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Driver, passenger viciously stabbed in separate incidents on L.A. buses

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Driver, passenger viciously stabbed in separate incidents on L.A. buses

As the union representing Los Angeles Metro bus drivers demands better safeguards for its drivers, two violent, bloody incidents unfolded aboard transit buses over the weekend in less than a 24-hour span. 

The first of the April 13 stabbings aboard Metro buses occurred at around 1:45 a.m. in the area of Sunset Boulevard and Benton Way in L.A.’s Silver Lake neighborhood.  

Video of the scene obtained by KTLA shows paramedics carefully lifting a blood-soaked passenger, who was suffering multiple stab wounds, off the bus and onto a gurney. The man was rushed to the hospital in critical condition.  

Details are limited and what led up to the grisly stabbing is unclear, but police were able to track down and arrest a suspect who fled from authorities on Benton Way north of Sunset.  

L.A. Metro passenger stabbed on bus on April 13, 2024. (ANG)

Authorities have not provided an update on the victim’s condition.  

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Later that evening at around 8:30 p.m. in South L.A., investigators say a Metro bus driver stopped the bus at East 119th Street and Wilmington Avenue when the suspect started yelling at him and then viciously attacked him.  

“The suspect, without provocation, punched the victim in the face then proceeded to stab the victim,” the Sheriff’s Department stated. 

The driver’s attacker, who is now wanted for attempted murder, exited the bus and fled northbound on Wilmington Avenue.  

Authorities are seeking a man suspected of attacking a bus driver in Los Angeles on April 13, 2024.
Authorities are seeking a man suspected of attacking a bus driver in Los Angeles on April 13, 2024. (Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department)

Erika Diaz, a good Samaritan who was behind the bus when it pulled over to stop, heard the bus driver’s gut-wrenching screams for help and seconds later saw the young man in his 30s just outside her car.  

“He had so much blood in his chest, no one was helping him,” Diaz told KTLA’s Chris Wolfe. “I just said, ‘Calm down, you’re going to be okay.’”  

She then rushed the bus driver to a nearby hospital.  

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A spokesperson for the L.A. Metropolitan Transportation Authority told KTLA that the driver has since been released and is recovering from the incident at home.  

In a statement about that stabbing, Metro said in part: 

“Metro is saddened to hear about this senseless act of violence against our bus operator, which was apparently fueled by drug abuse and untreated mental illness – crises that are plaguing our nation.”  

Diaz, who said she’s been keeping in touch with the driver, believes his emotional recovery from the traumatic event may take longer to heal than his physical injuries.  

“This is a young person that almost lost his life working,” she said.  

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This violence comes in the wake of an L.A. transit bus that was hijacked on March 21 by a 24-year-old man armed with what appeared to be a handgun, who caused multiple traffic collisions in downtown L.A. before crashing into the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.  

Among the safety improvements the union representing L.A. bus drivers is demanding include:  

  • Full bulletproof enclosures for drivers  
  • Armed security officers  
  • Felony-level charges with a long jail sentence for anyone who assaults a Metro driver  
  • Silent alarms to alert police of a disturbance or live shooter 

Union officials say the additional measures need to be universal and federally mandated for all transportation agencies to prevent issues like hijacking, as well as problems like the violence of last Saturday.  

For its part, L.A. Metro has said that it’s adding more security bus riding teams, building more significant barriers on all buses and providing de-escalation training to bus operators. 

Los Angeles, Ca

Violence erupts between pro-Israel, pro-Palestinian demonstrators at UCLA

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Violence erupts between pro-Israel, pro-Palestinian demonstrators at UCLA

Police were noticeably absent when violence erupted on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles Tuesday night between pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian demonstrators.

Dozens of counter-protestors, many wearing white masks and flags over their shoulders, arrived around 10:45 p.m. and attempted to dismantle the pro-Palestinian encampment that has overtaken Royce Quad since last Thursday. The agitators lobbed fireworks into the encampment and set off what may have been bear or pepper spray.  

Demonstrators on the pro-Palestinian side were seen using umbrellas to shield themselves, and skirmishes broke throughout the night out as counter-protesters attempted to wrestle away wood pallets, plywood and metal fencing from the encampment.

UCLA campus police along with medical personnel showed up briefly at the scene before retreating, KTLA’s John Fenoglio reported. The Los Angeles Police Department had not responded as of 1:00 a.m. Wednesday.

Aerial footage from Sky5 captured the chaotic scene, including countless clashes between protesters. The number of people injured was unclear.

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  • Many people in white masks showed up before violence broke out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • A firework was ignited and thrown into an pro-Palestinian encampment at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence broke out at a pro-Palestinian encampent at UCLA when pro-Israel protestors arrived on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • A firework was ignited and thrown into an pro-Palestinian encampment at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence broke out at a pro-Palestinian encampent at UCLA when pro-Israel protestors arrived on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence broke out at a pro-Palestinian encampent at UCLA when pro-Israel protestors arrived on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Violence breaks out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • Many people in white masks showed up before violence broke out among pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protestors at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)
  • A firework was ignited and thrown into an pro-Palestinian encampment by a pro-Israel protestor at the UCLA campus on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)

The encampment, populated by protesters demanding UCLA divest all interests in Israel and an immediate halt to the conflict between Israel and Hamas, now occupies portions of the steps and sidewalks of Powell Library and Royce Hall.  

At times, dueling demonstrations have become heated but Tuesday night’s clash marked the greatest escalation to-date.

Before the escalation

Earlier in the day, Luke Veltz attempted to donate snacks and drinks to those in the encampment. While he’s not a student, he told KTLA’s John Fenoglio that he supports calls for the university to divest from Israel and hopes for an end to the war and a free Palestinian state.  

“When you’ve had genocide carry on for this long, people are just not going to be able to live side by side with two governments in the way that it’s been suggested and I think that a free Palestine is the only way forward,” he said.

Counter-protesters calling for the release of Israeli hostages taken captive on Oct. 7 by Hamas have used screens and speakers to blast images and stories of survivors just feet away from the encampment. 

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“I think this is blatant antisemitism,” one young man, who was not identified, told KTLA. “This is crazy what’s going on, what they’re letting go on. They’re chanting to kill us. They’re chanting ‘from the river to the sea,’ which is just blatantly to kill us all. I wanted to see what’s going on and it’s scary.” 

On Tuesday morning, protesters chanted, “Let him go!” as a demonstrator carrying a Palestinian flag who scaled the scaffolding of a building near the encampment was arrested.  

He was later released.  

Vandals also sprayed graffiti on the doors of Royce Hall.  

A man trying to access a public walkway is stopped by security at UCLA on April 30, 2024.
A man trying to access a public walkway is stopped by security at UCLA on April 30, 2024. (KTLA)

On Tuesday morning, a man on crutches who claimed to be an alumnus and was not part of either protest was tackled by UCLA security after trying to access a public walkway outside the encampment, Fenoglio reported.  

“I told them I was disabled,” he said. “They said that I was trying to use [my crutches] as a weapon. It was on the ground behind me. It was insane. “

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There were also reports of demonstrators in the encampment blocking students from getting to class.  

The university called this kind of behavior “abhorrent” and said these actions could lead to “suspension or expulsion.” 

On Monday night, campus police broke up several fights after a group of about 60 pro-Israeli demonstrators tried to push through the encampment’s barricade.  

University officials ultimately decided to close Royce Hall until Friday and Powell Library until Monday.  

Over at the University of Southern California, the main commencement ceremony remains canceled, though smaller graduation ceremonies will take place across campus.  

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University President Carol Folt released a statement, saying in part: 

“USC remains committed to free speech and peaceful protests while ensuring public safety.”  

Folt also said she is in direct talks with the representatives from the pro-Palestinian group Divest from Death USC, which has established an encampment in Alumni Park.  

The park erupted into a chaotic scene last week after the university called on the Los Angeles Police Department to forcibly remove protesters.  

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Los Angeles, Ca

South L.A. narco that sold crack, meth out of storefront gets 12 years

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South L.A. narco that sold crack, meth out of storefront gets 12 years

A 54-year-old man, a member of what federal prosecutors referred to as the “Hoover Criminals Gang,” has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after he was found guilty of running a drug trafficking enterprise that distributed methamphetamine and crack cocaine, among other narcotics, out of his South Los Angeles storefront, authorities announced Tuesday.  

From June 2017 to May 2018, according to a news release from the United States Attorney’s Central District of California Office, Andrew “Batman” Tate engaged in drug sales out of his store, TNN Market, and directed his employees to do the same.  

He and a co-defendant, 59-year-old Bobby Lorenzo Reed, aka “Zo” and “Z,” who also owned a South L.A. store called H&E Smoke and Snack, supplied each other with narcotics and were implicated in dozens of illegal drug transactions and referrals.  

Reed is currently serving a 10-year prison sentence in this case after pleading guilty to federal narcotics charges in June 2022.  

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The 54-year-old was the lead defendant in a indictment targeting the gang’s members and associates in an investigation dubbed “Operation Hoover Dam,” the release noted. Prosecutors secured 10 convictions in the case, with Tate being the last defendant sentenced.  

“Tate participated in an extensive and long-running drug conspiracy to sell drugs, including methamphetamine and crack cocaine, in South Los Angeles,” prosecutors argued in a sentencing memorandum. “Tate’s role in the drug conspiracy was significant; he was the head of the entire drug trafficking enterprise pumping drugs into a vulnerable area of Los Angeles.” 

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, along with the Los Angeles Police Department and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, investigated the case.  

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Los Angeles, Ca

Deputy shoots man allegedly armed with gun, knife in Apple Valley

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Deputy shoots man allegedly armed with gun, knife in Apple Valley

A San Bernardino County Sheriff’s deputy shot and wounded an armed man after he shot and wounded a woman in Apple Valley, officials said.

The man, 71-year-old Thoren Rand, was reported for allegedly assaulting a 69-year-old woman in the 15200 Block of Pocahontas Street a few minutes before 8:30 a.m. Monday, the Sheriff’s Department said in a news release.

When deputies arrived, the woman ran out of the home while suffering from “severe injuries,” with Rand in pursuit of her, the release said.

“Rand was armed with a large knife and a firearm,” the release said. “The deputy gave Rand numerous commands to drop the weapons, but he refused to comply.”

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It was at that point that the deputy opened fire, the release added, striking Rand at least once.

“Through investigation, it was learned Rand physically assaulted the victim and then shot her,” officials said. “She was transported to a hospital where she remains in stable condition.”

Rand is also still hospitalized, though his condition is unknown.

He is being held in Sheriff’s Department custody, and his bail has been set at $1 million.

Rand is due to appear in Victorville Superior Court on Wednesday on an attempted murder charge.

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Anyone with information is asked to call 909-890-4904. Anonymous tips can be submitted by calling WeTip at 800-78-CRIME (27463) or by visiting wetip.com.

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