Los Angeles Times

Guns kill three men in one day in Los Angeles

City’s homicide count has been on the rise for the last 18 months.

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th and Priscella Vega Times staff writer Kevin Rector contribute­d to this report.

Three men were killed in separate shootings in Los Angeles in less than 24 hours.

The first took place shortly after 7:30 p.m. Friday in the 8900 block of Orion Avenue in North Hills, the Los Angeles Police Department said in a news release.

Officers responded to find a man with multiple gunshot wounds, police said. Paramedics pronounced the man dead at the scene. Authoritie­s identified him as Ryan Castellano­s, 18.

Investigat­ors received preliminar­y informatio­n that a compact sedan was seen fleeing the area, police said.

Anyone with informatio­n was asked to call the LAPD’s Valley Bureau homicide detectives at (818) 374-9550.

The second shooting took place in the 1300 block of 97th Street near Normandie Avenue in unincorpor­ated L.A. County near South Los Angeles, according to investigat­ors.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies responded shortly after 12:30 a.m. Saturday and found a wounded man lying on the sidewalk. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The coroner’s office identified him as Glenn Burton, 34, of Los Angeles.

The third shooting occurred Saturday on the 200 block of North Bowen Avenue in Compton, the Sheriff’s Department said in a news release.

The wounded man was taken by paramedics to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 2:25 p.m., authoritie­s said.

Homicide detectives were conducting an investigat­ion at the crime scene.

Anyone with informatio­n on the latter two cases is asked to call the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Homicide Bureau at (323) 890-5500 or Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477).

L.A.’s homicide count has been on the rise over the last 18 months, increasing far faster than it did during the previous decade.

Other U.S. cities have experience­d similar trends, and police officials and criminolog­ists nationwide are trying to figure out why. They are considerin­g factors as disparate as the economic toll of COVID-19, the closing of social services during pandemic lockdowns and the scope and intensity of recent anti-police protests.

The surge in homicides in Los Angeles since the start of the pandemic has played out almost entirely among Latino and Black victims, according to a Times analysis of LAPD data.

The figures reflect wide disparitie­s in public safety across the city, experts say, as well as compoundin­g trauma for communitie­s of color that have been hit hard by gang violence and the economic and social upheaval of the health crisis.

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