A SWAT Team Destroyed an Innocent Man's Shop. Then the City Left Him With the Bill.
Carlos Pena's livelihood has been crippled. It remains to be seen if he'll have any right to compensation.
Carlos Pena's livelihood has been crippled. It remains to be seen if he'll have any right to compensation.
The wildly popular podcaster is still "politically homeless" but says leaving California and having a kid have improved her life immensely.
City Councilmember Curren Price is indicted for steering favors to affordable housing developers who were bribing his wife.
When the state won't shade you, buy a hat.
Today, the Lone Star state counts 90 homeless people per every 100,000 residents. In California, the problem is almost five times as bad.
Public sector unions squeeze final gains out of a district that's been bleeding students yet constructing expensive new buildings for two decades.
The former head of the NYPD and the LAPD talks about how bad leadership creates police brutality and why he's still against pot legalization.
The legislation, which forbids shipping anything between American ports in ships that are not U.S. built and crewed, is just another a special deal that one industry has scammed out of Congress.
"I was born in Cuba, and it doesn't sound good when people are trying to achieve equal outcomes for everyone," said one parent.
The L.A. City Council saw a good thing happening and decided government wasn't involved enough.
Body camera footage shows precisely why some people don’t trust police to respond appropriately to nonviolent incidents.
Despite what you may have heard, many "recyclables" sent to recycling plants are never recycled at all.
The issue is the result of a districtwide policy of de facto grade inflation.
Landlords say that nearly three years of eviction moratoriums is forcing some property owners out of the rental business entirely.
Transit officials and transit-boosting politicians in D.C., L.A., and New York City are warming to the idea of being totally dependent on taxpayer subsidies.
Healthy cities are a boon not just for those who live in them, but for our entire society.
Voters gave a cold shoulder to candidates endorsed by former President Donald Trump, and Los Angeles County voters gave the heave-ho to Sheriff Alex Villanueva.
Los Angeles Sheriff's Department
Alex Villanueva was ousted after a single combative, troubled term. Voters also approved giving county leaders the power to remove future sheriffs.
Having a city council secretly dominated by people with racist views is troubling, but having an entire political system controlled by one special interest group is also scandalous.
A lack of transparency doesn't make politicians better people.
Plus: Copyright versus the internet, roofer helping rebuild hurricane-damaged Florida houses arrested for lack of Florida license, and more...
Pardoning possession offenders is nice. Taking his boot off the necks of cannabis sellers would be even better.
Plus: The Onion weighs in on qualified immunity case, Supreme Court rejects challenges to bump stock ban, and more...
An emphasis on corruption and enforcement downplays the very real influence of regulation and taxes on California's booming black market.
In the Bay Area and in Los Angeles County, authorities are quickly learning there's little public will to follow their mandates.
New court documents show that the FBI planned for months to seize and forfeit property found inside safe deposit boxes in an L.A. raid under the pretext of doing an inventory.
Educational freedom is good for everybody but unions, bureaucrats, and the education establishment.
Evidence from the past two years suggests they won't make a difference.
Reforms promised after Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 are not being followed by Los Angeles police.
Los Angeles Sheriff's Department
He’s been dismissive of fears of gang activity in the LASD and on the attack against critics and investigators. Voters have noticed.
In Los Angeles and San Francisco, voters face candidates who promised criminal justice reforms but whose records have been disappointing.
Now that the pandemic is fading and much of the available rent relief has been spent, L.A.'s eviction moratorium seems like pure regulatory inertia.
San Francisco and Los Angeles insist in suit that likely tens of millions have been illegitimately squeezed from small businesses by ADA plaintiffs without proper legal standing.
Preservationists hope to make the one-time home of Loren Miller a historic landmark. That it would make it nearly impossible to redevelop the $1.4 million two-bedroom home.
Despite apportioning over $1 billion for homeless housing, cost overruns and sluggish pacing threaten to jeopardize the city project.
Meanwhile, Virginia and Washington, D.C., are in a bidding war to decide which taxpayers will have the chance to pay for the Washington Commanders' new stadium. It shouldn't be this way.
But not so fast, Angelenos. No return to normal for you.
Los Angeles Libertarians to start gathering signatures to overturn the four-month-old ordinance.
If California politicians think the mask mandate is stupid, they should lead the charge to get rid of it.
The students' negative COVID tests weren't good enough for school administrators.
School choice is the best alternative for parents who are reasonably frustrated with this insanity.