MTA chief Art Leahy expounds on Leimert Park prospects in wake of subway celebration



South LA doctor accused of sexually assaulting patients



Man killed in South LA shooting



Compton elects new mayor



Life in solitary: advocacy groups push to change security housing units



It was lonely, quiet, and constricting in the 8 by 10 foot security housing unit 4B where Armando R. Morales spent nearly 23 hours a day in isolation at Corcoran State Prison.

He entered the prison system at age 16, and for the last eight years of his life spent his term in a security housing unit, often referred to by advocacy groups as solitary confinement.

Bobby Morales

Armando “Bobby” Morales at 8-years-old. Click here to see more.

Morales was 29 years old when he hanged himself by a shoe lace and a blue blanket in his unit on August 28, 2012.

Armando Robert Morales, known as “Bobby” by his family, was one of 32 inmates in a California prison who killed himself in 2012.

He was housed in the Security Housing Unit, or “SHU” — a place where inmates are 33 percent more likely to commit suicide than inmates in regular cells, according to Dr. Raymond Patterson in a federal report.

Prisoners in the SHU are 2 percent of California prisons’ population, but make up 42 percent of suicides overall, according to a 2012 report by Amnesty International, a global human rights group.

Stories like Morales’ are one of the reasons that California Families Against Solitary Confinement are pushing the California prisons to change the way inmates in segregation are treated. [Read more…]

Coliseum deal could go forward today



The California Science Center Board of Directors could vote at its meeting June 5 to approve the latest terms of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum lease agreement with USC.

If approved by the Board, the agreement would give USC full managing rights at the state historical landmark and guarantee the university 70 percent of the parking spaces in the Science Center’s deck on 25 event days per year (33 if the NFL uses the stadium temporarily). It would also extend USC’s lease from 2054, the expiration date agreed upon in a December 2012 plan, to 2111 — a 98-year deal.

But opponents of the deal spoke out at public forums this week, saying that the loss of parking would take both revenue and visitors away from the California African American Museum , the California Science Center and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. [Read more…]

Natasha Watley Softball League starts season in South L.A.



Photo from The Natasha Watley Foundation website

Photo from The Natasha Watley Foundation website

The sixth annual Natasha Watley Softball League opens in South Los Angeles tomorrow June 5th.  Natasha Watley is a two-time Olympic  softball medalist who created by the Natasha Watley Foundation in partnership with the city’s Department of Recreation and Parks.

The league includes 180 South L.A. girls from age nine to 12 and a dozen softball teams from 10 recreation centers all in South L.A.  The Natasha Watley Foundation was established in 2008 to provide girls in underserved communities the opportunity to learn and play softball.

The opening event will be held at 6 pm at the Algin Sutton Recreation Center, 8800 S. Hoover St. in the Vermont Vista neighborhood.   The event will also include a free clinic and a special appearance by Watley.

Watley had an all-star softball career at UCLA as a four-time first-team AllAmerican and All-Pac 10 selection at shortstop.  She won a gold medal a the 2004 Olympics and a silver at the 2008 games.

What Chef Roy Choi is teaching South Central L.A. students



South L.A. church opens doors to gay community



Reverends Russell Thornhill and Leslie Butke cut the ribbon officially opening the doors of the new home of the Unity Fellowship Church of Christ in South L.A.

Reverends Russell Thornhill and Leslie Butke cut the ribbon officially opening the doors of the new home of the Unity Fellowship Church of Christ in South L.A.

On Sunday, June 2, 2013 Reverends Russell Thornhill and Leslie Butke cut the ribbon officially opening the doors of the new home of the Unity Fellowship Church of Christ (UFC) in South Los Angeles.

The church was founded in 1982 by Archbishop Carl Bean during the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.  The UFC Movement through the years has grown into a national ministry with the distinction of being known as a spiritual home for the Black same-gender loving and transgender community.

While all are welcome, the UFC has made a point of being the Black church where Black gays can find solace and worship as all of who they are regardless of what they look like or who they love.

Services will be held every Sunday at 11 a.m. at Unity Fellowship mapat 9608 South Figueroa Street in the Vermont Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles.  Visit unityfellowshipchurch.org or call (323) 938-8322.

Bacaro owners to open another University Park eatery – Nature’s Brew