Scores of residents have returned to their still smoldering neighborhoods even as the threat of new fires persisted.
In California, incarcerated people become firefighters, but the low pay — and few job prospects when they're out — can make it a difficult choice.
The wildfires that erupted this week across Los Angeles County are far from contained, but they're already expected to be the ...
In the case of the Eaton Fire, the investigators are likely to use magnets to help them hunt for the tiny, melted pieces of ...
A father and son and a man who tried to save his home are among the L.A. wildfire victims Officials say at least 11 people ...
Anthony Honore was accustomed to seeing brush fires far up in the San Gabriel Mountains above Pasadena during yearly dry ...
More than 900 prison firefighters were responding to the crisis in Los Angeles — but their pay is low and the ethics of their ...
With thousands of houses destroyed by fire, one of the most populous cities in the United States must confront the fraught logistics of rebuilding.
A man was taken in for questioning on suspicion of arson, and later arrested, on Thursday afternoon in the Woodland Hills near the Kenneth Fire, which had started earlier that day.It was initially ...
As of Friday morning, 939 incarcerated firefighters have been working “around the clock cutting fire lines and removing fuel ...
There were too many houses to protect, and not enough engines,” one fire captain in Los Angeles said. Though fire officials ...
Ferocious wildfires are burning through the Los Angeles area for a fifth day, destroying thousands of structures and upending lives.