
Salvador Hernández
Articles
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1 month ago |
latimes.com | Salvador Hernandez |Salvador Hernández
Delta Air Lines planes on the tarmac at Los Angeles International Airport in 2022. A man was detained after a disturbance on a flight from Atlanta to Los Angeles. A man was detained during a flight to Los Angeles on Monday morning after he reportedly bit and hit other passengers. The unidentified man was on Delta Air Lines Flight 501, from Atlanta to L.A., when he reportedly struck other passengers, said Lorie Dankers, spokesperson for the Transportation Security Administration.
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Jan 13, 2025 |
mahoningmatters.com | Noah Goldberg |Salvador Hernandez |Salvador Hernández
LOS ANGELES - A trio of lawsuits were filed Monday accusing Southern California Edison of sparking the Eaton fire - one of the deadly blazes that broke out last week amid a historic windstorm and destroyed thousands of homes. Lawyers for homeowners in the Altadena area announced the suits Monday, saying their clients either had to evacuate their houses or lost their homes entirely in the Eaton fire.
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Jan 13, 2025 |
swoknews.com | Noah Goldberg |Salvador Hernandez |Salvador Hernández
LOS ANGELES — A trio of lawsuits were filed Monday accusing Southern California Edison of sparking the Eaton fire — one of the deadly blazes that broke out last week amid a historic windstorm and destroyed thousands of homes. Lawyers for homeowners in the Altadena area announced the suits Monday, saying their clients either had to evacuate their houses or lost their homes entirely in the Eaton fire.
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Jan 8, 2025 |
latimes.com | Salvador Hernandez |Salvador Hernández
Firefighters and resident team up to battle the Palisades fire. L.A. firefighters were battling a growing brush fire in an evacuated area of Brentwood. Officials said the fire was spotted just before 8 a.m. That area had been evacuated due to the nearby Palisades fire, which burned more than 1,000 homes.
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Dec 31, 2024 |
latimes.com | Salvador Hernandez |Salvador Hernández |Ruben Vives
Unlawful border crossings along the U.S.-Mexico border have dropped to a four-year low, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, with 46,610 people stopped between ports of entry in November. The number of illegal crossings that month marked an 18% decrease from the previous month, and the lowest level since July 2020, the agency said.
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