Summary: watershed news
fire, flood, mountain search-and-rescue

Sunday climbers take direct route up San Antonio
By Guy McCarthy
MOUNT BALDY - Valleys and foothills of east Los Angeles County were
socked in under a cold blanket of cloud much of Sunday, but above
Baldy Village it was clear and warm.
Snows high on sun-drenched Mount Baldy drew scores of backcountry
skiers and snowboarders, and squads of hikers equipped with ice
axes and crampons climbed the steep, direct route to L.A. County's
highest point.

Cloud cover viewed from above Baldy Village Sunday morning
Thousands more visitors drove up to San Antonio Canyon by the
afternoon, packing parking areas above 5,000 feet elevation and
briefly blocking emergency responders when a woman suffered a head
injury in a possible sledding accident, according to the U.S.
Forest Service.
By 2 p.m. two people had been treated for snow-related injuries and
an estimated 4,000 people and their vehicles were between Baldy
Village and the Mt. Baldy ski lift, Forest Ranger Mike Testa told
Watershed News.
Testa said it was "a beautiful day" and he advised people to "be
careful in the rocks and snow."
Search-and-rescue volunteers responded and fire engine drivers
sounded their horns to get through traffic on upper Mount Baldy
Road to reach one of the injured.

Rescuers on Mount Baldy Road while a woman is bandaged Sunday
It was so crowded by 2:30 p.m. authorities were stopping traffic
near the Baldy Trout Pools, and a line of eager motorists a mile
long stretched downhill through Baldy Village.

Traffic outside Mt. Baldy Lodge restaurant Sunday afternoon
Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Jan 09, 2011 - 8:55 pm

Sunday afternoon view of Baldy Bowl
MOUNT BALDY - A search was under way this evening after dark on
Mount Baldy for an Asian woman in her 50s, an experienced hiker who
was reported overdue on Saturday, a technical flight officer with
the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Aviation Unit said.
"We have an update from some hikers that they heard a woman
screaming, maybe near the ski lifts," said Deputy Carlos Quezada,
who was on a search flight this afternoon on the east side of Mount
Baldy in a sheriff's helicopter known as 40 King.
"She may have got stuck coming down," Quezada said Sunday in a
telephone interview at 5:30 p.m. "She's an experienced hiker, but
she's overdue since yesterday. Her vehicle was still in the parking
lot. She's an Asian female in her 50s, with a blue backpack."
Just before 3 p.m. today, a Forest Ranger and a sheriff's deputy
met people coming off Mount Baldy on a restricted access road above
Manker Flat, near the trailhead for the Ski Hut-Baldy Bowl trail,
to ask whether they'd seen the woman.

Sunday afternoon view of San Antonio Ski Hut
The ranger said the woman may have spent the weekend at the ski
hut, and he hoped to reach a caretaker at the hut this evening. The
ranger also said 40 King was coming out, and the airship appeared a
few moments later over a ridge to the north.
"Up at that elevation, it was a little windy and choppy, and it
started to snow on us," Quezada said. "It was about 20 miles per
hour steady and 35 gusting."
Quezada said search-and-rescue volunteers were being summoned
tonight to help locate the woman on the ground.
Before noon on the ice-patched summit of Baldy, also known as Mount
San Antonio, gusts and wind-chill with near-freezing conditions did
not deter scores of hikers from going for the top of the mountain.
Baldy's high point is 10,064 feet above sea level. It is the
tallest mountain in the San Gabriel range, and it is the high point
in Los Angeles County.

Sunday morning below summit of San Antonio
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Ski Hut web site is
here
Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Dec 05, 2010 - 7:29 pm
DUARTE - The mouth of the canyon is owned by Vulcan Materials.
Their public relations people bill the company as "the nation's
largest producer of construction aggregates" - which they define as
"primarily crushed stone, sand and gravel."
Vulcan Materials is the latest owner of the mining operation at the
mouth of Fish Canyon. It's been there since the 1920s or 30s.
Vulcan Materials allows access through their property from time to
time, with a van shuttle to a trailhead. The access calendar
current as of today is
here.
The last time Vulcan Materials allowed access was Saturday Nov. 13.
A few miles in is Fish Canyon Falls, described by author and
historian John W. Robinson as "one of the top natural attractions
of the San Gabriel Mountains." The tarantula was at the base of the
falls eight days ago.
The falls plunge "some eighty feet in stairway fashion," Robinson
says in his popular guide "Trails of the Angeles." The view above
is before the sun crept into the canyon.
The Fish Creek watershed is regulated by the dam keeper at Cogswell
Reservoir on the West Fork of the San Gabriel River, so it's
unclear how much natural runoff contributes to the falls.
The canyon is shaded in places by sprawling oak and other chaparral
species.
There is an alternate trail up and over the ridge pictured to reach
the canyon trail and the falls. Some locals say it is steep.
Robinson says "the hike into the canyon and on to the falls is no
longer the easy walk it once was."
The Vulcan Materials calendar for the "Azusa Rock Project" does not
list a date for the next time access is allowed through the quarry
property.
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Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Nov 21, 2010 - 4:07 pm
ANGELES NATIONAL FOREST - Three weeks ago there was a little snow
on the walk from Vincent Gap up to Mount Baden-Powell, a few miles
west of Wrightwood.
Most of the trail switchbacks upward through tall evergreens to a
high ridge, where the so-called "elfin forest" begins. Here the
Limber Pines are more exposed to the wind and other elements.
Snow and ice underfoot combined with alpine glare to make the
traverse interesting. This view is just below the 9,400-foot
summit.
There is a tree up there estimated 1,500 years old.
Today this ridge is likely blanketed with a bit more snow.
Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Nov 21, 2010 - 11:05 am

Sunrise tints a ridge on San Antonio aka Old Baldy
MOUNT BALDY - Gale-force winds rake the high east end of the San
Gabriel range from time to time, and they did again today.
Before sunrise at Manker Flats, gusting winds out of the northeast
roared down canyons aligned with the blasts, but the bulk of Mount
Harwood sheltered most of the Ski Hut-Baldy Bowl trail.
By 9 a.m. about 3,000 feet higher up the winds had more room to
maneuver, and people walking steeper sections of the trail skirting
the Bowl paid attention.
At 10 a.m. on the 10,064-foot summit, the high point in Los Angeles
County, walking and standing were challenging tasks. Wind-speed
estimates among those on the mountain top ranged from 50 miles per
hour sustained to 70 mph gusting.
National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Hall, based in Oxnard,
defined gale-force winds this evening as 39 to 46 mph.
"Forty-seven to 54 miles per hour is what we call a 'strong gale,'
" Hall said in a telephone interview.
Further west in the San Gabriels earlier today, instruments at
Chilao measured 30 mph sustained winds with 42 mph gusts, which
also qualified as gale-force, Hall said.
Conversation below full-on shouting on Baldy's summit today was
difficult, but descriptions of conditions up there later included
the words "scary," "intense," and "freezing."
Most who summited around 10 a.m. took refuge behind several
knee-high rock barriers cobbled together long ago for shelter from
the winds.
A bit later in the morning, others headed to the top bundled in
scarves, headbands and gloves.
Aside from the winds it was a crisp, clear sun-drenched day, and a
few decided to dress light.
These folks were heading down and glad to be warmer below the Ski
Hut.
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Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Nov 14, 2010 - 6:17 pm
By Guy McCarthy
WATTS - Fire gutted a building containing an auto body shop this
morning in Watts.
No injuries were reported. Firefighters at the scene called for
extra backup twice as they fought the three-alarm blaze for more
than one hour.
The fire in the 2500 block of East 114th Street was reported at
4:15 a.m., county fire dispatchers said.
A knockdown on the fire was declared at 5:38 a.m., but crews
continued mop-up well past 7 a.m. An investigation was under way to
determine the cause.
Photos by Guy McCarthy
Date Published: Apr 03, 2010 - 11:07 am

On Manistee Drive just before 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

On Manistee Drive just before 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

Ocean View Boulevard just before 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

Ocean View Boulevard just before 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

Ocean View Boulevard just after 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

Ocean View Boulevard just after 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.

Ocean View Boulevard just after 8 a.m. Saturday Feb. 6 2010.
Photos by Guy McCarthy
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Date Published: Feb 07, 2010 - 11:26 am

Investigators above Big Tujunga the day after Christmas
By Guy McCarthy
Two weeks ago homicide detectives released photos of three rings
and a gold necklace found near
two skulls discovered Dec. 24 and Dec. 26 in a
burned-out mountain gulch of the Angeles National Forest.
Plucked from ashes of the Station Fire but believed to pre-date the
massive blaze, the skulls and the jewelry remain an unsolved
mystery, said Los Angeles County sheriff's Homicide Lt. Mike
Rosson.
"There has been no identification, by DNA or other means," Rosson
said today in a telephone interview.
The rings - with red, green, and black stones - appear to fit
together but that hasn't shed any light on the investigation,
according to Rosson.
The skulls belonged to a man and woman, according to the coroner.
The jewelry may have belonged to one or both of them.
The first skull was found Christmas Eve by hikers in a burned-out
draw below the Angeles Forest (N3) Highway, near mile marker 19.36,
homicide detectives said. The skull had an apparent bullet hole in
it.
Deputies from the Crescenta Valley Sheriff's Station responded to
the site that day and secured the area. The draw is part of the
Lucas Creek drainage, which feeds Big Tujunga Canyon.
On Dec. 26, about a dozen forensic specialists, coroner's
investigators and homicide detectives returned to dig and sift
through dirt, rocks and debris in the gully.
Using soft-bristle brushes to excavate, wood-framed screens to sift
through material, and a dog trained at sniffing out human remains,
they found the second skull close to where the first was
located.
The second skull had signs of trauma, said Steve Whitmore, a
spokesman for the Sheriff's Department.
The gender of each set of remains was determined by examination of
other bones collected in the steep, fire-denuded gulch, Coroner's
Investigator Jerry McKibben said.
The skull with the apparent bullet hole belonged to a man and the
second skull belonged to a woman, McKibben said.
At least one of the skulls was partly burned but they appeared to
pre-date the Station Fire, which burned 250 square miles of the
Angeles National Forest in September and August.
Detectives have not said when the rings and necklace were
discovered, only that they were found where the skulls and other
remains were located.
Rosson urged anyone with information to call Detective Philip
Guzman or Detective John Duncan at (323) 890-5500.
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Ring photo from Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.
Dec. 26 photo by Guy McCarthy.
Date Published: Jan 27, 2010 - 6:11 pm

Cucamonga and east San Gabriels from below Forest Falls
By Guy McCarthy
Updated at 7 p.m.
MILL CREEK CANYON - All San Bernardino Mountain roads were
re-opened this evening to visitors trying to reach Bear Valley and
some of the Southland's most popular ski resorts.
The lifting of the closure was possible in part because the City of
Big Bear organized truck convoys to deliver food, supplies and fuel
to the Big Bear area, said Caltrans spokeswoman Terri Kasinga.
Caltrans, the California Highway Patrol and the Sheriff's
Department helped lead the convoys up state Route 38 "to help the
mountain communities following last week's heavy snowstorm,"
Kasinga said in a statement.
The roads had been closed to visitors since Sunday due to poor road
conditions, short fuel and limited food supplies in the resort
towns, said Third District Supervisor Neil Derry.
"The temporary closures are lifted as of 6 p.m.," Derry said in a
telephone interview. "The roads are open to both residents and
visitors."
Chain restrictions apply on the re-opened roads until further
notice.
The open roads to Bear Valley included state Routes 18 and 38,
though the 38 from Mentone was the only route open to buses and
trucks, according to Kasinga.
"The Arctic Circle on the 18 was clear and the roads looked good,"
Derry said this evening after a helicopter flight with the
Sheriff's Department to assess the situation. "We have another
storm on the way tomorrow with 6 inches to 8 inches of more snow
possible. So it's an ongoing maintenance concern, as it is whenever
it snows."
Some residents were snowed in during the storms last week and some
visitors were stranded without gas to get back down the mountain,
Derry said.
"We did have times when the roads weren't safe," Derry said. "We
did escort some supply trucks in today, primarily food and
fuel."
"We did have some slides, and we had 30 to 40 vehicles stuck on the
Arctic Circle at one point last week," Derry said. "The drivers had
to be rescued with snowcats. We had people snowed in under five
feet. They couldn't get out of their homes."
Earlier today, a pair of big rig trucks hauling tankers and other
large supply trucks were lined up at a CHP road block at Bryant
Street waiting for clearance to head up to Bear Valley via state
Route 38.
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MILL CREEK CANYON - Access to Bear Valley and some of the
Southland's most popular ski resorts remained temporarily closed to
visitors this afternoon due to poor road conditions, short fuel and
limited food supplies in the resort towns.
The situation was likely to be updated later today, as local and
state officials held conference call discussions on the closure,
which was announced Sunday.
Last week's snows have been plowed off most primary roads but more
snow may be coming Tuesday and Tuesday night, according to the
National Weather Service.
Visitors were being allowed up to the Running Springs, Crestline
and Lake Arrowhead communities in the west San Bernardino
Mountains, California Highway Patrol dispatchers in Running Springs
said this afternoon in phone interviews.
Further east at the resorts above Big Bear Lake, the roads were
closed to visitors, the Running Springs dispatchers said.
A pair of big rig trucks hauling tankers and other large supply
trucks were lined up this morning at a CHP road block at Bryant
Street waiting for clearance to head up to Bear Valley via state
Route 38.
County and sheriff's officials were planning helicopter flights
this afternoon to assess the situation, Lt. Dale Gregory said in an
interview at the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Aviation Bureau at
Rialto Airport.
The concern is for residents as well as visitors stranded without
fuel, Gregory said.
"They've been doing rescues at some homes with snowmobiles is my
understanding," Gregory said, speaking in the lobby at the aviation
bureau. Other flight crews were involved in rescues at lower
elevations this morning, and a pilot checked in with Gregory before
departing to the scene of crash involving a motor officer.
"It's been a busy week," Gregory said. "It's Southern California.
Sometimes we get rain and snow and people freak out."
Meanwhile, the heavy precipitation last week has turned brown parts
of the Inland Empire an emerald green more typically seen in
Ireland. Pictured here is Mentone with San Bernardino Peak in the
distance. Even parts of Moreno Valley - which translates literally
to "brown" valley - and the Badlands between San Timoteo Canyon and
the San Gorgonio Pass were sporting a lush green cover.
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Date Published: Jan 25, 2010 - 1:47 pm

Slopes above La Cañada and La Crescenta this morning
By Guy McCarthy
A fire captain and a coroner's investigator who responded to two
deadly post-fire erosion disasters on Christmas Day 2003 have words
of advice for residents of more than 750 foothill homes under
evacuation orders today.
"Listen to the officials," San Bernardino Fire Department Capt.
Vinson Gates said in a recent telephone interview.
"It's mud, rocks, boulders, trees and debris," Gates said. "Me
myself, I've seen a lot of people die behind that. I would leave,
me and my family, that's what I would do. I've seen it destroy two
campgrounds, so I can imagine what it would do to homes."
Sixteen people -- including nine children -- died on Dec. 25 2003
in two different boulder-laden flash floods in canyons above San
Bernardino.
Gabriel Morales, a supervising deputy coroner's investigator for
San Bernardino County, also advised Los Angeles-area foothill
residents to obey evacuation orders.
"I was out there Christmas Day, we had five members of a coroner's
recovery team," Morales said in a telephone interview. "Both the
KOA and Camp Sophia. It was a tragic event.
"These events are deadly," Morales said. "If law enforcement are
advising get out, absolutely do so because it will save your
life."
It took days to find most of the victims, and the last was
recovered four months later miles downstream, Morales said.
"It was terrible, to see small children killed like that," Morales
said. "I know a lot of rescue workers had problems with it."
Some victims were entombed and suffocated in the debris flows,
according to coroner's reports.
"Because of the pressure forces involved, some died of blunt force
injuries," Morales said. "It was awful."
The events occurred about 10 miles apart below mountain watersheds
denuded by the October 2003 Old Fire, which destroyed a thousand
homes and contributed to six deaths.
Christmas 2003 was the Southland's most recent reminder that
post-fire erosion events can be deadlier than the firestorms that
precede them.
In February 1978, a post-fire debris flow killed 13 people in the
community of Hidden Springs, above Big Tujunga Canyon in the
Angeles National Forest.
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Date Published: Jan 21, 2010 - 12:38 pm

Arroyo Seco from Devil's Gate Dam this morning
By Guy McCarthy
With more rain expected today on saturated, fire-denuded
mountainsides, the U.S. Geological Survey and other officials
warned evacuated residents to stay out of foothill homes below the
Station Fire footprint.
"Based on all the rain we've had this week, if we get showers of
any intensity there's still a chance of debris flows from the
Station burn areas," Oxnard-based National Weather Service
meteorologist Curt Kaplan said this morning.
"We do have potential for 2 to 4 more inches of rain in the
mountains today," Kaplan said. "With a fast-moving thunderstorm, it
may not take much to get things mobilized."
Evacuation orders issued to residents of more than 750 homes in the
foothills remained in effect today, County Fire Inspector Matt
Levesque and LAPD Officer Bruce Butterfield said in telephone
interviews.
The evacuated areas of Little Tujunga, La Crescenta, La Canada and
Glendale are in county and city jurisdictions.
Earlier this week, debris flows 8 feet to 12 feet high destroyed
USGS monitoring equipment in Dunsmore Canyon and an unnamed
tributary of Big Tujunga Canyon, USGS scientists in Pasadena said
in
a warning statement.
In the statement, titled "Southern California residents urged to
heed evacuation orders as rain continues," USGS debris flow
specialist Susan Cannon evoked two of the deadliest storms in
recent Southern California history.
"The forecast rainfall for the next 48 hours is comparable to that
which occurred during a 1969 storm that triggered landslides,
debris flows and floods throughout Southern California, resulting
in the deaths of 34 people," Cannon said.
"Because the hills above Glendora had been burned the previous
fall, that area was particularly hard hit during the 1969 storm,"
Cannon said.
The storm forecast through today is also similar to the Christmas
Day storm of 2003, which triggered debris flows from nearly every
watershed burned by the Old and Grand Prix fires in the San
Bernardino mountains, resulting in widespread destruction and the
deaths of 16 people, the USGS stated.
The warnings might seem like overkill to evacuation-weary foothill
residents.
But an aging flood-control system of debris basins and channels
offers only partial protection below the burned areas, according to
the county Department of Public Works.
Slope failures and debris flows are possible in some cases up to 72
hours after rains on burned areas, according to the Los Angeles
County Fire Department.
"In Southern California, debris flows and floods have over history
killed a comparable number of people as earthquakes," said USGS
seismologist Lucy Jones. "These past deadly debris flows highlight
that residents should not be complacent, and those with evacuation
orders need to leave."
When Cannon evoked the post-fire storms' impact on Glendora 40
years ago, she was referring in part to two separate fires that
denuded slopes above the community in July and August 1968,
according to
U.S. Forest Service records.
"The rainy season of 1968-69 provided a severe test to the disaster
prevention facilities protecting Glendora," USFS researcher J.M.
Rice wrote. The 1968 fires "denuded the slopes along 5 kilometers
of the northern boundary of the city."
Subsequent debris flows during heavy rains in January 1969
destroyed six houses and damaged an additional 200 homes, according
to Rice.
Glendora's vulnerability to post-fire and normal erosion stemmed
from the fact that "immigrants to the San Gabriel Valley, where
Glendora is located, failed to recognize the potential debris flow
hazard to settlements on the debris cone," Rice said.
"They had little experience with mountains as precipitous as the
San Gabriels north of Glendora. And they were probably unaware of
the effects of intermittent brushfires that denuded the mountains
of vegetation. Damages that resulted from the settlers' lack of
foresight were modest until 1969."
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Date Published: Jan 21, 2010 - 12:38 pm
Devil's Gate on Monday around 1 p.m.
By Guy McCarthy
Devil's Gate Dam on the Arroyo Seco is in no danger of overflowing,
officials say, in part because it has adequate means of letting
water out as the wetland behind it fills with black soup and debris
from the Station Fire.
That is not the case with some of the smaller debris basins across
the foothills below recent burned areas.
The 29 debris basins intended to protect residents from erosion
disasters are facing a severe test this week, and at least one of
them is of particular concern as more storms bear down today on the
Southland.
Mullally Basin at the end of Manistee Drive just east of Ocean View
Boulevard in La Canada Flintridge is considered undersized for the
current post-fire conditions, according to Los Angeles County and
U.S. Forest Service records, and it has overflowed at least twice
since the massive Station Fire denuded 250 square miles of mountain
watersheds.
The basin overflowed early Nov. 13 during a sudden deluge from an
"uncharted" storm cell, sending mud and debris flowing down parts
of Ocean View Boulevard. It overflowed again Monday, contributing
to the need for temporary evacuation of more than 60 homes in the
Paradise Valley area.
Enlargement of Mullally Basin has been in the planning stages for
several years, according to the county Department of Public
Works.
Several alternatives for enlarging Mullally Basin were discussed
during an October 2008 community meeting, according to county
records.
About a year later, while the Station Fire was still smoldering, a
Sept. 22 Burned Area Emergency Response report from the U.S. Forest
Service stated, "Mullally Canyon Debris Basin was identified as
being significantly undersized by L.A. County Public Works.
"If a large debris flow or flooding event occurs, the release is
onto Ocean View Blvd., which runs to Foothill Boulevard," a main
thoroughfare, the Forest Service stated. "Downstream residences
need to heed triggers and warnings established by the National
Weather Service."
In September, the Forest Service listed Mullally's capacity at
9,400 cubic yards and estimated the post-fire annual yield at
19,896 cubic yards. The post-fire estimate may already have been
exceeded since Nov. 13.
In addition to Mullally Basin, six other basins are considered
undersized and are slated for expansion to increase their storage
capacities, but implementing those plans is not scheduled to begin
until April, according to a public works report delivered to county
supervisors in December.
The dollarsignr5 million project to expand Big Briar, Mullally,
Snover, Pickens, Starfall, Pinelawn and Rowley basins was detailed
in a Station Fire disaster recovery report delivered to the county
board of supervisors by Director of Public Works Gail Farber.
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Date Published: Jan 19, 2010 - 1:19 pm

Investigators comb burned gulch the day after Christmas
By Guy McCarthy
Two skulls discovered Dec. 24 and Dec. 26 in a mountain gully
scorched by the Station Fire belonged to a man and a woman,
respectively, a coroner's investigator said today.
The first skull, found Christmas Eve by hikers in a draw below the
Angeles Forest (N3) Highway, had an apparent bullet hole in it, a
sheriff's homicide lieutenant said.
The skull with the hole in it is now considered evidence in the
death of John Doe #225, said Coroner's Investigator Jerry
McKibben.
The second skull, discovered two days later by a team of
investigators searching the same area, had signs of trauma, said
Steve Whitmore, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department.
The second skull is now considered evidence in the death of Jane
Doe #87, McKibben said.
The gender of each set of remains was determined by examination of
other bones collected in the steep, fire-denuded gulch two weeks
ago, McKibben said.
This is the first disclosure of gender identification in a mystery
the Los Angeles Times described recently as a "
jigsaw puzzle."
Both cases appeared to be homicides but no conclusions had been
reached, Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter told The Times last
week.
Early today, the cause of death in both cases was listed as
"deferred," McKibben said.
"We're still working it," McKibben said. "I'm sure homicide is
still investigating."
The gully where the skulls were found is near mile marker 19.36 of
the Angeles Forest Highway, above the Big Tujunga Dam. The draw
feeds into the Lucas Creek drainage, which in turn feeds Big
Tujunga Canyon above the dam.
The remains were found about 100 feet below the Angeles Forest
Highway.
Before the Station Fire burned 250 square miles of the San Gabriel
Mountains in August and September, Lucas Creek and Big Tujunga
Canyon were popular with hikers.
Though the backcountry burned areas are now termed off-limits by
the Forest Service, some people still go.
On Christmas Eve, deputies from the Crescenta Valley Sheriff's
Station responded to the site when hikers found the skull with the
apparent bullet hole, said Lt. Paul Becker of the Homicide
Bureau.
On Dec. 26 -- two weeks ago today -- about a dozen forensic
specialists, coroner's investigators and homicide detectives
returned to dig and sift through dirt, rocks and debris in the
gully.
Using soft-bristle, wood-handled brushes to excavate, and metal,
wood-framed screens to sift through material, as well as one dog
trained at sniffing out human remains, they found the second skull
close to where the first was located.
"We don't know if this is a murder, a suicide or accidental,"
Becker said that day. "Obviously that is the focus of this
investigation."
At least one of the skulls appeared to pre-date the fire, McKibben
said.
"Apparently it's part of the burn area, but it sounds like the
bones are pre-fire," McKibben said. "Just from the condition of the
skull, it sounds like it was skeletonized before the fire."
The John Doe and Jane Doe numbers assigned to the two sets of
remains indicate the first skull was the 225th unidentified male
case worked by the Los Angeles County coroner in 2009, and the
second skull was the county's 87th unidentified female case of the
year, McKibben said.
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Photo copyright by Guy McCarthy. All rights reserved.
For re-use contact guymccar@gmail.com
Date Published: Jan 09, 2010 - 9:20 am
HOLLYWOOD - A chunk of hillside gave way this morning in a
neighborhood near the Hollywood Bowl, triggered by a broken pipe, a
sprinkler system, or saturation from recent rains, according to Los
Angeles Fire Department officials.
The slide dumped 10 to 15 cubic yards of mud and dirt onto Los
Tilos Road and moved a parked sport utility vehicle a short
distance but it damaged no homes.
Whatever triggered the slide, water ran freely from a ruptured pipe
on the slope for at least two hours after the slide was
reported.
The slide in the 7000 block of Los Tilos Road occurred about 5:30
a.m., Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey
said.
Linda Chapman, 63, of Roseville, was staying in her father's former
home on Los Tilos Road. She said a crashing sound awoke her and she
thought it was a car wreck. When she looked outside, she saw a
mound of soil and vegetation piled up against a red Jeep Grand
Cherokee, which was pushed onto a sidewalk.
"I woke up my husband," she said. "I thought it was a car
crash."
Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Robert Rosario said the slide
appeared to have been triggered by a broken water line or a
sprinkler system that might have been inadvertently left on all
night.
Humphrey said it appeared a 1-inch PVC pipe, possibly a private
irrigation line, ruptured. But he also raised the possibility the
line may have broken as a result of the slide, rather than being
the cause of it.
Rosario estimated the slide at 10 to 15 cubic yards of material. By
about 6:30 a.m., firefighters thought they had stopped the flow of
water, but that apparently was not the case.
The slide affected access to about two dozen homes, Humphrey said.
That section of the road was closed. Stranded residents were taking
taxis from the clear section of the road, Humphrey said.
A Building and Safety inspector at the scene said he was
considering "yellow-tagging" a downslope home.
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On scene reporting and photos by Guy McCarthy. More images
here.
Date Published: Dec 19, 2009 - 12:27 pm

Cucamonga and neighbors 8:25 a.m. Sunday

Runoff from Arroyo Seco emerges from Devil's Gate 7:02 a.m.
Sunday

Devil's Gate dam keeper's tower 6:58 a.m. Sunday

Arroyo Seco with JPL and burned slopes in distance 6:55 a.m.
Sunday

Dawn from Angeles Crest Highway below closure 6:23 a.m. Sunday

Ducks on Arroyo Seco north of Devil's Gate 8:14 a.m. Saturday

Debris flow on Angeles Crest Highway 7:21 a.m. Saturday
More images
here.
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Date Published: Dec 13, 2009 - 11:19 am