A patch of undeveloped land in downtown Los Angeles is going viral on social media for some distressing messages seen from above, but police have confirmed that they found no illicit activity in the area.
Police say there is no evidence of trafficking or criminal activity after messages written with pipes and wood went viral on social media.
New projections show that between recruiting shortfalls and attrition, LAPD leaders expect to lose more than 150 officers in the coming fiscal year, leaving a force of about 8,620, which would be ...
Two officers from the Los Angeles Police Department were injured during a pursuit crash in South Los Angeles on Tuesday.
LAPD experience: Prior to this appointment, Lurie worked for the LAPD for 27 years, most recently serving as assistant commanding officer of West Bureau. According to an LAPD review of its own ...
The Warwick Police Department has started a campaign to help over 20 LAPD officers who have lost their homes and belongings in the wildfires that have ravaged southern
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power's CEO Janisse Quinones now has a 24/7 LAPD detail in response to the threats, the sources said. One LAPD source cited the recent shooting in New York of ...
LAS ANGELES -- The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said in an update Thursday that 18 people remain missing after the deadly Southern California wildfires. Authorities said they received a ...
LAUSD, the nation's second-largest school district, handed out "red cards" to students last week. The cards have information about people's rights if approached by an immigration officer.
The Los Angeles School Police Department (LASPD) will not “assist or engage in immigration compliance checks, immigration enforcement activity, or ICE related task force operations,” the agency said in a statement Tuesday night.
The Los Angeles fires have become the most devastating in American history, causing widespread destruction in the Pacific Palisades and the San Gabriel Valley. The state seized the moment to portray itself as a savior in a time of great need.
Police officers in California improperly accessed a state database of private information more than 7,000 times in 2023, according to a new report by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a digital rights and privacy advocacy group.