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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

LAPD Pacific Division is looking for volunteers

Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Pacific Division is looking for volunteers — no age restriction. For college and high school students, it can be an unpaid internship.

For those with time on their hands and who want an opportunity to serve their communities, think about these positions: station assistant, receptionist, typing/filing and various other clerical duties, detective assistant, crisis response team, pacific boosters, and neighborhood surveillance team.

Their is always the opportunity for members of the community to be a block captain, start a neighborhood watch, or attend and become a member of the community police advisory board.

Information and applications can be obtained from Pat Karasick, volunteer coordinator, at pk@afewgoodideas.com, 213-494-7586.

VNC to Hold Public Safety Townhall & Forum, 27 April

The Venice Neighborhood Committee will hold a Townhall and Formum Thursday, 27 April from 6:30 to 9 pm at the Animo Venice Charter High School, 820 Broadway, Venice. Present for the forum will be representatives from LAPD, City Attorney’s office, Bureau of Sanitation, LAPD investigators, Department of Transportation, Emergency Communications systems, Homeless Outreach and Proactive Engagement (HOPE) unit.

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Woman Stabbed at Windward; Police Looking for Suspects

Note: This came as a comment by Lee. Update does not know Lee but checking the facts with other sources finds that he knows what he is talking about.  LAPD is looking for leads.  If you can help, do so.

By Lee

Authorities Tuesday sought the public’s help to find three people involved in the fatal stabbing of a pregnant mother in Venice.

Officers from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Pacific Division went to 80 Windward Ave. at 9:30 p.m. Monday in response to a report of a fight and an assault with a deadly weapon, said LAPD Lt. John Radtke.

Arriving officers saw the mortally injured woman being held by witnesses. She was treated by Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics before being taken to a hospital, where she died, Radtke said.

She was identified by the coroner’s office as Jasmine Angelica Preciado, 22, of Inglewood. Family members told NBC4 that she was three months pregnant and the mother of a 3-year-old girl.

Police are looking for two women and a man who left the scene traveling east on Windward Avenue in a dark-colored SUV. Anyone with information on the crime was urged to call LAPD West Bureau Homicide detectives at 213-382-9470, or 1-877-LAPD-247.

City Council Passes New Live/Sleep LAMC 85.02; Enforcement

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Motorhome now parked next to Westminster Elementary School and close to preschool will be prohibited from parking within 500 feet of either with new LAMC 85.02.

 

The highly controversial LAMC 85.02 defining live/sleep vehicles parking on city streets has been totally replaced with an ordinance that prohibits live/sleep vehicles in residential areas during the hours of 9 pm to 6 am and at no time within 500 feet of  a park, licensed school, pre-school or daycare facility.  Posted city parking restrictions will remain in force.

This law will sunset 1 July 2018.  The mayor has yet to sign.  It also says nothing about commercial/industrial areas.

The new code is as follows:

SEC. 85.02. REGULATING THE USE OF VEHICLES FOR DWELLING.

A. Use of Vehicles for Dwelling Restricted on City Streets. No person
shall use a Vehicle for Dwelling as follows:

1. Between the hours of 9:00 P.M. and 6:00 A.M. on any Residential
Street; or
2. At any time within a one Block radius of any edge of a lot containing
a park or a licensed school, pre-school or daycare facility.

Nothing herein precludes the enforcement of any other laws such as parking restrictions, including, but not limited to, prohibitions on overnight parking.

B. Definitions: As used in this section:

1. Block is defined as 500 feet.
2. Dwelling means more than one of the following activities and when
it reasonably appears, in light of all the circumstances, that a person is using a vehicle as a place of residence or accommodation:

Possessing inside or on a vehicle items that are not associated with ordinary vehicle use, such as a sleeping   bag, bedroll, blanket, sheet, pillow, kitchen utensils, cookware, cooking equipment, bodily fluids. Obscuring some or all of the vehicle’s windows. Preparing or cooking meals inside or on a vehicle. Sleeping inside a   vehicle.

3. Residential Street means any street which adjoins one or more
single family or multi-family residentially zoned parcel.
4. Vehicle means any motor vehicle, trailer, house car or trailer coach
as defined by the California Vehicle Code.

C. Penalty. A first violation of this section shall be punishable as an infraction not to exceed $25. A second violation of this section shall be punishable as an infraction not to exceed $50 and all subsequent violations of this section shall punishable as an infraction not to exceed $75. Violators may be eligible for referral to a prosecutorial-Ied diversion program such as the Homeless Engagement and Response Team (HEART).

D. Sunset Provisions. The provisions of this section shall expire and bedeemed to have been repealed on July 1, 2018, unless extended by ordinance.

E. Severability. If any portion, subsection, sentence, clause or phrase of this section is for any reason held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such a decision shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this section. The City Council hereby declares that it would have passed this ordinance and each portion or subsection, sentence, clause and phrase herein, irrespective of the fact that anyone or more portions, subsections, sentences, clauses or phrases be declared invalid.

Enforcement
The City Attorney’s letter dealt with the enforcement situation and wrote to the City Council members the following:

City Council sought to enforce the draft ordinance through the City’s Administrative Citation Enforcement (ACE) program. However, the ACE program relies on the violator having a current and valid mailing address. Based on information provided by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) and others, people who use their vehicles to dwell often do not have reliable mailing addresses. Therefore, the ACE program is not suitable as a tool to enforce the draft ordinance.

In order to establish enforcement that meets the goals of City Council, the draft ordinance provides for the issuance of infraction citations with a penalty structure requested by City Council: $25 for first violation, $50 for the second violation and $75 for third and subsequent violations. A violator can pay the fine or appear in court to challenge the issuance of the citation. Alternatively, a violator may seek eligibility for dismissal of the citation through participation in the Homeless Engagement and Response Team (HEART) program or similar prosecutorial led diversion program.

The City will provide public outreach concerning information about where people can vehicle dwell on City streets. Public outreach will be coordinated with LAHSA and homeless service providers through the creation and distribution of maps developed by the City denoting the streets on which vehicle dwelling is allowed. The maps will be made available on the City’s website and updated regularly.

The adoption of this draft ordinance will allow the City to collect data for an environmental analysis of permanent regulation of vehicles used for dwelling on public streets.

Oscars Finds More Graffiti

Stewart Oscars, the Venice graffiti finder, has found more graffiti and stated that he feels the amount of damage done in Venice is increasing.

“I came across a New York Post article, August 6, 2016, titled, ‘How Bratton’s NYPD saved the subway system,'” he wrote. “The article is lengthy and covers more than tagging, however the positive actions used to lessen tagging damage on NY subways could be applied to Venice.” http://nypost.com/2016/08/06/how-brattons-nypd-saved-the-subway-system/

Stewart also asked the question: “Can’t something be done other than paint over it?” The answer is yes. One can paint the wall using anti-graffiti paint. One can put anti-graffiti film on windows. One would assume that there is a clear protective coat that could be painted over most murals too.

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1110 Abbot Kinney Blvd

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1130 Abbot Kinney Blvd

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730 Washington Blvd

Code to be Revised to Allow Vehicle Sleeping Only in Commercial/Industrial

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Motorhome in front of school. Legal?

Can one sleep/live in a parked vehicle in Los Angeles? Answer: Yes and No.

Question is in reference to Los Angeles Municipal Code 85.02 that used to prohibit people from sleeping/living in their vehicles but was ruled unconstitutional by the court and thus unenforceable.

Councilman Mike Bonin has been plagued by this code from those who want to sleep/live in vehicles and residents who do not want them in front of their homes, their schools. He has come up with what he hopes to be an equitable solution satisfying both the homeless and the residents.

Industrial and Commercial Areas Allowed
Last week the City Council voted 10 to 1 to have the City Attorney draft an ordinance that would allow people who live/sleep in their vehicles to park in areas zoned industrial or commercial. And they would be prohibited from living/sleeping in vehicles parked near homes and schools.

4000 living in vehicles
The designation of areas where it is permissible has allowed the City Council to prohibit living/sleeping in vehicles in residential areas and around schools. City estimates there are 4000 people living in their vehicles.

After the ordinance is drafted, the ordinance will be voted on by the Councilmembers.

Safe Parking Forthcoming
The revised 85.02 will be the forerunner to the Department of City Planning’s and the City Attorney Office’s joint plan to create a structure of “Safe Parking” places in Los Angeles similar to program in Santa Barbara.

This program would allow people to live and sleep in their vehicles in parking areas such as designated for churches, government, and miscellaneous businesses provided vehicle owners enroll in social service programs that would enable them to get off the streets.

Three Houses Burglarized in Triangle During Holidays

Two calls and 20 minutes later, police arrived and arrested burglar in house in one of the Triangle cul de sacs.

Fast and persistent action from a neighbor helped police apprehend suspect inside house in Triangle.

It was reported that two houses, one of which was under construction,  had been broken into the previous week on Dickson.

No one was home during any of the burglaries.

 

 

LAPD to Offer Community Police Academy Courses

Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) is offering their 11-week Community Police Academy course for community members. Course will start 26 January and graduation will be 5 April 2016. Classes are one day a week for three hours.

It is the opportunity for community members to get an overview of police department policies and procedures and to build a lasting partnership with the department with the ultimate goal being to reduce crime and improve the quality of life in the neighborhoods.

Classes will be held on Tuesday evenings from 6:30 to 9:30 pm at the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles,6505 Wilshire Blvd. Requirements are:

• Minimum age is 18 years
• Live or work in Operations-West Bureau
• No prior felony conviction
• No outstanding warrants
• No pending criminal cases
• Nominated by Area Commanding Officer

Contact Commjunity Relations Office, 12312 Culver Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90066, 310-202-2890.

LAPD Phone Just Rings and Rings, or is Busy, or on Hold

Venetians are familiar with hold times and busy signals when calling the LAPD at the Pacific Division desk. Most callers give up.

Note: This information is from Councilman Mike Bonin’s Neighborhoods First Newsletter.

This summer Councilman Bonin authored legislation asking for the Los Angeles Police Department to report to the City Council about excessive hold times on the department’s non-emergency phone number, 877-ASK-LAPD. Constituents calling the number to report non-emergencies such as loud parties, drinking in public or trespassing, have reportedly been forced to wait in excess of a half hour before speaking with a live person. The non-emergency number was created to free-up capacity when people call 9-1-1 during an emergency, but the system doesn’t work if people calling to report non-emergencies are not able to make reports because of excessive hold times.

As the Council considers ways to improve this system, we want to hear from you. Please share you experiences with 877-ASK-LAPD here.

Neighbor Effects Drug Arrest

All Photos and Story by David Thomas

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Early this Saturday about 11:15 am, while taking a walk, I spotted two individuals loitering between bike path at Oxford Basin and Oxford Triangle wall. The wall is the border between the City and County.

I discretely watched both subjects prepare heroin and shoot it into their arms with syringes. Knowing the goings on of BFMV (burglary from motor vehicle) and residential burglaries in the Oxford Triangle, as well as the bona-fide link between drug users and crime, I called and directed LAPD officers to the subjects. By then they had made their way to the Del Taco on Lincoln Blvd near Washington Blvd.

LAPD detained and ultimately arrested the two for possession. The guy in the orange shirt tried to run and ultimately discarded tar heroin and syringes from his backpack while being pursued by the officer. The orange shirt guy also spit out a baggie of tar heroin from his mouth upon arrest, which was also recovered. I found out that the guy in the black shirt is on probation for robbery. Officers also found burglary tools (e.g., screwdrivers, etc.) in their backpacks.