Torrance-based real estate developer Samuel Leung pleaded guilty Thursday to felony conspiracy, closing a major chapter in a campaign money laundering case that covered more than six years’ worth of political contributions to eight politicians. latimes.com/local/lanow/la…
The plea comes four years after the Times revealed that a network of donors directly or indirectly connected to Leung — more than 100 relatives, employees and others — contributed more than $600,000 while Leung’s apartment project was being reviewed. latimes.com/projects/la-me…
The blunt “stay-at-home” messaging worked to bend the curve in the spring, when fear of the novel coronavirus and the insidious ways it might spread kept many indoors.
Just in L.A. the number of people staying home has remained the same (55%) since June.
Nationally, millions zigzagged across the country to visit family for Thanksgiving, flouting the advice of health officials.
Los Angeles began the year with a 21-day stretch of smog-free days. However, the year 2020 will instead go down as one of Southern California’s smoggiest in decades.
Once the air-cleansing March weather went away, the region plunged into a late spring and summer with intense heat waves that contributed to the worst ozone pollution readings and highest number of bad air days since the mid-1990s.
In all, this year saw 157 bad air days for ozone pollution.
“There’s no sugarcoating it, this was a really, really bad ozone year,” said Philip Fine, a deputy executive officer for the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
A new stay-at-home order will be imposed on Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley, as the COVID-19 crisis spirals out of control with a speed that has exceeded dire projections.
With much of California set to go under the order late Sunday, hard-hit Los Angeles County set another alarming milestone in the COVID-19 surge, surpassing 10,000 new daily cases.
However, Orange County, which will also be impacted by the new order, argues that its COVID-19 conditions are not as bad as in the hot zones and maintains the state should not treat it like L.A. County.
The death of a newborn plunged detectives into a murky world of desperate young addicts and small-time drug dealers with a disgraced multimillionaire at the center: Dr. Carmen Puliafito, the former dean of USC’s Keck School of Medicine. latimes.com/california/sto…
Puliafito had been on the Sheriff’s Department radar before the baby's death.
At the time, Puliafito had a sterling reputation in ophthalmology and lived in a $5-million mansion with his wife of 38 years.
He was in a relationship with an escort named Sarah Warren, lavishing her with more than $300,000 in gifts and living expenses, according to an accounting he later provided a judge.
His largesse included funding Warren’s drug habit, she later wrote in a sworn affidavit.
Anxiety inside medical facilities is growing as cases surge and workers feel they are entering uncharted territory during this pandemic.
Unlike in the spring, emergency rooms across L.A. County, both at public and private hospitals, are busy. latimes.com/california/sto…
A nurse at a Kaiser hospital in L.A. County said he feels fatigued by the constant looming threat of COVID-19. When he comes into work, he never knows if he’ll be assigned a patient infected with the virus. latimes.com/california/sto…
Antelope Valley Hospital, which a hospital spokeswoman said has the second-busiest emergency room in the state, has been inundated in recent weeks with not only COVID-19 patients but also trauma patients. latimes.com/california/sto…
According to former insiders, L.A.’s iconic Magic Castle — home to arguably the most prestigious and exclusive magic club in the world — isn’t quite what it appears to be latimes.com/entertainment-…
In interviews with The Times, 12 people accused Magic Castle management, staff, performers and others of a variety of abuses — including sexual assault, sexual harassment and discrimination on the basis of race or gender latimes.com/entertainment-…
Former employees and guests said they voiced their concerns to management, which they claim were not addressed — or sometimes met with retaliatory action.
Officials speaking for the organization said all claims are “treated seriously and professionally” latimes.com/entertainment-…