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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Survivors want more from CA Insurance Commissioner
    A man in a suit speaks into a microphone at a podium, with the California state flag visible in the background.
    State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara speaks during a press conference in 2022.

    Topline:

    Los Angeles fire survivors are demanding the state intervene more to help them recoup what they're owed from insurance companies, citing months of frustration.

    Lawmakers and people who lost their homes in the January fires gathered Monday morning to ask state Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara to increase transparency and beef up enforcement.

    What they want: The group of fire survivors issued five requests, asking Lara's office to complete an ongoing investigation into State Farm within 60 days and prioritize complaints that insurers are cutting off people's short-term living coverage prematurely.

    What are some of those requests: They want the state to amend the California FAIR Plan — the last resort insurer for homeowners in the state — to protect people from denials for smoke damage. The group is also asking for greater transparency, including public reports from the Department of Insurance on complaints.

    What is Lara saying? Lara responded in a statement, citing his office's ongoing investigation into State Farm's fire claims, legal action against the FAIR Plan over smoke claims, and his move to form a task force focused on smoke damage claims.

    Read on... for more on the challenges fire survivors have faced with the FAIR Plan.

    Los Angeles fire survivors are demanding the state intervene more to help them recoup what they're owed from insurance companies, citing months of frustration.

    Lawmakers and people who lost their homes in the January fires gathered Monday morning to ask state Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara to increase transparency and beef up enforcement.

    They described lengthy battles with insurance companies that were making recovery and rebuilding even more challenging.

    " Every delayed payment, every denial of what is owed in someone's policy is not just paperwork to us. It's a family forced to wait in limbo," said Victoria Knapp, chair of the Altadena Town Council. "It's the silent, overwhelming weight carried by people who have already lost everything."

    Survivors are pointing their ire directly at Lara, who some accuse of failing to hold insurance giants accountable in a report put out by the Eaton Fire Survivors Network.

    "This is not an issue of weak laws. California already has some of the nation’s strongest consumer protections. The problem is that Commissioner Lara has failed to enforce them," that report states.

    What are they asking for?

    The group of fire survivors issued five requests, asking Lara's office to complete an ongoing investigation into State Farm within 60 days and prioritize complaints that insurers are cutting off people's short-term living coverage prematurely.

    They want the state to amend the California FAIR Plan — the last resort insurer for homeowners in the state — to protect people from denials for smoke damage. The group is also asking for greater transparency, including public reports from the Department of Insurance on complaints.

    " So we can see which companies are getting the complaints, who is complaining, and for why," said Assemblymember John Harabedian, who represents Altadena. "We wanna hold regulators accountable as well as insurers."

    Lara responded in a statement, citing his office's ongoing investigation into State Farm's fire claims, legal action against the FAIR Plan over smoke claims, and his move to form a task force focused on smoke damage claims.

    "Our goal aligns with the survivors' network: we want individuals to recover on their own terms," he said. "The severity of our insurance crisis and the suffering of countless Californians require us to get this right. We must empower our Department's experts to do their jobs to protect consumers, and that is my intention."

    Smoke damage claims

    Smoke damage claims have been a big challenge for people whose homes survived the fires but need remediation.

    The FAIR Plan is not run by the state — it's operated by the insurance industry as the last option for homeowners who can't get insurance elsewhere. State law requires that all insurers operating in California participate in the plan.

    Since 2017, the FAIR Plan's coverage policy requires “direct physical loss” that is "evidenced by permanent physical changes."

    Fire survivors say the "permanent physical changes" language has led the FAIR Plan to illegally deny smoke damage claims. The Department of Insurance agreed, last month filing legal action against the plan in July, saying it had violated state law by denying legitimate claims. The department reported that it had received at least 220 smoke damage or related complaints against the FAIR Plan since the January fires.

    That move came after a Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled in June that the insurer's treatment of smoke claims was illegal. The FAIR Plan told LAist in response that it did not expect to appeal.

    "Since last year, we have been working collaboratively with the California Department of Insurance to update and clarify our policy language around smoke damage," a spokesperson for the association wrote in an emailed statement.

    Fire survivors say it's not enough. They are asking Lara to use his power to order the FAIR Plan to remove the "physical damage" requirement entirely.

    "Since the illegal policy change in 2017, thousands of fire survivors across California have suffered needlessly," the report from the Eaton Fire Survivors Network reads.

    Lara's office responded citing its recent legal action and a letter it sent to the insurance plan demanding that it amend its policy.

    Requests for more transparency

    Fire survivors are also asking for more transparency from insurers and the state agency tasked with monitoring them. The group wants the insurance commissioner to require insurers to provide policyholders with copies of original and changed loss estimates.

    Victoria Knapp, the Altadena Town Council president, said Monday that she was now on her fifth insurance claims adjuster.

    " Survivors cannot rebuild when the very safety net that we've paid into refuses to function," she said.

    They want receipts from the state, too.

    They're asking the Department of Insurance to publish monthly public reports on complaints against insurers and to create a portal for the people filing those complaints to easily track where they stand.

    These asks highlight the months of challenge people have faced negotiating their insurance since January. In a recent survey from the organization Department of Angels, just one in four people who lost their homes or suffered severe damage in the Eaton and Palisades fires reported having their claims fully approved.

  • Woodland Hills woman nabbed Saturday night at LAX
    A woman walks past a banner showing missiles being launched, in northern Tehran, Iran, on Friday.
    A woman walks past a banner showing missiles being launched, in northern Tehran, Iran, on Friday.

    Topline:

    A woman was arrested at LAX on Saturday night for allegedly trafficking arms on behalf of the Iranian government, according to authorities.

    Why now: Shamim Mafi of Woodland Hills is charged with helping the regime sell drones, bombs, bomb fuses and millions of rounds of ammunition to Sudan.

    The backstory: Bill Essayli, First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, made the arrest announcement Sunday morning on social media.

    A woman was arrested for allegedly trafficking arms on behalf of the Iranian government at LAX on Saturday night, according to authorities.

    Shamim Mafi of Woodland Hills is charged with helping the regime sell drones, bombs and millions of rounds of ammunition to Sudan.

    Bill Essayli, First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, made the arrest announcement Sunday morning on social media.

    The 44-year-old Mafi is expected to appear in court for a bond hearing Monday afternoon in downtown L.A.

    According to the criminal complaint filed by the Department of Justice and obtained by LAist, Mafi allegedly brokered weapons deals on behalf of Iran through Atlas International, a business in Oman she co-owns, including facilitating a contract valued at more than €60 million (or some US $70 million) for the sale of Iranian-made armed drones to Sudan.

    She is also being accused of brokering the sale of 55,000 bomb fuses, AK-47 machine guns and other weapons to the Sudanese Ministry of Defense.

    Mafi faces up to 20 years in federal prison if convicted.

    Essayli said Mafi is an Iranian national who became a permanent resident of the U.S. in 2016.

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  • Companies can apply starting Monday

    Topline:

    Starting Monday, companies can apply to get their tariff-related refunds back.

    Why now: U.S. Customs is launching just the first phase of payouts, so not all the goods imported under the illegal tariffs will immediately qualify.

    The backstory: U.S. Customs has estimated that it owes a total of $166 billion in tariff refunds, and the agency's legal filings suggest that the initial phase would tackle the majority of affected imports.

    After weeks of waiting to hear how — or whether — the U.S. government might refund the tariffs struck down by the Supreme Court, Monday is the day it finally begins.

    Imagine tens of thousands of business owners with their fingers hovering over laptops, ready to enter America's hottest new queue: the U.S. tariff-refund portal.

    U.S. Customs is launching just the first phase of payouts, so not all the goods imported under the illegal tariffs will immediately qualify. And the latest federal guidance says that after refund requests are approved, it could take 60 to 90 days to return the money to the importer.

    Still, this marks a turning point for U.S. importers, who've waited for clarity for exactly two months since the U.S. Supreme Court declared most of President Trump's tariffs unconstitutional. The high court did not opine on the process of refunds, and government officials at first suggested the process could prove unwieldy.

    "Small businesses organized, spoke out, and won a major victory," said Main Street Alliance, which advocates for U.S. small businesses, in a statement. "Now, the federal government must follow through with a refund process that truly works for Main Street."

    U.S. Customs has estimated that it owes a total of $166 billion in tariff refunds, and the agency's legal filings suggest that the initial phase would tackle the majority of affected imports. On Tuesday, a Customs official told a judge that the vast majority of eligible importers signed up for electronic payments, as the agency is requiring, and that group is owed about $127 billion.

    Will consumers see any of that money land in their pockets? Probably not, economics and legal experts say.

    The cost of tariffs has been woven into the prices of many products in a way that can make it hard to separate out what customers ultimately paid. Often, manufacturers, suppliers, importers, retailers and shoppers all absorb costs along the way. And with tariffs landing on the heels of historic inflation, companies big and small have argued that they ate much of the cost to avoid spooking shoppers with higher prices.

    In fact, many retailers find themselves in a similar quandary because tariff refunds will go to whoever paid the actual customs bill. It's unclear how, or if, the refunds might trickle down to store owners who paid tariff surcharges to their suppliers.

    "As a retailer, I didn't pay tariffs directly. However, I did pay them indirectly in the form of higher wholesale prices," says Joe Kimray, owner of B & W Hardware in North Carolina. Most of his products are either made abroad or use imported parts.

    "I plan to have conversations with a number of manufacturers and hope that they will do the right thing and share some of the tariff refund money with us," he says. "I don't expect to get a direct refund check from anyone, but it could be even as simple as offering discounts on the wholesale cost of future product purchases."

    Shoppers hoping to recoup their own tariff expenses have launched class-action lawsuits against several companies, including Costco and FedEx. The shipping giant has pledged to pass down any refunds it receives. Costco's CEO last month told investors the company would return shoppers' money through "lower prices and better values" and would be transparent about its plans.

    U.S. Customs' initial phase of refunds will focus on tariff payments that haven't been finalized because they technically are still under federal review. (Companies typically pay import duties as soon as their goods arrive at the border, but the complete customs review that follows can take nearly a year.) The government will continue to set up its new system, called CAPE, so that it can later on refund older, finalized tariff payments.

    NPR asked U.S. Customs and Border Protection about the scale of tariff refunds it expects to handle in the first phase, including the volume of claims the agency's new tool is prepared to handle on Monday. A CBP spokesperson in response said that CAPE was developed "to efficiently process refunds" and referred importers and brokers to the agency's updated tariff-refund guidance.

    NPR's Scott Horsley contributed to this report.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • How does a city get its own game?
    A photo of a Long Beach version of Monopoly
    Long Beach is the latest SoCal city to get its own Monopoly game

    Topline:

    A new Long Beach-themed Monopoly game turns local landmarks into playable spaces on the board. The game is part of a recent wave of city-specific editions that has the iconic game connecting with communities through nostalgia and local pride.

    How to get a Monopoly game: To be featured, a city has to have enough people excited enough to support the production of thousands of games.

    Why now: Top Trumps has expanded U.S. city editions in recent years as interest in board games has resurged after the pandemic. A company representative said that Long Beach, with its strong sense of community and recognizable landmarks, fit the model.

    Monopoly lovers can now buy up the Queen Mary, collect rent on Belmont Shore and park their token at a storied tattoo shop, Outer Limits.

    The Long Beach landmarks line the spaces of a new Monopoly edition themed around L.A. County’s second biggest city, released just this month.

    The Long Beach edition is part of an expanding series of Monopoly games featuring dozens of American cities, which Hasbro licensee Top Trumps started to produce about five years ago when interest in board games surged during the pandemic.

    What it takes to make the cut

    How does a city land on one of the world's most popular board games? Turns out, it’s not just a roll of the dice.

    “We’re looking for places with strong community pride, places where people will really love seeing their city on a Monopoly board,” said Jennifer Tripsea, a partnership sales executive with Top Trumps.

    Long Beach fit the bill and got to join a list of SoCal cities on Monopoly boards including Huntington Beach, Riverside and Palm Springs.

    Tripsea said in some instances, a city will pitch themselves to the company — she didn’t disclose which have — but not every place makes the cut.

    There has to be enough population — or local enthusiasm — to support a run of thousands of games.

    Top Trumps sells the games online and through local businesses, sometimes the same ones featured on the board. That creates a built-in customer base: residents, tourists and collectors hunting for their next addition.

    And while some businesses may offer to sponsor their way into consideration, their inclusion isn’t a given.

    Tripsea said when deciding who earns a spot, the company weighs cultural relevance, brand standards and community input.

    The community gets a turn

    Once a city is selected, residents are invited to help shape the board.

    That means emailing suggested landmarks and drafting potential Chance and Community Chest cards. For Long Beach, one Community Chest card directs players to collect $100 if they "attend a beach cleanup at Alamitos Beach."

    Hundreds of submissions flooded in over the last year, many pointing to the same top attractions, Tripsea said. The Queen Mary and Aquarium of the Pacific take up the same spots on the board that are occupied by Park Place and Boardwalk in the original game.

    A shot of an ocean liner marked as the "Queen Mary."
    Of course the Queen Mary historic ocean liner landed a plum spot on the Long Beach version of Monopoly.
    (
    Patrick T. Fallon
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Others featured on the board are lesser known to outsiders, like Rosie’s Dog Beach and the Arts Council for Long Beach.

    The arts nonprofit was “surprised and excited” to hear from Top Trumps last year that they were being included in a version all about Long Beach, said interim executive director Lisa DeSmidt.

    “I describe Long Beach as a big city that's run like a small town, and that everybody kind of knows each other to some degree,” DeSmidt said. “Long Beach has a sense of community in that Long Beach takes care of Long Beach people.”

    A yellow Monopoly piece that reads "Arts Council for Long Beach" and features tiny renderings of buildings, a palm tree and ferris wheel.
    An intern for the Arts Council for Long Beach designed its space on the Monopoly board.
    (
    Arts Council for Long Beach
    )

    An intern for the arts council, Peyton Smith, designed its space on the board, featuring small, intricate renderings of landmarks like the Long Beach Airport and the pyramid arena at Cal State Long Beach.

    For DeSmidt, the game serves as a kind of cultural snapshot highlighting the city’s mix of arts, neighborhoods and institutions. It’s reminiscent of the council’s own project mapping the city’s cultural assets.

    “This ties into uplifting what makes Long Beach unique and what people love about it,” DeSmidt said.

    Monopoly's lasting pull

    Outer Limits Tattoo was also invited to be part of the game, where it now appears next to VIP Records on the board.

    Recognized as the country’s oldest continuously working tattoo shop, Outer Limits’ history dates back to 1927, when it opened in the waterfront amusement district known as The Pike, now home to the Pike Outlets.

    Outer Limits' general manager Matt Hand said once word got out that the shop was stocking the game, customers started showing up just to buy it.

    “It’s just a cool thing,” Hand said. “Especially when it’s like, ‘The business where I get tattooed’ is on the board.”

    A big reason Hand thinks these editions are catching on is nostalgia. Seeing your own city in a board game that you played as a kid — and may be now playing with your own kids — is thrilling.

    “You're basically like a part of the game now,” Hand said.

  • Why you are seeing purple early this year
    Pedestrians and a dog walker stroll a street in South Pasadena that is lined by Jacaranda trees in full bloom.
    Jacaranda trees line a street in South Pasadena.

    Topline:

    You might have noticed a little more purple on your commute in Los Angeles recently. Turns out the jacarandas are putting on their annual show of blooms a little early this year.

    Why? Originally from the tropics, jacarandas respond to changes in temperature. They typically flower in our region from late April to mid-June. But remember that sweltering heat wave we got in March?

    Where are the purple hot spots? A couple years ago, a local data graphics editor created an interactive map so you can find the purple hot spots.

    Go deeper: Jacaranda season is upon us. But wait, how do you pronounce ‘jacaranda’?

    You might have noticed a little more purple on your commute in Los Angeles recently. Turns out the jacarandas are putting on their annual show of blooms a little early this year.

    Originally from the tropics, jacarandas respond to changes in temperature. They typically flower in our region from late April to mid-June.

    But remember that sweltering heat wave we got in March?

    “They got the clear sign: ‘It’s over 90 [degrees], it’s hot out. Even though you weren’t quite prepared, it’s time to put out some flowers,'” Loral Hall, community forestry senior program manager at environmental nonprofit TreePeople, told LAist.

    Hall said not only do jacarandas grace us every year with thick canopies and carpets of purple, they’re relatively drought tolerant, pest resistant and able to grow in urban areas (like in a small square patch of dirt surrounded by concrete).

    “They’re attention-grabbers here in Southern California,” said Hall, who grew up in Hollywood and has childhood memories of playing with the fallen purple blooms at a local park. “In a place where we don’t have really obvious seasons, [jacaranda blooms] are a sign that warmer weather is on the way.”

    Hall also shared a lesser-known fact about jacarandas: There’s a white cultivar, too. The white version is much more rare in L.A., though with some of the trees rumored to be in a non-public area of the L.A. County Arboretum, Hall said.

    A jacaranda tree is full of purple booms. The blooms have dropped onto a pond below, making a purple carpet.
    A jacaranda at the LA Arboretum.
    (
    Katherine Garrova
    )

    How’d they get here? 

    The jacaranda is native to the tropical and subtropical regions of Argentina and Brazil.

    While we don’t know exactly when the jacaranda first arrived in our area, we do know they were brought to Southern California in the late 19th century and proliferated thanks to a local horticulturist named Kate Sessions.

    Where are the purple hot spots? 

    A couple years ago, a local data graphics editor even created an interactive map so you can find the purple hot spots.

    They’re... everywhere, so it shouldn’t be too hard to stumble upon a jacaranda show.