Cato Hernández
has scoured through tons of archives to understand how our region became the way it is today.
Published May 17, 2024 10:00 AM
La Carreta at Olvera Street.
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Caitlin Hernández
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LAist
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Topline:
If you've visited Olvera Street, you may have noticed a stuffed donkey stand near the entrance. It may get evicted soon because of a contract issue after a death in the family. Many Angelenos are not happy at losing the beloved La Carreta stand, and a city council member has stepped in to help.
Why it matters: The donkey stand has been a fixture of Olvera Street for photo ops and a callback to the original owners’ Mexican roots. Families have come for generations to snap a photo.
Why now: Richard Hernandez, the son of the original owners, has been operating the stand for much of the time it’s been open. But his name is not on the contract, so after his mother died, management started an eviction process.
What’s next? An L.A. City Council member introduced motion to request the commission in charge of Olvera Street consider adding Hernandez's name to the contract. It will be voted on next week.
Walk around Olvera Street and you’ll notice it: A large stuffed donkey with a cart, draped in traditional colorful serapes, greeting you as you walk into the plaza.
Known as La Carreta, the family-run attraction has been around for 57 years. It’s a popular photo op for visitors, but its owner says it’s also a beloved callback to Los Angeles’ Mexican roots.
Its legacy is at risk as the family has been served an order to vacate from Olvera Street. The attention has prompted the L.A. City Council to put forth a motion to save the donkey.
La Carreta’s history
Jesus “Don Chuy” Hernandez, who was born in Durango, Mexico, in 1930 was a traveling birria seller. Through his journeys, he met and married Trancito “Tancho” Valazquez and the two immigrated to L.A. where they began a custom jewelry business on Olvera Street.
They remained inspired by the donkeys that pulled carts back home in Tijuana, so they made it happen here. They painted a colorful cart, got sombreros and put other things around the stand that echoed Mexican life.
The early El Burrito y La Carreta was a live donkey. Trancito’s son, Richard Hernandez, remembers walking the animal from Eagle Rock to Olvera Street. But today, what stands in the small 10-foot space near the entrance of Olvera Street is a stuffed version.
Richard Hernandez and his family with El Burro.
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Caitlin Hernández
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LAist
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“When I see people walk in for the first time, they go, 'Oh wow, a little donkey,’” Hernandez said. “‘Is it real? Oh no, it's fake. How cool. Let's get a picture.' And they put on their hats. They hold a tequila bottle.”
Hernandez said that while it’s just a place for fun, people have taken it as a tradition. He’s had repeat customers over the years who will come back and show photos of them on the donkey when they were children.
Why it’s facing eviction
At issue is the contract that allows for the stand’s operation.
Hernandez’s mother died on April 16, leaving the stand without an alive signee on the paperwork that gives them the right to do business in Olvera Street.
Hernandez said his mother gave Olvera Street management notarized paperwork to add him to the contract in 2019, but, fast forward to today, the contract was never updated and Hernandez is not listed.
Hernandez’s eviction deadline was slated for Thursday, though he says his family has no plans to leave.
Olvera street management, which is overseen by a city board of commissioners, had no public comment, according to city employee Carlos Morales.
What’s next for the burro
The El Pueblo Commission will be taking up a discussion on the contract next week on May 23.
The board of commissioners for Olvera Street will discuss the agreement on May 23 at 2 p.m. Public comment will be accepted in person.
Location: 125 Paseo de La Plaza (In the basement of the Biscailuz Building Gallery)
“Why don't we just extend it?” de León told reporters on Thursday. “Why do we have to go out our way to make it much more difficult and onerous and bureaucratic?”
De León hadn’t yet spoken directly with City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto as of Thursday, but he understood that she believed the eviction process to be legitimate. However, given the donkey’s relationship to Olvera Street — and its small use of space — he wanted to save the stand.
“I sat down with Mr. Hernandez yesterday and went through all the data that was presented to me,” de León told reporters. “I just came to my conclusion that irrespective of what the city attorney's perspective may be, irrespective of what the general manager of El Pueblo may be, the donkey has been here for decades.”
Jill Replogle
covers public corruption, debates over our voting system, culture war battles — and more.
Published November 21, 2025 7:08 PM
Michael Gates at a news conference outside Huntington Beach City Hall on Oct. 14, 2024.
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Jill Replogle
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LAist
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Topline:
Michael Gates, a former Deputy Assistant Attorney General, produced a letter today that he said confirmed he was not fired for cause, but rather resigned from the Civil Rights Division of the federal Department of Justice.
The backstory: The Orange County Register last week reported Gates had been fired for cause, citing an anonymous DOJ source who said Gates repeatedly referred to women colleagues by derogatory and demeaning names and had complained about the department employing a pregnant woman. The Register also published a government employment form, which was undated, that they said showed that Gates was fired for cause.
Where things stand: Gates told LAist the allegations were “100% fabrication.” He shared a screenshot of a Nov. 21 letter from John Buchko, director of operational management at the DOJ, stating that the department “has accepted your voluntary resignation” and “will remove from your personnel record any previous reference to your termination.”
Michael Gates, a former deputy assistant attorney general, produced a letter Friday that he said confirmed he was not fired for cause, but rather resigned from the Civil Rights Division of the federal Department of Justice.
The Orange County Register last week reported that Gates had been fired for cause, citing an anonymous DOJ source who said Gates repeatedly referred to women colleagues by derogatory and demeaning names and had complained about the department employing a pregnant woman. The Register also published a government employment form, which was undated, that they said showed that Gates was fired for cause.
Gates told LAist the allegations were “100% fabrication.” Then on Friday, he shared a screenshot of a Nov. 21 letter from John Buchko, director of operational management at the DOJ, stating that the department “has accepted your voluntary resignation” and “will remove from your personnel record any previous reference to your termination.”
LAist reached out to Natalie Baldassarre, a DOJ spokesperson, to confirm the letter, sharing that screenshot. She responded by email: “No comment on personnel matters.”
Michael Gates provided this letter. A spokesperson for the department said they would not comment on personnel matters.
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Courtesy Michael Gates
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Back to Huntington Beach
Gates told LAist earlier this month that he was resigning from his job with the federal government because he missed Huntington Beach and his family. On Friday, the Huntington Beach City Council confirmed Gates has been hired back as chief assistant city attorney. He starts Monday.
Gates is both loved and loathed in politically contentious Huntington Beach. He has been an outspoken supporter of President Donald Trump and his policies and a continuous thorn in the side of Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who is one of the most prominent critics of the president.
Gates was first elected city attorney in 2014 and has won re-election twice since then, with wide margins. Huntington Beach is among a minority of cities in California that elects rather than appoints a city attorney.
Gates' track record
As city attorney, Gates sued the state over housing mandates and the right to implement voter ID. He also marshalled the city into the center of culture war battles. While he was city attorney, his office sued California over the state’s sanctuary law, as well as a law prohibiting schools from requiring teachers to inform parents of a child’s request to change pronouns or otherwise “out” them as LGBTQ.
Many Huntington Beach residents support his work. But Gates has also faced heavy criticism and legal penalties, for some of his actions. In 2021, the city paid out $2.5 million total in a settlement with one former and one current employee who alleged age discrimination while working at the city under Gates. The city did not concede to any wrongdoing under the settlement.
Gates told LAist he’s looking forward to, once again, heading up the city’s litigation, including a scheduled trial against an effort to force Huntington Beach to adopt by-district elections. He said he plans to run again for city attorney in next year’s election.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican who rose to prominence as one of President Donald Trump's biggest defenders and recently became one of his biggest critics, is leaving Congress.
The context: Greene's announcement late Friday that she would resign effective Jan. 5, 2026, is the latest escalation of months of clashes with the president over his second-term agenda, including the release of the Epstein files.
Why now? The third-term Congresswoman also said it would not be fair to her northwest Georgia district, one of the most conservative in the country, to have them "endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the president we all fought for," while noting that "Republicans will likely lose the midterms."
Why it matters: Greene is one of a record 40 House members and 10 senators who have indicated they do not plan to return to their seats after the 2026 election, joining a number of lawmakers who are retiring or running for a different office.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican who rose to prominence as one of President Donald Trump's biggest defenders and recently became one of his biggest critics, is leaving Congress.
Greene's announcement late Friday that she would resign effective Jan. 5, 2026, is the latest escalation of months of clashes with the president over his second term agenda — including the release of the Epstein files.
"Standing up for American women who were raped at 14, trafficked and used by rich powerful men, should not result in me being called a traitor and threatened by the President of the United States, whom I fought for," Greene wrote in a lengthy statement shared online.
The third-term Congresswoman also said it would not be fair to her northwest Georgia district, one of the most conservative in the country, to have them "endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the president we all fought for," while noting that "Republicans will likely lose the midterms."
Greene is one of a record 40 House members and 10 senators who have indicated they do not plan to return to their seats after the 2026 election, joining a number of lawmakers who are retiring or running for a different office.
Copyright 2025 NPR
DA seeks to drop charges against 2 police officers
Frank Stoltze
is a veteran reporter who covers local politics and examines how democracy is and, at times, is not working.
Published November 21, 2025 5:06 PM
DA Nathan Hochman is seeking to dismiss charges against two Torrance police officers who fatally shot a Black man in possession of an air rifle in 2018.
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Myung J. Chun
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Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
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Topline:
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman filed a motion Friday in Superior Court to dismiss manslaughter charges against two Torrance police officers who fatally shot a Black man in possession of an air rifle in 2018.
Hochman argued in court documents that prosecutors can’t meet the legal standard of proof needed for the officers to be convicted of a crime.
The backstory: Officers Matthew Concannon and Anthony Chavez were indicted in 2023 in connection with the killing of Christopher Deandre Mitchell, 23, who was suspected of stealing a car. As the officers approached the car, they saw what was later revealed to be an air rifle between Mitchell’s legs. When Mitchell appeared to reach for the rifle,the officers opened fire, according to police.
What's next: Superior Court Judge Sam Ohta did not immediately make a ruling Friday on the motion to dismiss the charges, saying the state Supreme Court is also considering the case.
Go deeper ... for more details on the case.
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman filed a motion Friday in Superior Court to dismiss manslaughter charges against two Torrance police officers who fatally shot a Black man in possession of an air rifle in 2018.
Hochman argued in court documents that prosecutors can’t meet the legal standard of proof needed for the officers to be convicted of a crime.
The court has not yet ruled on the matter.
The details
Officers Matthew Concannon and Anthony Chavez were indicted in 2023 in connection with the killing of Christopher Deandre Mitchell, 23, who was suspected of stealing a car.
As the officers approached the car, they saw what was later revealed to be an air rifle between Mitchell’s legs. When Mitchell appeared to reach for the rifle,the officers opened fire, according to police.
The backstory
Former District Attorney Jackie Lacey declined to file charges against the officers in 2019, saying they reasonably believed Mitchell had a gun. Her successor George Gascón, elected in 2020 on a platform of police accountability, assigned a special prosecutor to review the case. The special prosecutor sought the criminal indictment.
When Hochman took office in 2024, he appointed a new special prosecutor, who recommended the charges be dropped.
“We cannot move forward in good faith with prosecuting these two officers because we cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt with admissible evidence that the officers unreasonably believed they were in imminent danger when they saw what looked like a sawed-off shotgun or rifle between Mr. Mitchell’s legs and his hands moved toward the weapon just before the officers shot,” the statement read.
The courts
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Sam Ohta did not immediately make a ruling Friday on the motion to dismiss the charges, saying the state Supreme Court is also considering the case.
The state Supreme Court is considering an appeal filed by one of the officer’s attorneys after Ohta rejected an earlier motion to dismiss by the defense.
Kevin Tidmarsh
is a producer for LAist, covering news and culture. He’s been an audio/web journalist for about a decade.
Published November 21, 2025 4:35 PM
The Santa Ynez Reservoir in Pacific Palisades was offline for repairs in January. Repair work is expected to be completed by May 2027.
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Courtesy Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
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Topline:
A new report by several state agencies found that the water supply during the Palisades Fire was too slow, not too low, and even a functioning Santa Ynez Reservoir likely wouldn’t have helped much.
Why the hydrants stopped working: “The water system lost pressure, not due to a lack of water supply in the system, but because of an insufficient flow rate,” the report states.
Could it have been prevented? Though the exact data was missing, the state agencies running the investigation found that it was “unlikely that [the reservoir] could have helped maintain pressure for very long.” Municipal water systems like L.A.’s are not designed to fight large-scale urban conflagrations. Their main function is delivering drinking water.
What’s next: The repairs to fix the Santa Ynez Reservoir’s broken cover and make it usable again are slated to begin in June and finish by May 2027.
Read on ... to learn what the report recommends.
As the Palisades Fire was still burning in January, residents saw an eye-grabbing headline: the Santa Ynez reservoir, perched directly above the Palisades, was offline for repairs and empty.
The reservoir’s closure frustrated residents and spurred Gov. Gavin Newsom to announce a state investigation into whether the reservoir being full of water would have made a difference fighting the deadly fire.
After months of analysis, California agencies including the state’s EPA, Cal Fire and the Department of Water Resources issued a report confirming the explanations given by local officials and experts in the aftermath of the fire: the water supply was too slow, not too low — and even a functioning reservoir likely wouldn’t have done much in the face of an unprecedented natural disaster.
Why the hydrants stopped working
The report found that not even a full reservoir positioned uphill from the Palisades Fire could have maintained water pressure and stopped the devastation.
“The water system lost pressure, not due to a lack of water supply in the system, but because of an insufficient flow rate,” the report states.
A reservoir perched at a high elevation, such as the Santa Ynez, can serve an important role in maintaining water pressure for hydrants throughout the system. As water gets used downhill, water from the reservoir flows to towers that maintain water pressure. Because of gravity and physical limitations on flow rates, the pressure towers can't be refilled at the same pace as they are drained and eventually dry up.
In the case of the Palisades Fire, the report states, a full reservoir would have helped keep water pressure up for only a short time.
The report noted that some data points on the demand on the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s system were missing.
However, investigators found that based on experiences with other fires, the high demand across the system meant it was “unlikely that [the reservoir] could have helped maintain pressure for very long.”
The system’s design
The report found that the closure of the Santa Ynez Reservoir was in line with the primary purpose of L.A.’s water infrastructure: maintaining a clean drinking water supply. The reservoir repairs were prompted by a damaged cover. The repairs, the report notes, were required by federal and state laws on drinking water safety.
More broadly, municipal water systems like L.A.’s weren’t built to fight wildfires, as LAist reported in January.
“This report confirms what we and others have been saying more broadly regarding water system expectations and capabilities, but does so completely independently and with new details specific to the L.A. fires,” Greg Pierce, the director of UCLA’s Human Right to Water Solutions Lab, said in an email to LAist.
The state stopped short of recommending any changes to L.A.’s municipal infrastructure. Water experts like Pierce say massive amounts of water and a very expensive redesign of L.A.’s water system would be needed to keep fire hydrants working during large urban conflagrations.
For their part, researchers and others have been looking into other solutions, including putting more utility lines underground and redistributing water across the system.
The report about the reservoir comes on the heels of a separate report from the Fire Safety Research Institute about the timeline leading up to and during the January firestorm. That report, which was commissioned by the California governor's office, contains a detailed account of the Palisades and Eaton fires' progressions and emergency services' responses on Jan. 7 and 8.
As for the Santa Ynez Reservoir, the repairs to fix its broken cover and make it usable again are slated to begin in June and finish by May 2027.