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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Canals Get Vandalized and Burglarized

If you see this man, call 911.

By Darryl DuFay

In the past month, the Venice Canals around the 2600 block of Grand Canal and Strongs Drive have experienced Burglaries and Vandalism. 

Two of the incidents involved what the police call a Hot Prowl where the residents are home but unaware that a crime is taking place – the most dangerous kind.

Police reports and investigations are proceeding.  LAPD Detective Robyn Salazar has been assigned the case.  Our LAPD Senior Lead Officer Jennifer Muther is involved, as is Security Services Systems, who provide the Venice Canals Bike patrol.

1-23-19  LAST SEEN IN THE CANALS by Security Services System

Yesterday, Wednesday afternoon around 1:55 PM, the burglary suspect who broke into homes on Grand Canal and Strongs Drive, was seen in the community. SSS Officer Ramirez observed the suspect at Eastern Canal and Carroll Canal wearing the same clothes except his hat was green.  We called LAPD immediately and notified Det. Robyn Salazar that the suspect was in the area. The suspect began walking down Eastern Court and turned going west bound on Sherman Canal.  The suspect got into a white sedan at 28th and Del Ave and fled the area.  We were unable to get a license plate.

 CRIME INCIDENTS

12-20-18  2601 Grand Canal  8:30 p.m. Burglary  (Hot Prowl)

My home was robbed around 8 p.m. while my family was inside.  Perp broke and entered through a small window and removed a computer, wallet, and some other items. We caught him – sadly – after the fact on camera and reported it. Police responded, took a report (and later partial fingerprints). Detective Salazar is investigating. The same suspect robbed the home across canal less than an hour later, also with people inside.

12-20-18  2606 Grand Canal  9:30 p.m. Burglary  (Hot Prowl)

My house was robbed last night at around 9 pm or so.  I was out, but 3 children (two of mine and my son’s friend) were here at my house with my trusted nanny, and no one suspected a thing.  The perpetrator let himself in through the side door that enters our garage. He came up the back stairs and into my teen-aged daughter’s room. After deftly emptying a jewelry tray, he swiped her laptop and went into my son’s room. My 14-year-old, lights out, was so engulfed in a video game that he didn’t even look up, but spotted only a pair of black shoes, said hello to them, assuming they belonged to his older brother.  The shoes disappeared into the hallway, back down the stairs and into the alley behind our home where a get-away truck was later revealed to have been seen waiting by a neighbor.   It is time to install a Ring Doorbell system, which my brother will do for me. 

01-14-19  2610 Grand Canal 4:20 p.m. Vandalism – Rock through Glass Door.

Owner saw a buff fellow, olive skin legs with white shorts, white socks and soft tennis shoes. She saw and felt the violence when he hurled the large stone…hitting floor and walls until it landed at the other side of the house. Hiding in the bathroom she called the police who came and interviewed her. She said, “I could have been hurt or dead if I had been downstairs at my dinning table or just walking down.  Please try to catch him…. so I can have my life back and not come home trembling every day and our neighborhood can relax again.”

01-14-19  25XX Strongs Drive 5:20 p.m. Burglary – Police Report made.

 

Homeless Encampment Floating Carelessly in Venice Canals

What is going on in Venice?   Is this not the “poster child of the free reign of homelessness in Venice?”  No Carol Sobel laws are broken here.

This photo was sent to Update by Howard Weisenfeld, former president of Venice Canals Association and property owner.

The police have been notified and are working on this as well as the area in the Venice Median involved with the Grand Canal.

2018 Venice Canals Boat Parade

The Venice Canals had its own kids’ rock band this year.

Darryl DuFay’s Home Invaded by Homeless Man

It is one thing to talk in theory about the homeless. It is one thing to caution those putting homeless housing near your home. It is another thing to go to sleep at night knowing the police cannot and do not enforce the laws to protect those who are not homeless. It is one thing to caution the City about this inequity that just increases in potential as the homeless flaunt their homelessness.

It is another thing when it happens to you!

This is Darryl DuFay’s story of his night before and morning of the Fourth of July with his encounter of a homeless person in his home. Darryl is a long-time resident of Venice. He has been active in Venice Median project which is meant for homeless housing near the canals.

By Darryl DuFay

Good morning. I’m glad I can say that.
It is five o’clock in the morning now and It is just beginning to sink in six hours later. I am increasingly not feeling well. I am having my own traumatic stress experience. I am overwhelmed with “what ifs.”  What if my face-to-face personal encounter with a mentally disturbed homeless person had ended tragically.

I was going to bed about 11 last night. My bedroom is on the second floor. There is no outside access to my second floor. It was hot and I open the first of two doors to get a cross draft to cool down the room. It was the second door that enters onto my outside deck that I now replay and replay over in my head.

There rose up a figure on the other side of the door, which has glass panes, not solid. Then, a scream matched only by my own. Standing there, slightly bent over. was a disheveled white male, maybe be in his twenties or thirties, with something wrapped around him. No shirt. He continued screaming. Something about being beaten up, that he didn’t know where he was, and to call the police. He had to have climbed up from the outside.

My first impulse was to try to get him out of my home peacefully. In hindsight because he did not want to leave — not a good idea. I closed and locked the door.. He kept screaming and screaming. I was in a personal panic when I called 911. He kept screaming and screaming.

I walked out and sat down outside by my front door to wait for the police and continued to look back upstairs, afraid he might become violent and break through the door. He kept screaming and screaming.

A neighbor was on the footbridge right by my home. I asked him to call 911 again, which he did. Five to seven minutes had passed. His friend Tiffany came on the bridge and over to where I was sitting. She asked how I was feeling and offered any help I might need. He continue to scream and scream.

The police arrived about ten to fifteen minutes or more later. I don’t remember how much time, but it was not right away. They came. I directed them where to go. They talked to the individual. He didn’t resist. He kept saying he was sorry. The police took him outside and had him sit down to talk to him. He repeated he didn’t know where he was at. The police said they were going to take him to the hospital.

The police apologized for not arriving sooner but said they were encountering other situations.

I end by repeating my “what if.”  For me this did not end tragically but in the growing, uncontrolled homeless state that grips Venice. Who knows what will be next. For 39 years I have lived in the Venice Canals.

Canal Bridge Lights Go On, As Did Party

canals
(Photo courtesy of Darryl DuFay.)

The 15th Annual Voice of the Canals Bridge and Holiday Lighting ceremony and Party took place in the small community of the canals north of Washington. This year Regina Weller of the LAPD Homeless Task Force spoke of the work she and her husband Steve had done along with the police task force to end homelessness in Venice. The canal association donated $1000 to further their work.

Canal Walk Bridges to be Upgraded and Repaired

bridge (Photo courtesy of Darryl Dufay.)

The nine walk bridges on the canals west of Washington will be upgraded and repaired, according to Darryl Dufay, editor of the Voice of the Canals.

“Just got a letter from Councilman Mike Bonin stating that $170,000 had been transferred to the Department of General Services for the work,” said Dufay. We have been at this for nine years. As you can tell from the picture, the bridges need work.”

Letter from Bonin’s office stated that work could begin first week in November. All precautions will be taken to protect the water from construction debris.

“The plan is to complete one bridge per week, and at most, two bridges will be closed at the same time. All bridges will be open on the weekends.
The work will include sanding, replacing planks, replacing or adding screws to blanks, applying non-slip paint and all repairs will ‘maintain the unique and rustic character of the bridges.’ ”

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