Bus Riders Turn Crime Fighters

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I heard this story last night at the Herald Examiner reunion and it bears repeating, simply because it’s a fascinating look at how newspapers are shaped and what’s news.

The story was told by Ron Kaye, the editor of the Los Angeles Daily News. He worked at the Her-Ex and specifically on the early morning shift, where his goal was to put out a late street edition of the paper.

One day, making cop calls I assume, he heard the story of a group of “punks” riding around in the back of a pick up truck spraying a fire extinguisher at unsuspecting people waiting at bus stops.

One lady was so incensed when this happened to her she climbed on the bus and asked the bus driver to chase the pick up. He did, and somehow the bus managed to catch up to the pick up and block it in such a way that the driver couldn’t escape. 

The police came, caught the bad guys and that was that.

Later when Kaye’s editor, the legendary Jim Bellows came into the office, Kaye told him he had three stories to report, a homicide, some sort of robbery and the bus stop caper.

Bellows told him to lead with the bus stop story, simply by framing the information in a headline:

“Bus Riders Turn Crime Fighters”

Who wouldn’t want to read that? 

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One thought on “Bus Riders Turn Crime Fighters

  1. Hey,

    How about you take me to behind the crime scene tape of Cal Poly’s attacks two females on Wednesday instead of this 50-yr. old story. Who cares about thaaaaatt. You cover other stuff pomona so don’t tell me you dont come to cal poly no moe. or at least copy and paste someone else’s story so I can read it.

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