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In L.A., skid row’s homeless deal with yet more misery as tents go up in flames

He woke up hot and sweaty in his tent. But when he tried to crawl out for fresh air, he found a ring of flames around the sidewalk where he’d pitched the canvas.

“I rolled out and come up fighting through the fire,” 58-year-old Bobby Holiday, a tall man with a Dodgers cap and a faraway gaze, recalled on a sweltering July afternoon. “Burned my heel. All the clothes I had all got burned up.”

On the mean streets that collectively are known here as skid row, where several thousand homeless men and women wander, the fire was just one of the many that have consumed tents in recent years.

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Fleeing domestic violence in El Salvador, mother’s asylum quest in U.S. is complex

By Rob Kuznia

July 1, 2018

The little girl, a 6-year-old from El Salvador, never really knew her father until she was 5.

That’s when the man, a police officer, suddenly decided he wanted to rekindle his family life, and began demanding that she and her 23-year-old mother — his ex-girlfriend — spend time with him. He drank heavily and fought with the mother, often inflicting physical harm.

One day, during a fight with the mother, he pulled out a gun and pointed it at the little girl.

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Los Angeles tenants increasingly engaging in rent strikes amid housing crisis

By Rob Kuznia

June 2, 2018

 A few dozen tenants from a working-class neighborhood here hopped into their vehicles, creating a caravan that would head to affluent Orange County.

After the hour-long drive in late May, the group converged on the sidewalk in front of a two- ­story house with Spanish-tile roofing belonging to Gina Kim — their landlord’s daughter.

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It’s happened again: A fraternity is under fire for racist behavior, and a university has cracked down.

By Rob Kuznia

April 25, 2018

A California university has suspended all fraternities and sororities following racially insensitive incidents and become the latest school to crack down on campus fraternal organizations.

The trouble at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo began April 8, when photos of a Lambda Chi Alpha party surfaced that showed white attendees — one in blackface — flashing gang signs. The university’s administration suspended the fraternity for at least a year.

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Signs of progress emerge as Sacramento protests over Stephon Clark’s killing remain tense

April 1, 2018

 The 20 shots that police fired at Stephon Clark, killing the unarmed black father of two last month, have ignited protests that shut down major roadways, blocked entry to an NBA game and created a seemingly ever-present tension in the streets of California’s capital.

That conflict came to a head Saturday night when a sheriff’s department cruiser struck a protester, causing the demonstration to erupt into pandemonium that threatened to boil over.

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Related: Sacramento sheriff’s vehicle hits woman during Stephon Clark protest and drives away, video shows

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Stormy Daniels friend describes listening in on her phone calls with Trump

By Beth Reinhard and Rob Kuznia

March 13, 2018

A close friend of Stormy Daniels is confirming her affair with Donald Trump more than a decade ago — saying he listened in on their phone conversations — and defending her efforts to get out of the $130,000 hush agreement she made shortly before the 2016 election.

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In Oregon, pushing to give patients with degenerative diseases the right to die

March 11, 2018

Shortly after she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease at age 56, Nora Harris moved to Oregon from California with her husband, thinking it would be a place where she could die on her own terms.

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What Trump’s State of the Union address sounded like in eight American living rooms

By Jenna Johnson (with eight contributing writers)

Jan. 31, 2018

Throughout the speech, Trump repeatedly called for unity and declared that “there has never been a better time to start living the American Dream.” But his message was delivered to a nation with many different — and often opposing — perspectives on what that dream is. Here’s what happened in eight American living rooms as Trump spoke.

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At national parks, the confusing reality of the government shutdown’s first day

At national parks, the confusing reality of the government shutdown’s first day

By Rob Kuznia, Deby Dixon and Diana Crandall

Jan. 20, 2018

JOSHUA TREE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. — Jay Brown and Michelle Tukel picked a surreal weekend to visit sprawling Joshua Tree National Park. They arrived from Detroit to find the Southern California desert covered with a morning dusting of snow, and it was — briefly — colder than Michigan.

Stranger yet, the popular park was open but eerily devoid of staff.

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Convicted of a marijuana crime in California? It might go away, thanks to legal pot.

By Rob Kuznia and Katie Zezima

Yirtuamlak Hailu Derege came to California a decade ago with dreams of making it big in the entertainment business. But shortly after arriving, he was arrested and convicted of selling marijuana, a felony that has made it difficult for him to find any job at all.

But now, with California on the verge of legal recreational marijuana sales starting Jan. 1, Derege and hundreds of thousands of others could have their drug convictions wiped away.

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