News

Brian Williams, former deputy mayor of public safety, admits to fabricating a bomb threat at LA City Hall, risking a decade-long prison sentence.
The council provided the funds to recruit 240 police officers next year, down from the 480 proposed by the mayor. Bass' ...
In case you've forgotten about the incompetence in Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass' office that led to so much of the devastation from unprecedented wildfires early this year, an announcement from ...
Brian Williams told Mayor Karen Bass the bogus bomber was 'tired of the city support for Israel,' and was going to blow up ...
A former Los Angeles deputy mayor will plead guilty to reporting a bomb had been placed in city hall last year to law ...
Brian Williams, a longtime law enforcement oversight official who served as L.A.'s deputy mayor of public safety, agreed to ...
The plan averts 1,000 layoffs, lowering the number of Los Angeles city workers who will lose their jobs to 650.
In a marathon session, the Los Angeles City Council Thursday approved a revised $13.9 billion budget for fiscal year 2025-26 — one that is expected to slow down police hiring and curtail new spending ...
An 11-mile stretch of Pacific Coast Highway will reopen Friday. Access to the portion of the iconic highway that connects Los ...
The former City Hall aide, considered by colleagues a steady presence, faces a sentence of up to 10 years in prison.
Brian K. Williams, 61, was charged with one felony count of making a fire and explosives threat, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.