-
How to Watch Blues vs Jets: Live Stream NHL Playoffs, TV Channel - 27 mins ago
-
Barbara Lee Wins Oakland Mayor’s Race in Her Return Home - 40 mins ago
-
Jon Bernthal Takes Credit for Tom Holland’s Spider-Man Casting - about 1 hour ago
-
The Trump Billionaires Who Run the Economy and the Things They Say - about 1 hour ago
-
BetMGM Bonus Code NEWSWEEK1500: Claim $150 NBA Playoffs Bonus This Weekend - 2 hours ago
-
Trump Declares Lab Leak as ‘True Origins’ of Covid on New Website - 2 hours ago
-
How To Watch WrestleMania 41 Preshow: Live Stream WrestleMania, TV Channel - 2 hours ago
-
How to Watch Clippers vs Nuggets: Live Stream NBA Playoffs, TV Channel - 3 hours ago
-
An Urgent Supreme Court Order Protecting Migrants Was Built for Speed - 3 hours ago
-
How to Watch Clippers vs. Nuggets: Live Stream NBA Playoffs, TV Channel - 3 hours ago
Private security in Palisades working around the clock
Arturo Garcia said he’s been working in the Palisades for 17 hours nonstop. His partner has been awake for over 24.
Like the firefighters he was surrounded by the night before, he’s guarding homes — not against the flames, but against looters, who might see opportunity in an affluent neighborhood suddenly deserted.
“We’re the only two guards that are up here,” said Garcia, standing feet away from one of the stately homes he’s been paid to protect. “We don’t know when we’re going to go home.”
Garcia, a deputy sheriff, said many private security companies work in the neighborhood. But his company, Nastec, had been the only one out there during the fires that have engulfed the area.
He and his partner joined fire trucks and police cars as some of the few vehicles patrolling the streets Wednesday with most of the neighborhood cordoned off.

Arturo Garcia said the security company he works for, Nastec, had been the only one out there during the fires that have engulfed the area.
(Rebecca Ellis / Los Angeles Times)
He won’t say how many clients he has in the neighborhood. Only that “it’s a bunch” — and they are getting what they paid for.
In the last 24 hours, they have chased a “tag team duo” on a moped off a client’s property. They caught one man leaving another home with a luxury bag filled with what he suspects was the family’s Christmas haul: a drone and a toy car. They sent his photo to the LAPD.
“We actively patrol nonstop just driving around,” said Garcia. “As soon as they see the lights on the top, [looters] know.”
And when smoke started coming out of another client’s home, they didn’t need to call the fire department — they just flagged a passing truck to put it out.
It’s one of the few homes still standing.
Source link