
Members of the LAPD Beach Detail patrolled this morning.
Hike or Have Coffee with a Cop
There are two upcoming opportunities to meet and chat with Pacific Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin.
Hike with a Cop, will take place at 9 a.m. on Sunday, July 31, at 1501 Will Rogers State Park. Participants are invited to join Espin on the Inspiration Point Hike, which is an easy 2.2-mile hike on a loop trail above Will Rogers Historic Pike. For more details email Espin [email protected].
If you don’t feel like a bit of exercise, then join Espin for coffee at 9 a.m. on Sunday, August 7 at Estate Coffee, 847 Via de la Paz. There is no agenda, just a chance to say hi and ask any questions you may have.
CRIME JULY 10 TO 16

ASSAULT:
July 15, 9 p.m., in the 15200 block of La Cruz Drive (library). The suspect and victim were known to each other. The suspect punched the victim to the ground from behind and kicked the victim in the face several times. The suspect brandished a knife and said, “I’m gonna a stab you.”
ATTEMPTED BURGLARY (HOT PROWL):
July 12, at 3:08 p.m. in the 1200 block of Piedra Morada Drive. The suspect entered through an unsecured side gate. The suspect then attempted to pry open the front door. The victim’s wife screamed, which startled the suspect, who fled. The suspect’s vehicle was a white Volkswagen. Suspect’s prints may have been lifted.
BURGLARY:
July 15, 7:40 p.m. to 8:30 a.m., in the 17300 block of Sunset. The Suspect pried open, entered the business, pried open the cash register drawers, removed currency.
BURGLARY THEFT FROM VEHICLE:
July 10, 10:50 to 11:40 a.m. at Pacific Coast Highway and Temescal Canyon Road. The suspect entered the vehicle and took property.
July 15 to 16, 6 P.m. to 7:45 a.m. in the 500 block of Spoleto Drive. The suspect(s) picked the vehicle door lock to open the hood. They removed the battery and tampered with the ignition and transmission.
GRAND THEFT AUTO:
July 11, 9:45 a.m., at 17300 Pacific Coast Highway. The victim’s vehicle was taken from the gas station, because the victim had left keys in the ignition and the engine was running.
THEFT:
July 13, 1:50 to 2 p.m., in the 1000 block of Swarthmore Avenue. The suspect entered location, grabbed property and ran past cash registers without any attempt to pay.
Espin provided these additional tips:
- Security-Window Film : There are many different brands and companies that make shatter-proof window film. It is an added measure to make it harder for criminals. When someone smashes a window its usually just one hit. The film makes it harder to smash and obviously the person has to hit the glass several times creating more noise (which they do not want).
- When calling 911 or the non-emergency line (877-275-5273), please be patient and know your location and a detailed description of the incident you are calling about. Our LAPD Dispatchers are very good at determining the nature of response.
- I encourage everyone to get a security system that will give you instant notification if someone is on your property. This helps us (LAPD), if you can see that someone is in your house and can give a good description of the suspects. It will bump our response up to a priority call instead of a non-priority (alarm only).
- If you have security cameras on your property, it is helpful for an investigation to have one or more cameras angled towards the street or sidewalk. Investigators can back track areas where people are seen coming from based on video footage. Hopefully with other cameras showing vehicles or other suspects, investigators can obtain valuable information.
- Please continue to secure (lock) your house and vehicles and do not leave valuables in your vehicle. Let’s make it harder for these criminals to get our stuff.
- Remember to be aware of your surroundings. We can deter most crimes when we acknowledge the people around us. Most criminals do not want to be notice.
Espin (310) 444-0737 or email 37430 @lapd.online.
Non-emergency police number (877) 275-5273 (877-ask-lapd)





Only a few months after the wedding party, I was talking with my friend Alev, who had just finished editing actor Joseph Cotten’s autobiography for a small Bay Area publisher. After working in the book publishing business for many years, I offered her a few suggestions for local book signings and gave her several media contacts that I had used in the past. She seemed so appreciative of my modest input that she later called and invited me to Mr. Cotten’s book signing at Hunter’s Books in Beverly Hills.
I made small-talk with the gentleman standing next to me, who, like me, appeared to be comfortable in his role as “wallflower” at this event. I wondered aloud which of the Hollywood elite might be here in the audience. He leaned toward me and introduced himself as “Cornel.” Only a moment lapsed before several photographers approached him and began shooting pictures of the once-famous movie star Cornel Wilde, whom I had failed to recognize.
“Mr..ah..Vick..ah..rey, it’s such a pleasure to make your acquaintance. Your name sounds…ah…very much like…an English sea captain.” (At this point, it occurred to me that this was not Rich Little doing his famous impression of Stewart, but was, in fact, the real deal.)
Bob Vickrey is a writer whose columns have appeared in several Southwestern newspapers including the Houston Chronicle. He is a member of the Board of Contributors for the Waco Tribune-Herald and was cited by the California Newspaper Publishing Association for column writing awards in 2016 and 2017. He lives in Pacific Palisades, California.





“I remember my job after school was to go out in the pig pen and pick up the corn cobs. I always hoped the pigs were in a different part of the pen so they wouldn’t come and knock me over.
“But the day the village’s solar electricity was turned on, the batteries were drained within hours. One boy remembers being unable to do his homework early in the morning because there wasn’t enough power for his family’s one lamp.





