Category: Los Angeles
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Los Angeles Mayor’s Race 2026: Crowded Field Emerges as Bass Seeks Second Term
Los Angeles is gearing up for a competitive mayoral race in 2026, with incumbent Karen Bass facing numerous challengers amid rising voter dissatisfaction over issues like homelessness and public safety. A diverse field of candidates, including Austin Beutner and celebrity Spencer Pratt, highlights the election’s volatility and critical focus on city governance.
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Reality TV Star Spencer Pratt Enters Los Angeles Mayor’s Race as Populist Outsider
Reality TV star Spencer Pratt has entered the 2026 Los Angeles mayoral race, positioning himself as a populist outsider fueled by wildfire anger, government failures, and frustration with City Hall’s response to disaster recovery.
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Plants, Power, and Accountability: What the Palisades Fire Really Exposed
The catastrophic Palisades Fire was not just the result of wind, drought, or climate change. Newly surfaced documents and litigation records raise troubling questions about California’s wildfire policies, empty reservoirs, and environmental rules that may have delayed aggressive suppression—turning a small, contained blaze into one of the most destructive urban fires in state history.
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Tiny Vernon Becomes an AI Powerhouse—And Shows What California Gets Right When It Gets Out of the Way
A tiny industrial city with just 200 residents has quietly become Southern California’s most important AI data-center hub. Vernon’s cheap power, minimal red tape, and lack of political resistance reveal what happens when California lets infrastructure—not ideology—lead economic growth.
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Steve Hilton Puts Spotlight on Child Sex Trafficking as 2026 Governor’s Race Heats Up
In California’s 2026 gubernatorial race, Republican candidate Steve Hilton highlights child sex trafficking, focusing on Los Angeles’ Figueroa Street. He critiques Democratic leadership for lax policies, particularly Senate Bill 357, and proposes aggressive reforms. Hilton’s campaign aims to raise awareness and challenge current leaders on child protection effectiveness, underscoring the urgency of the issue.
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When Courts Release the Manual but Not the Map
The article discusses the implications of California Rule 10.500 for public access to court records, particularly in the case of People v. Smiel. It highlights how the Los Angeles Superior Court’s transparency efforts, while disclosing training materials, still restrict structural access. This raises questions about the necessary level of transparency in digital justice systems.
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When Allegations Outlive the Case
The article explores the complexities of unresolved criminal allegations within California’s court system, particularly in the context of the ongoing case against Giselle Smiel, who faces felony charges. It highlights the challenges of dismissals and protective orders that, while indicating institutional concern, lack definitive adjudicated findings, raising questions about fairness and transparency in legal processes.
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Bizarre Plane Theft Attempt Ends With Cessna Crashing Into Hangar at Van Nuys Airport
A bizarre early-morning security breach at Van Nuys Airport ended with a stolen training plane slamming into a hangar wall — without ever taking off. While national headlines used dramatic language, local authorities say the incident was a ground-level theft attempt that raises new questions about security at one of the nation’s busiest general aviation…
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LA District Attorney Records Show Investigators Authorized to Wear “POLICE” Uniforms — With No Training or Oversight on Public Confusion
Public records show Los Angeles County District Attorney investigators are authorized to wear uniforms labeled “POLICE,” even as the agency confirms it has no written training, audits, or oversight addressing whether such attire could mislead the public. The disclosures raise new questions about transparency, authority, and due process in sensitive child-related investigations.
