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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Production marks 55 years since Chicano Moratorium
    Six actors on stage against a backdrop of red stage lights.
    Los Angeles City College Theater Academy students perform in "August 29."

    Topline:

    August 29th marks the 55th anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium — the day in 1970 when tens of thousands of people marched through East L.A. to protest the number of Latinos dying in the Vietnam War. That history is the subject of the play "August 29."

    What audiences can expect: No spoilers here, but the play's director Ramiro Segovia shared his: “ The spirit of Ruben Salazar visits a professor, Lucero, who's wrestling with her identity, which reminds us that the history is not locked in the past."

    About Ruben Salazar: Salazar was a prominent Mexican-American journalist in Los Angeles who rose to prominence covering the Chicano community for a number of publications, including the L.A. Times and KMEX. A sheriff's deputy fired a tear gas canister at him during the Chicano Moratorium, killing him.

    About the production: The play is part of the Latino Theater Company’s Impact Initiative, which brings professional-level theater productions to local community colleges and gives students the opportunity to work on — and star — in them.

    Read on... for where to see the play and how to get tickets.

    August 29th marks the 55th anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium's largest protest — the day in 1970 when tens of thousands of people marched through East Los Angeles to protest the disproportionate number of Latinos dying in the Vietnam War.

    It’s also the day that Ruben Salazar was killed while covering the protests. Salazar was a prominent Mexican-American journalist who rose to prominence covering the Chicano community for a number of publications, including the L.A. Times and KMEX. An L.A. Sheriff’s Department deputy fired a tear gas canister at him, killing him.

    That history is the subject of a play, August 29, being put on by the Latino Theater Company tonight at East Los Angeles College in conjunction with students.

    Listen 4:25
    Latino Theater Company marks 55 years since the Chicano Moratorium with ‘August 29’ play

    A spotlight on “August 29”

    José Luis Valenzuela, the Latino Theater Company’s artistic director, said it was important for him to bring Salazar’s story to present-day stages.

    “We're in the middle of the Vietnam War and he's the only journalist killed during that year from the United States — in Los Angeles,” Valenzuela said.

    Two men in suits walk with heads downturned. A man wearing a suit and hat can be seen in the background.
    Ruben Salazar interviewing Robert F. Kennedy (left). Yes, that's Frank Sinatra in the background.
    (
    Courtesy USC Libraries
    /
    Ruben Salazar Papers Collection
    )

    The play is set in 1990, 20 years after the Chicano Moratorium. Without giving anything away, the production’s director Ramiro Segovia told LAist about what audience members can expect.

    “ The spirit of Ruben Salazar visits a professor, Lucero, who's wrestling with her identity, which reminds us that the history is not locked in the past,” Segovia said. “It continues to visit us as it challenges us.”

    Though the play’s events took place decades ago, Segovia said the themes resonate strongly in a time of heightened fear around immigration raids and law enforcement actions.

    “The production reaches back across decades to honor the fight for social justice and defines what Los Angeles is about,” Segovia said. “ Standing up and working on this production is a beautiful way for [the actors] to really speak up and use their voice through the arts.”

    Behind the production

    The play is part of the Latino Theater Company’s Impact Initiative, which brings professional-level theater productions to local community colleges and gives students the opportunity to work on — and star — in them.

    Valenzuela said he was compelled to get that initiative going at East Los Angeles College because of how many Latino students the institution serves.

    “I did a play with them and I directed them and took them around the city, and some of the young student actors would bring food for the others,” he said.

    Once Valenzuela found out that the student actors were extending that kindness because many were struggling with food and housing insecurity, he felt compelled to act as a theater professional.

    “ If you have those issues, how can you be a responsible citizen when all you're trying to do is to survive?” he said. “What is your intellectual engagement with your city? What's going on with your community, with your culture?”

    To that end, the Latino Theater Company started collaborating with local community colleges, with August 29 being the most recent production.

    “ If you go to a community college, we give you free tickets for you and another person to come to see all the work. We have panels and conversations with the students. We give you pizza if you come to the special events,” Valenzuela said. “And we go and direct plays with the students and then tour them around the county and give them the opportunity to perform on these stages for two weeks.”

    The Latino Theater Company’s leaders hope that this can help young people — most audiences are from 18 to 55, Valenzuela said — become more intellectually engaged with the world around them.

    “Sometimes, like right now, the fear in the community is so huge that they don't find a place where they can gather and talk about what's going on,” Valenzuela said. “So we try to offer that space here for many different issues — not just immigration.”

    About the Latino Theater Company

    The Latino Theater Company is historic in its own right — this year marks its 40th year in operation. It was founded in 1985 to bring new voices, plays and methods of expression to the American theater.

    The Latino Theater Company currently operates out of Los Angeles Theatre Center, a massive building downtown with lots of different performance spaces from traditional theaters to smaller black boxes. Los Angeles recently extended their lease on the building until 2056.

    And, as in the case of August 29, the company often takes their productions around the city. They also stage a yearly play at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Los Angeles, for example.

    Valenzuela said that bringing these performances to where people are is central to the Latino Theater Company’s mission.

    “ Who we are as Chicanos or Latinos in the United States, our history is not recorded. It's not written. We don't have enough PhDs to go around writing about us. The media, you know, we don't exist. We're kind of invisible,” Valenzuela said. “So theater became our living document of the recording of history.”

    How to see the play

    Viewers can catch the play at 8 p.m. Friday at East Los Angeles College. It will also have a run at Mt. San Antonio College on Sept. 18 and 19.

    You can reserve tickets for both shows on the Latino Theater Company’s website. Tickets are free with a suggested $10 donation at the door.

    You can see the Latino Theater Company’s full programming schedule here.

    Gillian Morán Pérez contributed reporting.

  • Three dead after car drives into 99 Ranch Market
    A screenshot of a television broadcast showing an overhead view of an accident scene. A fire engine and ladder truck are visible on the scene, along with a police cruiser and multiple firefighters dressed in yellow turnout gear.
    Three people are dead and several others are injured after a woman crashed her car into a 99 Ranch Market in Westwood.

    Topline:

    Three people are dead and there are multiple injuries after a driver crashed into a 99 Ranch Market in Westwood.

    What we know: The crash happened around 12:11 p.m., according to LAFD, which says four people were transported to local hospitals. Two of those people were in critical condition and two were in fair condition. The L.A. Fire Department said the woman driver hit a bicyclist about a block earlier before crashing into the store.

    Both the driver and bicyclist declined medical treatment and hospital transport. LAPD says it's not treating the crash as intentional. The LAFD says it removed the silver sedan from the store when it arrived at the scene to rescue people who were trapped. All three people who died were inside the bakery at the time of the crash.

    The victims: Names of the victims have not been released, but LAFD has identified them as a 42-year-old woman and two men, ages 55 and 30.

    This is a developing story.

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  • Police shot man who appeared to have a gun
    people stand around a long driveway roped off with police caution tape
    The Los Angeles Police Department set up a perimeter in the parking lot of the California Science Center following a shooting Thursday.

    Topline:

    Los Angeles police officers shot and killed a man who appeared to be armed with a rifle outside the California Science Center in Exposition Park on Thursday morning, according to LAPD Deputy Chief Marc Reina.

    What do we know right now? Reina said a motorcycle cop initially spotted the man around 9:30 a.m. carrying what appeared to be a rifle and walking west down State Drive, a small road that runs between the science center and Exposition Park Rose Garden. Multiple cops responded to the scene and faced off with the man. The subject continued down State Drive, Reina said, before police opened fire.

    Read on ... for more on what witnesses to the incident saw.

    Los Angeles police officers shot and killed a man who appeared to be armed with a rifle outside the California Science Center in Exposition Park on Thursday morning, according to LAPD Deputy Chief Marc Reina.

    Reina said police do not yet know the identity of man, who they estimate was about 35 years old.

    No police or other community members were injured in the incident, Reina said. The science center was placed briefly on lockdown but reopened. The north side of the museum remains closed, the deputy chief said.

    Reina said a motorcycle cop initially spotted the man around 9:30 a.m. carrying what appeared to be a rifle and walking west down State Drive, a small road that runs between the science center and Exposition Park Rose Garden.

    Multiple cops responded to the scene and faced off with the man. The subject continued down State Drive, Reina said, before police opened fire.

    Los Angeles Fire Department personnel arrived at the scene and pronounced the man dead, Reina said.

    The incident will be investigated by department use-of-force investigators, the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office and the LAPD’s inspector general, the deputy chief said.

    Investigators have not yet determined what prompted police to open fire, Reina said. Police do not believe the man fired his weapon.

    Here's what witnesses saw

    Stacey Hutchinson said he was sitting on a bench along State Drive drinking a cup of coffee when the incident unfolded.

    He said the man appeared in good spirits and greeted him nonchalantly as he walked up the street before taking a seat. Hutchinson said he saw the man carrying what appeared to be a long gun.

    Police initially responded with bean bag guns, Hutchinson said, but drew firearms when the man picked up the weapon.

    Police opened fire after the man pointed the apparent rifle in their direction, Hutchinson said.

    The man did not appear to be trying to enter the science center, Hutchinson said, and appeared to remain calm until police asked him to drop his weapon.

  • Ex-OC Supervisor Andrew Do formally disbarred
    A man in a chair wearing a suit jacket, tie and glasses looks forward with a microphone in front of him. A sign in front has the official seal of the County of Orange and states "Andrew Do, Vice Chairman, District 1."
    Then-Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do serving at an Orange County Board of Supervisor's meeting back in November 2023.

    Former Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do has been disbarred, stemming from his conviction last year on a federal bribery charge. The disbarment was expected. It stems from a state Supreme Court order that came down Dec. 1 and is now recorded as such on the state bar's website.

    What's the backstory?

    Do is currently serving a five-year prison sentence in Arizona after admitting to directing money to several nonprofit groups and businesses that then funneled some of that money back to himself and family members for personal gain. LAist has been investigating the alleged corruption since 2023. Do was also ordered to pay $878,230.80 in restitution for his role in the bribery scheme that saw millions in taxpayer dollars diverted from feeding needy seniors, leading authorities to label him a “Robin Hood in reverse.”

    What does the bar action mean?

    The official disbarment means Do is prohibited from practicing law in California. He was also ordered to pay $5,000 to the State Bar.

    Go deeper ...

    Here's a look at some of LAist's coverage of one of the biggest corruption scandals in Orange County history:

    LAist investigates: Andrew Do corruption scandal
    Ex-Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do is ordered to pay $878,230.80 in restitution
    'Robin Hood in reverse.' O.C. Supervisor Andrew Do resigns and will plead guilty to bribery conspiracy charge
    Former OC Supervisor Andrew Do turns himself in, begins 5-year federal prison term
    6 questions we still have after disgraced former OC Supervisor Andrew Do’s sentencing
    A quiet retreat for the judge married to disgraced OC politician Andrew Do

  • CA's first fully accredited tribal college
    Eight men and women wearing graduation caps, face masks and wrapped in colorful blankets stand next to each other on stage. Above and behind them hangs a banner that reads California Indian Nations College.
    The first graduation at California Indian Nations College, class of 2020 and 2021.

    Topline:

    California now has it's first fully accredited tribal college in almost 30 years.

    California Indian Nations College in Palm Desert recently received an eight-year accreditation from the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges.

    Why it matters: The accreditation grants the college access to state and federal funding for higher education. Assemblymember James C. Ramos of San Bernardino calls the milestone historic, saying California has the highest number of Native Americans in the U.S.

    How we got here: There aren't any fully accredited tribal colleges in California. But a Palm Desert school might change that.