Thursday, October 13, 2011

Seal Beach shooting: More than 1,000 attend emotional vigil

Seal Beach shooting vigil

More than 1,000 people converged at the Seal Beach shooting scene Thursday night for an emotional vigil to remember the eight people who were slain and another person who was critically wounded.

Many people in the crowd were carrying candles. They ranged from teenage soccer players to men and women who used canes to move around the crowded event outside Salon Meritage where the tragedy occurred.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

A memorial of flowers, candles and notes stood outside the salon.

At one point, the crowd broke out in singing "Amazing Grace."

Jim Watson, who owns the building where the rampage occurred, said the event was a positive move that will help begin the healing process.

"You feel the love," he said. "People genuinely care."

Sgt. Steve Bowles of the Seal Beach Police Department watched as people quietly wept and hugged one another.

"We're moving," he said, "from a period of crisis to a period of support."

RELATED:

Photos: Seal Beach shooting

Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Witness says of gunman: ‘Anybody he saw he was shooting’

--Matt Stevens and Ricardo Lopez in Seal Beach

Photo: People stand shoulder to shoulder at the emotional vigil. Credit: Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times

Children found in sheds, meth seized at cockfighting site

Rooster allegeldy used for cockfightingDeputies served a search warrant at an Antelope Valley cockfighting operation where they allegedly seized $1 million in methamphetamine, 100 roosters and found a 4-year-old boy and a half-dozen other youths living in dilapidated sheds.

The operation stemmed from a narcotics investigation that led authorities to the site in the 46200 block of 30th Street East in an unincorporated neighborhood north of Lancaster, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said Thursday night.

The seven youths ranged in age from 4 to 17 years. They were turned over to child welfare officials.

Five pounds of meth were found hidden in vehicles, and several firearms were recovered in Wednesday's operation, authorities said. Deputies found sparring muffs and steroids for the roosters.

Six adults were arrested on suspicion of narcotics violations, authorities said. Their names were not released.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

-- Robert J. Lopez
twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Rooster recovered by deputies. Credit: Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department

Seal Beach shooting: Soccer team gathers at vigil

The girls from the Beach Futbol Club gathered in their yellow soccer shirts Thursday night as a vigil was set to begin at the site where eight people were slain in a Seal Beach shooting rampage.

They were their because of Michelle Daschbach Fast, whose husband was a coach for the Seal Beach-area soccer club.  The couple's daughter, Lisa Fast, is a midfielder on the squad, team members said. She will be celebrating her 16th birthday this weekend.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

The girls held candles. Some were crying as several hundred people gathered at a memorial of flowers, notes and balloons outside of Salon Meritage, where police said Scott Evans Dekraai committed the deadliest shooting in Orange County history.

The girls remembered Michelle Daschbach Fast as a generous person who watched over the players on the squad.

"She really felt like a second mother to us," said Kristen Buono, 15.

RELATED:

Photos: Seal Beach shooting

Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Witness says of gunman: ‘Anybody he saw he was shooting’

--Ricardo Lopez in Seal Beach

Seal Beach shooting: Church overflows with mourners at service

The Seal Beach Center for Spiritual Living was overflowing with saddened community members Thursday night during a prayer service for the victims of the deadly mass shootings as Salon Meritage.

A center stage of the church was lined with nine burning candles.

"Lighting the candles means giving them life today," the Rev. Joshua Reeves told the packed church.

There was a moment of silence. Some people cried and sniffed as they prayed.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon


Members of the community spoke at the service, including civic  leaders such as Councilman Gordon Shanks, 76.

"I didn't know any of these people, but this is like a wound for my family," he said. "These things are not supposed to happen here," he continued.  "Maybe in Compton."

His remark drew awkward silence and laughter.  Shanks clarified his statement later. "I shouldn't have done that," he said. "It's not very nice."

He noted that crime in Seal Beach is often an offense such as drunk driving. "The crime rate here is very low. Things like this just don't happen here."

 RELATED:

Photos: Seal Beach shooting

Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Witness says of gunman: ‘Anybody he saw he was shooting’


--Ruben Vives in Seal Beach

2.6 magnitude earthquake reported off Palos Verdes Peninsula

A 2.6 magnitude earthquake struck Thursday night in the Pacific Ocean off Rolling Hills.

The quake was centered about 11 miles south of Rolling Hills and Rancho Palos Verdes, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

There were no immediate reports of damage.

The quake was reported about 8:23 p.m.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Police tell Occupy San Diego protesters to remove their tents from plaza

Photo: Sign at Occupy San Diego protest. Credit: Tony Perry / Los Angeles Times.San Diego police on Thursday afternoon ordered Occupy San Diego protesters to remove their tents and other property from the plaza behind City Hall by midnight or face arrest.

Two dozen police surrounded the plaza, where several hundred protesters have been camped in tents since the weekend.

Small groups of protesters, after listening to Assistant  Chief Boyd Long, huddled to discuss their next move.

A chant arose throughout the crowd, "Hell no, we won't go."

Long said the protesters must remove their tents and other structures -- including a makeshift kitchen  -- so that the area can be cleaned up Friday in advance of a dance troupe performance Saturday at the plaza auditorium that is expected to draw more than 1,000 people.

The protesters can remain, Long said, but their tents, tarps, tables, chairs and other personal property have to be removed. Those who do not comply, he said, will be subject to arrest and their belongings impounded.

Relations between the protesters and police have been mellow since more than 1,000 protesters marched Friday afternoon to the plaza.

There have been no arrests. Police had ignored a municipal ordinance that bans tents and other things that block the "public right-of-way" on public property.

But on Thursday afternoon, Long said that the ordinance will now be enforced.

Seemingly in anticipation of a clash with police, Occupy San Diego organizers from the beginning posted a handwritten sign reminding protesters of their legal right to remain silent and demand an attorney before being questioned.

A telephone number was also posted where protesters can report allegations of police misconduct.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

--Tony Perry in San Diego

Photo: Sign at Occupy San Diego protest. Credit: Tony Perry / Los Angeles Times.

Seal Beach shooting: Family says victim was an artist and athlete

Michelle Fournier, left, and Christy Wilson

The family of Christy Lynn Wilson, one of the eight victims who were slain in the Seal Beach salon shooting, remembered her Thursday as an artist who enjoyed making jewelry and an athlete who ventured into the ocean with her paddleboard.

Wilson was a friend of Michelle Fournier, who was allegedly slain by her ex-husband Scott Evans Dekraai as he sprayed Salon Meritage with gunfire in the afternoon rampage. 

Wilson had worked at the salon for years and was admired as an expert nail artist.

"Christy touched the lives of so many people that words alone cannot describe what a wonderful individual she was and what a tremendous asset to her community she was," her family said in a statement.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

Like others, the family said it struggling to make sense of the rampage in the normally placid beachside community. 

"Nothing can be done to bring back the individuals that were lost," the statement said, "but the family hopes and prays that everyone will be comforted by fond memories of their loved ones."

RELATED:

Photos: Seal Beach shooting

Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Witness says of gunman: ‘Anybody he saw he was shooting’

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: A picture of two of the victims, Michelle Fournier, left, and Christy Lynn Wilson, was taped to a window near the door of Salon Meritage in Seal Beach. Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Oakland mayor names interim police chief

Interim chief Howard Jordan at swearing-in ceremony with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan
Oakland Mayor Jean Quan swore in an interim police chief Thursday, just days after Chief Anthony W. Batts abruptly announced that he would step down from leading the crime-beleaguered city's department.

The change in command comes as the Oakland Police Department -- which has operated under a federal consent decree imposed in 2003 after a scandal that involved officers beating and framing suspects -- is struggling  with an understaffed force and a soaring homicide rate.

As a line of officers looked on, Quan administered the oath to Assistant Chief Howard Jordan. The 23-year department veteran is a longtime political ally of the mayor and has been leading the team charged with bringing the force into compliance with the federal settlement.

Calling Jordan a "cop's cop," Quan said that his selection promises continuity, rank-and-file support and the best shot at changing the department's culture.

Seal Beach shooting: Police release names of eight who were killed

Click here to see more photos.
Seal Beach police on Thursday released the names of the eight victims who were killed in the Salon Meritage shooting rampage.

The victims are: Victoria Ann Buzzo of Laguna Beach, David Caouette of Seal Beach, Laura Lee Elody of Huntington Beach, Randy Lee Fannin of Murrieta, Lucia Bernice Kondas of Huntington Beach, Michelle Daschbach Fast of Seal Beach, Michelle Marie Fournier of Los Alamitos and Christy Lynn Wilson of Cerritos.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

Fournier's ex-husband Scott Dekraai walked into the busy salon Wednesday afternoon and opened fire as victims fell to the ground and others scrambled for safety, police said. One 73-year-old woman was critically wounded and remained hospitalized Thursday.

Dekraii appeared to be targeting Fournier, friends and family members said. The two were locked in a bitter custody battle over their 8-year-old son, according to court records.

RELATED:

Photos: Seal Beach shooting

Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Witness says of gunman: ‘Anybody he saw he was shooting’

— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

Photo: Notes, chalk messages, flowers and balloons form a memorial for victims of the mass shooting at Salon Meritage in Seal Beach. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

Long Beach high-rise project gets go-ahead despite controversy

Los cerritos wetlands1

A proposed high-rise project in Long Beach that developers say would provide hundreds of jobs and millions of dollars in annual revenue has been given the go-ahead by the city's Planning Commission.

In a 4-3 vote, the commissioners approved a zoning change Wednesday night that will allow the controversial development -- a 12-story condominium and a pair of buildings that will range between four and six stories tall -- to go forward. The panel also certified an environmental impact report on the project. 

In amending Long Beach's limits on development, including height restrictions, the commission signaled the importance the city is placing on creating jobs in a stagnant economy.

Opponents, however, contend that the proposed development at 2nd Street and Pacific Coast Highway would increase an already congested intersection and harm the nearby Los Cerritos Wetlands.

The estimated cost of the project, which is expected to include a hotel, a coastal science center and a 99-seat community theater, has been put at about $360 million. Proponents say it would create at least 1,300 construction jobs, 1,000 permanent jobs for the city and pump at least $2 million a year into the local economy, according to the project's website.

Years of debate over the construction of the 2nd+PCH Project, as it is known, has divided residents in the coastal town. Last week, developers and an advocacy group opposing the project took out large ads to drum up support.

The Los Cerritos Wetlands Land Trust, a grass-roots coalition of homeowners and environmental groups, say traffic congestion around the 10-acre site will worsen and that changing the existing zoning plan will lead to taller buildings in the area and more pollution, which will affect the habitat of the wetlands.

"Over 95% of wetlands habitat in California has been destroyed and Long Beach's Los Cerritos Wetlands are the largest remaining contiguous piece of wetlands left in Southern California," the group's website says.

The marsh is separated from the project site and sits along an existing commercial site, according to city records.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

--Ruben Vives

twitter.com/latvives

Photo: Double-crested cormorants in the Los Cerritos Wetlands. Opponents of the proposed building development in Long Beach say high-rises like those proposed would add to the area's congestion and  harm the nearby wetlands. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

Interior Department reviewing allegations in delta smelt case

Delta smelt

An Interior Department official said Thursday the agency will ask independent experts to review allegations by a federal judge that the testimony of two department scientists was so inconsistent and contradictory it amounted to deliberate deception. 

U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Wanger attacked the credibility of the biologists last month shortly before retiring from the bench. At a hearing on a motion in a court case involving delta smelt protections, Wanger called one of the scientists a "zealot" and accused the agency of engaging in "bad faith."

A transcript of his remarks was widely circulated, providing ammunition for critics of endangered species protections that have cut water exports from the Sacramento-San Joaquin delta. Wanger later said his statements dealt with a limited issue and had been blown out of proportion.

Testifying before a House subcommittee on the Endangered Species Act, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Assistant Director Gary Frazer said the Interior Department disagreed with Wanger's comments and stood behind the work of its scientists.

"We also believe that, when questions arise regarding the integrity of scientific work, it is important to resolve them swiftly, independentlyand decisively," he said, adding that the agency has instructed its  scientific integrity officers "to retain independent experts to evaluate the allegations made by Judge Wanger."

 ALSO:

Delta smelt numbers rise in recent survey catch

The man with his hand on California's spigot

Judge orders U.S. to revise salmon safeguards

-- Bettina Boxall

Photo: A delta smelt. Credit: University of California Davis

Seal Beach shooting: Victim predicted ex-husband would kill her

Michelle Fournier, left, and Christy Wilson

Michelle Fournier made no secret about the fact that she feared her ex-husband. She told one friend she thought he might kill her.

So when her brother Butch Fournier turned on the television Wednesday and saw that the Salon Meritage awning was the site of a shooting rampage, he immediately felt sick: "I knew exactly who did it and exactly what happened."

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

Police say that Fournier's ex-husband Scott Dekraai walked into the busy salon at 1:21 p.m. Wednesday. Armed with a handgun, he opened fire, killing eight people and wounding one 73-year-old woman. Fournier, friends and family said, was the likely target as the two were locked in an ugly custody fight over their 8-year-old son.

Police released no new details about the shooting, but said that it was not a random act of violence. The gunman, they said, knew someone at the salon. More information, including the identities of the eight dead, will be released Friday by Orange County Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas.

Butch Fournier said that Wednesday's shooting may have been prompted by a recent custody  report, referenced at  a court hearing Tuesday. The report kept custody roughly equal between the couple despite Dekraai's efforts seeking additional time with his son.

14 people accused in OxyContin insurance fraud scheme

A federal indictment charges 14 people, including an 88-year-old doctor and two operators of a Los Angeles clinic, with running a scheme to illegally obtain and distribute OxyContin pills, carried out largely through insurance fraud.

The indictment stemmed from of a two-year investigation. Ten of the defendants were arrested Thursday morning, officials said.

The distribution ring was allegedly run out of Lake Medical Group, where doctors reportedly wrote prescriptions for the powerful painkiller to uninsured patients who did not need it, federal officials said. Defendants also allegedly obtained the pills from pharmacies by fraudulently billing public insurance programs such as Medicare.

Then members of the organization allegedly resold more than 1 million pills on the street for $23 to $27 a pill, raking in millions of dollars in profits.

The indictment also alleged that in some cases the defendants stole people's identities and Medicare beneficiary information so they could obtain the OxyContin.

Clinic operators Mike Mikaelian, 43, of East Hollywood and Anjelika Sanamian, 52, of Van Nuys allegedly orchestrated the scheme. Two doctors -- Morris Halfon, 88, and Eleanor Santiago, 73 -- are accused of prescribing the pills to people who had no medical need for them. The other defendants allegedly assisted in the plot by serving as runners, recruiters or posing as patients.

The defendants all face charges of drug conspiracy or healthcare fraud. Mikaelian is also charged with wholesale distribution of OxyContin. The maximum sentences range from 10 to 40 years.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

-- Abby Sewell

Seal Beach shooting: Suspect had been ordered not to carry guns

Scott Dekraai

Seal Beach shooting suspect Scott Dekraai was prohibited from having firearms and was ordered to move out of his stepfather’s house in 2007 after the relative complained that he had been verbally and physically attacked, according to court records.

Dekraai, who is being held on suspicion of killing eight people and wounding a ninth when he stormed into a Seal Beach hair salon, was also ordered to stay at least 100 yards from his stepfather, LeRoy J. Hinmon, according to documents for the restraining order.

The order followed an Oct. 19, 2007, incident in which Hinmon said his stepson attacked him in his Seal Beach home while Dekraai's 4-year-old son and two others were present, the records said.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

Hinmon said he was left with cuts, bruises and other wounds on his face and arms and that police had to be  summoned.

The restraining order also barred Dekraai from having firearms and required him to complete a 52-week batterer intervention program. It expired the next year.

Reader photos: Southern California Moments Day 286

Click through for more photos of Southern California Moments.

Dirigible: A Goodyear blimp floats across the sky in this Oct. 1 photo by Fred Castillo.

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.

Conrad Murray trial: Propofol dosing requires care, expert says

Dr. Steven Shafer
Jurors in the trial of Michael Jackson’s doctor began hearing Thursday from a top expert on propofol, the surgical anesthetic that led to the singer’s death.

Dr. Steven Shafer, a professor of anesthesiology at Columbia University, told jurors that when the drug was first introduced in the early 1990s for sedation, he conducted the research that established the dosing guidelines that are still currently in use.

Shafer said in his analysis, he discovered that propofol had to be used carefully because if the doctor is “off by just a little,” a dose could result in a patient taking hours rather than minutes to wake up from sedation.

Dr. Conrad Murray is accused of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson’s June 25, 2009, death from the effects of the drug, which he said he gave the singer nightly over two months to get him to sleep.

Responding to a prosecutor’s questions, Shafer also corrected what a defense attorney had earlier told jurors - -that he was a student of the defense’s main medical expert, Dr. Paul White.

Breast Cancer Awareness Month means a lot to cancer patients


It is best to buy only from recognised cancer charities (Photo: Getty)


If you enter "Breast Cancer Awareness Month products" into Google, 7,060,000 results pop up. I clicked on a few at random and was saddened to see just how many commercial websites are offering pink products – T-shirts, mugs, plates, shoes, slippers, keyrings etc.  The list is endless.  One website has a selection of pink clothes – of questionable quality – complete with the pink ribbon emblem, but, amazingly, considering this is breast cancer awareness month, the products are reduced in price – "get 20 per cent off our products".


No, it is not amazing.  This is just one of the websites that is cashing in on our generosity and desire to support breast cancer charities. There is no mention of a percentage going to a particular cause and, sadly, this is just one example among many. I think the answer is to boycott these websites and buy only from the recognised breast cancer charities. I would suggest you avoid filling those appealing-looking plastic bags which fall through the door. Not many of those are genuine either.


The well-known breast cancer charities all have "shops" on their websites, selling much better quality pink merchandise or pointing you in the direction of products on sale in the high street.  I have just bought a Portmerion "Secret Garden" teapot from John Lewis – 10% of the price goes to Breast Cancer Care. Le Creuset is also joining in, with £1.25 per item of their special range of stoneware going to this charity – and with a definite promise of a£20,000 donation.


Many of the well-known brands of beauty products have produced something special for various charities this October – Clinique, Elemis, Bourjois, Tweezerman, to name but a few. The website www.womenseverything.com carries some examples.


For The (Breast Cancer) Haven, Sainsbury's and Vitacress salads are, once again, combining to donate a percentage of sales of watercress (a rich source of antioxidants) – at 5p per pack, it gave The Haven over £20,000 last year; Fitflop has produced a SHUV in "cherry cherry pink", costing £50 of which £5 is its donation; and, rather more expensive, is a pendant, based on The Haven's Tree of Life logo made by Robinson Pelham, which sells at £150-£2,150 – depending on the finish – with 20% going to The Haven.


You can also find products at Debenhams, Marks & Spencer, Asda, Laura Ashley, Warehouse and Coast and, if you fancy changing your credit card, Breakthrough Breast Cancer is offering its own credit card, run by MBNA who will make contributions to the charity. I am off tomorrow to buy my annual M & S T-shirt.  I already have the useful "My Little Book Of …", a handbag sized notebook produced by Fashion Targets Breast Cancer (Breakthrough's flagship fashion campaign). Breast Cancer Campaign benefits from a percentage of each Vanish product sold – “Think Pink”.


As I read what I have written, I know that we are a generous nation and all the breast cancer charities will do well this October, which will mean hope and support for more people joining the ever-growing numbers of breast cancer patients.


 


 


 



Seal Beach shooting: Suspect suffered PTSD from boat injury

Scott Evans Dekraai

The suspect in the Seal Beach salon shooting rampage, Scott Evans Dekraai, 42, suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder as the result of a tugboat accident in 2007, according to court records.

His doctor, Ronald T. Silverstein of Long Beach, made the diagnosis in court documents dated Sept. 30, 2008, that were contained in Dekraai's divorce and custody proceedings.

The letter also stated that repeated phone calls from Dekraai's ex-wife Michelle Fournier -– the alleged target of Wednesday's shooting -– were "extremely stressful" and "not healthy" for Dekraai.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

As a result of that letter, the court limited contact between the couple to only one telephone call a week, initiated by Fournier.

The tugboat accident occurred in February 2007. A deckhand, 26-year-old Piper Cameron, was killed when she was crushed by a rope attached from the tug to the barge. Dekraai witnessed the accident and suffered a broken leg.

Group launches online environmental accident map

The environmental monitoring group SkyTruth launched an online map that tracks pollution accidents
The nonprofit environmental monitoring group SkyTruth on Thursday launched a real-time alert system that uses remote sensing and digital mapping to track pollution events in the United States.

The SkyTruth Alerts system shows air and water pollution, toxic spills and other incidents on an interactive map, noting the time of the event and whether toxic materials are involved. Users can track specific geographic areas and receive updates via email or RSS feeds.

The group culls satellite images, aerial photography and reporting data from federal and state emergency response agencies to compile the maps.

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Gov. Jerry Brown signs ban on chemical BPA in baby bottles

Pregnant California women show high levels of flame retardant

Texas fire: Chemical plant processes toxics, produces pesticide

-- Julie Cart

Photo: Fires burn off oil near the crippled BP well site in June 2010. Credit: Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times

 

Bicyclist hit by car and killed after leaving job at Disneyland

A bicyclist was struck by a car and killed, reportedly after she left work at Disneyland
A bicyclist was struck by a car and killed in Anaheim early Thursday morning, reportedly after she left work at Disneyland.

Anaheim police Sgt. Bob Dunn said the cyclist was eastbound on Ball Road at the Interstate 5 overpass when she was struck from behind by a vehicle.

The cyclist, a female adult whose name has not been released, was pronounced dead at a local trauma center.

The driver stayed at the scene after the crash, and it does not appear alcohol was involved, Dunn said. He did not know if the cyclist was wearing a helmet.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

-- Abby Sewell

Photo: Disneyland sign. Credit: Los Angeles Times

Seal Beach shooting: Customers recall rhythms of salon life

Salon customer Mary Stearns.

Pam Serdutz paced nervously outside the Salon Meritage early Thursday morning, desperate to know whether her favorite stylist was among the victims.

"I can't stand it, not knowing whether Gordon survived or not," she said, trying not to cry at the scene of Wednesday's shooting rampage in Seal Beach that left eight dead and one critically injured.

She was referring to Gordon Gallego, who she said had cut her hair for years.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach beauty salon

“I called his home phone, but his message machine is full," Serdutz said. "I just knew something happened to him."

Playing back memories of the laid-back rhythms of life in the salon on Pacific Coast Highway, she said, "Gordon was a world traveler and a camper, and he threw great parties for the other stylists and always invited clients to join them. He was 6 feet tall, good-looking and warmhearted.

"But let me tell you how Gordon became an important part of the life of my family," said the 67-year-old teacher. "Once, 15 years ago, my 17-year-old daughter desperately needed her hair done for prom night. The woman who usually did her hair was busy that day and couldn’t do it.

Alleged celebrity email hacker apologizes

Mila, Christina and Scarlett

This post has been corrected. See note at the bottom for details.

A Florida man who allegedly hacked into the personal email accounts of Hollywood celebrities, including Scarlett Johannson and Christina Aguilera, apologized and said he was ready to face the consequences.

Christopher Chaney told Action News of Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday that the scheme "started as curiousity and it turned to just being addictive."

Chaney, 35, of Jacksonville, was named in a criminal indictment Wednesday by the FBI in Los Angeles.

"What did you do with the info you found in those emails?" Chaney was asked in the interview.

"Nothing, it was almost like a completely uncensored blog," Chaney said. "I wasn't saving the emails to blackmail someone."

"So, why did you do it?" he was asked.

"It started as curiosity and it turned to just being addictive," answered Chaney. "Seeing the behind-the-scenes of what's going on with the people you see on the big screen."

Record-setting heat wave continues across L.A. area

Weather Story (click for larger image)

A heat wave that has already set new high-temperature records is expected to continue across Southern California on Thursday.

According to the National Weather Service, a 99-degree reading in downtown L.A. on Wednesday tied the record for the day, while Long Beach saw a record high, 102 degrees.

Temperatures are expected to stay in the 90s in the L.A. basin and reach above 100 in some inland valley locations on Thursday. Coastal areas will be cooler, with highs in the 80s.

The weather service said some temperature records could be set today, but a slight cooling trend is expected to begin Friday.

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

-- Shelby Grad

Image: A screen shot detailing Thursday's forecast and hot-weather precautions. Credit: National Weather Service

Alleged celebrity phone hacker apologizes

Mila, Christina and Scarlett

A Florida man who allegedly hacked into the personal email accounts of Hollywood celebrities, including Scarlett Johannson and Christina Aguilera, apologized and said he was ready to face the consequences.

Christopher Chaney told Action News of Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday that the scheme "started as curiousity and it turned to just being addictive."

Chaney, 35, of Jacksonville, was named in a criminal indictment Wednesday by the FBI in Los Angeles.

"What did you do with the info you found in those emails?" Chaney was asked in the interview.

"Nothing, it was almost like a completely uncensored blog," Chaney said. "I wasn't saving the emails to blackmail someone."

"So, why did you do it?" he was asked.

"It started as curiosity and it turned to just being addictive," answered Chaney. "Seeing the behind-the-scenes of what's going on with the people you see on the big screen."

Dead baby found buried in Angeles National Forest

Police detectives were trying to determine Thursday why a 6-week-old infant was buried in the Angeles National Forest and why the child's death was not reported to authorities.

Officials said they learned of the newborn's death Tuesday, when the Los Angeles Police Department's juvenile division received information about it. Detectives and coroner's officials recovered the body and unspecified evidence from the scene, they said.

Police added only that the baby died while in the care of his parents, and that they were trying to determine why he was buried in the forest.

The L.A. County coroner's office has not yet released a cause of death.

Anyone with information may call 1-877-LAPD-24-7 (1-877-527-3247).

Anonymous tipsters may call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (1-800-222-8477) or text to phone number 274637 (C-R-I-M-E-S on most keypads). All text messages should begin with the letters "LAPD."

ALSO:

Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Police release new details on Seal Beach shooting victims

Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

-- Abby Sewell

Custody dispute seen as motive in shooting at California beauty salon

Salon shootings

A custody dispute may have been at the center of a mass shooting that left eight people dead at a Seal Beach, Calif., hair salon.

Police on Wednesday night had not released the alleged gunman's name or the identities of the victims, nor had they established a motive.

But friends and witnesses who knew the salon employees said the alleged gunman was Scott Dekraai and he appeared to be targeting his former wife, who was a stylist at Salon Meritage. They said the couple had been involved in a bitter custody dispute involving their son.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach hair salon

Dekraai, 41, allegedly stormed into the salon about 1:30 p.m. and appeared to be looking for his former wife, Michelle Fournier, according to friends and witnesses. Dekraai is a resident of Huntington Beach. It was unclear whether Fournier was among those killed.

According to Los Angeles County Superior Court documents, Dekraai initiated a divorce case in 2007 against Fournier, whose last name was then Dekraai, court spokeswoman Mary Hearn said. A judge ruled that all contact between the couple had to be via text or email, except for a 10-minute phone call once a week to discuss their child's education and well-being.

At the time of the court dispute, Hearn said, it appeared that Dekraai was awarded custody and Fournier had to comply with several conditions to see the child, such as to not consume alcohol 24 hours before visiting. In August 2010, the case was transferred to Orange County Superior Court at Dekraai's request, according to Hearn.

Fournier always seemed to be in a great mood and enjoyed her children, said Judy Rodriguez Watson, co-owner of the Bay City Center where the salon is located. "She was a sweet, sweet, loving happy mama," Watson said. "She was always showing off photos of her kids."

She said she believes Fournier has three sons.

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Photo: A city police officer speaks to people at the scene of Wednesday’s deadly shooting. Witnesses said the gunman was the ex-husband of a stylist at the Salon Meritage. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times / October 13, 2011)

Man shot dead by deputies in Downey

Detectives were investigating Thursday the fatal shooting of a man in Downey by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies.

The shooting took place about 6:50 p.m. Wednesday at Firestone Boulevard and Old River School Road.

Officials were not releasing details about the shooting but said no officers were injured.

The man who was shot was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Coroner's officials had no information on him.

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Seal Beach shooting: Custody dispute seen as motive

Salon shootings

A custody dispute may have been at the center of a mass shooting that left eight people dead at a Seal Beach hair salon.

Police on Wednesday night had not released the alleged gunman's name or the identities of the victims, nor had they established a motive.

But friends and witnesses who knew the salon employees said the alleged gunman was Scott Dekraai and he appeared to be targeting his former wife, who was a stylist at Salon Meritage. They said the couple had been involved in a bitter custody dispute involving their son.

Full coverage: Deadly shooting at Seal Beach hair salon

Dekraai, 41, allegedly stormed into the salon about 1:30 p.m. and appeared to be looking for his former wife, Michelle Fournier, according to friends and witnesses. Dekraai is a resident of Huntington Beach. It was unclear whether Fournier was among those killed.

According to Los Angeles County Superior Court documents, Dekraai initiated a divorce case in 2007 against Fournier, whose last name was then Dekraai, court spokeswoman Mary Hearn said. A judge ruled that all contact between the couple had to be via text or email, except for a 10-minute phone call once a week to discuss their child's education and well-being.

At the time of the court dispute, Hearn said, it appeared that Dekraai was awarded custody and Fournier had to comply with several conditions to see the child, such as to not consume alcohol 24 hours before visiting. In August 2010, the case was transferred to Orange County Superior Court at Dekraai's request, according to Hearn.

Fournier always seemed to be in a great mood and enjoyed her children, said Judy Rodriguez Watson, co-owner of the Bay City Center where the salon is located. "She was a sweet, sweet, loving happy mama," Watson said. "She was always showing off photos of her kids."

She said she believes Fournier has three sons.

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--Nicole Santa Cruz, Tony Barboza, Robert J. Lopez and Tony Barboza

Photo: A city police officer speaks to people at the scene of Wednesday’s deadly shooting. Witnesses said the gunman was the ex-husband of a stylist at the Salon Meritage. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times / October 13, 2011)

Target commits to 100% sustainable, traceable fish by 2015

A steak is cut from the tail of an Atlantic blue fin tuna.The second largest discount retailer in the U.S. announced Thursday that it will sell only sustainable, traceable fish by 2015. Minneapolis-based Target Corp. operates 1,762 stores, many of which are converting to incorporate PFresh markets that sell fresh and frozen foods, including fish.

In 2010, Target stopped selling farmed salmon, Chilean sea bass and orange roughy due to various sustainability issues. It currently sells 50 different brands of fish certified by either the Marine Stewardship Council or the Global Aquaculture Alliance. 

"We thought this larger commitment to fully eliminate anything that's not certified by 2015 would be the right thing to do to encourage our guests to make the right decisions," said Shawn Gensch, vice president of marketing for Target's sustainability initiatives.

Target is partnering with the nonprofit marine conservation group FishWise to reach its sustainability goals. According to FishWise executive director Tobias Aguirre, the group will assess all Target seafood products with vendor surveys to understand how the seafood is caught or farmed and will evaluate the environmental impacts associated with each product.

Aguirre said the fish species with the largest such impacts include big eye tuna caught with 50-mile fishing lines that snag high levels of unintended catch, including sharks, turtles and sea birds, and farm-raised shrimp that may have contact with natural bodies of water and spread disease.

Tracing Target's fish from the water to the store is likely to be more difficult because "there is no national traceability policy and the seafood supply chains are incredibly complex," Aguirre said. Supplier audits and a tracking system are among the tools FishWise plans to implement in partnership with Target.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not currently have a seafood tracking database. Just 2% of the seafood eaten in the United States is inspected, according to a seafood fraud report issued earlier this year by the Washington, D.C.-based international ocean advocacy group, Oceana.

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Genetically engineered salmon must be labeled

-- Susan Carpenter

Photo: A steak is cut from the tail of an Atlantic blue fin tuna. Credit: Sachi Cunningham / Los Angeles Times

Why alcohol is not as strong as we imagine – or is it?


Alcohol: strong stuff (Photo: Karan Kapoor )


The effects of alcohol are not nearly as powerful as we imagine. In fact, cultural norms and the behaviour of people around us have more to do with how we behave when drunk than any properties of booze itself. Booze makes us slur our speech, bump into tables and so on, but it doesn't determine how we behave and what happens to our personalities. It doesn't make us smash windows, punch people, grope women and generally behave like yobs: we do that, in Britain anyway, because that's how we've learnt to behave when drunk. We've seen other people do it, and it's part of our culture.


This is what Kate Fox argues in an excellent article on the BBC website. She believes that everything we're told about alcohol, far from improving people's behaviour, actually acts as a self-fulfilling prophecy. The "messages" we take on board encourage us to believe that booze has almost magical powers to change our behaviour, when it doesn't. So drinkers behave as they expect to – which is often anti-socially and violently. Miss Fox wants to see alcohol education that transmits these messages instead:


a) alcohol does not cause disinhibition (aggressive, sexual or otherwise) and… b) even when you are drunk, you are in control of and have total responsibility for your actions and behaviour.


"Alcohol education will have achieved its ultimate goal," Fox writes, "not when young people in this country are afraid of alcohol and avoid it because it is toxic and dangerous, but when they are frankly just a little bit bored by it."


She makes her point very well and the whole article is worth reading. I have two doubts though. First, I slightly wonder whether she invests government propaganda and public education with more influence than it actually has. It's true that people in Britain behave badly because they've learnt to. But don't they also behave like that because they want to, as well? In other words, they like behaving like yobs.


The second thing has to do with Kate Fox's organisation, the Social Issues Research Centre. According to an article in the British Medical Journal last month, this august-sounding body shares its Oxford offices with a market research company called MCM. MCM's clients apparently include Bass Taverns, the Brewers and Licensed Retail Association, the Cider Industry Council, Grand Metropolitan Retail, the Portman Group (jointly funded by Bass, Courage, Guinness etc), Pubmaster, Rank Leisure, and Whitbread Inns, as well as some Australian brewing operations and several other businesses.


Kate Fox herself, who is the director of both MCM and the SIRC, has said that she doesn't think this amounts to a conflict of interest. She is, after all, a social anthropologist and, like all researchers, she has to get her funding from somewhere. The trouble is that her conclusions are quite booze-friendly. She's essentially saying alcohol isn't the cause of anti-social behaviour and violence we think it is. Since this happens to be the message the drinks industry would like us to grasp too, her organisation's links with alcohol producers raise a doubt in the mind.



Two Amtrak trains collide in Oakland, injuring passengers

Two Amtrak trains collided Wednesday night in Oakland, injuring a number of passengers in the accident near Jack London Square, authorities said.

The trains were traveling at a low speed when they struck shortly before 10 p.m. near Webster Street and Embarcadero, the Oakland Police Department said.

"Apparently they put two trains on the same track," Sgt. Randy Pope told The Times.

Reports from Bay Area news organizations said at least 18 people were hurt. Pope said police could not confirm those numbers but said that the victims appeared to have non-life-threatening injuries.

No other details were immediately available.

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— Robert J. Lopez

twitter.com/LAJourno

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