Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Arrests made in Christmas Day killing of South L.A. mother

Kashmier James Three suspects have been arrested in the Christmas Day shooting of a South Los Angeles mother who died in front of her 3-year-old daughter, police said Tuesday night.

Kashmier James, 25, was shot as she stood outside a friend's home in the 1700 block of West 85th Street in Manchester Square, police said.

The daughter witnessed the slaying from the back seat of her mother's car. The girl was not hurt.

The suspects have been charged on suspicion of murder, attempted murder and gang allegations, the Los Angeles Police Department said. Police did not release additional details, citing a news conference scheduled for Wednesday afternoon at the 77th Street station.

Witnesses told detectives that the attackers drove up in Chevrolet Tahoe, police said. A men got out and fired nine shots at James, striking her in the cheek and legs.

At least 19 homicides have been reported in Manchester Square since January 2007, according to a Times Homicide Report database.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Kashmier James and the shooting scene. Credit: KTLA-TV

Click to visit The Times' interactive Homicide Report

Man climbs KTLA-TV tower, is refusing to come down [Updated]

Man climbs KTLA tower
A man has climbed the KTLA-TV news tower outside the station and is refusing to come down, police said Tuesday night.

[Updated, 9:40 p.m.: KTLA reports that the man has come down and been taken into custody.]

A Mental Evaluation Unit from the Los Angeles Police Department was responding, said Officer Karen Rayner.

The man began climbing shortly before 8:30 p.m., the LAPD said. It was unclear why he began traversing the metal tower.

Police were at the scene monitoring the situation. No other details were immediately available.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Man climbing tower. Credit: KTLA-TV

Brush fire that closed part of Highway 138 contained

A brush fire that burned for three days and forced officials to shut down a segment of Highway 138 has been contained.

The blaze, known as the Oasis fire, was 100% contained after scorching about 355 acres of vegetation, the California Department of Forestry & Fire Protection said Tuesday evening.

The fire broke out Saturday afternoon south of Highway 138 off Oasis Road near Pinon Hills in Los Angeles County. Flames burned near the San Bernardino County line.

The cost of fighting the fire has been about $1 million, officials said.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

San Diego County fire 80% contained, smaller than estimated

The Pala fire in northeastern San Diego County is 80% contained with full containment expected on Thursday, officials said Tuesday night.

The cost of fighting the blaze is estimated at $1,441,641. The cause was a Monday morning traffic accident along a rural road that sent sparks into dry grass in the area near the Pala Indian Reservation.

Detailed mapping has put the burned area at 223 acres, officials said. Earlier estimates had said more than 300 acres were burned.

One firefighter was injured. At the height of the blaze, more than 600 firefighters were on the fire lines but with progress in containing the fire, their numbers are now at 288.

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Prescribing Exercise to Treat Depression

Can a stroll help ease depression? That question preoccupied Dr. Madhukar H. Trivedi, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, after several of his patients, all suffering from serious depression, mentioned that they felt happier if they went for a walk. The patients in question were taking the widely prescribed antidepressants known as S.S.R.I.’s, for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, but not responding fully. They remained, by clinical standards, depressed. Dr. Trivedi and his colleagues began to wonder if adding a formal “dose” of exercise would increase their chances of getting better.

Certainly the possibility was worth investigating. Clinical depression, as anyone who has experienced or watched a loved one struggle with the condition knows, can be stubbornly intractable. Even if patients have been taking an antidepressant for months, recovery rates tend to hover below 50 percent.

In order to increase the odds of improvement, doctors frequently add a second treatment — often another drug, like lithium or an antipsychotic — to the S.S.R.I. regimen at some point, Dr. Trivedi said. Most patients ultimately require at least two concurrent treatments to achieve remission of their depression, he said. Studies have shown that these secondary drug treatments help an additional 20 to 30 percent of depressed patients to improve, but the medications can be expensive and have unpleasant side effects.

Which prompted Dr. Trivedi to look to exercise. His investigation joins a growing movement among some physiologists and doctors to consider and study exercise as a formal medicine, with patients given a prescription and their progress monitored, as it would be if they were prescribed a pill.

In this case, Dr. Trivedi and his collaborators, who included researchers at the Cooper Institute in Dallas, the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Louisiana and other institutions, recruited 126 people with depression who had been using S.S.R.I.’s for a minimum of two months, without achieving remission. None of the patients exercised.

Dr. Trivedi and his colleagues divided these volunteers into two groups. One began a gentle aerobic exercise routine, under the tutelage of Cooper Institute researchers, which required them to burn a certain amount of calories per session, depending on their weight. How the subjects expended the energy was up to them. Some walked for about 10 minutes a day, on a treadmill or by strolling around the block, at a pace of three miles an hour. Others chose an equivalent easy cycling workout.

The second group was more energetic, walking briskly for about 30 minutes a day at a pace of four miles an hour, or the cycling equivalent, a regimen that meets the current exercise recommendations from the American College of Sports Medicine.

Each volunteer exercised for four months, while continuing to take an antidepressant. At the end of that time, according to the study published recently in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 29.5 percent had achieved remission, “which is a very robust result,” Dr. Trivedi said, equal to or better than the remission rates achieved using drugs as a back-up treatment. “I think that our results indicate that exercise is a very valid treatment option” for people whose depression hasn’t yielded to S.S.R.I.’s, he said.

As with most scientific findings, though, there are caveats.

One is practical. More patients improved in the group that completed the longer, brisker workouts than in the group assigned the easier exercise, but more of them also dropped out of the study. “We need to find ways to support people’s efforts to exercise,” Dr. Trivedi said. “It’s not going to be enough to casually say, ‘Go for a walk.’” Exercise, if it’s to be medicinal in depression treatments, will have to be monitored, he said, so it can’t be shrugged off.

Even then, many people will not respond. Almost 70 percent of the volunteers in this study did not achieve full remission. Failure rates were particularly high for women with a family history of depression, perhaps as a result of some as yet unknown genetic quirk. And women in that group who did recover were more likely to succeed using the lighter exercise program than the more strenuous routine.

Then there is the issue of a control group, whose members would have continued with their S.S.R.I.’s but not exercised. This study did not have one, making interpreting the results tricky, said James A. Blumenthal, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University who was not involved with this study but who has written extensively about exercise and depression. Perhaps four additional months of S.S.R.I. treatment raised people’s moods, and the exercise was incidental. “Evidence is accumulating that exercise may be an effective treatment for depressed patients who are receptive to exercise as a possible treatment and who are able to safely engage in exercise,” he said. But the evidence is by no means definitive.

Still, Dr. Trivedi said, although additional studies certainly are needed, there’s no reason for people with unyielding depression not to talk now with their doctors about exercise as a treatment option. “Side effects are almost nonexistent,” he said, “while you get additional benefits, in terms of improvements in cardiovascular health and reductions in other disease risks,” things antidepressant drugs do not provide. “Plus,” he pointed out, “the cost profile is very favorable.” Exercise, as medicines go, is cheap.

Angeles National Forest fire-danger level rising to very high

Fire-danger level The forest fire danger level will be raised from high to very high in the Angeles National Forest, officials said Tuesday.

The change will take effect Thursday to remind people that the fire risk has grown with recent hot weather and drier vegetation, the U.S. Forest Service said.

Open-wood and charcoal fires will be permitted in developed campgrounds and picnic areas, the agency said. Gas and propane stoves will be permitted in non-developed areas with a state campfire permit.

"Very high" is the fourth in a six-level scale that rates the brush fire danger. The danger levels are determined by vegetation-moisture levels, weather conditions and available firefighting resources.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Fire-danger rating system. Credit: U.S. Forest Service

Driver allegedly involved in drug deal smashes into County Jail

Driver smashed his vehicle in this area at Central Jail. A man allegedly involved in a drug deal Tuesday afternoon in skid row tried to evade police by taking a wild ride through downtown, where he drove the wrong way along busy streets before smashing his vehicle into the Central Jail, authorities said.

Undercover narcotics officers saw the transaction about 4:30 p.m. and began following the man, who started to drive the wrong way through downtown, the Los Angeles Police Department said.

The officers stopped their pursuit, police said, but the driver kept going. Initial reports indicate that he  hit parked vehicles before crashing into the Los Angeles County Central Jail at 441 Bauchet Street in Chinatown, according to the LAPD.

The man was apprehend by LAPD officers, who were investigating the case Tuesday evening. No additional details were available.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Map shows area where a driver smashed his vehicle into County Jail. Credit: Times Mapping L.A.

Kitten trapped on Riverside freeway ledge rescued with safety net

Rescued Kitten in Riverside
A kitten perched on a ledge amid heavy traffic on the 90 Freeway was rescued Tuesday by an animal services officer who snagged the feline with a safety net, Riverside County officials said.

The 3-month-old black domestic long-haired cat was on the ledge of the freeway near Van Buren Boulevard around 2 p.m., officials said.

Officer Alanna Esch, responding to a call from a motorist, was afraid that the animal would fall into the traffic but was able to quickly snatch the kitten, the Riverside County Animal Services Department said.

The kitten was taken to an animal shelter in Jurupa Valley and treated for a small wound near the pelvic bone. The wound did not appear to be serious, the department said in a statement.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Rescued kitten in the arms of an animal control officer. Credit: Riverside County Department of Animal Services

BPA ban passes California state Senate

Bisphenol A, a compound found in many plastic baby bottles and other food containers, has been linked to reproductive problems in animals. The California state Senate voted Tuesday to ban the plastic chemical bisphenol A, also known as BPA, from baby bottles and sippy cups sold statewide.

The Toxin-Free Infants and Toddlers Act (AB 1319) heads back to the state Assembly for a vote on Senate amendments later this year.

“Today’s action by the Senate is further proof that the interests of California’s children can have a voice in Sacramento,” said Renee Sharp, head of the nonprofit Environmental Working Group's California office.

Martha Dina Argüello, executive director of Physicians for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles, said Tuesday's vote "is part of reasserting California's leadership on environmental health protections.”

Porn filming still suspended in wake of HIV scare

Photo: A cyclist rides in front of the building that houses the Adult Industry Medical Healthcare Foundation, who has drawn criticism for opposing condom use in porn and insisting that frequent tests could protect performers from HIV. Credit: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times The pornography trade association that broke the news that an adult film performer has tested HIV-positive released a statement Tuesday noting that "the incident occurred outside of California" and that "there is nothing to suggest that the occurrence has affected the Los Angeles-based industry."

The Canoga Park-based Free Speech Coalition learned that the performer had tested HIV-positive on Saturday and the group called for a moratorium on filming Sunday night, according to the statement.

It was not clear Tuesday how long the temporary suspension of filming would last. 

"This moratorium should remain in place until primary reports of any exposure are confirmed. In the event of the necessity for first- and second-generational testing, a list of any individuals that may have been exposed will be compiled and the moratorium will then be evaluated by our medical and legal advisers, as well as industry stakeholders," the statement said.

It was not clear how many porn studios have suspended filming.

Ex-Laker Javaris Crittenton to appear in court in murder case

Javaris Crittenton Former Lakers player Javaris Crittenton is scheduled to appear Wednesday morning at the criminal courthouse in Los Angeles for a hearing in connection with his arrest in a murder case, authorities said.

Crittenton, 23, wanted in connection with a drive-by shooting in Atlanta, was being held Tuesday at Los Angeles Police Department Headquarters on a state penal code violation of being a fugitive from justice, FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller said.

Crittenton is scheduled to appear in Department 30 at the courthouse. A federal warrant charging him with unlawful flight to avoid arrest is expected to be dismissed because he is being held on the state charge, authorities said.

He was apprehended Wednesday night at John Wayne International Airport by a fugitive task force of FBI agents and LAPD officers.

Crittenton allegedly shot Jullian Jones, a mother of four, on Aug. 19 as she stood outside her home with two other people, authorities said.

Atlanta homicide detectives said Crittenton was trying to shoot someone he believed had stolen jewelry from him in April, according to Georgia law enforcement sources.

Jones was caught in a hail of bullets from the driver’s side of a sport utility vehicle. She was hit multiple times and declared dead at a hospital, according to authorities.

Crittenton, of Fayetteville, Ga., was drafted by the Lakers in 2007 but was traded in his rookie year to the Memphis Grizzlies. His NBA career sputtered with the Washington Wizards in 2009 when he and then-teammate Gilbert Arenas pulled guns on each other.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

Michael Jackson’s ‘distracting’ inner circle can't testify

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Javaris Crittenton. Credit: FBI

Sadness at San Diego Zoo: Giant panda Bai Yun is not pregnant

Bai Yun

Disappointing news this afternoon from the San Diego Zoo: The giant panda Bai Yun is not pregnant.

Given the idiosyncrasies of pandas' reproductive system, it will be another year before Bai Yun and her mate Gao Gao can try again.

The two mated in April. For 19 weeks, zoo staff monitored Bai Yun's behavior and hormone levels, confident that she was pregnant given that she has had five successful pregnancies since arriving at the zoo from China in 1996.

Ultrasound tests, however, indicated that the 20-year-old Bai Yun was not pregnant.

There is no indication that Bai Yun and Gao Gao will not be able to conceive next year, zoo officials said. The San Diego Zoo is one of four American zoos with giant pandas.

In the history of American zoos, no animal has proved as popular as the panda, dubbed a "charismatic mega-vertebrate" by zoologists.

Bai Yun returned to the panda exhibit Wednesday for the first time since she and Gao Gao mated.

ALSO:

Woman allegedly attacks school principal

Santa Monica plane crash pilot was student on solo flight

Baring it all for new threads

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: Bai Yun in 2003. Credit: Don Tormey / Los Angeles Times

Woman made up assault story to hide debts, authorities say

A Temecula woman who earlier this month reported to police that a burglar had ransacked her home and then tried to sexually assault her at knife-point has told detectives that she fabricated the story to hide recent gambling losses from her family, authorities said Tuesday.

The woman, who was not identified, admitted she made up the story after investigators questioned her about inconsistencies in her story, according to a statement released by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

Sheriff’s detectives have referred the case to the district attorney’s office to consider filing a charge of filing a false police report.

On Aug. 9, the woman told police that when she arrived at her home on Lahontan Street about 1:50 p.m., she found that the master bedroom had been burglarized and ransacked. She said that an attacker then jumped at her with a knife and that she was able to fight him off and lock herself in a bathroom, where she called 911 on her cellphone. She was then transported to a local hospital with superficial injuries.

She had described the attacker as a white or Latino male with medium-colored skin.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

Michael Jackson's "distracting" inner circle can't testify

Santa Monica plane crash pilot was student on solo flight

--Phil Willon in Riverside

Reader photos: Southern California Moments, Day 242

Click through for more photos of Southern California Moments.

Oil: Kevin Balluff photographs the Baldwin Hills oil fields in February.

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.

Neighborhood pesticide exposure linked to prostate cancer

Cockburn_mResearchers at the University of Southern California have found that men exposed to certain pesticides in Central Valley neighborhoods are at increased risk for prostate cancer, according to a study in the American Journal of Epidemiology. 

The authors recruited 173 men, ages 60 to 74, from 670 diagnosed with prostate cancer in Tulare, Fresno and Kern counties, according to the state's cancer registry. They used Medicare and tax records to find 162 men ages 65 and older without prostate cancer to use as a control group. 

They traced where the men lived and worked from 1974 to 1999, and compared those locations with state records of pesticide use. They found prostate cancer more prevalent among men who lived near areas sprayed with methyl bromide, captan and eight organochlorine pesticides.

Greenspace spoke with one of the study's authors, Myles Cockburn, an associate professor of preventive medicine at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine, about the implications.

Q: Why did you look at these particular pesticides?

A: We had to isolate particular pesticides to determine causality. So we started with things that we had some lab-based evidence that they might lead to prostate cancer. There had to be biological plausibility.

Q: How could you be sure these people were exposed in their neighborhoods, not agricultural or other jobs?

A: We asked them if they worked in farming occupations, and our control group was a random selection from the [Central] Valley, and only about 3% worked in agriculture.

Antonovich withdraws stadium motion amid conflict questions

AEG accuses Supervisor Mike Antonovich of conflict of interest

Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich on Tuesday withdrew a motion that could have slowed progress on a proposed downtown NFL stadium after the stadium developer’s lawyer questioned whether Antonovich had a financial conflict of interest in the matter.

The potential conflict stems from claims by Antonovich's wife that she is owed hundreds of thousands of dollars by an affiliate of the developer Anschutz Entertainment Group, according to an attorney for the firm. 

County supervisors on Tuesday had been scheduled to consider a motion by Antonovich opposing AEG's push in Sacramento to curtail the time period allowed for legal challenges to its $1-billion stadium proposal. But in a letter Monday, AEG lawyer James Sutton said a vote should not be cast until the county’s lawyers determine whether Antonovich should be disqualified from participating.

In a letter to the county’s lawyers, Sutton said that Antonovich’s wife, Christine Hu Antonovich, has been locked in a dispute over fees for more than a year with AEG’s affiliate in Shanghai, AEG Business Management Consulting. Hu Antonovich claimed that she earned those fees while introducing AEG executives to Chinese officials several years ago, Sutton said.

Antonovich opposes legislation that would shorten the time period for challenges to AEG's environmental impact report -- unless similar protections are provided to county hospitals, libraries, schools and transportation projects.

Antonovich said the intent of his motion was to protect taxpayers and he was surprised that AEG interjected a family member into the debate.

Antonovich told The Times he did not inform his staff or county counsel that his wife had a financial dispute with AEG and did not believe it posed a conflict. “No, because this doesn’t deal with AEG. This deals with the subsidiary in China,”  he said.

Recent high school graduates optimistic about value of college

Photo: Students celebrate during graduation ceremonies at North Hollywood High School in June. Credit: Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times Despite the rising costs of a college education, most recent high school graduates say that earning a college degree is worth the time and money, and most are optimistic that they and their peers will find good jobs and careers.

That is the good news from a national survey of 1,500 graduates from the class of 2010 that was released Tuesday by the College Board, the nonprofit association that runs the SAT and Advanced Placement tests.

The inaugural survey, One Year Out, sought to mine perspectives about the weaknesses and strengths of the nation’s education system from a group rarely heard from in that national debate. The survey was conducted by Hart Research Associates between July and August of this year. Twelve percent of the respondents were from California.

Perhaps surprisingly, given the rancor over issues of testing, graduation and college readiness, 66% said their high school did a good job of preparing them for college, while 58% said they were adequately prepared for the workplace. Only about half said their school did a good job of preparing them for both college and work.

A majority -- 69% -- said requirements for graduating from high school, including tests and courses, were easy. Thirty-seven percent said such requirements should be tougher.

Overall, 82% of recent graduates said they were very or somewhat satisfied with their high school experience, a percentage that was fairly consistent among those who went on to a four-year college, a two-year college or did not enroll in any college.

Still, given the chance, most students said they would change something about their high school experience, including 44% who said they wished they had taken different courses such as more intensive math, science and writing.

“These candid assessments provide critical firsthand insight into how high schools serve -- and in some ways shortchange -- their graduates,” College Board president Gaston Caperton said in a statement. “One Year Out is a call to action, straight from the class of 2010.”

County hospital system reports unexpected budget surplus

Dr. Mitchell Katz reports budget surplus for health services department

The financially plagued Los Angeles County public hospital system reported a bit of good news Tuesday: a surplus for its most recent fiscal year.

Dr. Mitchell Katz, the new director of the county Department of Health Services, told supervisors that there was a $13.2-million surplus for the 12 months ended June 30.

Katz, who began his job this year after heading the health department in San Francisco, said successful negotiations with the federal and state governments for financial aid, holding back on hiring and reducing the use of consultants helped bring the agency into the black.

Supervisors, who have regularly expressed frustration with the agency, were delighted at Tuesday's report, and it appeared that Katz's honeymoon with the supervisors was continuing.

"I've never had a budget like this report at all," said Supervisor Gloria Molina. "We can't even begin to thank you."

ALSO:

Hurricane Irene forces delay of Chihuahua airlift

'Litany of failures' cited in deadly San Bruno pipeline blast

Man threw 7-year-old son overboard for crying, authorities say

-- Rong-Gong Lin II at the Los Angeles County Hall of Administration

Photo: Dr. Mitchell Katz, who took over this year as director of the L.A. County Department of Health Services, with his former staff in San Francisco. Credit: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times

16-year-old killed, five wounded in Victorville party shooting

A shooting at a birthday party in Victorville on Sunday left a 16-year-old girl dead and five other guests wounded.

LeShay Walker, 16, was hit by gunfire that rang out about 2:30 a.m. at a party at the 15000 block of Kitfox Lane in the High Desert city, San Bernardino County sheriff's officials said. She was pronounced dead about an hour later at a hospital.

The shots struck three other Victorville teenagers -- males ages 17 and 18 and a female, 19 -- plus San Bernardino men ages 20 and 30.

They were taken by friends and family to area hospitals with gunshot wounds to their lower bodies, but their injuries were not life-threatening, said Jodi Miller, a Sheriff's Department spokeswoman.

Homicide investigators have been interviewing witnesses, including some of the 75 to 80 people gathered outside the home after the shooting.

No suspects have been named. Investigators are trying determine if more than one person fired shots.

ALSO:

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

Michael Jackson's "distracting" inner circle can't testify

Santa Monica plane crash pilot was student on solo flight

-- Tony Barboza

Second man arrested in slaying of Orange County executive

Kraft booking photoA second suspect has been arrested in connection with the slaying of an Orange County executive whose business partner admitted to killing him and pretending he was alive by sending phony emails from Africa.

Kenny Roy Kraft, 34, was arrested Monday and charged with accessory to murder in the killing last year of Christopher Ryan Smith, said Orange County Sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino.

Kraft, of Laguna Niguel, allegedly helped Smith's business partner, Edward Younghoon Shin, dispose of Smith's car, clothes and other items, Amormino said.

Shin was arrested Sunday as he got on a plane headed for Canada. He was charged with murder after admitting to killing Smith, 33, in June 2010 rather than pay $1 million to buy him out of their business partnership.

Investigators say he then faked that Smith was still alive and traveling the world. 

Shin sent emails from Smith's account to his family, portraying an exotic odyssey through Africa. Those emails describe him paragliding in South Africa and "sandboarding on huge mines."

In the phony emails, Smith claimed to be using gold to travel and talked about going to Rwanda.

Mountain lion sighting in Burbank prompts new alert

Mountain lions have been spotted again in Burbank

Burbank police issued another public safety alert Tuesday after residents reported seeing a mountain lion in a populated area.

The sighting was reported in the 900 block of Country Club Drive at 9:15 p.m. Monday as the lion was apparently heading back into the hills of northwest Burbank, police told the Burbank Leader.

Several mountain lions have been reported in the Burbank hills this summer, prompting warnings from officials to keep pet food indoors and to avoid hiking or jogging alone, especially at dawn or dusk, when the big cats are more active.

Earlier this month, Burbank police reported seeing a mountain lion walking among parked cars near Kenneth Road and Brown Drive.

ALSO:

Man threw 7-year-old son overboard for crying, authorities say

Porn actor's positive HIV test provokes new calls for condom use

Body found at Arizona clinic may be missing Newport Beach doctor

-- Jason Wells, Times Community News

Photo: A Southern California mountain lion. Credit: Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area

Pala fire in San Diego County 60% contained [Updated]

Pala

The Pala fire in northeast San Diego County is 60% contained after burning more than 300 acres but with no reported damage to homes or other structures, Cal Fire reported Tuesday morning.

The fire broke out after an automobile struck a light pole Monday morning on Pala Temecula Road, sending a shower of sparks into dry grass.

By late afternoon the occupants of three dozen homes along Rancho Heights Road had been ordered by authorities to evacuate. The American Red Cross provided shelter at the gymnasium on nearby Pala Indian Reservation.

The evacuation order was lifted Tuesday.

The blaze has been fought by 605 firefighters along with three helicopters and several air tankers dropping water and fire retardant.

[Update 9:30 am: The fire is not spreading and full containment is expected Tuesday. The cost of fighting the fire is estimated at $404,822, officials said.]

ALSO:

Wildfire near Yosemite forces evacuations

Southern California brush fires getting under control

Cardiff State Beach closed after sewage spill in Escondido       

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: An air tanker drops fire retardant on the Pala fire Monday. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

Stadium developer says Antonovich may have conflict of interest

AEG accuses Supervisor Mike Antonovich of conflict of interest
The developer of a planned downtown NFL stadium took aim Tuesday at a county supervisor who has criticized stadium lobbying efforts, saying he may have a financial conflict of interest that should bar him from involvement in actions tied to the project.

The potential conflict stems from claims by Supervisor Michael Antonovich's wife that she is owed hundreds of thousands of dollars by an affiliate of the stadium developer, according to an attorney for the firm, Anschutz Entertainment Group.  

County supervisors Tuesday were scheduled to consider a motion by Antonovich opposing AEG's push in Sacramento to curtail the time period allowed for legal challenges to its $1-billion stadium proposal. But in a letter Monday, AEG lawyer James Sutton said a vote should not be cast until the county’s lawyers determine whether Antonovich should be disqualified from participating.

In a letter to the county’s legal team, Sutton said that Antonovich’s wife, Christine Hu Antonovich, has been locked in a dispute over fees for more than a year with AEG’s affiliate in Shanghai, AEG Business Management Consulting. Christine Hu Antonovich claimed that she earned those fees while introducing AEG executives to Chinese officials several years ago, Sutton said.

Antonovich opposes legislation that would shorten the time period for challenges to AEG's environmental impact report -- unless similar protections are provided to county hospitals, libraries, schools and transportation projects.

Tony Bell, spokesman for Antonovich, did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday morning.

Jury selection begins in ‘Irvine 11’ student protest case

Jury selection begins in 'Irvine 11' case

Jury selection began Monday in the case against 10 students charged with misdemeanors for allegedly taking part in a protest against Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren at UC Irvine last year.

Prospective jurors were asked a variety of questions in an eight-page questionnaire, including whether they studied at UC Irvine, if their association with the school would affect their ability to be fair and impartial and if they are familiar with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Daily Pilot reported.

Other questions included whether jurors support the Israeli or Palestinian side in the conflict, their feelings toward the state of Israel and if they harbor any negative feelings toward Muslims.

About 300 jurors filled out the questionnaire, and about 150 people filled the courtroom before and after lunch to receive jury instructions.

The Orange County district attorney chose to file misdemeanor charges originally against 11 students in February of this year after a grand jury investigation last summer presented its findings.

On Feb. 8, 2010, Oren spoke in front of hundreds, and was repeatedly interrupted by the so-called "Irvine 11," who periodically stood up and shouted during his talk.

Charges against Hakim Nasreddine Kebir, one of the original 11 defendants, were tentatively dropped in July, the district attorney announced, pending Kebir's completion of 40 hours of community service at a Costa Mesa soup kitchen.

Among the handful of people at Monday's jury selection proceedings was Salam Al-Marayati, of the Muslim Public Affairs Council.

Al-Marayati said any punishment the students should face would be best coming from the university, rather than district attorney.

The students -- from UC Irvine and UC Riverside -- face up to six months in jail if convicted.

ALSO:

Ex-Laker Javaris Crittenton faces murder charge in Georgia

Slain city councilman was ambushed by opium grower, police say

Porn actor's positive HIV test provokes new calls for condom use

-- Lauren Williams, Times Community News

Photo: College students protest earlier this year in front of the offices of the Orange County district attorney against charges being brought against the 11 students who interrupted a speech by Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren.  Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Man threw 7-year-old son overboard for crying, authorities say













Two Orange County boys were in the custody of their mother Tuesday after their father was accused of throwing his 7-year-old son overboard from a boat after the boy would not stop crying, authorities said.

Sloane Briles, 35, of Irvine was booked on suspicion of child endangerment and resisting arrest. He was released Monday after posting bail.

Briles and his girlfriend were aboard the tour boat Queen on a cruise of Newport Harbor just before 2 p.m. Sunday when the couple got into an argument in front of his 6- and 7-year-old sons from a previous marriage, said Orange County sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino.

When the 7-year-old became upset Briles hit him several times, shocking and angering some of the tour boat's 85 passengers. Witnesses said Briles told his son that if he didn't stop crying, he would throw him overboard.

Teen charged with murder in slaying of pizza deliveryman [Video]













A teenager suspected of killing a Silver Lake pizza deliveryman in an apparent road-rage attack is in custody and has been charged with murder, authorities said Tuesday.

Jose Beltran, 18, is accused of killing Juan David Vasquez Loma, a well-liked busboy and pizza deliverer who was shot in the head shortly after 5 a.m. Aug. 7 as he drove down Silver Lake Boulevard.

Police have described the shooting as a road-rage attack.

Beltran was arrested on Aug. 19, initially on suspicion of driving with a loaded firearm, said LAPD spokesman Andrew Smith, who said detectives nailed down their case after Beltran was in custody.

Beltran currently faces one murder count and is being held on $1-million bail at Men’s Central Jail.

Loma, 20, was driving co-workers home after work when he was shot in the head. He was taken to a hospital, where he was placed on life-support until Aug. 14, giving his mother time to arrive from Mexico to say goodbye.

None of Loma's passengers were seriously injured.

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Glendale family arrested in alleged shoplifting incident at Sears

A Glendale family of four --including two teenage sisters -- were arrested over the weekend after they attempted to steal about $550 worth of shoes and cologne from a Sears store in Burbank, police said.

Christian Gonzalez, 31, and his wife, Norma Gonzalez, 32, along with their 13- and 14-year-old daughters were arrested outside the store on Magnolia Boulevard after employees stopped them and said they were placing shoes and boxes of cologne into bags from another store, Burbank Sgt. Travis Irving said Monday.

The incident occurred at 7:50 p.m. Saturday, Irving added.

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-- Maria Hsin, Times Community News

San Diego teen shot with arrow in dispute, police say

A San Diego teenager was recovering Tuesday after being shot with an arrow fired by another teen in a dispute, police said.

The incident began with two teenagers throwing rocks at two other teens riding in a Toyota RAV4 in the Linda Vista neighborhood.

The vehicle stopped and one of the occupants fired an arrow from a crossbow "impaling [one of the other teens] on the right side of his torso," police said.

The Toyota sped off and the teenager with the arrow in his chest was taken to a hospital.

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Small plane crashes into yard in Santa Monica           

Motorist killed after car plunges down mountainside        

Skydivers who collided in midair remain in critical condition       

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Missing hikers found safe in Angeles National Forest

Three hikers who had gone missing in the Angeles National Forest on Sunday were found safe Tuesday morning, authorities said.

Search-and-rescue crews found the three men, reportedly uninjured, in Devil's Canyon about 8:40 a.m., said Steve Goldsworthy, a volunteer with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Montrose Search and Rescue Team.

The men, ages 32, 45 and 50 and all from Los Angeles, left for a hike in the San Gabriel Mountains about 9 a.m. Sunday and were expected to return by 5 or 6 p.m. Family members reported them missing about 10:45 p.m. Sunday after they failed to return home.

Two vehicles belonging to two of the hikers were found, one at the trailhead leading to Devil's Canyon, the other at the trailhead to Mt. Waterman.

The hikers apparently had intended to hike a one-way, 15-mile day hike from one vehicle to the other and had not taken gear to stay overnight.

The search, which was activated shortly after 1 a.m. Monday, was carried out by crews from several law enforcement agencies, volunteers and a sheriff's department helicopter.

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Westside VA hospital boots three commercial tenants

Veterans Affairs medical center
The Veterans Affairs hospital on the Westside is evicting a bus company, a car rental firm and a commercial laundry from its site to try to counter criticism that it puts commercial interests ahead of veterans.

The three longtime tenants are among about two dozen private entities holding land-use agreements with the agency.

They were told they do not meet requirements contained in a recently enacted master plan for the 387-acre campus, the Associated Press reported.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car, which stores vehicles on campus, was told to move to a different part of the site by October to make space for a new mental health building and to leave the property entirely by May 2012, the AP reported.

Meanwhile, Los Angeles' Tumbleweed Charter Buses Inc., which keeps more than 170 vehicles on site, was told in May it would be able to use the facility for only one more year.

It is time to call the chief of the NHS to account


Sir David Nicholson, KCB CBE

Sir David Nicholson, KCB CBE


Needing a Pharmacist on Bank Holiday Monday, I logged onto the NHS website to find its list of pharmacies due to be open on 29th August – and found one, less than a mile from my home in west London. “Marvellous” I thought, “what a useful website”. How foolish of me – of course, the pharmacy was firmly shut. Why does the NHS bother with a website at all, if the information is incorrect?


No GP is available on a bank holiday – even though, by opening on these days, it might give people an opportunity to see their own doctor without having to take time off work. My surgery has now, virtually, given up booking appointments ahead of the day. “Ring at 8am on the day” is the mantra – so, as the surgery switchboard will not accept the telephone call-back facility, it means dialling and re-dialling and, inevitably, being beaten at the post by another of the surgery’s 9,000 patients. If you do get an appointment, the eight minutes allowed means that, if the GP thinks you need a blood test, a smear or a swab – which, nowadays, is only done by a nurse – you will have to make a separate appointment for yet another day, or go and sit for several hours at your local hospital, but not on a Bank Holiday!


Which brings me back to the subject of Scarborough Hospital. Since I first described how badly the staff at the hospital treated my elderly mother-in-law, I have received many heartbreaking emails detailing similar – or worse – experiences at this hospital.


Richard wrote to tell me how his wife had been admitted for a routine operation – with a three per cent chance of mortality – but, through neglect, her condition deteriorated to such an extent that “matters became irretrievable” and she died. Part of the problem was that, post-operatively, she saw no consultant surgeon for many days because there was confusion as to which consultant was in charge of her case – and then she contracted MRSA. How can such “confusion” happen?


Jane described a “botched” job on her badly broken leg, which has left her permanently disabled; being shouted at by a doctor after she complained that the pain was intolerable and her toes had turned blue – eventually the “pot” was removed but the leg is still scarred; how she witnessed the nursing staff deliberately ignoring the requests of elderly patients to be taken to the lavatory, leaving them desperate and crying, or falling as they struggled to walk there unaided. So shocked was she by the callous behaviour of the staff, that she and several other patients on the ward took matters into their own hands and rang their bells persistently on behalf of the elderly people, until the staff got the message. What goes on in the minds of these nurses?


Sara was pregnant with her second child – she was told the baby was a girl and would weigh 7-8 ozs. There were problems with the placenta, so she was seen by a consultant. However, when the baby was born – two weeks overdue – he weighed 3lbs 13 ozs and it was discovered that Sara had a condition known as polyhydramnios (where there is too much amniotic fluid – sometimes three times the normal amount) and the baby boy had Edwards syndrome (a chromosome disorder). If this was not enough with which to contend, the insensitive attitude of the nurses to Sara and her very sick baby, she says, was a disgrace. It would seem that there was no communication at all between the nursing staff – or the doctors – and, very sadly, after two days, Sara’s baby died. Her description of the experience makes very hard and sad reading. No apology has ever been received. Instead she was told it was her fault because she declined the amniocentisis.


These are just three examples. What is happening at Scarborough Hospital? As far as I can see, as Richard put it: “Unless you have the literacy skills to compete, in effect to make complaints staff, arrogant clinicians, the national ombudsman and the General Medical Council pay attention and take you seriously, you would appear to have little prospect of raising a complaint successfully.”


I have written repeatedly to Scarborough MP, Robert Goodwill, but have received only computer- generated responses, or, on one occasion, an email detailing the IT system at the House of Commons into whose “spam” bucket, he suggests, my email could have gone. Nonsense – I would have received no answer at all if that was the case. All of this but never an answer to my questions about Scarborough Hospital’s appalling record and how patients might elevate their complaints. Perhaps he could bring himself to read this blog post and respond to my original request for intervention and advice – and not just send a computer-generated email.


Complaints of negligence to GMC hearings have to be proved “beyond reasonable doubt” – which is virtually impossible. So, if – as it appears – the MP for the area cares so little about his hospital, the way it is run, the attitude of the staff and its general reputation, who is there to whom patients and their families can turn?


Let us not forgot Sir David Nicholson KCB, CBE. He is the Chief Executive of the NHS – and has been since 2006. Earning over £200,000 per year plus £35,000 in expenses, why is he allowing hospitals like Scarborough to continue in this fashion? Surely it is his duty to ensure that the budget – which comes directly from us, the taxpayer – is used wisely, efficiently and with total focus on the care of patients. The people who pay Sir David’s wages – us – want to see wards that are run for the benefit of the patients and not the staff; to see the right type of person being recruited into the nursing profession and being trained in pastoral, as well as medical care. It costs nothing to learn the lessons of the corporate world about customer care and how to deal with complaints. Even an informal complaint in the NHS is met with hostility and if you take it any further, you enter – as emailer, Tom, put it – “a Kafka-like process”.


It is long overdue for Sir David to be called to account. He presides over the largest employer in Britain, the largest spending public service and, frankly, in the private sector his performance would be deemed wholly unacceptable. This is without the recent announcement that part of the new NHS computer system (costing £7 billion) was so unworkable that it had to be scrapped.


If he can carry on in post, without fear of dismissal and the local MP cannot be bothered to respond to criticism of Scarborough Hospital, then just who is in charge of the clattering train? More importantly – who is accountable to the tax payer for the efficient spending of their hard-earned tax pounds?


To help Sir David along the way, what about this for a thought? Jobs at hospitals like Scarborough are not seen by ambitious young doctors as residencies which will further their careers. Perhaps, in order to attract top-class medical staff, Sir David might consider turning the pay structure on its head and offering a better salary package to those prepared to work in unfashionable, non-teaching hospitals? That way, the standards of care might rise and patients outside the large cities might have a better chance of good treatment. Scarborough Hospital should be first on his list.



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