Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Bunch of News

Palos Vedres Urban Village has changed hands

Apparently a Beverly Hills based firm, Omninet Capital, bought the 2.4 acre site in June, and are taking over the project from San Pedran Gary Dwight. Janice Hahn is "shocked" by the change. Read about it in the Breeze.

Mojo to be Repaired

More like re-invented, is what it sounds like. So it's been broken for months (I told you so!), and the company that programmed the robotic arm component went bankrupt, so they're replacing the whole arm (who's paying for this?) to make it work again. I thought I saw it working once, but it was just a bag lady standing in the right spot, where the broken arm points to. Read about it in the Breeze.

Eastview Looks Gift Horse in the Mouth

I'm puzzled by this as well. Eastview Little League (a private sporting organization) has been offered long term use of a piece of public land, but they'd rather blow their money on improving Knoll Hill for what is supposed to be a brief, 3 year residency? If they're expecting sympathy again in 2011 when it's time to remove them from Knoll Hill, I don't think they're going to get it. Read about it in the Breeze.

LA Traffic Count Method Broken

Of interest to Ponte Vista traffic dislikers. Apparently the way the city calculates traffic created by new developments is based off of a multi city model that may have no real connection to the local reality. Your tax dollars at work! So I think for now the best estimate of traffic impact from developments is probably our collective local gut. Read about it in the Times.

Wilmington Raid Nets 43 Arrests

A little follow up on the raid on the East Side Pain Bloods set in Wilmington yesterday. Total arrests is 43, and there are property improvement lawsuits and even the seizure of the Catalina Motel to go along with the arrests.

An aside - "Officials called Tuesday's sweep an unprecedented example of financially strapped local and federal agencies working together, sharing intelligence and pooling their resources to combat the region's vast gang problem."

A brief rant - Financially strapped? What planet are these guys living on. There's no department more flush with cash, and almost totally unaccountable for its ridiculous legal expenses than the LAPD. The Department of Cultural Affairs has a $10 million budget and you guys have $2 billion to play with, you don't even know what strapped looks like.

Read about it in the Times.

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Massive Police Raid in Wilmington

Don't worry, the 400 police and agents aren't wasting our tax dollars shutting down Wilmington's taco trucks, it's a gang raid. The gang targeted is the 75 member Eastside Pain, who are centered around an area affectionately known as "Ghost Town." About 30 or so arrests were made.

Anyone know where Ghost Town is or anything about the Eastside Pain? I'm not familiar with either of them.

Daily Breeze coverage

LA Times coverage

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Friday, February 09, 2007

Have you seen this man?













As I think anyone with access to a TV or a newspaper is aware of, there's a major focus on gang activity in Los Angeles going on at the moment. Right now there's a three day summit going on to find new solutions to address the problem. The most concrete thing to come out of this for those of us in the Harbor Area is the attention that's being given to the 204th St. Gang in Harbor City, who have made the top 10 list for gangs to be targeted, largely because of the race motivated conflict that they've brought to their own neighborhood.

The LAPD has put out a list of their 10 most wanted gang members, which includes Mario Lemus, a.k.a. "Drek" (which means "Shit" in Yiddish, FYI), who's associated with Rancho San Pedro (side note - some googling dug up this blog post of San Pedro gang tags), and wanted for the October 15 murder of David Carl Franklin, who was beaten to death on the street.

Anyone with information on Lemus is urged to contact Harbor Area Homicide Detective at 310-522-2036. On weekends and during off-hours, call the 24-hour toll free number at 1-877-LAWFULL (1-877-529-3855).

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