Special meeting tonight in Rose Park with Commander Le Baron of LBPD regarding the home invasion robbery last night on the 700 block of Coronado Ave

In connection with an attempted home invasion robbery in the 700 block of Coronado Ave last evening (Sunday, June 29th), East Division Commander Paul Le Baron of the Long Beach Police Department will be hosting an information meeting tonight at 6:00p in Rose Park (8th St and Orizaba Ave) for local residents and other interested persons. Given that there is little advance notice of the meeting, we’ll be posting a follow-up note about the meeting in the coming days here on our web site with pertinent details and safety tips that are learned from it.

Update Tue, Jul 1:

At about 9:30pm, Sunday, June 29, 4 male suspects quietly entered a house on the 700 block of Coronado in Rose Park. The resident was in the home with two guests and had the front screen door unlocked, with the front door open. One suspect had a rifle and pointed it at the victims; they were able to take a small amount of property. There was a brief altercation between the suspects and one of the victims, but during this time the resident was able to get to the back exterior of the house and scream loudly. Several neighbors on the block came out of their houses when they heard the screams and were instrumental in contacting police and providing information on which direction the suspects were headed. The suspects fled the scene. The suspect with the rifle ran down the street and discarded the rifle in a neighbor’s yard on the corner of 8th and Coronado, where it was retrieved by police. This suspect was apprehended at 10th street and positively ID’d by the victims at the scene. Two of the other suspects were apprehended in a car at 8th and Ohio and also positively ID’d by the victims at the scene. The fourth suspect is being sought. The suspects in this case have a known gang affiliation with a gang that is well-documented with the police; the gang investigation team is involved. During the police response, several police units as well as the helicopter were dispatched.

Only one of the victims suffered mild injuries in the altercation and no others were hurt.

The Commander emphasized that the police getting to the scene quickly and apprehending the suspects was due in large part to the neighbors’ response and by promptly calling 911. Rose Park has a strong Community Watch culture in place and it was evident in the neighborhood’s response.

The resident of the house was also present at last night’s meeting and stated that the four suspects were completely quiet and walked into the house through the screen door without any of them noticing even though they were seated in the dining room adjacent to the front entrance. As this case illustrates how easily someone can quietly enter your home through an unlocked door without you noticing, the Commander stressed the importance of locking doors/screen doors even when you are at home.

Can East 7th Street be improved? We think it can! What do you think?

The first of three “7th Street Visioning” workshops is this coming Saturday, June 14th, from 1:30p to 3:30p

E7S

Councilmember Suja Lowenthal, RPNA, our neighboring neighborhood associations, and local business owners invite you to participate in three visioning workshops for 7th Street, which puts focus of the future of this most important street, between Redondo and Alamitos Avenues (though the planning process need not necessarily be restricted to these boundaries). The first of these workshops is this Saturday, June 14th, at Our Savior Lutheran Church, 370 Junipero Ave (near 4th St and Junipero Ave), from 1:30p to 3:30p. The two others, whose location is yet to be determined, will happen on Saturday, July 26th and Saturday, September 20th—so mark your calendars now for those two as well. The second and third workshops build on those that came before, so it’s best if you can attend all three. The culmination of these meetings will be a practical plan to:

  • Inform city staff of the community’s priorities for projects and funding in the future
  • Enable community groups to focus on long-term goals
  • Provide the basis for grant applications to MTA and other major funders for infrastructure and other improvements

There is also expected to be a modest implementation of some aspect of the vision that’s laid out in the final plan (that is, a pilot project of some kind), which will help demonstrate the value of the overall plan’s long-term vision, usefulness, and value not only to those of us who live, work, and travel on the street, but to agencies whose funding will be critical to bringing the needed resources to execute the plan.  Community input is, of course, essential in making the street work for everyone—residents of the area especially, we believe—so this is a golden opportunity to shape one of the central features of our neighborhood—the one that cuts right through the heart of it, and thus affects us all. So plan to attend, if you can. The more, the better.

Councilmember Lowenthal’s office has engaged Roger Sherman, architect and urban planner, and UTILE, a leading urban planning firm, to lead us in these three sessions. As you may have heard or read, a similar planning process is happening for the Broadway Avenue and 4th Street corridors. What’s exiting to us and other neighborhood associations and community groups along 7th Street is the opportunity and level of readiness for the each of these projects to seriously consider the needs, opinions, and visions of all persons concerned with these three important corridors in our community—not just traffic planners. While all principals in the project recognize that there exist some competing needs and wants along these streets, everyone is also cognizant that there are plenty of shared priorities—and it is these that we also want to focus on in order to help reconcile what differences there might be. And how are we to know what are the different and shared needs and wants? By hearing from you! So we’re asking as many people as possible come with their DREAM BIG, THINK CREATIVELY, and WORK COOPERATIVELY hats on.

In the event that you cannot attend the planning sessions, the project will have a means to gather you opinion via an online survey, whose web address we will share with you when it’s up and running.

We look forward to seeing everyone next Saturday morning!