Thirteenth bus of migrants arrives at Union Station from Texas
A bus carrying 46 migrants arrived at Union Station from Texas on Saturday morning, marking the 13th bus sent to Los Angeles from the state since June 14.
A bus carrying 46 migrants arrived at Union Station from Texas on Saturday morning, marking the 13th bus sent to Los Angeles from the state since June 14.
A look at some of the top performances in high school football games across the Southland on Thursday and Friday.
Guns N' Roses announced that their St. Louis concert, originally scheduled for Saturday, will be postponed 'due to illness.'
The Rams placed star receiver Cooper Kupp on injured reserve because of a hamstring injury, meaning he will miss at least the first four games to start the season.
The Alaskan Inuit band Pamyua will headline the new Los Angeles Global Music Festival on Saturday at the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles.
A statewide investigation alleged Kaiser Permanente's dumping practices violated federal, state laws.
Paul Reubens' immediate cause of death was acute hypoxic respiratory failure, says his death certificate obtained by news outlets. The actor died in July.
An altercation outside of a Hollywood nightclub led to an officer-involved shooting early Saturday morning.
A rare, powerful earthquake struck Morocco late Friday, killing more than 1,000 people and damaging buildings in a swath of destruction stretching from villages in the Atlas Mountains to the historic city of Marrakech.
Danish footballers Ann Stengard and Birte Kjems, who won the first Women's World Cup in 1971, discussed the controversy at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Matthew Stafford and the Rams will face a tough challenge beating the Seattle Seahawks on the road without Cooper Kupp. Here's how the teams match up.
Justin Herbert and the Chargers open the season against the Miami Dolphins in what will be a test for the Kellen Moore-orchestrated offense.
When conservatives denounce campus progressives and radicals as out-of-touch elites, when liberals bemoan failures to defend free speech, and when both denounce cancel culture, we can hear the echoes of the 1960s.
A 23-year-old man was fatally stabbed at the Pershing Square Metro station in downtown L.A. on Thursday. The attack appeared to have been unprovoked.
Readers of the Los Angeles Times agree with columnist Bill Plaschke that the Dodgers should cut ties with Julio Urías after latest domestic incident.
A preliminary $9.5-million settlement has been reached in a class-action lawsuit over the Magic Key program at Disneyland. More than 100,000 people will receive payouts.
A bill before the Legislature would limit cooperation between corrections and immigration officials. The Senate should pass it, and Gov. Gavin Newsom should sign it.
You might mock the muddied attendees at Burning Man, but their experience reflects the plight of nature lovers elsewhere cut off from wilderness by extreme weather.
California legislators passed a bill giving water regulators authority to investigate whether some of the state's oldest water rights are valid.
At a gun control forum close to the site of the January mass shooting in Monterey Park, Reps. Adam Schiff of Burbank, Katie Porter of Irvine and Barbara Lee of Oakland and Silicon Valley executive Lexi Reese all pledged to push for reform.
Los Angeles County officials said they have no plans for new public mask mandates — a sign of how COVID-19 policies have changed in the back-to-normal era.
California lawmakers say the new law aims to make social media more transparent, but X, formerly known as Twitter, alleges it violates the 1st Amendment.
More than 90% of India could face waves of unsurvivably high heat by 2050. But Narendra Modi's government continues to invest in coal.
Corona Centennial High lost two fumbles, had a pass intercepted and was stuffed on two fourth-down plays in a loss to Las Vegas Bishop Gorman on Friday.
A look at how the Los Angeles Times' top 25 high school football teams in the Southland fared in Week 3 (games Friday unless noted).