A Los Angeles County fire official said an untold number of significant injuries were linked to two of the fires, and a city official in Los Angeles described the night of Jan. 7 as “one of the ...
The Palisades Fire and Eaton Fire, which continue to burn since they were first detected ten days ago, have destroyed 12,000 structures, killing at least 27 people, and burning down nearly 40,000 ...
A Cal Fire crew member works to mop up hot spots from the burn scar of the Palisades Fire in Los Angeles on Wednesday. (David Swanson/Reuters) More than a week into the fire crisis that’s ...
New York Times reporters have been writing personal portraits about the fires in the California Today newsletter. Here is a collection of their dispatches on what the disaster means to them ...
The Palisades and Eaton fires both erupted on Jan. 7. Los Angeles County has been devastated by two deadly wildfires that have become some of the most destructive in California history.
As Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles confronts a city dealing with devastating fires, her performance has raised questions, even among her supporters, about whether she can become the dominant ...
Lorenzo Lamas condemned California bureaucracy for failing to have a plan of action before the Palisades Fire tore through his hometown. Lamas, 66, who was born in Santa Monica and raised in the ...
"Apparently LAPD are looking for three 'persons of interest,' all tied to a MAGA website and who were spotted at the source of all three major LA fires," the post reads. "This might have been the ...
THAT’S WHERE WE COULD SEE WINDS GUSTING UP TO 70MPH, WHICH CAUSES VERY FAST SPREADING FIRES. AND TO PUT THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE. YOU SEE THOSE WHITE OUTLINES THERE? THAT’S THE PALISADES FIRE AND ...
The biggest fires in Los Angeles County, the Palisades and Eaton fires, have burned over an area of more than 37,000 acres in size as of Jan. 16. At least 27 people have died, according to the LA ...
Southern California is heading into a day of its most extreme fire weather with bone-dry vegetation and strong Santa Ana winds that officials warn could turn a small blaze into a massive inferno.