Feb 292012
 

Fighting L.A.’s gangs with families

 

Officials say L.A. Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes’ effort, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, is working.

Los Angeles Times
Opinion / Editorial
By Jim Newton
February 27, 2012
Guillermo Cespedes

 

Guillermo Cespedes speaks to the media after his appointment. (Los Angeles Times / September 8, 2009)

In a large conference room at City Hall East, more than 100 gang-intervention workers gathered last week to hear about a new approach to heading off gang violence and the destruction it causes. They had come to hear a family tell its story.

The mother did most of the talking, guided by a counselor. She was there with two of her children, a son and a daughter, and they’d been through the wringer. An older daughter had gotten in trouble, deeper and deeper. She’d neglected her schoolwork and fought back when her parents tried to discipline her. She ran away from home, got pregnant. “The road she was on,” the mother said, “was not good.”

As the mother and father became increasingly preoccupied with trying to set their older daughter straight, they had less time to spend with their younger children, and soon those two began to show signs of trouble as well. Their grades dropped; the boy’s interest in sports flagged.

Gripped by the sense that they were losing control, the parents called for help. It came in the form of a local organization, whose counselor dove into the life of this young family, escorting the kids to school, arranging for tutors, counseling the parents. Slowly, life settled down. The son got glasses, started doing his homework and brought up his grades; the younger daughter joined a program for future executives and thrived.

Asked to explain what got his attention and turned him around, the boy responded, “Jesus,” then quickly added, “and the ladies.”

The counselor for this session was Harry Aponte, a nationally recognized gang-intervention expert from Philadelphia, and he patiently waded through the family history as the audience of intervention workers listened, many taking notes.

This family-centered approach represents a new tack in Los Angeles’ long quest to divert young people from gangs. The philosophy behind it is that focusing on a single troubled child isn’t enough. Schools and neighborhoods surround children, but their families are their core of support and thus the most natural people to help them.

“We’re shifting the focus from the individual to the family,” Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes explained. “Every family has a problem-solving mechanism that gets jammed. We’re trying to address that.”

Police and others credit Cespedes’ efforts, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, with making steady progress against gang violence in Los Angeles. Last year, crime overall in the city continued its long decline (though homicides ticked back up by a single killing, from 297 to 298), and the drop in gang crime continued to outpace that for crime generally. Fewer gang members fired shots or were themselves shot, and gang crimes overall fell by more than 15%, from 5,537 to 4,694. (Again, homicides were an exception, though a relatively small one: 170 killings in 2011 were attributed to gang violence, up from 161 the year before.)

So impressed is Police Chief Charlie Beck with the program’s contribution to reducing gang crime in Los Angeles that, in an interview with Times reporters and editors last week, he said he’s judging the field of mayoral candidates in part by which ones would keep the office structured as part of the mayor’s staff. That configuration is useful, Beck explained, because gang crime is not spread evenly throughout the city, and giving the council oversight of the efforts means that there are pressures to spread its resources across 15 districts, rather than concentrate them where they are needed. “If [the program] becomes a council department again,” he said, “it’s not going to have the focus it has now.”

Meanwhile, the approach is continuing to evolve. Driven by the program’s determination to fuse research and real-world experience, Cespedes says he and others have concluded that families need to be at the center of the program’s efforts. Hence the training last week at City Hall.

During his 90 minutes with the family, Aponte listened carefully as the mother and her children spelled out the elements of their success as well as the challenges that lie ahead. The older daughter has just had her baby and is living in a group home. The younger children still have a long way to go in school, and the temptation of gangs will not recede with just one strong report card.

But Aponte also recognized the family’s progress, its emergence from a long stretch of tough work. “You’re celebrating life,” he observed. “You’ve gone through a dark alley, and now you’re celebrating.”

The mother nodded, as did her children. Aponte turned to his audience to emphasize the point: “They will not lose this…. This is their trophy to take home.”

 

 

 

 

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-newton-column-gang-intervention-20120227,0,3021365.column

Feb 012012
 

Driver in high-speed chase fires gun before arrest, LAPD says

Los Angeles Times
By: Robert J. Lopez
January 30, 2012

 

Photo: Vehicle involved in officer pursuit.

Credit: KTLA-TV Channel 5

 

 

Los Angeles -

A driver suspected of leading officers on a high-speed chase was arrested Monday night after he fired at least one gunshot round as he was being uncovered by a search dog after the chase, police said.

The man was taken into custody after he and a female passenger bailed from a suspected stolen vehicle at the end of a lengthy pursuit near Griffith and East 28th streets, the Los Angeles Police Department said.

An LAPD search dog had found the suspect, who fired his weapon as the dog neared, Officer Karen Rayner said. The passenger had not been found.

Officers from the LAPD and California Highway Patrol saturated an area near Griffith Street and East Adams Boulevard after the pursuit, which took place across several freeways as the vehicle hit speeds over 100 mph, officials said.

Officers from the CHP, which said the car had been stolen, tried to pull it over about 6:15 p.m. on the westbound 60 Freeway in Diamond Bar.  But the vehicle escaped north on the 57 Freeway before going on the 210 Freeway, officials said.

The car hit the southbound 605 Freeway to the 10 Freeway and drove west along the 101 Freeway before exiting near downtown Los Angeles and making its way south.

 

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/01/high-speed-officer-pursuit.html

Jan 222012
 

Los Angeles Mandates Use of Condoms for Sex Films

The New York Times
By JENNIFER MEDINA
January 17, 2012

LOS ANGELES —

The Los Angeles City Council approved a new mandate Tuesday requiring all actors in pornographic films to wear condoms during any filming that takes place within city limits. The law is the first of its kind in the country, advocates said, and could have a significant impact on what some say is a $1 billion industry.

Condoms!

 

Related

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation has pressed for such legislation for years and last year secured nearly double the number of signatures needed to place the issue on the ballot in June, when the state is scheduled to hold its presidential primary.

But the ballot initiative would have cost the already strapped city roughly $4 million. Several council members suggested that voters were likely to approve the measure by a large margin anyway and that the Council should simply save the money by approving it. The Council did that on Tuesday, without debate, in a 9-to-1 vote.

“The issue itself is so common sense and intuitive, why put the city through the costs and ordeal when the outcome is really preordained?” Councilman Paul Koretz said. “This is a no-brainer of an issue. It’s not going to cost us very much to enforce — we won’t spend any more money enforcing this than we do any other law. And in this case, if you don’t follow the law, it will be on film.”

The new mandate will allow the Los Angeles Police Department to perform spot checks on any set once a film permit is issued. A group of officials from the Police Department, the state’s workplace safety agency and the city attorney’s office will make recommendations on how to implement the policy, which goes into effect in 90 days.

The law also imposes a fee on all pornographic film permits to cover the costs of enforcement.

The city attorney had opposed the legislation, saying it was unclear whether the city had the authority to create such a law because the state governs issues between employers and employees. But he dropped the opposition last week, and the AIDS Healthcare Foundation agreed to pay up to $50,000 in legal costs if the city is sued over the matter.

The foundation is still pushing a ballot initiative that would create the same requirements for filming anywhere in Los Angeles County. In the past, county health officials have said that it would be too difficult to monitor the pornography industry through the Health Department and that the State Legislature should be the one to pass any laws regulating the industry. So far, advocates for the condom requirements have not been able to persuade a state legislator to sponsor such a bill.

“The most important thing about this is that this is the first political body to pass legislation requiring regulation,” said Michael Weinstein, the president of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “When push comes to shove, people know this was the right thing to do.”

Current regulations by the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health already require pornographic actors to use condoms. But the state agency can only respond to complaints, not perform its own inspections, and it has issued only a few fines.

Several filmmakers have said that requiring condom use is unnecessary and that the spread of sexually transmitted diseases is reduced by requiring actors to get regularly tested.

“Clearly this is about the government overreaching and intruding into consenting adults’ decisions,” said Diane Duke, the chief executive of the Free Speech Coalition, a trade group for the pornography business. “Our standards and protocols are extremely effective and are working. They are taking something they know nothing about and imposing their morality on our industry.”

Ms. Duke said that film executives did not know the Council was planning to vote on the matter until after it held an initial hearing last week, and that no producers had spoken with City Council officials. She said that the group would consider filing a lawsuit.

The only “no” vote came from Councilman Mitchell Englander, who represents the San Fernando Valley, the heart of the industry.

“Strictly on a matter of what we should and shouldn’t be going after when we are nearly broke, this isn’t where we should be spending our resources,” Mr. Englander said. He added that he feared filmmakers would take their business elsewhere. “We don’t know how much this will cost us to enforce, how we will enforce it and whether it will cost us the loss of jobs.”

Mr. Weinstein said the argument that the pornographic film industry would move out of Los Angeles is a “big lie.”

“They cannot just pick up their stakes and move to another state,” he said. “They’d hardly be welcomed in West Virginia or Utah or Mississippi, or even a place like Nevada, where legal prostitution is highly regulated and condoms are required. And we will follow them wherever they go.”

 

Direct Link:  http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/18/us/los-angeles-makes-condoms-mandatory-for-adult-film-actors.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha23

Jan 162012
 

Police Officers Save Elderly Woman From Burning Home

 

KTLA News

David Begnaud

January 15, 2012

 

VIDEO: Watch David Begnaud’s Report

 

Police Officers Save Woman From Burning HomeLAPD Rampart Division Officers Seree Rattanapichetkul and Anthony Farias. (KTLA-TV) 
Click here to find out more!

 

WESTLAKE (KTLA) –

Officers from the LAPD Rampart division are being praised for their bravery Sunday after risking their lives to save an elderly woman from a burning home.

The fire broke out around 9:30 a.m. at a home in the 1100 block of S. Westlake Avenue.

Officers Seree Rattanapichetkul and Anthony Farias, who were on patrol in the area, saw heavy smoke coming from the upper level of the home and called the fire department.


The officers helped two residents escape from the home to a safer location. They were then told there was a 89-year-old woman still in the kitchen at the back of the bottom floor.

The officers made their way through the smoke-filled home and led her to safety before going back in to make one last check of the home, according to Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Wes Burhmester.

The residents and the officers were treated at the scene for minor smoke inhalation.

“Due to the swift actions of the residents and Officers Farias and Rattanapichetkul, everyone survived the blaze and no one was seriously injured,” a police department press release said.

All the furniture and items in the home were saved, according to David Spence of the Los Angeles Fire Department.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-officers-save-woman-from-burning-home,0,3128995.story

Jan 162012
 

The Homicide Report

THE TIMES CHRONICLES L.A. COUNTY HOMICIDE VICTIMS

Showing 17 homicides from Jan. 1, 2012 to Jan. 8, 2012

Current view:
Homicides are grouped based on number of homicides in an area.
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Name Age Date
Gerardo Fernandez 20 1/8/12
Hector Hernandez 42 1/8/12
Alberto Cruz 38 1/7/12
Juan Nunez 34 1/7/12
Mark Miles 48 1/6/12
Jeff Pouncil Jr. 19 1/5/12
Richard Hughes 38 1/5/12
Jane Doe #1 0 1/4/12
Jazmyne Eng 40 1/4/12
Calvin Milner 62 1/3/12
Asia Sonnier 23 1/3/12
David Morales Jr. 18 1/3/12
Jimmie Jackson Jr. 21 1/2/12
Leobardo Esparza 50 1/2/12
Edwin John Jr. 18 1/2/12
Cristin Alvarez 28 1/2/12
Jude Burns Jr. 14 1/1/12
a 19-year-old Latino male, died Saturday, Jan. 29, 2011, after being shot in Westmont, according to Los Angeles County coroner’s records.

Homicides: Jan. 1, 2007 to Jan. 8, 2012

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The Homicide Report is the Los Angeles Times’ interactive map and database to track homicides in Los Angeles County and provide a forum for readers to remember victims and to discuss violence in their communities.
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Source: The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles County coroner’s office
Credits: Sarah Ardalani, Megan Garvey, Thomas Suh Lauder, Maloy Moore, Anthony Pesce, Sandra Poindexter, Ken Schwencke, Doug Smith, Ben Welsh
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