Friday, August 26, 2011

Mel Gibson, Oksana Grigorieva reach legal settlement

Mel Gibson and Oksana Grigorieva.

Mel Gibson and his ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva have reach a settlement in their long-running legal battle, the Los Angeles County Superior Court announced Friday.

"As the result of a multiday settlement conference, the court announces that Mel Gibson and Oksana Grigorieva have achieved a settlement in their ongoing dispute," the court said in a statement, adding that terms would be discussed at a hearing next week.

The released contained no other details.

Gibson and Grigorieva had been locked in a bitter custody dispute over their 1-year-old daughter, Lucia.

In March, the actor pleaded no contest to the charge of misdemeanor battery against Grigorieva in a  deal that allowed him to avoid jail time

Wildfire near UC Riverside contained

Riverside firefighters Friday afternoon quickly contained a 30-acre wildfire near UC Riverside, authorities said.

The blaze, which burned near the base of Box Springs Mountain and was fueled in part by the 100-degree heat, did not destroy any buildings and no injuries were reported, said Battalion Chief LaWayne Hearn of the Riverside Fire Department.

Crews and helicopters from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection assisted in battling the fire, which broke out about 2 p.m. and was contained in about four hours.

ALSO:

Women who slashed face of beauty queen admit guilt

'Excessive heat watch' issued for Southern California

Some lanes on 5 Freeway will close for carpool project

-- Phil Willon in Riverside

Owner put naked yogurt-store employee inside box, D.A. says

Omy A Monterey Park yogurt shop owner is facing kidnapping and attempted murder charges for abducting a female employee and keeping her inside a box in a soundproof room, prosecutors said Friday.

Robert Yachen Lee alleged lured the employee to a storage room above O My Yogurt on south Atlantic Boulevard early Wednesday, knocked her unconscious and then -- after removing her clothing and dressing her in an adult diaper -- placed her in a box, authorities said.

The victim told authorities that when she came to, she was bound with tape and had a collar around her neck.

Prosecutors believe Lee planned the kidnapping, because the storage room had recently been soundproofed.

The woman was able to free herself and escape to a nearby optometrist's office, where she alerted police.

Lee appeared briefly in Alhambra Superior Court on Friday afternoon. Bail was set at $10 million.

ALSO: 

To keep beach open, officials eye Coca-Cola contest

Some lanes on 5 Freeway will close for carpool project

Analyst casts doubts on economic benefit from downtown L.A. stadium

-- Richard Winton

Image: Map shows the location of O My Yogurt in Monterey Park. Source: Google Maps



747 lands safely at LAX after problem with landing gear

A Philippine Airlines Boeing 747 with 420 people aboard made a safe landing Friday night at Los Angeles International Airport after a landing gear problem was reported during the flight, LAX officials said.

Flight 102, carrying 400 passengers and 20 crew members, arrived about 9:15 p.m.

Officials said the airliner had two blown tires on one landing gear.

The incident is under investigation, and the plane remains on a runway at the airport.

ALSO:

Owner put naked yogurt-store employee inside box, D.A. says

San Diego man arrested on suspicion of stabbing wife and son-in-law

Insurers must cover mental illness on par with physical, court rules

-- Dan Weikel

San Diego man arrested on suspicion of stabbing wife and son-in-law

A 79-year-old San Diego man was arrested Friday on suspicion of stabbing his 80-year-old wife and 49-year-old son-in-law because he thought they were poisoning him with medication, police said.

The man's 40-year-old daughter was cut on her finger during a melee at the family home in the Mira Mesa neighborhood.

The suspect was arrested on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. His wife was taken to a trauma center with a knife wound on the top of her head and his son-in-law with stab wounds in his back and neck, police said.

None of the wounds are considered life-threatening, police said. No names were released. The Police Department's domestic violence unit is investigating.

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

2-year-old girl killed in fiery crash on 110 Freeway

Freeway crash

A 2-year-old girl died Friday in a multi-car accident on the 110 Freeway in Highland Park, despite efforts by her mother and neighborhood residents to rescue her from the burning wreckage.

“You could hear the screams of the child. They were high-pitched and terrible. Then they stopped,” said one witness, who ran out from his home after he heard the mother’s cries for help.

According to the California Highway Patrol, a Nissan Altima and a GMC Yukon sport utility vehicle collided about 5:20 p.m. on the southbound freeway just north of York Boulevard, a curving section of highway with three lanes that is known for frequent accidents.

The impact caused the Altima carrying the little girl and her mother to burst into flames, which spread through the vehicle as nearby residents rushed to fight the fire and free the child from the car. They were unable to do so as the intense heat drove them back.

The accident closed several lanes of the freeway and backed up traffic in both directions for miles. Some drivers simply parked and left their vehicles on the roadway.

-- Sam Quinones and Dan Weikel

Photo: A CHP officer begins investigation of the fatal crash Friday on the 110 Freeway. Credit: Sam Quinones / Los Angeles Times

Skydivers collide in midair, sustain serious injuries [Updated]

Two skydivers collided in midair over Lake Elsinore on Friday evening, both sustaining serious injuries, authorities said.

Riverside County firefighters went to Skydive Elsinore after receiving a 911 call about the incident.

One of the skydivers was in “traumatic full arrest,’’ and the other sustained major injuries, according to department spokeswoman Cheri Patterson.

Patterson said paramedics were performing CPR on one of the skydivers and were still on the scene.

Officials with Skydive Elsinore were not immediately available for comment. The Skydive Elsinore website states that the operation was established in 1959 and is the longest-running skydiving operation in North America.

[Updated, 7:56 p.m.: Riverside County sheriff’s spokeswoman Cpl. Courtney Donowho said those involved in the midair collision are members of the British military. Both are hospitalized in serious condition.

The incident is being investigated by the British military in consultation with the British Consulate, the Federal Aviation Administration and the Sheriff’s Department. "They, of course, will do their own investigation, and we will too,” Donowho said.]

ALSO: 

To keep beach open, officials eye Coca-Cola contest

Some lanes on 5 Freeway will close for carpool project

Analyst casts doubts on economic benefit from downtown L.A. stadium

-- Phil Willon in Riverside

Jon Peters ordered to pay damages on sexual harassment claim

Jon peters Hollywood producer Jon Peters was ordered Friday to pay $822,000 in damages to a former personal assistant after a Los Angeles jury found that she was sexually harassed and subjected to a hostile work environment.

Jurors also decided that Peters, 66, the former boyfriend of singer Barbra Streisand, acted with malice, a finding that triggers a further court hearing to determine if punitive damages should be awarded to Shelly Morita, who sued the producer and his company, J.P. Organization Inc., in December 2006.

Morita, 44, alleged that Peters inappropriately touched her at his Malibu home, crawled into bed with her at an Australian hotel and exposed himself to her and her then-2-year-old daughter in an outdoor restroom at his Santa Barbara ranch.

Morita, who worked for Peters for a year starting in February 2005, also claimed that the producer’s influence in Hollywood prevented her from obtaining another job after she quit his firm.

Defense attorneys contended that Morita had signed a release of all claims against Peters in January 2006, and they asserted that she had no witnesses to prove her allegations of sexual harassment.

Peters was a successful hairstylist in his family’s salon, where he made contacts in the movie industry. He went on to become the producer or the executive producer of such films as "Caddyshack," "Rain Man," "Bonfire of the Vanities" and "Superman Returns."

ALSO:

Skydivers collide in midair, sustain serious injuries

Owner put naked yogurt-store employee inside box, D.A. says

LAPD officer was struck, 'not stabbed,' before suspect fatally shot

-- Dan Weikel

Photo: Jon Peters. Credit: Getty Images

Fatal crash on 110 Freeway jams traffic in both directions

A fiery three-car crash that killed at least one person is backing up traffic Friday evening in both directions of the 110 Freeway, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Authorities said the accident, which caused one car to burst into flames, occurred about 5 p.m. in two of the three southbound lanes near York Boulevard.

One vehicle involved in the crash drove off, witnesses said.

ALSO:

Skydivers collide in midair, sustain serious injuries

Women who slashed face of beauty queen admit guilt

Knott’s Berry Farm settles with family injured on roller coaster

-- Dan Weikel

Endangered arroyo toads cling to existence in the Tehachapi Mountains

Toad (3)When biologist Ruben Ramirez wants to introduce people to his favorite amphibian, he takes them to a little oasis in the southwestern foothills of the Tehachapi Mountains where an isolated colony of endangered arroyo toads clings to existence by their stout little toes.

It is a remote creek on U.S. Forest Service land offering all the creature comforts needed for the toads to avoid extirpation: shallow water, sandy banks and willows and buckwheat buzzing with insects to feed on. It is also free of dams and diversions and seldom visited by hikers and mountain bikers.

During a tour on Friday, it took Ramirez and fellow biologist Robert Haase only a few minutes to find several young arroyo toads bulking up on harvester ants in the area, which also teems with more common species: western toads, Pacific chorus frogs and California chorus frogs.

Ramirez requested that the exact location not be disclosed. “The less disturbance here the better,” he said as a youngster hopped past the tips of his hiking boots.

“This is one of the few sweet spots left in Southern California for this species,” Ramirez said. “So it’s an ideal place to bring groups of people who want to know more about this incredible amphibian I have been researching for 15 years. The goal of these 'toad walks’ is to provide people with the kind of information you can only get firsthand in the field.”

Most people learn about arroyo toads in news reports about legal skirmishes among environmental groups, developers and federal land managers over their fate.

“Unfortunately, people love this toador hate it,” Haase said. “For those subject to the economic impacts of dealing with an endangered amphibian, it’s an enemy. For those who want to keep remaining ecosystems intact, it’s a treasure.”

Meanwhile, the 3-inch-long toad’s fate remains uncertain. When Bufo californicus -- a small, buff-colored amphibian with dark spots and warts -- was listed under the federal Endangered Species Act in 1994, it had lost more than 75% of its historic habitat to development, mining, agriculture and predation by non-native species.

Today, the arroyo toad persists in 23 small, isolated populations including this one, about 40 miles north of Los Angeles.

The Endangered Species Act requires the federal government to designate critical habitat for endangered and threatened species, creating an additional level of review for building and land-use permits.

But even within critical habitat, the arroyo toad faces threats that include fungal infections and predation by raccoons and non-native bullfrogs, and continues to figure in development battles across Southern California.
 
Earlier this year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service finalized designation of 98,366 acres of critical habitat for the arroyo toad from Monterey County to San Diego County, concluding a decade-long legal battle between the agency and the Center for Biological Diversity.

In June, a U.S. District Court judge ordered three federal agencies to "take all necessary measures" to better protect 40 endangered species -- including the arroyo toad -- in four national forests in Southern California.

In July, however, avdvocates for the toad lost a court fight to spare a small population in Orange County’s Silverado Canyon from threats posed by a proposal to develop a large horse ranch in the area.

Dropping to his knees for a better view of a dime-size arroyo toad hunting insects in the shade of a willow tree, Ramirez said, “The fight to save these creatures is far from over. But at the end of the day, the best decisions will be based on the best available science collected in places like this.”

 -- Louis Sahagun

 

 

Photo: An arroyo toad in the Tehachapi Mountains. Credit: Louis Sahagun/Los Angeles Times

The cave is his classroom, the environment his passion

Cave2 I picked up my candle lantern and entered the cool, damp and dark Crystal Cave at Sequoia National Park. I had paid my fare to take candlelit tour at dusk, hiked down the steep mountainside and prepared to enter the cave’s gaping mouth with a handful of park visitors, expecting to see fanged bats in the shadows.

And then came the cave naturalist and tour guide, Billy Dooling, 26, who promptly reminded the group to hold the candle upright, not to touch any of the dagger-like stalactites or stalagmites, and to not worry about the bats …because there were none.

Bummer, I thought to myself, blinking to see in the flickering darkness. The 48-degree chill crawled up my spine and I shuddered as the gigantic cavern opened up to reveal hundreds of ghoulish calcite formations that had spent millions of years twisting and warping in the marbled sanctuary.

Of 280 caves in the park, Crystal Cave is the only one open to the public, but is inaccessible without a professional guide, such as Dooling.

A biology graduate from Missouri Baptist University in St. Louis, Dooling works for the nonprofit organization Sequoia Natural History Assn. and has spent his first season as a guide educating visitors about cave conservation. It was about halfway through the tour when I realized Dooling was going beyond the history of the cave, informing us of its future and how we can help keep it intact.

I connected with him soon after to learn more about his role as a national park tour guide, active environmentalist and undercover educator.

A Dog at the Funeral Captured on Video

A video of a dog apparently mourning the death of his owner at a funeral has gone viral, prompting an outpouring from viewers around the world.

The footage was captured by a woman whose cousin Jon Tumilson, a member of a Navy Seal team, was killed in Afghanistan when his Chinook helicopter was hit by enemy fire on Aug. 6. A funeral service was held for Mr. Tumilson in Rockford, Iowa, last week and attended by 1,500 people.

But also in attendance was Mr. Tumilson’s loyal Labrador retriever, Hawkeye. The dog wandered over to his owner’s flag-draped casket and lay beside it throughout the service.

Struck by the gripping image, Mr. Tumilson’s cousin Lisa Pembleton took a picture and shared it with relatives. The image was published in local newspapers and quickly went viral on the Internet, capturing intense interest around the globe. A video of Hawkeye beside the casket was also shown on nightly newscasts.

Ms. Pembleton told one media outlet, Home Post, a blog about military life, that Hawkeye was her cousin’s “loyal son.”

I hadn’t planned on taking any pictures other than with family. However, from my seat at the funeral, I felt compelled to take one photo to share with family members that couldn’t make it or couldn’t see what I could from the aisle. This is that photo.

Stephanie LaFarge, a psychologist and senior director of counseling at the A.S.P.C.A., said that while no one can know for sure simply by looking at the image, she believed that the dog was aware that his owner was in the casket. Many dogs go through a grieving process similar to what humans experience after the death of a spouse or friend but with some differences, she said. Some dogs have been known, for example, to stay near or return to the places where they last saw their owners, in many cases their grave sites.

“There are famous stories of dogs returning to a grave site every day for five years, and you can’t account for that by saying he can smell the body there,” she said. “In fact, dogs return to the grave sites of their companion dogs and animals that they grow up with.”

As the video and picture of Hawkeye spread, many viewers reached out to Home Post with concerns about the pet’s well-being, along with many offers of adoption. A friend of Mr. Tumilson’s later said that the dog was taken by a good friend of Mr. Tumilson’s, who often kept Hawkeye when Mr. Tumilson was deployed overseas.

Dr. LaFarge said that while concerns about a pet that shows signs of mourning are normal, dogs and cats do not typically grieve to the point where it causes harm, for example by withdrawing or not eating for long periods of time.

“In other words, they do not get depressed and stop responding to life in normal ways,” she said. “Animals can generally miss and grieve and be upset and be sad for the person that they don’t have in their lives and simultaneously live a good quality of life, enjoy life, do all the things they would normally.”

Dr. LaFarge, who runs a free pet-loss hotline, said she often gets calls from people concerned about a dog or cat after its owner or companion pet has died.

“Their questions quite often are along the lines of, ‘One of my dogs just died, what’s going to happen to the other one?’ Or they say, “My husband just died and I’m worried about what’s going to happen to his dog,’ ” she said.

“This comes up all the time,” she added, “but rarely is it captured in such dramatic fashion. I think the power of the picture is what’s really interesting. It really tells us something about human beings, that what we see in this picture is what we treasure about animals, especially dogs, which is that they’re devoted to us. We’ve bred them to be that way. It didn’t happen by accident.”

Some lanes on 5 Freeway will close for carpool project

Work is underway this summer to add more carpool lanes to the 5 Freeway from Sun Valley to Burbank. The work is part of a $121-million project paid for with local, state and federal dollars to encourage more people to share cars and use less gasoline.

Expect a series of lane closures from Friday to next Thursday along the five-mile stretch. Between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. workers will be shutting lanes on both sides of the freeway for the overnight work. They will reopen about 6 a.m.

Ramp and lane closures will be staggered throughout the week. They will affect the entire section of freeway, including Sheldon Steet to Buena Vista Street, Sheldon to Penrose Steet and Buena Vista to Penrose.

To see a complete list of closures, visit the Caltrans website.

ALSO:

Women who slashed face of beauty queen admit guilt

To keep beach open, officials eye Coca-Cola contest

LAPD officer was struck, 'not stabbed,' before suspect fatally shot

-- Esmeralda Bermudez

Reader photos: Southern California Moments, Day 238

Click through for more photos of Southern California Moments.

Number nine: Stan Paul sends in this Aug. 24 photo of the track at Drake Stadium at UCLA.

Every day of 2011, we're featuring reader-submitted photos of Southern California Moments. Follow us on Twitter and visit the Southern California Moments homepage for more on this series.

Steve Lopez: Growing a garden, and a community

Finley 
Steve lopez No such thing as a free lunch?

Guess again, farmer.

Last week, when I wrote about Ron Finley’s edible garden near the Crenshaw district, Finley had one little quibble. He wished I had  mentioned that he and his partners will come to your house and help you plant your own garden for no charge, supplies and plants included.

It’s the deal of the century.

Finley, who studied gardening in a UC Cooperative Extension class taught by Florence Nishida, later hooked up with Nishida and a couple of other folks to address what they call the food desert in South Los Angeles, where healthful options are in short supply. The group is called L.A. Green Grounds.

“We try to locate people who want to grow vegetables but don’t know how,” said Nishida. “We go out and visit the property and make sure it’ll work. Does it have enough sunlight? And we want to assess the person to make sure it’s sustainable, because a garden is a lot of work.”

She has a word of caution, though. If you’re thinking they’ll come by and help you clean up a mess, forget it.

“We are not a weed abatement program.”

There’s another caveat or two:

Their primary focus is on South Los Angeles, and while they’ll bring some of the labor, you’ll be expected to recruit family and neighbors to help out.

“The idea is to develop community,” said Nishida.

And one more thing:

If they help you plant a garden, you’ll be required to pitch in on the next project.

If you saw my column on Finley, you know that his lovely and robust garden, which feeds half his neighborhood, was another case of no good deed going unpunished. He was cited by the city and ordered to remove the unpermitted garden.

But his hearing has been suspended, thanks to intervention by City Councilman Herb Wesson, who is trying to get the ordinance changed so more homeowners can plant gardens in the public space between curb and sidewalk.

If you’d like help with your own garden, go to Lagreengrounds.org for more information. And, as always, if you’ve got a beef with City Hall over a garden or anything else, this would be a good place to air your grievance.

-- Steve Lopez

Photo: Ron Finley stands by his garden. Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Analyst casts doubts on economic benefit from downtown L.A. stadium

Tim Leiweke gathered supporters of AEG's plan to bring NFL back to L.A. for announcement. PHOTOGRAPHER Al Seib Los Angeles Times
The policy office that advises the California Legislature cast doubts Friday on the level of economic benefits that would be derived from a planned NFL stadium -– and warned that studies commissioned by developer Anschutz Entertainment Group “likely overstated” the financial boost it would deliver.

Speaking to a state Senate panel reviewing the stadium plan, policy analyst Mark Whitaker warned that football stadiums typically have a minimal effect on a region’s economic growth, largely because they become a magnet for household entertainment dollars that were already being spent elsewhere.

In many cases, a family that planned to buy tickets to an event at the Home Depot Center in Carson, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, a restaurant or a movie theater would probably transfer those expenses to the proposed Farmers Field in downtown Los Angeles, said Whitaker, who works in the Legislative Analyst’s Office.

“There’s no net new economic activity there. It’s just transfer. This wouldn’t be the case with all events... There's no NFL team in L.A. right now, so that would be new economic activity,” he told the panel.

Despite setbacks, Assembly Speaker Perez aims to disband Vernon

Vernon
Assembly Speaker John Perez will push forward in his bid to disband the city of Vernon despite a loss of support in the state Senate this week, his spokesman said.

Perez (D-Los Angeles) plans to bring the disincorporation bills up for a final vote before the Legislature's session ends Sept. 9, spokesman John Vigna said Friday. The city of about 100 residents has been dogged by a series of corruption scandals in recent years and Perez argues it lacks an independent electorate.

Earlier this week, state Sen. Kevin De Leon (D-Los Angeles) withdrew his support for the disincorporation plan over concerns about the effect it would have on the many businesses in the industrial city just south of downtown L.A. De Leon instead called for a series of governmental reforms, which the Vernon City Council unanimously supported at a special meeting Thursday.

Perez remains "deeply skeptical" that Vernon can reform on its own, Vigna said.

"Vernon has had such a long history of saying or doing whatever they have to do to survive," Vigna said. "These are not real reforms and they're not going to solve the real problems."

Critics argue that Vernon has for decades been run as a fiefdom by a small group of leaders. The city owns nearly all of the homes and apartments within its borders, and many of the residents have close ties to city leaders. In the last six years, three top Vernon officials have been convicted on public corruption charges.

Marine sanctuaries delayed in Southern California

Marine_Protected_Areas 
Hundreds of square miles of marine sanctuaries that were scheduled to take effect Oct. 1 in Southern California will be delayed for at least several months for administrative reasons, state wildlife officials said Thursday.

The California Department of Fish and Game said the state Office of Administrative Law has had questions about the complicated package of regulations and informed the agency it would not be able to implement them by the planned start date.

In December the California Fish and Game Commission adopted protections for about 15% of state waters from Point Conception to the U.S.-Mexico border. Under the California Marine Life Protection Act, fishing will be banned or restricted in 49 marine protected areas to protect sea life and replenish depleted fish populations.

Though it's unclear how long the delay will be, "we're looking at months rather than years, or even a year," said Jordan Traverso, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Fish and Game.

The delay is unrelated to lawsuits fishing groups have filed against the regulations, Traverso said. The commission will discuss a new start date at a meeting next month in Redding.

Southern California's marine reserves are the latest segment in a chain of sanctuaries Fish and Game officials are charged with establishing up and down the coast. They came about after years of contentious negotiations between conservation groups seeking sweeping protections for marine habitat and commercial and recreational fishing groups trying to hold onto access to key fishing areas.

Newly protected waters will include a kelp forest off Point Dume in Malibu, Naples Reef in Santa Barbara County, a stretch of the Laguna Beach coastline and waters off south La Jolla.

The region sees the most fishing activity in the state because of its dense population and many harbors.

ALSO:

California shark fin ban advances

City Council not commenting on Laguna Beach access issue

Agency seeks to end sea otter relocations

--Tony Barboza

Photo: A lengthy stretch of the Laguna Beach coastline will be one of the state's new marine sanctuaries. Credit: Mark Boster/Los Angeles Times

3.4 earthquake rattles central coast of California

Location of the earthquake

The central coast of California was rattled by a magnitude 3.4 earthquake Friday morning.

The temblor was reported six miles from Pinnacles in San Benito County, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The earthquake’s epicenter was roughly 13 miles from Soledad and 20 miles from Hollister.

The temblor occurred at 10:44 a.m. Pacific time. The depth was recorded at 5.0 miles.

No damage was immediately reported.

RELATED:

2nd California earthquake rattles Bay Area

Small earthquake reported in Orange County

Earthquakes in California more mellow than on crusty East Coast

-- Ken Schwencke

Shot LAPD officer expected to fully recover; one suspect arrested

Photo: Shooting scene. Credit: KTLA-TV Channel 5. The Los Angeles police officer shot during a seemingly routine pedestrian stop on Thursday underwent surgery and is expected to make a full recovery, a hospital official said. 

Police said they had recovered the gun likely used in the shooting and arrested one man on suspicion of being involved in the attack.  At least one other suspect was still being sought.

Following surgery Friday morning to repair bullet wounds to his right hand, the officer was “alert and awake” and “in good spirits,” said Dr. Gudata Hinika, chief of trauma at California Hospital Medical Center.  The officer, Hinika said, is expected to be discharged on Saturday and faces months of intensive physical therapy before returning to work.

The Times is withholding the name of the officer, who has been in the LAPD for seven years, at the request of police officials, who are continuing to assess whether releasing his name would jeopardize the safety of him or his family.

The shooting took place about 2:45 p.m. Thursday as the officer and his partner, driving an unmarked police vehicle, investigated a rash of car burglaries in the Hyde Park neighborhood, said police Chief Charlie Beck.  Driving along Western Avenue near 70th Street, the officers, who were uniformed, stopped their car to question two men.  As the officers approached, one of the men pulled out a handgun and opened fire.

The wounded officer was struck twice in the torso and would have been seriously injured had he not been wearing a ballistics vest that absorbed the impact of the bullets.  A third bullet struck him in the hand and wrist.

Norwegian arrested in car and property buying scam in South Bay

A 37-year-old Norwegian man has been arrested in Hermosa Beach on suspicion of using fraudulent bank accounts to buy cars and properties across the country, police said.

Stig Dahl was arrested Wednesday after a car dealership contacted police when he tried to buy a 2007 Mercedes using a personal check, said Det. Mike Gaglia. 

When detectives contacted Dahl at the home he was leasing in Manhattan Beach, they discovered a stolen 2011 Dodge Charger in the garage that he illegally purchased in Texas, Gaglia said. Investigators allege that he also purchased vehicles in Florida.

Detectives believe  Dahl has scammed banks, car dealerships and property owners out of more than $200,000.

The owner of the Manhattan Beach home told investigators that Dahl agreed to lease his home and ultimately purchase a $3-million home from him in Hermosa Beach.

According to investigators, Dahl created a false development business, S & D Development, which he used to lure potential victims into believing that he was a legitimate businessperson. Police said Dahl has confessed that he had used fraudulent checking accounts to purchase several cars and properties in various states while visiting from Oslo.

ALSO:

Shark fin ban in California clears key Senate vote

LAPD officer stabbed, suspect killed in Wilmington

Lenny Dykstra indecent-exposure charges tied to Craigslist ads

-- Richard Winton

The Minimal Risks of Vaccines

In a new report, a panel of scientists assembled by the Institute of Medicine reviewed the risks of some of the most common vaccines. The panel found no evidence that a popular vaccine causes autism, a subject that has ignited debate for years. But it did find that the chickenpox vaccine carries some potential for side effects that can crop up years after the shot is administered.

People who have had the vaccine can develop pneumonia, meningitis or hepatitis years later if the virus used in the vaccine reawakens because an unrelated health problem, like cancer, has compromised their immune systems.

The same problems are far more likely in patients who are infected naturally at some point in their lives with chickenpox, since varicella zoster, the virus that causes chickenpox, can live dormant in nerve cells for decades. Shingles, a painful eruption of skin blisters that usually affects the aged, is generally caused by this Lazarus-like ability of varicella zoster.

The report is notable because it represents the most comprehensive review of the medical literature on the subject to date. For more, view the full report, “Vaccine Cleared Again as Autism Culprit,” and then please join the discussion below.

State Senate committee to discuss plan for downtown L.A. stadium

An artist's rendering depicts the proposed Farmers Field stadium, to be located on 15 acres PHOTOGRAPHER  AEG

A state Senate committee is scheduled to convene Friday at the Ronald Reagan State Building to discuss the possible effects of a proposed downtown Los Angeles stadium.

Anschutz Entertainment Group, which owns Staples Center and the L.A. Live complex, announced last year that it was looking into the possibility of a downtown NFL stadium, prompting dozens of environmental groups to urge lawmakers to require that the project undergo traffic, noise and air pollution studies.

AEG’s proposal came after real estate mogul Ed Roski’s plans to build a 600-acre NFL stadium complex in the City of Industry was exempted from state environmental laws by the Legislature in 2009.

Sen. Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles) is convening the hearing, which will examine land use and environmental concerns as well as effects on the neighborhood based on information provided by AEG, labor groups, environmental advocates, community organizations and residents.

The City Council has already approved a tentative stadium deal that includes reconstruction of a wing of the adjacent Los Angeles Convention Center.

RELATED:

Stadium deal approved by Council on 12-0 vote

L.A. moving closer and closer to getting the NFL back

Critics Notebook: AEG's design plan for downtown L.A. stadium

-- Corina Knoll

Photo: An artist's rendering depicts the proposed Farmers Field stadium, which would be located on 15 acres in downtown L.A. Credit: AEG

Looking at the Risks of Vaccines

In a new report, a panel of scientists assembled by the Institute of Medicine reviewed the risks of some of the most common vaccines. The panel found no evidence that a popular vaccine causes autism, a subject that has ignited debate for years. But it did find that the chickenpox vaccine carries some potential for side effects that can crop up years after the shot is administered.

People who have had the vaccine can develop pneumonia, meningitis or hepatitis years later if the virus used in the vaccine reawakens because an unrelated health problem, like cancer, has compromised their immune systems.

The same problems are far more likely in patients who are infected naturally at some point in their lives with chickenpox, since varicella zoster, the virus that causes chickenpox, can live dormant in nerve cells for decades. Shingles, a painful eruption of skin blisters that usually affects the aged, is generally caused by this Lazarus-like ability of varicella zoster.

The report is notable because it represents the most comprehensive review of the medical literature on the subject to date. For more, view the full report, “Vaccine Cleared Again as Autism Culprit,” and then please join the discussion below.

Police have no plans to arrest rapper Game for alleged assault

Los Angeles police said Friday they have no plans to arrest rapper Game for an alleged assault at a Hollywood nightclub earlier this week.

Police said the man who initially accused the rapper, whose real name is Jayceon Terrell Taylor, of assault can still make a citizen's arrest, said Cmdr. Andy Smith. But so far he has chosen not to do so, Smith said.

A citizen's arrest is an arrest for a misdemeanor crime not witnessed by an officer.

Detectives initiated the investigation after the victim complained that Game allegedly struck him early Tuesday morning at the Colony nightclub on Cahuenga Boulevard, Smith said. Police chose not to arrest Game after speaking with both men about the incident.

Part of the incident was captured on video and shows the Grammy-winning rapper being restrained by apparent members of his entourage, Smith said.

Detectives are still interviewing witnesses, Smith said.

The incident follows use of Game's Twitter account earlier this month directing thousands of calls to the Compton sheriff's station. The tweet asked internship applicants to call the number, jamming the station's emergency line for at least two hours.

Game, a former shooting victim, was arrested in 2007 for threatening another player in a South L.A. basketball game with a handgun. He pleaded guilty to a weapons charge and was placed on three years' probation. 

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San Diego beach closed again after another shark sighting

 











Hours after a two-mile stretch of beach in San Diego was reopened Friday morning for swimmers, a surfer spotted another great white shark and lifeguards closed the beach again.

Authorities are searching for the shark and say Mission Beach may remain closed another 24 hours.

On Thursday, a lifeguard spotted the dorsal fin of a great white shark. It was protruding about 18 inches out the water about 100 yards from the beach. A shark with a fin that size would probably be 12 to 15 feet long, lifeguards said.

A search by lifeguard boats and a San Diego fire and rescue helicopter failed to find the shark.

Lifeguard Lt. Nick Lerma said that swimmers sometimes mistake dolphins for sharks but that the Thursday sighting was from a veteran lifeguard who was within 30 yards of the creature. "He's a very credible source," he said.

Shark sightings are unusual but not unprecedented off Mission Beach. A more common spot for sharks is the water off La Jolla, possibly because the sharks are drawn by the seals that lounge on the beach.

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-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Video: KSWB-TV Channel 5

La Habra officer-involved shooting under investigation

The Orange County district attorney’s office is investigating a shooting in which a La Habra police officer shot a 47-year-old man who had possibly violated a restraining order, authorities said.

La Habra police officers were en route about 10:30 p.m. Thursday to a residence in the 1700 block of West Lambert Road where a caller complained of a restraining order violation, the department said.

A man then entered the residence and the call was disconnected.

Shortly after arriving at the residence, an officer reported that he had been involved in a shooting, the department said.

The victim was treated at the scene by Los Angeles County Fire Department personnel and taken to a hospital.

No other injuries were reported.

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-- Corina Knoll

Quick and Easy Cooking With Grains

For simple, healthful and fast meals, the solution may already be in your pantry, writes Martha Rose Shulman in this week’s Recipes for Health:

I can’t emphasize enough the importance of a well-stocked pantry to a healthy diet. If you have grains and legumes on hand — especially quick-cooking ingredients like bulgur, quinoa, rice and lentils — you’ll always have the basis for a healthy meal.

Check your pantry, then check out these five delicious dishes made with a variety of grains and lentils.

Barley and Farro Risotto With Red Peppers: With a ready supply of grains on hand, you can throw together quick, easy combination meals like this one.

Lemon Risotto With Squash: Lemon risotto is a favorite of dinner guests.

Lentil and Bulgur Pilaf: Red lentils have a refreshing flavor and a sproutlike crunch.

Quinoa and Wild Rice Salad With Ginger Sesame Dressing: The fluffy, pale quinoa in this gingery salad contrasts nicely with the dark, chewy wild rice.

Simple Vegetable Paella: You don’t have to make this vegetable-rich dish in a paella pan, though if you do, you’ll get a nice layer of crusty rice on the bottom. Serve it as a main dish or as a side.

Man fatally shot in South Los Angeles

A man in his 40s was shot to death early Friday in the Broadway-Manchester neighborhood of South Los Angeles, officials said.

The shooting took place about 1 a.m. near the intersection of East 87th and Wall streets, Los Angeles Police spokesman Richard French said.

The victim, whose name was not given, was found lying on a curb with multiple gunshot wounds. He was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

A male suspect was seen leaving the area in a four-door silver Nissan, French said. No other information was given.

-- Corina Knoll

Man sentenced for armed robbery of day-care provider holding baby

A Stanton man convicted of his third strike for the armed robbery of an Irvine in-home day-care provider was sentenced Thursday to 22 years in state prison.

Hung Trong Do, 34, pleaded guilty in May to robbing a woman at gunpoint while she was caring for six children, according to the Orange County district attorney's office.

Do pleaded guilty to felony first-degree robbery, first-degree residential burglary, possession of a firearm by a felon and two counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, the Daily Pilot reported.

He also admitted to a sentencing enhancement for personal use of a firearm.

Do broke into the victim's home while she was sitting on the couch feeding a baby with five other children in the room about noon June 3, 2009.

Do demanded money from the woman as he pointed his loaded .40-caliber semiautomatic gun at her head and forced her into another room with the baby still in her arms.

The woman gave him $100 out of her purse before her husband came home and began arguing with Do. This gave the woman a chance to call 911.

Do fled, but Irvine police found him loitering in a nearby apartment complex and a police dog found the gun in nearby bushes.

Do has two previous strike convictions for a 1996 attempted murder and a 2008 residential burglary. He was also convicted in 2005 for possession of a firearm.

— Britney Barnes, Times Community News

Men posed as cable TV workers to steal copper wire, police say

Authorities accused three men of posing as Charter Communications employees to steal copper wire from utility poles.

Jesus Arreguin-Lopez faces a felony count of grand theft of copper wire belonging to the cable company, according to a Los Angeles County Superior Court criminal complaint. The other two men — Jose Esparza, 26, of Van Nuys and Juan Lopez, 30, of Los Angeles — were also charged in the copper wire theft, but they were released from jail on $20,000 bond each and won’t be in court until next month, officials said.

“It’s something that’s picked up,” Burbank police Officer Joshua Kendrick told the Burbank Leader, referring to a recent rash of copper wire thefts at businesses, parks and power substations.

Burbank detectives are investigating whether the trio also committed other thefts of copper piping, wire, steel and aluminum support bars from park benches, Kendrick said.

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--Veronica Rocha, Times Community News

This jihad against junk food is driven by naked snobbery for the lifestyles of the lower orders


(Photo: Getty)

Junk food: a snob's nightmare (Photo: Getty)


When you hear the words “junk food”, what image comes to mind? I bet it’s greasy hamburgers and chips, maybe fried chicken, pizza, gloopy pink milkshakes, bumper bags of salty crisps, king-size bars of chocolate. But why don’t we think of duck  à l’orange, which is easily as fatty as any bag of chips, or foie gras, which is French for “fat liver”, or those posh, fancy Gü chocolate desserts, which are the match of any Mars Bars when it comes to sugar content and calorie count? I’ll tell you why. Because “junk food” is not actually a proper scientific term designed to measure a foodstuff’s dodgy content – rather it’s the term people use to express their disdain and disgust for the eating habits of the lower orders, for all those burger-chompers and chip-eaters who live in “white trash” bits of Britain.


Once again, news reports are telling us there will be a “war on junk food”, as an international group of experts warn of a rising “obesity epidemic”, and once again those news reports are accompanied, not by photos of grinning middle-class folk tucking into rich dishes in a swanky restaurant, but by photos of the podgy working classes, in ill-fitting leggings, licking ice-cream cones or crunching crisps. “Junk food” is codeword for “junk people”. At a time when it is no longer PC to use either of the s-words to describe the lower orders – “scum” or “savages” – snobs are forced to find another way to express their fear and loathing of the strange, unknowable blob that inhabits council estates and inner cities. And they increasingly do it through the issue of food, fantasising that Those People spend all day munching on recklessly unhealthy fare.


That is why in every discussion or shock-horror story about “junk food”, the focus is always, without fail, on working-class communities. From Morgan Spurlock’s film Super Size Me, in which that brave, well-educated New Yorker from the posh Park Slope area of Brooklyn dared to become like “poor folk” by living on nothing but McDonald’s meals, to Jamie Oliver’s various wars on unhealthy school dinners, in which our heroic chef lectured council-estate mums for giving their kids Turkey Twizzlers and even used the phrase “white trash” to describe them, the crusade against junk food never ventures beyond poor communities. It never knocks on the doors of five-star restaurants that serve up deliciously fatty grub or the homes of people who scoff fine steaks washed down with £100 bottles of wine. Why would it? The whole point of the nonsense notion of “junk food” is to make a moralistic distinction between what We eat (good, interesting, exotic food) and what They, the little people, eat: trashy, uninteresting, fast, microwaveable crap.


The story that best captures the bile inherent in the anti-junk food campaign was the time when two mums pushed portions of chips through the school railings at Rawmarsh School in Rotherham. They said they were sick of their children coming home from school hungry, having refused to eat the “rabbit food” served in the lunch hall under Jamie Oliver’s instructions. And so they decided to smuggle in chips for their kids to feast on instead. The women were depicted as the scum of the earth. They were “sinner ladies”, the press said, “like daytrippers feeding animals at the zoo”. All because they dared to ignore the Gospel According to St Jamie.


The expression of snobbery through the issue of food has a long history. As John Carey showed in his book The Intellectuals and the Masses, in the early twentieth-century writers and thinkers who were allergic to working-class folk frequently attacked the tinned food consumed by less well-off people. “Tinned food offends against what the intellectual designates as nature: it is mechanical and soulless”, said Carey. They saw tinned food as “an offence against the sacredness of individuality”. And so it is today. For all the spouting of medical statistics and health facts in the jihad against junk food, really it is driven by an elitist view of certain foodstuffs as “soulless”, unnatural, too fast and mass-produced. It is a matter of taste, and class hatred, cunningly disguised as a health campaign.



Animal experiments to produce new cosmetics? No thanks


Are we worth it? (Photo: Alamy)

Are we worth it? (Photo: Alamy)


I’ve blogged before about experiments on animals; it’s a contentious area. As I’ve said, in a meat-eating society. it’s hard to argue with carefully controlled experiments on animals for medical reasons, if it reduces human suffering. But what about experiments on animals to test the ingredients of cosmetics? Should these be allowed?


The obvious answer is “no”: we already have enough established cosmetic ingredients. Surely there are effective ways of combining these safely without sacrificing thousands of animal lives to find newer, improved forms of eye shadow and lipstick?


To date, the EU has been proactive in controlling the use of animal experiments for cosmetics. To summarise the history of EU legislation:


+ 2004- introduction of a testing ban on finished cosmetic products

+ 2009- introduction of a testing ban on cosmetic ingredients

+ 2009- introduction of a marketing (i.e. sales) ban for products containing ingredients that have been tested on animals anywhere for any health effects except repeated-dose toxicityskin sensitisation, carcinogenicity reproductive toxicity, and toxicokinetics.


Currently, there’s a deadline of 2013 for the introduction of a marketing ban for products containing ingredients that have been tested on animals anywhere for all effects, including repeated-dose toxicity, skin sensitisation, carcinogenicity, reproductive toxicity and toxicokinetics.


What this means is that, at the moment, cosmetic companies can have their ingredients tested for these exempted tests outside the EU, then continue to sell the resulting products within the EU. The proposed 2013 ban will prevent this outsourcing. Cosmetics companies will no longer be able to test any ingredients on animals at all, anywhere, for products sold in the EU.


Why is this subject in the news?  The European Commission is currently looking at whether to propose postponing the 2013 deadline. Industry lobby groups are pressurising the Commission to do this, for obvious commercial reasons.


In the US, there are no prohibitions whatsoever on the use of animals for cosmetics testing. There is increasing consumer pressure to introduce legislation more similar to the EU, which is why many in the US are watching what is going to happen in the EU; it will be seen as an important precedent.


This isn’t about choosing between animals and human health. Keeping the ban in place does not mean that shop shelves will contain untested or potentially dangerous products. The use of ingredients that have already been tested and are already on the market will not be affected. The impact, instead, will be on the ability to bring new ingredients and products to market.


So the choice is really about whether animals should be killed (animals are generally sacrificed as part of the testing or afterwards because they can’t be re-used) in order to bring a new scent of body wash or colour of lipstick to market.


By the way, there are alternative, non-animal types of testing for new chemicals, including human cell, molecular and computer-based methods. In many cases these methods are quicker, cheaper, and provide results more relevant to humans than the animal tests. Although a recent report, sponsored by the European Commission, determined that these methods are not yet effective enough to fully replace live animal experiments in the full testing of new cosmetics, they are improving year by year. The deadline of 2013 would provide an effective spur to more rapid development of these methods. It’s worth noting that the utility of these methods extends beyond cosmetics testing to drugs and other chemicals, ending even more animal tests for product safety in other walks of life, including medicine.


Do you remember those images of rabbits  with their heads held in frames while shampoo was dropped into their eyes to assess the level of irritation? Is a new, softer, sweeter-smelling shampoo really worth this type of animal abuse?



Councilwoman apologizes for comparing Jewish property owner to Hitler

A Santa Ana city councilwoman apologized Thursday evening for comments she made at a meeting a day earlier in which she compared a downtown property owner to Hitler.

“What I said was inappropriate, and I let my emotions get the best of me,” Mayor Pro Tem Claudia Alvarez said by telephone.

Alvarez was referring to a comment she made at Wednesday’s council meeting during discussion of a controversial tax for downtown property owners. A portion of those taxes goes to Downtown Inc., an organization charged with promoting and securing the area.

“Hey, so if Hitler rents you a place, he’s giving us a great deal, so who cares what he stands for?” she said. “We need to put a stop to this.”

The comment referred to Irving Chase, who owns roughly four blocks downtown. He walked out of the meeting with his son, Ryan. Both of Irving Chase’s parents, Sol and Fay Chase, are Holocaust survivors from Poland.

Irving Chase said his father hid in the mountains with two Catholic families for almost four years. His mother made German army uniforms and spent time in Auschwitz. They lost more than 300 relatives in the Holocaust.

“I’m very, very sensitive to the Holocaust,” Irving Chase said. “That was the lowest thing that she could have said.”

Downtown Inc. is an organization that promotes downtown. It has been riddled with controversy in recent months, as property owners in the area say they don’t benefit from increased property taxes.

Ryan Chase is the president of the board of Downtown Inc. Until Thursday, Irving Chase was its secretary. He resigned because he didn’t want to interfere with the organization’s business after the councilwoman's remarks. 

Alvarez's comments prompted condemnation by the Anti-Defamation League of Orange County/Long Beach. Kevin O’Grady, the director of the chapter, said the comments reinforce one of the oldest stereotypes surrounding people of Jewish descent: that of greed.

“I think it speaks to gross insensitivity,” he said of Alvarez's remarks. “I don’t think anybody deserves to be compared to Hitler unless they have actually led a genocidal campaign against people.”

Alvarez said getting emotional did not justify her statements. She said the debate has affected her personally because her father owned a business downtown, and the incident is the culmination of escalating tensions surrounding the downtown area.

“The conversation is not over,” she said. “I obviously need to learn how to keep my cool.”

When told about the apology, Irving Chase had no comment.

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-- Nicole Santa Cruz in Orange County

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