logo
Fairfax District business owners saddened, on edge and forced to close after burglary uptick

Fairfax District business owners saddened, on edge and forced to close after burglary uptick

Yahoo19-05-2025
Multiple businesses in L.A.'s Fairfax District have fallen victim to smash-and-grab burglaries in recent times, and now business owners are having to make tough decisions on whether they want to operate in the area.
One of the businesses most recently hit is Solestage, located at 455 North Fairfax Avenue. According to Los Angeles Police Department Officer Miller, a group of thieves used a blue Toyota Camry to smash into the storefront and steal merchandise before fleeing in a different vehicle before 5 a.m. on May 16.
The suspects were gone by the time police arrived, Officer Miller said. Solestage sells high-end streetwear and merchandise, and according to store owner Robert McClenton, that's exactly what the thieves took.
Celebrity-owned pot shop in Los Angeles burglarized
'I went to the surveillance cameras, looked and saw the car [had been driven] in, and when I got here, the car was still there running,' McClenton said of the Friday morning burglary. 'It's crazy because I get up every morning to get here to make sure I'm available for people to come out here and see these items…it's heartbreaking.'
Neither LAPD nor McClenton were able to elaborate on how much was taken from the store.
McClenton told KTLA that it will likely cost 'tens of thousands of dollars' to repair the storefront and security gate that were damaged in the burglary and that he is still unsure of how much insurance will cover.
Los Angeles barbershop blasts 'Baby Shark' to ward off homeless
Another nearby store owner spoke with KTLA on Monday about the rise in burglaries. While he declined to go on camera, he provided surveillance video that shows a similar tactic being employed by the thieves that hit his establishment: using a vehicle to ram right through the storefront.
In fact, similar crimes have already happened at his store twice this year, once in February and again in April, he said. He also noted that he is aware of at least three other businesses in the area that have been targeted.
The assistant manager of another Fairfax District business – one that has not been burglarized – told KTLA that he's 'always wondering if we're next.'
Chipotle is giving out $1 million in free burritos this summer: Here's how to get one
'Nobody's really doing anything about it,' Milton Hernandez said. '[There needs to be] more security and more patrolling.'
In the meantime, most businesses appear to be staying open, except for Solestage; owner McClenton says he is moving his entire inventory out of the store because he is forced to shut down for the next couple of weeks, meaning that on top of all the products lost, he is also losing business.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas Man Charged With Killing Afghan Father: What To Know
Texas Man Charged With Killing Afghan Father: What To Know

Newsweek

time2 days ago

  • Newsweek

Texas Man Charged With Killing Afghan Father: What To Know

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Newsweek has exclusively obtained, through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, the official charge sheet for Katia Trevon Bougere, a 31-year-old Texas man indicted on a murder charge in the April shooting of Abdul Rahman Waziri in Houston. Waziri—a refugee who fled to the United States in 2021 after serving in an elite Afghan military unit trained to detect hidden explosives and assigned to protect U.S. Green Berets—was fatally shot after a confrontation. According to the indictment issued by a Harris County grand jury, Bougere—born November 14, 1993, and originally from California—faces a felony murder charge as prosecutors pursue the case. Why It Matters Rather than being arrested on the felony murder charge, Bougere was allowed to remain free after receiving only a summons to appear in court—a move that has provoked outrage from Waziri's grieving family, their lawyers and parts of the community. Waziri's death has prompted public protests in Houston and letters from former U.S. military personnel who served with him, calling for justice, and raises a number of legal and ethical questions. Abdul Rahman Waziri was part of an elite Afghan military unit trained to detect hidden explosives and assigned to protect U.S. Green Berets. Abdul Rahman Waziri was part of an elite Afghan military unit trained to detect hidden explosives and assigned to protect U.S. Green Berets. Waziri Family What To Know The fatal shooting occurred around 9:08 p.m. April 27 outside an apartment complex on Ocee Street in Houston. According to police and surveillance footage reviewed by Newsweek, the shooting followed a brief confrontation between the two men over a parking spot. Video time-stamps show Waziri arriving at 9:06:28 p.m. in his white Toyota Camry. He parked, switched on his hazard lights and briefly stepped out to collect his mail. Just 22 seconds later, at 9:06:50 p.m., a black Kia sedan pulled in. Its driver, later identified by police as Bougere, exited the vehicle and confronted Waziri. The two men exchanged gestures before Waziri returned to his mailbox, while Bougere moved toward Waziri's parked car. Due to a camera obstruction, the footage does not capture the moments immediately preceding the shooting. According to Houston police, Waziri returned to his vehicle intending to leave when Bougere retrieved a gun from his own car and opened fire, striking Waziri multiple times. Surveillance video then shows Bougere calmly walking away from the scene. Waziri, married with two young daughters, was later pronounced dead at Ben Taub General Hospital. When law enforcement arrived, police said, a man identified himself to responding officers as the shooter, telling them the altercation began over a parking dispute. Police confiscated his firearm, interviewed him, and—on the advice of the Harris County District Attorney's Office—released him without a charge. "That's the unfortunate circumstance here," according to family attorney Omar Khawaja, who says Waziri was unarmed: "If you shoot and kill somebody and you report it and claim self-defense, then now, somehow there's a little bit of credibility given to your statement. "A husband and father was senselessly killed, and while we are grateful the grand jury returned a murder charge, it is outrageous that the man accused of taking his life is being allowed to appear by summons—not arrested, not handcuffed, not treated like the violent offender he is alleged to be," Khawaja said, according to adding, "This indictment is just the beginning of the justice the Waziri family deserves." Abdullah Waziri, Abdul's older brother, discussed returning to the scene: "Actually I don't like this area [pointing to the ground] ... in this crack, the bloods were here, and I asked the neighbor to get us a bucket and a brush, and I dumped water, and they were helping me with the cleaning the blood," reported. Newsweek exclusively obtained the official charge sheet for Bougere, dated July 27, which states: "In the name and by the authority of the State of Texas: the duly organized Grand Jury of Harris County, Texas, presents in the District Court of Harris County, Texas, that in Harris County, Texas, Katia Trevon Bougere, hereafter styled the Defendant, heretofore on or about April 27, 2025, did then and there unlawfully intentionally and knowingly cause the death of Abdul Waziri, hereinafter called the Complainant, by Shooting The Complainant With A Deadly Weapon, Namely, A Firearm." In Texas, when courts determine whether bail is "sufficient and non-oppressive," they must follow guidelines set out in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure (Article 17.15), setting an amount that: Is high enough to ensure court appearance and public safety, But not excessively high to be considered unconstitutional or punitive. On July 31, a bail bond for Bougere was requested, and granted, at $100,000. What People Are Saying Khawaja, in an exclusive interview with Newsweek on July 31, said: "Had he [Bougere] just waited 30 seconds, Mr. Waziri would have gotten his mail and moved on. Instead, an enraged man with a firearm decided otherwise. "Texas has developed an irrational sensitivity toward so-called Second Amendment rights. We now see regular shootings—road rage, parking disputes—it feels like the Wild West. People are drawing guns instead of resolving conflicts peacefully. Is that really the society we want, one where we tolerate dueling in the streets? "From what I understand from some of the residents that we interviewed ... this guy, Bougere, was living at these apartments ... and with the shooter continuing to live in the same complex, created a chilling effect. But the lack of an immediate arrest has terrified witnesses. Multiple eyewitnesses saw what happened, but many are just too scared to speak. We're urging them to come forward so justice can be served. We just want this family to get some justice." Ben Hoffman, a 20-year veteran with the Green Berets who served six tours in Afghanistan and who met with Waziri in 2019, told the media: "It makes me extremely upset ... after everything he went through and everything he risked, for him to be shot dead in front of his apartment over what seems like some dumb argument, and then for there to be ... very little response from the local authorities ... it breaks my heart," reported. What Happens Next The legal office of Khawaja is standing by the Waziri family, ensuring they understand the legal process and get the support they need. Subsequent to the shooting, Bougere was evicted from the complex and has moved to an apartment 2.1 miles away. He is under bail conditions that ban him from leaving his home and include GPS monitoring. His next court date is set for 9 a.m. August 5.

After ‘American Idol' exec killing and other recent break-ins, Encino residents demand LAPD action
After ‘American Idol' exec killing and other recent break-ins, Encino residents demand LAPD action

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

After ‘American Idol' exec killing and other recent break-ins, Encino residents demand LAPD action

Encino community leaders on Thursday asked Mayor Karen Bass to increase security following a deadly home invasion and a string of other break-ins in the San Fernando Valley hillside neighborhood. 'American Idol' music supervisor Robin Kaye and her rock musician husband, Tom DeLuca, were killed in their Encino home by an intruder earlier this month. The Hayvenhurst Avenue home of 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' star Teddi Mellencamp was also targeted last week by three intruders who jumped a fence and entered the property. Two other burglaries occurred in recent weeks, including an incident on Ostrom Avenue, where a homeowner shot a 14-year-old intruder, according to residents. The Los Angeles Police Department has responded to the uptick in violence by increasing patrols and adding measures such as officers on horseback. But some neighbors are still too scared to leave their homes, said Rob Glushon, president of the Encino Property Owners Assn. 'People are afraid,' he told reporters. 'People are angry.' Glushon and others leaders want Bass and the LAPD to create a real-time crime monitoring center at a local police station, similar to one in Beverly Hills. They also want a new police substation in Encino, drones to track suspicious cars and crime, license plate readers at major intersections, and weekly public meetings with LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell. Bass spokesperson Clara Karger said some of the requests sought by Encino community leaders have already been added. In addition to increasing patrols, the city has deployed license plate readers, and is working with the L.A. County Sheriff's Department's Burglary/Robbery Taskforce on targeting organized crime rings, she said. 'Last year we took urgent action to successfully address a spate of crime in the Valley and our response efforts helped. We will continue to do all we can to keep Angelenos safe,' Karger said. 'Crime was down last year and homicide totals are on track to be the lowest in 60 years.' A Zoom meeting with Bass, Councilmember Nithya Raman, state Sen. Henry Stern (D-Los Angeles) and Glushon and other neighborhood leaders is planned for Thursday night. Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman met with Encino residents last week during a crowded town hall on the recent violence. He told the crowd last week that as a lifelong Angeleno, the twin killings were personal to him. 'The government owes you one thing and that's safety,' Hochman said. 'Robin and Tom didn't experience safety that night. Safety failed them.' Kaye and DeLuca, who were both 70, had been dead inside their home for four days when officers found their bodies during a welfare check after a neighbor called police concerned that they hadn't seen or heard from them for a few days. It marked the third time in recent months that LAPD officers went to a location in the San Fernando Valley after receiving a 911 call and left, only to return later to a homicide. Menashe Hidra's body was found April 26 inside his fifth-floor Valley Village apartment after an assailant broke into a neighboring unit, jumped from the balcony to Hidra's unit and attacked him, investigators said. Neighbors called 911 and reported hearing shouting and a struggle coming from the apartment. Officers responded to those calls, knocked on the door and left without finding anything. A 27-year-old man was later charged with killing Hidra. The same day that Hidra's body was discovered, police found the body of Aleksandre Modebadze, who was beaten to death inside his Woodland Hills home. In that case, a woman inside the home called LAPD about 12:30 a.m. and reported three people had broken into her home and were beating her significant other before the call suddenly cut out, according to law enforcement sources. Shortly before 1 a.m., officers arrived at the home but no one answered the door, the sources told The Times. Authorities found Modebadze's suspected killers hours after the incident. Glushon said Thursday that the LAPD needs to examine its policy for entering homes. 'There's obviously a problem,' he said. Locals also said Thursday that they are also concerned about a well-known 'party house' next door to where Kaye and DeLuca lived, and described seeing multiple cars without license plates in the area. Encino resident Vlad Gold, 49, said that burglaries in Encino are common, but he's now considering getting a guard dog after the couple's murder. 'It's just horrible,' he said. Times staff writer Richard Winton contributed to this report.

ICE says it has made tentative job offers to more than 1,000 as hiring ramps up
ICE says it has made tentative job offers to more than 1,000 as hiring ramps up

Associated Press

time2 days ago

  • Associated Press

ICE says it has made tentative job offers to more than 1,000 as hiring ramps up

WASHINGTON (AP) — The agency responsible for carrying out President Donald Trump's mass deportations agenda says it has already made tentative job offers to more than 1,000 people as it ramps up hiring following the passage of legislation earlier this month giving the agency a massive infusion of cash. The agency's spokeswoman, Tricia McLaughlin, said in a statement Thursday that the offers had been made after July 4. That's when Trump signed into law a broad package of tax breaks and spending cuts that also included about $170 billion for border security and immigration enforcement, spread out over five years. 'ICE has already issued over 1,000 tentative job offers since July 4. Many of these offers were to ICE officers who retired under President Biden because they were frustrated that they were not allowed to do their jobs,' she said. 'Now under President Trump and Secretary Noem, ICE is excited to get back to work to remove rapists, murderers, gang members and pedophiles from our communities.' The budget is multiplying exponentially ICE is the key agency responsible for executing Trump's campaign promise of carrying out the largest deportation operation in history. The administration has been ramping up immigration-related arrests across the country. Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and main architect of Trump's immigration policies, has said ICE officers would have a target of at least 3,000 arrests a day, up from about 650 a day during the first five months of Trump's second term. That heightened enforcement has played out with arrests in immigration courts, worksites, neighborhoods and more. ICE is set to get $76.5 billion, nearly 10 times its current annual budget. Some $45 billion will go toward increasing detention capacity. Nearly $30 billion is for hiring 10,000 more staff so the agency can meet its goal of 1 million annual deportations. The White House has said ICE will grow from 20,000 employees to about 30,000. Earlier this week, ICE announced a recruiting campaign aimed at finding and hiring the deportation officers, investigators and lawyers it will need to meet that goal of 10,000 new staff. As part of that campaign the agency is offering an eye-catching bonus of up to $50,000 for new recruits as well as other benefits like student loan forgiveness and abundant overtime for deportation officers. At a time when the federal government has been firing federal employees left and right, the USAJOBS website where vacancies for federal jobs are posted has dozens of Immigration and Customs Enforcement jobs. Some are for the deportation officers responsible for finding and removing people from the country; investigators with Homeland Security Investigations, which helps investigate transnational crime, including immigration issues; and lawyers who represent the government in prosecuting immigration cases. Jobs to support the detention network are also in play But there are also other jobs that support the detention network that is being supercharged to carry out mass deportations: nurses and nurse managers, psychiatric care providers, auditors, field medical coordinators and more. The anticipated hiring boom has also raised concerns about whether standards will be lowered in order to meet the growing demand. The Border Patrol underwent its own expansion during the early 2000s — something that is often cited as a cautionary tale for the risks of quick hiring. To meet hiring goals, training and hiring standards were changed. Arrests for employee misconduct rose. McLaughlin rejected suggestions that the agency would lower recruitment standards. 'All new recruits must meet the same standards they always have. I know this may be shocking to the media, but many Americans want to serve their country and help remove the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens from our country,' she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store