Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Options weighed for handling tourists who visit Hollywood sign

Hollywood sign

Gates across public streets, construction of a viewing platform outside the Beachwood Market and warning signs in various languages were suggested Tuesday as ways of handling tourists who flock into the hills to see the Hollywood sign.

An old idea, construction of an aerial tram connecting the city's Travel Town and the ridge behind the sign was suggested by Hank Pinczower, a 50-year resident of the hillside neighborhood.

"It would be a moneymaker for the city" and get tourists off local streets, he told about 120 homeowners and city officials.

When police admitted they rarely ticket tourists who illegally park or smoke in the brushy hillsides because visitors are unlikely to return for their court date, software developer Jean Michel Morot-Gaudry suggested that officers use cellphones to collect fines from credit cards on the spot.

Tour company owner Patrick Hickey proposed that the city collect fees from each Hollywood tour bus and van that could be used for private security guards to patrol roads beneath the sign, watching for those smoking and those blocking streets while they take photographs.

City Councilman Tom LaBonge, who organized the community meeting, said officials will meet Thursday with tour company operators to seek more of their ideas.

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-- Bob Pool

Photo: Brazilian tourists Masra Andrade, left, and Ticiana Santana have their picture taken with the Hollywood sign. Credit: Christina House / For The Times

Police look for attacker in fatal Long Beach shooting

Long Beach homicides Long Beach police Tuesday were looking for an attacker who fatally shot a 28-year-old man.

Andre Swafford died Saturday from his injuries after being wounded several days earlier near 9th Street and East Walnut Avenue, the Long Beach Police Department said.

Police found Swafford sprawled on a sidewalk. He had sustained gunshot wounds to his upper body.

Since January 2007, at least 184 homicides have been reported in Long Beach, according to a Times Homicide Report database.

Anyone with information is asked to call Det. Greg Krabbe or Det. Mark Bigel at (562) 570-7244.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Map shows Long Beach homicides reported since 2007. Credit: Times' Homicide Report

Body found in a van in the desert in Riverside County

Riverside County homicide The body of a man who had been shot was found Tuesday in a van in the desert in eastern Riverside County.

Deputies responding to a call of a domestic dispute made the find about 1:45 p.m. in 15000 block of Avenida Mirola in an unincorporated area near Desert Hot Springs, the Riverside County Sheriff's Department said.

Deputies searched for additional suspects and victims but came up empty handed. The victim has not been identified.

Anyone with information is asked to call homicide detectives at (951) 955-2777.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Map shows area where body was found. Credit: Google Maps

LAX contractor dies after being electrocuted

A man died Tuesday after being shocked while working in an electrical room at Los Angeles International Airport, officials said.

The Los Angeles County coroner's office said Tuesday evening that the body was still at a local hospital and had not been identified.

The man was a private contractor believed to be about 40-years-old, the Los Angeles Fire Department said.

The accident was under investigation. It occurred about 11:15 a.m.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

L.A. school board opposes mayor in battle over redevelopment funds

The Los Angeles Board of Education voted Tuesday to join opponents of local redevelopment agencies in the legal battle over who should control funds that are held by these agencies.

The school board’s decision puts it at odds with L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who has backed keeping funds with redevelopment agencies, including the one controlled by the city of Los Angeles.

Billions of dollars are at stake statewide. Locally, the issue is whether these dollars should reside with the city—to help it spur development projects—or with counties and school districts.

Until now, a school-board majority closely allied with the mayor has been officially silent on the issue, even though the cash-strapped school district could reap substantial benefit by a transfer of these funds. But the political ground shifted somewhat at Tuesday’s meeting.

The resolution to take sides—and oppose the mayor’s position—was brought forward by recently elected school board member Bennett Kayser. With financial support from the teachers union, he  narrowly defeated a candidate who was backed by Villaraigosa. Kayser took office in July.

Kayser's resolution called for filing an amicus brief with the California Supreme Court over who should control the contested funding. The brief would make legal arguments supporting the transfer that has been advocated by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The school board approved the item in closed session and did not discuss the matter in its public meeting.

Joining Kayser were board members Steve Zimmer—who sometimes votes with the mayor’s bloc, and Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte, an outspoken critic of the mayor. The fourth and deciding vote was  that of Richard Vladovic, a longtime mayoral ally who was just reelected. The mayor’s closest ally, school board President Monica Garcia, abstained. Two board members, Tamar Galatzan and Nury Martinez, did not attend Tuesday’s meeting.

L.A. schools Supt. John Deasy, who has enjoyed Villaraigosa’s support, said he had no position on the board’s action, but that, in general, he supported efforts to bring in revenue to the school system. Deasy declined to comment when asked what the legal intervention was likely to cost.

The mayor's office said Villaraigosa, who is traveling, was unavailable for comment.

-- Howard Blume

Human remains discovered near Palmdale

Human remains in Palmdale
Human remains were found Tuesday in the desert near Palmdale, authorities said.

The remains were partially buried and badly decomposed, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said.

Homicide detectives were investigating the scene near 130th Street East and Avenue R-4.

No other details were immediately available.

Anyone with information is asked to call detectives at (323) 890-5500. Anonymous tips can be left a (800) 222-8477.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Investigators at the site where human remains were found. Credit: KTLA-TV

San Dimas man dies after trying to rescue pet bird in fire

Man dies while trying to save pet bird in fire
A 60-year-old San Dimas man who ran inside a burning building to rescue his pet bird was found dead Tuesday afternoon outside the fire-damaged structure, officials said.

The man was found shortly before 4 p.m. outside the condominium in the 900 block of North Bidwell Road, the Los Angeles County Fire Department said. The cause of death has not been determined.

The Fire Department said Tuesday evening that it was also unclear what happened to the bird. The cause of the blaze was under investigation.

No other details were immediately available.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Map shows area where the blaze broke out. Credit: Google Maps

100 trees to be removed after collapse kills woman in Costa Mesa

Tree falls on car, crushes womanOfficials said Tuesday that they would remove 100 trees in and around the Costa Mesa area where a felled eucalyptus crushed a car and killed a driver last week.

The accident at 17th Street and Irvine Avenue killed a 29-year-old woman.

Irvine Avenue will be closed between Westcliff and Dover drives until 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Newport maintains the trees for Costa Mesa.

Officials have been looking into the cause of the tree collapse.

ALSO:

Michelle Le's remains identified

Irvine 11 D.A.'s closing statement branded 'political theater'

Hockey mom accused of having sex with son's underage teammates

-- John Canalis, Times Community News

Photo: A crowd watches the scene where a giant eucalyptus tree smashed a car waiting at a traffic light at Irvine Avenue and 17th Street in Costa Mesa, crushing the vehicle. Credit: Don Leach / Daily Pilot

Report: No open-meeting violations in Capistrano school district

Capistrano school district open meeting investigation A report released Tuesday by the Orange County district attorney's office has concluded that the Capistrano Unified School District did not violate state open-meeting laws.

The district attorney's office had received complaints, including one from an attorney for two district board members alleging violations of  the Brown Act, which governs open meeting and agenda requirements for public agencies.

The alleged violations occurred at three meetings between Dec. 13, 2010, and March 16, 2011, the report said.

An initial inquiry by the district attorney's office resulted in notice to the district that violations had occurred. But the district attorney's office said it had "modified" the findings of that inquiry as a result of additional information that was obtained after a request by the school district to reopen the matter.

"Although an appearance of violations of the Brown Act occurred," the 26-page report concluded, "the evidence developed has not been sufficient to establish their actual occurrence."

In a statement, the district lauded the report's conclusion.

“We are pleased that the district attorney listened to our concerns and reopened the investigation,” Supt. Joe Farley said. “The education of this community’s children continues to be the top priority for both staff and elected members of this organization."

The report said investigators did uncover what was described as a "seemingly toxic atmosphere" among some district officials. "Evidence revealed examples of condescension or disdain for other board members or dissenting members of the public," the report said.

The complaints surfaced after three new members were elected to the board during a contested recall election in November 2010, the report said.

The new members were provided no formal training regarding the Brown Act and were given a booklet on the state's open-record laws. "Simply providing a booklet upon assuming their office is not sufficient," the report found.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Image shows the cover of the investigation report. Credit: Orange County district attorney's office.

Botulism suspected in death of Lake Forest ducks

Ducks have been dying in the Orange County city of Lake Forest of what officials suspect is botulism, and officials are placing part of the blame on well-meaning residents who throw bread crumbs to the birds.

Debbie McGuire, wildlife director at the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center in Huntington Beach, said she has heard reports of about 30 cases, and the center is treating six ducks, four of them in critical condition. Some of the birds the center has treated have recovered and been released, but others have died. 

The Orange County Register first reported the epidemic, saying that residents have found dead birds in the lakes at the Lake I and Lake II communities and at Village Pond Park and Forest Gardens Mobile Home Park.

While the birds are showing symptoms of botulism, which affects the nervous system, McGuire said that for cost reasons, the center has been unable to test them. She added, however, that the Orange County Vector Control District has offered to pay for testing any other birds that die.

Bread crumbs can feed the bacteria that cause botulism, which requires warm temperatures, a protein source and a lack of oxygen to grow.

"Saying bread causes botulism is a bit of a stretch, but it definitely adds to the problem," McGuire said.

The city has put out signs asking people not to feed the ducks but has no formal enforcement mechanism in place, the Register reported.

ALSO:

'Irvine 11' defense attorneys call the students patriots

Michelle Le case: High-school acquaintance charged with murder

High-speed rail agency ordered to reach more minority businesses

-- Abby Sewell 

 

Michelle Le case: High-school acquaintance charged with murder [Updated]

Giselle Esteban, 27

A 27-year-old pregnant woman has been charged with the murder of Michelle Le, a Hayward nursing student who vanished in late May, authorities said Tuesday.

Le, 26, was working at a hospital in the Bay Area city on May 27 when she went to her car to retrieve something. She was never seen alive again.

Security cameras in the hospital garage revealed that Giselle Esteban, 27, who went to high school with Le in San Diego, was in the garage about the time Le disappeared, Hayward police said.

Traces of Le's DNA were found on one of Esteban's shoes, and cellphone records showed that both Esteban's phone and Le's were in the same area after Le disappeared, police said. 

Esteban was arrested earlier this month in connection with Le's disappearance. On Saturday, human remains were found in a remote Alameda County canyon, and authorities on Tuesday positively identified the remains as Le's body.

"The evidence against [Esteban] is going to be overwhelming," said Lt. Roger Keener, a spokesman for the Hayward Police Department.

[Updated, 2:15 p.m. Sept. 20: Keener said the remains were discovered by Carrie McGonigle, the mother of Escondido murder victim Amber Dubois, 14, who was killed in 2009. McGonigle told police that her trained search dog, Amber, found the body during the volunteer search organized by Le's family.] 

Reader photos: Southern California Moments Day 263

Click through for more photos of Southern California Moments.

Skywriter: Graffiti artist Saber leaves an ephemeral call to  "End Mural Moratorium" in this photo taken Monday by Ted Fisher at Park La Brea.

RELATED:

Graffiti artist takes his protest to the skies over Los Angeles

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.

Remains of Army officer killed in World War II identified

Fortress 
The remains of an Army Air Forces officer from California lost during a World War II bombing mission have been identified and will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, the Pentagon announced Tuesday.

The remains of 2nd Lt. Charles E. Trimingham of Salinas will be buried Wednesday along with those of eight other service personnel killed in the crash of their B-17E Flying Fortress while on a bombing mission over Rabaul, Papau New Guinea, on June 26, 1943.

The plane, named the Naughty but Nice, was hit by anti-aircraft fire and then shot down by a Japanese fighter aircraft. Nine personnel were killed, the 10th survived and became a prisoner of war, the Pentagon said.

The remains of five of the nine were recovered in 1949 and buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu. Remains from those five will also be buried at Arlington National Cemetery--all in a single casket, officials said.

In 2001, a team from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command excavated the crash site and found human remains and crew-related equipment. Improvements in identification technology led to the identification of Trimingham and three others.

The B-17 was a four-engine heavy bomber used in Europe and the Pacific during World War II.

ALSO:

'Irvine 11' defense attorneys call the students patriots

Michelle Le case: High-school acquaintance charged with murder

High-speed rail agency ordered to reach more minority businesses

--Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: A restored B-17 Flying Fortress taking off from Burbank Airport in March. Credit: Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times.

 

L.A. bus riders protest proposed federal transportation cuts

As the 720 Rapid bus stopped at the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Vermont Avenue on Tuesday to pick up westbound commuters, activists beat drums and chanted slogans demanding that Congress and President Obama avoid cuts to transportation spending.

“Gridlock and congestion kill jobs, they kills us,” said Ryan Wiggins of the national advocacy group Transportation For America. “If cities like L.A. are going to prosper, we’re going to need robust systems.”

Organizers said Tuesday’s rally of about 100 people was one of several  across the nation timed to coincide with pending votes in Washington on federal transportation funding.

“We’re trying to get people to jobs and trying to keep and grow jobs,” said Bob Allen of the Northern California organization Urban Habitat. “We think it’s a great job creator,” he said of transportation spending.

Allen helped organize a similar event planned for Tuesday afternoon at the intersection of Broadway and 14th Street in Oakland. Other rallies were scheduled in Chicago, Seattle, New York and Boston.

“For the millions of Americans and...Angelenos without cars, public transit is the difference between having and not having a way to go to the market, the doctor, to school, to a job interview,” said Crystal McMillan of the Bus Riders Union, which supported the rally. 

Nearby was a sidewalk art installation of dozens of old shoes. “Put yourself in our shoes!" it said. "President Obama & Congress help stop bus service cuts and fare increases.”

- Ari Bloomekatz 

Yellowstone park releases report on grizzly attack

Grizzly bear in yellowstone

Officials at Yellowstone National Park on Tuesday released a report on the July 6 mauling by a grizzly that killed Brian Matayoshi, 57, of Torrance. The attack, which authorities described as a "one in 3 million" occurrence, was the first fatal mauling of a park visitor in 25 years.

The investigative record includes audio of the 911 calls that other hikers made seeking help. In one instance, a trauma surgeon who was part of a group of six hikers reported hearing Marylyn Matayoshi calling for help and asked if he should assist. 

The report added few details to what was already known about the incident, which occurred when Matayoshi and his wife, Marylyn, were hiking on the Wapiti Lake trail. The couple had earlier joined others watching a female grizzly and two cubs.

They had walked away from the bears, but when the couple turned to look back, the grizzly sow was charging them, the report said. Matayoshi yelled to his wife to run, and both raced down the trail yelling, according to the report. 

Michelle Le case: High-school acquaintance charged with murder

Giselle Esteban, 27

A 27-year-old pregnant woman has been charged with the murder of Michelle Le, a Hayward nursing student who vanished in late May, authorities said Tuesday.

Le, 26, was working at a hospital in the Bay Area city on May 27 when she went to her car to retrieve something. She was never seen alive again.

Security cameras in the hospital garage revealed that Giselle Esteban, 27, who went to high school with Le in San Diego, was in the garage about the time Le disappeared, Hayward police said.

Traces of Le's DNA were found on one of Esteban's shoes, and cellphone records showed that both Esteban's phone and Le's were in the same area after Le disappeared, police said. 

Esteban was arrested earlier this month in connection with Le's disappearance. On Saturday, human remains were found in a remote Alameda County canyon, and authorities on Tuesday positively identified the remains as Le's body.

"The evidence against [Esteban] is going to be overwhelming," said Lt. Roger Keener, a spokesman for the Hayward Police Department.

[Updated, 2:15 p.m. Keener said the remains were discovered by Carrie McGonigle, the mother of Escondido murder victim Amber Dubois, 14, who was killed in 2009. McGonigle told police that her trained search dog, Amber, found the body during the volunteer search organized by Le's family.] 

Cardboard fire closes part of Interstate 15 in Cajon Pass

Cajon Flats of cardboard were burning on a big rig parked on the side of Interstate 15 in the Cajon Pass early Tuesday, forcing two lanes to close for hours.

No one was injured in the blaze, which engulfed much of the truck.

The fire was sparked atop the big rig parked on the southbound freeway in the Blue Cut area of the pass, five miles south of state Highway 138. It backed up traffic for miles in the morning.

“I don’t expect a full opening until probably after 2 p.m. today,” said Terri Kasinga, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Transportation.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

West Covina robber grabs for woman's handbag, gets lunch bag

Rescuer recalls ‘hopeless feeling’ when tree crushed O.C. woman

-- Sam Quinones

twitter.com/samquinones7

Image: Map show approximate location of where cardboard was burning on a big rig in the Cajon Pass. Source: Google Maps

Predicting Sex Life After Prostate Cancer

Treatments for prostate cancer take a significant toll on male potency, leaving a surprisingly high percentage of men unable to have a normal sex life, new research shows.

The findings, based on a study of more than 1,000 men treated for prostate cancer at multiple medical centers, show that whether a man is able to achieve adequate erections after treatment for prostate cancer varies greatly depending on a number of individual variables, including his age, the extent of his cancer and the quality of his sex life before treatment.

Over all, fewer than half of the men who reported good sexual function before cancer had managed to regain it two years after treatment. But the chances of sexual recovery varied widely. After two years, some men had less than a 10 percent chance of achieving adequate erections after treatment, whereas others had a 70 percent or greater chance of a relatively normal sex life.

The results were not encouraging, but for the first time offer men a more personalized model for predicting sexual recovery after cancer treatment.

Cancer experts say the data, published today in The Journal of the American Medical Association, are sorely needed, in light of marketing efforts aimed at wooing men toward particular types of treatment but that often leave patients with unrealistic expectations. Many men report feeling shocked and depressed when their sex lives fail to return to normal after treatment.

“I think being transparent about what the pros and cons are, the reality — that’s important,’’ said Dr. Martin G. Sanda, senior author on the research and co-director of the prostate cancer program at the Dana Farber Harvard Cancer Center. “For any of the treatments for prostate cancer it would be misleading to tell someone they have a 100 percent chance of sexual recovery or even a 95 percent chance. It’s easier for a couple to face that and deal with that if they are expecting it, than if they were oversold and told there weren’t going to be any issues.”

The study evaluated sexual function among men at nine different academic medical centers who had undergone one of three treatments for prostate cancer: surgical removal of the prostate; radiation therapy; or brachytherapy, which uses radioactive seed implants.

Over all, just 35 percent of men in the surgery group, 37 percent of men in the hormone group and 43 percent of men in the brachytherapy group were able to have sexual intercourse two years after treatment.

Because the men weren’t randomly assigned to a treatment, the data don’t demonstrate whether one treatment is better than another. For instance, men who opt for brachytherapy are typically younger and healthier than men who undergo radiation treatment, so the results can’t be compared.

However, the researchers were able to determine which variables are most important for predicting a man’s erectile function after treatment. In all three treatment groups, the quality of a man’s erections before treatment — determined using a questionnaire about his sex life — helped predict his sexual recovery. Among surgical patients, a man’s age and his P.S.A. score, which measures prostate specific antigen, and whether he had nerve-sparing surgery also helped predict his chances of resuming a normal sex life. For men undergoing radiation treatment, those who had not also undergone hormone therapy
were more likely to regain erectile function two years after treatment. Among men who had brachytherapy, a younger age and lower body weight helped predict a better recovery compared to men who were older or obese.

One limit of the study is the fact that it only followed the men for two years. Men who undergo radiation and brachytherapy may experience a decline in erectile function two or more years after treatment, whereas men who undergo surgery may experience improvement.

Dr. Sanda said the data will allow doctors to take a more personalized approach as they talk to patients about the risks of a given treatment and counsel them about the benefits of drugs and other therapies that can improve erectile function.

“By and large, a lot of what we counsel men has been based on generalized average numbers,’’ said Dr. Sanda. “This really creates a more concrete metric as to what patients might expect.”

Stressed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

An armored car guard who reportedly was feeling anxiety and stress from his home and work life will be arraigned Wednesday for allegedly firing his gun from his work vehicle while it was on a crowded freeway.

Richard Chairez, 25, Santa Ana, will be charged with reckless discharge of a firearm when he is arraigned in West Covina Superior Court.

Chairez, a guard with Dunbar Armored, was a passenger in an armored van Monday when he told the driver to pull over to the slow lane of the 210 Freeway in Glendora, said Glendora Police Lt. Brian Summers.

Two killed in Camp Pendleton helicopter crash identified

CobraXXX 
The Marine Corps released the names Tuesday of two Marines killed in a helicopter crash at Camp Pendleton.

Capt. Jeffrey Bland of Champaign, Ill., and 1st Lt. Thomas Heitmann of Mendota, Ill., were killed when their AH-1 Cobra crashed Monday during a training exercise.

They were assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Training Squadron 303, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing.

"During this difficult time, I ask that you pray for the families of the warriors that we have lost," said Lt. Col. Robert Morgan, the squadron's commanding officer.

The cause of the crash was under investigation.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

West Covina robber grabs for woman's handbag, gets lunch bag

Rescuer recalls ‘hopeless feeling’ when tree crushed O.C. woman

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: AH-1 Cobra helicopter in Afghanistan. Credit: U.S. Marine Corps

Man killed in La Mirada hit-and-run

Police are looking for a motorist who killed a man Tuesday morning in a hit-and-run incident in La Mirada.

Deputies responded to a report of a pedestrian struck by a vehicle near Santa Gertrudes Avenue and Lawnhill Drive about 4:30 a.m. and found a man about 70 years old lying in the street, said Sgt. James Franck with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Norwalk station.

Paramedics pronounced the man dead at the scene. The motorist who hit him fled.

Franck said deputies have recovered what they believe is the vehicle that struck the man, but they are not releasing a description of the vehicle or suspect.

ALSO:

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant

West Covina robber grabs for woman's handbag, gets lunch bag

Rescuer recalls ‘hopeless feeling’ when tree crushed O.C. woman

-- Abby Sewell

Jonah Shacknai asks state to review deaths of son, girlfriend

Spreckels mansion
Jonah Shacknai has asked the state attorney general to review the findings of San Diego County law enforcement about the deaths of his son and girlfriend.

Shacknai said in a statement that he has no reason to disbelieve the findings that his 6-year-old son, Max, died of an accidental fall and that Shacknai's girlfriend, Rebecca Zahau, committed suicide by hanging.

But Shacknai said a review of the findings of the Coronado Police Department, San Diego County Sheriff's Department and San Diego County medical examiner might bring some peace to Zahau's family, which cannot believe she killed herself.

Shacknai said his family is being harmed by "vicious speculation and innuendo in certain media outlets" about the deaths.

Shacknai said a review would "further enhance the public's confidence in the integrity of the law-enforcement process and finally bring closure to these terrible tragedies."

Glendale seeks rightful owners of $280,000 in uncashed checks

There's about $280,000 in unclaimed checks sitting around in Glendale right now, and if the owners don't come forward to claim their loot soon, they're going to lose it.

City officials recently posted the list of 1,510 unclaimed checks on its website to reach the owners.

"The money has always been sitting there, it’s not ours," city spokesman Tom Lorenz told the Glendale News-Press in an email. "It’s encumbered to these parties."

There currently is no deadline to claim the money, but the city plans to post an official public notice about the unclaimed checks that will include a deadline, Lorenz added.

Hearing postponed for man accused of killing wife with chair leg

Health issues prevented a 70-year-old Burbank resident, accused of killing his wife with a chair leg, from appearing in court Monday, officials said.

Joseph Brancato did not appear in L.A. County Superior Court after officials said unspecified health issues prevented him from being moved from jail for a preliminary hearing, the Burbank Leader reported.

The hearing was rescheduled to Wednesday.

Brancato appeared in court Aug. 17 to plead not guilty to murdering his 65-year-old wife, Marie Brancato.

He is accused of beating her to death with a chair leg on July 5 at their home in the 800 block of North Valley Street.

ALSO:

Michelle Le's remains identified

South Gate motorist shot to death

Deputies search for man they call prolific bus tagger

-- Maria Hsin, Times Community News

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested on outstanding warrant [Updated]

Actor Tom Sizemore arrested
Actor Tom Sizemore found himself behind bars again Tuesday morning.

Sizemore, whose once-promising acting career has been derailed by a series of drug arrests and probation violations, was arrested by Los Angeles police officers on an outstanding battery warrant at an apartment on Wilshire Boulevard early Tuesday, said Officer Diana Figueroa.

No information on the alleged battery was available Tuesday morning.

The 49-year-old actor, who has appeared in films such as "Heat" and "Saving Private Ryan," was booked into L.A. County Jail in lieu of $26,000 bail, according to jail records.

Sizemore pleaded no contest in January 2006 to possession of methamphetamine. He was sentenced to probation. In 2007, he was arrested for methamphetamine possession in Bakersfield. An L.A. County Superior Court judge later sentenced him to 16 months in prison.

[Updated at 8:45 a.m.: In recent months, Sizemore had been reviving his career. His Twitter page mentions filming episodes of the CBS television series "Hawaii 5-0" last month. He also starred in the independent comedy "White Knight," which premiered Saturday at the Arizona Underground Film Festival in Tucson. The film is about a grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan sentenced to a prison hard-labor camp and who is forced to share a cell with a Latino field worker.]

ALSO:

Michelle Le's remains identified

John Travolta's vintage Mercedes stolen in Santa Monica

Crime alerts for Sylmar, Atwater Village, 8 other neighborhoods

-- Sam Quinones

twitter.com/samquinones7

Photo: Tom Sizemore.  Credit: Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

Exercise Spurs Teenage Boys to Stop Smoking

For teenagers struggling to quit smoking, a new study has some advice. To break the habit, try breaking a sweat.

It showed that teenage boys who took part in a smoking cessation program and combined it with exercise were several times less likely to continue smoking than those who received only traditional anti-smoking advice. Exercise did not have a comparable effect on teenage girls; researchers aren’t sure why. But the research is among the first to show that an exercise plan for teenage smokers can help them kick two bad habits at once, smoking and inactivity, which often go hand in hand.

For young smokers, breaking the habit before adulthood can be particularly crucial. Studies show that starting as a teenager makes it much more difficult to quit later on. About 80 percent of adult smokers began their habit before turning 18. Yet every day, 3,500 teenagers light their first cigarette.

The new study, published this week in the journal Pediatrics, took place in a state with one of the worst teen tobacco problems, West Virginia, where roughly a third of all high school students are smokers. Previous studies have shown that in adults, exercise — even if it’s just a walk around the block or lifting some weights — can help curb smoking by easing withdrawal symptoms and controlling cravings when people are confronted with cigarettes and other strong cues. Since West Virginia also suffers high rates of teenage obesity, the researchers wanted to see what effect exercise could have in combating two major health threats.

“It seemed logical to address these two together,” said Kimberly Horn, a professor of community medicine at West Virginia University and the lead author of the paper. “Exercise is known to mediate factors that often co-occur with smoking cessation, like increased stress levels, weight gain, withdrawal and cravings.”

To find out, the researchers recruited 233 smokers ages 14 to 19 at West Virginia high schools, and randomly assigned each to one of three groups. Some students received a single smoking-cessation session. A second group went through a 10-week anti-smoking program called Not on Tobacco, or NOT. And those in the third group went through the NOT program and were given pedometers and counseling on starting an exercise plan, which they could then schedule on their own time.

After three months, the study found that only 5 percent of the students who got the single anti-smoking session had quit smoking. But almost twice as many who went through the 10-week program had quit. When exercise was added to the mix, the effect on boys was remarkable: 24 percent of male students in the exercise group quit smoking, while only about 8 percent in the 10-week program that did not encourage exercise had stopped. They were also more likely to have stayed away from cigarettes after six months as well. The teenage girls in the exercise group, though, were no more likely to have quit smoking than those who received only counseling on quitting smoking.

“The kids in this study were pretty hard-core smokers,” Dr. Horn said. “They smoked about a half pack a day during the week and up to a pack a day on weekends. They were pretty addicted, and most started when they were about 11 years old.”

The data did not explain why a gender divide would exist, but Dr. Horn speculated that a few things could be responsible. Teenage boys are generally more enthusiastic about engaging in vigorous exercise, and are “more confident in their ability to be physically active,” Dr. Horn said, while physical activity levels typically plummet as teenage girls get older.

“It’s puzzling to us; it was a surprise finding,” she said. “I think we also need to look at issues of self-confidence. It could be the girls started with some stronger fitness barriers to overcome than boys.”

Nonetheless, the results over all were encouraging, since getting teenagers to give up smoking — or change any potentially harmful habits — can be notoriously difficult.

“One of the important things to point out is that oftentimes people believe that kids aren’t interested in quitting smoking,” she said. “I think this demonstrates that kids can quit, they’re interested in quitting and they can be successful, given the right tools.”

Body of swimmer missing off Seal Beach identified

A body found off the coast of Orange County has been identified as that of a swimmer reported missing last month in Seal Beach.

Joe Wayne Benford, 24, of Long Beach, went swimming with three friends off the Seal Beach west jetty on Aug. 31 amid powerful rip currents, according to a Seal Beach police report.

His friends made it back to shore, but he did not.

His body was retrieved Thursday. There was no evidence of foul play.

A cause of death was pending the results of a toxicology test.

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-- Sam Quinones

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West Hollywood ban on fur and wool clothing nears adoption

West Hollywood fur ban
West Hollywood moved a step closer to being fur-free Tuesday when the City Council tentatively approved an ordinance that would ban the sale of apparel made of fur, wool and animal hair.

More than 200 people and a Shih Tzu named Zach filled the West Hollywood Park Auditorium even though the first reading of the ordinance wasn't done until 1:15 a.m.

Dozens of people made statements about the proposed ban, and 120 supporters gave their names to be recorded by the council.

The crowd gave a standing ovation to the council after the vote.

"This was very exciting, and it was unanimous by this brave and thoughtful City Council," said Councilmember John D’Amico, who promoted a ban on fur during his election campaign earlier this year.

Deputies search for man they call prolific bus tagger

Deputies remove spray paint from an alleged tagger's home in 2010
Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies are searching for a man they say is a prolific graffiti writer.

Transit Services Bureau deputies served a search warrant in the 600 block of Oleander Avenue in Highland Park last week in search of Tomas Benson, 28, a tagger who goes by the name RUET.

They say Benson has caused more than $8,000 in damage to L.A. city and Metropolitan Transportation Authority property.

Deputies found evidence of graffiti writing at Benson's home but did not find Benson, according to a statement from the L.A. County Sheriff's Department.

They detained another man while serving the warrant but released him after questioning.

South Gate motorist shot to death

Los Angeles County sheriff's homicide detectives are investigating the shooting death of a man early Tuesday in South Gate.

The man was driving U-Haul pickup truck in the 9700 block of San Gabriel Avenue shortly after midnight when he was shot in the head by someone in another car, a sheriff's official said. 

The victim, whose name was not released early Tuesday, died at a hospital, the official said.

Sheriff's detectives handle homicide investigations for the South Gate Police Department.

No further details on the motive for the shooting were available Tuesday morning.

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-- Sam Quinones

twitter.com/samquinones7

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