Here are the landfills that could take toxic waste from the L.A. wildfires in the coming weeks — many have not accepted ...
In a pivotal milestone in Los Angeles County's long road to recovery from the deadly wildfires in early January, the U.S.
LOS ANGELES (Tribune News Service) — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Tuesday began clearing debris from burned properties in Los Angeles County.
Toxic fire waste from the second phase of cleanup could end up stretching from the Central Valley to El Monte to Azusa to the ...
Sheriff’s deputies stopped two individuals from trying to access a checkpoint in a vehicle that looked like a fire engine, Commander Minh G. Dinh of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department ...
The clean-up and rebuilding process following the devastating Los Angeles fires ... "When we remove fire ash and debris, we place it in the bed of a dump truck and inside of a black heavy-duty ...
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department The deputies conducted research and found that the fire department did not exist, and that the fire truck was bought at an auction, the sheriff's department ...
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office confirmed ... unit was driving through the Palisades Fire area with fire personnel and noticed a fire truck that did not appear to be legitimate.
The couple — 31-year-old Dustin Nehl and 44-year-old Jennifer Nehl — were arrested on Saturday by Los Angeles ... fire truck that did not seem to be legitimate. LAPD then contacted the county ...
Dustin Nehl, 31, and Jennifer Nehl, 44, were arrested for impersonating a firefighter, the Los Angeles County ... the Palisades fire area, which noticed that the fire truck did not seem to be ...
Besides Cal Fire, multiple agencies have dropped fire retardant and water, including the U.S. Forest Service, the Los Angeles and Ventura county fire ... 13 aircraft to dump suppressants on ...