Out-of-Control Fires Devastate Los Angeles Area

Out-of-Control Fires Devastate Los Angeles Area

  • Post category:USA

Several major wildfires, fueled by fierce winds and dry vegetation, scorched Los Angeles all day long. More than 1,000 homes and businesses were reduced to ash. The fires have killed least two people and forced more than 100,000 others to evacuate. Many of my colleagues are on the ground there, reporting live.

Here is a map tracking the fires, and photographs capturing the scenes from around the city.

Officials warned that the worst might still be yet to come. The two largest blazes were not at all contained, and firefighters were facing unfathomable conditions, including ferocious winds and a dwindling water supply. Firefighters from across the West were traveling in to help.

The largest fire decimated the affluent Pacific Palisades neighborhood. Businesses were charred, power lines were downed and the air was full of smoke. Several blocks of homes along Sunset Boulevard, the area’s famous thruway, were completely destroyed. Local landmarks burned down.

One resident dropped to his knees in front of a firefighter who was battling a blaze consuming the home next door, begging him to turn the water on the flames threatening his own home. Another firefighter warned: “We’re down to 25 percent. Hold off.”

At a shelter in Pasadena, a man told his wife that their home had been destroyed. The woman fell to her knees, sobbing. In Pacific Palisades, a man trekked through the debris to confirm that his house was gone. “I just needed to see it,” he said.


Federal prosecutors said today that they planned to release a portion of a report by the special counsel, Jack Smith, detailing his investigation into Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn his loss in the 2020 election. They also said the Justice Department planned to hold off on releasing the other volume of the report, which details Smith’s investigation into Trump’s handling of classified documents.

The prosecutors explained in a filing that it was legally problematic to release the volume on the documents case while the prosecution of Trump’s co-defendants was still ongoing. The filing came in response to a surprising court injunction blocking both volumes of Smith’s report from being released.

Donald Trump said this week that oil drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was one of his top energy priorities. But the Interior Department announced today that an effort to auction oil and gas leases in the pristine wilderness had ended without a single bidder.

Auctions to drill on the land have flopped twice in four years. The failures suggest that oil companies either are not interested or do not think it’s worth the cost. Some Alaska lawmakers and officials argued, however, that the Biden administration had not offered up enough land after it cut the allotment by more than two-thirds. Alaska’s governor called the auction “designed to fail.”

With the Academy Awards two months away, voting for this year’s Oscars opened today, and our critics took the moment to make their picks for who should receive nominations. They agree that “Anora,” “Green Border” and “Nickel Boys” should receive nods for best picture. Check out their full lists.

For more: Could this finally be the year that the Oscars is cool? Our awards season columnist Kyle Buchanan thinks it’s worth considering.


You’ve probably heard stories of people who reached 100 years old without adhering to typical medical advice. Helen Reichert, for example, lived to be 109, outlasting all the doctors who kept telling her to stop smoking cigarettes. So we wanted to know what matters more for longevity: living a healthy lifestyle, or being born with lucky genetics?

It turns out, it depends on what you mean by longevity. Scientists believe making it to 80 or even 90 is largely in our control, but if you want to become a centenarian, you’re going to need a little help from your ancestors.


The Belgian authorities issued that warning this week after the city of Ghent encouraged its residents to cook with the needles from their leftover holiday trees. The city asked: Why not make a delicious spruce needle butter?

The reason: It could be dangerous. Christmas trees are often treated with pesticides and fire retardants that are not meant to be consumed. And yew, an evergreen, can be poisonous. “Christmas trees are not intended to end up in the food chain,” a Belgian official told The Times.

Have a safe evening.


Thanks for reading. I’ll be back tomorrow. — Matthew

Sean Kawasaki-Culligan was our photo editor today.

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

by NYTimes