Posts Tagged ‘ extra ’

Extra, Extra: Immigration in Pomona, Mother-Daughter Drug Smugglers, and a Narcissistic Fred Durst

February 9, 2012
Extra, Extra: Immigration in Pomona, Mother-Daughter Drug Smugglers, and a Narcissistic Fred Durst

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, students and faculty debate immigration issues at Pomona College, a mother-daughter team tries to move cocain, and Fred Durst sings Fred Durst…but not in concert. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › Read more: Extra, Extra: Immigration in Pomona, Mother-Daughter Drug Smugglers, and a Narcissistic Fred Durst

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‘Somehow Those Promises Don’t Get Kept’

January 28, 2012

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The court-appointed receiver overseeing California’s prison health care system said Friday the state must keep its promise to spend more than $2 billion for new medical facilities before the federal courts can end an oversight role that has lasted six years. California committed to spending $750 million to upgrade existing medical facilities, building a new $906 million medical center and converting juvenile lockups at a cost of $817 million. So far, only the new medical center in Stockton is being built. Receiver J. Clark Kelso told The Associated Press that the state must begin all the upgrades before it should be allowed to retake control of a prison medical system once deemed so poor that it was found to have violated inmates’ constitutional rights. They are his first public comments since a federal judge last week told officials to begin preparing for an end to the receivership. “That leaves a court order that the state is now out of compliance with,” Kelso said during the 75-minute interview. “The courts have been promised construction for the last half-decade. Somehow those promises don’t get kept.” California officials are analyzing the need for new medical facilities in light of a state law that took effect last year that is sending lower-level criminals to county jails instead of state prisons. Federal judges have ordered the state to reduce its prison population by 33,000 inmates over two years to improve the treatment of mentally and physically ill inmates, a decision that has been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. At its height in 2006, California’s inmate population was more than 162,000. Kelso said the medical center that is under construction in Stockton and the $750 million in upgrades are needed even if the state has fewer inmates. Conversion of the juvenile lockups was to have included new housing and treatment facilities for sick and mentally ill inmates. Kelso has been negotiating with officials from the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and attorneys representing inmates after a federal judge issued a notice saying it was time to begin ending the federal receivership. Court oversight of medical care in the nation’s largest state prison system has led to improvements in inmate health care that have cost California taxpayers billions of dollars. “We’ll just see if the parties can’t find a middle ground for agreement,” Kelso said. The pace of those negotiations will determine how quickly the state can retake control of its prison health care operations, he said. Corrections Secretary Matthew Cate said he wanted to see the receivership end as early as this summer, although he also said it would be appropriate for the courts to maintain some type of oversight role to ensure that inmate care does not deteriorate. “I think the sooner we return day-to-day operations to the state, the better,” Cate told the AP in an interview earlier this week. “We need to work out the construction issues, obviously, and I know that Clark is also concerned about making sure there’s a strong structure in place to maintain the strides we’ve made. But if we can work those issues out, I’d love to see it be this summer.” Kelso said the state also should create a quasi-independent medical bureaucracy within the corrections department to make sure the state doesn’t backslide because of budget cuts or a lack of interest. “A lot of that has to do with budget independence and the independence of the head of prison health care really to control his or her budget,” Kelso said. “They can’t just get lost in the big haze that is the corrections budget.” He said the corrections department traditionally has focused on keeping inmates safely locked up, with a lesser emphasis on the well-being of those prisoners, and it is unclear if that culture has changed. Citing inmate overcrowding as the leading cause, the federal courts previously found that medical care for California prisoners was so poor that an average of one inmate a week was dying of neglect or malpractice. It ordered the prison population reduced, prompting the department to send layoff notices this week to 545 employees because fewer workers are needed as the number of inmates declines. In the notice he filed last week, U.S. District Court Judge Thelton Henderson said conditions had improved enough to consider ending the receivership. He said most of the goals of the federal oversight had been met. The San Francisco-based judge ordered Kelso, state officials and inmates’ attorneys to report by April 30 on when the receivership should end and whether it should continue some role in ensuring that conditions remained constitutional. “I think this all depends much more on the state’s progress than on mine,” Kelso said. “Frankly, if the construction had been done as promised, I’d be a hell of a lot closer.” See the original post here: ‘Somehow Those Promises Don’t Get Kept’

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Extra, Extra: 175 Pounds of Nicorette, Another Lap-Band Investigation & Why Downtown Businesses Love CicLAvia

January 28, 2012
Extra, Extra: 175 Pounds of Nicorette, Another Lap-Band Investigation & Why Downtown Businesses Love CicLAvia

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, someone killed their neighbors’ chihuahua with a golf club, downtown business love CicLAvia and 175 pounds of Nicorette gum looks as disgusting as you might imagine. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › See the original post: Extra, Extra: 175 Pounds of Nicorette, Another Lap-Band Investigation & Why Downtown Businesses Love CicLAvia

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Extra, Extra: Awkward at the Golden Globes, Car Drives Into 99 Cent Store, & Denim Shopping in East Hollywood

January 17, 2012
Extra, Extra: Awkward at the Golden Globes, Car Drives Into 99 Cent Store, & Denim Shopping in East Hollywood

In tonight’s MLK Day Extra, Extra we’ve got awkward moments at the Golden Globes, one way to get inside a valley bargain store, a stylist’s secrets for finding denim, and more news of the day. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › Read the original post: Extra, Extra: Awkward at the Golden Globes, Car Drives Into 99 Cent Store, & Denim Shopping in East Hollywood

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Why Did L.A. Fail To Bank Over $23 Million In Street Furniture Revenue? Because The City Procrastinated.

January 13, 2012
Why Did L.A. Fail To Bank Over $23 Million In Street Furniture Revenue? Because The City Procrastinated.

City Controller Wendy Greuel announced today that Los Angeles could have an extra $23 million in the bank had officials not dragged their feet to approve permits for advertising on street furniture. more › More here: Why Did L.A. Fail To Bank Over $23 Million In Street Furniture Revenue? Because The City Procrastinated.

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Extra, Extra: Cell Phone Robbery Caught on Tape, Heather Locklear Rushed To Hospital & a Hangover Pill

January 13, 2012
Extra, Extra: Cell Phone Robbery Caught on Tape, Heather Locklear Rushed To Hospital & a Hangover Pill

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, a hangover pill is in the works, a woman was beaten while being robbed of her cell phone and Heather Locklear’s sister calls 9-1-1 on her. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › See the original post: Extra, Extra: Cell Phone Robbery Caught on Tape, Heather Locklear Rushed To Hospital & a Hangover Pill

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LeBron’s Late Blunders Open Door For Clippers

January 12, 2012

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Clippers couldn’t hit a basket in the final four minutes of regulation. The Miami Heat could barely make free throws. Two tired teams coming off road losses the night before staggered into overtime. Then the Clippers took over. They outscored Miami 9-3 in the extra session and earned the biggest win of their young season, 95-89 Wednesday night. “It’s good to get a win and get it by grinding it out,” said Blake Griffin, who had 20 points and 12 rebounds. Their next test against one of the league’s power teams comes Saturday against the Lakers. Chris Paul had 27 points, 11 assists and one turnover in nearly 45 minutes, Caron Butler added 20 points, and Chauncey Billups had 12 for the Clippers, 9-2 against Miami at home since 2001-02. DeAndre Jordan had 11 rebounds and six blocked shots to set the tone defensively. “They didn’t surprise us,” said Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, who got ejected with 5 seconds left. “We have great respect for them. “That was great compelling playoff basketball in early January.” LeBron James had 23 points and 13 rebounds for the 200th double-double of his career, Mario Chalmers added 18 points, Dwyane Wade 17 and Chris Bosh had 16 points and 11 rebounds for the Heat, who have lost their last four games against the Clippers at Staples Center. “They are a good team, they are a really good team,” Bosh said. “They are going to have some battles and adversity is going to come. We’ll see how they handle it and just keep playing.” The Heat were coming off an overtime loss to Golden State, while the Clippers had lost at Portland a night earlier. In overtime, James, Bosh and Wade missed on a combined seven shots. Miami’s Big Three struggled in the fourth quarter, as well, combining to go 3 for 8. James missed three consecutive baskets in overtime and he was 6 of 10 from the line in the final 5:49 of regulation. Chalmers hit a 3-pointer for Miami’s only points in the extra session. The Heat were 20 of 34 from the line, with James accounting for eight of their 14 misses. “I’ve been shooting the ball particularly well from the free throw line, but tonight I didn’t make enough. So I put our free throw shooting on me,” he said. “It’s kind of a rhythm when it trickles down to everybody else, so I’ve got to concentrate a little more and knock them down when I get fouled.” Wade added, “We haven’t missed this many free throws on this team, probably ever.” The Clippers’ shooting nearly let them down in the final 4 minutes of regulation when they missed on seven straight possessions, but were bailed out by Miami’s own problems. The Clippers led by two with 27 seconds left in regulation before James tied it 86 on a free throw. The Clippers called their final timeout and Paul dribbled around with James hounding him before putting up a shot that missed as time expired, forcing the Heat to the third overtime of their trip. “We defended and gave ourselves a chance to win, and that’s all you can ask for,” James said. “So we can be satisfied. I mean, you don’t like to lose, but we’re not going to hang our heads about this one.” With the Clippers trailing 84-83, Billups got fouled by James on a 3-pointer with 27 seconds left in regulation and made all three free throws. The Clippers finished 17 of 23 from the line. The Heat won two video reviews in the final 16 seconds of regulation, but they failed to make a field goal in the final 7:32. “A lot of times we were able to get LeBron to the rim and that’s what we wanted,” Wade said. “It’s not always going to go in, but we can leave here with our heads up high, knowing that we stuck to our game plan. We just didn’t get the win.” Neither team led by more than three points in a physical fourth quarter that featured Wade knocking Paul to the court and Norris Cole and Mo Williams colliding. “There’s a lot of guys out there that, if you look at them, they like to lift a lot of weights, so it is going to be physical,” James said. “These are two teams that have high hopes, so when that kind of clash happens, it’s going to be physical.” Notes: The Clippers went 1-1 in their first back-to-back of the shortened season. … The Heat are 5-3 in four back-to-back sets. … Paul evened his career rivalry with good friend James at six wins apiece. “We hate to lose to each other,” Paul said. … The game drew a standing room only crowd of 19,341. The Clippers have sold out all five of their home games and 17 straight dating to last season. … Celebs attending included Rihanna, Chris Rock, Billy Crystal, Sinbad, Gabrielle Union, and former Los Angeles Angels teammates Jered Weaver and John Lackey. Union is Wade’s girlfriend. Here is the original post: LeBron’s Late Blunders Open Door For Clippers

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Extra, Extra: School Reform, Indecency in Broadcasting and 2,000 Pounds of Marijuana

January 12, 2012
Extra, Extra: School Reform, Indecency in Broadcasting and 2,000 Pounds of Marijuana

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, a recent graduate pushes for school reform in a high-performing district, the question is raised as to whether radio and TV should have the same indecency rules, and one boat was carrying a shitton of weed. more › Read more here: Extra, Extra: School Reform, Indecency in Broadcasting and 2,000 Pounds of Marijuana

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Extra, Extra: Where Elvis Went in L.A., Hollywood High-Rises and Blue Ivy Carter’s Takeover

January 9, 2012
Extra, Extra: Where Elvis Went in L.A., Hollywood High-Rises and Blue Ivy Carter’s Takeover

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, Elvis loved L.A., Blue Ivy Gets her own news section and Hollywood has a plan for high-rises. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › See the article here: Extra, Extra: Where Elvis Went in L.A., Hollywood High-Rises and Blue Ivy Carter’s Takeover

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Extra, Extra: ‘Pot-tel’ Hopes Are Dashed, David Hasselholf’s Hairy Chest Inspires Scientists, School District Gets Lucky

January 8, 2012
Extra, Extra: ‘Pot-tel’ Hopes Are Dashed, David Hasselholf’s Hairy Chest Inspires Scientists, School District Gets Lucky

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, David Hasselholf’s hairy chest inspires scientists, celebs are going on juice cleanses and hopes for a K-town pot-tel are dashed. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › The rest is here: Extra, Extra: ‘Pot-tel’ Hopes Are Dashed, David Hasselholf’s Hairy Chest Inspires Scientists, School District Gets Lucky

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Raw Police Video