Former USC athletics official pleads guilty in college admissions scandal
Donna Heinel, a former USC athletics department administrator, pleads guilty in the college admissions bribery scandal.
Donna Heinel, a former USC athletics department administrator, pleads guilty in the college admissions bribery scandal.
The students had trouble receiving schooling and other needed services if they chose not to return to in-person classes.
Beebe waded into the ocean to snap the iconic 1962 image of President Kennedy surrounded by admirers on a Santa Monica beach.
After a two-year hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic, the LA Pride parade will be in person in summer 2022, organizers say.
With BIG: LEAP, some 3,200 low-income Angelenos will get $1,000 every month for one year. Georgia Horton, a recipient of the Compton Pledge, is worried about what comes next for those who will come to depend on that money.
Numbers from the California Department of Public Health show that initial demand for booster shots has been much lower than originally expected.
Grieving relatives have sued nursing homes and other care facilities, accusing them of deadly failures amid COVID-19. Those facilities argue that they have immunity from such suits under a federal law invoked during the pandemic.
Local crews are working more than twice as many hours as a few years ago, leaving the state's relatively small pool of skilled labor stretched thin.
California's public utilities regulators voted unanimously to allow increased storage of natural gas at the troubled Aliso Canyon facility near Porter Ranch that was the site of the nation's worst gas blowout in 2015.
Many celebrated the increase as a meaningful step for low-wage workers. Others expressed concerns that it would cripple businesses already hurting from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The pressure from activists that led the board to eliminate funding for police and reimagine school safety in June gave way to new pressures from those who believe that the Pomona Police Department plays a crucial role in keeping schools safe.
In an area devastated by wildfires, an unusual project is planting offspring from some of the largest and oldest trees on the planet, sequoias, to see if genes that allowed the parent to survive so long will protect new growth from the perils of climate change.
After an eight-month delay because of coronavirus, the L.A. Marathon will take place Sunday. Here's the route, street closures and how to watch.
Skateboarding in the U.S. has been dominated by white dudes. Lately women, people of color and LGBTQ people are creating room for themselves.
On Beverly Hills' famed Rodeo Drive, police allegedly targeted Black shoppers, who say they feel unwelcome in the wealthy city.
More than 100 firefighters fought the flames. Some went on the roof but had to retreat when it became unstable.
A man accused of fatally shooting a woman on a Red Line train in Hollywood last month has been arrested, authorities confirmed.
The union representing Los Angeles firefighters urged the city to reconsider a mandate that requires city employees to be vaccinated or risk losing their jobs.
The governor has joined the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in appealing a vaccination order for all prison employees.
A male falcon named Grinnell was injured and his mate, Annie, has taken up with a new bird that researchers think attacked the man of the house.
Like Los Angeles County as a whole, city officials say they will initially focus on education and outreach to bring facilities into compliance.
Big-band singer and L.A. philanthropist Ginny Mancini dies at 97