logo
State authorities to investigate fatal shooting by LAPD of man officers say had gun

State authorities to investigate fatal shooting by LAPD of man officers say had gun

Yahoo2 days ago

The California Department of Justice will investigate a fatal shooting by Los Angeles Police Department officers under a law that empowers the state attorney general to probe police shootings of unarmed people — despite the LAPD saying the man killed Tuesday was holding a gun.
At 10 p.m. Tuesday, officers responded to a reported shooting in an apartment building in the 1000 block of Ardmore Avenue in Koreatown, LAPD officials said in an unsigned statement.
As they entered the building, Ronald Gainer Jr. exited an apartment holding a handgun, officials said. The officers fired at Gainer, who retreated into the apartment.
The officers entered the unit and took Gainer into custody, according to the LAPD. Gainer, 35, died at a hospital, according to the L.A. County Medical Examiner's office.
Officers found a handgun and discharged cartridge casings "at scene," the LAPD said, along with a second gun and ammunition inside the apartment.
Read more: 'A night of tragedy': A young officer who loved Dodgers, snowboarding killed in Baldwin Park shootout
According to the police statement, Gainer was involved earlier that evening in a "domestic violence incident" with his girlfriend. After she fled, Gainer allegedly fired a gun into the air and toward a building, prompting the response by the officers who shot him, the LAPD said.
The LAPD's Force Investigation Division was already probing the shooting — standard protocol for all uses of force by officers — when on Wednesday California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta announced his office was investigating as well.
In a press release, Bonta cited Assembly Bill 1506, which requires the state's Department of Justice to investigate police shootings of unarmed people.
Alexandra Duquet, a spokeswoman for Bonta, said state prosecutors will investigate cases when it isn't immediately clear whether the person killed had control of a weapon.
Assembly Bill 1506 defines "possession" of a weapon as being "under the civilian's dominion and control at the time of the shooting."
Agents from the Department of Justice's Division of Law Enforcement will conduct an investigation separate from the LAPD's and present their findings to prosecutors in Bonta's office, who will make a decision to bring criminal charges.
If no case is filed, state prosecutors must release a report detailing the evidence and the legal reasoning for why charges were not warranted.
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.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Admin Surrenders to Judges and Returns Abrego Garcia
Trump Admin Surrenders to Judges and Returns Abrego Garcia

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Admin Surrenders to Judges and Returns Abrego Garcia

The Maryland father mistakenly deported to El Salvador by the Trump administration is back in the United States. Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed Kilmar Abrego Garcia had landed on Friday, and he will now face criminal charges for allegedly transporting illegal immigrants. 'He was a smuggler of humans, and women, and children,' she said. Abrego Garcia's return appears to be yet another about-face by Donald Trump after the White House insisted he would not be allowed back into the country. The stunning move is being seen as a way out for the administration after being hauled over the coals by judges for ignoring court orders. The indictment, filed in Nashville, Tennessee, accuses the 29-year-old of a conspiracy to move undocumented immigrants from Texas to other parts of the country. Abrego Garcia, who lived with his wife and children in Maryland, has been accused of being involved in smuggling thousands of foreign citizens from Mexico and Central America. Some were said to be children. The married father was deported to El Salvador's top security CECOT prison in March as part of the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants. Democratic Party lawmakers have blasted the deportation after a Department of Justice official admitted Abrego Garcia was removed from the country by mistake. Donald Trump and White House advisers, including Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, insisted that the Maryland resident was a member of the violent MS-13 crime gang. His family and lawyers have denied that's the case. Miller claimed that if Abrego Garcia ever returned to America, he would be arrested and kicked out of the country a second time. The federal filing was reportedly entered under seal in Tennessee last month. In a statement to ABC News, Abrego Garcia's attorney, Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, said they are determined to get a fair trial. 'From the beginning, this case has made one thing painfully clear: The government had the power to bring him back at any time. Instead, they chose to play games with the court and with a man's life,' he said. 'We're not just fighting for Kilmar, we're fighting to ensure due process rights are protected for everyone. Because tomorrow, this could be any one of us, if we let power go unchecked, if we ignore our Constitution.' NBC News reported that a federal grand jury has indicted Abrego Garcia on two counts, conspiracy to unlawfully transport illegal aliens for financial gains and the unlawful transportation of illegal aliens for financial gains. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said if convicted, Abrego Garcia will be sentenced to a U.S. prison. He will serve that sentence and then be removed from the U.S. The administration acknowledged in court papers that a mistake had been made and that a 2019 court order shielding Abrego Garcia from deportation had been violated. He feared persecution from gangs if he returned to El Salvador. But the White House insisted the father's gang affiliations should bar him from the U.S. in spite of the error. Abrego Garcia has been in the country since illegally entering at the age of 13 and has been living in Maryland for 13 years. He has one child with his wife, Vasquez Sura, a U.S. citizen.

Snitch On Password Hackers And Get $10 Million — Here's How
Snitch On Password Hackers And Get $10 Million — Here's How

Forbes

time6 hours ago

  • Forbes

Snitch On Password Hackers And Get $10 Million — Here's How

$10 million reward for information regarding RedLine hackers. There aren't too many ways you could make a quick $10 million these days, at least not legally. The U.S. Department of State has just provided one though, for anyone who knows any password hackers with a connection to the RedLine password-stealing threat campaign. While the reward specifically mentions Maxim Alexandrovich Rudometov, a Russian national, as allegedly being the creator of the RedLine infostealer in question, the reward is also applicable to information about those individuals using the password hack to infiltrate critical U.S. infrastructure providers. Here's everything you need to know. Channeling the South Park character Mr. Mackey, with a little creative license, password hacks are bad, m'kay. There are very few occasions where the opposite can be said to be true: gaining access to your own resources when credentials have been lost, checking the veracity of security protections within the boundaries of a contracted penetration testing exercise, accessing a terrorist device to garner life-saving information as a federal agent and, nope, I'm starting to struggle now. There is one additional password hack-related money maker, though, and that is snitching on the state-sponsored password-stealing cybercriminals who are using the RedLine infostealer against U.S. targets. In the latest addition to the Rewards for Justice bounty scheme, the U.S. Department of Justice has confirmed that it will pay 'up to $10 million for information leading to the identification or location of any person who, while acting at the direction or under the control of a foreign government, participates in malicious cyber activities against U.S. critical infrastructure.' In this case, the reward is open to individuals who can provide information regarding the RedLine password-hack malware operation. Available by way of a decentralized Malware-as-a-Service platform, cybercriminals are able to buy or rent the RedLine malware to use in their own attack campaigns. 'Rudometov has regularly accessed and managed the technical infrastructure of RedLine,' the Department of State said, and 'is associated with various cryptocurrency accounts used to receive and launder payments,' as well as being in physical possession of the RedLine malware source code. 'Anyone with information on foreign government-linked associates of Rudometov, or their malicious cyber activities, or foreign government-linked use of RedLine malware, should contact Rewards for Justice,' in order to pursue the $10 million bounty on offer. So, if you know one of these password hackers, now is the time to snitch before someone else does.

Flash-bangs, tear gas and arrests as ICE raids protests continue in Los Angeles
Flash-bangs, tear gas and arrests as ICE raids protests continue in Los Angeles

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Flash-bangs, tear gas and arrests as ICE raids protests continue in Los Angeles

A series of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids ignited widespread protests, confrontations and scenes of chaos as federal agents detained at least 44 individuals across Los Angeles on Friday. Protesters swarmed the streets, some jumping in front of law enforcement vehicles, as KTLA captured the escalating tensions from both the air and ground through the day and night. Agents moved in on at least three locations throughout the day. One of the most visible confrontations took place outside a Home Depot in the Westlake District, where day laborers often gather for temporary work. ICE agents in riot gear were seen clashing with and chasing people through the parking lot as stunned shoppers looked on. Another raid unfolded at a clothing store on Towne Avenue in the Fashion District. Several workers were taken into custody in handcuffs and loaded into waiting vans. Outside, other agents in tactical gear engaged in tense standoffs with onlookers and activists, some of whom used megaphones to urge garment workers not to sign documents or speak with federal agents. Later in the evening, flash-bang grenades and tear gas filled the air as Los Angeles Police Department officers responded to mounting unrest in the Civic Center area. At 7:51 p.m., LAPD Central Division declared an unlawful assembly at Alameda and Temple streets, warning that those who failed to leave would be subject to arrest. Minutes later, the department reported that a group of violent individuals was throwing large pieces of concrete. Officers were authorized to use less-lethal munitions to disperse the crowd. By 8:24 p.m., the LAPD issued a citywide tactical alert, requiring all officers to remain on duty. A traffic advisory was also issued: Alameda Street was closed between Aliso and 1st streets, with detours recommended via Los Angeles, Main, or Spring streets. East-west traffic was rerouted to 1st Street. Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), a division of ICE, confirmed that agents executed four federal search warrants with partner agencies, including the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration. 'Approximately 44 people were administratively arrested and one arrest for obstruction,' an HSI spokesperson said. 'The investigation remains ongoing, updates will follow as appropriate.' That single obstruction arrest was confirmed by US Attorney Bill Essayli as David Huerta, president of the California branch of the Service Employees International Union. Essayli posted an image of the union leader handcuffed and placed in the back of a vehicle. Video of the purported incident that led to his arrest was also posted. It showed Huerta briefly standing near the front of an unmarked white SUV that was used in the operation before being pushed out of the way by a federal agent. He is seen falling to the ground with several agents around him before he is presumably taken into custody while protesters and agents exchange shoves. The arrest of Huerta, who union members said was also injured, was condemned by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who called Huerta a 'respected leader, a patriot, and an advocate for working people.' 'No one should ever be harmed for witnessing government action,' Newsom added. In a news release issued Friday evening, SEIU California said Huerta was treated at a local hospital for injuries he suffered during his arrest, but currently remains in federal custody. He made the following statement through the union: 'What happened to me is not about me; This is about something much bigger. This is about how we as a community stand together and resist the injustice that's happening. Hard-working people, and members of our family and our community, are being treated like criminals. We all collectively have to object to this madness because this is not justice. This is injustice. And we all have to stand on the right side of justice.' Chris Wolfe, Travis Schlepp and Cameron Kiszla contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store