organization, identified as Anthony Wright, boasted that he was making $1,000 a day for several years, officials said.

Wright got large quantities of drugs from Dabney's Pharmacy in South Los Angeles, Harris said. The pharmacy has failed to report sales of the drugs since late 2009.

The charges against the 15 come from both federal and state indictments issued in Los Angeles and San Diego.

ALSO:

Atheism billboard greets O.C. drivers

Drunk-driving crackdown begins this weekend in L.A.

Some see Obama illegal-immigration review as amnesty

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Reward offered in case of slain couple dumped in trash

Chatsworth home

Officials on Friday announced a $75,000 reward for information leading to the person who killed two people and dumped their bodies in a trash bin outside a home in Chatsworth.

The bodies were found in a state of decomposition Friday night at the home in the 20400 block of Lassen Street.

Police suspect Brent D. Zubek, 43, of killing a man and woman.

Police said undercover officers spotted Zubek around noon Sunday. An undercover unit posted in the 9400 block of Sepulveda Boulevard had been watching a Ford F-150 truck connected with Zubek when the suspect got inside and drove off.

The officers tailed the truck at normal speeds without using the siren. They decided not to pull Zubek over because he is considered armed and dangerous and the officers were waiting for backup units.

Police said Zubek used a "series of maneuvers" to elude the undercover officers.

Los Angeles Councilman Mitchell Englander announced the reward at a news conference Friday.

ALSO:

Stolen Rembrandt found in church pastor's office

'Real Housewives'' Russell Armstrong: No suicide note found

Kobe Bryant: After alleged tussle in church, parishioners speak out

-- Shelby Grad

Photo: A cyclist passes the house in the 20400 block of Lassen Street in Chatsworth where police found two bodies Friday. Credit: Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times

 

 

 

Hiker found safe in Sierra National Forest

A Southern California woman who went missing in the Sierra National Forest was found safe Friday, authorities said.

Barbara Taborek, 58, of Irvine, was reported missing at 9 p.m. Thursday after she was last seen near the Fernandez Pass Trailhead, above North Fork, said Madera County Sheriff’s officials.

Madera County Search and Rescue teams scoured the area and placed themselves in three spots overnight where they thought they might be able to see Taborek.

A California Highway Patrol helicopter was preparing to help in the search just after 7 a.m. Friday when ground crews found Taborek near the Norris Creek Trailhead.

Taborek, a seasoned hiker, was in good condition and was “fully equipped” to handle the area’s rugged terrain, sheriff’s officials said.

ALSO:

Letter returned to woman 21 years after it was mailed

Some see Obama illegal-immigration review as amnesty

Actor quits "Rocky Horror Show" in San Diego after sex crime revealed

-- Kate Mather

Interior department to hold big gulf oil lease sale

Oil worker gulf of mexico

The Obama administration announced Friday that it will hold its first oil and gas lease sale in the Gulf of Mexico since the deadly Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill.

“This sale is an important step toward a secure energy future that includes safe, environmentally sound development of our domestic energy resources,” said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. “Since Deepwater Horizon, we have strengthened oversight at every stage of the oil and gas development process, including deepwater drilling safety, subsea blowout containment, and spill response capability."

The Department of Interior plans in December to offer more than 20 million acres in the western gulf for energy leasing -- despite a recent Interior report that found companies are not exploring or producing oil and gas on roughly two-thirds of the 34 million acres they already lease in the gulf.

The administration came under sharp criticism from the oil industry and gulf state politicians for imposing a deep-water drilling moratorium in the wake of last year's Deepwater explosion -- and then when the ban was lifted -- for not approving new drilling quickly enough.

“This lease sale is an important and encouraging step toward getting the Gulf of Mexico and its hardworking people back to work. Unfortunately, the slow pace of new permits in the gulf places lingering uncertainty over this critical industry," Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu, a Democrat, said in a statement.

The conservation group Oceana condemned the move as premature. “Rushing this lease sale in the western gulf puts animals like turtles, dolphins and bluefin tuna at risk," said senior campaign director Jacqueline Savitz. "The Obama administration still hasn’t addressed significant shortcomings in spill response and cleanup capabilities."

The Environmental Defense Fund was more positive. “This announcement proves that the Obama administration is serious about allowing oil companies to return to deep-water drilling in the gulf, as long as they follow essential new rules ... to  protect the environment, workers and the economy," said Elgie Holstein, the group's senior planning director and former chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Energy. 

The new lease areas are located from nine to about 250 miles offshore in shallow and deep water, and could, the Interior said, produce 222 million to 423 million barrels of oil and as much as 2.65 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

Acknowledging that many existing leases are sitting idle, the agency said it intends to increase the minimum bid amount for deep-water blocks to $100 per acre from $37.50 to "discourage companies from purchasing leases they are unlikely to explore in the near term." 

The sale will include environmental safeguards for marine life and, "when conditions warrant," monitoring by trained observers to ensure compliance, the department said.

An Interior analysis released this spring found that gulf lease auctions before the BP spill drew little interest. Of nearly 53 million acres offered in 2009 in the central and western gulf, only 2.7 million acres were leased. Last year, only 2.4 million acres were leased out of roughly 37 million acres offered.

-- Bettina Boxall

Photo: An oil worker in the Gulf of Mexico. Credit: Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times

Tombstones found during Loma Linda drug bust

Tombstones found in drug bust
When sheriff’s deputies raided a suspected meth house in Loma Linda, the drugs, guns and pipes were there, as expected.

But the discovery of about two dozen granite tombstones had them stumped.

Although officials originally believed the markers were stolen, that might not be the case.

A San Bernardino man has said his company made the tombstones, but he gave them to a local contractor a few years ago because they all had mistakes.

Denver Cooley said Friday that when he first started working at Monumental Bronze & Granite in 1996, the owner at the time had a big stack of markers that could not be used because they either had a wrong date or missing initial.

Tombstones are hard to get rid of, Cooley said, because it’s difficult to break them into pieces, and they’re too heavy for easy disposal.

Over time, the pile of mismarked markers--some of which were 20 years old-–just grew larger.

CVS pays $2 million in overcharging, misleading-ads suit settlement

http://blogs.abcnews.com/photos/uncategorized/2009/05/04/ap_cvs_pharmacy_090218_main.jpg

Drugstore giant CVS Pharmacy has agreed to pay more than $2 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that the company took part in misleading advertising and overcharged customers for sale items.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Maureen Duffy-Lewis signed the final judgment this week after Los Angeles, Riverside and Ventura counties' district attorneys filed the civil complaint Aug. 11.

In the complaint, the Rhode Island-based CVS was accused of routinely charging customers more money for items advertised at a sale price since 2006. The complaint also said CVS used misleading advertising when it failed to provide an immediate discount for certain advertised items.

Per the terms of the judgment, CVS Pharmacy Inc., will pay $1.2 million in civil penalties; $420,000 in investigative costs; $300,000 to the California Department of Measurement Standards; and $100,000 to the Consumer Protection Trust to go toward the enforcement of consumer protection laws.

CVS will also create a three-year pricing program to make sure customers aren’t overcharged in the future, and conduct weekly in-store price inspections to make sure all prices are accurate. The drug store will also implement a “Scan-right” program guarantee where consumers will receive up to $2 off an item if it's scanned at a higher price than advertised.

CVS agreed to the settlement without admitting liability and “worked cooperatively” with prosecutors, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office said.

ALSO:

Heist nets $2 million in diamonds

Atheism billboard greets O.C. drivers

Letter returned to woman 21 years after it was mailed

--Kate Mather

Church arsonist motivated by sex teachings gets 6 years in prison

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef015434630fec970c-250wi A man who started a fire at a church three times because he disagreed with its teaching against masturbation was sentenced Friday to six years and four months in state prison.

Huntington Beach resident Izad Chavoshan, 32, pleaded guilty Aug. 9 to three felony counts of arson, one felony count of attempted arson and a hate crime sentencing enhancement, according to the Orange County District Attorney's office. Chavoshan had a previous criminal threats conviction from 1998.

On three separate occasions between Oct. 15 and 19, 2009, Chavoshan moved trash cans to the front of Orange County Church of Christ in Irvine and set their material on fire, prosecutors said.

After the incident was reported to Irvine police, Chavoshan was caught trying to set the church on fire by inserting a lighted piece of paper through its closed doors, according to the Daily Pilot.

ALSO:

Heist nets $2 million in diamonds

Atheism billboard greets O.C. drivers

Letter returned to woman 21 years after it was mailed

— Mona Shadia, Times Community News

Photo: Izad Chavoshan. Credit: Orange County District Attorney's office.

Citing Casey Anthony, Michael Jackson doctor wants sequestered jury

6a00d8341c630a53ef015390d3eb6d970b-piArguing that the Casey Anthony trial in Florida exposed a dangerous new order in television coverage of high-profile legal proceedings, lawyers for Michael Jackson’s physician have demanded a sequestered jury for his upcoming trial.

In court papers filed Thursday, the attorneys for Dr. Conrad Murray wrote that bombastic, opinionated commentary from cable personalities like Nancy Grace “demonstrated the danger that is created to a fair trial when basic information is managed for the purpose of entertainment and television ratings.”

The judge for Murray’s manslaughter trial, which is set for next month, has said previously he does not believe around-the-clock isolation of jurors is necessary.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor has also said the cash-strapped court system cannot afford the expense of hotel accommodations for the jury.

But in their filing, defense lawyers urged him to reconsider, writing that in the Anthony case, in which sequestered jurors delivered a not guilty verdict at odds with much of the television analysis, underscored the need for the panelists to be kept away from press coverage.

“Would [the Anthony jurors] have been so sure of the facts if the ‘experts’ had informed them on a nightly basis that they were wrong?” defense lawyers Nareg Gourjian and Edward Chernoff wrote.

6a00d8341c630a53ef015390d3ec3f970b-300wiMurray is accused of causing Jackson’s 2009 death from an overdose of surgical anesthetic. He maintains that Jackson administered the fatal dose himself.

If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray faces a maximum of four years in prison.

In their filing, Murray’s lawyers predicted viewership of the trial on the Internet and television would outdraw Anthony’s, given Jackson’s global fame. 

“There is reasonable expectation that Dr. Murray’s trial will be the most publicized trial in history,” they wrote.

The attorneys noted that in an aborted attempt at jury selection this spring, a process scuttled by unrelated delays, only one potential panelist said she had never heard of the case.

“And she could not speak English,” they added in a footnote.

Representatives for Grace did not return a message seeking comment, and her network, HLN, declined to comment.

A spokeswoman for the District Attorney's office declined to comment. A hearing is set for Aug. 25.

ALSO:

Heist nets $2 million in diamonds

Atheism billboard greets O.C. drivers

Letter returned to woman 21 years after it was mailed

-- Harriet Ryan

Photo: Michael Jackson, top; Casey Anthony. Credit: Los Angeles Times (bottom); Red Huber / Reuters.

Atheism billboard greets O.C. drivers

Atheist billboard unveiled in Westminster.

Orange County drivers of the 55 Freeway accustomed to seeing the usual billboards hawking mobile phone plans, sweaty palm surgeries and mixed martial arts matches were greeted this week by the smiling face of a young woman selling atheism.

"Atheism is philanthropy without mythology, peace without superstition," reads the large billboard next to some industrial buildings at the southbound Edinger Avenue on-ramp.

The billboard is the latest public outreach effort of an Orange County coalition of atheist groups.

“I put up the billboard…because there are no churches for atheists. We have to organize our own events if we want to socialize—and we do,” Bruce Gleason, director of the Freethought Alliance, wrote in an “On Faith” column in Friday's Newport Beach Daily Pilot.

“There are more atheist groups in conservative Orange County than in Los Angeles," he added.

Distracted at the Concert Hall

James Oestreich, a critic for The New York Times, set out last month to review a concert at Lincoln Center featuring the works of Mozart and Stravinsky. But Mr. Oestreich found himself more focused on the man seated directly behind him, who was connected to an oxygen cart or similar medical device that emitted what he called a steady — and apparently disruptive — ticking sound.

“Hard to describe,” he wrote in his review, “it was really more of a faint, dull metallic clank in a relentless rhythm that seemed somehow resistant to all the many other rhythms emanating from the stage.”

Mr. Oestreich was so distracted by the sound of the device that he devoted the majority of his review to an unusual question: what is the etiquette on medical hardware during a live show? Is the disruption of a few listeners during a performance “acceptable collateral damage” for the concertgoer who requires mechanical help?

Mr. Oestreich’s review triggered a heated response from John Walsh, president of the Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Foundation, who in a letter to The Times criticized the article for its lack of sensitivity, saying it promoted a “negative connotation of those (myself included) who use supplemental oxygen.”

Worldwide, 210 million people suffer from C.O.P.D. Are you telling me that those who use supplemental oxygen should not be allowed to participate in the arts for their enjoyment, because of their supplemental oxygen? We refuse to sit quietly in our homes just because a few people might have issues with the slight noise a portable oxygen concentrator might make.

I know that many individuals with C.O.P.D. would love the possibility of a completely silent portable oxygen device — in fact we’d like that as much as anyone. But the reality is, that doesn’t exist currently, and in the meantime, we will continue living our lives — on supplemental oxygen or not — despite what others might think or say. We have just as much a right to enjoy concerts and public outings as anyone else, and your words have deeply offended our entire community.

In an interview, Mr. Walsh said he was upset that the review even raised the question of noise from a medical device, which unlike a cellphone or pager cannot be switched off or turned to silent mode in a theater. He said he worried the review would bring shame to people who have to deal with embarrassing stigma anytime they step out in public.

“It’s not just children looking at someone because they have a tube in their nose,” he said. “It’s the adult community that by and large thinks that just because you’re using supplemental oxygen you must have smoked, so therefore you did it to yourself. I myself have a genetic condition. I never smoked a cigarette in my life, but I have 34 percent of normal lung function and I need to use supplemental oxygen when I sleep, when I exercise or when I fly.

“To me it’s incredible that someone would not at least understand that if you’re using supplemental oxygen, you have no choice — you can’t breathe otherwise.”

In his review, Mr. Oestreich acknowledged that classical music audiences can seem pampered and intolerant, “with their ceaseless demands for silence in their surroundings.” But quiet, he wrote, is essential for classical music in its “unamplified — that is, its classic — form, where contrast is everything.” He also pointed out that he, too, requires mechanical medical assistance, from a mechanical heart valve he had implanted last year to correct a congenital heart condition.

“Today even I can hear the ticking only in a small, reverberant space or in the dead of night,” he wrote. “No one has yet tried to shush me in a concert hall. But what if.”

In his letter, Mr. Walsh said he hoped the reviewer would have a change of heart, then invited him to a C.O.P.D. Awareness Night event with the New York Mets, which takes place this Saturday night at New York’s Citi Field.

View the full review, “A Faint Sound at a Concert, but Impossible to Ignore.” Then please join the discussion below.

Estranged wife, 2 men charged in slaying of Fontana man

Hillrich suspects
A nurse and and two parolees have been charged with first-degree murder in the slaying of a 39-year-old Fontana man gunned down outside his Ontario office, police said Friday.

John Hillrich, 39, an advertising firm supervisor, was shot multiple times Tuesday afternoon in the parking structure outside his office, said Ontario Det. Jeff Crittenden.

Hillrich died of his wounds shortly after being taken to a hospital.

Police said they recovered documents Tuesday suggesting Hillrich's estranged wife, a registered nurse, allegedly was planning the murder, possibly motivated by a custody battle. Amy Hillrich, 38, was later arrested.

Also arrested were parolees David Olvera, 24, of Yucaipa, and Emilio Saldana, 22, of Calimesa.

Olvera was on parole for a sexual assault conviction, Saldana for burglary. The three had previously worked together at a care facility, police said.

Hillrich was in communication with Olvera and Saldana immediately before and after the slaying, Crittenden said.

The investigation began when police responded to calls of shots fired Tuesday and quickly found a pickup truck that witnesses saw fleeing the shooting. The truck was found at the home of its registered owner, who was not one of those charged.

Ontario police were still trying to determine a motive and locate the murder weapon. Anyone with information is asked to call Det. Gary Naranjo at (909) 395-2764.

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Yankees' Hideki Irabu committed suicide, coroner's office says

-- Ricardo Lopez

Photo: Left to right, David Olvera, Emilio Saldana and Amy Hillrich. Credit: Ontario Police Department.

Drunk-driving crackdown begins this weekend in L.A.

A CHP sobriety checkpoint in Orange County in 2003
Los Angeles police will launch an end-of-summer crackdown on drunk drivers by setting up more than a dozen sobriety checkpoints beginning this weekend.

Dubbed the “Avoid the 100” campaign because of the number of local police agencies involved, the checkpoint program will aim to reduce drunk driving collisions and fatalities, officials said.

The campaign will run through Labor Day.

"Our message is simple and unwavering: if we find you driving impaired, we will arrest you.
No exceptions," Lt. Ron Katona said in a statement. "Even if you beat the odds and manage to walk away from an impaired-driving crash alive, the trauma and financial costs of a crash or an arrest for driving while impaired can still destroy your life."

Violators face jail time, loss of their driver's licenses or other penalties. The sobriety checkpoints will run from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.

Some of this weekend’s checkpoints include the following:  Figueroa Street and 33rd Street in the Southwest area; Glenoaks Boulevard and Paxton Street in the Foothill area; Topanga Canyon Boulevard and San Jose Street in the Devonshire area; and Sunset Boulevard and Sutherland Street in the Northeast area.

In 2009, 10,839 people died in crashes in which a driver or motorcycle rider was at or above the legal limit for alcohol, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The age group with the highest percentage of alcohol-impaired-driving fatalities in motor vehicle crashes was 21 to 24.

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Hate crimes down in Orange County

Stolen Rembrandt drawing tested for DNA evidence

Yankees' Hideki Irabu committed suicide, coroner's office says

--Carlos Lozano

Photo: A California Highway Patrol sobriety checkpoint in Orange County in 2003. Credit: Christine Cotter / Los Angeles Times

Inmate dies at Twin Towers jail

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s homicide detectives are investigating the death of a 53-year-old inmate at the Twin Towers jail downtown, a spokesman said Friday.

The unidentified inmate suffered a heart attack while in custody early Friday morning and was pronounced dead at USC Hospital, Sgt. Diane Hecht said.

An investigation by homicide detectives is standard procedure in all inmate deaths, the spokesman said. No further details were available.

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Heist nets $2 million in diamonds

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-- Ricardo Lopez

Some see Obama illegal-immigration review as amnesty

Secure Communities

While some immigration rights advocates cheered, others are more skeptical about the Obama administration's plan to review the cases of 300,000 illegal immigrants currently in deportation proceedings to identify "low-priority" offenders.

Officials said that by launching the case-by-case review, officials said they are refocusing deportation efforts on convicted felons and other "public safety threats." Those who have not committed crimes could be allowed to remain in the U.S.

Critics labeled the plan a "blanket amnesty" for a large group of illegal immigrants.

This "clearly demonstrates the Obama administration's defiance of both the constitutional separation of powers and the will of the American public," said Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform.

Some immigrant rights advocates were skeptical about Obama's plan. "We've heard elegant statements of priorities before," said Chris Newman of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network. "I don't know what today has changed."

Heist nets $2 million in diamonds

Masked thieves got away with $2 million worth of diamonds after trapping the car of a man in North Hollywood, police said Friday.

The unidentified man left a friend's house around 10 p.m. Thursday and was stopped at the intersection of Burbank Boulevard and Bellaire Avenue. That's when a car rear-ended him and another blocked the front of his vehicle, Los Angeles police said.

Five or six men in masks and dark clothing jumped out of one of the cars that was blocking the man's  vehicle and smashed one of his car windows.

As they snatched a backpack containing the jewels, the man tried to fight back but was struck repeatedly by the assailants, police said.

It was unclear why the man had the diamonds, although media reports said he was a jewelry salesman. Police could not confirm that Friday morning.

ALSO:

Hate crimes down in Orange County

Stolen Rembrandt drawing tested for DNA evidence

Yankees' Hideki Irabu committed suicide, coroner's office says

-- Ricardo Lopez

The Squashes of Summer

The Recipes for Health columnist, Martha Rose Shulman, asked Facebook followers what kind of recipes they wanted to see. Dishes using zucchini and other summer squashes led the list — no surprise at this time of year. Here are five light and flavorful ways to prepare summer squash.

Spicy Grilled Zucchini: This mildly spicy dish from southern Italy can serve as an appetizer or side.

Cumin-Scented Summer Squash Salad: The summer squash is lightly steamed in this North African salad.

Shells With Summer Squash, Corn, Beans and Tomato: You can use canned beans for this dish, but if you happen to have cooked pintos or borlottis in broth, use the broth for the pasta sauce.

Marinated Zucchini Salad: Raw zucchini can be a dull ingredient, but when it’s very thinly sliced it marinates beautifully, especially in lemon juice.

Pan-Cooked Summer Squash With Tomatoes and Basil: This Provençal summer dish is delightful as a starter or as a side dish with fish, chicken or cooked grains.

Crime alerts for Glassell Park, Tujunga and eight other L.A. neighborhoods

Crime reports are up significantly for the latest week in 10 L.A. neighborhoods, according to an analysis of LAPD data by the Los Angeles Times’ Crime L.A. database.

Eight neighborhoods reported a significant increase in violent crime. Glassell Park (A) was the most unusual, recording three reports compared with a weekly average of 0.6 over the last three months.

Tujunga (I) topped the list of two neighborhoods with property crime alerts. It recorded 14 property crimes compared with its weekly average of 5.8 over the last three months.

Alerts are based on an analysis of crime reports for Aug. 10–16, the most recent seven days for which data are available.

Ben Welsh, Thomas Suh Lauder

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