Los Angeles Times

Wild ‘flamingo’ chase

Only in L.A. would the sight of three men floating down the river in a pink raft attract a news helicopter, then police in slow pursuit

- By Angel Jennings angel.jennings @latimes.com

A giant, inflatable flamingo raft carrying three men inched down the Los Angeles River on Monday, carried by the slow current of rainwater captured in the basin. It could’ve been a scene from any lazy river at an amusement park, but in true L.A. pursuit fashion, helicopter­s hovered overhead.

Police, curious about the chopper, called in about 1 p.m. to see what had captured the news crew’s interest, Vernon police Lt. Jerry Winegar said. They were told a pink flamingo — large enough to carry three YouTube attention seekers — had floated down the flood channel from Boyle Heights to just north of South Downey Road in Vernon.

At that point, the officers didn’t know whether it was a stunt gone wrong that might require a water rescue, or a prank that needed def lating, police said.

So officers wheeled their cruiser along the concrete river wall, parallel to Downey Road. The officers got out and called out to the three men sprawled on the massive raft, taking in the sun.

Last week, three men attempted something similar. The group constructe­d a raft from eight inflatable mattresses and drifted 15 miles down the river. The adventure was recorded and posted on YouTube on Thursday and has since garnered almost 30,000 views. Like many car chase suspects who thought they could outsmart and outmaneuve­r law enforcemen­t, the men were unable to evade police.

It was unclear whether the new pranksters were copycats or repeat offenders. But a blond man with dreadlocks in the video closely resembled one of the men on the flamingo.

Winegar ticked off the dangers of going into the L.A. River: First, it’s a criminal offense that could land offenders with a trespassin­g charge, he said. Second, it’s dangerous.

“It’s not like other rivers were there’s a dirt bottom,” he said. “It’s concrete and it’s slippery.”

Search and rescue crews have had to pull many people — and bodies — from the river, because they underestim­ated its power. Today, however, the waters were calm and slow.

The officers didn’t use spike strips to puncture the flamingo. They just asked the men to let out the air.

 ?? KTLA ?? POLICE ASK three men on the L.A. River to deflate their raft. A trio last week attempted a similar stunt.
KTLA POLICE ASK three men on the L.A. River to deflate their raft. A trio last week attempted a similar stunt.

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