Tuesday, October 14, 2025
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What’s on the Ballot?

Candidate Endorsements

President and Vice President

Joseph R. Biden (Dem)

Kamala D. Harris

RLn recommends a NO Vote on Trump. Is there really another choice?


United States Congress

District 28 — Los Angeles County

Rep. Adam B. Schiff* (Dem) — RLn Endorsed. Schiff did a great job with impeachment.

District 29–San Fernando Valley

Coin toss

Rep. Tony Cardenas* (Dem)

Angélica María Dueñas (Dem)

District 33–Los Angeles County

Rep. Ted Lieu* (Dem) —RLn Endorsed

District 43–Los Angeles County

Rep. Maxine Waters* (Dem) —RLn Endorsed

District 44 — Los Angeles County

Rep. Nanette Barragán* (Dem) —RLn Endorsed

District 47–Los Angeles County

Rep. Alan Lowenthal* (Dem) —RLn Endorsed


State Assembly

District 64 — Carson

Coin Toss

Assemblymember Mike Gipson* (Dem)

Fatima S. Iqbal-Zubair (Dem)

District 66–Rolling Hills Estates

Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi* (Dem) —RLn Endorsed. His opponent is rightwing extremist Arthur Schaper.

District 70– Long Beach

Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell* (Dem) —RLn Recommend


State Senate

District 24

Sen. Maria Elena Durazo —RLn Recommends

District 33

Sen. Lena A. Gonzalez —RLn Recommends

District 34

Sen. Tom Umberg —RLn Recommends

District 35

Sen. Steven Bradford —RLn Recommends


Superior Court Judges

Office 72

Myanna Dellinger —RLn Recommends

Office 80

Klint James McKay —RLn Recommends

Office 162

Caree Harper —RLn Recommends


Los Angeles District Attorney

George Gascon —RLn Recommends


El Camino College District Board of Trustees:

Ken Brown —RLn Recommends


Los Angeles Unified School Board

District No. 1

Dr. George McKenna III*—RLn Recommends

District No. 3

Coin Toss

Scott Mark Schmerelson* (School Board Member)

Marilyn Koziatek (School Programs Director)

District No. 5

Jackie Goldberg* —RLn Endorsed

District No. 7

Patricia Castellanos (Workforce Deputy/Parent) —RLn Endorsed


Long Beach City Council Election

Council District 2

Cindy Allen —RLn Recommends

Council District 6

Coin Toss

Councilmember Dee Andrews *

Suely Saro

Council District 8

Coin Toss

Councilmember Al Austin II *

Tunua Thrash-Ntuk


City of Carson Mayoral Election

No RLn recommendations

When the final tally of votes has been counted, the citizens of Carson who now live in newly formed districts will already have elected their new mayor and city council members. Whether those district boundaries remain as they are remains to be seen given the broad dissatisfaction with how the city approved those boundaries. It is gratifying to see new blood and new talent rise up to take on the city’s civic affairs. We look forward to seeing a new generation of leaders take the reins in the coming election cycles. With some trepidation, Random Lengths News won’t be endorsing any candidate for any office in Carson this cycle due to our belief that the city’s incumbents with their collective experience will be able to guide the city through this new phase in its evolution.

Mayor Albert Robles *

Councilman Jim Dear

Councilwoman Lula Davis Homes

Ana Meni


Carson City Council District 1

Councilmember Jawane Hilton*

Elito Santarina

Vincent Kim

Charles Thomas


Carson City Council District 3

Councilmember Cedric Hicks*

Brandi Williams-Murdock

Daniel Valdez


Lomita City Council (At large Election)

No RLn recommendations

Brenda L. Stephens

Barry M. Waite

William D. Uphoff

Robert Bohi

Kevin N. Torrez


Los Angeles Community College District Board of Trustees

Seat 1

Andra Hoffman* —RLn Recommends

Seat 3

Robert Payne —RLn Endorsed

Seat 5

Nichelle M. Henderson —RLn Recommend

Seat 7

Nancy Pearlman —RLn Endorsed

*Incumbent


California General Election Ballot Measures

State Propositions

Proposition 14

Vote YES on Proposition 14 to continue the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, or CIRM, a state agency that has distributed a significant source of funding to scientific research programs and enterprises across the state, both nonprofit and for-profit.

Why voting YES on Prop. 14 matters:

Funding from the CIRM has been available for 15 years, and ending the program could limit research programs in areas that include central nervous system and brain conditions, but also immunotherapy trials, cancer research and vision-loss research currently funded by the CIRM.

In 2018 (the last year it was fully funded), CIRM-funded companies raised more than $1 billion from outside investors; a sign of validation not just for the companies and their therapies, but also for CIRM and its judgment.

Stem cell research could lead to groundbreaking medical treatments, which we need more than ever in the face of COVID-19.

CIRM has changed its policies for those who receive CIRM funding through an academic or nonprofit institution to require project proposals to address considerations of racial, ethnic, sex and gender diversity, which is an important step in remedying past inequities in medical research. It is important to note that this policy change does not appear to apply to for-profit entities funded by the CIRM.


Proposition 15 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 15 to provide between $6.4 billion to $11.5 billion in additional funding to local schools and governments. 

Why voting YES on Prop. 15 matters:

California public schools continue to be underfunded and communities of color continue to be impacted the most. Prop. 15 is a way to invest in our communities without having to raise taxes on small businesses, renters and homeowners. In light of the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic fallout, California needs this funding from corporations who have not been paying their fair share of taxes.

California ranked 41st (with adjusted cost of living) out of all states and Washington, D.C. in spending per k-12 student (California Budget & Policy Center). 

California is ranked 51st in three categories: number of k-12 students per teacher, number of k-12 students per guidance counselor, and number of k-12 students per librarian (National Education Association / National Center for Education Statistics).


Proposition 16 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 16 to repeal 1996’s Prop 209 and reinstate affirmative action in the state.

Why voting YES on Prop. 16 matters:

It is time that California follows the other 42 states that have taken gender, race, ethnicity and national origin into account for college admissions and hiring in government and public agencies.

Prop 209’s affirmative action ban resulted in annual losses of more than $820 million every year in Minority-and Women-Owned Business Enterprise Program contracts with the state of California.

Reports conclude that the percentage of contracts granted to the program never returned to pre-Prop. 209 levels. Restoring affirmative action is the next step in building a more equitable and diverse future for California.

The University of California’s analysis of Prop. 209 revealed that affirmative action had increased the population of underrepresented students by at least 12%, with the largest effects seen at UCLA and UC Berkeley.


Proposition 17 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 17 to restore voting rights to Californians on parole. 

Why voting YES on Prop. 17 matters:

California is one of the 31 states that do not automatically restore voting rights upon completion of a person’s sentence. In Maine and Vermont, there are no laws that disenfranchise and discriminate against people with criminal convictions even when they’re still serving out their sentences.

Parolees who are reintegrating into society resume other civic responsibilities, such as paying taxes and jury duty. Being barred from voting while paying taxes is taxation without representation.

In 2017, black Californians made up 28% of all prison populations despite only making up 6% of California’s total population. With an astonishing and horrifying incarceration rate at 8 times the rate of white Californians, it is clear that the disenfranchisement of parolees is the disenfranchisement of black voters.


Proposition 18 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 18 to allow 17-year-olds to vote in the primary election if they will turn 18 by the following general election.

Why voting YES on Prop. 18 matters:

Nineteen other states, as well as Washington D.C., allow 17-year-olds to vote in the primary election if they will be 18 by the general election.

Research has proven time and again that voting is habit-forming. These states recognize the importance of allowing 18-year-olds to vote, to help form their voting habits and amplify their voices.


Proposition 19 — NO

No on Prop 19 to maintain property tax savings for all and avoid increasing housing inequity.

Why voting NO on Prop 19 matters:

Proposition 19 widens the generational wealth gap by giving homeowners older than 55 and other qualified groups a way to keep property tax breaks they receive for having bought their homes decades ago if they move anywhere else in the state, up to three times. They can also keep that break if they move to a more expensive property.

Proposition 13 caps most property tax rates at 1 percent of a home’s sale price and holds annual increases in assessed value to 2 percent or less. This means people who purchased their home a few decades ago already pay significantly less property tax than newer homeowners. Prop 19 further builds the wealth of longtime homeowners and denies wealth-building opportunities to people who don’t own a home or who may be struggling to buy one.

While Prop 19 does eliminate a $1 million property tax exemption for parent-to-child transfers and could potentially generate state revenue that would be distributed to fire protection agencies and schools, this amendment is being paired with the primary tax break for longtime homeowners to make it more appealing.

Top Funders of Prop 19

Realtor associations have contributed $36,270,000 in support of Prop 19. There is no registered financial opposition.


Proposition 20 — NO

Vote NO on Prop. 20 to protect criminal justice reforms and constitutional rights to privacy.

Why voting NO on Prop. 20 matters:

Prop. 20 is a dangerous proposition put forth by Courage Score Hall of Shame Assembly member Jim Cooper, and it is sponsored by Courage Score Hall of Shame Assembly member Vince Fong. Time and again, Assembly Members Cooper and Fong vote to protect police brutality and discriminatory criminal justice policies. Both voted no on Assembly Bill 1600, which would expedite access to police misconduct records for a trial.

Association for Los Angeles County Deputy Sheriffs, Los Angeles Police Protective League, and the Peace Officers Research Association of California all support and have heavily financed Prop. 20.

Prop. 20 would increase recidivism by removing positive incentives from Prop. 57.

Parole review boards would consider an individual’s entire criminal history, not just the offense they are on parole for, when deciding to release a person convicted of a felony on parole.


Proposition 21 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 21 to allow cities and counties to establish and regulate rent control.

Why voting YES on Prop. 21 matters:

California has the highest rate of homelessness in the nation, which can be attributed to the overwhelmingly high median rates for rent throughout the state forcing residents to pay 50% of their income just toward rent.

The Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act prohibits rent control on residential properties built after Feb. 1, 1995. Since then, housing built in California has become accessible only to those who can afford uncontrolled rent increases, and low-income families have largely been shut out from newer housing developments.

According to a Stanford study, those who lived in rent-controlled properties when Costa-Hawkins passed ended up saving a cumulative total of $7 billion within 8 years, which confirms that rent control is an effective way to prevent displacement from the city.


Proposition 22 — NO

Vote NO on Prop. 22 to protect labor rights and classify app-based drivers as employees, not contractors.

Why voting NO on Prop. 22 matters:

By classifying workers as contractors and not employees, companies like Lyft, Uber and DoorDash are not required by state employment laws to enforce minimum wage, overtime, unemployment insurance and workers’ compensation.

Ride-share and delivery workers are entitled to labor rights that every other employee in California is entitled to, such as the right to organize, minimum wage and Social Security.

Assembly Bill 5, which Prop. 22 is trying to repeal, guarantees paid family leave, paid sick days and unemployment insurance to those classified as gig employees. These labor rights are essential during a global pandemic.


Proposition 23 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 23 to require infection reporting and state approval to close or reduce services at hospitals.

Why voting YES on Prop. 23 matters:

Prop. 23 builds upon current federal requirements that report dialysis-related infections to the National Healthcare Safety Network at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to include reporting these infections to the California Department of Health.

Having a physician on-site at chronic dialysis clinics during all treatment hours provides a higher quality of medical care with an additional layer of patient safety.

Prop. 23 protects the 80,000 Californians who require dialysis on a weekly basis by ensuring chronic dialysis clinics cannot discriminate against patients based on how they are paying for their treatments. Insurances like Medi-Cal pay less for dialysis treatments than private insurance, which is why corporations like DaVita and Fresenius are spending millions to oppose this proposition.


Proposition 24 — NO

Vote NO on Prop. 24 to protect consumers’ personal information.

Why voting NO on Prop. 24 matters:

While this proposition looks like it protects consumers from giant corporations it was written behind closed doors by these very same corporations. We don’t trust them and neither should you!

Prop. 24 erodes a consumer’s request to delete their data and would completely end California Consumer Privacy Act protection of biometric information.

California should maintain net neutrality so people do not have to pay for companies to safeguard their personal information.

Prop. 24 would disproportionately affect working people and families of color.

The Legislative Analyst’s Office estimates that Prop. 24 will cost $10 million annually to create a new state agency that oversees and enforces the more stringent consumer privacy laws with an unknown impact on state and local tax revenues.


Proposition 25 — YES

Vote YES on Prop. 25 to eliminate the use of cash bail in pretrial incarceration.

Why voting YES on Prop. 25 Matters:

The cash bail system directly ties an individual’s wealth and ability to pay to the question of whether they pose a risk to the community and their conditions of pretrial release. This system is unfair from every angle and perpetuates the cycle of poverty and incarceration existing in many low-income communities, which are also disproportionately black and brown communities.

The bail bond industry uses its influence to lobby for legislation favorable to them, which perpetuates but also escalates the cycle of poverty and incarceration. Passing Prop. 25 will permanently end their influence in the political process.

If Prop. 25 does not pass, voters will be perceived as having rejected SB 10’s reforms, in particular the effort to end the cash bail system. This will be framed as a significant precedent for opponents of criminal-justice reform to use in lobbying and legal arguments to keep the system intact in the future.

If Prop. 25 passes, community groups will have the opportunity to advance further criminal-justice reforms related to this initiative.


COUNTY/COUNTYWIDE MEASURES

Measure J (Los Angeles County, Calif.)

Budget Allocation for Alternatives to Incarceration Charter Amendment (November 2020)

A “YES” vote supports:

Amending the county’s charter to require that no less than 10% of the county’s general fund be appropriated to community programs and alternatives to incarceration, such as health services and pretrial non-custody services; authorizing the Board of Supervisors to develop a process to allocate funds; and authorizing the Board of Supervisors to reduce the amount allocated with a vote of 4-1 during a declared fiscal emergency.

A “NO” vote opposes:

Amending the county charter to require that no less than 10% of the county’s general fund be appropriated to community programs and alternatives to incarceration.


City of Carson

Measure K

Carson Essential City Services, Emergency Response Protection. 

A “YES” vote approves the 0.75% general transactions and use tax. 

A “NO” vote goes against the 0.75% general transactions and use tax. The transactions-and-use general tax proposed by Measure K would take effect only if it receives a majority “YES” vote at the Nov. 3, 2020, general municipal election.


City of Long Beach

Measure US

Long Beach Community Services General Purpose Oil Production Tax Increase 

To provide funding for community healthcare services; air/water quality and climate change programs; increase childhood education/ youth programs; expand job training opportunities; and maintain other general fund programs, shall a measure be adopted increasing Long Beach’s general oil production tax from 15¢ to maximum 30¢ per barrel, subject to annual adjustments, generating approximately $1,600,000 annually, until ended by voters, requiring audits/ local control of funds?

A “YES” vote favors increasing the general purpose Barrel Tax to a maximum of 30 cents per barrel, subject to annual CPI adjustment.

A “NO” vote opposes the increase and maintains the general purpose Barrel tax at 15 cents per barrel, subject to annual CPI adjustment.

A majority of “yes” votes is required for the measure to pass.


Los Angeles Unified School District

Measure RR

School Upgrades And Safety Measure 

To update classrooms/labs/technology for 21st century learning; implement COVID-19 facility safety standards; address school facility inequities; reduce asbestos, earthquake and water quality hazards; and replace/renovate aging school classrooms/buildings, shall Los Angeles Unified School District’s measure be adopted authorizing $7 billion in bonds at legal rates, levying approximately $0.02174 per $100 of assessed valuation, generating an estimated $329,528,000 annually until about 2055, with independent audits, citizens’ oversight, no funds for administrative salaries?

A “YES” vote favors the bond measure.

A “NO” vote opposes the bond measure.


City of Lomita

Measure L

City of Lomita Local General Municipal Sales Tax Measure. 

To protect Lomita’s long-term financial stability; maintain city services; improve local drinking water quality; repair streets/potholes; keep parks and public areas clean/safe; maintain emergency/public safety response; help retain local businesses; and provide other city services, shall a measure be adopted establishing a three-fourth cent local sales tax providing about $1.3 million annually until ended by voters, requiring annual independent financial audits with all funds benefitting Lomita residents.

A “YES” vote favors the sales tax.

A “NO” vote oposes the sales tax.


City of Signal Hill

Measure R

City of Signal Hill Financial Stability Measure 

Shall a measure establishing a three-quarter cent sales tax providing an estimated $5 million annually to the city’s general fund to maintain city programs such as: street, pothole, and infrastructure repair, clean public areas, 9-1-1 emergency response, crime prevention, and other general services until ended by voters, with independent audits, all money used locally for Signal Hill, be adopted.

A “YES” vote favors the sales tax.

A “NO” vote opposes the sales tax.

Gov. Newsom’s Policing Advisors Announce Recommendations to Improve Police Response to Protests and Demonstrations

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SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Oct 13, released recommendations from his policing advisors for improving police response to protests and demonstrations and a series of actions in response. The release of the report follows the Governor’s signing of a package of legislation last month to reform policing practices and tackle discrimination in the criminal and juvenile justice systems. 

In response to the more than three-dozen recommendations, the Governor has directed the statewide Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training or POST to modernize training and guidance for law enforcement. The training includes for law enforcement to ensure that it prioritizes the protection of First Amendment rights and to develop best practices to identify, monitor and strategically detain individuals suspected of inciting violence and destruction during protests and demonstrations.

Additionally, the recommendations encourage local law enforcement agencies to require all officers in direct contact with demonstrators to wear and activate body cameras; ensure the protection of journalists and legal observers; and identify and address the role of hate groups in disrupting protests and instigating violence. Finally, the recommendations propose restrictions on the types of weapons and tactics that should be used during protests and demonstrations.

“The role of police officers in protests and demonstrations is to keep the peace, and facilitate the ability of protesters to demonstrate peacefully without infringing on their First Amendment rights,” said Gov. Newsom. “Implementation of these recommendations will help ensure our law enforcement agencies are better equipped to respond safely to protests and demonstrations and reinforce the values of community partnership, de-escalation, and restraint.”

The policing advisors are Ron Davis, a former East Palo Alto police chief who also served as the head of the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services during the Obama Administration, and Lateefah Simon, a current director and president of BART and president of the Akonadi Foundation.

These recommendations follow the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May, and that of other unarmed Black people at the hands of police, and the global protests and demonstrations that ensued. Gov. Newsom held meetings across the state with faith and community leaders, elected officials and small business owners, all to discuss racism, systemic injustice and how we move forward as a state. The Governor also directed the POST Commission to stop training police officers on the carotid hold.

LA County Small Business Revitalization Grant

If you’re unable to re-open your business in L.A. County, you may be eligible for a Business Revitalization Grant from the County.

To be eligible:

Meet the definition of a small business as defined in California Government Code 14837: (d) (1) (A) “Small business” means an independently owned and operated business that is not dominant in its field of operation, the principal office of which is located in California, the officers of which are domiciled in California, and which, together with affiliates, has 100 or fewer employees, and average annual gross receipts of ten million dollars ($10,000,000) or less over the previous three years.

Have been allowed to reopen by the State, but ordered to remain closed by the County of Los Angeles Health Officer Order as of Sept. 4, 2020.

Target Industries

Breweries with no kitchen, wineries with no kitchen, miniature golf parks, batting cage facilities, kart racing centers, and tanning salons.

Business Location

Only businesses located in the County of Los Angeles, except the City of Los Angeles are eligible to apply. 

The physical business address as listed on a business license will be used to qualify the location of the business. If a business does not require a business license, the address listed with the Secretary of State will be used. If the business is owned by a sole proprietorship and does not require a business license, applicant shall submit an executed business lease or deed to validate business’ location. 

Application Period: 

Now through 12 p.m. Oct. 16.

Details: https://wwwa.lacda.org/home/small-business-revitalization-grant

Far-Right Twitter Trolls Won’t Admit They Were Wrong About Killing of a “Patriot” in Denver

It was a reporter’s bodyguard, not an anti-fascist activist, who shot and killed a right-wing demonstrator who had assaulted him.

Robert Mackey, The Intercept

HERE’S WHAT HAPPENED in Denver on Saturday: Lee Keltner, a right-wing demonstrator, was shot and killed after he assaulted Matthew Dolloff, a reporter’s bodyguard, who retaliated for a blow to the head and a squirt of pepper spray by firing a single gunshot from point-blank range.

Those details, and more evidence about the deadly encounter, gradually emerged in the hours and days after the shooting, but initial reports and reaction to the killing were shrouded in misinformation, much of it introduced by political partisans who jumped to conclusions about the gunman’s motives before all the facts were known.

Read more at: https://theintercept.com/2020/10/12/far-right-twitter-trolls-wont-admit-wrong-killing-patriot-denver/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Intercept%20Newsletter

Final Census Deadline is October 15!

Late Oct. 13, the Supreme Court reversed the lower courts’ preliminary injunction regarding the Census deadline. This will now allow the Census Bureau to end the count before Oct. 31. 

The Census Bureau issued a press release which states that self-response and field data collection operations for the 2020 Census will end Oct. 15, 2020.

This is your last chance to make a positive impact in your community. Get counted.

Details: Go to, 2020Census.gov

www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2020/2020-census-data-collection-ending.html

Legal experts reveal one reason Gov. Whitmer kidnap case is strong

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Phoebe Wall Howard Detroit Free Press

The federal criminal case against six of 13 suspects accused ofplotting to abduct and possibly harm Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmercontains a legal nuance that former officials from the U.S. Department of Justice say make conviction more likely.

Read more at: www.freep.com/story/news/politics/2020/10/09/gov-whitmer-kidnap-case-legal-experts/5934793002/

Harbor Area Experiences An Upswing In Shootings

During the last two-weeks the Harbor area has seen several shootings from Long Beach to Torrance. What follows below is an account of these events.

Murder Investigation – Ocean Boulevard and Promenade North

LONG BEACH— Detectives from the Long Beach Police Department are investigating the Oct. 6 death of a 41-year-old homeless man who was stabbed multiple times in the upper torso at the intersection of Ocean Boulevard and The Promenade North.The victim’s name has not been released pending notification of next of kin by the office of the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner.  Preliminary information about the murder suggests a physical altercation between the victim and one or more suspected assailants, but detectives do not have a description of the suspect(s) or last direction of travel.

Detectives are actively looking for additional evidence and witnesses to determine a motive and identify a suspect(s). Anyone with information regarding the incident is urged to call (562) 570-7244.

LASD Responds to a Deputy Involved Shooting,  

Harbor-UCLA Medical Center

TORRANCE  —  Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Homicide investigators responded to a deputy-involved shooting. The incident happened at about 11:15 p.m. Oct. 6, at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, 1000 W. Carson St., Torrance. 

Deputies from South Los Angeles Station, who were working a security detail at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center were alerted to an incident within the hospital involving a patient. That patient was discovered in a room destroying medical equipment before attempting to smash a window with a metal medical device. 

A deputy assisted medical staff by moving patients. The patient in question, a Hispanic man between 30 and 40 years of age, turned his attention on the deputy. At that point, a deputy involved shooting occurred. The patient was struck by gunfire and was immediately treated on scene. He is currently in critical condition. 

No deputies, patients, or medical staff were injured as a result of the incident. 

The investigation is ongoing and there is no additional information available at this time.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to call (323) 890-5500 or visit http://lacrimestoppers.org.

LASD Responded to Shooting Death 

LOMITA—  Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Homicide Bureau detectives are continuing their investigation into the shooting death of two male adults that occurred on the 2100 block of 255th Street, in the City of Lomita. The incident was reported Oct. 4, about 1:30 a.m.

Detectives have learned that deputies assigned to Lomita Station responded to the location regarding a person-down call.

Upon arrival, they located two victims, both suffering from at least one gunshot wound to the upper torso.

The victims were both pronounced dead at the scene. There is no known motive or suspect information.

The investigation is ongoing and there is no additional information available at this time.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Homicide Bureau at 323-890-5500. 

Murder Investigation – 900 Block of Obisbo Ave. Long Beach

LONG BEACH —  On Oct. 1, at about 12:30 am, officers responded to a reported shooting victim at a residence on the 900 block of Obispo Ave., which resulted in the death of a male adult.

The first responding officers located a male adult victim down in the common area of a residential complex. Officers immediately performed life-saving measures and observed the victim was suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. Long Beach Fire Department personnel arrived and took the victim to a local hospital, where he later succumbed to his injuries and died.

The victim has been identified as 23-year-old James Magee of Long Beach.

The preliminary investigation revealed Magee was standing near a residential complex when the suspect(s) approached and fired at Magee, then fled the area, possibly in an unknown color sedan.

Detectives are in the area searching for any witnesses or evidence. The motive for the shooting remains under investigation; however, the shooting is being investigated as gang-related.

Anyone with information regarding the incident is asked to call 562-570-7244. 

Drive-By Shooting Leaves 1 Dead

WILMINGTON— The Los Angeles Police Department’s Harbor Area Homicide Detectives are seeking the public’s assistance in identifying the suspect(s) responsible for the drive-by shooting death of 18-year-old Raemond Jarrod Santos.

On Sept. 30, about 2 a.m., Raemond Jarrod Santos was sitting in his car in the 1200 block of North Drumm Ave. Santos was parked at the east curb when a vehicle with an unknown suspect(s) stopped next to his vehicle and fired multiple rounds in Santos’ direction.

Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics responded to render aid; however, Santos

succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead just after 3:00 a.m.

Detectives do not have any leads as to the suspect’s identity and are asking for any witnesses, who may provide a description of the vehicle, to call 310-726-7889

California State Controller’s Property Tax Postponement Program

State Controller Betty T. Yee administers the Property Tax Postponement (PTP) Program to allow homeowners who are seniors, are blind, or have a disability to defer payment of residential property taxes. Applicants must meet income, equity, and other requirements. If approved for the program, a lien will be placed on the property. These deferred taxes accrue simple interest at a rate of 5 percent a year and become due if the homeowner moves or sells the property, transfers title, refinances, dies, obtains a reverse mortgage, or defaults on a senior lien. For manufactured homes, a security agreement will be filed with the Department of Housing and Community Development. A lien or security agreement remains in effect until the account is paid in full.

PTP participants must reapply each year to demonstrate they continue to meet eligibility requirements. The application filing period for the 2020-21 tax year runs October 1, 2020, through February 10, 2021. Funds are limited and will be disbursed on a first-come, first-served basis. Last year alone, California homeowners were able to postpone $4 million in tax payments with the assistance of the state’s PTP program.If you or someone you know could benefit from the PTP program, visit www.ptp.sco.ca.gov for more details and an application, call (800) 952-5661, or email postponement@sco.ca.gov for more information.

Exposed: Fake List to Steal Wisconsin

Court Heard Lawsuit to Purge Voters on List
Black Voters Matter: “It’s Wrong and Racist” 

By Greg Palast for The Capital Times

Yesterday, the Wisconsin Supreme Court may have chosen our President. That is, justices heard arguments in a lawsuit that would force the state to remove 129,000 from the voter rolls on grounds they’d moved from their registration addresses.

But a report by the nation’s top experts in address verification, including the official licensee of the US Postal Service, says that at least 39,722 “movers” did not move.

Worse, the hit list is not only disastrously wrong, it is suspiciously over-weighted with African-Americans.
Given Trump’s 2016 Wisconsin victory margin of less than 23,000, this racially poisonous purge of voters could decide the state, and so the nation.

On Monday, Black Voters Matter Fund issued my foundation’s report, Wisconsin “Movers” Purge List Errors with a link to SaveMyVote2020.org where we list every single voter wrongly facing erasure of their voting rights.

This was not a sampling nor an estimate. Rather, four experts in what is called, “Address List Hygiene”—the same experts that confirm your address for Amazon, eBay and Home Depot—conducted a name by name review of address using 240 tested data feeds—where you get your Netfix films, your mortgage, your taxes, your credit card purchases—to locate you with absolute precision.

In addition it was all checked with the Post Office’s designated licensee, Merkle Inc., in charge of maintaining the deep historic change-of-address files.

As an economist and statistician by training, the technical term for the “movers” purge list is, “garbage.” Indeed, the State Board of Elections is resisting using a list they fear could be 15% wrong—unacceptable when the right of a citizen to vote is at stake. But our experts found the list twice as error-filled as the state’s guesstimate.

Look at the maps of Greater Milwaukee. They reveal a near-perfect match between the percentage of Black voters in a Census tract with the number of voters wrongly tagged as having moved.

Rick Esenberg brought this lawsuit on behalf of Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL). When I spoke to him, Esenberg admitted he had not checked his would-be voter cancellation list for accuracy. He never heard of Address List Hygiene and claims he has no idea that the list is overloaded with Black and low-income voters.

WILL is backed by the right-wing Wisconsin billionaire Bradley family foundation. That does not surprise Elections Commissioner Ann Jacobs who is blunt about their aim. “I think it’s crystal clear the intent of this suit was to remove voters in Milwaukee and Madison…on behalf of the Republican Party in an attempt to gain an advantage …particularly for the Presidential race.”

Catch Esenberg, Jacobs and the full story in our 7-minute film.

Whatever the intent, how could Esenberg’s group get it so wrong? It begins with a misuse of what is called the “ERIC” list. ERIC is the Electronic Registration Information Center of Washington.

ERIC, controlled by 30 state officials uses a limited and amateurish system for identifying those who have moved from their registration address. But that’s not a problem, as ERIC was not established to hunt voters for the purge but to find those who moved into a state or town and invite them to register.

ERIC often confuses common names like James Brown. But if the wrong James Brown gets a postcard inviting him to register, no harm done. But the Wisconsin Legislature and then-Gov. Scott Walker added a stinger: If a voter does not return the postcard, they must be removed from the voter rolls.

The card looks like “junk mail” – so less than 2% returned it. Our lead address verification expert John Lenser says, “not returning a postcard does not at all indicate someone has moved. People think it’s so-called ‘junk mail’ and toss it.” Indeed, he says, unless a card is returned “undeliverable,” that is evidence the voter has not moved.

Mark Swedlund, a recognized expert in mailings, notes from Census studies that minority, young and urban residents don’t always receive mass mailings and respond at only a fraction of the rate of white, older, suburban homeowners. In effect, the “Jim Crow” result is in the postcard return requirement.

The Palast Fund reached out to over 700 voters, and we heard the same story again and again: I never moved.

Adding to bias against low-income and young voters, these “junk mail” cards were sent to voters who moved within the cities of Milwaukee and Madison even though both federal and state law prohibits cancelling registrations of those who move within their city.

Our experts identified another 58,000 who moved within their county. Typical is student Phyo Zin Kyaw of Madison College who told us he moved just two doors down yet faces loss of his vote.

LaTosha Brown and Cliff Albright, co-founders of Black Voters Matter, who released the experts’ report, have had enough. “There is a small right-wing group which wants to undermine Black voters and young voters. They are desperate because they are losing power — so they are resorting to cheating and undermining the election by any means.”

Palast Investigative Fund attorney Jeanne Mirer submitted a copy of our findings to the Wisconsin Attorney General and the Wisconsin Board of Elections.

Los Angeles Board of Supervisors Make Significant Moves On Antiracist Policy And Support Communities Impacted by Trauma

Progress in Establishing an Antiracist LA County Policy Agenda

LOS ANGELES — Responding to Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas’ motion, Establishing an Antiracist Los Angeles County Policy Agenda, the County’s Chief Executive Office announced Sept. 29, the search for a Racial Equity Executive Director and launched an Antiracism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative website so the public can share their ideas for addressing institutional racism in the nation’s most populous county.

Supervisor Ridley-Thomas praised these initial steps and stressed the need to keep working with urgency. He noted that, in just the brief period since he introduced the motion, the COVID-19 pandemic has continued to take a higher toll on people of color and protestors have continued to fill the streets in response to the separate police shootings of Dijon Kizzee and Jacob Blake, and the lack of indictments in Breonna Taylor’s case.

On July 21, the Board of Supervisors unanimously approved Supervisor Ridley-Thomas’ motion that called for declaring racism a matter of public health, prioritizing the elimination of racism within Los Angeles County, and highlighting the need to examine and eradicate policies and processes that prevent African Americans from advancement.

The motion also directed the CEO and other departments to promote and support policies that would achieve more equitable outcomes for African Americans in the areas of education, housing, mental health, employment, and the criminal justice system.Today, Acting Chief Executive Officer Fesia Davenport Sept 29, gave the board its first report back on the county’s antiracism efforts, laying out the essential components and initial framework for developing a strategic plan and policy platform in four phases, to be completed by June 2021.

Earlier this month, LA County initiated a national search for an Executive Director of Racial Equity who “will establish, support, lead, and manage efforts to identify and eliminate structural and systemic racism in those areas where the county has control or influence, such as county employment, provision of county services, and contracting.” The executive director will also be a “visionary leader” who will “champion the elimination of institutional racism while also promoting efforts to deepen the county’s work on diversity and inclusion.”LA County also launched the Antiracism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative website to be a platform for outreach and engagement. People can visit the website to provide feedback on the County’s efforts and sign up for upcoming opportunities for stakeholder and community conversations.

Board Approves Motion to Make Further Investments in Violence Prevention and Resources to Support Communities Impacted by Trauma

LOS ANGELES — Amid an unprecedented increase in local tensions surrounding the recent deaths of Andres Guardado and Dijon Kizzee, the Board of Supervisors Sept. 29, voted unanimously to implement the Office of Violence Prevention’s (OVP) strategic plan and retool the Family Assistance Program—motions led by Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas and co-authored by Supervisor Kuehl. The two initiatives will help to expand community investment and well-being and offer relief to families who have lost loved-ones to deputy-involved shootings.

There has been a growing public demand for an equitable response to violence prevention and interventions that address the systematic biases and inequities that cause disproportionate health, economic and socio-cultural impacts. In the motion, to  implement a strategic plan for the Office of Violence Prevention, as well as create a community-based crisis response system, the Board is working towards establishing a coordinated community-based response to incidents of violence, such as homicides, shootings, and sexual and domestic assault to prevent and interrupt cycles of violence before they happen.

Over the span of 15 months, more than 14 victims have died at the hands of Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department (LASD) deputies. To lessen the burden of tragedy that families face in the difficult moments after the death of a loved-one in a deputy involved shooting the Board is taking steps to secure and enhance the Family Assistance Program (FAP). Created by the Board of Supervisors based upon the recommendation of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission, the FAP works to counteract the trauma of loss that is compounded by a lack of clear communication.

“When a family loses a loved one as a result of the fatal use of force by law enforcement, it always devastates friends and family members, and has a deeply destructive impact on community relationships with law enforcement,” said Supervisor Sheila Kuehl.” The Family Assistance Program, an innovative idea that emerged from discussions at the Civilian Oversight Commission, provides compassionate communication and trauma-informed support to those families. With this motion, we are asking for an assessment of its effectiveness, improvements that may be needed, and the identification of funding to sustain it.”

Among the key elements of the FAP is the employment of “advocates” to be present during next-of-kin notifications to provide crisis intervention and grief counseling, as well as to serve as liaisons between the Sheriff’s Department and other County departments as needed. The motion seeks to reinforce this valuable community resource so that it is available in the future for impacted families in their critical moment of need.