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  • 9
    May
    2013
    10:45pm, EDT

    Pit bulls maul Southern California woman

    By Dan Whitcomb, Reuters

    LOS ANGELES - A 63-year-old woman was fatally mauled by a pack of pit bulls while walking near her home in Southern California on Thursday and police were searching for the four dogs, law enforcement officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A driver called police Thursday morning to report that four dogs were mauling the woman by the side of a road in a remote high desert area near Palmdale, California, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Captain Mike Parker said.

    When a sheriff's deputy arrived on the scene a few minutes later, he found the woman being attacked by one dog, which circled and moved aggressively toward him as he approached, Parker said.

    The deputy fired twice at the animal before it ran into the desert. There was no sign of the other three dogs, Parker said.

    The victim, who was not immediately identified, died in an ambulance while being taken to a hospital, said Los Angeles County Care and Control spokeswoman Evelina Villa.

    Authorities were searching for the tan-colored dogs and issued warnings to residents of Palmdale, about 65 miles east of Los Angeles.

    "Sheriffs deputies are knocking on doors in the neighborhood, patrolling and warning people in the area, but we have not picked up any leads since the deputy fired the shots," Parker said.

    Homicide detectives were on the scene and Parker said the dog's owners could face charges.

    Members of the woman's family had told police that she walked daily in her neighborhood, he said.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    188 comments

    Oh man, what a horrible way for her life to end. After 63 years, that's how it ends. Very sad!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: los-angeles, dog-attack
  • 5
    May
    2013
    12:17am, EDT

    Man charged with murder accidentally released and sheriff wants him back

    L.A. County Sherrif's Dept. / AP

    This photo released Friday by the Los Angeles County sheriff shows a Johnny Mata, who is charged with murder and was accidentally released by authorities from jail last month because of a clerical error.

    By Brandon Lowrey, NBCLosAngeles.com

    A clerical error caused Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies to release a jail inmate charged with gang-related murder last month, and authorities have asked the public to help them find him.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Johnny Mata, 32, was released in downtown Los Angeles on April 4 after he was charged with a 2010 gang murder in Baldwin Heights, according to a Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department statement.

    See original report at NBCLosAngeles.com

    "Mata’s release should not have occurred because a murder charge had been filed by the District Attorney and a processing clerk had not yet entered it as a 'hold' on inmate Mata," the statement said.


    Mata was arrested May 25, 2012 by the El Monte Police Department. His last court date was listed as April 3 -- the day before his accidental release.

    Mata was described as a Latino man, 6 feet, 1 inch tall, 197 pounds.

    Anyone with information about Mata's whereabouts can call sheriff’s homicide detectives at (323) 890-5500. Anonymous tipsters call LA Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-TIPS (8477), texting the letters TIPLA plus your tip to CRIMES (274637), or going to lacrimestoppers.org

    249 comments

    I am sure this fine, upstanding citizen will turn himself in as soon as he realizes their error.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: jail, crime, los-angeles, nbclosangeles
  • 4
    May
    2013
    12:19pm, EDT

    'Long, hot, incendiary summer': Early wildfires bode ill for California

    As Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Point Mugu, Calif., firefighters are hoping to take advantage of rain in the forecast to help contain a wildfire that has scorched at least 28,000 acres in Ventura County.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Record-setting temperatures, erratic winds and a parched landscape spell a dangerous fire season for California, experts said on Friday as firefighters fought to control several large blazes of a kind that usually would not raise thick plumes of smoke over the horizon until late fall.

    “This is definitely a preview of a long, hot, incendiary summer,” said William Patzert, a climatologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada-Flintridge.

    A combination of early, powerful gusts from the inland to the coast, called Santa Ana winds, breathed life into the roaring orange flames that devoured brush and raced down hillsides near Malibu toward the Pacific Ocean on Thursday night. The sea-bound winds pour into the southern part of the state from the northeast and southwest, becoming drier and hotter as they approach the coast, said Stuart Seto, a weather specialist at the National Weather Service in Oxnard, Calif.

    This week, “all the ingredients” came together across parts of California, Patzert said.

    The Spring Fire in Ventura County was 56 percent contained, Cal Fire said on its Twitter feed Saturday evening, after jumping to 28,000 acres on Friday, shutting down a portion of the Pacific Coast Highway for a time and drawing nearly 1,900 fire personnel, eight helicopters, and a half-dozen air tankers. The fire damaged at least 15 residences and dozens of other structures, NBCLosAngeles reported, citing fire officials.

    The Summit Fire in Riverside County was fully contained at about 3,166 acres, Cal Fire said. Riverside County fire officials said two firefighters were injured as they worked to draw a line around the flames, which destroyed one home, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    More than 1,000 firefighters battled a third blaze, the 6,720-acre Panther Fire, in Tehama County.

    “At this point it’s just a question of meteorology, of the Santa Anas, and of course in Southern California 95 percent of the fires are human (caused),” Patzert said. “Fire is fuel plus meteorology plus ignition.”

    Many California residents in areas prone to wildfires have known the fear of watching flames lick the borders of their property, but in the past wide-scale destructive fires usually have not struck until summer or fall. A series of 22 major fires across seven Southern California counties destroyed more than 2,200 homes in 2007 – but those fires lasted over three weeks from October to November, according to a report by the Orange County Fire Authority.

    The 2009 Station Fire burned over 160,000 acres, destroyed 80 structures, and killed two county firefighters. That fire, the largest in Los Angeles County history, wasn't sparked until late August, according to an after action review. The cost to fully contain the Station Fire topped $95 million, the U.S. Fire Service reported.

    “This is certainly one of the earliest fire seasons I remember,” Patzert said.

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    Firefighters battle the Springs Fire at Point Mugu State Park on May 3. A wind-driven wildfire raged along the California coast north of Los Angeles early on Friday.

    Firefighters around Camarillo contended with unpredictable Santa Ana winds as flames threatened residences on Thursday and Friday. Such winds drive from inland to the sea, but they usually occur during the fall and winter months.

    “We’re having Santa Ana events in May,” Capt. Mike Lindberry of the Ventura County Fire Department said on Thursday. “An event like this … it hasn’t happened in my career.”

    Those winds make it harder for firefighters to corral the flames as they leap across scrubby, uninhabited areas.

    “The winds are just super strong. They couldn’t get ahead of the fire because the winds are so strong, and the heat was tremendous,” said Seto.

    Extremely dry conditions for this time of year have also contributed to the growth of the fires, Seto said. The dryness of the vegetation that fueled the flames in the Camarillo area was comparable to what is usually measured in July, he said.

    Temperatures hit a record high for the date of 98 degrees in Camarillo on Thursday, Seto said, topping the previous high of 94 degrees in 2004. Normal for this time of May is about 74 degrees, he said.

    While parts of the Plains states and upper Midwest saw late-season snowfall earlier this week, officials in California have said that the state's snowpack is lighter than normal. That means the amount of water that flows into state reservoirs over coming months will be less than usual as the snow melts.

    “I’m finding nothing,” Frank Gehrke, chief surveyor for the Department of Water Resources, told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Seriously, there is no snow on the course at all.” The water content in California’s high-altitude snow turned out to be only 17 percent of what it usually is, the department reported.

    Fire officials have been warning about the dangerous fire conditions in California for several months. After an 100-acre brush fire flared up in Monrovia in April, city fire Chief Chris Donovan told reporters that experts anticipated a “very dry – and very bad” season.

    A wildfire outlook produced by the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, predicted “above normal” fire potential for Southern California, the Sacramento Valley and parts of southern Oregon in May. The likelihood of significant fires will expand through Washington, Arizona, New Mexico and other large swaths of California over the summer months, according to the fire center’s outlook.

    “This big picture is across the country it’s been sort of two winters, as the Northeast and the Midwest had a never-ending winter with spring that just didn’t want to show up,” Patzert said. Meanwhile, in Southern California, “the rain spigot essentially just turned off in January.”

    “It’s a no-brainer to tell you that it is going to be a busy fire season,” he said.

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    A fire engine is parked on Pacific Coast Highway as the Springs Fire burns in the hills at Point Mugu State Park on May 3.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    • 'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu
    • 12-square-mile Springs Fire spreads toward Ventura County Coast
    • Thousands in Calif. wildfire's path evacuated

    117 comments

    Prayers to those who have suffered. Immediate relief is coming.. Mother Nature will give us rain. Rain Rain Please come, little johnny wants to play in the rain.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fire, california, wildfire, los-angeles, malibu, springs-fire, summit-fire
  • 4
    May
    2013
    10:24am, EDT

    California mental patient obsessed with Sandy Hook is back in custody

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Sofia Pop and Melissa Pamer, NBCLosAngeles.com

    A mental health patient obsessed by the killings at Sandy Hook Elementary School is in custody after escaping from an Orange County facility the day before, authorities said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Norris Phuoc Nguyen returned to the Royale Health Care Center at Bristol Street and Warner Avenue in Santa Ana at 4 p.m. Saturday, said Anthony Bertagna, spokesman for the Santa Ana Police Department.

    Friday afternoon, Nguyen walked away from the Royale Health Care Center, where he has been detained since December 2012.

    Police said the 23-year-old told them he visited a friend while he was away from the facility, and it does not appear Nguyen committed any crimes while he was gone.


    Authorities became familiar with Nguyen -- who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and repeatedly detained and institutionalized -- in August 2011. At that time, he walked into the Westminster Police Department dressed in camouflage and holding an assault rifle, saying he wanted to "die by cop," Garden Grove Police Chief Kevin Raney said.

    The weapon was not loaded, the chief said, adding that Nguyen did not have a permit for the firearm.

    Nguyen was questioned, and police found he was fixated on a teacher at a Garden Grove elementary school that he had attended, Raney said, declining to name the school.

    "We have statements and we have the firm belief that he is committed, unfortunately, to harming children at this specific school," Raney said.

    Nguyen had been detained periodically since then, Raney said, until it became apparent in interviews with him in December that he was obsessed by the massacre that left 26 dead at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school on Dec. 14, 2012.

    Nguyen has spoken repeatedly both about protecting children and endangering them, Raney said.

    Nearly two weeks ago, Nguyen's mother, who lives in Huntington Beach, tried to gain custody of her son at a court hearing, but the judge refused to have him released, Raney said.

    Related:

    • Emotions run high in debate over future of Sandy Hook school
    • Guns, paperwork, books flesh out portrait of Newtown killer Adam Lanza
    • Investigators: Adam Lanza surrounded by weapons at home; attack took less than 5 minutes

    317 comments

    So maybe we should do something about mental patients obsessed with killing sprees?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, california, guns, los-angeles, mental-health, sandy-hook
  • Updated
    4
    May
    2013
    11:41pm, EDT

    California wildfire triples in size, but evacuation orders are lifted

    Over 28,000 acres have been burned in southern California, and officials say the fire is at 20 percent containment. Officials are hoping to get a lucky break to fight the fires. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A raging 28,000-acre wildfire that sent thousands of people fleeing from their homes in Southern California was about 56 percent contained and evacuation orders were lifted Saturday, officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The Springs Fire has charred a 44-square mile swatch across Ventura and Los Angeles counties.

    High temperatures, dry vegetation and strong winds helped stoke the blaze, which began Thursday off the Ventura Freeway.

    Fifteen homes have been damaged as close to 1,900 firefighters backed by air tankers and helicopters have worked to bring the flames under control, according to a release from the Ventura County Fire Department.

    Forecasters expected increased humidity over the weekend, which they expected would help firefighters, who had battled early Santa Ana winds. The strong gusts blew from inland regions toward the coast and drove the Springs Fire toward the Pacific Ocean this week but died down on Friday.


    “It’s a total turnaround from what we had,” Kurt Kaplan, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Oxnard, Calif., told the Associated Press of the break in the weather.

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    David Mcnew / Getty Images

    Firefighters battle a growing wildfire that reached the beaches in Ventura County and pushes its way toward the upscale city of Malibu.

    Launch slideshow

    “Firefighters continue to construct control line and mop up operations. Firefighters are working in a challenging environment, with the potential for fire flare-ups throughout the day,” the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said in a release. “A low pressure weather system has developed over the fire bringing higher humidity, lower temperatures, [and] creating an opportunity to increase containment.”

    Capt. Mike Lindberry of the Ventura County Fire Department said that workers planned to take advantage of the improved conditions to get a hold on the fire.

    “That will give us a chance because it’s going to really bring that fire activity down quite a bit,” Lindberry told the AP on Saturday. “I think we will make some significant progress,”

    Firefighters still faced the challenges of fighting the flames in the scrubby brush areas where the fire spread.

    “It feels … like you’re always behind,” U.S. Forest Service Division Chief Steve Seltzner told NBC Los Angeles. “Just about the time you get caught up, the fire is out-flanking you.”

    The Pacific Coast Highway was reopened on Friday night after a nine-mile stretch was shut down on Thursday evening as flames crawled down slopes toward the coast.

    “The hillside is subject to falling debris and rock slides as there is little vegetation,” the California Department of Transportation cautioned in a release.

    Related:

    • 'Incendiary summer': Early wildfires bode ill for California
    • 'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu
    • Thousands in Calif. wildfire's path evacuated

    This story was originally published on Sat May 4, 2013 7:15 AM EDT

    82 comments

    Good luck to all the people and firefighters out there, Stay safe.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, wildfire, los-angeles, featured, updated
  • Updated
    3
    May
    2013
    4:49pm, EDT

    'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    A fire engine is parked on Pacific Coast Highway as the Springs Fire burns in the hills at Point Mugu State Park on May 3.

    Launch slideshow

    By John Newland and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News

    Southern California firefighters battled back a series of sprawling, brush-fueled wildfires on Friday, including one that had blazed a trail to the beach in Ventura County overnight and was pushing toward the upscale city of Malibu, officials said.

    At least six fires of various sizes flared up as high temperatures, low humidity and brittle brush left the state a veritable tinderbox over the last two days, although conditions were improving by the afternoon.

    The so-called Springs Fire, made worse by howling Santa Ana winds and unusually dry vegetation, crept within "seven or eight miles" of Malibu around 2 a.m. local time [5 a.m. ET], Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Bill Nash said.

    "We've got hot, dirty, unglamorous firefighting work going on right now, guys with shovels trying to scratch out lines on the ground," Nash said in the early hours of Friday. "We've got those guys on these steep hillsides in the dark with nothing but the light of the fire and a flashlight."

    Dry winds from inland to the ocean brought gusts of 40 to 50 miles per hour to the Southern California region on Friday. By 1 p.m Pacific time, the temperatures had dropped 11 degrees and the humidity shot up to 19 percent. Warnings remained in effect as winds stoked the flames, the National Weather Service reported.

    “We’re looking good,” Battalion Chief Fred Burris of the Ventura County Fire Department said on Friday, according to NBC Los Angeles. “We believe we’re past the major structure threat at this time.”

    The Springs Fire grew to 10,000 acres and was 10 percent contained as of early Friday morning, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Prevention.

    An eight-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway was shut down for a time on Thursday night as bright orange flames raced down scrubby hillsides toward the Pacific Ocean.

    “We are asking members of the public to be very aware: This is very dangerous,” said Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Tom Kruschke. “This is still a moving fire. If you were asked to evacuate, it will be a while before you are allowed in. And if at one point you are uncomfortable, please leave the area. It’s not safe to stay.”

    The fires become especially dangerous when tree cover is dry and Santa Anna winds gust at high speeds, creating a wake-up call for everyone in California to be prepared. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    “The firemen have been doing a really great job of keeping it away from the houses,” said Sara Mallam, a resident of Newbury Park, near Thousand Oaks, Calif. “It is kind of scary to see it get so close, but they really seem to know what they’re doing.”

    Though the more than 925 firefighters on the scene got a brief overnight reprieve as the humidity jumped and winds died down, winds picked up again after sunrise on Friday.

    Firefighters received help from tankers and helicopters in the air after the sun rose on Friday, according to a release from the Ventura County Fire Department.

    Complicating the situation is the extremely dry plant life left from a season in which only about five inches of rain fell, officials said.

    Friday "may be the hottest day of the week, and the humidity we do expect to plummet," Nash said. "We’re faced with a situation right now where the vegetation on the hillsides, the moisture level is what we typically see in August."

    The cause of the fire remained under investigation Friday. There had been no lightning or other natural fire-starting phenomenon in the area when the blaze began, Nash said.

    In Riverside County, hundreds of firefighters had begun to gain control of a wind-lashed 3,000-acre wildfire that consumed one home and led to the evacuation of hundreds of others.

    The Riverside County fire, dubbed the Summit Fire, remained at just under 3,000 acres Friday morning and was about 65 percent contained, according to a Cal Fire incident report. Firefighters worked to improve containment lines around the raging blaze that threatened homes on Wednesday, but one building had been destroyed.

    Two of the 650 firefighters trying to tame the blaze sustained non-life-threatening injuries, according to the report.

    Additionally, more than 1,000 firefighters were battling a third major wildfire, designated the Panther Fire, Friday in rugged timberland in Northern California’s Tehama County about 30 miles east of Chico.

    NBC News' Jeff Black contributed to this report.

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

     

    Related:

    • Thousands in Calif. wildfire's path evacuated
    • 'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu
    • 12-square-mile Springs Fire spreads toward Ventura County coast

    This story was originally published on Thu May 2, 2013 9:46 AM EDT

    276 comments

    Get a grip people. There is no safe place on this earth and there never has been. We live and we die. Make the best of it while you can.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fire, california, wildfire, southern-california, los-angeles, featured, ventura-county, malibu, updated, riverside-county, springs-fire, summit-fire, panther-fire
  • 2
    May
    2013
    4:08am, EDT

    May Day protests turn violent in Seattle; thousands march in LA

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    A Seattle Police officer with a baton tries to fend off protesters during a May Day anti-capitalism protest that ended with demonstrators clashing with police on Wednesday.

    By Eric M. Johnson, Reuters

    SEATTLE -- Protesters clashed with police in Seattle on Wednesday as a May Day rally that began peacefully turned violent after dark, with demonstrators hurling objects at officers who responded with flash-bang grenades and pepper spray.

    One protester was seen using a skateboard to smash windows at a Walgreens drug store in the city's Capitol Hill neighborhood, and others overturned trash cans and lined up newspaper display racks to block police.

    Matt Mills Mcknight / Reuters

    A demonstrator attempts to break a window of a pharmacy in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood during May Day demonstrations Wednesday.

    Officers in riot gear, some riding in armored SWAT vehicles, repeatedly used the flash-bang grenades and tried to disperse the crowd.

    Seattle police said that as of 9 p.m. local time (12 p.m. ET), 11 adults and two juveniles had been arrested for assaults and property damage. Several people were shown on local TV stations being taken into custody.

    Seattle police said in a tweet that one officer was injured by a thrown object. His condition was not immediately clear.

    The violence broke out as darkness fell in Seattle following a day of May Day rallies in cities across the U.S. West that were planned by a coalition of organized labor activists, students, civil rights advocates and members of the clergy to call for an overhaul of immigration laws.

    In Los Angeles, thousands of protesters marched through downtown waving American flags and carrying signs with the slogan, "Stop deportations."

    The demonstrators chanted in Spanish, "Obama! Escucha! Estamos en la lucha!" ("Obama! Listen! We are in the fight!"), as they marched down one of downtown's main thoroughfares.

    Thousands of people across the nation took to the streets to protest for immigration reform and immigrant workers rights. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.  

    The march spanned across more than two large city blocks, and one police officer told Reuters that unofficial estimates put the size of the crowd at roughly 3,500 people. No arrests were reported.

    In Arizona, where a state crackdown against illegal immigration was signed into law three years ago, several hundred people joined a late-afternoon rally outside the state Capitol in Phoenix, ahead of a march through downtown.

    The protests come about two weeks after a bipartisan group of U.S. senators introduced an 844-page bill, backed by President Barack Obama, that would rewrite many U.S. immigration laws.

    A centerpiece of the measure would create a path to legal status and ultimately citizenship for many of the 11 million undocumented immigrants in the United States.

    It also aims to secure the U.S. border with Mexico against illegal entry and to make it easier for industry, particularly high-tech businesses and agriculture, to hire workers from abroad when needed.

    Related:

    Occupy LA sues city over mass detentions

    NBC News in depth: Immigration Nation

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    1302 comments

    Treat the Los Angeles protesters just like Mexico would; Arrest them all and let them rot in jail.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: immigration, violence, police, protests, seattle, los-angeles, featured, may-day
  • 1
    May
    2013
    5:42am, EDT

    Worker chips away with hammer after being pinned by 1,000-pound slab of granite

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Samantha Tata, Alex Calder and Beverly White, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Pinned between a massive slab of granite and the wall of a cargo container, a worker who appeared to aid in his own extrication was rescued Tuesday afternoon in Fontana, Calif.

    The 1,000-pound piece of rock, often used for countertops, was being delivered to a contracting company in Fontana. The trapped worker apparently was helping take the slab out of the truck when it split in two.

    Crews from the San Bernardino County Fire Department cut open part of the truck's rear wall, allowing the worker to dangle his right arm outside the truck.

    "As soon as they cut a section out, his arm fell out," witness Lucky Lira said. "At that point they were frantically trying to get him out."

    The worker appeared to be helping rescuers break down the granite that was trapping him, at one point taking a hammer from crews to chip away at the rock.

    More from NBCLosAngeles.com

    "He got quite lucky," said Battalion Chief Kathleen Opliger, who led the rescue. "When the granite came down, it formed an alcove for him, putting pressure on his lower extremities instead of his whole body."

    Paramedics hooked up the man to an IV drip attached to what appeared to be a saline bag taped to the outside of the truck.

    The man became trapped in the truck about 5 p.m. (8 p.m. ET) on Industry Avenue.

    Rescue crews pulled the man out of the truck about 6:30 p.m. He appeared to be moving his arms freely and speaking with rescuers as he was airlifted to the hospital.

    Witnesses called the rescue a "miracle."

    "He grabbed hold of his rescuer, was trying to hug his rescuer, then did thumbs-up with both arms while we were trying to load him to the gurney," Opliger said.

    The worker remained in the hospital late Wednesday. It was not immediately known when he would be well enough to leave.

    23 comments

    Bet he won't take his job for granite.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: accident, california, los-angeles, featured, fontana, granite, worker-trapped, nbclosangeles
  • 27
    Apr
    2013
    9:25pm, EDT

    Police search Spider-Men in Hollywood after one grabs $6,000 in cash

    By Jason Kandel, NBCLosAngeles.com

    There’s a rogue superhero on the loose in Hollywood.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police are on the hunt for Spider-Man after the masked web-slinger snatched a paper bag filled with $6,000 in cash and credit card information from an employee of the Starlines Tour Bus company.

    See original report at NBCLosAngeles.com

    It happened Friday morning as the worker was leaving the firm’s Hollywood Boulevard headquarters, said Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Rich Galbaldon, a watch commander at the Hollywood Division.


    Hoping their web-head didn’t make it too far, police have been rounding up other Spidey impersonators who were seen milling about in the area, which sits near the TCL Chinese Theatre, formerly Grauman's, a tourist mecca.

    So far, no arrests have been made.

    Other local superheroes -- among them Superman, Batman and Catwoman -- have said they would help the police in the search for the masked felon around the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    Starline Tours is the oldest and largest sightseeing tour company in Los Angeles, according to its website. It offers tours of Hollywood, the city of LA, and tours of celebrity homes.

    This isn't the only shady Spidey to act out on Hollywood Boulevard.

    In 2009, a Spider-Man impersonator hit a man in the face and arms.

    36 comments

    Who keeps that kind of cash in a paper bag?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hollywood, crime, los-angeles, spider-man, weird-news, nbclosangeles
  • 9
    Apr
    2013
    7:08am, EDT

    Southern California brushfire threatens 100 homes

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A wind-whipped brushfire spread over 170 acres overnight in Ventura County, Calif., destroying two homes and threatening about 100 more, and was still not contained as of early Tuesday morning.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The fire began with a fire in a mobile home around 3:15 p.m. on Monday, fire officials said. That home sustained damage to its roof, but was not entirely destroyed. About 400 firefighters responded as the blaze spread, with officials saying that they hoped slackening winds overnight would help them control the flames.

    “I can see flames and some smoke and helicopters coming in and dropping of their water,” Judi Ortiz, an employee at a local gas station, told NBCLosAngeles.com. “You couldn’t see anything at the beginning but smoke. It’s horrific.”

    Driven by 40-mph winds, the city engulfed an orchard near the city of Fillmore, north of Los Angeles.

    “A couple years back we had some pretty bad fires, but nothing that came close to homes like this,” Fillmore Mayor Pro Tem Manuel Minjares told NBCLosAngeles.com. “This is pretty significant.”

    No injuries have been reported as a result of the fire. Authorities lifted a mandatory evacuation order on about 160 homes early on Tuesday morning, saying they hoped to have the fire contained by sun up.

    6 comments

    By the way, Porter...sequestor was Obama's idea in the first place. Damn those greedy corporations and rich people. Smell the coffee yet? Or is your nose crammed full of what Obama is spreading?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: life, california, wildfire, los-angeles, us-news, brushfire, nbclosangeles
  • 6
    Apr
    2013
    9:44pm, EDT

    Cop's wife accused of having sex with minors

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Tony Shin and Jason Kandel, NBCLosAngeles.com

    A vice principal at a Riverside County, Calif., high school accused of having sex with three current and former male students is married to a San Diego County police officer, law enforcement sources confirmed to NBCLA on Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Erin Henton, 45, a vice principal at Tahquitz High School, was arrested Wednesday after allegations surfaced March 8 that she had sexual relationships with current and former students, police said.

    Erin Henton is married to Tim Henton, a lieutenant with the El Cajon Police Department in San Diego County, according to law enforcement sources and his LinkedIn profile.

    Law enforcement officials said he filed for divorce shortly after the allegations surfaced and is devastated by the allegations.


    Erin Henton, who is in a Riverside County jail, faces charges including unlawful intercourse with a minor and oral copulation with a minor, according to the Riverside County Jail inmate information website. She has pleaded not guilty.

    Outside court Friday, Henton’s San Diego attorney, Stephen G. Cline, said he is reviewing the case and that she and her family are distraught.

    The incidents were believed to have happened off-campus over a period of several months, Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart told the Associated Press.

    One of the boys’ parents discovered the relationship and reported it to authorities, police said. Henton had been under investigation since March 8, the same day she was placed on administrative leave by the school.

    Detectives say they found evidence including emails and texts of lewd pictures and videos sent by Henton to the students.

    Police did not yet know how the relationships began and did not release the ages of the alleged victims.

    “We take these situations very seriously and have taken appropriate personnel actions in response to this arrest to ensure the safety of our students and staff,” the Hemet Unified School District said in a statement on Wednesday.

    On March 15, the district had said it was assisting in the investigation of an unnamed school employee.

    Henton oversaw the school’s student council and athletics and assisted in discipline, according to media reports.

    423 comments

    Was this a school for the blind?

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    Explore related topics: crime, los-angeles, nbclosangeles
  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    6:23am, EDT

    Second teen hiker found alive after three days in California forest

    By Melissa Pamer, Samantha Tata, Beverly White and Robert Kovacik, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Searchers on Thursday rescued an 18-year-old woman who had gotten lost with a friend on an Easter Sunday hike in an Orange County forest.

    Orange County Sheriff via AP

    Hiker Nicholas Cendoya was found alive late Wednesday. Kyndall Jack, right, was found on Thursday.

    A sound of a female voice led Orange County Sheriff's search and rescue teams to locate Kyndall Jack in the Holy Jim Canyon area of the Cleveland National Forest, said Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Jason Park.

    Crews used a helicopter about noon Thursday to hoist Jack out of a dense ravine and take her to a hospital.

    The rescue came hours after authorities found Jack's hiking companion Nicholas Cendoya.

    He was found "dehydrated and disoriented" in a ravine near where Jack and Cendoya had parked their car.

    Searchers had to cut through thick brush to rescue Cendoya. Visibility was less than 10 feet, Park said.

    Authorities and volunteer searchers on foot and using dogs and helicopters had combed since Monday a network of trails in the rugged forest, trying to find the two teens.

    After Cendoya was found Wednesday night, searchers were optimistic that they would find Jack.

    They located her near where they found Cendoya.

    Cendoya and Jack, both Costa Mesa residents, called authorities at 8:25 p.m. Sunday to say they had gotten lost, said Gail Krause, an Orange County sheriff's spokeswoman.

    The cellphone battery wore down and authorities could not get an accurate GPS "ping" from the phone to pinpoint their location, prompting a massive search, said Sheriff's Lt. Erin Giudice.

    538 comments

    I'am sure glad they get him out alive. I'd like to know how they get seperated. Hope they find the girl alive.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: missing, california, los-angeles, nbclosangeles
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