Wilmington Hit-and-Run Hurdles

Previous Entry | Next Entry
| | Comments (1)

I'm trying hard to update the story on the two 13-year-old girls who were injured yesterday in Wilmington by an alleged hit-and-run driver. What I'm up against in this endeavor are some pretty classic reporting hurdles exacerbated by two of the area's largest bureacracies: LAPD and LAUSD.

While trying to see how Wilmington Middle School administrators and students are dealing with this traumatic event, I stopped by to speak with a principal, assistant principal ... whoever would help. After checking in with security, showing my press credentials and receiving a visitor's badge, I waited at the main office for someone to see me. And waited. And waited.

After about 20 minutes I was told that no one would see me and, as I was digging out a business card, a woman strode by telling me she was an assistant principal. Guessing that I was to go with her on the premise that she would talk to me about such things as grief counselors and such, I stood up and walked beside her ... as she led me swiftly out the school's gates. She explained that I was not "invited" and the school was in "crisis mode," so no one could speak with me. I explained that I had a visitor's badge, so was thus "invited" on to the public campus and, yes, the crisis is why I was there. The community wants to know how the students and the classmates are feeling, and how the school is helping. No dice.

On the other end, I'm doing the usual reporter type things by trying to get information about the suspect, Rigaldo Guevas. However, it appears he hasn't been booked in the county jail - despite LAPD's media relations officers insisting he has. It's from a suspect's booking sheet that we get a birthday, which, in the reporting world, is the key to such things as driving and criminal records. Media relations won't release his birthdate, either. Attempts to reach someone at the Harbor Division so far have only been met with busy signals and waits on hold so long I've been forced to hang up.

So there you have it, a behind-the-scenes look at the hurdles we routinely face in our attempt to bring information to our community. Unfortunate, isn't it?

1 Comments

CYNDI PONCE said:

THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR TRYING TO GET INFO. AS A LIFE LONG RESIDENT OF WILMINGTON AND HAVING A GRANDSON ATTENDING THAT SCHOOL, I DEFINETELY WANT TO KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON THERE AND WHAT THEY ARE DOING TO PROTECT OUR CHILDREN.
I HAVE HEARD ABOUT SOME TERRIBLE THINGS HAPPENING THERE AT SCHOOL, WHILE SCHOOL IS IN SESSION. THIS IS HEAR SAY, BUT I KNOW A LIL ABOUT THE GOINGS ON AT WILMINGTON MIDDLE SCHOOL.
AS A CONCERNED PERSON, WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP GET THAT SCHOOL MORE PROTECTED?
THANK YOU
CYNDI

Leave a comment

About the Blogger


Larry Altman has covered crime in the South Bay since 1990. He's seen it all - the missing model who turned up dead in the desert, the wives found dead in trunks, the high-school coaches who get a little too close to their players. He drives his young colleagues nuts with his "I remember when" stories. He welcomes your tips and observations about the present, and you can mix in a little Lakers basketball talk if you like.

E-mail Larry at larry.altman@dailybreeze.com.

ADVERTISEMENT

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Denise Nix published on April 10, 2008 1:47 PM.

Redondo Beach Resident and LA Fire Chaplain Has His Say was the previous entry in this blog.

UPDATE: Wilmington Hit-and-Run is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

About the Blogger


Denise Nix knew as young as grade school, when she spent every summer working on the camp newspaper, that she wanted to be a journalist. Denise has spent most of the last 12 years of her career in the courtroom. She joined the Daily Breeze in 2001, where she tracks and reports on hundreds of cases at every level of the justice system. And she's never, ever, seen a judge use a gavel.

E-mail Denise at denise.nix@dailybreeze.com.

ADVERTISEMENT