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Robberies

CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
April 19, 2012 | By Stephen Ceasar and Rosanna Xia, Los Angeles Times
Gunfire echoed once again through a neighborhood bordering USC early Wednesday, unnerving a community still reeling from the double slaying of two graduate students last week. A campus police officer shot and wounded a man suspected of robbing four students at gunpoint as they walked along the university's fraternity row around 12:30 a.m. The students were not injured. The incident comes as the campus continues to grieve the deaths of two students from China who were shot and killed April 11. The officer-involved shooting occurred not more than a block from where a memorial service was held Wednesday evening for the students slain last week.
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CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
April 14, 2012 | By Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times
In announcing a $125,000 reward in the killing of two Chinese USC grad students, Los Angeles police officials said Friday that they hope to identify an assailant in dark clothing and a dark-colored car that sped away moments after the attack. The slayings may have been a robbery gone wrong, authorities said. LAPD Deputy Police Chief Pat Gannon said items are missing that belonged to the students, who were shot on a residential street less than a mile west of the campus early Wednesday.
NATIONAL
April 6, 2012 | By Molly Hennessy-Fiske
Three men convicted of purse snatching -- one of whom was sentenced to 99 years in prison -- were exonerated Friday in Dallas. They are the latest examples of men who have been wrongly convicted of crimes in Texas. Darryl Washington, Marcus Lashun Smith and Shakara Robertson were arrested in November 1994 and charged with aggravated robbery. The victim could not identify them, but witnesses who gave chase claimed the trio was responsible. As a result, a jury convicted Washington, who received the 99-year sentence, while Smith and Robertson accepted plea deals and were sentenced to probation.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
March 27, 2012 | By Matt Stevens, Los Angeles Times
The man suspected of killing five people in a San Francisco home Friday was ordered to be deported six years ago, but remained in the United States when his native country of Vietnam refused to cooperate, authorities said Monday. Binh Thai Luc, 35, of San Francisco was arrested Sunday, two days after the bodies of three women and two men were discovered in an Ingleside district home. On Monday, officials revealed that Luc had been taken into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody in August 2006 after he completed an eight-year prison sentence for assault and attempted robbery.
WORLD
February 20, 2012 | By Jeffrey Fleishman and Amro Hassan, Los Angeles Times
The headlines reflect a previously unknown cruelty: a woman gunned down in a rich Cairo neighborhood, a rash of carjackings, a deadly soccer riot, a stream of smuggled arms that have given muscle to criminal gangs once easily outgunned by police. The revolution that inspired this country one year ago has set loose a menacing air that Egyptians find unfamiliar. Bristling beneath the political battle for power against the ruling generals is an insecurity over crime and a bitterness that has darkened Egypt's congenial nature.
NATIONAL
February 18, 2012 | By David G. Savage and Ian Duncan, Washington Bureau
Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer was at his Caribbean vacation home late in the evening one recent Thursday when a man wielding a machete cut his way through a screen door, walked into the living room and demanded "money, money, money," according to Colin Smith, the gardener. The thief on the island of Nevis "looked more nervous than we were," Mary-Anne Sergison-Brooke, Breyer's sister-in-law, said in an interview from her home near Oxford, England. "Nevis is such a nice, friendly island.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
November 9, 2011 | By Joel Rubin, Los Angeles Times
A high school football star, whose talents on the playing field once seemed certain to carry him out of South Los Angeles, was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole for murdering the mother of a girl who was set to testify against him in a robbery case. The sentencing of Tyquan Knox, 23, came nearly five years after the January 2007 shooting, in which he was found to have strode up to Pamela Lark, 49, outside her home and shot her multiple times at close range as her grandchildren looked on. In that time, prosecutors tried three times to convict Knox, once a standout wide receiver at Crenshaw High School who had attracted the attention of college recruiters from several top-tier schools.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
September 28, 2011 | By Sam Quinones, Los Angeles Times
A series of armed robberies of distressed motorists along Inland Empire freeways earlier this month has prompted the California Highway Patrol to form a special task force and increase early morning patrols. The robberies all occurred in the early hours of Sept. 18 and 19. In two incidents, the robbers fired shots, though no one was hurt, authorities said. The suspects, who remain at large, are described only as three or four men wearing hooded sweat shirts. "There are isolated incidents where things like this happen," said CHP Officer Daniel Hesser, a spokesman for the department's Inland Division.
BUSINESS
August 18, 2011 | By Stuart Pfeifer, Los Angeles Times
That stunning rise in the price of gold is having a ripple effect: A rash of jewelry store robberies, street muggings and home burglaries. Now, merchants are stepping up security and police are warning everyone against flaunting their bling. When Capt. Mark Olvera, who runs the LAPD's Newton Division, spotted a beefy man with a gold chain around his neck the other day, he worried the guy might become a victim. "He looked like he could take care of himself," Olvera said. "But that's a couple thousand dollars ... on him. " So far this year, gold chains have been snatched from the necks of at least 110 people during street robberies in Olvera's South Los Angeles division.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
July 20, 2011 | By Joel Rubin, Los Angeles Times
A high school football star, whose athletic talent could have delivered him from the streets of South Los Angeles to a college campus, was convicted Monday of murdering the mother of a girl who was set to testify against him in a robbery case. The verdict against Tyquan Knox, 23, comes after two previous trials ended in hung juries. This time, jurors concluded that Knox, a standout wide receiver at Crenshaw High School who had attracted the attention of college recruiters from several top-tier schools, was the gunman who strode up to Pamela Lark in a parking lot one morning early in 2007, put a gun to her face and fired five times.
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