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San Bernardino County Line Fire containment drops – NBC Los Angeles

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San Bernardino County Line Fire containment drops – NBC Los Angeles


Flare-ups in the San Bernardino National Forest have prompted officials to issue new evacuation orders as firefighters continue battling the Line Fire, which has been burning for nearly a month.

Containment of the wildfire in the San Bernardino County mountains dropped to 76 percent early this week. The fire, an arson-related blaze that started in early September during a stretch of above-normal temperatures, was a 43,400 acres.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department ordered the community of Seven Oaks on Monday to vacate the area immediately. The move comes after flare-ups began burning about a day prior.

Fire crews said the flare-ups occurred in an open area that has yet to be contained. That area was described as steep and rugged, a space that firefighters expected to burn because of dry conditions, hot temperatures and winds that helped spread the flames.

“The Line Fire made a run up the Santa Ana River drainage (Monday),” Cal Fire said in a statement. “The last few days of above normal temperatures have dried out both the vegetation and moisture from the air. Firefighters had expected some movement along the open line in this area however, fire behavior exceeded expectations. The dry vegetation, steep slopes and wind aligned yesterday to create conditions for the rapid fire spread yesterday.”

In addition to Seven Oaks, Barton Flats and Angelus Oaks residents were also ordered to evacuate.

Evacuation shelters

  • Apple Valley Conference Center — 14975 Dale Evans Pkwy., Apple Valley
  • Redlands East Valley High School — 31000 Colton Ave., Redlands

“Seven Oaks is at the bottom of the drainage,” said Bob Poole, a fire spokesperson for California Team 11. “It’s mostly cabins for vacations. We have structure protection groups there in place in case it gets to that community.”

The Line Fire has been burning for almost a month after it sparked Sept. 5. It has since exploded to more than 43,000 acres and is 80% contained.

Authorities determined the blaze was the result of an arson and arrested 34-year-old Justin Wayne Halstenberg of Norco on suspicion of starting the fire. He pleaded not guilty to arson-related crimes in the case.



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Officer stabbed, suspected attacker dead outside police station in Santa Monica – NBC Los Angeles

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Officer stabbed, suspected attacker dead outside police station in Santa Monica – NBC Los Angeles


A man was shot and killed after stabbing an officer Saturday outside the doors of a police station in Santa Monica.

At around 5:21 p.m., an officer in front of a police station was confronted by a man in his 30s who pulled out a knife on him and began attacking him unprovoked, according to the Santa Monica Police Department.

The knife-wielding man slashed, stabbed the officer and continued to follow him as the officer attempted to retreat around the corner of the building.

The officer drew his weapon and opened fire. Santa Monica officers gave the suspect medical aid until the fire department arrived but succumbed to his injuries.

The injured officer was transported to a local hospital with serious stab wounds but is expected to survive, police said.

More information on the attacker was not immediately available.



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WWII veteran celebrates 103rd birthday – NBC Los Angeles

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WWII veteran celebrates 103rd birthday – NBC Los Angeles


Larry Schlesinger, a WWII Army veteran, celebrated his 103rd birthday Saturday surrounded by generations of family and friends, reflecting on over a century of life.

“It feels great to have all these people around me and my whole family going to all this trouble to celebrate my birthday,” said Schlesinger.

The centenarian enlisted in the Army in February of 1942, sailing on the Grey Ghost and the Queen Mary, which served as a troop ship in the war.

Proud of his Jewish heritage, Schlesinger joined the front lines in hopes of putting an end to antisemitism.

“You know at the end of World War Two I came home and thought that will be the end of it. Humanity has learned its lessons. We buried millions of people. We didn’t learn anything. We’ve been at constant war,” said Schlesinger.

The army veteran continues to stay up to date with the current Israel-Hamas war and called the unrest “disturbing.”

He said he never goes to bed without watching the news.

“We live life to enjoy it, stay informed, keep alert to the changes in politics of our country and the rest of the world,” said Schlesinger.

The veteran plans to exercise his American right in the upcoming November election by voting in person.

“We watched the political debates, we pay code attention to the key people involved. And we intend to make our voices heard,” said Schlesinger.

He credits staying interested in the world around him as one of the secrets to a long and healthy life.

“What’s going on in the world is terribly important. Maybe I won’t see if affects me tomorrow or the next day but it will certainly affect my children and grandchildren,” said Schlesinger.



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Shohei Ohtani homers in first postseason start, Dodgers rally to beat Padres 7-5 in Game 1 of NLDS – NBC Los Angeles

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Shohei Ohtani homers in first postseason start, Dodgers rally to beat Padres 7-5 in Game 1 of NLDS – NBC Los Angeles


Hours before his first career playoff game, Shohei Ohtani, baseball’s active leader in most games played without a postseason appearance, was asked if he was nervous. 

“Nope,” he said matter of factly in English without the use of a translator. 

Turns out he was right. 

In his first ever playoff game, Ohtani performed the same as he has in the nearly 900 games preceding it: like the superstar he is. 

Ohtani rocketed a three-run homer in just his second playoff swing, and the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied from two different multi-run deficits to defeat the San Diego Padres 7-5 in Game 1 of the National League Division Series on Saturday Night at Dodger Stadium. 

Much like a library book you find in the back of your closet, Ohtani’s first taste of the postseason was long overdue. 

After the Dodgers trailed 3-0 in the second inning, Ohtani’s game tying-shot off San Diego starter Dylan Cease sent the blue towel-waving sellout crowd of 53,028 into a feveried frenzy. The Dodgers single-season home run leader, and one and only member of the 50-50 club watched the ball fly as he chucked his bat towards the Padres dugout and let out a guttural scream of exultation as he trotted around the bases.

Ohtani’s blast set a tone and a precedent unseen in the last two postseasons; that not only can the Dodgers take a punch, they can get knocked down, and get up off the mat and fight back. 

That didn’t happen in the Dodgers last two NLDS exits, but then again, those teams didn’t have Shohei Ohtani on them. 

Ohtani’s energy and enthusiasm was contagious, and turned out to be the jolt the Dodgers needed after old friend Manny Machado hit a towering two-run home run into the left field pavilion just a few batters into the game. 

The two-run homer came off of Ohtani’s countryman, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the Dodgers rookie starting pitcher that ironically was also making his postseason debut. However, it didn’t go as good as Ohtani’s.

Just like he did in his MLB debut against the same team, Yamamoto allowed five runs on five hits in Game 1 on Saturday.

After Ohtani’s three-run blast tied the game, Yamamoto gave the lead right back in the top half of the third after surrendering a two-run double to Xander Bogaerts that gave the Padres a 5-3 lead.

With a mentality as hard as bronze, the Dodgers fought back and  rallied in the bottom half of the fourth inning. Tommy Edman reached base on a bunt single, Miguel Rojas followed with a single to left-center, and Ohtani hit a broken-bat bloop single to center that loaded the bases. Edman scored on a wild pitch, and two more runs scored on an RBI single by Teoscar Hernandez. 

“This is what I dreamed about,” said Hernandez to Fox Sports during the game. “This atmosphere and facing one of the best teams in the National League. I’m enjoying it and we’re going to keep pushing until the final out.”

The Dodgers added an insurance run in the bottom of the fifth inning and reliever Blake Treinen struck out Donovan Solano on an 84MPH slider with the bases loaded in the top of the eighth to secure the lead.

The Padres put runners on first and second for Machado in the top of the ninth, but the All-Star third baseman struck out to end the game.

The loss was the first for the Padres this postseason after sweeping the Atlanta Braves in two games in the best-of-three Wild Card series at Petco Park earlier this week.

This is the third meeting between the two division rivals in the NLDS in the last five years.

The Dodgers swept the first playoff meeting between the two teams on a neutral field in Texas during the 2020 COVID-shortened season.

After losing the first game of the series in 2022, San Diego won three straight to stun the 111-win Dodgers and eliminate them just four game into the NLDS.

Saturday’s matchup marked another exciting and dramatic chapter in the playoff trilogy.

Game 2 of the best-of-five division series is Sunday night at 5:08PM at Dodger Stadium.





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