Multiple wildfires, including the Palisades Fire and Eaton Fire, are raging across Southern California Thursday, leaving at least 10 dead and burning more than 27,000 acres, officials say. Police have arrested 20 suspected looters.
Three wildfires were raging Thursday, Jan. 9, forcing evacuations and threatening homes in Los Angeles County.
Evacuation orders were downgraded to warnings in La Cañada Flintridge: There's a 6 p.m. - 6 a.m. curfew in place for all areas under mandatory evacuation orders and evacuation warnings because of the Eaton Fire, within the Altadena area. There is no curfew in evacuation zones located in the city of Pasadena.
California wildfires have killed at least 16 people, a death toll expected to climb for the Palisades and Eaton blazes that have burned more than 37,000 acres.
Several health care centers and medical facilities remain closed amid the devastating wildfires that continue to spread across southern California.
Two major wildfires were raging around Southern California on Monday, Jan. 13, forcing evacuations and threatening homes in Los Angeles County ... Madre and La Cañada Flintridge, has burned ...
LOS ANGELES - Updated interactive map of evacuation warnings and orders As multiple wildfires roar throughout Southern California ... reports filed with the LA County Sheriff's Office in the ...
On Jan. 11, an airborne imaging spectrometer managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory flew over Los Angeles County to survey the damage from the historic fires. It captured images of charred hillsides in Angeles National Forest, devastated neighborhoods in Altadena and — just west of the Eaton fire’s burn scar — the 170-acre JPL campus.
Radio reports reveal the scramble to contain the Eaton fire as it exploded from a 10-acre brush fire to a devastating 14,000-acre blaze that destroyed thousands of homes.
LA fires expose California’s difficult road to navigate between disaster risk and solving the state’s housing crisis.
All the way from Altadena to Huntington Beach, the first wave of wildlife refugees are finding sanctuary from the Eaton fire in the open arms, and pens, of Huntington Beach's Wetlands & Wildlife Care Center.