News

Federal investigators concluded a controlled fire near where the Palisades Fire burned to try and determine how it began.
Kyle Evans, environmental program manager for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, told LAist he’s surprised there ...
Nearly four months after the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives began investigating the Palisades fire, ...
Many of the firearms appear damaged and are difficult to identify. The LAPD wants to catalogue which guns are destroyed or ...
Investigators with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will conduct a controlled fire along the Temescal ...
The Los Angeles Police Department recovered about 500 firearms from rubble leftover from the Palisades Fire, and now they are ...
Pasadena firefighters who battled the Eaton Fire are waiting to receive blood test results after experiencing severe symptoms ...
A controlled fire test is planned this week in the Pacific Palisades area as fire investigators continue looking into the potential origin of the deadly Palisades Fire. The Bureau of Alcohol ...
While seeing fire in the hills this week may be traumatic for Pacific Palisades residents, Federal officials believe the controlled blazes may help them finally determine what caused the deadly ...
A controlled fire test being conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms that began Tuesday night may help investigators figure out the root cause of the devastating Palisades Fire.
The test started Tuesday night and will continue through Thursday along the Green Peak and Skull Rock trailhead.
It’s been a “painstaking” process, but authorities are now ready to ask individuals who may have lost a firearm in the Palisades Fire to come forward. According to Los Angeles Police ...