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  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    7:02am, EST

    Cops investigate Chris Brown after alleged fight over parking space

    John Shearer / AP, file

    Police said they had not yet been in contact with Chris Brown.

    By Marian Smith, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Updated at 7:30 p.m. ET: Grammy-winning singer Chris Brown is being investigated following an alleged fight over a parking space in West Hollywood, police said early Monday.

    Authorities responded to a call of a fight involving six males on Santa Monica Boulevard, the LA County Sheriff's Department said in a statement.

    "Deputies talked to witnesses who stated that Chris Brown and the victim were involved in an altercation over a parking space," the statement added. "The altercation allegedly led to Chris Brown punching the victim."

    Brown had already left when officers arrived, police said.

    The police say that according to witnesses, Brown punched R&B artist Frank Ocean in the fight. Steve Whitmore, the LA County Sheriff's spokesman, said that no charges have been filed against Brown yet, but that Ocean "is desirous of prosecution in this incident."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Police said they had not yet been in contact with Brown, and the singer's rep has not released a comment. No arrests have been made.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Explore related topics: entertainment, grammy, hollywood, assault, crime, los-angeles, chris-brown, featured
  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    2:24pm, EST

    Justin Bieber calls for paparazzi laws after photographer dies trying to get a $100 shot

    By M. Alex Johnson and Courtney Hazlett, NBC News

    Pop superstar Justin Bieber called for a crackdown on paparazzi Wednesday after a photographer was killed as he tried to shoot pictures of Bieber's white Ferrari in Los Angeles — pictures that a veteran photographer said probably would have been worth no more than $100.

    Gene Blevins / Reuters

    Los Angeles police look over the car that struck and killed a celebrity photographer who was trying to take photographs of a Ferrari registered to pop star Justin Bieber on Jan. 1.

    The photographer, a man in his late 20s whom police wouldn't identify until they can notify his next of kin, was pronounced dead at UCLA Medical Center shortly after he was run over by a passing motorist about 5:30 p.m. local time Tuesday, police said.

    Authorities confirmed that Bieber, 18, wasn't in the Ferrari. It was being driven by a friend, whom they wouldn't identify, and it wasn't involved in the accident, police said. 

    David Allocca, who's photographed celebrities for many years, told NBC News that even if Bieber had been in the car, any shot the man took would likely have been worth little.


    Follow @TODAY_ent

    "A plain photo of Bieber in his car? Probably around $100, not more than $500," said Allocca, who's photographed Marlon Brando, Frank Sinatra, Nicole Kidman and both Presidents Bush in a 30-year career. "I can guarantee that."

    The incident took place after a California Highway Patrol officer flagged the Ferrari for speeding on the northbound lanes of Interstate 405, said Madeline Nightingale, watch commander of the Los Angeles Police Department's West Traffic Bureau. The car then exited at Sepulveda Boulevard and Getty Center Drive, she told NBC News.

    During the traffic stop, the photographer crossed the busy Sepulveda thoroughfare, which runs parallel to the 405, and tried to shoot photos of the vehicle's occupants from a perch on the narrow divider, she said.

    The Highway Patrol officer on the scene repeatedly warned the man that his position was dangerous, she said. The man was then struck by a car traveling southbound on Sepulveda, Nightingale said.

    No charges were expected to be filed against the motorist, who stopped and tried to administer assistance, Nightingale told NBC News. The driver was a woman with two young children in the vehicle, Nightingale said.

    Police in Los Angeles are investigating the death of a photographer who was hit by a car while trying to take pictures of a white Ferrari owned by pop star Justin Bieber. TODAY's Willie Geist reports.

    Thibault Mauvilain, a celebrity photographer who went to the scene of Tuesday's accident, told reporters that he knew the photographer who was killed.

    "He always played by the rules. I'm not aware of him doing anything illegal," Mauvilain said, according to NBC 4 of Los Angeles. 

    NBC Los Angeles: Man killed attempting to photograph Justin Bieber's Ferrari

    "Some people will say he's just another crazy paparazzo trying to make the money. Actually, he was not a paparazzo. He was just another kid from New Mexico."

    'Hopefully this tragedy will finally inspire meaningful legislation'
    In a statement Wednesday, Bieber said: "While I was not present nor directly involved with this tragic accident, my thoughts and prayers are with the family of the victim."

    DCNYRE2013 - Getty Images

    Justin Bieber wasn't in the car at the time of Tuesday's incident, police said.

    He added: "Hopefully this tragedy will finally inspire meaningful legislation and whatever other necessary steps to protect the lives and safety of celebrities, police officers, innocent public bystanders and the photographers themselves."

    Justin Bieber tosses water bottle at Miami paparazzi

    In fact, California has such a law. In 2010, the state cracked down on paparazzi, adding extra penalties for photographers who drive dangerously in pursuit of pictures they intend to sell. 

    But in November — in a case also involving a photographer who was hoping to get pictures of Bieber at a traffic stop — a Superior Court judge refused to apply it, saying it was unconstitutional.

    Los Angeles City Council member Dennis Zine — who witnessed a previous paparazzi pursuit of Bieber in July, which ended with a photographer's being struck by a motorist — called on lawmakers Wednesday to give the law even more teeth.

    "Unfortunately, the State law that passed in 2010 was not successful in a recent court case, so I would urge our State legislators to revisit the statute and make amendments in order to strengthen it and make it more effective," Zine, a Los Angeles reserve police officer, said in a statement.

    The behavior of celebrity photographers has been widely denounced ever since 1997, when Princess Diana died in a French auto accident that was initially blamed on pursuing photographers. The wreck was subsequently blamed on Diana's driver.

    The market value for many celebrity shots has fallen in recent years, Allocca said, and now it takes a "great photo" to earn big money.

    Justin Bieber is the most Googled person on Earth. The pop star started as a viral sensation. He and his manager, Scooter Braun, discussed Bieber's journey and his future with Ryan Seacrest.

    "With Instagram, with Twitter, with cellphones — everyone's got a point-and-shoot, everyone's got a camera wherever you go," he said.

    "If he had a joint in his mouth, maybe a million bucks, to somebody," Allocca said. "But no one outlet is paying that money. Magazines aren't the first to get it anymore. The Internet gets it."

    But celebrities continue to get caught up in dangerous incidents involving paparazzi:

    • In June 2011, Tori Spelling backed her car into the wall of her children's school in Tarzana, Calif., as she was being pursued by a photographer.

    "Wht will it take?" Spelling tweeted at the time. "Someone dying for paparazzi to stop?"

    • In October 2009, a car driven by Nicole Richie was rear-ended by a car carrying two photographers in Beverly Hills, Calif. The driver was arrested and found to have no driver's license.
    • The same month, Brad Pitt was riding a motorcycle in Los Angeles when a photographer trying to get a picture rear-ended the actor with his car. Pitt and the motorcycle fell over, but he was uninjured.
    • In 2010, a photographer claimed that he was badly injured when a car in which Lindsay Lohan was riding ran him over outside a Hollywood nightclub. The photographer sued Lohan in January 2011; Lohan asked a court to dismiss the suit last summer.
    • In June, Lohan was involved in another crash when her rented Porsche ran into a truck in Santa Monica, Calif., while allegedly fleeing a pack of chasing paparazzi.

    Allocca said it was "stupid" that the photographer who was killed Tuesday died over a picture that eventually would have little value.

    "All I can say is remember the New Kids on the Block. Remember Hanson," he said.

    "Bieber will be there shortly as well." 

    Daniel Strieff of NBC News contributed to this report.

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    470 comments

    Justin Bieber is another Brittany spears no talent media whore hyped up to sell to the generation of kids with tin ears. mho

    Show more
    Explore related topics: los-angeles, california-highway-patrol, traffic-accident, featured, lapd, sepulveda, justin-bieber, nbclosangeles, pararazz
  • 15
    Oct
    2012
    10:16am, EDT

    Hollywood movie premiere ends in clash between police and skateboarders

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Michelle Valles and Jason Kandel, NBCLosAngeles.com

    A mob of skateboarders and skate fans who ran amok through Hollywood Saturday night attracted a swift crackdown by riot police.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In a video captured by a driver caught in the middle of the mayhem, skaters are seen vandalizing businesses and throwing bottles, as bystanders can be seen running — a melee that more than 100 Los Angeles police officers in riot gear were deployed to quash.

    The incident began before 9 p.m., when about 1,500 skaters and skate fans showed up to a theater that only holds 600 people to watch a free premiere of the skateboard movie, “Bake and Destroy.”

    More news from NBCLosAngeles.com

    Those who were turned away reportedly reacted violently, police said.

    “I just saw everyone in the street going crazy," witness Huckleberry Hamill said.

    The caretaker of the Vine Theatre that hosted the event refused to talk to an NBC4 reporter.


    Jay Mok, the owner of Hollywood Tattoo, which is next door to the theater, said he hid inside his shop while vandals etched his car with the letter A for anarchy.

    Mok said this is not the first time a melee has broken out at the theater.

    Also on NBCLosAngeles.com: Long Beach Soldier Killed in Afghanistan

    "It happened a few years back, a few times," Mok said. "They didn't get into a riot, but ... out of control."

    Police dispersed about 500 skateboarding fans in less than three hours. No injuries were reported.  

    Los Angeles Police Sgt. Raul Jovel said several people threw rocks and bottles at officers during the clash. At least two cars were also damaged.

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    165 comments

    Kids make stupid decisions . A bunch of kids together make a bunch of stupid decisions . Its always been that way . It will always be that way . Kids dont need a skateboard under thier feet to act irrationally . It just made for a more meaty storyline .

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hollywood, los-angeles, featured, skateboard, bake-and-destroy, vine-theatre
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    12:33pm, EDT

    String of incidents involving Batman movie causes jitters after shooting in Aurora, Colo.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Several incidents in recent days involving screenings of the new Batman movie underscore the heightened anxiety about security at movie theaters in the wake of the mass shooting in Aurora, Colo.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    -- On Monday, about 100 moviegoers in Edgewater, N.J., were evacuated from a showing of "The Dark Knight Rises" after a patron saw a man opening an emergency exit, police told NJ.com.

    The patron who called the police said that about 90 minutes into the show, a man stood up, walked to an emergency exit and spoke to someone outside. He then returned to his seat, but wouldn't come forward when the police arrived at the theater. The showing was canceled as a precaution.

    -- A 52-year-old moviegoer in Norwalk, Calif., was arrested Sunday after allegedly shouting about a gun and the recent movie-theater shooting in Colorado, sheriff's officials said Monday.

    Clark Tabor allegedly created the disturbance during a screening of "The Dark Knight Rises," sheriff's officials said.

    Several witnesses told police the suspect appeared to hold his cellphone in the air and yelled, "Does anyone have a gun?" and "I should go off like in Colorado."

    Tabor was arrested on suspicion of making criminal threats and is being held on $50,000 bail plus unrelated warrants, police said.


    No weapons were found on the suspect, in the theater or its surrounding area, or in Tabor's residence, police said.

    -- Also on Sunday, a fight broke out in a Pittsburgh screening of “The Dark Knight Rises.” No weapons were found and no arrests were made, officials said.

    -- A 27-year-old man in Arizona was arrested Friday on suspicion of disorderly conduct and threatening and intimidating after witnesses say he appeared drunk and was acting strangely during a showing of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Sierra Vista, according to The Associated Press.

    A moviegoer confronted Michael William Borboa, which led to about 50 people fleeing the theater, the AP reported.

    -- In Maine, a 49-year-old man claimed he carried a loaded gun in his backpack into a recent showing of the movie, state police said. Timothy Courtois was stopped Sunday morning for speeding when police found several guns in his car – including an AK-47 assault rifle. Courtois reportedly told authorities that he was on his way to shoot a former employer a day after watching the Batman movie.

    Warner Bros. said on Monday "The Dark Knight Rises" took in $160.8 million at U.S. and Canadian box offices over the weekend, which is lower than what the industry had estimated for the debut before the Aurora movie theater massacre. The movie ranks No. 3 on the list of top three-day opening weekends behind No. 1 "The Avengers" at $207 million and No. 2 "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part II," which earned $169 million.


    NBCLosAngeles.com and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    107 comments

    We've all been told that freedom of speech STOPS at the point of yelling FIRE in a crowded theater. Now, you can't yell "GUN" in a crowded theater either. RIGHTLY SO. Remember The Who concert from Cincinnati in 1979 when 11 people died from being trampled? Stuff like that actually happens.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: colorado, los-angeles, batman, aurora, dark-knight, james-holmes
  • 24
    Apr
    2012
    1:34pm, EDT

    For sale: Home that inspired Beatles' 'Blue Jay Way'

    By Laura Vecsey, Zillow

    An associate loaned the home to George Harrison for a 1967 trip to Los Angeles.

    The opening line of one of George Harrison's most memorable songs sets the mood: "There's a fog upon L.A.'' But it's the plaintive refrain of the vaguely melodic chorus of an otherwise odd and discordant song that made "Blue Jay Way" such a haunting twist to the Beatles' "Magical Mystery Tour" album.

    This rock classic was penned back in 1967, and Harrison and fellow Liverpudlian John Lennon are long gone from this world, but the legacy of that peculiar song endures in the form of a Mid-Century modern house where Harrison created the eerie little ditty.

    That architectural gem that sits high over Sunset Blvd at 1567 Blue Jay Way in Los Angeles. It offers a 170-degree view of the city and can be yours for $4.599 million, according to Curbed. The price tag reflects the stellar remodel of this unique home as much as it honors the part it played in musical history.

    On the site beatlesbible.com, Harrison told the story about how he wrote the tune late one night waiting for a record publicist and musician Harry Nillson to show up at the Blue Jay Way home that had been lent to him during a stay in L.A.

    "Derek Taylor got held up. He rang to say he'd be late. I told him on the phone that the house was in Blue Jay Way. And he said he could find it OK... he could always ask a cop. So I waited and waited. I felt really knackered with the flight, but I didn't want to go to sleep until he came. There was a fog and it got later and later. To keep myself awake, just as a joke to pass the time while I waited, I wrote a song about waiting for him in Blue Jay Way. There was a little Hammond organ in the corner of this house which I hadn't noticed until then... so I messed around on it and the song came."

    The Hollywood Hills real estate market home had been owned in 1967 by a former Army colonel, Ludwig Gerber, who managed singer Peggy Lee. Gerber was said to be forever proud of the way the song had been composed at his prized home. He was forced to sell the place in 1994 for $760,000, having run out of money in his later years.

    Since then, the home has been bought and re-sold three more times, and now boasts a stunning remodel that has guaranteed a future as illustrious as the home's past. According to listing details, the Blue Jay Way home contains:

    "Massive walls for art, glass sliding doors that expose the house to a courtyard with large outdoor space that includes a wrap-around patio, fire pit, pool and spa. Fantastic open floor plan with high ceilings, amazing light, great energy and the ideal indoor/outdoor living we all enjoy. Perfect for parties and entertaining. Includes gorgeous screening room, touchscreen surround throughout, two-car attached garage. Grand entrance is just the beginning of what this home has to offer in the sough after bird streets. This home in celebrity row is close to all things important. Sunset Strip, Beverly Hills and Century City just minutes away."

    Zillow

    Sliding glass walls open up to the patio and pool area.

    Zillow

    The home has been significantly updated with new finishes and designer touches.

    See more photos of the Blue Jay Way home on Zillow.

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