
Ventura sinkhole takes down a shed and two vehicles, sends people scrambling
A sinkhole near a construction site in Ventura took down a shed and two vehicles Tuesday morning, as the ground collapsed several feet — rupturing pavement, cracking a fence and sending people fleeing for safety.
The sinkhole formed next to the site of a future apartment building on East Front Street near South Laurel Street, but it primarily damaged an adjacent lot where several vehicles had been parked. The sinkhole is located less than a mile from the Ventura Pier and even closer to the ocean.
No one was injured in the collapse. Ventura city officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the sinkhole. A representative for the company building the apartment complex also could not be reached for comment.
Tron Elliott, who owns a nearby auto repair shop, said a neighbor grabbed him early Tuesday after noticing the ground was moving. Elliott and the neighbor both store vehicles in the lot where the sinkhole eventually formed.
"We could see it was starting to sink and drop,' Elliott said in an interview with The Times. 'It just happened to be where my trucks were."
The two men worked together to try to move the at-risk vehicles away from the area, and were able to move two before the movement accelerated. As Elliott worked to pull out a third vehicle to safety, he said the ground shifted again, and his son yelled at him to get out.
'I was trying to tow another truck out," said Elliott, the owner of Elliott's Performance, an auto repair shop about 100 yards away from the sinkhole. 'I floored it up and over as it collapsed."
Read more: Rancho Palos Verdes is home to a Trump golf course. But his cuts are imperiling the city's landslide response
Just after he moved the vehicle out, he looked back and watched a customer's blue pickup truck descend with the sinking earth, collapsing into his personal black truck. When the ground shifted a bit more, the movement pushed a covered Porche onto the edge of the sinkhole, left precariously dangling.
"It's stuck pretty good," Elliott said.
City officials later came and red-tagged the area, declaring it too dangerous for anyone to enter, Elliott said.
He didn't know what might have caused the sinkhole, but said there hasn't been any more movement since early Tuesday. He wasn't particularly worried about future sinkholes, as much as he was concerned about how another large apartment building could affect the area.
'Too many apartment complexes, they're trying to push us out," Elliott said of the small businesses in the area. "We expect some growth but this is out of control."
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Man falls off cliff after running from authorities in Clark County
DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – A man is recovering in the hospital after falling from a cliff after running from law enforcement in Clark County on Sunday. 2 NEWS spoke with Sergeant Elliott about this incident. Elliott stressed that the man is not under arrest; he has no active charges or warrants. Elliott said officials believe the man was facing mental health or possible substance issues at the time. Officers were not chasing the man when he ran sometime Saturday evening. This happened within the Mad River Gorge and Nature Preserve. WWII soldier returned home 80 years later; public services soon After the man ran into the woods, officers searched for him throughout the night, concerned for his safety. Elliot said they had stopped searching in the morning. A person in the park discovered the man had fallen from a cliff into a gorge. They called 911 at approximately 7:30 a.m. The fire department assisted in taking him back up the trail and to a nearby hospital. He was found in the area South of the Springfield Masonic Community Home and left of U.S. 68. It's currently unknown how long the man was in the gorge. 2 NEWS will update this article when more information is available. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Wayfarers Chapel may have a new site in Rancho Palos Verdes
Wayfarers Chapel, the historic Rancho Palos Verdes sanctuary shuttered due to landslides, may have found more stable ground. Chapel leaders say they have found a location about a mile west of the old site, where rapid land movement has threatened hundreds of homes. Afraid conditions would only worsen, leaders announced in May 2024 their plans to disassemble the chapel, a national historic landmark and popular wedding venue. This week, the chapel announced on its website that it has found 'an ideal new location' next to Rancho Palos Verdes City Hall on the old Battery Barnes military site. The chapel said it still needs to 'secure' the site and raise the rebuilding funds. Read more: Rancho Palos Verdes is home to a Trump golf course. But his cuts are imperiling the city's landslide response Dan Burchett, the chapel's executive director, previously said he expected the full rebuild to cost almost $20 million. If leaders secure the money, the site will be rebuilt with a visitor's center, a museum, a cafe and gardens, according to the website, and guests will be treated to the same sweeping ocean views. The historic chapel had been battered by the recent landslides with shattered windows, warped metal framing and fresh cracks in the parking lot. Chapel leadership initially considered trying to rebuild it in the same location, but worsening landslides made that impossible. The prospective new site is not part of the city's landslide zone. The 100-seat glass-and-wood chapel was built in 1951 and designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright Jr., son of famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Trump pardons drive a big, burgeoning business for lobbyists
Seeking a pardon from President Donald Trump has become big business for lobbying and consulting firms close to the administration, with wealthy hopefuls willing to spend millions of dollars for help getting their case in front of the right people. 'From a lobbying perspective, pardons have gotten profitable,' said one lobbyist whose firm has received such calls. There's no set rate for pardon help. But two people directly familiar with proposals to lobbying firms said they knew of a client's offer of $5 million to help get a case to Trump. These people, like others, were granted anonymity to speak candidly. And while such high numbers do not seem to be standard, they speak to a burgeoning pardon economy. A $5 million figure is higher than numbers The New York Times reported Trump allies receiving for pardon help in his first term. In 2021, the outlet reported that Brett Tolman, a former federal prosecutor who advised the White House on pardons, was receiving five-figure amounts for the work, according to filings and a client. The Times also reported that John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer convicted of disclosing classified information, was told that former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a Trump ally, could help secure him a pardon for $2 million; Giuliani disputed that account. Cozying up to a president's allies or hiring lobbyists to gain access to clemency isn't new. But along with the price spike, what's different now is that Trump is issuing pardons on a rolling basis — rather than most coming at the end of the administration. 'It's like the Wild West,' a Trump ally and lobbyist said. 'You can basically charge whatever you want.' The increased use of the pardon power has some familiar with the process concerned about the appearance of financial and political favoritism that can erode confidence in the clemency process. 'This is very destructive to our justice system. It delegitimizes the pardon power,' said Elizabeth Oyer, who served as pardon attorney for the Department of Justice during President Joe Biden's administration. 'It entrenches a two-tier system of justice in which wealth really can be a get-out-of-jail-free card.' 'All pardon and commutation decisions are solely made by President Trump, who is always willing to give well-deserving Americans a second chance — especially those who have been unfairly targeted by a corrupt justice system,' White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said. Since Trump took office in January, he has pardoned or granted executive clemency to more than 1,500 people, most related to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. It's a significant uptick from a similar time frame during his first term in office. Even without the Jan. 6 defendants, Trump has pardoned 58 people; in his previous administration, Trump had pardoned just one person in his first year. In the past week alone, Trump has pardoned or commuted the sentences of 27 people. Many clemency recipients have been people with the means to elevate their case — allies, donors, celebrities and former politicians. There is a process for vetting pardon applications through the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney, but presidents have not always followed it. Some of the pardons Trump is granting, involving people currently incarcerated, would not be able to make it through the typical process. Unless the Justice Department grants a waiver, the regulations say that petitioners need to wait until five years after either the conviction or the end of their sentence, and they place a premium on acceptance of responsibility. As of this week, there are 6,394 applications for commutations and 1,529 applications for pardons. Not every Trump-aligned lobbyist is eager to take pardon work; some who have turned down offers said they have passed them along to a small handful of Trump supporters who then help the pardon-seeker get on the president's radar. In some cases, referral fees are paid to the lobbying firms even if they are not directly engaged to do the work, according to three people familiar with the process. 'There are others, like us, who have turned down a bunch of that work, but generally the way that works is that they get referred to others who are helping,' said a Washington-based lobbyist whose firm has been approached by people seeking a pardon. The person said that roughly half their client inquiries in recent months have been for pardon help. In the past, it was roughly 1 in 50 client solicitations. The Trump ally who is also a lobbyist said their firm is not taking pardon clients out of concern that they could face blowback when the political winds inevitably change. Another lobbyist said they turn down pardon work because it feels 'sketchy.' In a case that drew significant attention this week, Trump pardoned reality-TV stars Todd and Julie Chrisley, who were convicted in 2022 on fraud and tax evasion-related charges. The two built a national following through their reality show 'Chrisley Knows Best.' The pardons came after a public pressure campaign led by their daughter Savannah, a prominent Trump supporter with nearly 3 million followers on Instagram. Key to reaching Trump is pushing a message that will appeal to the president, particularly one around a politicization of justice by Democrats or overzealous prosecutors. 'Weaponization is real,' said Tolman, who is now a Fox News contributor and the executive director of the conservative-leaning criminal justice reform group Right on Crime. 'If you are in power and you are willing to use the power of the prosecution to go after your political adversaries, how do we fix it?' His comments came during a 2024 panel at the Conservative Political Action Conference focused on the 'weaponization' of the justice system. The panel also included now-Attorney General Pam Bondi and Savannah Chrisley, who used the platform to talk about her parents' case. Tolman has become one of the go-tos for help when people are seeking Trump pardons. He helped the Chrisleys, as well as Charles Kushner, the father of Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner. At the end of Trump's first term, he also lobbied Trump to pardon Ross Ulbricht, who in 2015 was sentenced to life in prison on narcotics and money-laundering charges related to his dark web marketplace Silk Road. Getting Ulbricht out of prison became a cause célèbre to many on the political right who thought he was unjustly targeted by the justice system. During the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump promised to pardon Ulbricht, and he did so as one of his first acts after taking office. Tolman did not respond to a request seeking comment. Other Trump allies who have played influential roles in the pardon process over the past few weeks include Washington attorney Adam Katz, who previously represented Giuliani and helped secure a sentence commutation for a California businesswoman in Trump's first term. Katz did not return a request seeking comment, but lobbyists interviewed by NBC News named him, along with Tolman, as two of the people to whom they refer pardon work. Corcoran Partners, a Florida-based lobbying firm whose managing partner includes Matt Blair, the brother of Trump deputy chief of staff James Blair, has also registered to lobby on federal pardon issues for the first time. In March, Matt Blair's firm registered to lobby on 'pardon' issues for Juno Empire Inc., a Miami-based company that is identified in federal lobbying records as a 'medical billing advocate.' It's not clear what this company does or what its issue is, and there was no contact information available for Juno. Corcoran Partners did not return a request for comment. Longtime Trump confidant Roger Stone also registered in February to lobby for Roger Ver, who is nicknamed 'Bitcoin Jesus' and, if extradited from Spain, faces up to 109 years in prison for, among other things, allegations that he tried to evade nearly $50 million in tax payments. It's the first time Stone's firm, Drake Ventures, formally registered to lobby on pardon issues, records show. An attorney for Ver did not return a request for comment. Some lawyers also see new hope for their clients in Trump's willingness to issue pardons. Tim Parlatore, a former member of Trump's legal team, represented Adm. Robert Burke, who was convicted in May of bribery. Parlatore told NBC News that he had unsuccessfully attempted to get Justice Department leadership to reconsider the Burke case before it went to trial, and that he'd try to secure a pardon now that Burke has been convicted. 'I think I have a great appeal for Burke, but will I go and ask for a pardon? Absolutely! You'd be crazy not to,' he said. 'The way that that case was investigated and presented, I believe, was fundamentally unfair.' Parlatore said he wanted to 'pursue all possible remedies' for his client. 'I'll go to call people and try to figure this thing out, whether it's Ed Martin, Alice Johnson,' he said, referring to Trump's pardon attorney and his more informal 'pardon czar.' 'I just want to make sure that that gets in front of the right people to make a decision.' The president's pardon power, a vestige of the British monarchy, is largely unchecked. Trump isn't the first person to face criticism for controversial pardons. But the perception that Trump is leaning into rewarding supporters was boosted last week when Martin, Trump's current pardon attorney, openly signaled the political motivations for the pardon given to Scott Jenkins. The former Virginia sheriff was facing 10 years in prison after a federal jury found him guilty of taking $75,000 in return for doling out law enforcement authority to local businessmen, as well as two undercover FBI special agents. 'No MAGA left behind,' Martin posted on X after the pardon was announced. One staffer familiar with the pardon process said Martin and the administration were trying to 'undo the damage from weaponization,' often choosing to pardon people they felt were unfairly targeted. 'You have a president who's going to exercise his presidential powers that he has from the Constitution, whether or not there's some guidebook,' they said. 'He does it on trade, he does it on immigration, and he does it everywhere.' That staffer and other Trump allies argue that it was Biden's use of the power that has set the precedent under which they are currently operating. Biden pardoned or commuted the sentences of more than 8,000 people, including to his son Hunter, who was set to be sentenced on federal gun charges just weeks before the pardon was issued. On the way out of office, he also issued pre-emptive pardons for some members of his family, worried Trump would try to prosecute them. An administration official called Biden's pardon decisions an 'absolutely earth-shattering departure from presidential norms.' Trump supporters argue the potential hit to a president's reputation that previously existed for the perception of politicizing the clemency process is no longer there. 'It's become easier after Hunter's pardon. Long gone are the days of an eleventh-hour pardon. It has become more transactional,' the Trump ally and lobbyist said. Beyond increased payments to lobbying firms to help secure pardons, family members of those seeking pardons have also found it useful to amplify their platform by going on conservative media outlets that Trump is known to watch or appear in MAGA-friendly spaces. Savannah Chrisley, for example, spoke at the Republican National Convention and suggested her parents were targeted for being conservative. During a press conference Friday, she said it was a 'misconception' that she 'either paid for a pardon or slept for a pardon' for her parents. She said she simply went to Washington and made sure she was in 'the right room at the right time' and 'begged for meetings.' 'Many people have come on my OAN program to make their case for pardons,' former Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, who became a news anchor for One America News Network after Trump unsuccessfully tried to install him as attorney general, told NBC News. 'Some have not. Some might get granted in the future. I trust President Trump's judgment.' Gaetz says he himself has not officially focused on pardon work but said his show, like others, can help amplify a pardon-seeker's case. 'I've covered pardons as a journalist,' he said. 'One way people get on the pardon radar is coming on my show and making their case on other media President Trump is known to watch.' This article was originally published on