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Teamsters Stand with CA Food 4 Less Workers

CALIFORNIA — Teamsters Joint Council 42 June 18 voted unanimously to sanction a possible strike by over 6,000 Food 4 Less workers in California, represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union or UFCW.

Grocery workers at Kroger-owned Food 4 Less stores across California are fighting for the preservation of work, fair wages, and benefits and have authorized a strike if negotiations break down.

“We stand united with our UFCW brothers and sisters in the grocery industry, fighting for fair wages and a union contract,” said Chris Griswold, Teamsters Joint Council 42 president. “It’s a travesty that these companies, reaping unprecedented profits, choose to undermine the very people who made their success possible. The Teamsters will combat corporate greed in all its forms, and our members are ready to honor their picket lines if they choose to strike.”

“Their fight is our fight,” said Lou Villalvazo, Teamsters Local 630 secretary-treasurer and Teamsters Joint Council 42 southwest food-warehouse industry chairman. “Teamsters are gearing up as Food 4 Less/Ralphs is one of the many grocery employers we will negotiate with next year. These employers profited from the COVID-19 pandemic, making record profits to the point that their parent company, Kroger, was able to purchase their competitor, Albertsons, for $24.6 billion. Meanwhile, other chains like Smart & Final continue to exploit their workforce, disregarding labor and state laws. It’s crucial that Food 4 Less and all grocery chains take responsibility for their essential workers and the community by agreeing to a fair contract.”

The potential strike by the UFCW is a significant development in the ongoing unrest in the grocery industry. As grocery chains continue to report record profits and the cost of food escalates, the workers’ demands for fair wages and better working conditions are more pressing than ever.

Teamsters Joint Council 42 consists of 23 affiliated Teamsters Local Unions representing nearly 200,000 workers and retirees in Southern California, Southern Nevada, Guam, Saipan and Hawaii.

Israel’s New Air War in the West Bank: Nearly Half the Dead Are Children

Nearly 20 years after the Second Intifada, the Israeli military has resumed airstrikes in the West Bank — and killed 24 children.

The Intercept: by

https://theintercept.com/2024/06/12/israel-west-bank-airstrikes-drones-palestinians-killed-children/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Intercept%20Newsletter

AROUND 9:30 P.M. in late February, a white Mazda pulled up near a game cafe in the Jenin refugee camp on the northern edge of the West Bank, where a crowd of boys and young men often gathered to socialize.

As the car stopped, a few people walked by on the narrow street. Two motorbikes weaved past in different directions. “Everything was fine at the time,” according to an eyewitness sitting nearby in the camp’s main square.

Then the car erupted in a ball of flame. Two missiles fired from an Israeli drone had hit the Mazda in quick succession, as shown in a video the Israeli Air Force posted that night.

According to the IAF, the strike killed Yasser Hanoun, described as “a wanted terrorist.”

But Hanoun was not the only fatality: 16-year old Said Raed Said Jaradat, who was near the vehicle when it was hit, sustained shrapnel wounds all over his body, according to documentation collected by Defense for Children International-Palestine. He died from his injuries at 1 a.m. the next morning.

Jaradat is one of 24 children killed in Israel’s airstrikes on the West Bank since last summer, when the Israeli forces began deploying drones, planes, and helicopters to carry out attacks in the occupied territory for the first time in decades.

With 37 bombings, helicopter gunship attacks, or drone strikes, the Israeli military’s air campaign has killed 55 Palestinians, including 24 children. Map illustration: Fei Liu

The world’s attention has been on the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which has killed at least 36,000 people — including more than 15,000 children — and prompted accusations of genocide from U.N. officials and at the International Court of Justice. In the name of eliminating Hamas in retaliation for the attacks in October, the Israeli military action in the Gaza Strip continues.

But Israel has also transformed its tactics in the West Bank. Since June of last year, and with increasing regularity during the Gaza offensive, the Israel Defense Forces have shown a new willingness to use air power in the West Bank, regardless of the collateral damage to children and other civilians caught in the blasts.

An open-source Intercept investigation documented at least 37 Israeli airstrikes, drone strikes, and attacks by helicopter gunships in the West Bank since June 2023, which have killed 55 Palestinians, according to the United Nations. Most attacks struck densely populated urban areas and refugee camps in Jenin, Tulkarem, and Nablus, all in the northern part of the West Bank.

The Israeli military repeatedly stated on social media that the strikes were carried out to kill terrorists. But this investigation identified a different pattern: Nearly half of the people killed in the strikes were children.

Some of the children killed were throwing homemade explosives at Israeli troops, or were close to armed men when they were killed. Many were unarmed and uninvolved in any confrontations. Their ages ranged from 11 to 17.

The database of attacks was compiled using information published by news outlets, the Negotiations Affairs Department of the State of Palestine, and the Israeli military. The determination of whether children were killed in the process is based on publicly available information and documentation gathered by Defense for Children International-Palestine. The Israeli military did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the findings of this investigation.

“The Israeli military is far more concerned about protecting the lives of its soldiers than it is with protecting the lives of civilians.”

Many of these strikes are part of a broader Israeli campaign of targeted killings: assassinations of individuals by Israeli forces that, despite the name, often kill people who happen to be near the target at the time of the strike. Targeted killings, and these aerial attacks more broadly, are considered by some experts to be likely violations of international law.

“One of the things this says, which is not particularly surprising, is that the Israeli military is far more concerned about protecting the lives of its soldiers than it is with protecting the lives of civilians who may be killed when they drop bombs from the sky,” said Yousef Munayyer, head of the Palestine/Israel program and senior fellow at the Arab Center Washington DC.

THE AIRSTRIKES BEGAN last June.

Ashraf Morad Mahmoud Al-Sa’di, 15, was killed by a drone strike — the first fatal strike documented in the West Bank since the Second Intifada — alongside two young Palestinian men in agricultural lands close to the Al-Jalameh military checkpoint, near the wall between Israel and the occupied territories. According to documentation collected by DCI-P, Al-Sa’di and the two men opened fire at Israeli military vehicles, and were later killed by a drone strike in their car.

After October 7, however, the pace of the airstrikes accelerated. Eight children, ages 11 to 17, were among over a dozen people killed in a series of drone, helicopter, and plane attacks on Jenin and the Nur Shams refugee camp late that month. In November, four children, ages 12 to 16, were killed over the course of seven drone strikes across the West Bank. On December 12, a strike killed a 17-year-old who was standing near three armed men.

Some of the children killed in the first months of airstrikes were described as armed or throwing homemade explosives at Israeli soldiers carrying out raids into the West Bank, according to DCI-P documentation. In other cases, what the children were doing in the moments before their death is unclear and could not be confirmed by DCI-P.

But in the waning days of 2023, two children — unarmed, uninvolved — were also targeted and killed by an Israeli drone strike.

The strike took place on December 27, during an Israeli raid on Nur Shams camp, one of 48 raids across the West Bank that day. While the Israeli forces destroyed parts of a kindergarten building, Palestinian fighters confronted them. In the words of the Israeli Air Force, “A terrorist squad was identified that threw explosives at the forces, and an Air Force aircraft attacked the squad.” Six people were killed, and another six were injured.

Hamza Ahmad Mostafa Hmaid, 16, and Ahmad Abdulrahman Issa Saleh, 17, were among the dead. Hmaid and Saleh had not been a part of the group confronting Israeli soldiers, DCI-P reported.

They would not be the last unarmed, uninvolved children to die from an Israeli missile strike. On January 7, Wadea Yaser Hasan Asous, 17, was killed by a drone-fired missile near Jenin. Israeli forces were withdrawing after a raid when a group of Palestinians confronted them with explosives, according to documentation gathered by DCI-P. After the Israeli vehicles left the area, an Israeli drone fired on a different group of Palestinians, including Asous, who were sitting around a fire near an all-night cafe. Seven Palestinians, including four brothers, were killed in the attack.

Later in January, a drone strike during a raid on the Tulkarem refugee camp killed three Palestinian boys, all aged 17. The boys were walking near an armed young man, according to DCI-P, but were themselves unarmed and were not participating in confrontations. Seven other people, including three paramedics, were injured in the raid.

The airstrikes have not let up. In the February strike on the white Mazda, 16-year-old Jaradat was fatally injured. On a single night in March, five individuals were killed in drone strikes in Jenin and Tulkarem.

A total of six children have been killed this year to date in aerial attacks in the West Bank, as documented by DCI-P. In the latest attack, on June 6, an IDF helicopter carried out strikes during a raid in Jenin. The gunship’s missiles did not kill, but Israeli forces shot and killed three Palestinians, including one child, in the raid.

Bombs and missiles don’t only kill; they also maim those nearby. After an airstrike on Jenin last fall that sent roughly 20 people to the hospital, Doctors Without Borders, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières, or MSF, published an account of the scene. “Patients had lost their limbs, lost their legs,” said Dr. Elma Wong, an anesthetist with the group. “Lots of shrapnel injuries, which meant a piece of metal [went] into the chest, into the abdomen, into the head.” Two patients didn’t survive.

The Israeli military has intensified its ground campaign in the West Bank since October 2023, hitting a peak of nearly 1,500 raids in December. Graph: Fei Liu

Israel’s reintroduction of air attacks in the West Bank comes alongside the intensification of land incursions, also called raids. In the year before October 2023, Israeli forces launched an average of 600 raids per month in the occupied territories. In the months since, raids have ratcheted up to over 1,000 per month. Israeli soldiers and settlers in the West Bank killed 507 Palestinians — including 121 children — in 2023, according to DCI-P, making last year the deadliest for Palestinians in the West Bank since 2005, when the U.N. started recording casualties.

THE ISRAELI MILITARY last regularly used air power in the West Bank during the Second Intifada, which lasted from September 2000 to February 2005, often in pursuit of assassinations, or targeted killings.

“The marriage of combat helicopters with special ground forces has become our ‘dream team’ for targeted killing operations,” remarked an Israeli general in 2003. By January 2005, media and defense sources reported over 550 attacks by the IAF on Palestinian targets.

These targeted killings weren’t only deadly for those targeted. According to B’Tselem, a Jerusalem-based human rights nonprofit, targeted assassinations killed 103 Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem during the Second Intifada. Just over 75 percent of those killed were the targets; the rest were collateral damage.

At the time, the U.S. government vocally opposed these killings, referring to them explicitly as assassinations. “The United States government is very clearly on the record as against targeted assassinations,” said U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk in July 2001, on Israeli broadcast television.

Today, as the targeted killings continue, the State Department did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the current U.S. position on such killings or on the Israeli forces’ use of air power in the West Bank.

“The doubt with Israel is that there has been so much impunity for Israeli violations, that nobody trusts such a process.”

In 2006, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled that targeted killings in the West Bank and Gaza had to be investigated after the fact to determine whether the killings met proportionality and targeting norms, but recent scholarship has questioned the “composition, objectivity, and independence” of the committees carrying out these investigations. “The doubt with Israel is that there has been so much impunity for Israeli violations, that nobody trusts such a process,” Ben Saul, the U.N. special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights, told The Intercept.

Several factors have contributed to this new wave of airstrikes in the West Bank. In part, they’re the result of an evolution in military tactics by both Israeli and Palestinian combatants.

This campaign marks Israel’s first use of armed drones in the West Bank since the Second Intifada — and the first time the IDF is announcing its use of drone strikes in the West Bank as they happen on social media. The IDF used drones to assassinate militants in Gaza in the intervening years, according to leaked documents, but until 2022, the government actively censored mentions of their use in the Israeli press.

Israeli Raids in the West Bank Push Palestinians to Brink Again

Palestinian fighters’ have adopted more ambush tactics and deployed more improvised explosive devices in response to Israeli military raids in the West Bank in recent years, which Munayyer said could account for the new prominence of air power. In years past, “there were tactical ways in which the military could go into even densely populated refugee camps, conduct raids, and be able to do that with an acceptable degree of risk to their troops,” he said. “With the introduction of ambushes and improvised explosives as developed tactics, that started to change.”

Other researchers trace the recent surge in West Bank airstrikes to the failure of the Palestinian Authority — the government that has partial control over the West Bank, which is distinct from Gaza’s elected Hamas leadership — to tamp down on militant activity in the West Bank. After a January strike in Balata refugee camp, Seth J. Frantzman, an adjunct fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and analyst at the Jerusalem Post, wrote that “increased activity from groups such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad have led Israel to be more aggressive in its campaigns.”

Israel’s War on Gaza

ISRAEL HAS DECLARED that the law of armed conflict governs its use of lethal force in the West Bank, whether that force comes from the barrel of a gun or the blast of a bomb.

In the same 2006 ruling that called for investigations of targeted strikes, Israel’s Supreme Court determined that the international laws of war applied to Israel’s actions in the West Bank, since Israel and Palestinian militant groups were in continuous armed conflict in the occupied territories.

But many experts say that international human rights law applies instead of — or in addition to — the laws of armed conflict. In this view, which casts Israeli forces in the role of law enforcement officers, rather than combatants in a war, the use of force is only allowable as a last resort to protect the life of an officer or others from immediate serious injury or death.

Ido Rosenzweig — director of cyber, belligerencies, and terrorism Research at the Minerva Center for the Rule of Law Under Extreme Conditions at Israel’s Haifa University — said that he believed a law enforcement situation could escalate into an armed conflict situation on the spot, changing the legal paradigm in real time. “Targeted killing on its own is not illegal,” he said. “It has to be done according to laws of armed conflict.”

Saul, the U.N. special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights, said that the dominant view is that humanitarian law applies in conjunction with international human rights law in the West Bank. “Israel’s international human rights law obligations apply extraterritorially in occupied territory, even though Israel rejects that,” Saul said.

Israel has obligations under the Geneva Conventions as an occupying power and under international human rights law to not use lethal force in policing situations, said Brian Castner, senior crisis adviser and weapons investigator at Amnesty International, unless it is used as a last resort to protect the life of the officer or others from immediate serious injury or death. “This is a very high standard, as spelled out in the UN Basic Principles on Policing,” Castner said.

Another expert said the strikes are likely a violation of international law. Öykü Irmakkesen, a legal consultant at Diakonia International Humanitarian Law Centre in Jerusalem, commented in writing that the law enforcement regime under international human rights law governs all operations of the Israeli security forces. “It is thus extremely unlikely that the air and drone strikes targeting individuals are in compliance with Israel’s obligations under international law,” she commented.

IN THE MIDDLE of the night last November, an explosion rocked the center of the Balata refugee camp near Nablus. The camp is a densely packed place, built in 1950 to shelter 5,000 refugees. It now houses approximately 30,000 people.

The homes in Balata are so close together that most of them receive no direct sunlight, said Ibrahim, a camp resident and staff member of a community center who asked to only be identified by his first name.

The Israeli drone strike targeted a building in the center of the camp that functioned as the local headquarters for Fatah, the political party that exercises partial control over the West Bank (and has fought armed conflicts of its own against Hamas). The building was destroyed, and five people died, including 14-year-old Mohammad Musa Mohammad Msaimi.

“People woke up with a shock,” Ibrahim said, and emerged from their rooms to find that seven or eight of the homes near the targeted building were damaged to the point that they were deemed unsuitable for habitation. The inhabitants of the damaged homes were forced to move in with family members or rent elsewhere in the camp.

Repairing a home or renting a new one is out of reach for most residents of Balata. The economic situation there was difficult before October 7, with unemployment rates at 17 percent. But it has only worsened since. The camp’s residents who previously worked on the Israeli side of the 1949 armistice lines are now blocked from doing so, after Israel indefinitely paused Palestinian workers’ permits in the wake of the October 7 attacks. “It’s a complete closure,” said Ibrahim.

The displacement and destruction Ibrahim described in Balata is playing out across the West Bank. “The new level of violence by the Israeli army in the West Bank, specifically targeting refugee camps, has resulted in a large amount of internal displacement,” said Aseel Baidoun, acting director of advocacy and campaigns at Medical Aid for Palestinians. “The camps are becoming more and more uninhabitable.”

While largely unseen compared to physical damage, air and drone strikes have a devastating psychological effect. A psychosocial specialist from Nablus, who requested to remain anonymous for security reasons, grapples with the increase in violence personally and professionally. Every morning, her son asks the same questions: “Is everything normal? Are we going to school?” The answer to those questions depends on if there was a strike, a raid, or any other events in Nablus overnight.

At the nonprofit where she works, the need for psychosocial and financial support has increased significantly. The nonprofit provides sessions with social workers and psychologists to disadvantaged families in Nablus. It used to serve around 70 families. Since October 7, their work has ballooned to serve over 100 beneficiaries. She’s seen new behavioral issues in children and an increase in attachment issues across generations.

For older generations, the strikes are a reminder of previous conflicts. “A lot of people are used to that from the First Intifada and the Second Intifada,” she said. For children, it’s a different story. “It’s a new thing for the new generation. It’s unexpected and very scary for them.”

Community-based organizations in Tulkarem and Jenin have reported an increased demand for mental health and psychosocial support services, said Baidoun of Medical Aid for Palestinians. “The almost weekly attacks, invasions, airstrikes, and bombings are having a huge negative impact on people’s mental health.”

Long Beach Briefs: POLB Sets $760M Budget and City Auditor Delivers Message

Port of Long Beach Sets $760 Million Annual Budget

The Long Beach Board of Harbor Commissioners have approved a $760 million budget for the Port of Long Beach for the 2025 fiscal year, establishing a plan to fund new capital improvements in rail, zero-emissions and other infrastructure.

Later this year, the budget will be sent for approval to the Long Beach City Council. It includes a record $25.8 million transfer to the City’s Tidelands Operating Fund, which supports quality-of-life projects along Long Beach’s seven-mile coastline that have improved shoreline safety, cleanliness, water quality, facilities and other amenities.

The port’s budgeted spending for the 2025 fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1, is 19.5% higher than the budget adopted last year. The increase is largely due to infrastructure projects like the Pier B On-Dock Rail Support Facility, which breaks ground this year, and the proposed Pier Wind. If approved, Pier Wind would be the nation’s largest facility specifically designed to assemble offshore wind turbines.

Operating revenue is estimated to be 6.8% higher than last year’s budget.

Next year’s proposed capital budget totals $368.3 million, 47.2% higher than the prior year. Of the sum, $204.9 million is for the Pier B project, which will break ground this summer. Pier B will shift more cargo to “on-dock rail,” where containers are taken to and from marine terminals by trains. Moving cargo by on-dock rail is cleaner and more efficient, as it reduces truck traffic. No cargo trucks would visit the facility. The Port of Long Beach maintains one of the most comprehensive seaport infrastructure programs in the nation.

Also included in the budget is approximately $25 million in Clean Truck Fund subsidies to support the transition of the heavy-duty truck fleet to zero emissions. The Port of Long Beach has twin goals of a zero-emissions cargo-handling fleet by 2030 and zero-emissions trucking by 2035. Additionally, during the board’s action, the amount allocated for the community sponsorship program was increased from $2 million to $3 million. The sponsorship program helps the Port of Long Beach engage with and inform local community members about port operations and initiatives.

 

Message from LB City Auditor Laura Doud

The City of Long Beach derives revenue from oil and gas operations including various taxes and fees through 14 oil operators with over 2,700 wells. This revenue funds services and projects that safeguard the environment, improve infrastructure, enhance beaches and keep residents safe.

The city recently released a report that found it is projected to have a decline in oil revenue up to $301 million by 2035 due to oil production decline and the potential passage of Senate Bill 1137 (SB1137).

The report forecasts a 54% decrease in oil revenue to $26 million by 2035 due to the natural oil production decline of 6% annually which is expected until the oil field may generally cease production for economic reasons.

With the anticipated decline in oil production and revenue, the city needs alternative strategies to bridge the revenue shortfall for capital projects, public safety operations, and all other essential city services that residents rely upon.

Details: View the report here: https://tinyurl.com/Climate-Transition-Impact

State Endorses Land Return Effort to Shasta Indian Nation

 

SACRAMENTO – On the 5th anniversary of the state’s apology to California Native American peoples, Gov. Gavin Newsom June 18 announced the state’s support for the return of over 2,800 acres of ancestral land to the Shasta Indian Nation. This return is one of the largest in state history and part of the state’s ongoing efforts to right the historical wrongs committed against the Native communities of California.

Click to see a video recap of the Governor’s meeting with leaders of the Shasta Indian Nation.

Earlier in June, Gov. Newsom visited the Klamath River dam removal project, the largest river restoration project in American history that will rehabilitate over 300 miles of salmon habitats, and discussed the ancestral land return with leaders of the Shasta Indian Nation.

With the support of the state, the Shasta Indian Nation is pursuing the transfer of 2,820.860 acres of “Parcel B” lands associated with the dams.

“The Shasta Indian Nation is pleased with the Governor’s decision to support the return of our ancestral lands and sacred sites. Having access to our ceremonial sites, including the site of our First Salmon Ceremony, is critical to the spiritual and emotional health of our people. The ceremony has not taken place since the lands were taken by eminent domain for the construction of Copco dam over 100 years ago. This is transformative and the beginning of restorative justice for our people,” said Shasta Indian Nation Chairperson Janice Crowe. “We welcome the opportunity to steward our ancestral lands in a manner consistent with tribal values and incorporating tribal ecological knowledge. Land return also allows us to educate the public by completing the Shasta Heritage Trail that incorporates Native art in the design along with informational placards that share the history of Shasta people from Kikacéki.”

When Gov. Newsom officially apologized on behalf of the State of California to California Native American peoples five years ago – on the future site of the California Indian Heritage Center – he also announced the creation of the California Truth and Healing Council. Through collaborative and consultative work of the council, the Governor’s office of tribal affairs, and tribes across the state, the state has developed a number of programs and initiatives, including:

New Lawsuit Against LAUSD Challenging Surveillance App

 

The Stop LAPD Spying Coalition and Students Deserve have filed a public records lawsuit against the Los Angeles Unified School District or LAUSD challenging LAUSD’s secrecy around the development of Los Angeles Schools Anonymous Reporting or LASAR app, a phone app that deputizes “the Los Angeles school community to anonymously report suspicious activity, mental health incidents, drug consumption, drug trafficking, vandalism, and safety issues.”

LASAR was launched in March 2023 and met with wide community opposition. Much of this concern has focused on the app expanding surveillance and criminalization of students rather than investing in resources that may improve student safety and wellbeing more directly. In September 2023, the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition filed a public records request with LAUSD about the development of the app. LAUSD has refused to disclose any of the requested records, in violation of the California Public Records Act and the California Constitution.

Along with filing this lawsuit, the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition have released an open letter on behalf of many community organizations condemning the harms of this app. Other signatories on the open letter include Disability Rights California, Children’s Defense Fund-California, ACLU Southern California, Legacy LA, and the Youth Justice Coalition.

Much is shrouded in secrecy about LAUSD’s development of this app and the relationship between the district and the tech company they have contracted to build it, Kokomo Solutions LLC, including what access this and other technology companies will have to students’ data. This lawsuit seeks to uncover this and other details about the app’s development, funding, privacy protections, and impact.

The Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, a community group founded in 2011 that researches and advocates against police surveillance technologies, and Students Deserve, a community group comprised of students, teachers, and parents that researches and advocates against criminalization and policing in Los Angeles schools, are suing the district for these records.

Officer-Involved Shooting Occured on Long Beach Boulevard

 

The Long Beach Police Department is investigating an officer-involved shooting which occurred on June 16.

At about 8:55 p.m., officers were dispatched to an apartment building with multiple calling parties reporting a woman with a gun in the 1000 block of Long Beach Boulevard. Upon arrival, officers located the female adult suspect who was armed with a firearm. She went into her residence.

At one point, she opened the door and pointed the firearm towards officers, which resulted in an officer-involved shooting. The suspect then barricaded herself inside her residence.

SWAT responded to the scene and attempted to deescalate the situation. After about four hours of unsuccessful attempts to contact her, SWAT officers deployed gas. The suspect then surrendered and was taken into custody.

The suspect sustained a gunshot wound to the upper body. Long Beach Fire Department personnel transported the suspect to a local hospital for medical clearance prior to booking, where she was listed stable condition.

Officers recovered a replica firearm.

No officers were injured. No other injuries were reported.
Homicide detectives responded to the scene and were equipped with body-worn cameras. LBPD is in the process of reviewing the footage and will make that available to the public as soon as possible.

As with all officer-involved shooting incidents, the department will be conducting a full and thorough multi-level review of the incident. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office will conduct an independent investigation of the incident, as they do with all officer-involved shootings that result in injury or death.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is urged to contact Homicide Detectives Eric Thai or Kelsey Myers at 562-570-7244 or anonymously at 1-800-222-8477; www.lacrimestoppers.org.

 

Public Health Responds to Privacy Breach

Between Feb. 19, 2024, and Feb. 20, 2024, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health experienced a phishing attack in which a hacker was able to gain log-in credentials of 53 Public Health employees through a phishing email, compromising the personal information of more than 200,000 individuals.

Upon discovery of the phishing attack, Public Health disabled the impacted email accounts, reset and re-imaged the user’s device(s), blocked websites that were identified as part of the phishing campaign and quarantined all suspicious incoming emails. Additionally, awareness notifications were distributed to all workforce members to remind them to be vigilant when reviewing emails, especially those including links or attachments. Law enforcement was notified upon discovery of the phishing attack, and they investigated the incident.

The information identified in the potentially compromised email accounts may have included DPH clients/employees/other individuals’ first and last name, date of birth, diagnosis, prescription, medical record number/patient ID, Medicare/Med-Cal number, health insurance information, Social Security Number, and other financial information.

Affected individuals may have been impacted differently and not all of the elements listed were present for each individual.

Public Health is notifying impacted individuals by mail. For individuals where a mailing address is not available, Public Health is also posting a notice on its website to provide information and resources. Public Health is also notifying the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights and other agencies as required by law and/or contract.

In response, Public Health has implemented numerous enhancements to reduce exposure to similar email attacks in the future.

While Public Health cannot confirm whether information has been accessed or misused, individuals are encouraged to review the content and accuracy of the information in their medical record with their medical provider. To help relieve concerns and restore confidence following this incident, Public Health secured the services of Kroll, a global leader in risk mitigation and response, to provide identity monitoring for one year at no cost to affected clients.

Additionally, affected individuals should review “Steps You Can Take to Protect Against Identity Theft and Fraud,” to help protect their information.

Individuals that would like to inquire if their information was impacted can contact the following established dedicated call center available toll free in the U.S. at 1-866-898-4312, from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pacific Time (excluding weekends and major U.S. holidays).

Murder Investigation – LA River and Long Beach Boulevard

 

Homicide detectives are investigating the murder of a male adult that occurred June 15 in the area of the Los Angeles River and Long Beach Boulevard.

At about 8:50 a.m., officers were dispatched to an encampment in the area of the Los Angeles River and Long Beach Boulevard, regarding a stabbing.

Upon arrival, officers located a male adult victim with a stab wound to the upper body.

Officers rendered medical aid until being relieved by Long Beach Fire Department personnel, who arrived at the scene and determined the victim deceased.

Homicide detectives responded to the scene to investigate the incident. Through their preliminary investigation, detectives determined the victim and a male adult suspect engaged in a verbal altercation, which escalated when the suspect stabbed the victim. The motive for the stabbing is still under investigation.

The suspect fled the scene before officers arrived.

The identity of the victim is being withheld pending notification of the next of kin by the Los Angeles County Department of the Medical Examiner.

Anyone with information regarding the incident is urged to contact Homicide Detectives, Ethan Shear or Chasen Contreras 562-570-7244 or anonymously at 800-222-8477www.LACrimeStoppers.org

Ten New Mpox Cases Reported in Los Angeles County in Past Two Weeks

Public Health is alerting residents and health care providers about a concerning increase in mpox cases, with 10 new cases reported in Los Angeles County in the past two weeks up from an average of less than two cases per week during the preceding several weeks.

Mpox (previously referred to as Monkeypox) is mainly spread through close contact with body fluids, sores, shared bedding or clothing or respiratory droplets (kissing, coughing, sneezing). Symptoms include rash or unusual sores that look like pimples or blisters on the face, body and genitals, fever, chills, headache, muscle aches or swelling of lymph nodes. Early detection, testing and vaccination are vital to controlling the spread of this disease and protecting the health of Los Angeles County residents.

Given the recent increase in cases, Public Health recommends the following actions:

Testing: Anyone who develops symptoms consistent with mpox, such as rash, fever or swollen lymph nodes should seek medical attention and get tested. Health care providers should be aware of the possibility of mpox and promptly report suspected cases to Public Health for appropriate testing and interventions.

Prevention: Vaccination is an important tool in preventing the spread of mpox. Jynneos is a two-dose vaccine developed to protect against mpox, and getting both doses provides the best protection against mpox. The vaccine is available to anyone, and individuals who identify with any of the following subgroups are highly encouraged to get vaccinated:

  • Any man or transgender person who has sex with men or transgender persons
  • Persons of any gender or sexual orientation who have sex or intimate physical contact with others in association with a large public event or engage in commercial and/or transactional sex
  • Persons living with HIV, especially persons with uncontrolled or advanced HIV disease
  • Sexual partners of people in any of the above groups

People in high-risk groups are urged to get fully vaccinated with two doses for the best protection. Second doses can be given no matter how long it’s been since the first dose. Residents can choose to receive the mpox vaccine subcutaneously (in the upper arm) or intradermally (under the skin on their arm or back). Vaccine boosters are not recommended at this time.

Public Health is collaborating with health care providers, community organizations and other stakeholders to address the mpox resurgence. Enhanced surveillance, contact tracing and outbreak investigations are underway to identify potential sources of the infection and prevent further transmission. Public Health’s mobile vaccination units are providing free vaccination at numerous Pride events this season, Public Health’s sexual health clinics found at http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/chs/sexualhealthclinics/ and other walk-up vaccine clinics can be found at https://myturn.ca.gov/.

Details:1-833-540-0473; ph.lacounty.gov/mpox

Joe Orton’s “Loot”: For Farce Fans Only

Typically, if a play has “a farce” attached to it as a sort of subtitle — as is the case with Long Beach Playhouse’s production of Joe Orton’s Loot — I’ll avoid it. Facial elements, okay. But as a genre? Pass.

But Joe Orton, Joe Orton…why do I know that name? Didn’t I read one of his plays as an undergrad? (Yes, What the Butler Saw — no recollection.) Oh, and didn’t Gary Oldman play him in a film I saw way back when? (Prick Up Your Ears — no recollection.) Maybe I should give this one a shot so at least I can stop going, “Joe Orton, Joe Orton…why do I know that name?”

Well, I was warned: Loot is a farce through and through. But if you have a taste for that sort of thing, Long Beach Playhouse is serving up a dish that should go down easy.

Mrs. McLeavy has just died, her body lying in a coffin in the family home. As they await the hearse that will bring her to her final resting place, bereaved Mr. McLeavy (Rick Reischman) is comforted by Fay (Roxy Payne), who’s hanging around despite the completion of her nursing duties. She’s got designs on McLeavy’s money, you see; it’s a road she’s been down before. But her machinations are interrupted by her would-be stepson, Hal (Jack Loeprich), who is curiously amused by a newspaper account of an overnight bank robbery that occurred next door to the funeral parlor owned by the family of his pal Dennis (Ronan Walsh). But with the arrival of Inspector Truscott (Noah Wagner) from the “Water Department” (wink wink), the jigs may be up.

While Loot still qualifies as irreverent — Orton’s got the hypocrisies of family, religion, and law enforcement in his crosshairs and has all guns blazing from start to finish — what may have seemed shocking in mid-’60s England is old hat today. But that’s a separate question from whether it’s any fun — the play’s main point then and now.

The answer to that comes down to whether you like your comedy quasi-absurdist, sans depth or subtlety, and coming so fast and furious that often every line is a joke. If you do, director Allen Sewell has a cast capable of batting around the ping-pongish dialog competently — and the rhythm here is half the battle. But the biggest laughs probably come from Roxy Payne’s reactions (facial gestures, body movements — she gives good shrug). Maybe Sewell has her draw from this well a bit too often, but it’s easy to see why.

There’s not much to Loot, so there’s not much to say. There are plays one might refer to as “farce” that transcend the genre; Loot ain’t that. But if this sort of thing tickles your fancy, Long Beach Playhouse can probably give you a fun night out.

Loot at Long Beach Playhouse
Times: Fri–Sat 8:00 p.m., Sun 2:00 p.m.
The show runs through July 6.
Cost: $20 to $30
Details: (562) 494-1014; LBplayhouse.org
Venue: Long Beach Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach