Saturday, February 28, 2026

Pedophiles don't just haunt government schools

Teacher from elite Calabasas private school hit with child molestation, child pornography charges


LA depends into third world status

Fury as LA admits it takes 270 days to repair a streetlight


Outrage is mounting across Los Angeles as residents face a staggering 270-day wait for streetlight repairs.

The city is currently buried under a mountain of roughly 33,000 pending repairs, leaving some neighborhoods in total darkness for nearly a year, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The scale of the crisis was highlighted by FOX 11 reporter Matthew Seedorff on X, who shared an automated response from the city’s 311 system.

The city is currently buried under a mountain of roughly 33,000 pending repairs. MediaNews Group via Getty Images
The scale of the crisis was highlighted by FOX 11 reporter Matthew Seedorff on X. X/@MattSeedorff

“Theft and vandalism are driving a massive repair backlog,” the notification read, confirming the nine-month wait time.


The “theft epidemic” has become so severe that copper wire theft now accounts for nearly 40% of all outages, with thieves stripping miles of cable from city infrastructure faster than crews can replace it

Infrastructure failure has become a central flashpoint in the 2026 mayoral election. Councilmember Nithya Raman, who recently filed to challenge incumbent Mayor Karen Bass, has seized on the outages as proof of systemic mismanagement.

Raman, an urban planner, has built her campaign on “fixing the basics,” arguing that the city’s inability to maintain its streets is a public safety emergency.

Only 185 field workers are tasked with maintaining more than 220,000 lights citywide. Getty Images

In response to the crisis, the City Council recently proposed a $65 million plan to bypass traditional repairs in high-theft areas by converting over 60,000 fixtures to solar power.

While this would eliminate the need for copper wiring, the Bureau of Street Lighting remains severely under-resourced, with only 185 field workers tasked with maintaining more than 220,000 lights citywide.



If only the thousands of protesters killed by the Mullahs were alive to rejoice!

Iranians chant and dance in the streets after US, Israeli air strikes: ‘I love Trump!’



Entitled to violence...it all starts in the home

Student, 12, dies after heartless bully threw water bottle at her head — as cops open murder probe



Slash More UN Funding:

Freeing Cuba from the Communist dictatorship

Trump and Rubio have brought Cuba's government to the brink

6 hours ago

A blockade on oil imports is leaving Cuba with few resources. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wants Cuba's government on its knees. The situation has become even more tense following a fatal confrontation at sea.

How corrupt has Los Angeles become? This should tell you!

LA Democrats Advance Charter Reform to Abolish City Controller’s Office Amid Massive Fraud Scandals

The majority approved language that would replace the elected Controller’s role with an appointed CFO, potentially stripping away independent oversight

By Megan Barth, February 27, 2026 12:33 pm

In a move that has ignited fierce backlash, the Los Angeles Charter Reform Commission voted 9-2 on Thursday to advance a proposal that would effectively eliminate the independent City Controller’s office, shifting its core functions—including audits, accounting, payments, revenue forecasting, and fraud investigations—to a new Chief Financial Officer (CFO) appointed by Mayor Karen Bass and accountable to the City Council. This reform, framed by supporters as a consolidation of financial operations to address the city’s ongoing budget crisis, comes just weeks after Controller Kenneth Mejia’s office played a pivotal role in exposing a $23 million homelessness funding fraud scheme, leading to the arrest of a Westwood man charged with defrauding taxpayer dollars intended for homeless services. 

Mejia, in a video posted to social media on Thursday, expressed shock at the proposal, stating he learned of it only two hours before the commission’s meeting. “Everyone, I am tired of my office being under attack,” Mejia said in the video, which has since garnered widespread attention. “There is a proposal being presented at the Charter Reform Commission that would eliminate our accounting, our payment functions, revenue forecasting, our audits and fraud, waste and abuse [investigations], and essentially give it to the mayor and city council through the creation of a new CFO.” He urged Angelenos to rally in support of alternative reforms that would empower his office, including designating the Controller as the city’s CFO and granting independent budgeting to shield it from political retaliation. 

The Charter Reform Commission, tasked with overhauling the city’s governing document amid fiscal strains—including a $1 billion budget deficit that led to 27 position cuts in Mejia’s office last year—has been debating these changes for months. Commissioners Carla Fuentes and Michael Yap opposed the motion, but the majority approved language that would replace the elected Controller’s role with an appointed CFO, potentially stripping away independent oversight. If adopted by the City Council and approved by voters, the reform could centralize financial authority under the mayor, raising concerns about reduced accountability in a city plagued by scandals.

This push arrives against a backdrop of rampant waste, fraud, and abuse in Los Angeles, as extensively covered by the California Globe. In April 2025, U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli announced the formation of the Homelessness Fraud and Corruption Task Force to probe misuse of billions in homelessness funds, highlighting Los Angeles County’s disproportionate role in statewide scandals. The Globe reported on specific cases, such as the $23 million fraud involving fake invoices and empty shelters, which Mejia’s audits helped uncover, triggering federal arrests. Broader investigations revealed $3.5 billion in suspected hospice and home-health fraud centered in Los Angeles, as noted by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz

Congressman Kevin Kiley (R-CA) has amplified these issues, requesting a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report in February 2026 to quantify California’s staggering fraud since 2016, estimating billions across sectors like housing and healthcare. Kiley cited a $50 million homelessness scheme in Los Angeles as emblematic of the problem, alongside $370 million diverted from the California Cannabis Tax Fund for non-intended purposes like “social justice” grants unrelated to substance abuse prevention.

The Globe’s coverage of Governor Gavin Newsom’s administration has further exposed systemic failures, including $24 billion in homelessness spending from 2019-2024 yielding no measurable results, and $8.6 billion in COVID-era relief fraud. 

Vice President JD Vance, leading a federal anti-fraud task force in California, has signaled intensified scrutiny of Los Angeles’ homelessness programs.

As the proposal heads to the City Council, critics argue it undermines the very watchdog mechanisms that have begun to hold officials accountable. Mejia’s office has proposed six counter-reforms via its website, including expanded audit powers over all city tax dollars, to fulfill the Controller’s role as the “people’s watchdog.” The battle over LA’s charter underscores deeper tensions in California’s largest city, where fiscal mismanagement continues to fuel calls for federal intervention.

 

Ending the free ride for leftist saboteurs!

Judge says Greenpeace will have to pay $345 million over pipeline protest

Crowd gathers outside courthouse during Greenpeace liability verdict

People gather outside the county courthouse in Mandan, N.D., where a jury finds Greenpeace liable over Dakota Access Pipeline protests. Photo: Morgan Sweeney / The Center Square

(The Center Square) – Nearly a year after a nine-person jury found Greenpeace liable for $667 million in damages in a case related to the Dakota Access Pipeline, a North Dakota judge has said the environmental organization will soon be ordered to make good on the damages.

In court papers filed Tuesday, Judge James Gion granted a motion filed by Energy Transfer, the company that owns the pipeline, and said he intends to issue the final judgment on the case soon. The final judgment will detail what the three Greenpeace entities named in the lawsuit are expected to pay, but the amounts were not included in Tuesday’s filings. Gion did, however, reduce Greenpeace’s total liability after the jury’s verdict to $345 million.

Energy Transfer sued Greenpeace in 2019 for its involvement in a massive, months-long and sometimes violent protest against its Dakota Access Pipeline, which was installed in 2016 and 2017. The nearly 1,200-mile crude oil pipeline crosses the Missouri River upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, and protesters said the pipeline would threaten the tribe’s water supply and destroy important cultural sites.

Energy Transfer has at least partly blamed Greenpeace and its public support of the protest for why the protest ultimately ballooned in size, as it began with just a small group of Sioux people. People traveled from all over the world to camp and protest at the site, with various reports estimating there were as many as 10,000 people there at one time. 

Greenpeace sent six employees to the camp who participated in protests, led trainings or otherwise lent support to the cause. It also donated money and supplies and supported the project’s debanking by several lenders. 

The case went to trial in 2025, and a jury found Greenpeace liable on all claims Energy Transfer brought against it including defamation, tortious interference, conspiracy, trespass and nuisance. Greenpeace maintains, despite the jury’s verdict, that it is and always has been committed to nonviolence and that Energy Transfer has never proved that Greenpeace employees orchestrated or participated in violence or property damage.

Greenpeace has said it cannot afford to pay the amount last determined by the judge.

Both sides have said they will appeal the judgment. 

The right to self defense


Teen robbers open fire on victim behind Texas Family Dollar, but victim also has a gun — and turns the tables lethally

'What are they doing about these kids getting out of school and being in the streets during school times?'

Armed teenage robbers opened fire at a victim behind a Family Dollar in Beaumont, Texas, last week, police said.

But the victim also had a gun and turned the tables — lethally.

'I I just think that it's sad that our babies are just dying left and right, and nobody's doing anything.'

Police said its investigation — helped by witness accounts and video surveillance — determined that Jayson January and Brenden Earnest, both 17, as well as two juveniles acted together in a plot to rob the victim near Avenue B and Harriot last Friday, KFDM-TV reported.

All four suspects attacked the robbery target and fired shots at him, police told the station.

However, the victim also was armed and returned fire at the suspects, KFDM reported.

One of the suspects — January — was hit by gunfire and died in a grassy field near the store, the station said.

KLVI-AM reported Monday that Earnest turned himself in and was charged with aggravated robbery — but the two juveniles, ages 15 and 16, were still at large.

Earnest was being held at the Jefferson County Correctional Facility on a $1 million bond for the aggravated robbery charge as well as a $10,000 bond for unlawfully carrying a weapon, jail officials told KMBT-TV.

By Wednesday, the two juveniles also turned themselves in, police told KBTV-TV, adding that there had been warrants out for them on aggravated assault charges.

RELATED: DA reacts to store clerk fatally shooting 16-year-old armed robber: 'Once somebody puts a gun in your face, the rules change'

Detectives are continuing to investigate and complete their findings so the case can be submitted to the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office, KBTV said.

One woman reacting to the incident told KFDM during an on-camera interview that "I just think that it's sad that our babies are just dying left and right, and nobody's doing anything." The woman asked, "What are they doing about these kids getting out of school and being in the streets during school times?" She also declared, "Something is not right here. Make it make sense."


From a commenter:

these "babies" were old enough to KNOW they were to be in school and not to try and rob people 
obviously we need GUN BANS and RED FLAG LAWS - yeah that would stop 4 MINORS who can't buy legally from getting guns right?? 
these "babies" were CRIMINALS and had OTHER WARRANTS already for assault charges -they were bangers, thugs, degenerate delinquents already and I doubt that even if they were at school they would be passing classes and doing work at grade level. 
if they were made to go to school they would start fights there or simply WALK OUT without consequences or not care what they were, if enforced.

this goes DIRECTLY to the community culture or lack thereof
the lack of a father in the home
the lack of consequences for actions from young ages
mother's complaining that their "babies" are just "good kids that made mistakes" and blaming racism, bigotry, or the school for their LACK of ability to bring up their children as CIVILIZED people because they are not civilized themselves

only sad part about this is that the one they tried to rob didn't fire straight and put all 4 of them in dirt naps in the nearby field