Month: December 2019

Home / Month: December 2019

Alors que Meghan Markle fête Noël auprès de son époux, le prince Harry, et de la famille royale, le Mail Online a publié une vidéo de la duchesse datant de 1998. Elle y réalise une belle prestation pour le spectacle de Noël de son lycée.

Meghan Markle fête son deuxième Noël auprès de la famille royale d’Angleterre. Un moment un peu difficile, alors qu’elle a coupé les ponts avec une grande partie de sa propre famille, car la future maman est secouée par une forte période de tensions. La duchesse de Sussex, qui a par ailleurs du mal avec les traditions imposées par la couronne (notamment la séparation, les hommes d’un côté les femmes de l’autres le matin du 25 décembre à Sandrigham), serait en froid avec Kate Middleton depuis des mois. Cette querelle atteindrait même les deux frères. Cette dernière, avec le prince William, ont d’ailleurs pris le parti de ne pas les loger cette année, contrairement au réveillon passé.

Alors en ces moments de troubles, un peu de légèreté est le bienvenu. Les fans de Meghan Markle pourront se réjouir, car une vidéo d’il y a 20 ans a été retrouvée et publiée dans le Mail Online. On y voit la duchesse, âgée de 17 ans, faire une belle prestation à l’occasion d’un spectacle de Noël de l’Immaculate Heart High School à Los Angeles en décembre 1998. Sur scène, bonnet de Noël sur la tête, elle interprète avec une camarade la chanson humoristique Santa Baby (où une femme demande au Père Noël des cadeaux extravagant, comme un yacht).

Cette camarade n’est autre que Natalie Garcia Fryman, devenue elle aussi actrice par la suite. Meghan Markle était à cette époque en dernière année du secondaire. Et alors qu‘elle montrait déjà un goût pour la comédie, prenant son rôle très au sérieux, elle a aujourd’hui dû renoncer à sa carrière pour se dédier à son rôle en tant que duchesse de Sussex.

Retrouvez ici tout ce qu’il faut savoir sur la grossesse de Meghan Markle

Crédits photos : AGENCE / BESTIMAGE

Découvrez la bande-annonce de la comédie Un flic à la maternelle 2 ! Après Arnold Schwarzenegger, c’est aujourd’hui Dolph Lundgren qui incarne l’homme de loi amené à côtoyer de turbulents enfants pour mener à bien son enquête.

En 1991, Arnold Schwarzenegger était Un flic à la maternelle dans la comédie culte d’Ivan Reitman. Un quart de siècle plus tard, la suite se dévoile avec cette fois l’imposant Dolph Lundgren dans le rôle de l’homme de loi amené à côtoyer de turbulents enfants pour mener à bien son enquête.

La première bande-annonce d’Un flic à la maternelle 2, qui sort directement en vidéo aux Etats-Unis, est à découvrir dans notre player ci-dessus. Alors : de Dolph ou Schwarzie, quel Expendable s’en tire le mieux au milieu de ces chères têtes blondes ?

Souvenez-vous : “Un flic à la maternelle” avec Arnold Schwarzenegger, c’était ça !

Un flic à la maternelle Bande-annonce VO

 

WASHINGTON  — 

With the Democratic presidential nomination still very much up for grabs, candidates sprinted from the year’s final presidential debate in Los Angeles to Iowa this weekend, hoping to get a jump on a frenetic month of campaigning ahead of the state’s Feb. 3 caucuses.

Iowa’s pull, always powerful because it hosts the first contest of the nominating season, is stronger than ever because the race is one of the most volatile in years. Many Iowa Democrats say they are still making up their minds.

“I’ll probably decide in about 45 more days,” said Tami Loge, an Iowa Democrat who attended a rally for New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker in a T-shirt stenciled with the first names of all the Democratic candidates. “Usually I know right away. But there’s so many of them, and they’re all so good. We need to get somebody that’s going to win.”

The waffling may soon end as Iowa’s political pulse quickens after the holidays and voters begin to make their final decisions.

“We’ve gone from the point where people are kicking the tires to the point where they are getting serious about making a commitment,” said Jeff Link, a Democratic strategist in Iowa who is neutral in the race. “We’re in the fourth quarter and everything matters.”

Underscoring the increasing sense of urgency, four of the five top candidates traveled to Iowa for this final weekend before Christmas; the fifth will be there to ring in the new year.

On Saturday, three candidates scheduled events at the same time — 10:30 a.m. — in different parts of the state. Two rivals are scheduled to appear in the same town Sunday.

Stuck in the bumper-to-bumper candidate jam, some are hoping to build on attention garnered from their debate performances — or to heal wounds inflicted by their rivals.

The debate dynamics Thursday were a reflection of the latest pecking order in Iowa. Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., who has been topping the field in Iowa polls, came under fire from rivals with the most at stake in taking him down a notch.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who has lost ground to Buttigieg in Iowa, criticized his fundraising practices. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, in a late effort to break into the upper tier in Iowa, attacked Buttigieg’s lack of national political experience.

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and former Vice President Joe Biden could afford to stand apart from the debate fight because they have relatively stable and strong bases of support in Iowa and other early-voting states.

The average of recent Iowa polls by Real Clear Politics finds 22% of likely Democratic caucusgoers are for Buttigieg, 20% for Sanders, 18% for Biden and 16% for Warren. Klobuchar averaged just 6.3%, but support for her has been on the rise.

Since September, Biden, Warren and Buttigieg have all taken a turn at the top of Iowa polls, leaving the outlook unusually murky.

“The degree of indecisiveness and the willingness of people to consider different candidates, I gotta think it’s at an all-time high,” said Dave Nagle, a former congressman and Iowa Democratic Party chairman who is a veteran of caucus politics. “The last 15 days out here are going to be one earthquake after another.”

One measure of the race’s fluidity: A Des Moines Register/CNN poll in November found that 62% of likely caucusgoers said they could yet be persuaded to support someone other than their current first choice; 30% said they had made up their mind for good.

That’s why Buttigieg, who returns to Iowa on Sunday for two days of campaign events, can take nothing for granted. “The mayor is hot right now,” said Nagle. “The question is, can he sustain it?”

Performing well in Iowa is important for all of the candidates because a strong showing typically boosts a candidate with a burst of attention, donations and momentum heading into other early-voting states.

The Iowa caucuses present a make-or-break moment for candidates who have not yet broken into the top tier, such as Booker, who has polled so poorly that he did not make Thursday’s debate stage.

Klobuchar did make it to the debate, but she is barely hanging on to a spot among the top candidates. She made a splash Thursday and is following up with a four-day, 27-county tour of Iowa this weekend.

Polling by FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos before and after the debate found that Klobuchar had a 4-point increase in the share of respondents who said they were considering voting for her — a bigger increase than any other candidate.

Jean Ulmer, a retiree from Soldier, Iowa, was among those whose head was turned. Ulmer said she had thought she would caucus for Buttigieg. She even had a yard sign planted for him. But she was impressed enough by Klobuchar’s concise, clear answers in the debate that she is giving the senator a second look.

At one of her first events in Iowa on Friday, a jubilant Klobuchar told supporters that her campaign had received $1 million in donations in the 24 hours after her debate performance.

The windfall may not be enough to change her fortunes, however. Her campaign received a similar fundraising boost after the October debate, and she continued to struggle.

Warren came to Iowa on Saturday for two events, seeking to recapture support she enjoyed this fall, when she had her turn topping state polls. She slipped after Buttigieg and others began challenging her and fueling concern that she is too far left to beat Trump.

Speaking to a crowd of about 350 in North Liberty on Saturday, Warren returned to her central argument against the more-moderate agendas proposed by Biden and Buttigieg.

“They think running a vague campaign that nibbles around the edges of these big problems is somehow the safe strategy,” Warren said without naming Biden or Buttigieg. “If the best Democrats can offer is business as usual after Donald Trump, then Democrats will lose.”

Biden, campaigning in Ottumwa on Saturday, also revisited the theme of electability that ran through the presidential debate, arguing that he is the best positioned to beat Trump next fall.

The Des Moines Register/CNN poll in November found that 63% of likely Democratic caucusgoers said their first priority was picking a nominee with a strong chance of beating Trump; 32% said it was more important to pick a candidate who shares their position on major issues.

Campaigning with Biden, former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack, who served alongside him in the Obama administration, told the crowd of about 175 that he had checked polls in eight battleground states and found Biden was the only candidate leading or even with Trump in all of them.

“He is the candidate in the best position to win,” Vilsack said. “One thing Donald Trump and I agree on: Joe Biden is the person he is most concerned about.”

Sanders stayed in California after the debate and had a rally in Venice on Saturday afternoon with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. Sanders — who has held more Iowa events than any of the top candidates except Klobuchar, according to the Des Moines Register tally of events — will return to Des Moines to ring in 2020 at an event billed “Bernie’s Big New Year’s Bash.”

Some Sanders supporters are particularly focused on increasing participation in the caucuses, which are typically low-turnout affairs.

Larry Cohen, a former union leader who chairs Our Revolution, a political organization associated with Sanders, said the group is targeting union members in five eastern Iowa counties that traditionally voted Democratic but flipped to support Trump in 2016.

He estimated that among the group’s 6,000 members in those counties, only about 25% on average participated in Iowa’s caucuses.

The goal is to increase participation to 75% through a program of member-to-member outreach, he said.

Times staff writer Seema Mehta contributed to this report.


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After seeing so many open shots clank off the rim, Ethan Anderson couldn’t help but celebrate. So when the freshman made a big three-point basket that put USC ahead by five points with 3 minutes 9 seconds to play against Louisiana State on Saturday in Staples Center, Anderson skipped twice down the court, swinging his arm in a circle.

Anderson said he was “so happy” after the shot, but the Fairfax High alumnus still wore a serious expression during the celebration. He never stops competing.

Behind clutch shooting from the point guard, USC hung on for a 70-68 victory over Louisiana State and secured a key win over a power conference team before Pac-12 Conference play begins in January.

Anderson, who missed his first six shots, scored 11 points, all in the final 9:21, and had six assists and two steals. He made two three-pointers to bookend a 13-2 USC run in the second half that put the Trojans (10-2) ahead 66-61.

“That’s what I expect as a head coach, our staff expects that, his teammates expect that — to come in and play like he did down the stretch because he’s a heck of a basketball player,” coach Andy Enfield said of Anderson.

“He makes freshman mistakes. However, we have confidence in him and we’re going to ride with our young guys.”

The Tigers (7-4) held Onyeka Okongwu to 10 points, but the Chino Hills alumnus got nine rebounds and four blocks, including the game-sealing play as he blocked Javonte Smart’s rushed shot from the free-throw line as time expired after USC senior Jonah Mathews missed the front end of a one and one.

Anderson was riding a shooting drought that extended over two games; he was 0 for 4 in USC’s victory over Long Beach State. He had open shots early but missed them. His confidence waned. As his frustration built, he drove into the lane, hoping to provide a spark with a big dunk. Instead, he got stonewalled.

But the coaching staff didn’t say much to the competitive freshman. This was a player from Carson who woke up every day at 5:30 a.m. to drive 45 minutes to go to school. He was the L.A. City Section player of the year after leading Fairfax to an Open Division championship.

“What am I going to tell a kid that’s done that? ‘You’re playing like crap?’ ” Enfield said. “No, I’m going to just let him be and when I put him back in the game, I expect him to show that toughness and that competitive spirit he showed throughout his whole high school career.”

Anderson said all the early wake-up calls and long drives were worth it because it got him in a much better position to be recruited for college.

He lamented Saturday, standing in a hallway in Staples Center, that he was ranked in the 300s as a recruit: 327th nationally, according to the 247Sports composite. He is an undersized 6 feet 1 and averaged only five points entering Saturday’s game, but he proved that the best skills can’t always be measured.

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“I always play with a chip on my shoulder,” Anderson said. “Toughness is one thing that I can control always.”


In a film session after the Lakers squeaked by with a win over the Atlanta Hawks, there was plenty for them to improve. But Frank Vogel doesn’t like to harp too much on negatives, and if he has a point to make he often employs movie clips. This time, he turned to Rocky Balboa and Adonis Johnson.

In a scene from the movie “Creed II,” Balboa stood with Johnson in front of a mirror and pointed at the young boxer, saying that was his toughest opponent.

“Every time you get into the ring, that’s who you’re going against,” Balboa said.

Vogel wanted to remind the Lakers about the importance of self-reflection.

In the same film session he showed another clip about basketball — it showed point guard Rajon Rondo faking a lob to LeBron James, and James faking that he was going to block Rondo’s shot.

That message? It’s good to have fun.

“We find a lot of different things to laugh about that are also good points for our team,” said Phil Handy, one of Vogel’s assistant coaches. “His film sessions, at some point there’s always going to be some comedy to it. It’s not about always chewing us out. Constructive criticism comes with laughter as well.”

By this time last season, the Lakers had already seen two players suspended, one superstar start to lose his patience and the head coach get called into the president of basketball operations’ office to get berated over how the team began the season.

A year later, drama has been noticeably absent from Lakerland. One reason for that has been Vogel.

After spending a career learning how to unify teams, including stops as a head coach in Indiana and Orlando, Vogel is now acing his toughest test. His style is more collaborative than authoritarian. His positive view and his jokes come with hard-won mutual respect.

“Frank is a great leader,” Lakers assistant Jason Kidd said. “He has that beautiful mind. And he’s just real chill. … He just doesn’t stress over a lot of stuff and that’s as simple as it gets.”

Managing the staff

Having just parted ways with an inexperienced head coach in Luke Walton, the Lakers wanted to fill their new staff with people who’d had experience as head coaches.

It worried an old friend.

“One guy that went there for an interview told me they had told him they wanted just former head coaches [as assistants],” said Dan Burke, an assistant coach for the Indiana Pacers. “Oof. How many of those guys are ready to kind of … I was worried for Frank.”

Burke has since realized that Vogel’s personality would help make that work. The two of them worked together in Indiana as part of Jim O’Brien’s staff from 2007 to 2011. When the Pacers fired O’Brien and promoted Vogel, he empowered Burke to focus on the team’s defense.

Vogel had practice with an experienced staff at Indiana. Burke joined the Pacers staff before Vogel, and former Portland Trail Blazers coach Nate McMillan joined Vogel’s staff in 2013. The group guided Indiana to the Eastern Conference finals in 2013 and 2014.

Lionel Hollins has been coaching since 1985, most of it as an assistant. He was the Grizzlies head coach from 2009 to 2013, and the Nets head coach from 2014 to 2016.

“He likes feedback,” Hollins said. “… It’s a think-tank type of situation.”

Kidd, though, a former head coach for the Bucks and Nets, had never been an assistant. Some wondered if he would be content in that role. He’d interviewed for the Lakers’ head coaching job before being considered as an assistant. Kidd had previously declined interview requests this season so as not to draw attention away from Vogel.

Asked about the outside perception that he would be after Vogel’s job, Kidd said that’s not an issue.

“I think the key word there is outside,” he said. “For whatever reason there’s always noise around the Lakers from the outside but on the inside it was always a calm situation. … There was never a discussion. It’s more or less, he knows I have his back, and he has mine and that’s what a team is all about.”

Said Handy: “I think there was a lot of bad media around maybe some of his past experiences as a coach. I think you have to judge people by what they do with you. … I think J’s been tremendous because he brings a lot of value as a Hall of Famer, champion and someone who’s got coaching experience as well. He’s been of the mind-set of ‘I need to learn how to be a really good assistant coach.’”

Handy is the only front-of-the-bench assistant on Vogel’s staff who doesn’t have head coaching experience. He grew up with Kidd, but didn’t know Vogel until interviewing for a position on his staff. But he did know former Cleveland coach Tyronn Lue, who turned down the Lakers’ offers for the job.

“I mean honestly, if I sit here and say no, I’d probably be lying,” Handy said, when asked if he had any reservations about the organization. “But even with that, it may have been reservations, but in my mind … I came in with a clear conscience and said, ‘Hey listen, this is a fresh start for everybody.’”

Working with players

It is not always easy for an NBA player to see limited minutes on his team. It helps, though, to have a coach who offers full transparency about his thought process.

“I’ve had coaches where I’m scared to talk to or don’t know how they’re feeling that day or not knowing if I’m going to play, stuff like that,” Lakers guard Troy Daniels said. “As a player, I accepted it as a young guy because I thought that’s just what the NBA is.”

Vogel isn’t like that. He talks to Daniels individually about his plans for Daniels in each game. If Vogel plans on using someone else more, he has that difficult conversation.

“You feel like you belong, you feel like you’re actually a part of the team,” Daniels said.

Said Kyle Kuzma: “That just makes it easier on the team because most guys know what they are going to do on a nightly basis, where they are going to get their shots, where they are going to get their plays called and whatnot.”

That is a trait Vogel had to develop.

“I think he learned and he adjusted, found what works and what doesn’t,” said Paul George, the Clippers star who began his career with the Pacers. “My whole time what made it so remarkable and so great with the system that he had was just positive, very positive influence, and it was great — tough days, long days, tough road trips, he always found the positive.”

George flourished under Vogel’s tutelage. Vogel had a knack for making each player feel important.

“He helped my confidence a lot. More than anything, bad game, good game he always kept me aligned,” Pacers center Myles Turner said.

How his stars react to him has been critical, too. In that respect, Vogel has also excelled. He isn’t afraid to coach LeBron James, and James often praises Vogel even when he isn’t directly asked about him.

“When I was going through all their pick and rolls I think the only guy handling the ball was LeBron so that helps too,” Burke said, with a chuckle. “But that’s smart. You gotta play that game… I think you gotta be smart enough to know who the guy is.”

Positively silly

Not everyone gets Vogel’s jokes right away. Or catches his movie references.

“I didn’t even know who the guy was from ‘Creed,’” Hollins said, referring to Michael B. Jordan, who played Adonis Johnson.

When asked if anyone is on Vogel’s level with movie quotes, Hollins enlisted the opinion of Dru Anthrop, the Lakers’ head video coordinator, who happened to be nearby preparing for a game.

“I don’t know if anyone can be,” Anthrop said. “Coach would always give me three or four movies a week that he’d say you’ve gotta see this movie. I’d be like, all right, but you also gave me a lot of work to do.

“If it’s an ‘80s movie and you work for coach, you gotta know it.”

Said Burke: “I don’t know if he ever saw a good movie in his life but his movie references are great. Some of them I don’t know. ‘Dumb and Dumber’ I didn’t really watch.”

It’s the spirit of his references that matters to those he coaches and those who work for him. He likes to have fun. He likes to remind players of their strengths. He’ll pick his moments for critiques.

“I think just his low key, his funny personality,” Kidd said. “… He believes he has a really good team, good coaching staff and so he’s being himself.”

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LAS VEGAS — 

UCLA’s offense was a mess. The point guard hesitated to take open shots, the big men couldn’t score on collapsing defenders and seemingly everyone on the roster committed turnovers.

Watching it all inside T-Mobile Arena was a player who could have solved many of the problems.

Daishen Nix surveyed his future teammates from two rows behind the Bruins’ bench Saturday during their 74-64 loss to North Carolina as part of the CBS Sports Classic and felt conflicted.

Yes, the star high school point guard was eager to lead a team whose record sunk further toward .500 back to national prominence, but he also realized that there could be benefits to the pain the Bruins are enduring in their first season under new coach Mick Cronin.

“I think them going through this right now will get them tougher for next year,” Nix said, “so when I come in I won’t have to like be the leader automatically because they already played together and they know what to do in tough situations like they just had.”

The 6-foot-5, 210-pound Nix is the kind of player who could spark a dramatic turnaround for a team that appears destined to miss the NCAA tournament for a second consecutive season. The senior at Las Vegas Trinity International School is a passing wizard considered by some to be the nation’s top prep player at his position.

His passing skills evolved from being the quarterback of his football team until he gave up the sport in seventh grade. He enjoys watching YouTube passing highlights of current and former NBA players including Rajon Rondo, Jason Williams and Magic Johnson because of the way they galvanized everybody inside an arena.

“That really catches my eye,” Nix said, “passing the ball and getting the team involved and bringing the crowd into the game.”

Nix became Cronin’s first UCLA recruit after picking the Bruins over Kentucky and Kansas. He said he was attracted to UCLA in part because of Cronin and in part because of the school’s legacy of winning. During a recruiting visit, Nix said he was wowed by massive banners depicting each of the Bruins’ 11 national championships that line a hallway leading from the locker room to the court inside Pauley Pavilion.

Nix was born in Fairbanks, Alaska, but grew up in Anchorage, sparing him the 50-below-zero temperatures that his grandparents and mother once endured. His family eventually moved to Las Vegas because his grandfather had a chronic health condition and needed to escape the cold. After showing some initial improvement, his grandfather died eight months later.

Seated next to Nix on Saturday was Lakewood Mayfair High shooting guard Joshua Christopher, another prep standout UCLA covets. Nix said he was making his own recruiting pitch to Christopher as well as Jalen Green, a star guard from Napa Prolific Prep.

The more talent surrounding Nix, the easier it will be for the Bruins to replicate the kind of turnaround they enjoyed during point guard Lonzo Ball’s first season, when they went from 15-17 to 31-5.


Two of the surprise basketball teams in the opening month of the season have been Corona Centennial (10-2) and King-Drew (11-1), with each winning tournament championships on Saturday.

In Las Vegas, Centennial won the toughest division of the Tarkanian Classic, taking the Platinum title with four consecutive victories culminating with a 71-55 win over Las Vegas Bishop Gorman.

Tournament MVP Paris Dawson scored 27 points.

Freshman Jared McCain added 12 points. In the third-place game, Santa Ana Mater Dei was beaten in double overtime by Sacramento Sheldon 70-62. Devin Askew had 19 points for Mater Dei.

King-Drew won the Serra tournament championship with a 75-50 win over View Park Prep. Tournament MVP Fidelis Okereke had 22 points.

Fairfax finished up in Las Vegas with a 79-77 overtime win over Colorado Overland. Keith Dinwiddie scored 20 points.

El Camino Real defeated Campbell Hall 65-53 despite 24 points from Kyle Beedon.

Heritage Christian defeated Crossroads 70-58. Skyy Clark had 28 points and Max Allen 23.

Santa Margarita received 21 points from JP Tijanich in a 55-46 win over San Gabriel Academy.

Renaissance won its seventh in a row with a 59-47 win over Santa Monica.

Chaminade was beaten by Ohio St. Vincent-St. Mary 79-71. Kenneth Simpson led Chaminade with 31 points.

Clark Slajchert scored 34 points in Oak Park’s 75-56 win over Santa Barbara.

Rolling Hills Prep (10-0) defeated Venice 75-22. Troy Murphy Jr. scored 25 points and Benny Gealer 21.

Richmond Salesian defeated Crespi 57-42.

Beverly Hills defeated Palisades 80-61.

Sierra Canyon stayed unbeaten with a 66-55 win over Virginia John Marshall. BJ Boston scored 31` points and Harold Yu contribued 13 rebounds.

KJ Bradley scored 28 points but Crenshaw lost to Village Christian 59-55.

In girls’ basketball, Windward and Sierra Canyon each lost in tournament finals. Windward was beaten in the Nike TOC 43-40 by Maryland Elizabeth Seton. Sierra Canyon lost to La Jolla Country Day 44-43.


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‘Twas a couple of weeks before Christmas, when the culprit sneaked up to a San Pedro home, snatched a package on the porch and ran off with the goods.

But a witness quickly caught the thief: an unlikely but rather anxious bushy-tailed squirrel.

The package was returned to its owner. The incident was caught on a home surveillance camera.

Not everyone is so lucky, however. As online shopping becomes increasingly popular, so too has “porch piracy” — or the pilfering of delivered packages.

Typically, according to FedEx, Amazon and other delivery and online companies, such issues are swiftly resolved.

But sometimes — particularly during the holidays, when timing is of the essence — porch piracy begets long-term conflict and disappointment.

Recently, nearly 300 Amazon packages were stolen from a post office in Amador County in Northern California. Indeed, the problem appears to be especially acute in the most populous state in the country.

Three of the top 10 metro areas in the nation most susceptible to porch piracy are in California, according to a recent report by SafeWise, an independent security system review site. The rating list was compiled by comparing FBI crime data with Google Trends searches for missing and stolen packages.

The watchdog site examined metro area package theft rates for the entire year, compared with holiday-specific theft rates.

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The San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose area came in first, SafeWise found. Los Angeles and the Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto area came in at ninth and 10th place, respectively. In these areas, the rate of theft was determined to be consistent throughout the year.

Other regions in the top 10 list were Salt Lake City; Portland, Ore.; Baltimore; Seattle-Tacoma; Chicago; Austin, Texas; and Denver.

Asked if SafeWise’s findings aligned with their own internal data, the U.S. Postal Service and Amazon did not respond or declined to comment. Jonathan Lyons, a spokesman for FedEx, also declined to provide data about reported package thefts. But he did cite a 2018 Comcast and Wakefield Research Survey, which indicated that “1 in 4 Americans has fallen victim to package theft.”

But he also noted that “there are steps our customers can take for added peace of mind.”

FedEx has instituted its own preventive measures, including having items shipped to alternative destinations, such as a relative’s home, one’s workplace, a FedEx office location or an authorized shipping center, such as Walgreens or Albertsons.

To ensure that items are not left unattended, customers can also schedule deliveries at a convenient time or require a signature from the recipient. Specific delivery instructions can also be provided to FedEx drivers. “Do you like your packages left behind the big planter or tucked behind the grill beside the back door?” the company asks.

Some customers have installed surveillance cameras and video doorbells to keep an eye on their parcels, while a few law enforcement agencies have resorted to elaborate sting operations, using packages with GPS trackers inside, in an effort to reduce the number of thefts.

In Amador County, where some 300 parcels were stolen from the post office on Dec. 1, local authorities have no surveillance footage or witness information to go on. On the sheriff’s Facebook page, victims of the theft are encouraged to share their experience.

Through a post, Jean Michelle Morgan Ballard indicated that she’d lost out on nine packages of gifts for her grandchildren. Likewise, Victoria Cox Noble was waiting on three presents. When Cox Noble reported the loss, she said, Amazon gave her a refund. Still, she will not be able to replace the products, one of which was part of a Black Friday sale, because they are no longer available.

To date, only a handful of victims have come forward. Plus, “Amazon never reached out to us, never gave us any information,” Amador County Undersheriff Gary Redman said. As a result, the agency has been unable “to determine the level of theft.”

All of the stolen packages were taken from a post office that was closed for the day.

The delivery person, who was hired through a third-party company, left them at the wrong place, Redman said.


A joyous New Orleans-style Second Line parade to honor the roughly 1,000 homeless people who have died in Los Angeles County this year turned to anger on Friday, as skid row mourners stopped at City Hall to denounce elected officials for not halting the growing death toll.

Dozens of skid row residents and advocates, all decked out in Mardi Gras beads and flying black, gold and purple balloons, chanted: “Three a day! Too many!” They waved their fists at the windows of City Hall, where a homeless man in his 50s was found dead Tuesday night.

The parade and angry demonstration were part of National Homeless Persons Memorial Day, marked in dozens of cities.

L.A.’s day of mourning began soberly at the James Wood Community Center with prayers, songs and the traditional recitation of the names of all people who died at skid row missions and programs. Later, advocates planned to release candles at Echo Park Lake, where dozens of people have been living and dying in tents over the past year.

The Los Angeles County Public Health found in October that deaths among homeless people have increased each year, from 536 in 2013 to 1,047 in 2018. The tally so far this year is 963, they said.

Pete White of the Los Angeles Community Action Network, the parade organizer, accused City Atty. Mike Feuer of hypocrisy for expressing sadness over the homeless man who died outside City Hall, the same week the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a landmark homelessness case that curbs police powers to clear homeless encampments when there aren’t enough shelter beds available.

Feuer and officials from several other cities and counties across California had asked the high court to either clarify or overturn the lower court ruling in City of Boise vs. Martin.

“The city attorney had the audacity to hold a press conference [about the death] … when, days before, his office was trying to figure out how to criminalize that man,” White said.

Rob Wilcox, the city attorney spokesman, said Feuer wanted the court to clarify the Boise ruling, not to extend police powers over homeless people.

Feuer announced the man’s death at a press conference on Wednesday morning.

“He was someone’s son. He might’ve been somebody’s dad or somebody’s brother,” Feuer said. “I don’t know. But I do know that he died alone, and if there is any truth to statistics, he is not alone.”

The first parade to mark National Homeless Persons Memorial Day took off at noon Friday from San Julian Park, accompanied by drums, a trumpet, a keyboard, bicycles festooned with beads and Christmas garlands, and a giant banner that included photos of skid row residents who had died. It was labeled “Death by neglect” and contained a dot map of every homeless death site in Los Angeles County in the past year.

Several singers led the crowd in “Wade in the Water” and other civil rights anthems. Stephanie Arnold Williams, a longtime skid row advocate, sped around the crowd in red sequined skates, live streaming the parade on Facebook from a solar-powered tablet strapped to her back.

“When death comes to the doorstep of City Hall, you know we must respond,” White said. “We are going to set up shrines to show our people didn’t die in vain.”

Several of the dead were remembered by name, including Rodney Evans, who died on skid row waiting to get housing.

The parade eventually returned to the skid row corner where Dwayne Fields, a longtime skid row street musician, was killed in August when his tent was set on fire in what authorities said was an intentional act.

Jonathan Early, 38, who also was homeless, has been charged in Fields’ death. The death — and that of his partner, Valarie Wertlow, a month later — underscores the stakes in the epidemic of homeless deaths.

“Fields was a Jimi Hendrix impersonator in Las Vegas, and he was a better guitarist than Jimi Hendrix,” Anderson said. “It’s like genius is being snuffed out. This is all of our fight.”


A storm will bring widespread rain to Southern California from Sunday through Monday evening, according to the National Weather Service, and winter weather advisories are in effect beginning as early as noon on Sunday for the higher elevations.

Snow levels are expected to be in the range of 5,500 to 6,500 feet on Sunday, but then lower to between 5,000 and 6,000 feet on Monday. And snow could potentially dip down to 4,500 feet locally on some interior slopes.

It’s possible that there could be snow down to the level of the Grapevine, which is at about 4,100 feet, on Monday night, said Curt Kaplan, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Oxnard. That would be the result of this complicating factor: The moist southwest flow bringing the rain may encounter a cold, dry easterly wind, which would cause evaporative cooling. That cold offshore flow could cause snow levels to dip to the level of the I-5 Freeway through the Tehachapi Mountains.

Isolated thunderstorms are also a possibility with this system, especially in the afternoon and evening hours on Monday, because of instability caused by cool temperatures aloft.

Significant snow accumulations are likely above 7,000 feet, with lighter accumulations down to 5,000 feet.

Another storm is expected on Wednesday and Thursday, but the timing is uncertain. However, with this second system, snow levels may drop to 4,000 feet on Thursday, which would affect Interstate 5 over the Grapevine.


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