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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Steps Down Citing Health Reasons Amid Criticism Over Handling of Sex Abuse Scandal

Scott Blackmun is stepping down as the chief executive of the United States Olympic Committee for health reasons, the organization announced Wednesday.

USOC CEO Scott Blackmun addresses the media during the Team USA Media Summit in Park City, Utah ahead of the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games on Sept. 25, 2017 in (Credit: Maxx Wolfson/Getty Images)

USOC CEO Scott Blackmun addresses the media during the Team USA Media Summit in Park City, Utah ahead of the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games on Sept. 25, 2017 in (Credit: Maxx Wolfson/Getty Images)

In a statement posted on its website, the USOC said Blackmun is resigning after eight years because he has prostate cancer.

In January, it was Blackmun who apologized to all sexual abuse victims of former national gymnastics team physician Larry Nassar, stating that the “Olympic family is among those that have failed you.”

USOC board member Susanne Lyons was named interim CEO.

“The USOC is at a critical point in its history,” the organization said. “The important work that Scott started needs to continue and will require especially vigorous attention in light of Larry Nassar’s decades-long abuse of athletes affiliated with USA Gymnastics.”

Blackmun said in the statement that the job was immensely rewarding and the highlight of his professional life.

“I am proud of what we have achieved as a team,” he said.

Several members of Congress had called on Blackmun to resign after Nassar was sentenced in federal court for child pornography and in two state courts for sexual abuse. More than 160 people gave victim impact statements.

“Scott Blackmun’s resignation is long overdue,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat from New Hampshire. “It’s clear that the culture at the US Olympic Committee desperately needs to change so that it prioritizes the health and safety of US athletes. In the meantime, Senator (Joni) Ernst (a Republican from Iowa) and I will continue to urge the Senate to establish a special committee to investigate the US Olympic Committee and its governing bodies.”

The USOC has hired a law firm to investigate the actions of the USOC and USA Gymnastics in the Nassar scandal.

The USOC earlier this month issued a statement saying, “we have consistently said we learned in 2015 of a doctor potentially having abused an athlete and that was reported to the FBI. That’s what is supposed to happen.”

Lyons said Wednesday she was devastated to learn Nassar abused girls and women for so long. She added the USOC had made reforms and was announcing new steps to prevent abuse.

“The USOC has made significant progress to strengthen protections for athletes, but our collective efforts to improve athlete safety must never cease,” she said in a statement. “We must honor the strong voices who have stood up against abuse and bring real and lasting change to the US Olympic and Paralympic family’s ability to detect, report, investigate, resolve and end abuse.”

Blackmun joined the USOC in 1999 as director of legal affairs and general counsel. He was acting CEO for 11 months in 2000 and 2001.

He replaced Stephanie Streeter as full-time CEO in 2010, just before the Vancouver Games.

Blackmun’s resignation also comes three days after the end of the Winter Olympics, where the US medal count was its lowest since 1998.



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Trump Tells Rep. Scalise a Bill Combing Background Checks With Concealed Carry Will ‘Never’ Pass

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President Donald Trump, during a meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers on Wednesday, shut down Republican Congressman Steve Scalise when he pitched lumping in a pro-concealed carry measure in with a broader gun control measure.

Scalise was touting a House-passed measure that would loosen gun regulations and allow those with permits to carry concealed weapons to legally travel with those firearms to other states, a top priority of the National Rifle Association.

But Trump told Scalise bluntly that it will “never” pass as part of a broader package due to Democratic opposition, where such a proposal would need at least 60 votes to advance.

The President did, however, leave open the door to taking it up in the future.

“I think that maybe someday that bill will pass but it should pass as a separate. If you’re going to put concealed carry between states into this bill, we’re talking about a whole new ballgame. I’m with you, but let it be a separate bill,” he told Scalise, who was seriously wounded by a gunman targeting a GOP congressional baseball team practice last summer.

Trump reiterated that “if you add conceal carry to this, you’ll never get it passed.”

He later added that “Amy and Dianne” would not go for that — referring to Democratic Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Dianne Feinstein of California. Feinstein, sitting beside the President, nodded in agreement.

Trump on Wednesday signaled his support for a hodgepodge of other policies — from strengthening background checks to raising the minimum age to buy certain guns and taking guns away from the mentally ill — during the meeting with lawmakers.

But after the hour-long televised session ended, it was still unclear what specific legislation Trump would support. And the wide-ranging meeting, which included blunt back-and-forths between Trump and members of both parties, laid bare the vast divide on gun legislation and Trump’s own unfamiliarity with the searing, years-old gun debate.



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L.A. County Sheriff’s Department Arrests Its Own Cadet on Suspicion of Arson, Stealing From Newhall ATM

A recently hired Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department recruit has been arrested in connection with incidences of theft and arson that occurred last year in the Santa Clarita area, officials said Wednesday.

Julio Cesar Jimenez was arrested Feb. 15 on suspicion of felony arson, grand theft and embezzlement amid his training at the Sheriff’s Academy, the Sheriff’s Department said in a statement released Wednesday afternoon.

Jimenez allegedly committed the crimes weeks before he joined the Sheriff’s Department. His employment has since been terminated, officials said.

“These allegations conflict with the highest ethical and professional standards required for employment with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department,” the statement read.

The 35-year-old Santa Clarita resident was hired as a cadet on Dec. 14, 2017, and began training four days later, on Dec. 18, authorities said.

He is accused of robbing an ATM in Newhall on Nov. 28, 2017, and in an incidence of arson on Dec. 1. Sheriff’s officials did not say what he is suspected of setting fire to.

Authorities believe he committed the acts after the Sheriff’s Department had completed his background investigation. Only about 5 percent of applicants make it through the “extensive” investigation process and are admitted to the training academy, according to the department.

Jimenez had been employed as a cadet for about two months at the time of his arrest. Sheriff’s officials said he was in the initial phase of the department’s 22-week training program when they began investigating his potential involvement in the incidents, but did not provide an exact date.

Jimenez was initially booked at the East Los Angeles Sheriff’s Station following his arrest but was released on bail later the same day. Inmate records indicate his bond had been set at $50,000.

The L.A. County District Attorney’s Office had not announced any formal charges in the case as of Wednesday.



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Michigan Man Loses Thousands During Online Monkey Purchase, Prompting Warning to Others

A Michigan man is warning others after his online search for an exotic pet cost him thousands of dollars.

"I needed a monkey. I needed to be different," Don Abrego told KTLA sister station WXMI in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

He wanted a capuchin money and found one three weeks ago, supposedly in Hawaii, according to WXMI. However, as soon as his first $400 payment cleared, he said the problems began.

The shipper was requesting more money and claimed it was for flight cancellations and vaccination costs. So Abrego shelled out more cash.

"About 20 Amazon gift cards ranging from a hundred to $400 and $500," Abrego said.

He texted his card information to the shipper. Abrego said even the drug store employees voiced their concerns, but he kept going.

"They tried to warn me almost every single time I went to a Walgreens or a CVS, and I bought a gift card. I would say six times out of eight, they were like 'you're being scammed. Whatever you're doing, you're being scammed,'" Abrego explained.

Now he says he’s out thousands of dollars.

"I would say between $4,500 and $5,000," Abrego estimated. There’s still no sign of his new pet, he says.

"What we found and even on a national level is about 80 percent of the sponsored ads online could be fraudulent," said John Masterson with the Better Business Bureau.

Masterson suggests anyone looking to buy a pet should see it in person in person s make sure it's real and in good physical condition.

"Obviously research the organization, the business you're buying from, [and] try to found out who the owner is," Masterson explained.

Abrego did eventually receive photo ID from the shipper, but it expired 10 years ago and was apparently fake.

Abrego is speaking out in the hopes his story will be a cautionary tale for others.

"I want people to know about it, and I want him to stop," he said.

Abrego said he paid using Western Union, Amazon gift cards, and Paypal. He managed to get the original $400 back through Paypal. The BBB suggests using a credit card so you have an easier time recovering your funds if something goes wrong.



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Parolee in O.C. Pursuit That Injured Police Dog Charged With Aggravated Assault

 

A parolee who allegedly attempted to hit an officer with his truck during an Orange County pursuit that injured a police dog has been charged with aggravated assault and numerous other counts, officials announced Wednesday.

Antonio Padilla Jr., 37, was also charged with injuring a police animal, evading while driving recklessly, evading a peace officer and driving against traffic, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s Office for the Feb. 26 incident. He also faces misdemeanor hit and run with property damage charges.

Padilla has three strikes on his criminal record. He was convicted of first-degree robbery in 1998 in Orange County; making criminal threats in 2006 in Riverside; unlawful possession of a firearm in 2007; burglary in 2011 in Riverside and inflicting corporal injury in Riverside in 2017, officials said.

On Feb. 18 a Garden Grove police officer pulled Padilla over for speeding. The defendant allegedly started his truck and accelerated toward the officer as the officer wrote the citation. The officer was able to get out of the way.

Garden Grove detectives spotted Padilla again on Feb. 26 in Santa Ana and the defendant led police on a high-speed pursuit to Irvine. Once there, he allegedly got out of his vehicle, carjacked and assaulted a young woman and her brother by dragging her out of her SUV, officials said. Padilla then crashed the stolen SUV and ran away.

Santa Ana police

 

 

Padilla faces 120 years to life in prison if he is convicted as charged.

 



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Walmart to Raise Minimum Age for All Gun Sales to 21

Walmart is raising the minimum age to purchase all firearms and ammunition to 21, the company announced on Wednesday.

The company is also going to remove any toys and items that resemble assault-style rifles from their website.

Here is the full statement by the company:

In light of recent events, we’ve taken an opportunity to review our policy on firearm sales. Going forward, we are raising the age restriction for purchase of firearms and ammunition to 21 years of age. We will update our processes as quickly as possible to implement this change.

In 2015, Walmart ended sales of modern sporting rifles, including the AR-15. We also do not sell handguns, except in Alaska where we feel we should continue to offer them to our customers. Additionally, we do not sell bump stocks, high-capacity magazines and similar accessories. We have a process to monitor our eCommerce marketplace and ensure our policies are applied.

We take seriously our obligation to be a responsible seller of firearms and go beyond Federal law by requiring customers to pass a background check before purchasing any firearm. The law would allow the sale of a firearm if no response to a background check request has been received within three business days, but our policy prohibits the sale until an approval is given.

We are also removing items from our website resembling assault-style rifles, including nonlethal airsoft guns and toys. Our heritage as a company has always been in serving sportsmen and hunters, and we will continue to do so in a responsible way.



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Motorcyclist Arrested in Santa Clarita Road-Rage Crash Captured on Viral Video: CHP

An arrest has been made in a high-profile road-rage incident that left a vehicle overturned on the 14 Freeway in Santa Clarita last year, the California Highway Patrol announced Wednesday.

Andrew Flanigan, 45, was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, reckless driving and hit-and-run, all felonies, CHP Assistant Chief Mark Garrett said at a news conference.

Flanigan was identified as the motorcyclist sought in connection with the June 21 crash, which occurred on the southbound 14 near Newhall Avenue and was captured in a viral video, Garrett said. He credited the widely seen footage with giving them "great" leads in the case, calling it a "major" part of the investigation.

The incident began when the driver of a silver sedan cut in front of a motorcyclist, according to witnesses Tim Morrison and Chris Traber. As the situation escalated, Traber took out his cellphone and began recording.

The footage showed the motorcyclist apparently kicking the side of the car while both were in the carpool lane. The sedan swerved into the motorcycle, but the rider managed to avoid crashing.

At that point, the car appeared to lose control and struck the median. It then traveled back into traffic and crashed into a passing white Cadillac Escalade, causing the luxury vehicle to overturn and land on its roof.

The Escalade driver received moderate injuries in the rollover crash.

Authorities were investigating the incident as a possible hit-and-run because the motorcyclist fled the scene, authorities said at the time.

Flanigan was identified as the possible motorcyclist within a week of the incident, but Garrett said they needed to make sure he was the suspect. In order to build a case, authorities decided to monitor him using techniques that the assistant captain declined to get into in order to protect the integrity of the investigation.

“We feel that we have the person responsible for this incident," he said.

Investigators didn't believe that Flanigan posed a threat to public safety, otherwise they wouldn't have waited eight months to make the arrest, Garrett added.

Authorities took the Arleta resident into custody on Tuesday evening. Flanigan was released the following morning on $110,000 bail, according to inmate records.



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Worshippers Bring AR-15s to Blessing Ceremony at Pennsylvania Church

A church ceremony inviting hundreds of people to bring their high-powered rifles sparked controversy and protest Wednesday morning in Dreher Township, Pennsylvania.

The ceremony at Sanctuary Church started at 10 a.m. and wrapped up shortly before noon, according to KTLA sister WNEP in Harrisburg.

Followers of the offshoot from the Unification Church came with their AR-15s which they believe are the rod of iron mentioned in the bible.

Reverend Sean Moon led the blessing of couples inside the church. Several hundred worshippers wore crowns -- some made of bullets -- and held their firearms throughout the ceremony.

Church officials hold AR-15 rifles during a ceremony at the World Peace and Unification Sanctuary on February 28, 2018 in Newfoundland, Pennsylvania. (Getty)

Within the last year, Moon incorporated the belief of the rod of iron and a human right to bear arms.

His brother Justin Moon owns Kahr Arms, a gun maker in Pike County.

There was a lot of media attention on this ceremony, mainly because of the involvement of the same weapon used in recent mass shootings across the country.

Even before the blessing ceremony at Sanctuary Church started, members of the congregation and their assault-style rifles had to go through security.

Unloaded and zip-tied for safety, the guns became part of the ceremony at the request of Rev. Moon, son of the late Sun Myung Moon who believed he was Jesus Christ.

A woman holds an AR-15 rifle during a ceremony at the World Peace and Unification Sanctuary on February 28, 2018 in Newfoundland, Pennsylvania. (Getty)

"Jesus did return in 1920. He returned with a new name," said Tim Elder of Sanctuary Church.

The sanctuary was packed with people, with many wearing crowns -- some made of bullets -- and dozens were armed with AR-15 rifles.

"We pray they would stand as kings and queens with their crown and rod of iron," said Moon.

The blessing is a big deal for the church and its followers.

Jonathan Franco of Tannersville was born into the Unification Church and now follows the offshoot Sanctuary Church.

Even though Sun Myung Moon never taught the biblical "rod of iron" to be an AR-15 like his son, Franco fully supports the idea that these guns are God's gift of self-defense.

A man wearing a crown of rifle shells, takes communion, as worshippers at World Peace and Unification Sanctuary attend services February 28, 2018 in New Foundland, Pennsylvania. (Getty)

"If you don't have a rod of iron then, unfortunately, you can come into a situation where your life can come to an end. Who else is there to blame if you yourself didn't take the responsibility to preserve your own life? "Franco asked.

Outside, a group of people protested the church's move involving guns in worship.

"This is the continuation of the Moonies as far as I'm concerned, now they're armed," said Lisa Desiena of Scranton, Pennsylvania. "This guy's the messiah, it's a cult, period."

The service was supposed to be broadcast on YouTube but church leaders announced their channel was shut down by the company.

There's a group of protesters along Route 507 and a small state police presence but no issues.

Students at the nearby elementary school were bused to a different school in the Wallenpaupack Area School District.



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Trump Voices Support for Certain Gun Control Measures During Bipartisan Meeting With Lawmakers

President Donald Trump on Wednesday signaled his support for a hodgepodge of policies — from strengthening background checks to raising the minimum age to buy certain guns and taking guns away from the mentally ill — during a meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers at the White House on Wednesday.

Donald Trump speaks as Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) listens during a meeting with bipartisan members of the Congress at the Cabinet Room of the White House on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Donald Trump speaks as Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) listens during a meeting with bipartisan members of the Congress at the Cabinet Room of the White House on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

But after an hour-long televised meeting, it was still unclear what specific legislation Trump would support. And the wide-ranging meeting, which included blunt back-and-forths between Trump and members of both parties, laid bare the vast divide on gun legislation and Trump’s own unfamiliarity with the searing, years-old gun debate.

Trump again, brought up his support for raising the age of gun purchases from 18 to 21, though he didn’t specifically say he would sign a bill that includes that provision.

The President also said he was eagerly waiting to sign an executive action to ban bump fire stocks, gun accessories that make it easier for semi-automatic weapons to fire like they are automatic.

But, during an exchange with Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat, and Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican, Trump signaled that he did not know much about the duo’s bill to strengthen background checks.

Trump said he “hasn’t heard a lot about” the Manchin-Toomey background check legislation during the meeting, asking during the exchange whether the bill had bipartisan support. The measure, which has been pushed for five years, garnered 54 votes in the Senate in 2013.

During the Wednesday meeting, Trump asked Toomey whether his proposal raised the age of gun purchases from 18 to 21. When Toomey said the bill didn’t, Trump said, “Because you’re afraid of the NRA, right?”

Trump has signaled a willingness to address gun issues in the wake of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting that left 17 people dead earlier this month. But his focus has vacillated from strengthening background checks to more forceful gun control measures.

During the Tuesday meeting, Trump called on the bipartisan group of lawmakers to “turn our grief into action” and move in a bipartisan way “to end this senseless violence” of mass shootings.

“It can be ended and it will be ended,” Trump said.

The President once again called for the need to “harden” schools and arming “people with a certified training” to carry guns in schools, though he noted that “some people will oppose” that — and urged those opponents to voice their criticism.

Trump also stressed the importance of strengthening the background check system and once again said he pressed the National Rifle Association over the weekend on the need for action.

“I am the biggest fan of the Second Amendment. I am a big fan of the NRA. I had lunch with (them) on Sunday and I said, ‘It’s time, we’re gonna stop this nonsense this time,’ ” Trump said.

Trump, seemingly eager to do something where his predecessors have failed, added he was eager to bear the responsibility of rallying Republicans around substantive legislation.

“I like that responsibility,” Trump said. “I really do. It’s time that a President step up.”



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White House Communications Director Hope Hicks Is Resigning Following Congressional Testimony

Hope Hicks, the White House communications director, is resigning.

One of Trump’s longest-serving and closest aides, Hicks’s resignation comes a day after she spent the day testifying before the House Intelligence Committee.

The New York Times first reported her departure.



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10% of Disneyland Employees Have Been Homeless in the Past 2 Years, Union-Funded Wage Report Finds

Disneyland is known as the “happiest place on Earth,” but for many employed at the theme park, that’s not translating to a high quality of life, according to a newly released report based on surveys of Disneyland Resort employees.

Crowds walk down Main Street in front of Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland in Anaheim in June 2017. (Credit: Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)

Crowds walk down Main Street in front of Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland in Anaheim in June 2017. (Credit: Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)

Some are struggling to cover basic living expenses, with more than 10 percent of employees at the Anaheim resort telling researchers they have been homeless at some point in the past two years. Of those who can afford housing, over half say they worry about being evicted from their residence.

Additionally, 68 percent reported not having reliable access to sufficient quantities of food, and many end up eating just one meal a day.

A number of workers also said they couldn’t afford health care or dental costs, including 36 percent who have had to give up other necessities just to pay for the monthly premiums of the resort’s health insurance plan.

On top of that, extra-long commutes and ever-changing work schedules make it difficult for employees — known in the company as “cast members” — to find a second job that could help ease their financial hardships.

Those are just some of the staggering findings from the 125-page report titled “Working for the Mouse,” which was put out by researchers at Occidental College and the Economic Roundtable, and funded by a coalition of unions representing workers at Disneyland Resort.

The vast majority of respondents stated they were being paid less than $15 an hour, and about 3/4 of the approximately 5,000 surveyed said they run out of money by the end of month, according to the study.

The cast of the all-new Club Mickey Mouse performs a sparkling holiday number on Main Street U.S.A. at Disneyland during a taping of "Disney Parks Magical Christmas Celebration" on Nov. 13, 2017. (Credit: Richard Harbaugh/Disney Parks via Getty Images)

The cast of the all-new Club Mickey Mouse performs a sparkling holiday number on Main Street U.S.A. at Disneyland during a taping of “Disney Parks Magical Christmas Celebration” on Nov. 13, 2017. (Credit: Richard Harbaugh/Disney Parks via Getty Images)

The report suggests raising the wage floor to $20 and hour, noting that the average hourly wage in real dollars dropped 15 percent since 2000, from $15.80 to $13.36.

Disney officials, however, dispute the findings as “deliberately distorted,” calling them an “inaccurate and unscientific survey … paid for by politically motivated labor unions,” according to the Orange County Register.

Spokeswoman Suzy Brown told the newspaper the average wage last year for full-time, hourly workers  was about $37,000, including any tips earned. The resort employs about 30,000 cast members.

“While we recognize that socio-economic challenges exist for many people living in Southern California, we take pride in our employment experience,” she said.

In fact, economic hardships aside, most of the employees — about 80 percent — expressed satisfaction with the work itself, saying they are “proud” of what they do at the resort, according to the survey.

But the bleak picture of homelessness and food insecurity, along with stories of employees struggling to get by, serves in stark contrast to the resort’s prosperity. As real wages steadily declined over the past decade, overall revenue for Disneyland increased dramatically during the same period, according to the report.

In 2016, Disneyland generated more than $3 billion in revenue for the Walt Disney Company, up from $1.7 billion a decade earlier, the report found. Attendance also increased over those 10 years, from 20.6 million to 27.2 million.

Pedestrians walk near the entrance to Disneyland Resort on Feb. 19, 2009 in Anaheim. (Credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

Pedestrians walk near the entrance to Disneyland Resort on Feb. 19, 2009 in Anaheim. (Credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

The theme park has become increasingly more expensive to visit, with ticket and annual passport prices increasing virtually every year — most recently this month.

“As Disneyland profits and prices hit record highs, Disneyland employees are falling farther behind,” said Peter Dreier, a professor of policy at Occidental College who co-wrote the report. “Disneyland wages aren’t keeping up with rising rents in Southern California. Our survey found that homelessness and housing instability are so widespread that they have become a normal part of employees’ lives at the park.”

Glynndana Shevlin, who has worked for the resort for nearly 30 years, is among the workers struggling to get by. A food and beverage concierge at the Disney E-Ticket Club, Shevlin says she works to give guests “a magical experience.”

But away from the job, she can barely afford rent, food and bills, often having to choose which one she can pay at the end of each month.

“I have been evicted twice. I work all day serving delicious food to people, yet I’m often hungry because I’m skipping meals,” Shevlin said. “At work, I’m a clean, happy person, but when I leave and get in my car, I become a sad, unhappy person who doesn’t always know where they’re going to sleep.”

Rebekah Pederson, a hair and makeup artist, said she recently lived out of her car for more than three months and is once again homeless.

“I love my job, and I take great pride in working at Disney. I’m a licensed professional whose position requires years of experience – yet my wages are so low I often have to choose between food and a roof over my head,” she said.

The survey, which was conducted this past October, was commissioned by eleven different unions representing various resort workers, including hair stylists, costumers, food service workers, candy makers, security guards, custodians, hotel workers, retail workers, ticket takers, musicians, puppeteers, singers and dancers.



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L.A. Mayor Touts New Speed Limits on 146 Miles of City Streets as Part of Push to Reduce Traffic Fatalities

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti announced changes to posted speed limits throughout L.A. at a news conference Wednesday morning as a component of his effort to eliminate traffic deaths in the city.

L.A. County sheriff’s Deputy Elton Simmons aims his speed gun at a motorist in La Mirada in June 2012. (Credit: Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

Under state law, the city can’t issue to tickets to drivers for speeding on streets that haven’t been surveyed by traffic engineers to find the average speed. Surveys on many streets expired more than a decade ago, but now they’ve been updated by the city Department of Transportation, the mayor’s office said in a news release.

The new surveys, which cover 825 miles of roadway, allow Los Angeles Police Department officers to use radar guns and laser technology on those streets to better enforce speed limits, Garcetti said during the news conference in the Arlington Heights neighborhood.

Forty-five streets over nearly 53 miles of roadway have been adjusted to a lower speed limit; 26 streets got an increased limit over more than 94 miles of pavement.

The changes mean that 68 percent of city streets now have enforceable speed limits, the mayor said.

Almost all the streets on the city’s “High Injury Network,” on which streets see more severe and fatal collisions, now have enforceable speed limits.

The change in speed limits is a priority under Garcetti’s Vision Zero initiative, which was created in 2015 and aims to eliminate all traffic-related deaths by 2025. That includes educating citizens about safety, implementing better engineering and increasing enforcement.

Pedestrian deaths climbed 80 percent in the first two years of Vision Zero, according to Los Angeles Times reporting. However, fatal traffic collisions dropped 6 percent from last year. That’s still short of the Vision Zero goal of a 20 percent decrease by 2017.

Garcetti blamed the uptick in pedestrian deaths in part on cellphone use by both people on foot and behind the wheel.

Mayor Eric Garcetti gives a press conference on speed limit changes in Los Angeles on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: KTLA)

Mayor Eric Garcetti gives a press conference on speed limit changes in Los Angeles on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: KTLA)

“When you are walking, when you are driving, even when you are cycling, put your phone away,” the mayor said. “It could be the difference between somebody in this city losing their life and not.”

At the news conference, Garcetti was flanked by children from Saint Paul Elementary School near West Washington Boulevard and South Bronson Ave, an area where multiple pedestrians have been killed by cars.

The City Council’s Transportation Committee will be hearing the Vision Zero action plan at a Wednesday afternoon meeting, Councilman Mike Bonin said.

Bonin called fatal traffic collisions in Los Angeles a “public health crisis.”

“This problem is so big it is a moral imperative to fix it,” Bonin said.

A map from the city of L.A. shows streets where speed limits have been updated in 2018.

A map from the city of L.A. shows streets where speed limits have been updated in 2018.



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2 Shot During Sherman Oaks Home Invasion: LAPD

Two people were shot during a home invasion in  Sherman Oaks Wednesday morning, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Police responded to a hospital about 6:10 a.m. for a person who was shot in the arm and was in stable condition, Officer Luis Garcia told KTLA.

Officers then responded to the 15000 block of Valley Vista Boulevard where the home invasion had occurred.

Investigators discovered that two males entered the home using a back sliding glass door and demanded money, Garcia said. Shots were fired during the robbery. One victim was shot in the arm and a second victim had a graze wound to the arm.

The robbers allegedly took purses and wallets and drove off in a black Ford Expedition and a black BMW 3 Series, Garcia said.

No arrests have been made in the case, which remains under investigation. The incident prompted a large LAPD and Los Angeles Fire Department response, and police remained at the scene Wednesday afternoon.

KTLA’s Jennifer Thang contributed to this story. 



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What it will take for Giants to trade back from No. 2 pick in NFL Draft

Will Giants follow lead of Browns and 49ers and trade the No. 2 pick in the draft? Here is GM Dave Gettleman's take.

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Study Shows Ultra-Processed Food Consumption Increases Cancer Risk

Ultra-processed foods are not known for their health qualities. We know this, yet it’s hard to resist the doughnuts your kind colleague brought into the office. Now, research published Wednesday in the BMJ may give you at least a longer pause before you pick the pink one with sprinkles.

A photo illustration of the ingredients on a packet of instant noodles on February 16, 2018 in London, England. A recent study by a team at the Sorbonne in Paris has suggested that ‘Ultra Processed’ foods including things like mass-produced bread, ready meals, instant noodles, fizzy drinks, sweets and crisps are tied to the rise in cancer. (Photo illustration by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

Researchers discovered that people who eat more ultra-processed foods have a higher risk of cancer. Such foods are the ones with unrecognizable and unpronounceable words on the list of ingredients — anything from the candy that turns your tongue blue to healthier-sounding canned soups packed with artificial flavors, additives or emulsifiers. Most food is processed to some degree, but ultra-processed foods are typically much more calorie-, sodium- and sugar-packed.

Research has long showed that people who live on ultra-processed food tend to be more obese and overweight. They’re also more likely to have heart and circulation problems or diabetes, studies have found. Eating a lot of processed meat like hot dogs has also been tied to an increased risk of colorectal cancer.

Researchers saw this new cancer link when they analyzed 24-hour dietary records of nearly 105,000 adults in the NutriNet-Sante cohort, a general population group in France. The individuals recorded what they ate from a list of 3,300 food items that were then categorized by how processed they were, using a system called NOVA.

What the scientists found was that a 10% increase in the proportion of ultra-processed foods in the diet was associated with a significant increase of greater than 10% in risks for overall cancer and breast cancer.

“Ultra-processed fats and sauces, sugary products and drinks were associated with an increased risk of overall cancer,” the study says. “Ultra-processed sugary products were associated with an increased risk of breast cancer.”

People who tended to eat more ultra-processed food also tended to smoke more and exercise less than the others, but the authors controlled for these issues and still found the elevated cancer risk.

“It was quite surprising, the strength of the results. They were really strongly associated, and we did many sensitive analysis and adjusted the findings for many co-factors, and still, the results here were quite concerning,” study co-author Mathilde Touvier said.

“What people eat is an expression of their lifestyle in general and may not be causatively linked to the risk of cancer. So it is necessary to rule out what are called cofounding factors,” said Tom Sanders, scientific governor of the British Nutrition Foundation and an emeritus professor at King’s College London.

Sanders, who was not involved in the study, said the authors made statistical adjustments to accommodate for some of that, but he cautions that “the approach of categorizing dietary patterns that depend on industrially processed food in relation to disease risk is novel but probably needs refining before it can be translated into practical dietary advice.”

The nonprofit trade group Association of Food Industries did not respond to requests for comment.

Marji McCullough, strategic director of nutritional epidemiology at the American Cancer Society, suggests caution about interpreting what is responsible for the cancer risk associated with ultra-processed food.

“This study doesn’t mean that people should think ‘if I eat this cracker, I’m going to get cancer,’ ” McCullough said. “The overriding message of this study was really to look at an overall diet pattern rather than a specific ingredient, and it supports a lot of what we already know.”

For example, she said, people eating more highly processed foods are probably eating fewer healthy foods, which may help prevent cancer. Nutritionists recommend a diet rich in whole grains, whole fruits and vegetables instead of foods that have little nutritional value.

Touvier also noted that it’s an observational study, meaning scientists don’t know what exactly is causing the increased cancer risk, but her group at the Sorbonne Paris Cité Epidemiology and Statistics Research Center plans to look closer at what the connection may be. “The challenge now is to disentangle the different foods and understand this relationship to see what specifically is having this effect.”

Animal studies have shown that some additives are “quite good candidates” for being carcinogenic, Touvier said, “but that would need to be seen if they are also carcinogenic in the human population.”

If you are starting to worry about what you’ve brought for lunch, Touvier cautions not to be “too alarmist” about this research.

However, ultra-processed foods occupy a growing part of the world’s diet. A 2016 study found that 60% of the calories in the average American diet come from this kind of food. A 2017 study found that they make up 50% of the Canadian diet, and they make up more than 50% of the UK diet. And more of the developing world is starting to eat this way.

A balanced and diversified diet should be considered one of the most important public health priorities, the authors advise. “Eat real food and try to limit ultra processed items,” Touvier said. “At least until we know more.”



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Los Angeles Rams Cheerleader Auditions

Rams Cheerleading Director Keely Fimbres along with 6 LA Rams Cheerleaders joined us live to talk about this year’s cheerleader auditions.  The Los Angeles Rams are hosting cheerleader auditions for the 2018 season starting Sunday, March 11 at the USC Galen Center.  Candidates must register online  by Thursday, March 8th. All candidates looking to audition must be 18 or older by March 1. The Rams Cheerleaders are also hosting four voluntary workouts prior to auditions at 24 hour fitness locations throughout the LA region which includes one hour of dance and a Q & A session with Cheerleading Director Keely Fimbres For more information, click HERE. Rehearsals & interviews will take place from March 13 - 22 and Final Auditions will take place on Sunday, March 22.



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‘The Lost Tapes: Malcolm X’ on Smithsonian Channel



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Georgia Teacher Arrested After Allegedly Firing Gun in School

A northern Georgia high school teacher is in custody on suspicion of firing a gun in a classroom where he’d locked himself in alone Wednesday morning, police said.

(Credit: Tex Texin/flicker via Creative Commons)

(Credit: Tex Texin/flicker via Creative Commons)

No one was injured in the incident at Dalton High School, except for a student who injured an ankle during the evacuation, Dalton police spokesman Bruce Frazier said.

The gunfire happened as the principal tried to use keys to enter the room, Frazier said. Earlier, the teacher refused to let students in the classroom, he said.

The incident occurred as a national debate is playing out over whether to arm teachers after a gunman killed 17 people in a high school in Florida on February 14.

Check back for updates on this developing story.



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Man Arrested on Suspicion of Attempted Rape in Home-Invasion Stabbing of Woman at Her Santa Monica Home

A  man who allegedly broke into a woman’s Santa Monica home last week is being held on suspicion of attempted rape and the victim is still recovering from stab wounds, police said Tuesday.

Santa Monica police released this photo of Rashad Harris.

Santa Monica police released this photo of Rashad Harris.

Rashad Devon Harris, 25, allegedly broke into an apartment in the 1700 block of Fifth Street at 3:30 a.m. last Friday, while the woman was sleeping, according to a Santa Monica Police Department news release.

After entering through the window, he grabbed a knife from the kitchen and then asked the victim for money and items, police said.

He stabbed her in the arm and jumped on top of the injured victim, who managed to fight him off. The woman, in her early 20s, received cuts to her face and arms, according to police.

“She’s fairly young, so we’re hoping that she’s strong enough,” Santa Monica police Lt. Saul Rodriguez said after the attack. “She made it, she did fight herself off of the suspect, so that was definitely a good thing for her. We hope that she survives.”

She remains hospitalized in stable condition, police said Tuesday.

Harris was linked to the crime through forensic evidence at the crime scene. He arrested without incident at the Van Nuys Probation Office.

Harris was booked at the Santa Monica jail on suspicion of attempted rape, assault with a deadly weapon, robbery, kidnapping and probation violations, according to the release. He is being held without bail.

Anyone with information about the case is asked to call Detective Burciaga at 310-458-8932, Detective J. Rodriguez at 310-458-2233 or the Santa Monica Police Department at 310-458-8491.



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San Diego Co. Ninth-Grader Arrested After Allegedly Posting Photo of Lego Rifle on Social Media With Threatening Message

A freshman at a San Diego County high school was arrested on suspicion of making terrorist threats after he posted a photo of a Lego rifle on social media with a threatening message, a school district official said.

The 14-year-old ninth grader at West Hills High School in Santee was arrested at his home Tuesday, said Catherine Martin, a spokeswoman with the Grossmont Union High School District.

We thank law enforcement for their quick action,” Martin said on Twitter.

The arrest comes as several schools — both in Southern California and across the country — have reacted to threats of violence in the wake of the Feb. 14 school shooting in Florida that left 17 people dead.

Read the full story on LATimes.com



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NFL Combine 2018: Will Giants draft a quarterback No. 2? | 7 telling Shurmur, Gettlemanquotes

Giants have Eli Manning and Davis Webb, but is that enough to pass on Josh Allen, Josh Rosen, Sam Darnold and Baker Mayfield? Read between the lines.

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Luxury Women’s Shoes Handcrafted in L.A. With Jaclyn Jones USA

Founder, creator and designer of Jaclyn Jones USA Jaclyn Jones joined us live with her new line of women’s luxury shoes. Jaclyn had become very familiar with the lack of practicality in most women’s footwear, especially those sitting in the designer space. Moved by a desire to look good without walking like an injured animal, Jaclyn sought the long-headed path to create such a product that women could not only enjoy looking at, but actually feel their best in. From start to finish, Jaclyn Jones USA shoes are stitched and completed by the hands of a few skilled artisans making each shoe a unique piece of art. For more information on Jaclyn Jones USA luxury shoes, visit her website or follow them on social media.



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83 Percent of Americans Back DACA, Hold Trump and GOP Responsible for Not Extending Program: Poll

Support for continuing the DACA program remains high and bipartisan, according to a new CNN poll conducted by SSRS, and about six in 10 Americans say it is likely that it will wind up continuing.

Thousands of immigrants and supporters join the Defend DACA March to oppose the President Trump order to end the program on September 10, 2017 in Los Angeles. (Credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

Thousands of immigrants and supporters join the Defend DACA March to oppose the President Trump order to end the program on September 10, 2017 in Los Angeles. (Credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

The poll, conducted before the Supreme Court declined Monday to immediately consider a case on the program, found that those who back continuing the program hold President Donald Trump (33%) and the Republicans in Congress (31%) responsible for it not yet having been extended more than they do the Democrats in Congress (17%).

A broad majority, 83%, favor continuing the Obama-era program, while 12% say it should be ended. Those figures have held roughly steady in CNN polling back to mid-September. The program has support from 94% of Democrats, 83% of independents and 67% of Republicans.

Related: Full poll results

Overall, 61% say it’s very or somewhat likely that the program will ultimately be continued. Republicans are more inclined to think the program will live on than are Democrats: 71% of Republicans say it’s very or somewhat likely to continue, compared with 66% of independents and just 51% of Democrats.

Trump moved to end the program in early September, setting up a March 5 target date on which the program would begin phasing out, while urging Congress to take action on the program. Although Congress has thus far failed to advance any legislation and has been at odds with the White House, federal court rulings have allowed the program to continue, and by not taking up the case, the Supreme Court allows those rulings to stand until they do address the issue, rendering the March 5 date null.

Trump’s approval rating for handling immigration stands at 36%, roughly where it’s been since shortly after he announced his plans on DACA in the fall. And few are confident that Trump and the Republicans in Congress will enact new laws that do improve the nation’s immigration system: 38% are very or fairly confident that will happen, 60% are not confident.

Republicans are mostly confident that their party’s leaders in Washington will make improvements on immigration (71% say so), but deep confidence in the President and his partisans in Congress on the issue has waned some in the last month. In January, 40% of Republicans said they were “very confident” that the Republicans in government would improve the nation’s immigration laws; that stands at 33% now. Still, that’s higher than the 23% who felt as confident in September.

Findings released earlier this week from the same CNN poll found that immigration ranked below health care, the economy, and gun policy as a meaningful issue for voters as the congressional midterm elections approach. Overall, 38% call it an extremely important issue in their vote, though Democrats were more apt to say it was deeply important than were Republicans (48% to 32%).

Trump’s approval on the economy has faded slightly in the last month, with 47% now disapproving, up from 43% in January; 46% currently approve. In January, Trump’s approval rating for the economy had tipped into positive territory for the first time since the spring. That happened at the same time the President’s overall approval ratings ticked upward by 5 points. Findings released earlier from the same poll found his overall numbers dipping back to 35% approval, erasing the gains seen in January following a string of positive economic news and strong stock market performance.

The public is split on how things are going in the US generally today: 49% say things in the country are going fairly or very well, 49% badly.

That isn’t a new high mark overall or for the Trump administration’s tenure, but the 13% who feel things are going “very well” is the highest to say so in CNN polling back to at least 2004. That uptick is driven largely by Republicans. Back in October, 13% said things in the country were going very well, now, 26% say the same. Among Democrats and independents, though, the numbers haven’t moved significantly.

The CNN poll was conducted by SSRS February 20-23 among a random national sample of 1,016 adults reached on landlines or cellphones by a live interviewer. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points, it is larger for subgroups.



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Our American Boys: Are They Alright? Learning the Habits of Heroes With Eric Davis



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Wednesday Forecast: Sunny and Cool Ahead of Late-Week Storm

Look for sunny and cool conditions Wednesday before a storm system brings showers to Southern California late Thursday through Friday. Henry DiCarlo has KTLA’s forecast on Feb. 28, 2018.



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NFL Combine 2018: Giants team doctor provides an inside look at the medical evaluations

The medical exams are a big piece of the evaluation process.

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Giants and Saquon Barkley: 'Comical' to de-value running backs, but what does Pat Shurmur want?

Pat Shurmur explains what he wants in Giants running back. Both he and Dave Gettleman were part of RB drafts in 2017.

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Trump Publicly Criticizes Sessions Again, This Time Over ‘Disgraceful’ Handling of FISA Probe

President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions attend a panel discussion on an opioid and drug abuse in the Roosevelt Room of the White House March 29, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Credit: Shawn Thew-Pool/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions attend a panel discussion on an opioid and drug abuse in the Roosevelt Room of the White House March 29, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Credit: Shawn Thew-Pool/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump on Wednesday publicly chastised Attorney General Jeff Sessions over an investigation into alleged surveillance abuses.

The scathing tweet is the latest in a long line of public rebukes the President has leveled against his attorney general, a man who broke with much of his party to endorse Trump early in his presidential run.

“Why is A.G. Jeff Sessions asking the Inspector General to investigate potentially massive FISA abuse. Will take forever, has no prosecutorial power and already late with reports on Comey etc,” Trump wrote. “Isn’t the I.G. an Obama guy? Why not use Justice Department lawyers? DISGRACEFUL!”

Sessions said Tuesday that the Justice Department is looking at whether the FBI has properly handled applications for surveillance orders under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Sessions, appearing at a news conference announcing a new opioid task force, was asked about House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes’ controversial memo outlining purported surveillance abuses and told reporters that “the inspector general will take that as one of the matters he’ll deal with.”

The Justice Department’s inspector general is Michael E. Horowitz, a longtime department official who has worked under Republican and Democrat administrations. He was confirmed for the inspector general job in 2012 under then-President Barack Obama.

While Trump is correct that Horowitz does not have prosecutorial powers, he can — and often does — make criminal referrals to the Justice Department based on his investigations. An investigation into improper FISA use would fall squarely onto Horowitz, too, given his charge instructs him to “investigate alleged violations of criminal and civil laws by DOJ employee.”

Latest attack on Sessions

Trump’s anger toward Sessions stems from his decision to recuse himself from all investigations into the 2016 campaign, including special counsel Robert Mueller’s expanding investigation into collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian operatives bent on meddling in the election. Sessions made that decision after he did not fully answer questions during his confirmation hearing about his conversations with Russian diplomats during the 2016 campaign. Trump, in turn, has said he wouldn’t have named Sessions to lead the Justice Department had he known he would have recused himself.

That animosity has played out publicly ever since.

Trump pestered Sessions for not looking into Hillary Clinton’s deleted emails, slammed him for being “very weak” on Clinton’s “crimes” and labeled him “beleaguered” in July.

As pressure mounted on Sessions last year, his standing in the administration appeared untenable to people inside the West Wing. During the first six months of Trump’s presidency, Trump asked for Sessions’ resignation, called the attorney general an “idiot” but then later declined to accept his attorney general’s resignation letter.

Sessions has so far weathered the incessant incoming from the White House and sources close to the attorney general have told CNN that he is unlikely to go anywhere soon. But the saga between the two top Republicans has played out in public for much of Trump’s first year in office and the President’s chronic antipathy towards the top law enforcement official has defined Trump’s view of the Justice Department.

Trump’s anger boiled over in June, too, when the President pushed then-chief of staff Reince Priebus to obtain Sessions’ resignation, according sources familiar with the exchange. Priebus later said that he talked Trump out of the firing.

The latest chapter in the saga between Trump and Sessions came just one week ago, when Trump challenged Sessions to launch an investigation into the Obama administration for failing to do enough to stop the 2016 election foreign interference.

“Question: If all of the Russian meddling took place during the Obama Administration, right up to January 20th, why aren’t they the subject of the investigation?” Trump asked. “Why didn’t Obama do something about the meddling? Why aren’t Dem crimes under investigation? Ask Jeff Sessions!”



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Some Sexual Predators Pretending to Be Uber and Lyft Drivers Are Attacking Women Leaving Bars and Clubs, Police Warn

"These predators drive in areas where there are nightclubs and they prey on intoxicated victims or people they perceived to be intoxicated." Los Angeles police Homicide Capt. Bill Hayes said. "Did they call an Uber? the predator will ask. And when the victim jumps into the vehicle, they don't realize that is not the one they called." In this photo, a sticker with the Uber logo is displayed in the window of a car. (Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

“These predators drive in areas where there are nightclubs and they prey on intoxicated victims or people they perceived to be intoxicated.” Los Angeles police Homicide Capt. Bill Hayes said. “Did they call an Uber? the predator will ask. And when the victim jumps into the vehicle, they don’t realize that is not the one they called.”
In this photo, a sticker with the Uber logo is displayed in the window of a car.
(Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

In January of last year, a woman climbed into what she thought was an Uber outside a Hollywood nightclub on a bustling stretch of Cahuenga Boulevard.

But instead of driving her home, authorities allege the man behind the wheel took her to a secluded area and repeatedly sexually assaulted her.

Los Angeles County prosecutors on Tuesday charged Nicolas Morales, 44, with raping seven women while posing as a ride-hailing service driver. Authorities allege he struck across the region, including Alhambra, Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, between October 2016 and January 2018.

Authorities said they are dealing with a string of sexual assault cases in which attackers pretend to be drivers to lure women into their vehicles. When customers call for an Uber or Lyft, they might not pay attention to the type of vehicle the service is sending and end up jumping into the first car that pulls over for them, they said.

Read the full story on LATimes.com



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Man’s Body Found Near Ocean Front Walk in Venice

A death investigation is underway after a man’s body was found near the Ocean Front Walk in Venice Wednesday morning.

Police tape is seen around a restroom facility where a man's body was found in Venice on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: KTLA)

Police tape is seen around a restroom facility where a man’s body was found in Venice on Feb. 28, 2018. (Credit: KTLA)

The discovery was reported about 5 a.m. near Ocean Front Walk and Ozone Avenue, Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Sanchez said.

Video from the scene showed police tape surrounding a restroom facility on the beach.

There were no signs of trauma found on the man’s body, Sanchez said.

His identity has not been released.

The cause of death will be determined by the Los Angeles County coroner’s office.

KTLA’s Geoff Peters contributed to this report.



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Amid Forecasts of Another Winter Storm, Mammoth and Lake Tahoe Are Expecting to Get Sensational Snow This Week

Catch rule? Pass interference? Potential rule changes NFL is considering for 2018 season

The NFL competition committee is considering major rule changes for the 2018 NFL season.

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Authorities Recommend Evacuations in Parts of Santa Barbara County Ahead of Storm

Authorities are urging residents to evacuate in parts of Santa Barbara County ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the area Thursday.

Authorities are recommending evacuations in Santa Barbara County ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the area. (Credit: Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

Authorities are recommending evacuations in Santa Barbara County ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the area. (Credit: Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

The Sheriff’s Office recommended that residents in parts of Goleta, Santa Barbara, Montecito, Summerland and Carpinteria evacuate starting at 8 a.m. Wednesday. The county has created an interactive map that shows which neighborhoods are most at risk.

“This is giving them more than enough warning to begin to prepare,” said Terri Nisich, a county spokeswoman. “Those with access and functional needs, people that need more time leaving an area, [should] begin to move.”

Forecasters predict that the storm will dump a one-third to two-thirds of an inch of rain per hour at certain points through Friday, which could be enough to trigger mud and debris flows near burn areas.

Click here to read the full story on LATimes.com.



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Giants coach Pat Shurmur: 'I like what I've seen from Davis Webb' after closer review

Pat Shurmur, Dave Gettleman have seen the limited tape available on QB Davis Webb, who will determine what Giants do with No. 2 pick in 2018 NFL Draft

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‘Darkest Hour’ Movie Sets on The Queen Mary



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Cupid’s Cash- February 28, 2018



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1 in 14 Women Still Smokes While Pregnant, CDC Report Says

About one in 14 pregnant women who gave birth in the United States in 2016 smoked cigarettes during her pregnancy, according to a report released Wednesday.

A woman holding a cigarette is seen in this file photo. (Credit: iStock/Getty Images Plus)

A woman holding a cigarette is seen in this file photo. (Credit: iStock/Getty Images Plus)

The findings, gathered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics, revealed that 7.2% of all expectant mothers smoked — but that the percentage of pregnant smokers varied widely from state to state.

The prevalence of smoking was highest in West Virginia, where 25.1% of women reported smoking at any time during pregnancy, and lowest in California, where 1.6% reported smoking.

“Despite the well-understood risk to mother and child, still, about one of every 14 women in the United States smoked during pregnancy,” said Patrick Drake, senior author of the report and a demographer at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

“These levels do vary widely by state, maternal age, race and Hispanic origin, and education, but any amount of smoking during pregnancy is too much,” he said.

In 2011, about 10% of women in the US reported smoking during their last three months of pregnancy, and of those women who smoked, 55% quit during pregnancy, according to data from the CDC’s Pregnancy Risk Assessment and Monitoring System.

Smoking while pregnant puts a baby at risk for certain birth defects. It also can cause a baby to be born too early or to have low birth weight and can raise the risk of stillbirth or sudden infant death syndrome, according to the CDC.

A spotlight turned on West Virginia

The new report is based on birth certificate data from the CDC’s National Vital Statistics System.

After analyzing the data, the researchers found that the prevalence of smoking during pregnancy was lower than the overall national rate in 19 states, including California, Utah, Texas, Hawaii, New Jersey, Nevada, Arizona, New York and Connecticut, and in the District of Columbia.

Those states and D.C. each had a prevalence of less than 5%, much lower than the national 7.2%.

Thirty-one states had a prevalence higher than the national rate. West Virginia topped the list, followed by Kentucky, Montana, Vermont and Missouri.

“Women in West Virginia smoked during pregnancy more than five times as often as women in the states with the lowest prevalence,” Drake said.

The researchers also found that prevalence of smoking during pregnancy varied by age and race. The prevalence was highest among women 20 to 24 at 10.7%, followed by women 15 to 19 at 8.5% and 25 to 29 at 8.2%.

The prevalence also was highest among non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native women at 16.7%, followed by non-Hispanic white women at 10.5%, non-Hispanic black women at 6%, Hispanic women at 1.8% and non-Hispanic Asian women at 0.6%.

“Non-Hispanic white women were almost twice as likely to smoke during pregnancy as non-Hispanic black women and about six times as likely as Hispanic women,” Drake said.

The prevalence of smoking also varied by education. Women with a high school diploma or GED had the highest prevalence at 12.2%, and the prevalence decreased with increasing education, dropping to 7.9% among those with some college or an associate’s degree.

Among those with less than a high school diploma, the prevalence was 11.7%.

The report had some limitations, one being that the data on smoking during pregnancy were self-reported.

Since most women might be less likely to admit that they smoked cigarettes while pregnant, the prevalence of smoking could be under-reported, said Dr. Robyn Horsager-Boehrer, professor and chief of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Texas Southwestern’s William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital.

“With the birth certificate data, it’s easy to use it for things like birth weights, potentially the presence of anomalies, things that are a little bit more objectively recorded during the course of a delivery,” said Horsager-Boehrer, who was not involved in the new report.

“But in this case, this is the mom being asked about her use of cigarettes during pregnancy, and I do worry a little bit about a bias toward under-reporting,” she said. “In some cases, even though a patient may come and report that she is not smoking, you walk into a room, and you can smell the smoke on her clothes or on her hair. They may not be aware that their presence is kind of contrary to what they’re reporting.”

‘We still need very aggressive education campaigns’

The prevalence of cigarette smoking during pregnancy across the US came as no surprise to Dr. Haywood Brown, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University School of Medicine, who was not involved in the new report.

“West Virginia and Kentucky have always had one of the highest prevalence of smoking, and it’s consistent,” Brown said, adding that education campaigns could help reverse the prevalence of smoking during pregnancy.

The perceived risk of smoking declined in the United States between 2006 and 2015, according to a separate study published Monday in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

That study included data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health suggesting that, in 2006, 73.89% of people surveyed said cigarette smoking posed a great health risk, but in 2015, that percentage dropped to 72.89%.

“We still need very aggressive education campaigns in high-smoking-prevalence states, particularly in where there’s rural access-to-care issues,” said Brown, who was not involved in that study.

“We still have a serious issue with infant mortality — prematurity and infant mortality are clearly linked to cigarette smoking, as is low birth weight — and when you begin to explain these things to patients, it really does appear to make a difference to them,” he said.

Brown pointed out that some of the states in the new CDC report with the highest prevalence of smoking during pregnancy also tend to have high rates of infant mortality. A CDC data brief released in January showed that, between 2013 and 2015, West Virginia and Kentucky had infant mortality rates higher than the overall national rate.

“The linkages between smoking and infant mortality and prematurity are real,” Brown said.

Yet for many patients, pregnant or not, quitting smoking remains difficult, Horsager-Boehrer said. On the other hand, she added, pregnancy can provide an opportunity for many women to overcome their nicotine addiction once and for all.

“Pregnancy gives us an opportunity because people are frequently coming for multiple visits. So there’s a lot more support, I think, during pregnancy than at any other time that somebody might want to stop smoking, and there’s a lot of motivation,” she said.



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Jennifer Lawrence Says She Was Treated ‘In a Way That Now We Would Call Abusive’

Academy Award winner Jennifer Lawrence has added her voice to the #MeToo debate, saying she had been treated “in a way that I think now we would call abusive.”

Jennifer Lawrence attends 20th Century Fox x The Wing on February 23, 2018 in New York City. (Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Wing)

Jennifer Lawrence attends 20th Century Fox x The Wing on February 23, 2018 in New York City. (Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Wing)

The star of Hollywood’s “The Hunger Games” franchise says she does not put any of her experiences in the same category as those of Harvey Weinstein’s alleged victims, but she does remember occasions when men in senior roles in the movie industry would touch her legs and she felt unable to protest.

“I was certainly mistreated,” she said in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.

In 2014, she was one of several celebrities who were hacked and whose personal nude photos were published online, which Lawrence described at the time as a “sex crime.”

Lawrence has described feeling “empowered” after shooting a nude scene in her new espionage thriller “Red Sparrow,” which she described as “the perfect movie” for the #MeToo age.

“I had… a lot of insecurities when it came to sexuality and nudity and my body and I’ve just been carrying them around for years,” she said in an interview, which also featured “Red Sparrow” director Francis Lawrence (no relation).

“When I read the script I loved it so much and I thought, if I don’t do it… it’s almost like all of these insecurities and fears win.”

Based on the first novel in a trilogy, “Red Sparrow” tells the story of Dominika Egorova (played by Lawrence), a Russian ballerina who becomes a secret agent after an injury ends her career.

She undergoes a sadistic training program at the Sparrow School, at one point being told, “Your body belongs to the state,” and is ordered to strip naked along with several other women.

Recalling the process of shooting the scene, the 27-year-old actress said: “The pre-emptive anxiety is so much worse than the actual reality. I had had a good year to prepare mentally for what I was going to do. The worst part was the night before — I didn’t sleep at all.”

Coincidentally, the scene echoed a “mentally brutal” experience Lawrence had early in her career when she was photographed almost naked alongside several much thinner women and told by a female producer to “use the photos as motivation” to lose weight.

The shoot for the nude scene in “Red Sparrow” was far less stress-inducing than she might have thought.

“When I got there, everybody’s so professional and so nice,” she said. “I was perfectly comfortable, and afterwards I felt empowered. I still feel empowered.”

Although the film was shot well before the emergence of the #MeToo movement, the actress sees it as “the perfect movie that we need right now.” It “opens up the conversation for the difference between consent and not consent,” she explained. While she made an independent decision to be part of the movie, fully aware of what that entailed, Lawrence is aware that not all women in the industry are truly free to make the choice that is right for them.

When she agreed, they immediately began a conversation “about how to make her as comfortable as possible,” said director Francis Lawrence. “It was a real collaboration between the two of us.”

The director is convinced that men such as himself have a vital role to play in ending sexual abuse and harassment in the industry.

Directors should aim to create “the safest environments possible… so that people feel respected and safe and comfortable,” he said.

He also called for more movies about women, and for more women to be hired to work both in front of and behind the camera, as well as more female executives.

Sexual harassment “happens in every single business around the world” and has been happening “for a very long time,” he said. “What’s new is the bravery of the people coming out and speaking about it.”

Both he and Jennifer Lawrence are convinced that change will come as a result. “If we create a community where survivors can come forward and talk, then there’s going to be change and there’s going to be no way of going backwards,” she said.

“Red Sparrow” is scheduled to be released in most of Europe on March 1 and in the United States on March 2.



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NRA Appealed to Trump Against Raising Age for Firearms Purchases

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National Rifle Association leaders appealed directly to President Donald Trump about not raising the age limit for buying certain firearms, a senior administration official tells CNN.

US President Donald Trump listens to a speaker in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on February 27, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

US President Donald Trump listens to a speaker in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on February 27, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

The appeal came when Trump had lunch with the leaders on Sunday. The official said the NRA would prefer that the White House pursue school safety programs.

The official, however, said that although the White House continues to speak with the NRA, they’re not going to agree on everything.

The White House will unveil school safety proposals on Thursday before the President leaves for the Billy Graham funeral on Friday, the official said.

The official maintained that the President does want to raise the purchasing age of certain firearms to 21 years old. Though there has been “a lot of flux in the way it’s been communicated, the President’s preference is that it’s raised to 21,” according to this official. This person said several times that this is Trump’s “preference.”

Vice President Mike Pence has been advising the President on gun safety and offering advice on gun safety measures from his days as Indiana governor.

Trump met over the weekend with NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre and Chris Cox, the head of the NRA’s lobbying arm, the two figures who have most prominently pushed the organization’s opposition to tightening US gun laws over the years.

In the wake of the Parkland, Florida, school massacre, Trump last week promoted the idea of increasing the age limit of those who can purchase semi-automatic rifles from age 18 to age 21. The NRA quickly came out against that position, and congressional Republicans have also expressed resistance to the idea.

Sources told CNN earlier this week that Trump appears to be backing away from that position, though White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters Tuesday that Trump still supports raising the age for “the purchase of certain firearms.”



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Trump Threatens to Delay California Border Projects Until ‘Whole Wall is Approved’

President Trump hailed his administration’s “big victory” in court in a case that challenged his proposed border wall, but threatened Wednesday to delay improving some sections of the existing border barrier in California.

A Border Patrol agent looks over the U.S.-Mexico border wall in Calexico, California, in the Imperial Valley, on Jan. 31, 2017. (Credit: Sandy Huffaker / AFP / Getty Images)

A Border Patrol agent looks over the U.S.-Mexico border wall in Calexico, California, in the Imperial Valley, on Jan. 31, 2017. (Credit: Sandy Huffaker / AFP / Getty Images)

His tweet, an apparent attempt to punish California, seemed to be an effort to fuel the continuing battle between the state’s liberal, pro-immigration officials and Trump’s White House.

Trump’s administration won an order Tuesday from a federal judge in San Diego, who ruled that the administration did not abuse its authority in waiving some environmental laws and other regulations when it began building new barriers and demonstration projects in Southern California.

U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who ruled in the case, is the same judge Trump disparagingly called “a Mexican” during his 2016 campaign, even though the judge was born in the United States.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.



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