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$2.00 DESIGNATED AREAS HIGHER © 2016 WSCE latimes.com TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 A night of terror in Orlando As police uncover details about the gunman, club-goers recount the harrowing hours in Pulse. By Joe Mozingo, David S. Cloud and Molly Hennessy-Fiske Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times THOUSANDS ATTEND a rally in downtown Orlando to honor those killed and wounded in the Pulse nightclub massacre a day earlier. Trump, Clinton diverge on guns, security Inside Pulse nightclub: A timeline of the rampage emerges 4 About 2:30 a.m.: Mateen Roofed service alley calls 911. He pledges allegiance to Islamic State. Exit Dressing room 5 Over the next two hours, Mateen talks with police. 6 5:05 a.m.: SWAT team storms the club. A shootout ensues. Mateen is killed. Dressing room Women’s restroom 3 About 2:15 a.m.: Police enter the Storage room Exit club and exchange fire with Mateen, who retreats to a bathroom. A SWAT team is called. Stage Exit to patio Drink prep Bar Exit to patio Fence Men’s restroom Stage Bar Dance floor 2 Mateen opens fire. Police VIP seating Emergency exit For decades, the Calderon name carried weight. Ronald and Tom Calderon, along with an older brother, were power brokers and deal makers who rose up from the small-time politics of Montebello, their hometown east of Los Angeles, to hold sway in Sacramento’s corridors of power. Known for a ruthless style of political hardball and audacious fundraising, the brothers were masters of Exit Restroom Gate Stage Reception desk 1 2:02 a.m.: Omar Mateen walks to the entrance and starts shooting. An off-duty police officer working security exchanges fire with Mateen, who slips into the club uninjured. Fence Sources: Orlando Planning Commission, Times reporting. Graphics reporting by C h a r l e s M i n s h ew Orlando Sentinel E b en M c Cu e , A ng e li c a Q u i n t er o Los Angeles Times Shooter was a ‘known wolf’ In two FBI investigations, agents concluded he was not a threat By Del Quentin Wilber and Brian Bennett WASHINGTON — Omar Mateen was scaring his coworkers. In the spring of 2013, the edgy security guard at St. Lucie County Courthouse in Florida was boasting of his family ties to Al Qaeda, the Sunni extremist group, while also bragging that he belonged to Hezbollah, a rival Shiite group. He hoped to die as a martyr when police raided his apartment, he told his coworkers. Alarmed, they called the FBI, which launched a 10month investigation to determine whether Mateen, a U.S. citizen born in New York, really was a terrorist — Calderon guilty plea is blow for political family By Joel Rubin and Patrick McGreevy Bar Patio Closet CLEVELAND — The candidates didn’t take the requisite timeout from the presidential campaign trail. They didn’t announce that this week was for healing only. The body count, in fact, was not even final before the massacre in Orlando, Fla., had become as politically charged as it was horrific. The deadliest mass shooting in American history became the launching point Monday for what was already expected to be one of the country’s nastier presidential campaigns, coming the week that Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were set to turn their attention entirely to attacking each other and building their cases in battleground states. Instead, the attack forced them to rewrite planned speeches and confront the anxieties set off by yet another gruesome mass murder — and another perpetrator of Islamic faith. Trump focused relentlessly on immigration as the root cause of the massacre, saying that “the only reason the killer was in America in the first place was because [See Candidates, A11] Seating said most of the victims died in the first moments. By Noah Bierman and Evan Halper leverage, using others’ wants and weaknesses to their advantage. But in recent years whispers about misdeeds and broken laws erupted into the open as federal prosecutors indicted the two Democrats on a host of bribery and money laundering charges. Monday brought a crushing blow to the family dynasty as Ron Calderon, a former state senator, pleaded guilty to mail fraud, conceding he accepted tens of thousands of dollars in bribes from undercover FBI agents and a corrupt hospital executive. The announcement of the plea agreement came on the heels of a guilty plea last week by Tom Calderon, a former state assemblyman, to a charge of money laundering that stemmed from allegations he helped conceal the bribes his brother solicited. The plea deals mean the brothers will avoid a trial that had been scheduled to begin next month and was expected to feature a who’s who of state lawmakers, including Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles), who testified before a grand jury in the case and whom prosecutors planned to call [See Calderon, A7] or might become one. Between May 2013 and March 2014, the FBI sent an undercover informant who secretly recorded Mateen, conducted surveillance of his movements and scrutinized his communications, FBI officials said Monday. They even interviewed him twice. At the end, the agents concluded that Mateen was Money’s good for bosses at CBS, Viacom Sumner Redstone’s lieutenants, Leslie Moonves (CBS) and Philippe Dauman (Viacom) rank second and third for executive pay at publicly traded U.S. companies. BUSINESS, C1 On to Game 6 The Cleveland Cavaliers avoided elimination from the NBA Finals by defeating the Golden State Warriors, 112-97. SPORTS, D1 Weather Clouds early. L.A. Basin: 74/59. B8 7 85944 00200 5 not a threat and had broken no laws. He was full of bluster, they decided, and angry about being teased and, in his view, discriminated against by his colleagues. His name was removed from the terrorist watch list maintained by the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center, a database that serves as a clearinghouse for federal [See FBI, A11] ORLANDO, Fla. — In less than six seconds, 17 shots reverberated through the Pulse nightclub. Amanda Alvear, a 25year-old pharmacy assistant, was taking a selfie video on Snapchat. She had lost 180 pounds over two years and loved to show off her new figure, loved to dance. She felt safe to be herself in gay and lesbian clubs like Pulse. The video shows her crew dancing around her against a backdrop of purple and blue lights. She holds a drink and smiles. As the first bang rings out, sharp and metallic, Alvear squints, as if trying to figure out what made the noise. Her eyes scan the room, blinking, becoming more fearful. “Shooting,” she says. The 17 shots are heard before the video stops, just as she appears to move away. She and 48 other people would not survive the night. In the wake of the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history, investigators on Monday were trying to understand how three terror-filled hours unfolded after Omar Mateen, a gymbulked, 29-year-old security guard and onetime wannabe cop, entered the popular gay nightclub and gunned down dozens of patrons and staff before taking hostages. Substantial questions remain about how many of the injured were stranded without treatment in the lengthy standoff, and whether Mateen knew any of his victims. At least four regular customers said they had seen Mateen at the club before, and one said he had communicated periodically over the last year with Mateen on a gay chat and dating app, Jack’d. Whether the visits and exchanges were motivated by his sexual orientation or were ruses to target victims is unclear. FBI agents scrambled Monday to recover data from Mateen’s electronic media — cellphones, computers and other devices — looking to find clues into what sparked the massacre, according to current and former FBI officials. One U.S. law enforce[See Night, A9] An outpouring of love and grief Loved ones remember the shooting victims, who came from all over the country, as charming and kind. NATION, A8 latimes.com /nation Go online for more coverage on the Orlando nightclub massacre. Microsoft bets on business with LinkedIn purchase By Tracey Lien When newly appointed Chief Executive Satya Nadella spelled out his vision for Microsoft in 2014, he pledged to revive a stagnant technology giant that had been eclipsed by more nimble and more mobile companies. To do that, he said, “we must rediscover our soul — our unique core.” So where is the unique core of the $392-billion company that brought computers into the home and made Windows the default operating system for nearly two decades? The workplace, apparently. With Monday’s $26.2-billion acquisition of professional networking site LinkedIn Corp. — a deal that marks one of the biggest purchases in the history of the technology industry and the biggest ever for Microsoft — Nadella further pinned the company’s future to business software. It brings together Microsoft’s Internet services and “the world’s leading pro[See Microsoft, A14] A2 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 S L AT I ME S . CO M BACK STORY Inspire your kids to read. The new LA Times Parent Reading Guide, available in English or Spanish, can be downloaded for free: latimes.com/ReadingBy9 ANGE LES TIME EC S SP ECT IAL S ION g n i d a e R Parentde 2016 Gui LOS ® ents for Par ns endatio m om k Rec I Boo e List rc ou I Res I Tips Hotshot in the line of fire Lone survivor of Yarnell Hill blaze is criticized for book, movie deal By Nigel Duara PHOENIX — Brendan McDonough survived one of the deadliest wildfires in U.S. history, an inferno near Yarnell, Ariz., that killed 19 of his fellow Granite Mountain Hotshots on June 30, 2013. For the next year, he went to memorials, gave speeches and raised money for wildland firefighting. But the constant reminders of the fire wore on him. He was diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder and had to stop making so many public appearances. “I kept reliving it, kept reliving it, kept reliving it,” McDonough said. Citing his PTSD, he twice canceled depositions scheduled by the Arizona Division of Forestry, which was investigating the fire and negotiating settlements with the families of the dead. Arizonans were infuriated, then, when it was announced that McDonough would write a book about his life and the ordeal, and advise on a movie, “Granite Mountain,” which is set to begin filming this summer. In an interview with The Times, McDonough spoke about the controversy. How many times did the Arizona Division of Forestry ask to depose you, and what happened each time? The first time they came at me, they just said, “Come on down for lunch and let’s talk.” I told someone and he said, “Hell no. Even if you have nothing to hide, they’ll twist your words.” So he put me in touch with an attorney. The attorney said, “I’m not free for some time.” The [Arizona Division of Forestry] scheduled the day he said he might be free. So there was no time to prep, and he said no. The second time, I was talking to my counselor, and I was just getting into some real heavy [stuff], really getting into the nitty-gritty of what makes my stress, my anxiety, my PTSD tick. She’s like, “There’s no way you’re doing it right now. They can come back to us in six months or a year. If they want to do it then, we’ll do it then.” While this is going on, everyone in the media is saying, “Brendan is hiding, he’s lying, he won’t testify, yada yada yada, he’s deceitful. He’s still writing a book, but he’s going to write something in the book he doesn’t want to testify about.” We set up a third deposition. I wanted to shut these people up. I was ready to testify. The [Arizona Division of Forestry] canceled it the night before, like 8, 9 o’clock. More information had come out that showed [the 19 dead firefighters] didn’t make the mistakes they were accused of. I think that’s why [the Arizona Division of Forestry] canceled it. (State records show that the deposition had been scheduled for late May 2015. The state reached a settlement with the families of the deceased firefighters on June 1, 2015.) I’m not scared of them; I don’t fear them. The worst they can do is come to my house and put a bullet in my head. These are the people who were supposed to take care of us. I don’t feel taken care of. So why not make a bigger deal about this, hold a news conference or something of that nature? Do you care about what the public thinks outside of the small area where you live? Nigel Duara Los Angeles Times BRENDAN McDONOUGH survived an inferno near Yarnell, Ariz., that killed 19 of his fellow Granite Mountain Hotshots on June 30, 2013. No, I do care. I want to be mindful of how I’m perceived. I’m trying not to go out in the media and say they did this to me and they did that to me. But they tried making it about me when there were 200 other people who should have been looked at, people [at the Arizona Division of Forestry] who could have made better choices. You’re recognized near your home in Prescott, Ariz., and at firefighter memorials. It’s a weird kind of celebrity, isn’t it? I’ve learned to just talk and listen, listen to people’s grief. That’s what I’m famous for. I’m not famous for being an Olympic gold medalist. I’m not famous for inventing the cure for cancer or anything like that. I’m famous for losing my brothers. Do you find people using the tragedy for their own benefit? It’s one thing to continue to honor men. But there’s other people, a very few people, taking advantage of what it is, taking grief and trauma that’s not their own. They’ve attached them- selves, leeched on to my brothers’ legacy. They’ll say, “Oh, my car just turned over to 119,000 miles,” or “Oh, I just saw 19 doves fly by.” How the [expletive] can you count 19 doves? I had a lady, she came to one of my book signings. She was telling me the story of how she got pulled over for speeding. She had a memorial shirt on. She played it off like she didn’t use it for her advantage, but she did. She didn’t get a ticket. I’ve never done that. Since reliving the tragedy is difficult, how do you balance the outreach you’re doing with your own mental health? [Well-wishers] want to talk. They want to say, “I’m so sorry for your loss.” People don’t understand, that’s me reliving it. But I’m not going to tell them, “Don’t talk to me.” When I was first in therapy, I didn’t know that it was OK to still be alive. But I have a purpose in life. I can’t let those feelings take over. nigel.duara@latimes.com 16RB9062 LA’s best tastes, all in one place Friday, September 2 Saturday, September 3 Sunday, September 4 Fresh tastes from LA’s best chefs Summer’s last hurrah 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hosted by Amy Scattergood and Michael Cimarusti Hosted by Noelle Carter and Mary Sue Milliken Let the good times pour One city, countless tastes Hosted by Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris, Ray Garcia and Michael Lay Hosted by Jonathan Gold and Kris Yenbamroong An evening among the culinary stars 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Hosted by Noelle Carter, Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris and Amy Scattergood #TasteLA 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. GET TICKETS: LATIMES.COM/THETASTE Subscribers save $25 on Saturday and Sunday events 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Presenting sponsor Platinum sponsor L AT I ME S . CO M S T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 A3 THE WORLD Islamic State hunts for gay men Sunni extremist group uses obscure writings to try to justify its brutal executions. By Nabih Bulos BEIRUT — The camera lingers on the jihadists suspending the man by his legs over the edge of the building. Blindfolded, his hands bound behind his back, he flails as he falls to his death, the video switching to slow motion as an Islamic chant, known as a nasheed, plays in the background. The clip, from a 2015 video celebrating the anniversary of Islamic State’s takeover of the Iraqi city of Mosul, is one of dozens of photo reports and videos depicting the fate of those accused by the militant group of “committing the act of [sodomy]”: being thrown from “a tall height,” usually a building. Those who survive have stones hurled at them by crowds waiting below. In the almost two years since Islamic State declared its self-styled caliphate in parts of Iraq and Syria, it has carried out amputations, whipping and crucifixions to punish those who violate its strict reading of sharia, or Islamic law. But for gay people living in Islamic State-held areas, Sunday’s “lone wolf ” attack in Orlando, Fla., served as a bitter reminder of the systematic targeting they face under the group’s regime of terror, where their sexuality is a death sentence — one often carried out with the tacit approval of the community around them. “Since December 2014, the group has bragged that it has killed at least 41 individuals for what it calls sodomy,” said Jessica Stern, executive director of OutRight Action International, an advocacy group. “Clearly the 41 deaths are just the tip of the iceberg, and when we talk to our friends in Iraq and Syria they tell us of many other deaths that [Islamic State] didn’t claim public responsibility for,” she added. Islamic State maintains a veneer of legality, backing its persecution of gay people with arguments derived from the group’s interpretation of Islamic texts. In February, the group outlined its legal argument for its crackdown on what it described as “sexual deviance” in its English-language magazine, Dabiq. The article is a jeremiad against the “West’s sexual revolution,” which “plunged it into a downward spiral of sexual deviance and immorality” where “disease is rampant.” “In the midst of this widespread affront to the fitrah (natural human disposition),” the article rails, “the Islamic State continues its efforts against these deeds of misguidance — which Western ‘Civilization’ regards as a part of their ‘values’ — by implementing the rulings of Allah on those who practice any form of sexual deviancy or transgression.” The body of the article is peppered with quotes from both the Koran as well as sayings attributed to the prophet Muhammad to derive “rulings … that will protect the Muslims from treading the same rotten course that the West has chosen to pursue.” The Koran discusses the issue of homosexuality in its retelling of the story of Sodom and Lot. In Arabic, the word “loti” is a derogatory term for homosexual. The Koran says both men who engage in homosexual acts are to be punished, but it does not specify how, and says the death penalty can be waived if they repent. For its signature punishment, Islamic State instead relies on literature from the Hadith, a lesser-known compendium of the prophet’s words, said Islamic State expert Aymenn Jawad alTamimi, a research fellow at the Middle East Forum. The book was “very obscure until Islamic State started publicizing it.” “This is the way Islamic State justifies itself foremost to its supporters, by presenting a theology meticulously backed by source ma- terial so as to impress them,” concluded Tamimi in a social media interview. This approach, observers say, is central to the image Islamic State hopes to create for itself as the protector of Muslims throughout the world, which serves as a powerful recruiting tool. Armed with these rulings, Islamic State hunts for gay men in its midst, apprehending people and rifling through their phones for simply walking or speaking in a way that would arouse suspicion, said Subhi Nahas, a Syrian who escaped from Idlib after it was taken over by the Al Qaeda affiliate Al Nusra Front. He now resides in San Francisco, where he has become an advocate of LGBT rights for refugees. Since Nahas left, he has learned from others that Islamic State’s tactics have gotten uglier. The group now stalks websites that are popular with gay Arab men. Some people have been betrayed by other gay people in the community who, fearing for their safety, hope to avoid detection by giving up others while pretending to support Islamic State. But the jihadists can also rely on support for their cause from Muslim communities where intolerance of homosexuality is mainstream. “There is no acceptance of [homosexuality], people aren’t even willing to talk about it,” said Nahas, who even feared his father would hand him over to the militants. “I always had trouble with my father because of my orientation, so I thought he would do it to get rid of me,” Nahas said. “These atrocious acts exist on a continuum of violence,” said Stern. “I think it’s really important to underscore that there is vi- olence by families, killing campaigns by militias ... and there was indifference by governments even before the rise of ISIS, with not a single murderer being prosecuted.” Although there are bright spots, including a thriving LGBT community in Lebanon and one in Jordan that is somewhat tolerated, many countries across the Arab and Islamic world sentence people to death or subject them to lashings. The Orlando attack has also spurred some to challenge those around them to acknowledge prejudice. On Sunday, Murad Zagal, a resident of Jordan who volunteers with a group promoting HIV awareness, expressed his anger on Facebook. “Please don’t lecture me about Islam’s ‘true’ image that you think is being mutilated by terrorists who ‘don’t represent true Islam.’ Instead just show me,” he wrote. “The majority of Muslims are homophobic, there, I said it. Until that changes your claims of true Islam are delusional and hypocritical.” Bulos is a special correspondent. Ahmad al-Rubaye AFP/Getty Images IRAQI GOVERNMENT forces and elite counter-terrorism fighters patrol the outskirts of south Fallouja’s Shuhada neighborhood during a military operation, backed by air support from the U.S.-led coalition, to regain control of the area from Islamic State. Militant group suffers setbacks Islamic State is losing territory and doesn’t have sufficient personnel, U.S. says. By W.J. Hennigan and Brian Bennett WASHINGTON — The mass shooting in Florida comes as Islamic State forces are stretched thin, under financial strain and losing ground near strongholds in Iraq, Syria and Libya, U.S. officials say. A multi-pronged U.S. strategy has killed thousands of Islamic State fighters in Syria and Iraq, trimmed their ability to smuggle oil and move supplies, and steadily chipped away at the group’s self-declared caliphate in both countries. “The noose is tightening,” CIA Director John Brennan said in an interview Sunday with the Saudiowned Al Arabiya news channel. “They still maintain quite a bit of capability to carry out attacks in [Iraq and Syria] as well as beyond, so this is going to be a long, hard fight,” Brennan said. As the slaughter of 49 patrons at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., early Sunday made clear, the Obama administration is battling a multi-front war against Islamic State, with more American casualties on the home front than overseas. “Everybody is focused on the destruction of the caliphate,” said Christopher Harmer, a former Pentagon strategist now at the Institute for the Study of War, a nonpartisan public policy group in Washington. “But the more daunting task will be combating their ideology to inspire attacks, which is a virtually impossible problem to solve.” No evidence indicates that the Orlando gunman, New York-born Omar Mateen, had contact with or Mahmud Turkia AFP/Getty Images FORCES LOYAL to Libya’s U.N.-backed unity government wait on Friday at the entrance of Surt in the effort to recapture the city from Islamic State fighters. Militia fighters have reportedly taken over Surt’s port. support from Islamic State or any other terrorist group, officials said Monday. He professed allegiance to the leader of Islamic State in a 911 call during the shooting. He later died in a shootout with police. Mateen’s self-radicalization, apparently from extremist websites and other online material, is part of a trend that has confounded the Obama administration. “Even as we hit their leadership, even as we go after their infrastructure … one of the biggest challenges we are going to have is this kind of propaganda and perversions of Islam that you see generated on the Internet,” President Obama said Monday at the White House. The U.S. military portrays the domestic attacks, in part, as a sign of the growing pressure it is putting on Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. “We know they continue to look for opportunities to make spectacular, headline grabbing attacks, in part to make up for their losses on the battlefield in both Iraq and Syria,” Col. Christopher Garver, spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Baghdad, wrote in an email. But the evidence is scanty. Islamic State has urged followers since 2014, when it was at its peak, to carry out attacks in America, Europe and elsewhere. Nothing suggests that Mateen, or the couple who gunned down 14 people in San Bernardino in December, or the 18-year-old who stabbed four people at UC Merced last fall, did so to avenge Islamic State’s battlefield setbacks. Although the militants remain entrenched in cities and towns, by any measure the group’s losses are substantial and growing. Iraqi military forces, tribal fighters and Shiite Muslim militias are attempting to recapture Fallouja, an Islamic State stronghold west of Baghdad. Backed by more than 80 coalition airstrikes in the last month, the offensive has moved slowly closer to the city. At the same time, Islamic State has ramped up a deadly series of suicide bombings in Baghdad in an apparent attempt to rekindle sectarian strife between Sunnis and Shiites, and to destabilize the government. In Syria, rebel forces backed by coalition warplanes and about 300 U.S. advisors have encircled the border city of Manbij in an effort to cut the militants’ ability to move supplies or personnel in and out of Turkey. An estimated 3,500 fighters, mostly from Arab militias, are seeking to close the so-called Manbij Pocket, a 60-mile stretch of the border that long served as a conduit for the militants. The terrorists who carried out deadly attacks in Paris and Brussels since November had traveled from Raqqah, Islamic State’s selfdeclared capital in Syria, up to Manbij “and then out to the capitals where they organized their attacks,” Brett McGurk, Obama’s envoy to the U.S.-led coalition, told reporters Friday at the White House. “So we have to work with forces on the ground to close out this area,” he said. In Libya, militias aligned with the fledgling United Nations-backed unity government have retaken parts of Surt, which has been an Islamic State stronghold. In recent days, the militias reportedly took over the port area and began advancing on the city center. “What we see now is that they are also being pressured by various militia groups, and the armies that have been brought to bear against them,” Brennan said. “These efforts take time.” william.hennigan @latimes.com brian.bennett @latimes.com A4 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Japan cracks down on coerced sex in the porn industry By Jake Adelstein and Mari Yamamoto TOKYO — Japan’s pornography industry has come under greater scrutiny after Tokyo Metropolitan Police arrested executives of a wellknown talent agency on suspicion of coercing an actress to engage in sex on camera. Human rights groups had been calling for action for months. Police announced Monday that they had arrested the president of Marks Japan and two others on suspicion that they forced a woman into appearing in adult films by threatening to punish her financially. They also threatened to force her parents to pay for “contract violations” if necessary, police said. The woman, described as being in her 20s, reportedly signed with the company in 2009 as a fashion model and was forced to have sex on camera in more than 100 videos before being able to cancel her contract in 2014, according to police. The three men arrested, including the company president, Takashi Kozasu, were charged with breaking laws that regulate temporary employment agencies — specifically, rules that prevent the agencies from sending workers into assignments that violate public morals. The assignment that led to the charges was a film shoot in September 2013. In March, the Tokyo- based advocacy group Human Rights Now issued a report charging that Japan’s pornography industry, which is reputed to take in $4.4 billion annually, violated the human rights of women and girls by blackmailing them and coercing them into work they didn’t want to do. Shihoko Fujiwara, the founder of another group, the nonprofit Lighthouse: Center for Human Trafficking Victims, said that in the last year her group had received more than 100 complaints regarding forced participation in porn — and that the industry uses tactics similar to those of human traffickers. Ten percent of these complaints were from young men. Japan has a shortage of men in the adult film industry, with an estimated 70 men and several thousand women. “Victims are talked into signing a fashion-modeling contract,” Fujiwara said. “When they turn up on set they are informed that it is a porn shoot. They beg to quit or go home but are threatened to be charged millions of yen for penalties for contract violations and often end up giving in. The results are life devastating.” Marks Japan did not respond to queries about its practices or the charges. Adelstein and Yamamoto are special correspondents. Special correspondent Louis Krauss contributed to this report. FOR THE RECORD TV review: In the June 13 Calendar section, a review of the TV series “BrainDead” said Ronald Reagan has not been president since January 1988. He was president until January 1989. Aid in dying: In the June 9 California section, a chart listing facts about Oregon’s aid-in-dying law gave “46” as the median time between a patient’s first request for a lethal medication and his or her death. It should have said 46 days. Loving Day: In the June 13 California section, an article with reader stories about their multiracial families said the anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Loving vs. Virginia decision, which struck down a ban on interracial marriage, was this weekend. Because of a production error, the time element was incorrect. The anniversary was June 12. Electoral map: In the June 9 Section A, a map showing battleground states in the race to win 270 electoral votes for the presidency listed North Carolina as having six. North Carolina has15 electoral votes. 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By Robyn Dixon JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Oscar Pistorius is a depressed, “broken man” who shouldn’t go back to prison for the murder of his girlfriend, a psychologist told Pretoria’s High Court on Monday at a sentencing hearing for the South African athlete. Jonathan Scholtz, appearing for the defense, said the athlete told him he had overheard the sound of a young inmate being raped in prison, and later found out the victim killed himself. He had seen the inmate’s body hanging from his doorway. Prosecutor Gerrie Nel, who is seeking a sentence of at least 15 years, told the court that the incident never happened. Pistorius spent a year in the hospital wing of a Pretoria prison after being convicted of culpable homicide, South Africa’s term for a reckless but unintentional killing, for shooting his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, through the toilet cubicle door in his bathroom in 2013. Sentenced to five years, he was released in October and ordered to spend the remaining four years under house arrest at his uncle’s mansion. But the verdict was overturned last year and the athlete was convicted of murder. The trial prosecution and defense were sparring in court Monday on the first day of a sentencing hearing that is expected to last five days. Scholtz argued that Pistorius’ psychological condition had deteriorated sharply since 2014. He said the athlete was suffering from worsened depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and agoraphobia, a condition that can include a fear of enclosed spaces. Instead of being sent back to prison, he should be in a hospital, the psychologist testified. He added that Pistorius wasn’t psychologically fit to testify at the hearing, but that he was remorseful and expressed guilt about taking Steenkamp’s life. “Unfortunately, I feel his condition has worsened. He’s almost given up. One has to prompt him to get some semblance of hope for the future,” said Scholtz, adding that Pistorius was forgetful, would not remember things he had just said, and fell asleep during his interviews with the athlete. Nel countered that Pistorius had never expressed an appreciation of the fact that he had committed murder, not culpable homicide. “It can never be true re- morse. It’s feeling sorry for himself,” Nel said. He questioned why it was too stressful for Pistorius to testify in court, when he had recently appeared on a television network making comments about the trial. Pistorius testified that he opened fire in the belief an intruder was in the bathroom. The appeals court found that Pistorius must have known that firing four high-powered bullets would kill anyone in the cubicle and he was therefore guilty of murder. Pistorius won global admiration as the first double amputee to compete in the 2012 Olympic Games in London. “His fall from grace was enormous. Although he received support from many quarters, he was vilified by many,” Scholtz said. robyn.dixon@latimes.com Twitter: @RobynDixon_LAT Pakistan closes border crossing with Afghanistan after clashes Installation of a fence by the Islamabad government sparks a heavy exchange of fire, killing one guard. By Zulfiqar Ali PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pakistan closed its main border crossing with Afghanistan and imposed a de facto curfew Monday after overnight clashes, including an exchange of gunfire, between the countries’ border security forces. One Afghan guard was killed and 22 people were wounded, officials said. Residents of the border town of Landi Kotal in Pakistan said that after the security forces exchanged heavy fire, the local administration warned them early Monday to remain indoors. Pakistani authorities also closed the immigration and customs offices at Torkham, the main border crossing, and sent in reinforcements of paramilitary forces. The clashes began Sunday evening when Pakistani officials began installing a security fence about 30 yards inside their territory. The fence is part of increased security measures that Pakistan says will better regulate the movement of people between the countries and curb infiltration by militants and criminals. Gen. Zarawar Zahid, police chief of Nangarhar, Afghanistan, said one Afghan security officer was killed and six were wounded, the Associated Press reported. He said Pakistani forces opened fire after the Afghans asked them to stop working on the fence, which he claimed is located on no man’s land. Noorullah Shirzada AFP/Getty Images AN AFGHAN border policeman takes position after security forces traded gun- fire with Pakistani counterparts. Pakistan deployed paramilitary reinforcements. Afghanistan does not recognize the present boundary, the so-called Durand Line, as an international border, and has denounced Pakistan’s plans to erect a fence at the crossing. The Afghan government has called on Pakistan to ease some border controls to facilitate the movement of refugees. Pakistan hosts about 1.5 million documented Afghan refugees in addition to more than 1 million who do not have legal status. Pakistani officials said they had informed Afghan border police of the fence installation in advance. A statement from the Pakistani military accused Afghanistan of “unprovoked firing” into Pakistani territory. “Pakistani authorities informed Afghan officials about the gate installation on its own territory, but despite that Afghan border po- lice resorted to heavy firing,” said a Pakistani official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. The Torkham highway serves as the main trade route from Pakistan to Afghanistan and Central Asian states, and has also been the major supply line for U.S.-led coalition forces in Afghanistan. Hundreds of vehicles were stranded on both sides of the border Monday. Residents at Landi Kotal said they were breaking their daylong fast, customary during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, on Sunday when the firing began. “Shells were flying over residential quarters and people started fleeing their homes,” resident Sabir Shinwari said by phone. He said shells fired from the Afghan side caused partial damage to houses and that firing from both sides continued into the morning hours Monday. Officials said the movement of visitors from Afghanistan to Pakistan has drastically decreased since the Islamabad government began installing fences at Torkham about two months ago. The move came after a January attack on a university in Charsadda, in northern Pakistan, that left at least 21 people dead. Pakistan says militants involved in the attack entered the country from Afghanistan via Torkham. Between 1,000 and 2,000 travelers with visas have been entering Pakistan daily from Afghanistan, down from the 15,000 to 25,000 who crossed via Torkham previously, according to officials. Ali is a special correspondent. Times staff writer Shashank Bengali in Mumbai, India, contributed to this report. LOS ANGELES TIMES TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 Heavy Metal SM 844.LUX.CARD | luxurycard.com Luxury Card marks are property of Black Card LLC. BLACKCARD is a registered trademark used under license. Luxury Card products are issued by Barclays Bank Delaware. MasterCard and the MasterCard logo are registered trademarks of MasterCard International Incorporated. A5 A6 T U E S DAY , J U N E 14, 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M THE NATION Tony Dejak Associated Press “CLINTON’S negative coverage can be equated to millions of dollars in attack ads, with her on the receiving end,” said Thomas E. Patterson, a study author. Jim Cole Associated Press “TRUMP’S positive coverage was the equivalent of millions of dollars in ad buys in his favor,” Patterson said. He “exploited [the media’s] lust for riveting stories.” Trump’s ‘edge’ with the media News coverage early on greatly helped the Republican and hurt Clinton, a study finds By David Lauter WASHINGTON — News coverage of the early months of the presidential campaign strongly boosted Donald Trump’s bid and put Hillary Clinton at a disadvantage, according to a new study from Harvard University that is likely to add to the heavy volume of complaints that the media aided Trump’s rise. From the time he announced his run in mid-June 2015 to the end of the year, Trump received about onethird of all coverage of the Republican race among 17 candidates, according to the study by Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy that examined all stories on the campaign from eight major television and print news outlets, including The Times. And although Trump has loudly objected since early in his campaign to coverage he deemed unfair — he an- nounced Monday that he was banning the Washington Post from his campaign events, the latest in a line of more than half a dozen organizations to be frozen out — his coverage during 2015 was overwhelmingly favorable, the study found. Trump’s former Republican rivals as well as Democrats have griped for months that the news media played an outsize role in helping Trump secure the nomination. Their objection has been that news outlets disproportionately covered him early in the contest, when candidates seek to gain exposure and establish themselves as viable contenders. But the problem was not that news media actively favored Trump, wrote the study’s principal author, Thomas E. Patterson, a professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School, who for many years has studied the intersection of the press and politics. Instead, reporters did what they naturally do: look for stories about subjects that are new, different and unexpected. Trump fit that bill precisely and knew how to take advantage. He “exploited their lust for riveting stories,” Patterson wrote of the news media. “The politics of outrage was his edge, and the press became his dependable, if unwitting, ally.” The coverage Trump received was about twice the amount devoted to Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor who was briefly the GOP front-runner. Two other leading Republican candidates, Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas, each received slightly less coverage than Bush. Just in the eight outlets studied, the exposure Trump received during those early months would have cost about $55 million in advertising to obtain, the study found — outpacing Bush by just under $20 million. Because most of the cov- erage during those months focused on the campaign itself and presented Trump as gaining in polls, drawing large crowds and exciting his supporters, it was overwhelmingly positive in tone. Across the eight outlets studied — the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, CBS, NBC and Fox News — neutral or positive stories about Trump made up about two-thirds to threequarters of the total, according to the study, which employed Media Tenor, a company that collects and codes news stories to analyze the content of the coverage. The Democratic race had a different pattern. Not only was coverage significantly less, but, more notable, stories about Clinton overwhelmingly took a negative tone. In contrast with every other major candidate, the majority of stories about Clinton were negative in all but one month in 2015. The exception was October, when Vice President Joe Biden announced he would not run for the nomination and Clinton dominated her first debate with Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and held her own in 11 hours of grilling from a congressional committee investigating the terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya. Fox News stood out for the most consistently negative coverage of the Democratic front-runner, but across the board, each of the eight news sources published more negative than positive or neutral stories about Clinton during the year, the study found. Part of the reason for the negative tone was that a higher share of stories about Clinton dealt with her record and positions on issues than with the campaign horse race. The record and issue coverage accentuated her problems, the study found. At the same time, the horse race stories tended to focus on her losing ground in polls. “Whereas media coverage helped build up Trump, it helped tear down Clinton,” Patterson wrote. “Trump’s positive coverage was the equivalent of millions of dollars in ad buys in his favor, whereas Clinton’s negative coverage can be equated to millions of dollars in attack ads, with her on the receiving end.” Sanders received relatively little coverage at first, but the volume grew over time, and the overall mix was more positive than for any other candidate, the study found. The Vermont senator often complained that stories about him mostly focused on the campaign horse race and not on the issues he raised, but that may have helped him, Patterson noted: The horse race stories mostly fit into a narrative of Sanders “gaining ground,” which almost always presents a candidate in a positive light. david.lauter@latimes.com Case probes murky chapter in Chile’s past Decades after national hero was shot dead, his accused killer goes on trial — in Florida. By Les Neuhaus ORLANDO, Fla. — In the bloody days after a military coup in Chile, a folk singer and poet named Victor Jara was marched to a soccer arena in the nation’s capital, where he was held for days in the dark tunnels of the National Stadium. Eventually he was shot — 44 times in all. Jara’s wife was later summoned to the morgue in Santiago and asked to identify her husband. Decades later, the man accused of killing Jara — whose music, words and fate long ago cemented his status as a national hero — appeared Monday in a Florida courtroom, where a murky chapter in Chile’s history is being resurrected. Pedro Pablo Barrientos Nunez was indicted along with eight retired Chilean military officials four years ago in the folk singer’s 1973 death but has never been extradited to Chile to stand trial. Now Jara’s family has forced Barrientos into a U.S. federal courtroom, where he will face civil accusations that he was the gunman who killed the singer. An eight-person jury will decide whether he’s guilty or innocent, though he cannot be imprisoned in the U.S., even if found guilty. He can be found liable only for damages. Jury selection began Monday. “The importance of this case is twofold: Up to this point nobody has been held accountable in the murder of Victor Jara,” said Dixon Osburn, an attorney and executive director of the Center for Justice and Accountability, which — along with a New York-based law firm — is representing Jara’s widow. “And it will be a clear attempt to pull back the veil on what happened at the stadium in Chile during those days — and that has incredible importance to the people of Chile.” “It is our belief that Barrientos was the triggerman,” Osburn said. Barrientos, who moved to the U.S. in 1989, lives in Daytona Beach, Fla. Walking with a cane and assisted by her daughter, Jara’s 89-year-old widow, Joan Jara, took the witness stand Monday and talked about her husband’s final days. “I was very, very afraid for him because his life had been threatened so much,” she said. “My life was cut in two, and my children’s.” Mark Beckett, another attorney representing Jara’s survivors, said he would call Chilean civilians who lived through the coup and army conscripts who heard the screams and the gunshots, and who were forced to help carry bodies out of the stadium. “The conscripts will tes- Associated Press VICTOR JARA’S poems and songs struck a chord with his countrymen and influenced musicians such as Joan Baez and Bruce Springsteen. tify that Barrientos bragged about shooting Victor Jara in the head and showing off the gun he used to do it with,” he told the jury. Jara, whose poems and songs about the common man struck a chord with his countrymen and influenced musicians including Joan Baez and Bruce Springsteen, was rounded up at a time when thousands suspected of having communist affiliations were being hauled off to jail in the first few days of the CIA-backed military coup that ousted Socialist President Salvador Allende, as Gen. Augusto Pinochet began his 17-year reign of terror. Rather than surrender, Allende shot himself. But what exactly happened to Jara in his final hours has remained a mystery for decades. “The last time I saw my husband, we were sitting in our living room, listening to the radio as a brutal military dictatorship took over Chile,” Joan Jara said in a statement before the trial began. “More than 40 years later, my daughters and I are still seeking justice. “The importance of this trial does not end with my family, but it extends to all who have spent so many decades searching for answers about their loved ones who were tortured, disappeared or killed at the hand of the Pinochet regime.” The accused killer’s back story is nearly as murky. Though he was indicted in Chile in connection with Jara’s death, it’s unclear whether a formal extradition request was ever filed and, if so, what became of it. “As a matter of policy, we generally do not comment on extradition-related matters,” Peter Carr, a spokesman for the criminal division of the U.S. Justice Department, said in an email. Naomi Roht-Arriaza, a professor at the UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco and an expert in international human rights law, said the two nations haven’t ratified a new extradition treaty since 1900. She said a new one was finally drafted in 2013, and it passed through the Chilean legislature the following year. But the same draft has sat in the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee untouched, she said. “Nobody has any idea when it will be pushed out of the Foreign Relations Committee,” she told The Times. “They’ve been extraordinarily slow in getting things like this done…. There’s no reason why that’s sitting there for two years. It’s crazy.” Roht-Arriaza, who wrote a book titled “The Pinochet Effect: Transnational Justice in the Age of Human Rights,” said the Justice Department could be hamstrung by the treaty ordeal, unable to accomplish anything until the new extradition treaty is approved. She also noted that Chile, to some degree, has changed the way it deals with these cases — by not ignoring them anymore. “A lot of Barrientos’ codefendants have been prosecuted,” she said. “The fact that he escaped and has lived in the U.S. rankles a lot of Chileans.” While he was being held at the soccer stadium, where thousands of others were reportedly beaten, tortured or killed, Jara is said to have written a poem about the violence and chaos he was witnessing. It was later smuggled out into the city. “You song, you come out so poorly, when I have to sing of the terror,” he wrote. Saying the authorities carried out their actions with precision, he wrote: “Blood is like medals for them. Slaughter is an act of heroism.” Neuhaus is a special correspondent. L AT I ME S . CO M W S CE Calderon pleads guilty [Calderon, from A1] as a witness. “This closes a sad chapter in the Senate’s history,” De León said in a statement Monday. “We move on.” Although the guilty plea spares Ron Calderon the possibility of a jury convicting him and the harsh punishment that would have followed, he is almost certain to be given a lengthy prison sentence. Under the terms of the deal, prosecutors agreed only to request that U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder sentence him to no more than 70 months behind bars — the low end of what sentencing guidelines suggest. His brother, meanwhile, is expected to receive about a year in prison. Along with a guilty plea for mail fraud, the deal filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles calls on Ron Calderon not to contest any of the other allegations prosecutors leveled against him in a 2014 indictment. Although a mail fraud charge sounds somewhat innocuous, included within it are an array of allegations that Calderon solicited and received bribes for himself and his children. For example, Calderon, 58, admitted that he pressured the owner of a Long Beach hospital to hire his son as a paid summer intern in exchange for pushing legislation in Sacramento that would have benefited the man. Similarly, Calderon acknowledged he agreed to push for a state law that would have provided a tax break for producers of smaller-scale, independent films. He made the legislative moves on behalf of men he believed were film executives, but who were actually undercover FBI agents. In return, Calderon demanded that his daughter be put on one man’s payroll for a fabricated job and that the supposed executives send a $25,000 check to an organization run by Tom Calderon. The brothers used the organization as a front to enrich themselves, the plea agreement said. T U E SDAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 Supreme Court rejects Samoans’ citizenship appeal By David G. Savage Rich Pedroncelli Associated Press FORMER STATE Sen. Ronald Calderon pleaded guilty to accepting tens of thou- sands of dollars in bribes from undercover FBI agents and a hospital executive. Ron Calderon’s attorney, Mark Geragos, had steadfastly declared his client’s innocence and vowed to beat the charges. He previously described the case as “the definition of entrapment” — a reference to work the FBI agents did to lure Calderon in — and said the alleged offenses had been “manufactured by the government at the cost of millions of dollars to the taxpayer.” Geragos could not be reached for comment Monday. The plea agreements mark the downfall of a political dynasty in California that saw members of the same L.A. County family wield power in the Capitol for more than three decades. One or more Calderons have been part of the state Legislature since the 1982 election of Charles Calderon, a Democrat from Whittier and brother to Ronald and Tom. “It’s a huge fall from power for the family because they were riding the crest,” said Jaime A. Regalado, emeritus professor of political science at Cal State L.A. “It’s from the top of the mountain to the deepest valley.” Charles Calderon, who lost a race for Superior Court judge in 2014 after his brothers’ indictment, at one time was the Senate majority leader. He helped elect his son, Ian Calderon, to the Assembly in 2012. Ian Calderon distanced himself from his uncles after their indictment and is the last remaining family member in state office. Neither Charles nor Ian were charged — or implicated — in the criminal scandal. Playing musical chairs, Tom Calderon served in the Assembly from 1998 to 2002, when Ron Calderon was elected to the Assembly. Ron jumped to the Senate four years later, earning a reputation as a moderate vote for business. After his indictment, he was suspended with pay for the last eight months of his term in office, which ended in November 2014. The Calderons all were skilled at political fundraising: The family raised nearly $15 million in contributions for dozens of political committees they controlled since 2000, The Times has reported. Much of the fundraising took place at lavish resorts where family members liked to golf. Family members also leveraged their power to gain important committee chairmanships. Until his legal troubles began, Ron Calderon was chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee. Tom Calderon was also able to benefit from his family name to obtain a lucrative consulting contract with the Central Basin Municipal Water District, which serves 2 million people in southeast Los Angeles County. Tom Calderon was paid to advise the district when his brother was in the Senate. Ian Calderon has won reelection once and is running again this year. By distancing himself from his uncles and raising funds for a political reform measure on this month’s ballot, the youngest Calderon has shown signs he may be able to survive the fallout from the scandal that engulfed his relatives, according to Jack Pitney, a professor of political science at Claremont McKenna College. “Family members once succeeded because of the family name,” Pitney said. “Ian Calderon is succeeding despite the family name.” The Calderons were two in a handful of current and former legislators to face criminal charges in 2014. Former Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco) was sentenced in February to five years in prison for doing political favors in exchange for campaign cash, and former Sen. Roderick D. Wright (D-Inglewood) was found guilty of lying about living in his district. “It’s the end of a chapter,” Bob Stern, an attorney who co-wrote the state’s political reform laws, said of Ron Calderon’s plea. “The Legislature suffered a black eye.” joel.rubin@latimes.com Twitter:@joelrubin patrick.mcgreevy @latimes.com Twitter: @mcgreevy99 A7 WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday turned down an appeal from American Samoans who said they deserved the right to be U.S. citizens at birth. The court’s action leaves in place a law adopted in1900 that says people born in American Samoa will be considered “nationals” who owe allegiance to the United States, but not citizens with the right to vote and hold public office. “We’re obviously very disappointed. This means there will be many Samoans living in California, including veterans, who will not be able to vote in November,” said Neil Weare, a civil rights lawyer and president of We the People Project, which sponsored the lawsuit brought by the Samoan Federation of America, based in Carson. Acting without comment, the justices refused to review a U.S. appeals court ruling that said it is up to Congress, not the courts, to change the legal status of American Samoans. Currently all people born in the 50 states and the other U.S. territories, including Guam and Puerto Rico, become U.S. citizens at birth. The lawsuit brought by five Samoan plaintiffs pointed to the 14th Amendment, which declares that all people “born or naturalized in the United States” shall be American citizens. In the early 1900s, however, the Supreme Court ruled that people in the newly acquired U.S. territories were not entitled to all the constitutional rights of citizens. In 1901, Justice Henry Brown said the “development of the American empire” could be set back by the “annexation of distant possessions,” which are “inhabited by alien races.” During the 20th century, Congress extended citizenship rights to the people of the other territories, except for the people of American Samoa. The timing of the appeal may have played a role in its dismissal. Since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in February, the eight justices have granted review of only a few new cases, and most of those arose because the lower courts had split on an issue of law. On Monday, the court said it had denied review in more than 100 appeals, including Tuana vs. United States, the Samoans’ case. No new cases won a review. Also Monday, the court left in place the Obama administration’s anti-pollution rules that require power plants to sharply restrict emissions of mercury and other toxic chemicals. The justices turned away an appeal from Michigan and 19 other Republican-led states, which contended the rules were too costly and illegal. Last year, Scalia spoke for a 5-4 ruling that rebuked the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to conduct a cost-benefit analysis before publishing the long-delayed rules. That decision, however, stopped short of striking down the rules. This year, the EPA published its cost-benefit analysis. Michigan’s attorney general appealed, arguing the rules should be put on hold while further legal challenges go forward. But the court said Monday that it would not hear the latest appeal in Michigan vs. EPA. “Today, millions of American families and children can breathe easier knowing that these lifesaving limits on toxic pollution are intact,” said Vickie Patton, general counsel for the Environmental Defense Fund. david.savage@latimes.com You’re Invited to a Free Diabetic Dinner Event Stunning Research now suggests Type II Diabetes can begin to be REVERSED In As Little As 1 WEEK. Topics Include: FREE ADMISSION & FREE GOURMET MEAL: • Common reasons diabetics get worse with time. • A unique clinical approach that allows the diabetes to reverse. • Is your treatment causing you to get worse over time? • Common drugs that may cause you to actually get worse. Culver City Lyfe Kitchen 9540 W. 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An outpouring of love, grief The victims, who came from all over the country, are remembered as kind and charismatic. By Sarah Parvini It was Latin night at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla. The DJ played reggae. Club-goers danced against the backdrop of purple and blue lights, sipping their drinks as they swayed. Then, just after 2 a.m. Sunday, a gunman opened fire and sprayed bullets throughout the club. Fortynine people were killed and more than 50 others were wounded in the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history. The victims came from all over the country, from Hawaii to New York. A theme park employee “without a mean side.” A protector and confidant. A charismatic singer. Many of the victims were Latino. At least three Mexican citizens were among those killed, Mexican authorities confirmed Monday; more than half were of Puerto Rican descent, Puerto Rican government officials said. Some dreamed of becoming emergency medical technicians; others, photographers and nurses. Their mothers waited for them at home and left food for them in case they were hungry when they returned, only to learn later they would never speak to their children again. Amanda Alvear went to Pulse on Saturday night to dance with her friends. Gay and lesbian clubs were among her favorites because she felt safe to be herself, her family said. The Polk County, Fla., native had reshaped herself over two years, shedding 180 pounds with the help of gastric bypass surgery and daily workouts. She proudly documented her transformation with her phone. “Can you tell I look better? Can you tell I look cuter?” she would tease her brother. The 25-year-old was a graduate of Ridge Community High School in Davenport, Fla., and worked as a pharmacy technician. She planned to be a nurse. “People got caught in her wake,” her brother, Brian Alvear, said. “Whatever she was doing, that’s what they were going to do and have fun doing it.” She also loved to take selfies. In a Snapchat video posted by one of her friends Sunday, Alvear is dancing to the beat of the music booming in the club. In a series of posts, she sipped her drink and toasted the people watching her feed. Her friends danced around her. But the next video set a different tone. Alvear held the camera close to her face, her brows furrowed and her eyes filled with confusion. “Shooting,” she said. Seventeen rounds fired off around her. Bang! Bang! Bang! It was her final post. Rosalie Ramos expected her son would come home hungry after a night of dancing at Pulse. She made a tomato and cheese dip and left it in the refrigerator for him. But her son, Stanley Almodovar III, a pharmacy technician, died in the shooting. He was hit three times — in the chest, stomach and the side — and died at Orlando Regional Medical Center. Ramos said her son was a happy man with a big heart. He often fussed with his hair, changing the style. It was dyed Saturday night. He would have turned 24 this month. THE VICTIMS AMANDA ALVEAR STANLEY ALMODOVAR III LUIS DANIEL WILSON-LEON In a video posted on Snapchat, Almodovar laughed and sang on his way to the club. Ramos said she wished she had the video to remember him by. Friends described Luis Daniel Wilson-Leon as a protector, confidant and hero. “We grew up in a really small town in Puerto Rico,” Daniel Gmys-Casiano said. Stanley Almodovar III, 23 Amanda Alvear, 25 Oscar A Aracena-Montero, 26 Rodolfo Ayala-Ayala, 33 Alejandro Barrios Martinez, 21 Martin Benitez Torres, 33 Antonio Davon Brown, 29 Darryl Roman Burt II, 29 Jonathan Antonio Camuy Vega, 24 Angel L. Candelario-Padro, 28 Simon Adrian Carrillo Fernandez, 31 Juan Chevez-Martinez, 25 Luis Daniel Conde, 39 Cory James Connell, 21 Tevin Eugene Crosby, 25 Franky Jimmy Dejesus Velazquez, 50 Deonka Deidra Drayton, 32 Leroy Valentin Fernandez, 25 Mercedez Marisol Flores, 26 Peter O. Gonzalez-Cruz, 22 Juan Ramon Guerrero, 22 Paul Terrell Henry, 41 Frank Hernandez, 27 Miguel Angel Honorato, 30 Javier Jorge-Reyes, 40 Jason Benjamin Josaphat, 19 Eddie Jamoldroy Justice, 30 Anthony Luis Laureanodisla, 25 Christopher Andrew Leinonen, 32 Brenda Lee Marquez McCool, 49 Jean Carlos Mendez Perez, 35 Akyra Monet Murray, 18 Kimberly Morris, 37 Jean C. Nives Rodriguez, 27 Luis Omar Ocasio-Capo, 20 Eric Ivan Ortiz-Rivera, 36 Joel Rayon Paniagua, 32 Enrique L. Rios Jr., 25 Juan P. Rivera Velazquez, 37 Yilmary Rodriguez Solivan, 24 Christopher Joseph Sanfeliz, 24 Xavier Emmanuel Serrano Rosado, 35 Gilberto Ramon Silva Menendez, 25 Edward Sotomayor Jr., 34 Shane Evan Tomlinson, 33 Luis S. Vielma, 22 Luis Daniel Wilson-Leon, 37 Jerald Arthur Wright, 31 One victim remains unidentified. “He was going to the same church that I was, and he was always the odd man out. He was bullied constantly. He was different. He would dress in black, wear long sideburns.” Gmys-Casiano said Wilson-Leon, 37, was the first person he ever told he was gay. He did not know that Wilson-Leon was too. Wilson-Leon moved to Vero Beach, Fla., soon after, where he quickly became manager of a shoe company and offered Gmys-Casiano a job when he also moved from Puerto Rico. Wilson-Leon had been with Jean Carlos Mendez Perez, 35, another fatality in the Pulse nightclub shooting, for about eight years. “He’s been dealing with hate all his life. We all have,” Gmys-Casiano said. “He never retaliated with hate. He was a very loving person. He was strong. He would stand to protect his friends.” Franky Jimmy Dejesus Velazquez moved from San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Orlando, where he worked as a visual merchandiser for Forever 21. On social media, relatives and friends remembered the 50-year-old as a loving person they could always turn to. One family member, Mahya Veray, posted a photo with Velazquez and said she was trying to not “fall prey to hate.” “They killed you out of hate for the freedom to be who you are and it makes me hurt inside because if there was anyone who always had a smile, who helped me … it was you,” she wrote. “Todavía no lo creo,” wrote Shiela De Jesus, another of Velazquez’s friends. “I still can’t believe it.” sarah.parvini@latimes.com Twitter: @sarahparvini Orlando Sentinel writers Stephen Hudak and Jason Ruiter contributed to this report. Some global reactions prompt cries of hypocrisy By Shashank Bengali MUMBAI, India — Many world leaders have rushed to express sadness and solidarity over the Orlando, Fla., gay nightclub massacre, including some whose countries have less-than-spotless records on gay rights. Social media posts by the leaders of Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and other countries where homosexuality or homosexual acts are criminalized have drawn withering reactions. In Afghanistan, where shooter Omar Mateen’s par- ents were born, President Ashraf Ghani said he was “praying for all those affected by this tragedy.” Some online commenters noted that Afghanistan is one of 13 countries in the world where homosexuality is punishable by death, according to the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Assn., or ILGA, an advocacy group. In Pakistan, where homosexuality also carries the death penalty, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said in a statement: “No innocent man, woman or child should ever feel afraid of being shot or killed for being who they are in a progressive and democratic society. “This is against every principle of pluralism, tolerance and humanity that we have been striving for.” Although capital punishment for gay people is rarely implemented in these countries, the laws have created a stigma surrounding homosexuality that forces many to stay in the closet or live in the shadows. In India, where sex “against the order of nature” is outlawed — including same-sex relations — Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was “shocked” by the shooting, in which 49 people died, along with Mateen. Critics quickly pounced on the statement, calling on Modi to introduce a bill to strike down the anti-gay law. The Indian law does not ban homosexuality and has led to few prosecutions since it was reinstated in 2013. But activists say it has commonly been used to harass and blackmail gay people. “If you’re sincere about your prayers for the Orlando victims, maybe you will tweet a message of support for the millions of similar LGBT people back home,” journalist Dhrubo Jyoti wrote in a letter to Modi in the Hindustan Times. Majority Muslim countries that are U.S. allies also rushed to express sympathy — including Saudi Arabia, where homosexuality is illegal under sharia, or Islamic law. Punishments for samesex relations in the kingdom include execution and chemical castration. In 2014, Saudi authorities sentenced a gay man who used Twitter to meet another man to three years in prison and 450 lashes. The Saudi government issued a statement Monday extending “its deepest condolences to the families and friends of the victims and to the people of the United States. We stand with the American people at this tragic time.” But experts noted that such statements from Arab states where homosexuality is criminalized — and widely seen as un-Islamic — were careful not to specify the nature of the Orlando club or who was targeted. shashank.bengali @latimes.com L AT I ME S . CO M S T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 A9 ORLANDO MASSACRE Alan Diaz Associated Press THE BODIES of two victims arrive at the Orange County medical examiner’s office in Orlando on Sunday. Omar Mateen killed 49 before he died in a shootout. Phelan M. Ebenhack Associated Press BRANDON SHUFORD waits near Pulse on the night of the shooting. It’s unclear how many of the injured were stranded without treatment during the standoff. Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times OFFICIALS EXAMINE the back of the nightclub building. Police punched holes in the cinder-block wall to reach bathrooms where the gunman and club-goers hid. A standoff, then a shootout [Night, from A1] ment official said agents also have obtained evidence that Mateen visited and perhaps scoped out Disney World in recent months. The official said it was clear from the evidence that Mateen’s visit involved more than tourism, but cautioned that agents may never learn fully whether he was casing Disney properties for an attack. Mateen, an American citizen born in New York to Afghan immigrants, was described by co-workers as a bigot who despised gays, blacks, women and Jews. His ex-wife said he was bipolar and abusive. His father said he grew furious when he recently saw men kissing. On Sunday he pulled into the Pulse parking lot about 2 a.m. It was last call on Latin Night, a popular event, where DJs on three stages played thumping reggaeton, merengue, salsa and hiphop. Mateen walked to the entrance in the balmy air with an AR-15-style assault weapon and a handgun he had purchased just days earlier, and started shooting. An offduty, uniformed police officer doing security for the club responded and they exchanged fire, officials said. But Mateen slipped into the club uninjured. Ivory McNeal, 28, and his friends were making their way through the crowd to the main bar when the shooting erupted just behind them by the front door. Within seconds, nearly everyone around him had been shot. The music — he thought it might have been Beyonce playing — abruptly stopped and people started running in all directions, some screaming, some falling, as MySpace MATEEN’S beliefs and practices were contradictory, and he had a shaky understanding of the difference between Sunni and Shiite Islam, authorities said. the bullets tore through the room — about three every second. The muzzle flashes lighted up the dark like a strobe light. McNeal’s friend Luis Ruiz, 33, would later say that Mateen was “pledging allegiance to Allah and calling people faggots.” Ruiz, a former soldier with a shaved head and dark beard, spent 15 years in the Army and served in Iraq. He sprinted across the bloody floor toward a patio. A woman running next to him was hit and fell. “Everyone was pushing each other to get out. I still don’t know how I wasn’t hit,” Ruiz said. McNeal rushed through a different door to the same patio while their friend Ariel Hermina sought shelter in a bathroom at the back of the club. Ruiz forced his way outside and saw people kicking through the fence that enclosed the patio. They managed to break an opening, and Ruiz tried to squeeze through it with dozens of others. In the scrum, he fell. The panicked crowd trampled right over him, the gunshots right behind them. He somehow got to his feet and, with an injured right leg, limped across the street to a 7-Eleven, where others were gathered, crying and calling out for friends still inside. Ruiz had been in combat in Iraq and only days earlier he had been watching YouTube videos of Islamic State fighters in the Middle East. Now, as he thought about Mateen yelling about Allah, he thought, “Wow, they’re here.” Back in the patio, McNeal took cover be- hind a planter with a big palm tree. “The shots kept going off, then all of a sudden it stopped,” McNeal said. He said he thought at the time that shooter was an angry boyfriend. He wondered whether the massacre was over. Then more shots rang out. He began texting friends. “They’re killing people,” he said he texted his exboyfriend and his cousin. He got puzzled replies. At some point shortly into the rampage, several Orlando police officers arrived and entered the building, Police Chief John Mina said. They immediately found themselves in a gun battle. Mina said they “forced him to retreat to the bathroom, where we believe he had several hostages.” The chief did not indicate exactly what time this occurred, but said the situation stabilized” at that point and the shooting stopped. “At that time we were able to save and rescue dozens and dozens of people who were injured or non-injured.” The officers apparently left the building and called SWAT. About 2:30 a.m., Mateen made two calls to 911, according to the FBI. The first time he hung up. He called again and talked briefly with a dispatcher before hanging up again. Then the dispatcher called him and spoke with him. During one or both of the last two calls, he pledged allegiance to Islamic State and proclaimed solidarity with the perpetrators of the Boston Marathon bombing and a Florida-born suicide bomber who blew himself up in Syria for Al Nusra Front, an enemy of Islamic State. As investigators would later learn, Mateen’s beliefs and practices presented a series of contradictions. The FBI had investigated him twice on suspicion of terrorist ties, but found no conclusive evidence that he had any; it even determined Mateen had a shaky understanding of the difference between Sunni and Shiite Islam, the religion’s two major denominations. Texts from one victim suggest he resumed his killing while the officers waited outside. Eddie Justice, 30, texted his mom at 2:06 a.m. saying he was trapped in a bathroom with a shooter loose in the building. At 2:39, he begged her to call police. “Call them mommy now.” Seconds later, he wrote the last text of his life: “He’s coming. … I’m going to die.” Over the next two hours, Mateen holed up in a bathroom and communicated with police, apparently over his cellphone. Mina said the shooter didn’t have any specific demands but made statements about explosives and “bomb vests.” Police requested a “bomb truck” at 4:10 a.m., according to scanner communications. By 5 a.m., fearing “loss of life was imminent,” Mina would later say, the police chief decided to breach the back wall to reach the men’s and women’s restrooms. At 5:05 a.m., SWAT officers ignited an explosive device, but it didn’t penetrate the cinder-block wall. They rushed to break it open with a BearCat armored vehicle. Dozens and dozens of people rushed out of one of the holes. At some point so did Mateen, with guns blazing. One officer took a shot to the head but was saved by his Kevlar helmet. Mateen fell in the barrage and died, the wall behind pocked with about 40 police bullet strikes. The three friends McNeal, Ruiz and Hermina reunited in the parking lot. McNeal had escaped early when police tore down the patio fence behind him. Hermina had holed up in a handicap stall in the bathroom that Mateen had not commandeered. He pulled the toilet off the floor to make room for more people and eventually made it out after police came in and said it was safe. They hugged and cried. “Seeing them I just felt a sense of relief,” Ruiz said. “We made it. I made it. But I was thinking there are people in there who didn’t make it.” Police and emergency personnel moved in to retrieve the bodies. The club was mostly silent now but for a haunting sound that has become the universal dirge played in the aftermath of mass shootings, a reminder of all the other lives that would soon be torn apart: cellphones buzzing for the departed. joe.mozingo@latimes.com david.cloud@latimes.com molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Mozingo reported from Los Angeles, Cloud from Washington and Hennessy-Fiske from Orlando. Times staff writer Brian Bennett in Washington and the Orlando Sentinel contributed to this report. A10 T U E S DAY , J UNE 14, 2 016 W S CE L ATI M E S . CO M ORLANDO MASSACRE Popular with hobbyists — and mass shooters Military-style rifles are a strong source of profit, even as sales of other firearms slump. By Laura J. Nelson and James Rufus Koren The military-style rifles used in some of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history, including Sunday’s massacre at a gay nightclub in Florida, have become increasingly popular in recent years among American consumers. The Colt AR-15 and similar models of semiautomatic rifles, which fire as fast as the shooter can pull the trigger, are a consistent source of profit for arms manufacturers, who have reported strong sales growth even as sales for other types of firearms have slumped or remained flat. But the weapons can be a financial liability too. In the wake of deadly shootings, several major investors for public employees, including funds that manage California teacher pensions and the University of California’s endowment, have distanced themselves financially from the makers of those rifles. Nearly every major arms company builds a version of the AR-15, which is a lightweight, portable rifle that can fire accurately at long ranges. The rifle has very little recoil, meaning it doesn’t kick after each shot, which allows for greater accuracy. “It stays on target, it’s very accurate, and it’s devastatingly lethal,” said Jay Wachtel, a retired Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent and a lecturer at Cal State Fullerton. “You don’t have to have an accurate hit in order to kill someone.” A federal law enforcement source said the .223caliber rifle used by 29-yearold Omar Mateen in the Orlando, Fla., massacre was an AR-15 variant made by Sig Sauer, a subsidiary of a German company. On its website, Sig Sauer says its AR-15style rifles are “gaining a reputation for revolutionary design, exceptional accuracy, engineered reliability and traditional craftsmanship.” Semiautomatic rifles fire one bullet each time the trigger is pulled. With parts that can be purchased legally, some rifles can be converted to automatic weapons, meaning holding down on the trigger releases a continuous stream of bullets. Still, from a well-trained shooter, experts say, semiautomatic fire can be more deadly than automatic fire, which is harder to control. The police have not said whether the rifle used in the Orlando attack had been modified. AR-15-style rifles, which typically sell for more than $1,200, can be purchased legally in most states. Some states, including California, limit the capacity of magazines that can be used with such rifles. Florida does not. The A in AR-15 stands for Armalite, the company that created its forefather, the M-16, in the late 1950s and sold the design to Colt. The M-16 was used by the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. Colt modified the design and released it to the civilian market in the 1960s as the AR-15. “When you’re into cars, you want the fastest and the sleekest,” Wachtel said. “If you’re into firearms, you want the most lethal. It had the aura of the military, so it became extremely popular.” During a 10-year federal ban on some assault-style weapons, manufacturers were forced to modify their designs in a way that made the guns less attractive to some consumers. Sales slumped. When the ban expired in 2004, gunmakers increased production of semiautomatic rifles. “It’s hard to keep making money if you only make basic hunting rifles, because people buy one or two and use them for a long time,” said Daniel Webster, director of the John Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research. “But these companies know their market. They know that gun guys like macho weapons, and that they’ll buy new products they don’t necessarily need.” These guns, dubbed “modern sporting rifles” by manufacturers, have been big sellers over the last few years. Between 2010 and 2014, sales grew at an annual rate of 28%, double the rate for all other types of firearms, ac- Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times SAN BERNARDINO sheriff’s deputies at the scene where two shooters were killed in a gun battle with police. The assailants in the December attack used AR-15-style weapons to kill 14 people and wound 22 others. A weapon of choice for mass shooters AR-15-style guns are the semiautomatic version of the fully automatic M-16 rifle used by the military. Produced by several manufacturers, they are used by shooting enthusiasts and police forces – and mass killers: Pulse nightclub Killed 49 (Florida, 2016) San Bernardino 14 (California, 2015) Umpqua Community College (Oregon, 2015) Wounded 53 22 9 9 Sandy Hook Elementary 27 (Connecticut, 2012) Aurora theater 2 12 (Colorado, 2012) 58 Source: Times reporting Kyle Kim Los Angeles Times Gunmakers’ stock performance after mass shootings S&P Sturm, Ruger & Co. San Bernardino Smith & Wesson Planned Parenthood Dec. 2, 2015 Nov. 27, 2015 16.03% 8.32% 7.41 7.55 0 –1.99 Nov. 24 Dec. 9 Umpqua Community College Oct. 1, 2015 0 0.5 0 Nov. 19 Dec. 4 Charleston church June 17, 2015 4.2% 2.78 9.2% 3.93 –1.29 0.16 0 Sept. 24 Oct. 8 June 10 June 24 Source: FactSet Research Systems. Graphics reporting by James Rufus Koren Armand Emamdjomeh Los Angeles Times cording to the gun conglomerate Remington Outdoor, citing figures from the National Shooting Sports Foundation. Although Remington Outdoor reported a $46-million drop in firearm sales overall last year, sales of its AR-15 style rifles were up more than $12 million. In 2014, the most recent year for which federal data are available, Remington said it made about 930,000 rifles, or about 28% of the 3.4 million rifles manufactured domestically that year. It’s unclear how many of those rifles were assault-style, because gun companies do not typically separate manufacturing figures from the broader rifle category in public reports. Analysts at the broker- FDIC INSURED GUARANTEED 4.65 % age and investment bank BB&T Capital Markets said in a report Monday that the Orlando rampage would probably lead to an increase in gun sales. Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said in an interview with CBS on Monday that she wanted to restore the federal assault weapons ban, a move that analysts predicted would prompt a rush to gun stores. After Adam Lanza stormed into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., and killed 20 children with an AR-15-style Website Doctor Is your website tired and sick? Don’t trash it - fix it! We cure problems and give face lifts. Free Estimate FDIC Insured 6 Month Term Webfour 310.446.1783 www.webfour.net VEHICLE LIEN SALE Thursday June 16, 2016 10am. Inspect 8:30am Cash Only! 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FDIC Insured to $250,000 per institution. New customers only. Rates available tor returning customers. Sun Cities is not a bank and checks are not made payable to Sun Cities, only the FDIC Insured bank you select. Sun Cities is a leader in locating superior insurance and banking products. Insurance products offered through SC Financial & Insurance Agency. rifle, one of California’s major public pension funds said it would divest from companies that manufactured assault-style weapons. The California State Teachers’ Retirement System quickly sold stock in arms makers Smith & Wesson and Sturm, Ruger & Co., but getting out of another gun investment with a direct tie to Sandy Hook proved trickier: $500 million in a private equity fund managed by a New York firm called Cerberus Capital Management. The $7.5-billion fund owned shares of Freedom Group, a conglomerate of gun manufacturers that included the company that produced Lanza’s rifle. Pension systems can easily sell stock in publicly traded companies. But it’s more complicated to get out of a private equity investment. Investors typically agree to let a firm manage their money for a decade. “You don’t have any right to force the [private equity firm] to sell the entire position or sell your interest,” said Timothy Spangler, a UCLA law professor who has worked with private equity firms. Days after the Newtown shooting, Cerberus announced it would sell the shares of the gun conglomerate, which has since become Remington Outdoor. But two years later, it had not found a buyer. Cerberus told investors that it would essentially buy them out of their shares if they wanted to divest from gun manufacturing. Sources familiar with that deal said the majority of fund participants took the offer. The University of California also was an investor in that fund, but sold its stake to another investor more than two years ago, UC spokeswoman Dianna Klein said. The university system also has sold stakes it held in Smith & Wesson and in a firearms distributor owned through a separate private equity investment. Not all investors cashed out of Remington when Cerberus offered. The San Francisco Employees’ Retirement System invested $20 million in the fund in 2006. Spokesman Norm Nickens said that the pension fund did not request that Cerberus buy it out and that it still has a financial interest in Remington. Sign up at latimes.com/HotProp L AT I ME S . CO M T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 A11 ORLANDO MASSACRE FBI revisiting prior investigations [FBI, from A1] and state law enforcement agencies to keep track of potential threats. Several months later, Mateen popped up on the FBI’s radar a second time as agents investigated Moner Mohammad Abusalha, a Florida man who had joined Al Nusra Front, an Al Qaeda affiliate in Syria. In May 2014, Abusalha blew up a truck packed with explosives, killing more than a dozen people and becoming the first American to carry out a suicide bombing in Syria. Again, FBI agents interviewed Mateen. He told them he had met Abusalha casually at a local mosque several years earlier. Again, the FBI concluded Mateen wasn’t a threat. Those vivid details and others emerged Monday as FBI officials scrambled to explain how two previous investigations of Mateen failed to prevent him from killing 49 people at a gay nightclub Sunday in Orlando, Fla., in the worst mass shooting in U.S. history. The bureau’s handling of Mateen’s case got a strong vote of support from President Obama after he was briefed by James B. Comey, the FBI director. “The FBI followed the procedures that they were supposed to and did a proper job,” Obama told reporters. As part of its current investigation, the FBI is seeking to determine whether Mateen scouted out other gay venues or other potential targets, including properties associated with Disney World, according to a senior U.S. law enforcement official briefed on the investigation. Agents believe he visited those locations in recent months, but cannot say for certain that he was evaluating them as potential targets, the official said. Former agents said investigators would be digging through Mateen’s cellphone and other electronic devices to look for GPS data, and would collect records from businesses and individuals who may have had contact with him. Comey, along with Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and Nick Rasmussen, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, will give a classified briefing to House members Tuesday in the first of what is likely to be an extended congressional inquiry into the shooting. While the FBI was reviewing its records of the two investigations to see whether agents missed any clues, senior officials said Monday that they didn’t know what else they could have done. “We will continue to look forward in this investigation, and backward,” Comey Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times FBI INVESTIGATORS outside the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. As an inquiry into the shooting continued Monday, FBI officials scrambled to explain how two previous investigations of the gunman, Omar Mateen, failed to prevent him from killing 49 people. Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ORLANDO police and FBI officials near the crime scene. The FBI is investigating whether Mateen scouted out other gay venues or other potential targets. told reporters at FBI headquarters. “We will leave no stone unturned. And we will work all day and all night to understand the path to that terrible night. We are also going to look hard at our own work to see if there is something we could have done differently,” he said. “So far, the honest answer is that I don’t think so. I don’t see anything in reviewing our work that our agents could have done differently.” Still, officials found one red flag that may prove important. During the 2014 investigation of Abusalha, the suicide bomber, FBI agents asked someone else they interviewed who else might become radicalized, a law enforcement official said Monday. The person singled out Mateen because he had mentioned watching videos featuring Anwar Awlaki, the American-born cleric who joined Al Qaeda and was killed in a 2011 drone strike in Yemen, the official said. Awlaki’s online sermons have inspired a generation of terrorists. They include the Army major who shot and killed 13 people at Ft. Hood, Texas, in 2009, and the couple who shot and killed 14 people in San Bernardino in December. But the individual added that Mateen had since settled down, gotten married and was holding a steady job. In other words, he told agents that he didn’t think Mateen was still a threat. Mateen was not the first “known wolf,” the term analysts use for a person who passes an investigation and then becomes a terrorist. The latest tragedy highlights the challenges authorities face in trying to predict when noxious speech shifts to deadly action. Authorities had investigated the Ft. Hood killer before his rampage, and had interviewed one of the brothers who planted bombs at the finish line of the Boston Marathon in 2013. One of the gunmen who tried to assault an exhibit featuring cartoon images of the prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas, in May 2015 also had been under FBI surveillance. FBI officials said they had found no evidence indicating Mateen had contact or support from Islamic State or any other terrorist group before Sunday’s attack. Indeed, he seemed to have a hodgepodge of motivations for embarking on the massacre. Thirty minutes into the shooting, Mateen called 911 and told the operator he was swearing allegiance to the leader of Islamic State, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, officials said. He then expressed solidarity with Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bombers, and to Abusalha, the Al Nusra Front suicide bomber. Neither the Tsarnaev brothers nor Abusalha had any affiliation with Islamic State. To add to the confusion, Al Nusra Front and Islamic State are fighting each other in Syria. Mateen claimed in 2013 that he had ties to Al Qaeda, a Sunni group, and to Hezbollah, a Shiite group that opposes Al Qaeda. The FBI investigation found no links to either group and agents concluded Mateen did not understand the difference between Sunni and Shiite Islam, the religion’s two major denominations, a U.S. law enforcement official said. Mateen’s lack of rigid ideology and his affection for terrorist groups that are at odds with one another suggest he was posturing or seeking an excuse to commit mass murder, experts said. “The guy seems to be all over the place,” said Ali Soufan, a former FBI agent who worked on terrorism cases and now runs a security consulting firm in New York. “This profile is about someone who is violent, mentally unstable, a wife beater — this is all part of a picture that the investigators have to look at,” Soufan said. del.wilber@latimes.com brian.bennett@latimes.com How Clinton, Trump would combat terrorism [Candidates, from A1] we allowed his family to come here.” His unrestrained broadsides on immigrants, Muslim nations, even the motivations of President Obama — at one point Trump seemed to question whether the president had terrorist affiliations — defied, as usual, political convention. Clinton delivered a nuanced speech with multiple policy proposals, emphasizing the need for the country to unite and avoid scapegoating Muslims. “Our open, diverse society is an asset in the struggle against terrorism, not a liability,” she said, while warning that installing an unsteady hand with xenophobic tendencies in the White House is among the most dangerous things voters could do. She mentioned no names. The day highlighted approaches, on style and substance, so starkly opposed that at times the candidates seemed to be coming from different planets. It all reflected the nation’s deep divisions on the national security and gun safety concerns likely to dominate the election, as well as the new normal in political discourse. Trump accused Clinton — her name came up at least 19 times in his address — of mismanagement, political correctness and designing an Obama administration immigration policy culpable for the killings in San Bernardino and now Orlando. He appeared to expand his proposed ban on Muslims entering the country to an even bigger group of people, those from any “areas of the world where there’s a proven history of terrorism” against the U.S. and its allies. “Why does Hillary Clinton want to bring people here — in vast numbers — who reject our values?” Trump asked, citing no evidence that Clinton wants to do so. He also suggested that Clinton, who enjoys broad support from LGBT groups, is no friend of gays. “Ask yourself: Who is really the friend of women and the LGBT community?” Trump said. “Donald Trump with actions, or Hillary Clinton with her words? Clinton wants to allow radical Islamic terrorists to pour into our country — they enslave women, and they murder gays.” The aggressiveness of Trump’s remarks at a New Hampshire college were overshadowed only by his comments earlier in the day when he skewered Clinton and Obama on the cable news networks. He said on Fox News that either Obama was not smart and tough enough for the job or “he’s got something else in mind.… And the something else in mind — you know, people can’t believe it. People cannot, they cannot believe that President Obama is acting the way he acts and can’t even mention the words ‘radical Islamic terrorism.’ There’s something going on. It’s inconceivable. There’s something going on.” The tone of the accusation and the unspecified insinuations harked back to Trump’s time as the most prominent member of the so-called birther movement, those who questioned whether Obama was born in the U.S. He was. Clinton’s response since Orlando has been measured. Her campaign is confident that swing voters are going to perceive Trump as unhinged and unstable. For her, the shooting was a time to recognize the stakes of taking a gamble on a volatile personality. In Cleveland, she delivered a speech much like the ones she gave after the shootings last fall in Paris and San Bernardino, in which she soberly laid out a plan for fighting Islamic State and sought to rally voters to embrace, not resist, diversity in these moments. As in the other addresses, she laid out her bona fides for confronting such threats with a plan focused on engaging U.S. allies, boosting the resources of local law enforcement to combat homegrown terrorism and toughening gun laws that allowed shooters to get the assault weapons used in their attacks. “Whatever we learn about this killer and his motives in the days ahead, we know already the barbarity we face from radical jihadists is profound,” Clinton said. “The attack in Orlando makes it even more clear we cannot contain this threat. We must defeat it.” Clinton warned that the type of Muslim ban Trump has proposed “is wrong. It is also dangerous. It plays right into the terrorists’ hands.” The only place Clinton yielded to Trump, ever so slightly, was in the language she used to describe terrorists. She referred in a television interview to “radical Islamism,” a rhetorical shift for her campaign and one the White House is refusing to make amid concerns that the term needlessly complicates U.S. relationships with Islamic allies such as Saudi Arabia and underscores the misguided idea pushed by Islamic State and other extremists that the West is fighting a war against all of the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims. Trump took credit for the Clinton shift, but then went on to declare his rival “still has no clue what radical Islam is.” Trump and Clinton talked extensively about failures in U.S. gun law enabling the Orlando killer, underscoring how once again 2nd Amendment concerns will play big in the election. Their comments reflected how little common ground Americans have been able to find on the issue, even as gun violence escalates and the weapons used in large-scale attacks are often legally obtained. “If the FBI is watching you for suspected terrorist links, you shouldn’t be able to just go buy a gun with no questions asked,” Clinton said. “You shouldn’t be able to exploit loopholes and evade criminal background checks by buying online or at a gun show.” Trump, by contrast, bo- asted of his support from the National Rifle Assn. He has suggested the attack could have been averted — or minimized — if there had been guns available in the Orlando nightclub to defend its patrons. Clinton, he said, “wants to take away Americans’ guns, then admit the very people who want to slaughter us.” The candidates did attempt to take some semblance of a break from politics in deference to the victims of Orlando and their families. Clinton postponed fundraisers Monday and a major campaign event with Obama in Wisconsin on Wednesday, their first scheduled rally together since he endorsed her. It was moved to next week. Trump canceled his Monday evening campaign rally. But Clinton’s declaration at the top of her address Monday that “today is not a day for politics” hardly held true. There was no avoiding them. noah.bierman @latimes.com Twitter: @noahbierman evan.halper@latimes.com Twitter: @evanhalper Bierman reported from Manchester, N.H., and Halper from Cleveland. A12 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /O P I N I O N OPINION EDITORIALS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LETTERS --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Trump’s innuendo a new low His bizarre suggestion that Obama is standing down in the face of Islamic terrorism is a smear. D onald Trump, the loose cannon who would be president, hinted Monday that President Obama might be complicit in terror attacks by Islamic extremists, including Sunday’s bloodbath in Orlando, Fla. That accusation by innuendo marks a new low for Trump, who along with his surrogates is engaged in a smear campaign reminiscent of the dark days of McCarthyism. Trump — who made hay during Obama’s 2012 reelection campaign by pushing “birther” challenges to Obama’s citizenship — told television interviewers Monday that Obama may be willfully standing down in the face of terror plots by Islamic radicals, lending credence to a conspiracy theory pushed by folks who stubbornly cling to the fiction that the president is a Kenyan-born Muslim. “Look, we’re led by a man that either is not tough, not smart, or he’s got something else in mind,” Trump said on Fox News. “And the something else in mind — you know, people can’t believe it. People cannot, they cannot believe that President Obama is acting the way he acts and can’t even mention the words ‘radical Islamic terrorism.’ There’s something going on. It’s inconceivable. There’s something going on.” What’s inconceivable is Trump suggesting Obama may be endangering the people he has sworn to protect based on nothing more than the chatter of political lunatics. This isn’t the first time Trump has used innuendo to introduce personal smears as though he’s a small-town gossip. You can almost hear him whisper, “I’m not saying this, but others are talking …” before channeling the kind of garbage that lives out on the political fringes. Trump doubled down on his anti-Muslim hate-mongering in a speech in New Hampshire in which he warned that “radical Islam is coming” and pledged to ban immigration from areas of the world in which anti-U.S or anti-European terrorism may arise. Never mind that the shooter in Orlando was a native New Yorker. In Trump’s view, the government has no mechanism for keeping children of immigrants from radicalizing. So not only would he ban adherents of a major world religion for the acts of the few, he also indicts them for the imagined crimes of their unborn children. And he urged Muslim communities to “turn in the people who they know are bad — and they do know where they are,” implying Muslims are intentionally shielding terrorists. We’ve said before that Trump’s shootfrom-the-lip persona makes him unsuited for the presidency, and we’ll keep saying it right up until the election, when we hope he fades from the national stage and takes his repugnant intolerance with him. Yet we also fear his campaign has given currency to dangerously wrong ideas about race, religion and proper conduct of a civil society. More reasonable minds recognize those ideas as intellectually and morally bankrupt, and they should recognize the boastful messenger for what he is. A proactive war on poverty L os Angeles County provides the “safety net” for millions of residents who have fallen off the financial cliff due to personal catastrophes such as job loss, illness, accidents or just oppressive, persistent poverty. It’s a net that must be constantly mended and reinforced because so many other nets — those provided by the federal government, by private philanthropy and by an economy with plentiful manufacturing jobs — have been dropped or have unraveled. About a third of county residents worry about being pushed to the brink of hunger or homelessness, according to a survey conducted this year by UCLA's Luskin School of Public Affairs. Nearly half lack sufficient savings or assets to stay above poverty for even three months after losing a job. Meanwhile, nearly 3 out of 10 county residents are “underbanked,” meaning they don’t have checking or savings accounts or, even if they do, they still have to rely on payday lenders or check-cashing services to get by. That means a proportion of their earnings that ought to help build their savings goes instead to just financing their payments. And that, in turn, means more people falling off the cliff and into the net. What if the county, in addition to keeping its net in good repair, worked to keep so many people from approaching the edge of that financial cliff in the first place? Governments in other counties, including San Francisco, and in places such as Seattle and New York, have created financial empowerment offices that connect people living on the brink with services to help them build a savings cushion and develop economic savvy. Earlier this year, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors began studying a similar program here, to be coordinated by the county but funded in part by a grant from Citi Community Development and in part by the existing county Department of Consumer and Business Affairs budget. It’s a good idea, and the board should move forward with its plan and approve a two-year pilot Center for Financial Empowerment project Tuesday. This is wealth building, not wealth transfer. In some cases, it’s as simple as making people aware that they can keep thousands of dollars in their pockets by using the federal earned income tax credit and the new analogous state credit. In others, it’s a matter of connecting people with the coaching they need to create college funds or start and sustain small businesses. The county is uniquely positioned to coordinate services already available but not currently sufficiently known or accessible to people who need them. Getting more out of CURES L ike 48 other states, California has an online database that records all the prescriptions issued for potentially habit-forming or abuseable drugs, such as OxyContin and Ritalin. The hope is that the system will deter patients from “doctor shopping” to obtain excess quantities of a drug, and help authorities crack down on healthcare professionals who negligently — or cynically — prescribe pills on demand. With opioids and other prescription drugs accounting for more than half of the overdose deaths in the United States, curbing excess prescribing needs to be part of the effort to slow the epidemic of ODs. That’s one reason numerous states share information across state lines (but not, sadly, California’s). One study found that doctors in Ohio who consulted the state’s prescription database tended to change the amount of opioids they prescribed, typically to reduce or eliminate them. But as researchers have shown, most prescribers don’t consult drug databases when they’re not required to do so. That’s why Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) has proposed a bill requiring doctors and pharmacists to look up a patient’s prescription history on the state’s database, called CURES, before prescribing or dispensing a controlled substance to that patient for the first time, and again at least once every year that the patient continues to receive it. The bill (SB 482) passed the Senate last year but has yet to move in the Assembly, and a trade group for California doctors is opposing it (as it has with similar proposals in the past). One of the group’s main concerns is that the database isn’t ready for the added volume of inquiries the bill would generate; but if the bill did cause CURES traffic to surge, that would only show how badly the database has been underused. The association also argues that not all doctors are in a position to consult CURES, and that the system doesn’t sufficiently protect the privacy of prescribers or patients. A compromise seems within reach. It’s reasonable to hold off the mandate to consult CURES until the system can handle the extra volume, and to provide carefully tailored exemptions for some emergency-room physicians and others who can’t reasonably be expected to access the database — as long as the exemptions don’t create easy pathways for abuse. The privacy concerns, meanwhile, boil down to setting the right limits on how the CURES records can be used. With the alarming rise in prescriptiondrug overdose deaths, though, lawmakers need to finish the job they started in 2009. The database won’t truly serve the purpose for which it was created unless those who prescribe and dispense dangerous drugs check it routinely. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AND PUBLISHER Davan Maharaj News MANAGING EDITORS Marc Duvoisin, Lawrence Ingrassia DEPUTY MANAGING EDITORS Colin Crawford, Megan Garvey, Scott Kraft ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Christina Bellantoni, John Corrigan, Shelby Grad, Kim Murphy, Michael Whitley FOUNDED DECEMBER 4, 1881 Opinion Nicholas Goldberg EDITOR OF THE EDITORIAL PAGES Juliet Lapidos OP-ED AND SUNDAY OPINION EDITOR AT L.A. PRIDE on Sunday, many participants rifles. It doesn’t take military-style weapons with large magazines to hunt. The other sad thing is that there are mass killings almost every day in America and we are getting more numb so when 50 people are killed, we just shrug our shoulders and go back talking about trivial things. America is sinking to Trump’s level because we are letting a small number of greedy people keep us from doing the right thing on guns. Steve Werner Centennial, Colo. Sadness, then pride What hath Ralph Nader wrought? Re “ ‘An act of terror and an act of hate,’ ” June 13 Re “Spoiler alert,” Opinion, June 12 Richard Vogel Associated Press expressed support for the Orlando shooting victims. I am part of the LGBT community; which of those letters I associate with does not matter. Sunday morning’s massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., opened my now-watery eyes to a few things. After the shooting, I realized the magnitude to which our community’s members are so lovingly intertwined. The “that could’ve been me, a close friend or family member” thought would not seem to pass. The hurt I felt, however, proved those victims are family. On Sunday I bought a rainbow flag to fly for the first time as the smallest of gestures for those whose lives were taken. I’ve never felt such pride in being a part of this community. On Sunday I was given a new level of appreciation for our loving allies. They, in many ways, are just as much a part of the movement for widespread equality. On Sunday we cried. On Sunday we mourned. On Sunday we were angry. Today and tomorrow, we will continue to stand together, speak out and advance a loving movement that no amount of hate can tear down. Daniel Cowell Monrovia This tragic massacre is an act of domestic terrorism, not Islamic terrorism. It was a uniquely American act — a mass murder by an American citizen, a man born and educated in America. It will be said that it was Islamic State-inspired because the killer, one individual, pledged allegiance to the terrorist group. He could have just as easily been inspired by any number of America’s religious or political organizations that espouse bigotry. America cultivates discrimination very well on its own without outside help. Blaming this horrific tragedy on Islamic State is a convenient excuse that group will be only too happy to accept. But the sad truth is, there are many individuals who share those same intolerant views, own the lethal weaponry and possess the hatred to commit this act. We need to look inward, not outward. Janet Haislip Redlands :: The tragedy of the Orlando massacre is made worse by the reality that our nation seemingly has no will to do anything about it. There is no lack of ignorant, mentally unstable people in this world and there is no lack of armaments. We must address both to bring an end to this madness. We too often demonize those who are different from us. Ignorance, hate and mental illness know no boundaries. People who are easily influenced by extremist ideologies are more numerous than we care to admit and exist in every nation, religion, political persuasion, gender, race and sexual orientation. We need parents and leaders not only to condemn the violence but also to challenge the underlying ideologies that promote hate. We also need common-sense gun control. But don’t count on members of Congress putting aside their own ideological differences to do anything. It’s up to us to change hearts and minds. Stephen Newcomer West Hollywood Gun control: If not now, when? Re “Once again, this time in Orlando,” editorial, June 13 As a medical student at UCLA, I stand for healing and caring, and it breaks my heart that underregulated guns work against this by putting all of us in harm’s way. This month I huddled on the UCLA campus on lockdown. This weekend we heard that the worst gun massacre in U.S. history has happened in Orlando, where so many people lost a child, a friend, a partner. Police in Santa Monica may have narrowly averted a similar tragedy at Sunday’s L.A. gay pride parade. I encourage everyone to contact their representatives and ask them to support sensible gun legislation such as universal background checks and assault weapons bans and dedicate funds for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to conduct research on gun violence. Doing nothing in the face of this violence is a decision. Don’t let it be yours. Katrina Koslov Santa Monica :: In your editorial you say that “blood is on the hands of the National Rifle Assn. and its sycophants in Congress who have conspired to make this a more dangerous nation.” Do you actually believe that if all of the legal guns in the U.S. are taken away that this kind of terrorism would stop? I would like to remind you of the war on drugs, which has accomplished nothing. It has not been able to stop the flow of illegal drugs across our borders. Our borders are open to the flow of illegal contraband because of the demand. The same kind of demand for illegal guns would provide a flow of guns across our borders into the hands of terrorists and criminals. Robert Pecoraro Prescott, Ariz. :: If we don’t have the decency to pass reasonable gun regulations after another mass shooting, then we deserve someone like Donald Trump as president because we don’t have the courage to demand that something be done. The media and politicians wring their hands and talk a lot, and we put flowers and stuffed animals at the site of the killings and organize church vigils, but we do this over and over and we don’t vote in politicians who will stand up to the National Rifle Assn. and the gun industry and pass reasonable laws. There isn’t any reason for citizens to own assault Ralph Nader’s intelligence has never been in doubt, but his grip on reality has sometimes been a different matter. His criticism of the two-party system is valid, and I agree with it. But to say it’s not possible to split the vote in a way that helps an opposing candidate is absurd. Presidents can only do so much good and so much damage. I would put George W. Bush’s U.S. Supreme Court appointments during his two terms as president in the damage column — damage that could have been avoided if Nader had not insisted on running as a third-party candidate in 2000. I hope Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders doesn’t make the same mistake. Carmen Reid Santa Barbara :: When a person runs for president knowing he cannot win — understanding the potential of tipping the results in a direction he doesn’t even want or forcing the election into the House of Representatives — but nonetheless runs to make a political statement or for an ego massage, that is the definition of a spoiler. Donald J. Loundy Simi Valley The Bible as humanity’s diary Re “You’re reading the Bible wrong,” Opinion, June 10 Carel van Schaik and Kai Michel have an interesting premise, but they miss a major point. Yes, the Bible is a series of stories written to explain the natural world and the culture of the time, and it was changed or modified to fit new religious dogma (although comparing this to doing “what good scientists today would do” is a bit puzzling). So we have a diary that was written in the youth or perhaps adolescence of human existence, and then set in stone. Thus we should read the book as the fascinating diary of a young teenager and not literal wisdom for the ages. John Clement Arleta :: As a person who has attended church regularly my whole life, I was delighted to see this opinion piece about the Bible. The ideas expressed in it are not new, but I don’t see them expressed in most forums. I don’t have to see how many impossible things I can believe in my church, which voted to call ourselves progressive. The Bible was never meant to be seen as literal. The Bible is an important piece of Western culture. But belief in God is not dependent on belief that the Bible is a literal history. Lake Nofer Woodland Hills HOW TO WRITE TO US Please send letters to letters@latimes.com. For submission guidelines, see latimes.com/letters or call 1-800-LA TIMES, ext. 74511. L AT I ME S . CO M / O PI N I O N T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 A13 OP-ED Even the loathsome have rights By Ken White L ast week’s Gawker Media bankruptcy inspired online triumph. “What a beautiful day,” tweeted Hulk Hogan, whose $140-million invasion-of-privacy verdict —underwritten by hostile Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel — doomed Nick Denton’s snarky online empire. Most were less subtle. “Goodbye and good riddance to Gawker,” the New York Post sneered. It’s tempting to side with the gloaters; I’m as disgusted by Gawker as the next guy, and I’m not above feeling a frisson of glee when bad people face consequences for their actions. But schadenfreude isn’t a 1st Amendment value. From a legal and constitutional perspective, even Gawker haters should be troubled by its fate. Spite arose from partisan hostility to Gawker’s reliably left-of-center sensibilities. It was also a reaction to Gawker’s routine degradation of its targets, and to how sharply that behavior contrasts with Gawker’s progressive pieties. Gawker Media attacks anti-gay politicians and celebrates advances in gay rights. At the same time, its writers smugly and self-righteously out gay men. Recently, Gawker transmuted blackmail into clicks when it participated in a male escort’s extortion of a married executive from a rival media empire. Gawker also champions feminist values, particularly through its site Jezebel, even as it humiliates women for traffic. Gawker paid a young man to describe a sexual encounter with a candidate for U.S. Senate, including a critique of her pubic hair, because Gawker didn’t like her politics. A reliable critic of objectifying women out of one side of its mouth, Gawker publishes hacked and leaked nudes out of the other. Gawker offers nihilistic hypocrisy as clickbait. Observers were, then, rather skeptical that Gawker had principled journalistic reasons to publish Hulk Hogan’s sex tape. And the trial, far from rehabilitating Gawker’s reputation for professionalism or decency, soiled it further by dredging up unseemly episodes from the site’s past. “Blah, blah, blah,” a Gawker editor wrote in passing along a complaint from a young woman who was the subject of a stolen video, eagerly published for clicks, that may have depicted her rape. So, yes, Gawker got what was coming in a karmic sense. Nevertheless, when a jury verdict bankrupts a media company for what it has published, we ought to examine meticulously whether the company received due process, whether the court applied the correct 1st Amendment principles, whether the verdict was based on mere antipathy rather than law and fact, and whether the damages are proportionate to the alleged wrongdoing. The 1st Amendment does not allow courts to craft new ad hoc exceptions to free-speech principles when speech is sufficiently upsetting. Rather, courts must carefully determine whether particular speech falls into well-defined exceptions to the 1st Amendment, such as obscenity or fraud. Nor should we just assume that the judge and jury decided the case wisely, because most of our cherished free-speech rights have been recognized by appellate courts after judges and juries erred. The right for high school students to wear black armbands to protest the Vietnam War, the right to burn a flag, the right for Hustler magazine to satirize Jerry Falwell, the right for the New York Times to publish the Pentagon Papers without prior restraint, the requirement that public officials prove that journalists engaged in actual malice before winning a defamation case — all of these important rights arose from Supreme Court decisions correcting the mistakes of trial courts and juries. In short, we shouldn’t just assume that crushing bad people is just or defensible. We don’t need the 1st Amendment to defend popular speech, we need it to protect unpopular speech; our civic obligations are at their peak precisely when loathsome people are on the line. Devotion to the 1st Amendment should also provoke grave concerns about Thiel’s open-checkbook funding of Hogan’s lawsuit against Gawker. What Thiel did wasn’t illegal; he has free-speech rights too. The problem is that Thiel found a way to weaponize the brokenness of our legal system. Though Thiel crushed Gawker through victory, he might well have crushed it in defeat. Defending a civil suit, whatever its merits, is often a years-long pitched battle. Eventual vindication rarely comes with reimbursement of fees and costs, let alone compensation for the disruption and stress. Most victories are Pyrrhic. Few factors deter vengeance by litigation; one is that litigation is impossibly expensive, even for plaintiffs. A billionaire’s support eliminates that barrier and allows angry people to silence speakers they hate. That doesn’t mean we should stop the rich from funding causes they care about. It means that the cause of free speech requires us constantly to reevaluate our legal system and demand that the process of litigation itself cannot prove ruinous. Again, that’s true even when hated gossip-mongers are at the receiving end of that litigation. We owe this vigilance to ourselves — as the potential next targets — and to our free-speech heritage. Ken White is a criminal defense attorney and civil litigator at Brown White & Osborn LLP in Los Angeles. FOR THE RECORD California primary: A June 10 op-ed article on primary results said that Assemblyman Henry Perea of Fresno resigned to take a government relations job with Chevron. Perea went to work for the pharmaceutical industry. Timothy A. Clary AFP/Getty Images REPUBLICAN presidential candidate Donald Trump observed a moment of silence for the Orlando shooting victims. An Orlando conspiracy O By Jesse Walker n Monday morning, Donald Trump hinted that President Obama may have welcomed the slaughter of 49 clubgoers in Orlando, Fla. “He doesn’t get it, or he gets it better than anybody understands,” the presidential candidate said on Fox. “It’s one or the other.” He repeated the sentiment later in the segment, declaring that Obama “is not tough, not smart — or he’s got something else in mind.” Trump left it to his listeners to infer what that “something else” might be, but it’s not hard to see what he was implying. The man is already prone to saying things like “If President Obama’s goal had been to weaken America, he could not have done a better job.” This week, Trump just took it a step further. Perhaps, he suggested, that really is Obama’s goal. These comments were an off-the-cuff encapsulation of one of the core components of Trumpism: not just conspiracy theories — they’re rather common among politicians, even mainstream ones — but conspiracy theories of a particular kind. You can divide most of Trump’s conspiracy rhetoric into two categories. In the first, Trump tries to cast suspicion on his political rivals. The most infamous example of this was when he implied that Ted Cruz’s dad was mixed up with the JFK assassination, citing the National Enquirer as his source. Less flamboyantly, he has accused Cruz of stealing the Iowa caucuses Trump hinted that Obama welcomed the slaughter of 49 clubgoers. and he periodically suggests that the people who protest his rallies are paid to do so. The second category is more ideological. Trump at his core is a nationalist, and nationalists are especially likely to embrace Enemy Outside stories. In these tales, the conspirators are based outside the community’s gates; if they’re not out to conquer your country, they at least aim to subvert and outwit it. Listen to any Trump speech, and you’re likely to hear some version of this. China is plotting against us. Mexico is deliberately dumping its criminals on our side of the border. Syria’s refugees are a jihadist Trojan horse. Such stories are central to Trump’s worldview — and to his sales pitch. “I have great respect for China, but their leaders are too smart for our leaders,” he tells us. “Our leaders don’t have a clue.” That quote comes from his Super Tuesday victory speech, but he has said the same thing in countless ways on countless days: We’re being led by weaklings and naifs; I’ll be the tough, smart commander the nation needs. Vote for Trump! There is a tension here. Those weaklings and naifs, after all, are the same leaders who are supposed to be conniving Machiavellis when it comes to domestic politics — creating false-flag protests, stealing elections, rigging the game. Now, there are ways to resolve that tension without contradiction. Given his string of political victories, Trump can always shrug and say the conspiracy arrayed against him is simply inept. But the tension is there, and it bubbles up most obviously in Trump’s rhetoric about Obama. Half a decade ago, Trump leaped headfirst into birtherism. The birther story has taken several forms, but the usual upshot is that Obama was born in Africa, not Hawaii, and therefore has no right to be president. In other words, the president is foreign and concealing it; the man charged with defending American interests is not just metaphorically but literally un-American. It’s a horror movie on a grand political scale: “The call is coming from inside the White House!” On some days Trump’s Obama is a wily alien agent deliberately undermining the country. Other days, he’s a stupid dupe who can’t handle the foreign forces assembled against us. And if you catch Trump at the right moment, he might bring up both accusations at once: “He doesn’t get it, or he gets it better than anybody understands. It’s one or the other.” Jesse Walker is books editor of Reason magazine and author of “The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory.” After terror, politicians on autopilot JONAH GOLDBERG F riedrich Nietzsche, that great sage of despair, asked, “What if some day or night a demon were to steal into your loneliest loneliness and say to you: ‘This life as you now live it and have lived it you will have to live once again and innumerable times again; and there will be nothing new in it…?’ ” Nietzsche called this idea of eternal recurrence “the heaviest weight.” In the aftermath of the slaughter in Orlando, Fla., where 49 people were killed and even more injured during an attack early Sunday on a gay nightclub, it seems many are all too eager to carry a similar load. As soon as news broke, pundits and politicians returned to dog-eared scripts to repeat lines memorized long ago. President Obama, who has spent his presidency yearning for the reality he wants, rather than the one he has, once again downplayed any suggestion that this was another battle in the war on Islamic terrorism he does not want to fight. “Over the coming days, we’ll uncover why and how this happened,” the president promised, referring to a killer who called 911 to proclaim his allegiance to Islamic State. Obama acknowledged that it was an “act of terror,” but as John Podhoretz noted in the New York Post, referring to “terror” without a modifier is like a doctor discussing “cancer” without identifying its specific form; it is a way of talking around the problem without addressing it. (For her part, presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton said she was perfectly “happy” to call it “radical Islamic terrorism.” Beyond that, she offered little other than staying the course in her desired third Obama term.) Obama’s tentativeness gave way to conviction when he spoke of how “we need the strength and courage to change” our attitudes toward gays and lesbians. And Alex Wong Getty Images PRESIDENT OBAMA stressed the need for gun control. Both sides used Orlando to hit the usual talking points. conviction gave way to certainty when he tried to make this attack into one more example in his brief for gun control. In this reflexive return to rote thinking, the president was truly a representative of, if not the American people, then at least much of the media and the political class. The New York Daily News blamed the attacks on the National Rifle Assn. The only references to “jihad” on its front page were not to a self-proclaimed jihadist but to past cheap shots the newspaper has taken at the NRA. Left-wing pundits flipped on the autopilot and tried to make this slaughter about guns and homophobia (based on the testimony of the killer’s father, an apparent Taliban supporter no doubt eager for a different story line). Meanwhile, many on the right — not to mention a Republican presidential candidate —immediately turned an atrocity into an argument for a ban on Muslim immigration. Such a ban would not have stopped a killer born and raised in the United States, but it would surely encourage more potential “lone wolves” to believe that America regards Islam as the enemy. Indeed, banning Muslims as if they were all part of an undifferentiated blob of terrorists just happens to echo Islamic State’s propaganda. “There are only two armies, two camps, two trenches,” Muslims and everyone else, the Islamists proclaimed in a recent communique. But the GOP’s instant analysts didn’t limit themselves to relatively new ideas, such as a ban. Donald Trump surrogate and possible running mate Newt Gingrich seized the moment to call for a return of the House Un-American Activities Committee, launched during the 1930s. See, it’s not just Democrats who want to go back to the Roosevelt years. At least Gingrich was pointing to the real problem. As Obama demonstrated in his remarks, too many elites in this country reflexively try to make Islamic terrorism America’s fault. Whether the culprit is American imperialism, guns, Guantanamo Bay, or, this week, homophobia, we instantly race to comfortable excuses and comfortable arguments. The true nature and scope of the challenge is too unpleasant to contemplate, and so we return to our scripts and read our lines until the next slaughter provides an opportunity to read them all over again. It’s enough to make you want, as Nietzsche imagined, to “throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who spoke thus.” jgoldberg@latimescolumnists.com A14 T U E S DAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 WSCE L AT I ME S . CO M Microsoft buys LinkedIn for $26.2 billion [Microsoft, from A1] fessional network,” Nadella said in a statement. He described how LinkedIn’s database of some 433 million users — imagine Facebook for the cubicle set — will complement Microsoft’s workplace products Office 365 and Dynamics businesses. He described the “magic” that will happen when data from LinkedIn and Microsoft cross-pollinate. He envisioned how the two companies will “transform the lives of professionals.” When PCs were king, Microsoft was the dominant force in computing and the nation’s highest valued company by market capitalization. But as Web browsing moved to mobile devices, Apple and Google overshadowed the Redmond, Wash., firm in both prosperity and prestige. But the workplace is one place where Microsoft has found staying power. The majority of office computers still use Windows products, with estimates from IT management firms that as many as 90% of office computers run the Windows operating system. The addition of LinkedIn — which will retain its “distinct brand, culture and independence” after the acquisition, with Chief Executive Jeff Weiner remaining at the helm — could beef up Microsoft’s work-focused offerings and make them more attractive to businesses and businesspeople. “It follows in the pattern of Microsoft trying to use its huge cash flow from its mature business (Windows and Microsoft Office) to grab onto something else that can grow,” said James Angel, a professor of finance at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business. He compares Microsoft’s move with that of IBM, which in the 1990s pivoted away from its core business of PCs to focus on software for office workers. Although analysts are generally optimistic about the acquisition, Microsoft’s past bets have given business experts reason to be Richard Drew Associated Press LINKEDIN SHARES soared after word of the company’s acquisition by Microsoft, as seen at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. skeptical. In 2013, Microsoft paid $7.2 billion to acquire Nokia’s mobile phone business and license all its patents. The deal was widely considered a disaster, with Microsoft gutting the Nokia business and exiting mobile hardware two years later. Three years earlier, Microsoft acquired Internet communications company Skype for $8.5 billion, the results of which have been underwhelming. Last year, it bought Mojang, the company that developed the video game “Minecraft,” for $2.5 billion. They jury is still out on the success of that move. “Microsoft doesn’t have a great track record of success with these acquisitions,” Angel said. LinkedIn is a treasure trove of professional data, according to Gene Marks, founder of the Marks Group PC, a firm that specializes in customer relationship management software. One po- tential opportunity is Microsoft Dynamics CRM, the customer relationship management platform that lets businesses analyze and manage interactions with customers. By integrating with LinkedIn, Microsoft’s platform could access frequently updated user and business profiles, as well as information on people’s professional connections — a valuable asset in generating sales leads. This could help Microsoft fend off competition from a younger rival that has inched into the world of business software: Salesforce.com. Last year the CRM industry brought in $26 billion in revenue, according to data research firm Gartner, of which Salesforce had 19.7% market share. Microsoft had 4.3%. The industry continues to grow at double digits year over year. “Microsoft is looking for a way to defeat Salesforce, and I think they’ve found it,” Marks said. The acquisition is a “big and bold step” for Microsoft and a “great deal” for LinkedIn, said Gregory Sichenzia, a partner at securities law firm Sichenzia Ross Friedman Ference, who said both companies will breathe new life into each other. LinkedIn has in recent years struggled to grow its user base and hit revenue targets. The Mountain View, Calif., company attracts 105 million visitors to its site and mobile app every month, compared with Twitter’s 305 million and Facebook’s 1.65 billion monthly users. One of its biggest challenges, analysts say, has been persuading users to log on when they aren’t searching for work. The company’s stock took a dive in February, falling 43% and wiping out $11 billion in value after it lowered its revenue projections for 2016. Until Monday’s acquisition news, LinkedIn’s stock had spent the last three and a half months depressed. A hacker last month offered for sale more than 100 million LinkedIn passwords. “A lot of people feel that LinkedIn has gotten stale, and it couldn’t grow beyond what it’s already done,” Sichenzia said. “Microsoft has also become somewhat stale — it’s not where the excitement is anymore, so Microsoft will be a terrific partner that can grow LinkedIn in ways it couldn’t grow itself, and having LinkedIn puts Microsoft at the level of a younger, hipper, more socially relevant company.” Analysts also speculated that Microsoft has financial incentives for spending big. Mike Wade, a professor at IMD Business School, noted that the company is sitting on $100 billion in cash and short-term investments — a big weight on the balance sheet. “The pressure to spend it or issue a special dividend, as it has done in the past, was mounting,” Wade said. “Better to spend it than to lose it.” Microsoft will pay $196 per share of LinkedIn in the all-cash transaction, a 50% premium on LinkedIn’s closing stock price of $131.08 on Friday. Despite the premium, Microsoft’s offer is still significantly lower than LinkedIn’s 52-week high of $258 a share. On Monday, shares of LinkedIn soared $61.13, or 46.6%, to $192.21. Microsoft closed down $1.34, or 2.6%, to $50.14. The deal has been unanimously approved by both companies’ boards of directors and is subject to approval by LinkedIn’s shareholders and other regulatory approvals. It is expected to close this year. tracey.lien@latimes.com Twitter: @traceylien Times staff writer Samantha Masunaga contributed to this report. 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Securities offered through EF Legacy Securities, LLC, an affiliated broker/dealer, member FINRA/SIPC. CALIFORNIA B T U E S D A Y , J U N E 1 4 , 2 0 1 6 :: L A T I M E S . C O M / C A L I F O R N I A DEPUTY IN JAILS PROBE GETS 6 MONTHS ORLANDO M AS SACRE Gilbert Michel took a $1,500 bribe to smuggle a cellphone to an inmate in an L.A. County lockup. By Joel Rubin Mark Boster Los Angeles Times THE ROOF of artist ChadMichael Morrisette’s West Hollywood home has a jumble of 50 mannequins, symbolizing the victims in Orlando. Joined together in solidarity More than 2,000 people at L.A. City Hall and others at vigils across the area honor the victims. By Emily Alpert Reyes, Jason Song and Ben Poston They came to pay their respects, to mourn, to comfort each other. The crowd of more than 2,000 people gathered Monday evening at the steps of Los Angeles City Hall to honor the victims of the mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla., over the weekend. “We are with our family in Orlando and everywhere else our community faces hate and violence,” said Justine Gonzalez, a member of the Los Angeles Transgender Advisory Council. “And so I urge each and every one of us to love, to never slow down. To show the agents of fear and hate that they can’t win. They will not hate us away.” As the names of the 49 people killed were read aloud, the crowd lifted their smartphones into the air, making a starry night of the masses gathered before City Hall. Singer Lady Gaga, whose [See Vigil, B5] An additional safety precaution West Hollywood gay bar is considering armed guards after the Orlando shooting. LOS ANGELES, B4 Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ALISON COSSIO, center, holds a photo of her friend, Christopher Sanfeliz, who was one of those killed in the massacre. Standing behind her is her husband, Luis Dieppa. The names of the victims were read aloud. ‘He was young and dumb’ Armed man headed to Pride fest made gun threats and had other troubles with the law. By Brittny Mejia, Veronica Rocha and Joseph Serna It was a random yet chilling discovery. Just hours after a gunman had opened fire at a popular gay nightclub in Florida, Santa Monica police stumbled upon a parked motorist with a cache of weapons and explosive chemicals — some displayed openly in his vehicle. When asked what he was doing, 20-year-old James Wesley Howell told officers he was bound for the L.A. Pride festival. As the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender community and the nation as a whole on Monday continued to mourn the deaths of 49 Orlando clubgoers, investigators in California said they did not believe Howell’s actions were tied to the massacre or that he had intended to cause harm at L.A. Pride. Nevertheless, it remained unclear exactly why Howell had driven from his home state of Indiana with a small arsenal — and what, if anything, he intended to do with it. Those with knowledge of Howell’s past said he has a hot temper and a penchant for intimidation. “The boy was young and Uh, this could get awkward House Democrats have a difficult choice: Harris or Sanchez? By Sarah D. Wire With two Democrats on the ballot for the U.S. Senate for the first time in state history, California’s House Democrats are attempting to minimize the awkwardness that could come with the intra-party fight. Lawmakers who serve with Orange County Rep. Loretta Sanchez are split on whom to back in the race to replace Sen. Barbara Boxer: their longtime colleague or Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris, who won 40% of the vote to the congresswoman’s 19% in Tuesday’s primary. According to the campaigns, 17 of California’s 39 House Democrats have endorsed Sanchez and nine have endorsed Harris. The Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ACCORDING to the campaigns, nine of California’s 39 House Democrats back Kamala Harris, left, and 17 support Loretta Sanchez; the rest have yet to choose. other 12 are sitting it out so far, as are Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Boxer. Rep. Mike Thompson (DSt. Helena) said Wednesday he’s worked with Harris on gun violence prevention, an issue that’s dear to him. “I was impressed with her. I think she’s smart, I think she would make a good U.S. senator,” Thompson said. He said he was concerned that Sanchez had told the combined editorial boards of McClatchy’s California newspapers in April that everything, including changes to the Endangered Species Act, should be on the table to address the state’s water needs. Thompson said he and Sanchez spoke about it. “She said that was her position, and I explained to her that if it were, I couldn’t be with her,” Thompson said. “I like Loretta, we’re friends. But in my district the Endangered Species Act is life or death.” Rep. Jared Huffman (DSan Rafael) has known Harris since she was a district attorney in San Francisco. He [See Democrats, B8] dumb and had a mouth on him,” said Jeremy Hebert, a former Indiana neighbor who once was threatened at gunpoint by Howell, according to court documents. Howell was arrested just before 5 a.m. Sunday in Santa Monica after a resident reported a suspected prowler. Officers arrived to find Howell sitting in his white Acura. Upon searching the vehicle, they discovered three assault rifles, high-capacity [See Pride, B4] A former Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputy at the center of the jail scandal that rocked the department and led to the conviction of 21 agency officials, including the former sheriff, was sentenced Monday to six months in federal prison. Gilbert Michel was the first to be charged in the wide-ranging FBI investigation into misconduct and corruption in the jails after he was caught in a sting operation smuggling a cellphone to an inmate in return for a $1,500 bribe. In sending Michel to prison, U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson rejected a request from prosecutors that he spare Michel time behind bars. The request for leniency stemmed from a plea agreement prosecutors struck with Michel, in which he pleaded guilty to the bribery charge and agreed to testify against other sheriff ’s officials in subsequent trials. Anderson did go more lightly than he could have, setting aside sentencing guidelines that called for Michel to be sent away for 24 to 30 months. But the government’s recommendation that Michel be given just four months of home detention was not acceptable to the judge, who has handled many of the cases stemming from the FBI investigation and come down harshly on other sheriff ’s officials who were convicted. After Michel offered a tearful apology for taking the bribe — a crime that he said he “will forever regret” — Anderson said the misconduct had been “a gross abuse of the public’s trust.” “The defendant’s actions were symptomatic of a department where abuse of inmates was rampant, unchecked and corruption went all the way to the top,” Anderson added. The August 2011 discovery of the cellphone by sheriff ’s officials exposed the FBI’s secret investigation and disrupted the bureau’s plans to carry out a more ambitious plan — Operation Blue Line — targeting corruption inside the Sheriff ’s Department. [See Michel, B6] New approach to grading teachers Critics warn the change may favor educators, not pupils. By Howard Blume Sebastian, who goes by one name, takes issue with the new teacher evaluation system in Los Angeles. Her rating has declined, unfairly in her view. The San Pedro High teacher is hardly the only one with concerns. Some see the observation-based system — negotiated by the district and unions — as too friendly toward teachers. Others say it’s too cumbersome or too reliant on principals with limited expertise. Supporters see the district’s approach as breaking ground, even leading the nation. Critics say the kind of political compromise it was born of inevitably promotes mediocrity and fails to help students. The latest revisions to the 1-year-old system are expected to win formal approval at Tuesday’s Board of Ed[See Teachers, B7] A push to redefine rape A bill seeks to broaden the definition beyond “an act of sexual intercourse.” B3 Lottery ...................... B2 B2 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M CALIFORNIA RETROSPECTIVE Winged ‘army’ kept watch over L.A. tower No one knew what to call the sculptural figures that made the Richfield Building, razed in 1969, distinct. SCOTT HARRISON For years the Richfield Building dominated the downtown Los Angeles skyline, an art-deco neontopped masterpiece that is considered one of the city’s most beloved buildings. But in 1969, the new downtown — with its modern high-rises — meant the end for the Richfield Building. It was torn down to make way for the Arco twin towers. In April 1969, The Times wrote about some of the unlikely refugees of the Richfield Building’s demise: For 40 years they stood guard over the black-gold fortress at Flower and 6th Sts. that was the Richfield Building. From 15 floors they watched Los Angeles From 15 floors they watched Los Angeles around them grow from simple order to smoggy complexity. around them grow from simple order to smoggy complexity. They saw the gaudiness of their own building turn to art. Now they lie strewn about a Cleveland Wrecking Co. yard like a defeated army. Soldiers? Is that what these mysterious creatures were supposed to be? Soldiers with golden wings? Maybe angels. But angels with Roman helmets and breastplates? “I don’t know what the heck they’re called,” an employee at Cleveland Wrecking said Wednesday while poring over invoices. “I know we’re selling ’em for a hundred bucks each. It cost us that to tear ’em down.” He said they were hauled into the yard at 3170 E. Washington Blvd. about a month ago. There are 40 of them. Workmen arranged them in several rows, some sitting straight up like a Harvard crew, some lying on their backs. A few have fallen forward, their gold-colored Roman noses buried in asphalt. Other than being ripped from the building at waist level, the figures suffered few casualties — a broken nose here, a clipped wing there. Two were decapitated After 40 years in sun and rain their brilliant gold glaze remains only in recesses, their eye sockets, their navels, the insides of their wings. During all that time they faced only one real test as Lottery results Tonight’s Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $293 million Sales close at 7:45 p.m. For Monday, June 13, 2016 Fantasy Five: 2-9-15-20-28 Daily Four: 1-5-6-7 Daily Three (midday): 1-7-0 Daily Three (evening): 2-9-9 Daily Derby: (04) Big Ben (01) Gold Rush (11) Money Bags Race time: 1:44.93 Results on the Internet: www.latimes.com/lottery General information: (800) 568-8379 (Results not available at this number) guardians of the Richfield Building. And they blew it. The Cleveland Wreckers picked them off easily, one by one. “It took about two weeks,” said Dick Laws, superintendent of the job. “We put a choke around the neck and one around the waist and just cut away the concrete. “I’ll say this, they came down a lot harder than they went up.” Laws didn’t know what the figures were supposed to be called. “They usually call those things gargoyles, don’t they? At least they served that purpose,” he said. Neither did Mickey Parr, a public relations man at Atlantic Richfield. “I guess nobody around here has ever bothered to ask,” he explained. However, he dug out a 1930 copy of Arts and Architecture and read the following caption: “Heroic in size, impressive in conception, are the sculptural figures designed by Haig Patigian which crown the main walls with a fairly regal procession of silhouetted torsos. “This figure is a highly conventionalized suggestion of motive power.” “I don’t know what it means either,” said Parr. “Perhaps the oil executives of the day considered them merely expansive hood ornaments.” A few of the guards have survived. In 2010, The Times wrote about one man who snagged a piece of the building for himself: John Malmin Los Angeles Times WRECKERS removed 40 gilded terra cotta sculptures that resembled Roman soldiers with angel’s wings from the Richfield Building, a downtown L.A. landmark that was torn down in 1969. A few have survived. For his first 40 years he looked down on 6th Street in downtown Los Angeles. For the next 40 years he looked down on a frontyard in Santa Ana. Now the stone-faced figure wearing a Roman soldier's helmet and breastplate and angel's wings is gazing upon the polished concrete floor of Eric Lynxwiler's Los Angeles loft. The 1½-ton terra cotta sculpture is one of the few surviving remnants of the Richfield Building, a blacksided, gold-trimmed landmark that was topped by an oil-derrick tower and served as a monument to petroleum. Ornate elevator doors from the Richfield are on display in the courtyard between the twin towers. scott.harrison @latimes.com Larry Sharkey Los Angeles Times THE oil-derrick tower, atop the Richfield in 1965, served as a petroleum monument, The Times wrote in 2010. SCIENCE FILE Seeing marine fish in a new light Bioluminescence is so useful that it evolved 27 times, a study says. DEBORAH NETBURN We don’t often encounter species that produce their own light here on land. Fireflies do it. Some millipedes and fungi do it. That’s about it. But in the murky depths of the ocean, it’s a whole different glowing story. About 1,000 to 1,500 feet beneath the ocean surface, in a region known as the deep scattering layer, there can be so much bioluminescence that the sea looks as if it is twinkling with blue stars. “As you get deeper and deeper in the water column, it becomes less and less penetrable to sunlight,” said Matt Davis, an ichthyologist at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota. “The only light many of these Matt Davis BIOLUMINESCENCE allows fish to communicate with one another, hide their silhouettes from predators or ward off an attack, scientists say. animals see is made from other organisms.” The almost magical ability of creatures to chemically create their own light serves a lot of purposes in the deep sea. Fish use bioluminescence to communicate with one another, hide their silhouettes from low-lurking predators, as a way to lure prey, and even as a defense mechanism. The shining tubeshoulder fish got its name because it squirts a blob of bioluminescent goo out of its shoulder when it is being attacked, using the flash of light to confuse its predators as it escapes into the darkness. Bioluminescence is so useful to underwater creatures that it turns out it evolved independently at least 27 times in marine fish alone, according to a new study in PLOS One. “When we see something that’s repeatedly evolving over and over again, that’s a good clue that it is of biological importance,” said Davis, who led the work. Previous studies on bioluminescence have found that the ability for an organism to create its own light evolved 40 times across the tree of life. The new study, which focused entirely on ray-finned fish, suggests that this evolutionary adaptation occurred many more times than that. Not all fish use it in the same way. The authors’ genetic analysis suggests that intrinsic bioluminescence — when a fish creates and emits light without any help from bacterial symbiosis — evolved eight times. Bacterially mediated bioluminescence evolved 17 times. The genetic analysis also allowed them to see that the evolution of these lightmaking phenomena began as early as 150 million years ago and continues. deborah.netburn @latimes.com Twitter: @DeborahNetburn L AT I ME S . CO M T U E SDAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 B3 THE STATE Lawmakers pressing for gun control With the Legislature about to take key votes on 11 bills, officials use Orlando attack to spur action. By Patrick McGreevy John Gastaldo San Diego Union-Tribune ELIZABETH DENNY, 13, president of the Julian and Santa Ysabel 4-H Club, locks the pigpen at her family’s home near Lake Cuyamaca as part of a Mountain Lion Foundation project to keep mountain lions at bay. Saving predators and prey A game warden, landowners and 4-H club members work to fortify structures to protect livestock and mountain lions By J. Harry Jones Volunteers gathered this weekend at a home near Julian to work on a project aimed at protecting both area livestock and mountain lions. The wild animals and the farm animals frequently have had contact — in ways potentially fatal to all. Mountain lions are protected animals and it is illegal to hunt them. But rules change when a puma kills livestock, said Game Warden Jorge Paz. If there is strong evidence that a mountain lion is responsible for a livestock death, the state is required to offer the landowner a “degradation permit,” which allows for the killing of the lion within 10 days should it be seen or trapped on the property. Three area mountain lions have been killed in the last eight months after livestock attacks. The weekend project, organized by the national Mountain Lion Foundation, brought together scientists, a state game warden, 4-H club members and local landowners. The aim was to build a protective pigpen to keep lions out and, in the end, protect the lives not just of prey but of predators. “It’s obvious that if you don’t work to preserve and protect the livestock you’re not going to be able to preserve and protect the mountain lions,” said Lynn Cullens, the Mountain Lion Foundation’s associate director. In Julian in the last couple of years, mountain lions have eaten penned chickens, goats and sheep. Usually lions won’t stick around a specific area and feed on livestock more than once or twice, but that has not been the case on the Denny property near Lake Cuyamaca. In October something got into the chicken coop and ate all but two birds. The next two nights, Brian Denny saw a mountain lion trying to get into the reinforced coop. His wife, Tara, soon encountered the lion when she went outside to find out why the chickens were “screaming.” “I was bent over talking to the chickens and didn’t think to look behind me,” she said. When she did, a mountain lion stared at her from just a few feet away. “I screamed probably the loudest I could and then I did the thing they tell you never to do. I ran for it,” she said. Her husband was just pulling into the driveway. He said he’d never seen his wife move so fast. “Her feet never hit the ground.” He and his teenage son Trevor armed themselves with a rifle and a shotgun and went outside to look for their dog. Brian saw the lion crouched next to the house. “I was aiming at it but I didn’t want to shoot a lion,” he said. “Not only is it not cool, it’s a huge hassle and a big mess and a really important animal.” But the lion acted menacingly, so Denny killed it. In May, 13-year-old Elizabeth Denny — the president of the Julian and Santa Ysabel 4-H Club — lost three show pigs she had been raising for this summer’s Ramona Fair to at least two lions that jumped the pen’s 6-foot fence with apparent ease. A trail camera caught one of the attacks on film. Degradation permits were obtained, and two lions were killed. “We do appreciate (the lions). It was very sad when they had to be put down,” Tara Denny said. “It wasn’t a victorious thing. We cried. It was awful. The whole thing was sad.” Just last week, another lion showed up on the property, denting the roof of the chicken coop. The Dennys agreed to work with the foundation on the demonstration project because they want alternative ways to protect their livestock. The chain-link pen is enclosed on all sides and on the top to better keep lions out. At the weekend gathering, people also saw various devices that use noise and lights to ward off unwanted wildlife. Paz said in his eight years as game warden, this is the first time that landowners and the Mountain Lion Foundation have joined forces in such an effort. “It’s a step in the right direction,” he said. jharry.jones @utsandiego.com Jones writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune. SACRAMENTO — On the eve of key votes on a package of 11 gun control bills, California lawmakers on Monday cited the Orlando massacre as a call for approval of the measures, and opponents of the measures accused the legislators of exploiting a tragedy. Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has proposed a gun control initiative for November, said the Orlando attack that killed 49 people and December’s terrorist shooting in San Bernardino that killed 14 are brutal evidence that existing gun laws are not working. “This is a uniquely horrific tragedy that is unprecedented,” Newsom said Monday. “The fact that this individual allegedly was able to purchase an assault rifle so easily despite being watched by the FBI suggests that our gun laws are wholly inadequate in this country.” Newsom and Democratic state lawmakers said Congress has failed to act so the states must. “Why are guns that are so dangerous to human life available so easily?” asked Assemblyman Marc Levine (D-San Rafael), one of four legislators at a news conference in San Francisco on Monday. “Yesterday’s tragedy was a call to action. The loss of life in our communities has become unbearable.” California law bans the sale of AR-15-style assault weapons like the one reportedly in possession of Omar Mateen when he killed 49 people and wounded more than 50 others at a nightclub in Orlando. However, Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) said the bills scheduled for action Tuesday in legislative committees would close loopholes that allow the sale of semiautomatic rifles with detachable ammunition Doctor indicted in drug scheme By Richard Winton A federal grand jury has indicted an Orange County doctor and his two physician assistants on allegations of drug trafficking, saying they issued prescriptions for dangerous and addictive narcotics, including oxycodone and methadone, without a medical purpose. Within days of seeing Dr. Victor Boon Huat Siew, at least four patients he wrote prescriptions for died of drug overdoses, according to the 56-count indictment made public Monday. Those deaths occurred in 2009, 2010 and 2013, it said. Siew, 65, of Laguna Beach, is accused of seeing “patients” at his Fountain Valley clinic — some of whom were addicted to drugs, and some of whom were undercover law enforcement officers — and issuing prescriptions outside the usual course of professional practice. The indictment said Siew and his employees allegedly wrote prescriptions for narcotics for “patients” who often paid cash for office visits that typically involved only the most cursory examination, if at all. Siew and his employees repeatedly wrote prescriptions for oxycodone and methadone, authorities said. “Opioids such as oxycodone and methadone can bring substantial benefits to patients who truly need these drugs,” said U.S. Atty. Eileen M. Decker. “But narcotics such as these also threaten the lives of people who abuse the drugs or become addicted. Medical professionals who prescribe dangerous drugs without a medical need are harming patients and threaten entire communities when these drugs are diverted to the black market.” The indictment charges one count of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and 55 counts of illegal distribution of a controlled substance by a practitioner. Each defendant is charged in multiple, but not all, distribution counts. Siew is due to surrender Tuesday; physician assistant Thanh Nha T. Pham, 45, of Fountain Valley has agreed to surrender to authorities this week. The second physician assistant, Kaitlyn Phuong Nguyen, 31, was arrested by federal authorities in the Bay Area. Eachcharge carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison. richard.winton @latimes.com Gabrielle Lurie AFP/Getty Images STANFORD graduates wear “1/3” signs. The fraction reflects a statistic that says 1 in 3 female students will experience a sexual assault by the time she graduates. Calif. lawmakers say it’s time to redefine rape By John Myers SACRAMENTO — Amid the intense debate over the sentence given a former Stanford student after a campus sexual assault, two members of the California Legislature say the state’s definition is out of date. “We found a loophole in California’s criminal code and need to fix the law to send a strong message that we do not accept rape in Cal- ifornia,” said Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia (DBell Gardens). Garcia and Assemblywoman Susan Eggman (DStockton) introduced Monday a bill to broaden the state’s definition of rape as beyond “an act of sexual intercourse.” That would include “penetration” of any kind without consent. The lawmakers said that the six-month jail sentence for Brock Turner, the former Stanford student found guilty in the attack, was limited because the assault did not fit the existing definition of rape. Eggman called it an “archaic definition” that “finds any excuse to be lenient with rapists.” Both women have been outspoken about the Stanford case, with Garcia signing on to political efforts to remove the Santa Clara County judge who handed down the sentence. john.myers@latimes.com Rich Pedroncelli AP LT. GOV. Gavin Newsom says Orlando and San Bernardino show existing gun laws don’t work. magazines. Other bills would outlaw the possession of magazines with a capacity of more than 10 bullets and require background checks for people who buy ammunition. “We want to make sure we have opportunities to grieve right now,” Ting said. “But at the same time we do have an opportunity to take action.” Newsom’s initiative would also require background checks for ammo purchasers, ban large-capacity magazines and dictate quick removal of firearms from those disqualified from owning them because of a felony conviction or other factor. Lawrence Keane, a leading advocate for gun owners, accused the legislators of trying to use a horrible tragedy to gain political ground for bad legislation. “This is just the latest effort by anti-gun politicians to exploit tragedy to extinguish what little remains of the Second Amendment in California,” said Keane, a senior vice president of the National Shooting Sports Foundation. Tuesday’s hearings are expected to be packed with opponents, including Chuck D. Michel, president of the California Rifle & Pistol Assn., who condemned the violence in Orlando. “The worst response to attacks like this is to strip law-abiding citizens of their rights and the ability to protect themselves and their families,” Michel said. The bills pending in the Legislature were introduced in response to the Dec. 2 terrorist attack in San Bernardino. Democratic Assemblymen Rob Bonta of Oakland and David Chiu of San Francisco also said the Orlando mass shooting shows that action is overdue. “After the tragedies in Newtown, [Conn.], and San Bernardino, our community demanded action, and this week approximately another 50 families will be planning funerals for their loved ones,” Bonta said. Ting is author of a bill that would expand a yearold law allowing law enforcement and family members to ask a court to issue a restraining order to take guns away from people who they believe are dangerous. “If Florida had what we have in California, a gun violence restraining order, people could have acted,” Ting said. “What we had [in Orlando] is law enforcement had concerns, this person’s wife had concerns.” The news conference was also attended by leaders of the gay and Muslim communities who condemned the Orlando shooting but did not take a position on the pending gun control bills. Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) also urged approval of the gun bills. “There are logical steps we can take to prevent highly destructive weapons from getting into the wrong hands, responsible ways to do it, and we can take action right now,” De León said in a statement Sunday. “Thoughts and prayers are not enough.” patrick.mcgreevy @latimes.com Twitter: @mcgreevy99 B4 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M LOS ANGELES Gay bar weighs adding guards Well-known West Hollywood venue considers increasing its security after the Orlando shooting. By Hailey Branson-Potts Photographs by Harrison Hill Los Angeles Times VANESSA DELIRA, a student at Owensmouth High School, waves to her family during the graduation ceremony in the football stadium at East Los Angeles College. Alternative schools serve students who need to recover credits or learn on flexible schedules. EYES ON THE PRIZE Students who took nontraditional routes celebrate their hardearned degrees from alternative L.A. Unified high schools By Sonali Kohli Destin Thompson attended five high schools in two states as his mother traveled in search of work. He started high school in Compton, then moved to Nevada. When his mother lost her job, they wound up back in Los Angeles. Keeping up with each new school’s demands was hard for Thompson. But finding his way to L.A.’s Patton High School helped. The alternative school allowed him to make up credits and take the classes he needed to finish high school with his peers. Last week, Thompson was one of hundreds of Los Angeles Unified School District students to graduate from two dozen alternative high schools. The ceremony at East Los Angeles College included most of the district’s educational options program schools, which serve students who haven’t graduated on time or who need to recover credits or learn on flexible schedules. Most graduates take nontraditional paths to the finish line. Jaileene Flores, who rocked a mustache-adorned bow tie and a Ravenclaw-inspired cap, went to three high schools in Texas and L.A. before graduating from Youth Opportunities Unlimited Alternative High School in South L.A. It’s hard to track credits, make sure they transfer and keep up with lasses when you’re moving a lot, students said. The alternative and continuation schools are more likely to accept credits from other states, and allow students to take more classes in one semester. Walter Webb and Chandra McPherson sat in the crowd Wednesday watching their son Christo- L.A. UNIFIED high school students wait to walk to their seats for the graduation ceremony. The alternative and continuation campuses are more likely to accept credits from other states. pher Webb graduate from Henry David Thoreau Continuation High School in Woodland Hills. They know what a struggle he had. Christopher, 17, attended three high schools in three different states: Illinois, North Carolina and California. He was home-schooled for two years while his parents were in custody negotiations. Halfway through this school year, while he lived with his father in North Carolina, Christopher realized he would not be able to graduate on time, McPherson said. So he moved to L.A., where his mom lives, and enrolled in Thoreau, where he finished 12 classes in eight weeks so he could graduate Wednesday. “He just whipped through them,” working from 8 a.m. until midnight many days, McPherson said. “He was not playing.” McPherson knows her son did not spend as much time with the materials as students at traditional schools do, and that he might have a lower-quality high school education because of it. But she said her son already has a plan for the future. He’s going on to a two-year college with plans to transfer to a four-year college. “At some point you’ve just got to say, ‘I’ve just got to get it done,’ ” McPherson said. sonali.kohli@latimes.com A well-known West Hollywood gay bar is considering making armed security guards a regular presence after Sunday’s mass shooting in a Florida nightclub. During the L.A. Pride celebration just hours after the attack in Orlando, Abbey Food & Bar increased its security, with 36 guards on duty — including a visible armed presence at the front and back entrances at all times, said Brian Rosman, a spokesman for the bar. The Abbey is considering making armed guards routine, especially during peak times such as Pride, Rosman said. “It’s something we’re looking at moving forward,” he said. “We’re going to talk more with the sheriff and City Hall to figure out the appropriate safety precautions.” The Robertson Boulevard bar, he said, already searches patrons’ bags and purses and asks them to open up bulky coats to see if they have anything dangerous underneath, Rosman said. On Sunday, the bar was “extra vigilant,” he said. “It was about keeping our patrons safe and making sure people felt safe,” Rosman said. “We were worried with the news out of Orlando. We didn’t know what would happen.” The attack at the Pulse nightclub — the deadliest mass shooting in American history — left 49 people dead and at least 53 injured. David Cooley, owner and founder of the Abbey, was in regular contact with Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputies at the West Hollywood station to figure out the best safety precautions, Rosman said. Thousands of people lined the streets for the annual Pride parade Sunday, many of them saying it was more important than ever before to be visible and to not let hatred push them back into the closet. The Abbey staff, Rosman said, did not consider closing and had large crowds throughout the day. At 3 p.m., the crowd observed a moment of silence. “It was really unusual to see the Abbey at full capacity and completely silent during Pride weekend,” Rosman said. hailey.branson @latimes.com Suspect, on probation, charged in Kentucky [Pride, from B1] magazines, ammunition and a 5-gallon bucket containing “chemicals capable of forming an improvised explosive device,” police said. Howell was booked by Santa Monica police on suspicion of possessing an explosive device, possessing a loaded firearm in a vehicle and possessing high-capacity magazines. According to FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller, Howell “remains in state custody while investigators consult with prosecutors at the district attorney’s office in Los Angeles and the United States attorney’s office to determine whether Mr. Howell will be charged at either the state or federal level in relation to the weapons and other items found in his vehicle.” Howell is being held in lieu of $500,000 bond and was scheduled to appear in court Tuesday, jail records show. Indiana court documents show that Howell had been accused on three occasions of threatening people with firearms; in two of those, the alleged victim was a man who identified himself as Howell’s boyfriend. In October 2015, at a McDonald’s in Charlestown, Ind., a manager informed law enforcement that one of her employees, Richard Hambrick, had said his boyfriend had called and threatened to shoot him when he got off work. When the officer spoke with Howell, he denied the allegations. Days later, officers were called to Howell’s residence, where they were met by Hambrick, who said he was there to collect some of his possessions. When he entered the yard, Hambrick said, Howell came out with an “AR rifle,” pointed it at him and told him to leave. “James told me if I stepped foot in his yard, he would kill me,” Hambrick told police. A witness, according to court records, verified Hambrick’s account. Howell, however, told police that he told Hambrick to leave his yard and then grabbed his rifle, held it up on his shoulder and continued to ask him to leave. Other witnesses said that Howell had not pointed a weapon at Hambrick. One day later, Howell pointed a gun at a neighbor who was arguing with one of his roommates. Howell was arrested on charges of intimidation with a weapon and pointing a firearm, convicted and sentenced to probation earlier this year, court documents show. One neighbor told police that Howell “is going to get AFP/Getty Images JAMES Wesley Howell was found with weapons and chemicals, police say. someone hurt and he needs to quit pointing guns at people,” documents show. Months later, he was arrested in Kentucky for allegedly evading police during a traffic stop. Howell was stopped in February on an expressway in Jefferson County for a traffic violation, said his attorney, Ryan Vantrease. The officer approached Howell in his vehicle, got his driver’s license information, and then returned to his police cruiser. That’s when Howell “gunned out of there,” Vantrease said. “There was no high-speed chase or anything like that,” he said. Howell got away, but police had his information. Investigators presented evidence to the district attorney, who filed charges against Howell, his attorney said. In that case, Howell is charged with felony evading a police officer, reckless driving and speeding. Robert Boyd, Howell’s second attorney in the Kentucky case, told The Times on Monday that his client’s parents were “shocked to learn about the situation” in Santa Monica and were “fully cooperating” with federal investigators. Initially, Santa Monica Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said on Twitter that Howell had told one of her officers that he wanted “to harm Gay Pride event.” A department spokesman later said the tweet was a misstatement and that although Howell told investigators that he was going to the Pride festival, he did not make statements about his intentions. Boyd said Howell’s family was concerned about the Santa Monica Police Department spreading “misinformation” about their son’s arrest. Details about the case, Boyd said, “may have been blown out of proportion.” “They are very interested to find out the true facts of the case,” he said. brittny.mejia@latimes.com veronica.rocha @latimes.com joseph.serna@latimes.com L AT I ME S . CO M WSCE T U E S DAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 B5 CALIFORNIA BRIEFING WESTLAKE One person dies, 3 are rescued from office fire One person was killed Monday evening in a fire at an office building in Westlake, authorities said. Firefighters rescued three people from the two-story building, but a fourth person was confirmed dead at the scene, said Brian Humphrey, spokesman for the Los Angeles Fire Department. The four were described as “unauthorized occupants” of the building, Humphrey said. Los Angeles police have interviewed a “person of interest” and the fire remains under investigation, Humphrey said. Fire crews arrived just after 7 p.m. to find flames engulfing a large building at 2411 W. 8th St., Humphrey said. It took 145 firefighters about two hours and 20 minutes to knock down the blaze. — Ben Poston Photographs by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times RABBI Neil Comess-Daniels plays guitar and sings during an interfaith vigil in Koreatown hosted by the Is- lamic Center of Southern California and Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace. Mourning, comforting [Vigil, from B1] surprise appearance drew gasps from the crowd, called the shootings “an attack on humanity itself ” and urged everyone to mourn “these innocent, beautiful people.” “Let’s all today pledge an allegiance of love to them and to their families who are suffering so deeply,” she said. The vigil and rally was organized by the Los Angeles LGBT Center. Other observances were held across the Southland on Monday night. The Islamic Center of Southern California and Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace hosted an interfaith vigil at the center in Koreatown. A vigil was held at Micky’s West Hollywood, a gay nightclub on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood, and the San Diego LGBT Community Center hosted a candlelight vigil Monday evening. At the L.A. City Hall event, members of the crowd waved rainbow flags and signs. Valentino Lugo, of South Los Angeles, held a sign that read “We Are Not Afraid / We Have Fought Before / We Will / Fight / Once More!” Lugo said he decided to attend the vigil “to support the victims in Orlando and to let people know we don’t need to be afraid. We’re not going to be anyone’s victim.” is time to mourn,” Rabbi Denise L. Eger of Congregation Kol Ami in West Hollywood told the crowd. “We must mourn those amazing, precious souls in Orlando.” Juan Carlos Hernandez, who owns a downtown clothing store, came to the vigil with a Mexican flag draped over his shoulder. He said he was saddened by the deaths of so many young people — so many of them Latinos like himself. “They were so young — beginning a life in the great freedom of this country,” Hernandez, who is from Acapulco, said in Spanish. “Nobody had the right to snuff out their lives.” Hernandez, who is gay, said the attack has made him more worried to go out to clubs or even on the street at night. “If we don’t do anything, there will be more attacks,” he said. MARWA BALKAR holds a candle at the Koreatown vigil. Others were held around the Southland. Lorri L. Jean, chief executive of the Los Angeles LGBT center, roused the crowd by declaring that the attack was not instigated by the terror group ISIS, but by extremists closer to home — including “divisive” politicians such as presump- tive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. But those in attendance quickly turned somber when speakers urged them to grieve for the Orlando shooting victims. “Let us not forget that it emily.alpert @latimes.com jason.song @latimes.com ben.poston@latimes.com FRESNO Woman admits defacing parks A San Diego woman who painted and drew on treasured natural rock formations at national parks and shared her work on social media pleaded guilty Monday to defacing government property. Casey Nocket, 23, pleaded guilty in a federal court in Fresno to seven misdemeanors for the autumn 2014 painting spree at seven national parks including Yosemite in California and Zion in Utah. She also admitted to defacing rocks at Crater Lake National Park in Oregon and Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado. Nocket used Instagram and Tumblr to document her trip and her graffiti-like work, which led to broad outrage on social media. She was sentenced to two years’ probation and 200 hours of community service. The vandalism in September and October of 2014 caused serious cleanup problems at the national parks. The sandblasting and chemical stripping used to remove paint can cause even more damage to irreplaceable natural features. At two parks, Crater Lake and Death Valley in California, the cleaning has yet to be completed nearly two years later. A later hearing will determine how much Nocket must pay to help with the cleanup. — associated press FRESNO Four teens, dog hit by gunfire Authorities say four teenagers and a dog were shot at a home in Central California. The shooting happened about 5 a.m. Monday. All four teenagers were hospitalized: a 19-year-old female and three males, ages 19, 16 and 14. Police spokesman Joe Gomez says the victims are all in stable condition. Their gunshot wounds are not considered to be lifethreatening. Their names were not released. Animal control also carried out a dog that was hit by gunfire. It was not expected to survive. No arrests have been made. 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Buy One ME-3175RIC at list price get second free. *Studies conducted at the University of Northern Colorado (2014) and Oldenburg Horzentrum (2013) showed that Speech Reception Thresholds (SRT) in cocktail-party situations improved to 2.9 dB for wearers with mild to moderate hearing loss using GENIUS with Directional Focus, compared to people with normal hearing. This corresponds to over 25% improvement in speech understanding. B6 T U E S DAY , J U NE 14 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Former deputy gets 6 months [Michel, from B1] The discovery, prosecutors later alleged, also set into motion a conspiracy to frustrate the FBI probe. As a result, several sheriff ’s officials were convicted of obstruction of justice or other charges, including former Sheriff Lee Baca, who recently pleaded guilty to lying to federal authorities and awaits sentencing. In January 2012, Michel pleaded guilty to bribery as part of the deal with prosecutors in which he was required to cooperate with federal investigators. In a series of interviews with the FBI from late 2011 to early 2013, he described incidents of unprovoked assaults by deputies against inmates, including some that he was personally involved in, according to FBI internal documents reviewed by The Times. Some of the assaults punished inmates accused of rape or other violent crimes against women, Michel said. Other times, deputies would squeeze an inmate’s fingers until he flinched, then claim the inmate had started the altercation. Often, the incidents would not be reported or deputies would falsify reports, Michel told investigators. Michel said he was among the deputies who felt he had to be “one notch” more aggressive than the inmates. If a deputy treated inmates well, other deputies called him or her “Deputy Love,” Michel told agents. Michel, who resigned from the Sheriff ’s Department soon after the cellphone was found, was not charged with crimes relating to his admitted uses of excessive force. Outside court on Monday, he told reporters that the six-month sentence was “totally fair and justified,” and that he wanted to apologize to the county’s taxpayers for what he had done. “I made the wrong choices, so I’m truly sorry,” he said. Michel decried the culture of the Sheriff ’s Department and what he called the arrogance of jail deputies, Turner juror blasts judge A man who heard the Stanford sex assault case says 6 months is ‘ridiculously lenient.’ associated press Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE DISCOVERY in August 2011 of a cellphone smuggled into a jail facility by Gilbert Michel exposed a secret FBI investigation and disrupted the bureau’s plans to carry out a more ambitious probe of the jails. which he said led to the abuse. “We thought that we ran the jail,” he said. “It was our jail. It wasn’t anyone else’s jail. And we controlled the jail. It’s a little arrogant to think that you own that. You don’t. The people of Los Angeles County own that jail.” Federal prosecutors used Michel as a witness in some of the criminal cases that arose from the jails investigation. In 2014, testifying in one of the obstruction of justice trials, the disgraced former deputy described a culture among jailers guarding the high-security floors of the county’s detention facilities that led to excessive force and frequent coverups. He matter-of-factly recounted incidents in which he said he and at least five other sheriff ’s employees brutalized inmates on the third, or “3,000,” floor of Men’s Central Jail, then falsified reports to legitimize their actions. Michel described beating inmates unprovoked, slapping them, shooting them with a Taser gun and aggressively searching them to pick a fight — something he learned “on the job.” He said he would huddle with other jail guards to get their stories straight and write up reports with bogus scenarios justifying the brutality. If the inmate had no visible injuries, he wouldn’t report the use of force, he said. He did all this with impunity, knowing that even if inmates reported the abuse it “wouldn’t go anywhere,” he testified. If they were to put it in writing and drop it in a complaint box, it was his fellow deputies who opened that box too, he said. After Michel accepted a bribe from the undercover FBI agent to smuggle the cellphone into jail, federal agents had planned to use the deputy as a key player in a wider undercover operation. Called Operation Blue Line, the plan was to rent a warehouse, spread the word that it was full of narcotics and hire corrupt deputies from the jails to moonlight as guards. Included in the budget was $10,000 for bribes and kickbacks, according to an internal FBI memo reviewed by The Times. Investigators hoped that Michel would recruit his coworkers to guard the warehouse if he were enticed with additional bribes, the memo said. The deputies lured into the purported drug enterprise would then be used to get information about abuses in the jails. Two days after it was OKd by headquarters in Washington, Blue Line came to an abrupt halt. Sheriff ’s officials had found the cellphone and traced the phone back to the FBI. joel.rubin@latimes.com Times staff writers Cindy Chang and Victoria Kim contributed to this report. A juror who helped convict a former Stanford University student-athlete of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman thinks the “ridiculously lenient” sixmonth jail sentence imposed by the presiding judge has made a mockery of the jury’s verdict, a newspaper reported Monday. The Palo Alto Weekly published a letter that the juror sent Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Aaron Persky over the weekend to convey his shock and disappointment over the sentence 20-year-old Brock Turner received. “It seems to me that you really did not accept the jury’s findings,” he wrote to the judge. “We were unanimous in our finding of the defendant’s guilt and our verdicts were marginalized based on your own personal opinion.” The man is the first juror to speak publicly about the case. He wrote the letter and spoke to the Weekly anonymously to maintain his privacy in a case that has attracted intense media coverage. The names of the Turner jury’s members have not been made public. In an interview with the newspaper, the juror said he found Turner’s contention that the victim had consented to sexual contact to be unpersuasive, especially compared to the accounts of the two Stanford graduate students from Sweden who testified that he ran away when they confronted him on top of the motionless, partially clothed woman. They received a $51,000 water bill. Do you know what happened next? Los Angeles Times readers do. A plumber found no evidence of any leak, so the couple, a family member and their attorney each called to contest the charges, all to no avail. After our investigation, the DWP sent an investigator to their home and canceled their bill. Join the conversation at latimes.com. Photo: Brian Van Der Brug, LA Times, 5/22/2015. For the FULL STORY: latimes.com/SteveLopezDWP 15BR1529 L AT I ME S . CO M T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 New teacher evaluation fails students, critics say [Teachers, from B1] ucation meeting. The pact was achieved with far less acrimony than what has usually accompanied efforts here and elsewhere to overhaul how teachers are assessed. But, said Dan Goldhaber, a professor at the University of Washington with extensive experience in teacherevaluation research, “The ultimate test is: Is this having positive, measurable effects on teachers and students?” In L.A., it’s still too early to say, even more than six years into a sweeping endeavor to revamp how instruction is measured and improved. Notably missing in the latest system is any direct reliance on student standardized test scores to determine whether teachers keep their jobs. Test scores are to be used instead for analyzing student needs, setting goals and reviewing progress toward achieving them. Until recently, the Obama administration pushed hard for test-based evaluations, as did wellheeled foundations with an outsize influence on the nation’s education policy. But opponents called them inconsistent and unfair. Across the country, aligning against them along with teachers were many parents, who objected to the time and emphasis placed on standardized tests. In L.A., efforts to use student scores to evaluate teachers led to lawsuits and legislative battles, and played a central role in highly charged and expensive local and state elections. But the district has more or less made peace with the teachers union, which fought against relying on test scores, and the hope is that the new approach will work at least as well. Goldhaber, however, worries, as do others, that labor harmony has been given priority over student welfare. L.A. Unified, he said, needs to resist the norm of most school systems, which rate nearly every teacher effective. A good evaluation, he said, reliably separates teachers of different abilities and is used to improve instruction. In Los Angeles, former Supt. John Deasy pushed for test scores to count for about 30% of an evaluation. His target failed to survive, though his efforts, including a lawsuit he backed, helped cement the place of student achievement in a more meaningful review process. L.A. Unified administrators undergo five days of training in how to provide consistent and fair evaluations. Under state law, data such as test scores must be part of appraising a teacher. But the new L.A. system also can consider students’ progress in learning to read, portfolios of student work, school-wide attendance, suspension rates and the percentage of passing grades in the school or a class. A teacher rated as below standard can challenge the rating by filing a grievance. Although Sebastian had reservations about testbased evaluations, she’s not convinced that the new format will greatly improve teaching. Formal observation, for example, which plays a key role, is required only once during an evaluation year. Schools are supposed to evaluate about a quarter of a school’s teachers every year. “I think even the worst ‘The ultimate test is: Is this having positive, measurable effects on teachers and students?’ — Dan Goldhaber, University of Washington professor teachers at my school are able to pull off a decent onehour evaluation,” she said. Sebastian’s personal quibble, however, is with the limited new ratings categories. The district gave in to union demands and reduced the choices from four to three — eliminating the previous top rating of highly effective. Now there are three rankings: effective, developing and ineffective. And Sebastian, who previously had been assessed as highly effective, is ranked effective. “It kind of, in essence, lowers my rating,” said Sebastian, who teaches moderately to severely disabled students. This seeming minutiae is part of a larger debate. The district would prefer a four-level rating system to better identify, among other things, teachers who could serve as mentors. Other districts have used such yardsticks to hand out bonuses. Teacher unions, however, are concerned that rating systems could trump seniority when layoffs are necessary, or abet the targeting of outspoken or highersalaried veteran instructors. That concern prompted one new provision: If a teacher is to undergo a formal evaluation, he or she now must be notified within the first five weeks of the school year. “We’ve had situations where an educator sometime during the year does something to get on the bad side of an administrator and the administrator in March says: ‘Oh, by the way, I’m going to evaluate you this year,’ ” said Alex CaputoPearl, president of United Teachers Los Angeles. Caputo-Pearl also noted that an administrator now must provide feedback on an evaluation within 10 working days. Previously, there was no deadline. Administrators and teachers have applauded the simplification of the evaluation form, which has far fewer categories. The idea is to delve deep into a few areas rather than get lost in a multitude of superficial details, said Linda Del Cueto, who heads the district’s training and evaluation for teachers and principals. The new evaluation guidelines are part of a teachers contract revision that also includes extra counseling days outside of the formal school term, an extra teaching position at 55 elementary schools with especially high needs, a cap of 55 students in physical education classes, and an extra teaching position at high schools to help provide more electives or smaller classes in elective courses. “Our elective classes often make students want to come to school every day and allow for creative expression,” Caputo-Pearl said. howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblume obituary NotiCES Browning, Doris May May 14, 1926 - June 7, 2016 Born May 14, 1926June 7th 2016. Passed away in Santa Monica, California following a lengthy battle with Alzheimer’s. Doris was predeceased by her only brother, Howard Berg in 1992 and is survived by her husband, Frank A. Browning, her son Ross A. Landrum, daughter, Susan E. Landrum-Brien and stepdaughter, Jeannette Browning Hernandez. Born in Chicago, IL Doris moved to California in 1941 and lived the rest of her life in the Los Angeles area. She attended Fairfax High School and resided in the Fairfax district before moving to Malibu in 1972 with her husband and children where she lived for the next 42 years. After the outbreak of World War II, Doris volunteered at the Red Cross and ran the Blood Bank. She was in charge of the fundraising events for blood donations to help out the cause for our troops including the big celebrity Hollywood event at Scandia Restaurant on Sunset Blvd. She was a lover of animals starting with dogs and then adopting orphan cats that would stray into their yard. She loved all animals, including birds and horses as well as many of the nocturnal visitors to her yard and swimming pool. Her family always joked that if they were to come back as a four legged animal they would want to be adopted by her. Her family also joked that the strays would tell the other strays, “Hey, come over here. There is a nice lady who feeds us and takes care of us too!” Doris was an avid traveler with her husband and many good friends, loved fine dining, throwing big parties for family and friends, listening to music by Betty Buckley & Barbara Streisand as well as collecting artwork of window paintings with her good friend Jean Robinson. A memorial is to be scheduled sometime in July at Riviera country Club in Pacific Palisades to celebrate Doris. Butler-love, Shirley A. BUTLER-LOVE, SHIRLEY A., retired Operations Assistant II, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, passed away on May 11, 2016. Shirley joined the Sheriff’s Department on July 12, 1970 and retired from Medical Services Bureau on March 29, 2004. Services were previously held. Submitted by the Sheriffs’ Relief Association. Horkin, rose Perlman Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries 800-600-0076 www.mountsinaiparks.org KapeluszniK, Jorge Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries 800-600-0076 www.mountsinaiparks.org Honor a life To place an obituary ad please go to latimes.com/placeobituary Kimura, asako (90), passed away on April 26, 2016 in Santa Monica. She is survived by her children, Phyllis (Eugene) Hayashibara, Claudia (Carlos) Nakata, and Marie (Ken) Baker; grandchildren, Akemi and Lauren Hayashibara, Gina (Henry) Yu, Kenji Nakata, Kevin and Justin Baker; great-grandson, Tristan Hiro Hayashibara Horton; sister, Hanako Oshita; sisters-in-law, Yuki Yanagi, Yone (Aki) Asai, Hiro (Henry) Shimizu, Clara Ike; also survived by many nieces, nephews and other relatives. A memorial gathering was held on Saturday, June 11, 2016 at the Pavilion of Green Hills Memorial Park. (213) 749-1449 www. kubotanikkeimortuary.com Nagai, Michio (93) passed away on June 3, 2016 in Glendale. He was predeceased by his wife, Lorraine, of 65 years; and is survived by his sons, David and Mark; brother, Toru Nagai; sister-in-law, Marjorie Hasegawa and nephews. A private graveside service was held on Saturday, June 11, 2016 at Rose Hills Memorial Park. (213) 749-1449 www.kubotanikkeimortuary.com June 16, 1923 - June 3, 2016 Marcella was born in Los Angeles to Andrew and Mary Schaefer, and grew up in San Gabriel. She attended St. Stephen’s School, The Academy of the Holy Names and Alhambra High School, and Sawyer’s Business School. With the goal of ferrying airplanes during WWII, she took flying lessons, then worked at the instrument lab at Vega. Marcella was one of 15 women chosen to go to The California Institute of Technology in Pasadena for accelerated courses in aeronautical engineering. She then worked at Lockheed and JPL in engineering, where she met and married James Kirst of La Canada. After the war and Jim’s return from the Sea-Bees, they lived in La Canada for 45 years and raised their four children. Marcella was active in St. Bede’s Catholic Church and School, the Huntington Memorial Hospital Guild, and enjoyed golf, tennis, painting, puzzles, reading, gardening, and the ocean. Marcella and Jim traveled extensively and had great fun with their children. She is predeceased by her son, Gregory; and her husband, James; and leaves her greatly loved family: James Kirst, Jr. (Sue Ann), Dana Gabriel (Steven), and Mary Kirst; grandchildren: James Kirst III (Laura), Jennifer Craycraft (Brian), Holly Kirst, Andrew Gabriel, Nicholas Gabriel (Stephanie), and Gregory Gabriel; and great-grandchildren: Cameron Craycraft, and James and Emily Gabriel. She and her strength, wisdom, grace, kindness, compassion, and love will be greatly missed. A celebration of Marcella’s life will take place on Wednesday, June 15, at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, 2046 Mar Vista Dr, Newport Beach, where a Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 2:00 pm. Private interment will be held the following day at Calvary Cemetery in Los Angeles. To place an obituary ad please go online to: latimes.com/placeobituary 1923-2016. William (Bill) is survived by wife Rae Ann, son Ross, sister Barbara, step-children Robert & Nancy, and grandchildren Jenna & Julia. He was a bright light. No service. Thomas, Pamela m. Pamela M. Thomas, retired Public Response Dispatcher II, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, passed away on May 22, 2016. Pamela joined the Sheriff’s Department on June 25, 1984 and retired from Communications and Fleet Management Bureau on December 27, 2012. No services are planned. Submitted by the Sheriffs’ Relief Association. Westlund, Robert eugene Weese, Denise McAuliffe Robert Eugene Westlund, 81, passed away peacefully in Corvallis, OR on May 14, 2016. He was born in Alhambra, CA on July 25 1934 to Lelah and Walter Westlund. He spent his early years attending schools in the Alhambra School District. Then he attended UCSB, where he received his B.S. Degree in 1956 and Master’s in 1957. After UCSB, he served as an aviation officer in the US Navy, A gifted communicator, Bob was known to recognize humor in his business dealings, and among his many friends. He was a valued member of the Oregon State University Foundation having served for almost 22 years and was vice president for principal gifts to athletics prior to his retirement in 2013. He was instrumental in the major facility improvements of Reser Stadium, the Valley Football Center, the MerrittTruax Indoor Center, the Prothro Footballl Complex, and Goss Stadium at Coleman Field. Prior to joining the OSU Foundation, Bob was vice president of W.M. Keck Jr. Foundation in Los Angeles, and as director and vice president of the Keck family’s Coalinga Corporation. Bob also served as the development director at the University of Southern California School of Business from 1975-80 and later as executive director for the southern California region 1980-85. Bob was preceded in death by his daughter, Alison Hester, and his son, Ross Lewis Westlund as well as his parents. Bob is survived by his grandchildren Madeline and Toby Hester and his son-in-law, Bryan Hester; his sister, Janice (Bingham) Cherrie and nephews Matthew (Eva) Cherrie and Daniel (Carolyn) Cherrie. He is also survived by his former wife, Wendy Ross and many wonderful cousins, nieces, nephews, family and friends whose lives have been touched by this funny and kind man. Our family is extremely grateful to Jennifer and Dave Milburn and Mike Brantley and Kay Yates for their wonderful friendship and amazing support of Bob in his last year. The OSU Foundation will hold a Celebration of Bob’s Life on June 20, 2016 in Corvallis, OR. Gifts in Bob’s memory may be made to the Nature Conservancy of Oregon, www.nature. org/oregon. In loving memory of Denise McAuliffe Weese a celebration of life service to be held on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 from 5-8pm @ 740 Amigos Way#1, Newport Beach, CA. Denise was a loving mother, sister and friend and is survived by her daughters Elizabeth and Margaret and her sister Patricia McAuliffe Forbes. July 25, 1934 - May 14, 2016 Kirst, Marcella Marie Sherwood, william r. March 4, 1944 - June 11, 2016 To place an obituary ad please go online to: latimes.com/placeobituary B7 OBITUARIES VETERAN ACTRESS Janet Waldo and Richard Crenna in the play “The World and His Wife.” JANET WALDO, 1920 - 2 016 Actress was the cartoon voice of Judy Jetson associated press J anet Waldo, who provided the voice for Judy Jetson and many other cartoon characters, has died. The veteran film, TV and radio actress died Sunday at age 96 at her home in Encino. Her daughter Lucy Lee told the Associated Press on Monday that Waldo had been battling a brain tumor. Waldo was born inYakima, Wash., on Feb. 2, 1920. She was featured in the futuristic series “The Jetsons,” which initially aired in the 1960s. Her other credits included Josie in “Josie and the Pussycats” and Fred Flintstone’s mother-in-law in “The Flintstones.” Before “The Jetsons,” Waldo had been an actress for decades, appearing on such sitcoms as “I Love Lucy” and “The Andy Griffith Show.” Waldo’s husband, playwright Robert Edwin Lee, died in 1994. news.obits@latimes.com Place a paid Notice: latimes.com/placeobituary Search obituary notice archives: legacy.com/obituaries/latimes Nishimura, Florence aiko Age 92 passed away peacefully at her home on June 4, 2016. Predeceased by her husband, Rev. William Y. Nishimura, siblings, William and Roy Fujitaki and Chizuko Ikeda and a nephew, Michael Ikeda; she is survived by many nieces, nephews, grandnieces, grandnephews and other relatives. Celebration of life will be held on Tuesday, June 21, 11 a.m. at First Presbyterian Church of Altadena, 2775 N. Lincoln Ave. in Altadena. www.fukuimortuary.com 213-626-0441 Cemetery Lots/Crypts InglewoodParkCemetery.Cryptdouble capacity (Upper & Lower). Garden of Roses #54-E-P. $7,695.00. Contact: Keith Johnson - sidewayz911@yahoo. com rose hills memorial park grave 3 lot2829, national shrine lawn for sale. price $3500.00 obo. please call ralph spagnolo,( 702)-759-5121 Share a memory To sign a guest book please go to latimes.com/guestbooks James Howard Banks September 8, 1938 - July 11, 2016 Jim Banks, our treasured father, grandfather, and loved one, passed away at home on June 11, 2016. Born in Toronto, Canada, he moved to Los Angeles in 1965 to begin his family. He worked as a tax accountant his entire life, and loved spending time with his clients, whom he considered friends. His greatest joy was his family, and it grew larger over the years. He is survived by his children Jennifer (Michael), Brian (Joanna), Jon (Julie), Andrew (Elad), and James. He was loved by his partner Karen Schwartz and her family, and his brothers Leonard and Richard and their families. He was Papa to Zachary, Audrey, Ben, Josh, Conor, Matthew, Joey, Maya, Abe, Levi, Margaret, and three more grandchildren due later this year. We mourn the loss of a very special man, but celebrate his memory. In lieu of flowers, the family requests a donation to the Katz Summer in Israel Scholarship at University Synagogue in Brentwood. Donald J. Nores May 28, 1930 - June 9, 2016 Donald Nores was received into Gods hands, surrounded by his family, on June 09, 2016. Don was born at Queen of Angels Hospital in Los Angeles on May 28, 1930 to his loving parents Marguerite and Robert Nores. His childhood was spent in Alhambra, California where he attended St. Therese Catholic School. He later attended Loyola High School and Loyola University where he graduated in 1952 with a degree in Business Administration. In later years, as an entrepreneur, he returned to Loyola Marymount University to establish the Entrepreneurship Program. In 1950, Don met Joyce Ann O’Hagan of San Marino – a blind date grew into the love of a lifetime. They wed at Saint Felicitas Church in San Marino on June 21, 1952. Upon graduation, he was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the US Air Force, serving for two years. Due to his love of classical music, he became involved as a founding director of the Los Angeles Master Chorale and remained actively involved with the Chorale, rising to the title of Director Emeritus. Don, always challenging himself, decided in 1971 to establish his own company, Digital Printing Systems. With Don at the helm, DPS has become the leader in the parking and transit industry. Don had many interests and hobbies; however, sailing, woodwork, and traveling with his family were his true passions. Don and Joyce extensively traveled to many capitals of the world. He was particularly proud of a pair of bent wood baby cradles he built for his grandchildren. With great zeal, Don set goals and accomplished them. He was deeply involved in his community, serving as President of Holy Family Adoption Service and many other charitable organizations including St. Phillip the Apostle, Loyola High School, Loyola Marymount University, Mayfield School, and Saint Andrew’s Abbey. Donald Nores was a humble man of incredible integrity and character, always giving, in countless ways, to his family, friends, and the community he loved. There are no words to describe the amazing son, husband, father, uncle, and grandfather he was. Don found tremendous joy in spending time with his family and will be greatly missed by all. He is survived by: his loving wife Joyce of 64 years, his three children and their spouses: Jim and Mary Nores, Nancy Snowden, Brian Nores and Edmundo Luna, his grandchildren: Christopher, Matthew and Michelle Nores, David Flannery, Danny, Mitchell, Mariah and Scott Snowden and his adoring niece, Drucilla Kent. Funeral services will be held at Saint Philip the Apostle Church, 151 South Hill Avenue, Pasadena on Saturday, June, 18, 2016 at 1:30PM. Interment will be at San Gabriel Cemetery, 601 Roses Road. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in his name to St Phillip the Apostle Church, Loyola Marymount University, Loyola High School, or the Huntington Hospital. Cabot and Sons Funeral Homes B8 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Today in Southern California Today in North America 5-day forecasts Pressure: High/low temperatures are average forecasts for entire zone. Today L.A. Basin 74/59 Valleys 76/54 Clouds, then sun Wednesday Turning sunny 74/59 Thursday Turning sunny 77/61 Turning sunny 79/63 Friday Saturday Sunny, warm 87/65 Los Angeles Basin: Widespread low clouds gradually clearing to sunshine. Low clouds returning tonight. Valleys/canyons: Low clouds through mid-morning then becoming mostly sunny. Mostly clear then low Air quality Mostly sunny Sunny Clearing Sunny Sunny Beaches 69/58 Turning sunny Turning sunny Turning sunny Turning sunny Sunny, warm 74/52 77/54 82/57 89/66 clouds later tonight. Orange County: Low clouds gradually clearing to a mostly sunny sky in the afternoon. Low clouds returning tonight. Ventura/Santa Barbara: Areas of low clouds then becoming mostly sunny. Low clouds along the coast Good Moderate Mountains 72/38 70/57 72/54 75/57 80/61 Mostly sunny Sunny Sunny, cool Sunny Sunny then inland tonight. San Diego County: Low clouds clearing to afternoon sunshine. Low clouds returning tonight. Local mountains: Sunny, breezy at times. Mostly clear tonight. High desert: Sunny, breezy at times and warm. Clear Unhealthful for: Sensitive people Temps Deserts 99/69 Sunshine Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny 68/33 67/36 71/39 79/45 Low H High ▲ Warm Front Cold Front 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100+ Rain T-storm Snow Ice 96/67 98/68 99/73 105/81 Seattle 59/48 Chicago 85/70 New York 81/63 Denver 81/55 Los Angeles 74/59 Las Vegas 98/74 Houston 91/76 Not Available Miami 91/77 South Coast Air Quality Management District forecasts air quality SANTA BARBARA CO. Santa Clarita Hesperia 80/52 Santa Paula LOS ANGELES CO. 87/54 74/54 Santa Simi Valley Barbara Chatsworth SAN BERNARDINO CO. Burbank Monrovia 75/53 70/53 76/54 Camarillo Ventura 76/58 76/52 71/56 68/54 Yucca Valley Pomona/ UCLA 92/57 Fairplex Oxnard San Bernardino Westlake Ontario 72/57 LA Downtown 80/54 68/56 Woodland 84/53 74/59 Village 80/57 Hills Whittier Santa Barbara Co. 72/53 Chino 78/52 Height Period Direction Santa Monica Hills Riverside 82/56 RIVERSIDE CO. Fullerton 76/57 2-4’ 18 sec SSW 69/58 82/53 76/60 Torrance Santa Ana Ventura Co. 72/59 ORANGE CO. Palm Hemet Long Height Period Direction 71/61 Springs 83/51 Irvine Beach Newport 3-5’ 18 sec SSW 71/58 99/69 72/61 Beach Mission Viejo Los Angeles Co. 69/61 Temecula Height Period Direction 73/57 Laguna 79/51 3-5’ 18 sec SSW Beach San 69/59 Clemente Orange Co. Surf and sea 71/59 SAN DIEGO CO. Height Period Direction POINT CONCEPTION TO MEXICO Oceanside 3-5’ 18 sec SSW Inner waters: Variable winds 5-10 knots 72/59 becoming west 10-15 knots. Wind waves San Diego Co. 2-5 feet, west and southwest swells 1-3 Ramona Escondido Height Period Direction feet. 79/48 75/54 3-5’ 18 sec SSW Surf zone: A moderate rip current risk Poway in Santa Barbara and Orange counties, 73/59 a high risk at other beaches. Tides UV index L.A. Outer Harbor, in feet. Minutes to burn for San Diego Today 6:25a 3.3 Hi 12:50a 1.4 Lo sensitive people Station Time Wind Waves Temp 69/62 Las Vegas, 25 Morro Bay Santa Barbara Ventura Zuma Beach Marina del Rey Hermosa Beach Cabrillo Beach Hunt’n. Beach Newport Beach Dana Point San Clemente Oceanside Solana Beach Mission Beach Avalon 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p VENTURA CO. Ojai 76/54 WNW8 SW4 SW4 SW4 SSW4 SSW4 SSW4 SSW4 SSW4 SSW4 SSW4 SW4 SW4 WSW4 SW4 4/8 3/18 5/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 4/18 5/18 5/18 1/18 57/65 61/71 60/69 63/67 65/67 64/67 64/70 63/69 65/68 65/68 67/69 66/68 64/70 65/70 65/68 Wind speed in knots; wave heights in feet/intervals in seconds; temperatures for sea/air California cities City Monday Today Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Anaheim 73 Avalon/Catalina 59 Bakersfield 92 Barstow 94 Beaumont 73 Big Bear Lake 70 Bishop 86 Burbank 73 Camarillo 71 Chatsworth 77 Chino 79 Dana Point 67 Death Valley 106 Del Mar 65 Escondido 76 Eureka 65 Fallbrook 75 Fillmore 77 Fresno 92 Fullerton 76 Hemet 79 Hesperia 89 Huntington Beach 72 Idyllwild 65 Irvine 73 L.A. D’ntown/USC 71 L.A. Int’l. Airport 69 Trough Jet Stream Anchorage 68/55 tonight. Remaining breezy Wednesday. Low desert: Sunny and not as warm as it usually is in mid-June. Clear tonight. Sunny Wednesday. San Francisco Bay Area: Low clouds clearing to partial sunshine. Becoming mostly cloudy tonight. All –0 L ◗ Storms in the Plains: Storms with damaging wind, hail and flooding rain will move across the northern and central Plains. Scattered storms will move through the Deep South and Southeast. Dry weather will span the Northeast while the Northwest is quite cool. Marine layer in the morning: A moderately deep marine layer will push clouds deep into the valleys Tuesday morning then gradually clear. The same pattern with similar temperatures will occur Wednesday into Thursday. An upper-level ridge will develop in the west and by Sunday and Monday, extremely high heat is likely with some valleys reaching 110 degrees and lower deserts over 120. 62 53 67 64 53 39 50 58 54 56 61 59 77 62 60 51 59 51 63 61 55 53 61 50 62 60 60 Wed. Hi Lo -- 75 57 75 55 Tr 65 52 63 52 -- 89 59 83 56 -- 98 66 92 61 -- 81 50 78 48 -- 72 38 68 33 Tr 88 52 85 48 -- 76 58 76 57 -- 71 56 70 54 -- 76 54 74 53 -- 82 56 81 54 -- 69 60 69 58 -- 107 71 103 67 -- 66 57 66 55 -- 75 54 74 53 -- 60 46 58 45 -- 75 55 73 52 -- 77 52 75 50 -- 87 58 80 55 -- 76 60 75 59 -- 83 51 81 50 -- 87 54 82 51 -- 69 61 69 58 -- 74 50 72 48 -- 71 58 71 57 -- 74 59 74 59 -- 69 59 69 57 Wed. 6:41p 5.0 Hi 11:56a 1.5 Lo 7:27a 3.4 Hi 1:35a 1.0 Lo 7:12p 5.3 Hi 12:37p 1.7 Lo Almanac Los Angeles, 25 Phoenix, 10 San Francisco, 25 Monday Downtown readings Temperature Los Angeles Fullerton Ventura High/low 71/60 76/61 67/56 High/low a year ago 72/63 75/64 74/62 Normal high/low for date 77/60 78/61 71/55 Record high/date 99/1896 90/2007 81/1972 Record low/date 46/1894 58/1999 46/1952 Precipitation 24-hour total (as of 4 p.m.) 0.00 0.00 0.00 Season total (since Oct. 1) 6.88 5.26 8.43 Last season (Oct. 1 to date) 8.47 6.35 7.99 Season norm (Oct. 1 to date) 14.71 13.61 16.39 Humidity (high/low) 83/60 44/38 92/67 City Monday Today Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Wed. Hi Lo Laguna Beach xx xx xx 69 59 69 57 Lancaster 88 59 -- 88 61 82 56 Long Beach 72 61 -- 72 61 72 59 Mammoth Lakes 69 38 -- 68 38 64 36 Mission Viejo 75 59 -- 73 57 72 54 Monrovia 75 60 -- 76 52 74 50 Monterey 62 55 -- 64 52 63 49 Mt. Wilson xx xx -- 69 51 65 47 Needles 101 77 -- 104 79 103 76 Newport Beach 67 61 -- 69 61 69 59 Northridge 76 56 -- 77 53 75 51 Oakland 67 57 -- 68 55 67 53 Oceanside 73 55 -- 72 59 71 56 Ojai 76 46 -- 76 54 73 52 Ontario 75 59 -- 80 57 80 56 Oxnard 68 55 -- 68 56 67 54 Palm Springs 95 66 -- 99 69 96 67 Pasadena 73 58 -- 76 55 75 53 Paso Robles 82 49 -- 84 47 76 44 Pomona/Fairplex 76 59 -- 80 54 79 52 Poway 77 59 -- 73 59 72 58 Redding 89 62 -- 78 56 72 53 Rialto 81 58 -- 82 54 81 51 Riverside 77 60 -- 82 53 80 52 Forecasts provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 Sun and moon Today’s rise/set Los Angeles County Sun 5:41a/8:06p Moon 3:03p/2:13a Full Moon June 20 Last Quarter June 27 Orange County Sun 5:40a/8:04p Moon 3:02p/2:12a New Moon July 4 Ventura County Sun 5:45a/8:10p Moon 3:08p/2:17a First Quarter July 11 City Monday Today Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Wed. Hi Lo Sacramento San Bernardino San Clemente Pier San Diego San Francisco San Gabriel San Jose San Luis Obispo Santa Ana Santa Barbara Santa Clarita Santa Monica Pier Santa Paula Santa Rosa Simi Valley Tahoe Valley Temecula Thousand Oaks Torrance UCLA Van Nuys Ventura Whittier Hills Woodland Hills Wrightwood Yorba Linda Yosemite Valley 81 76 63 72 66 72 75 74 71 68 78 71 77 83 74 70 78 69 72 67 76 67 72 77 71 75 82 72 82 70 68 66 77 67 70 70 69 77 70 72 69 74 56 76 71 72 72 75 68 76 76 72 76 68 55 60 52 64 55 61 58 56 61 55 55 59 51 53 52 35 58 53 64 57 57 56 61 51 46 60 50 ---------------------------- 78 84 71 69 66 78 70 74 71 70 80 69 74 75 75 64 79 73 72 72 78 68 76 78 77 77 75 52 53 59 62 54 56 53 52 61 53 52 58 54 46 53 43 51 54 59 57 57 54 57 52 49 55 42 49 52 55 61 54 55 51 49 59 52 52 57 52 44 51 33 50 51 58 55 56 51 55 50 45 54 37 U.S. cities High 106 in Death Valley, Calif. Low 26 in Bridgeport, Calif. City Monday Hi Lo Prcp. Albuquerque 90 64 .04 Amarillo 89 68 -Anchorage 66 50 .09 Atlanta 97 75 -Atlantic City 76 60 -Austin 94 77 .20 Baltimore 80 59 -Billings 80 57 .11 Birmingham 96 72 .13 Boise 87 53 -Boston 73 54 -Brownsville 92 80 -Buffalo 63 51 Tr Burlington, Vt. 66 50 .08 Casper 73 50 .29 Charleston, S.C. 91 78 .14 Charleston, W.Va. 82 52 Tr Charlotte 93 70 .04 Chicago 86 54 .02 Cincinnati 86 61 -Cleveland 70 52 -Colo. Springs 74 57 .20 Columbia, S.C. 97 74 -Columbus 83 52 -Concord, N.H. 69 49 -Dallas/Ft.Worth 92 73 .15 Denver 76 55 .27 Des Moines 91 73 .22 Detroit 74 53 Tr Duluth 61 47 .56 El Paso 98 81 -Eugene 68 46 -Fairbanks 63 51 .07 Fargo 84 57 -Flagstaff 71 42 .02 Grand Junction 73 64 .04 Grand Rapids 78 53 Tr Green Bay 70 54 .66 Hartford 72 54 -Helena 77 43 -Honolulu 85 74 .19 Houston 93 74 .22 Indianapolis 90 63 -Jacksonville, Fla. 97 74 .04 Kansas City 88 67 Tr Las Vegas 95 75 -Little Rock 88 73 .51 Louisville 90 69 -Medford 78 52 -Memphis 94 75 .04 Miami 91 77 .06 Milwaukee 71 54 Tr Minneapolis 78 64 .39 Nashville 97 74 .20 New Orleans 90 79 .63 New York 74 57 -Oklahoma City 84 67 .01 Omaha 92 73 .01 Orlando 96 76 .03 Philadelphia 78 61 -Phoenix 100 79 -Pittsburgh 77 52 -Portland, Maine 71 51 .03 Portland, Ore. 65 53 .01 Providence 73 54 -Pueblo 82 62 .34 Raleigh 85 65 -Rapid City 83 60 1.23 Reno 83 54 -Richmond 82 62 -St. Louis 96 74 .12 Salt Lake City 74 60 .30 San Antonio 93 77 -San Juan, P.R. 91 79 .15 Santa Fe 89 53 -Seattle 65 52 Tr Today Hi Lo Sky 89 96 68 92 74 95 82 85 91 69 76 93 75 76 81 94 89 91 85 86 79 83 96 87 77 95 81 89 76 60 98 63 62 73 75 85 82 74 80 68 83 91 86 93 89 98 90 91 66 89 91 75 75 92 90 80 96 88 94 82 100 80 71 61 79 90 90 79 75 83 94 84 94 91 86 59 60 64 55 75 61 75 62 51 74 49 61 79 53 58 46 78 65 73 70 68 65 54 75 68 53 78 55 70 62 48 70 41 44 60 39 56 63 61 55 46 75 76 72 74 69 74 78 75 45 77 77 63 66 74 79 63 75 67 75 60 74 64 55 50 58 55 72 53 51 64 78 63 76 78 49 48 Su Su Su Ts Pc Pc Pc Pc Ts Pc Su Pc Su Pc Pc Su Pc Ts Ts Pc Pc Pc Su Pc Pc Pc Pc Ts Cy Pc Su Sh Pc Ts Su Su Cy Cy Pc Pc Pc Pc Ts Ts Ts Su Pc Pc Pc Pc Pc Cy Ts Pc Ts Su Pc Ts Pc Pc Su Pc Pc Ts Su Su Su Pc Su Pc Pc Su Pc Su Su Ts Taken at 3 p.m. Monday Spokane 71 54 Springfield, Mo. 88 67 Tallahassee 100 75 Tampa 91 79 Tucson 97 67 Tulsa 88 74 Washington, D.C. 81 64 Wichita 90 70 Yuma 98 70 World Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barbados Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Copenhagen Dublin Edinburgh Frankfurt Geneva Havana Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul Kingston London Madrid Manila Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Mumbai New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tehran Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Winnipeg Zurich 92 64 81 104 97 87 80 63 59 93 97 70 88 62 63 57 68 66 88 93 91 84 90 47 97 90 64 90 90 114 78 68 63 95 104 70 65 70 76 82 69 66 88 85 71 66 64 72 79 63 -.09 -.57 -.12 -.21 -- 60 91 92 89 99 94 83 97 100 41 75 75 78 67 77 66 71 72 Pc Ts Ts Pc Su Ts Pc Ts Su 78 .16 57 .40 66 .14 67 -82 -79 -68 .78 54 .27 43 -72 -73 -54 -75 -55 .05 54 .26 54 .54 57 .96 57 .38 75 -79 .16 80 .39 68 -61 -39 .27 62 -81 -57 .18 68 -73 -87 .02 56 .11 52 .12 48 -86 .01 86 .19 43 -52 .07 57 -59 -64 -39 .01 46 -77 .57 63 -69 .77 52 -54 .05 57 .02 52 -55 1.22 88 65 84 108 96 87 72 70 61 89 103 63 90 65 62 58 68 63 88 92 91 79 91 56 95 89 65 85 91 111 73 78 69 91 102 72 65 73 78 85 68 69 89 88 79 74 60 76 76 63 78 53 70 75 81 80 62 54 41 70 82 42 78 56 50 51 53 49 70 79 82 66 74 41 60 79 54 56 78 83 57 59 51 85 83 52 54 61 63 69 49 52 78 66 68 55 51 59 57 49 Ts Ts Pc Su Pc Su Sh Ts Pc Su Su W Pc R Ts R Ts Ts Pc Pc Ts Pc Su Pc Su Pc Ts Su Ts Ts Ts Su Cy Pc Ts Pc Ts Pc Pc Pc Pc Su R Su Pc Su Ts Ts Pc Ts Key: Su sunny; Pc partly cloudy; Cy cloudy; Fg foggy; Prcp precipitation; Dr drizzle; Hz;hazy Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; R rain; Sn snow; Sf snow flurries; I ice; Rs rain/snow; W windy; Tr trace. Notes: National extremes are for NWS stations; excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Missing data indicated by “xx”. Whom to support: Harris or Sanchez? [Democrats, from B1] endorsed her in January 2015 “within seconds” of finding out she was getting in the race, he said. “I just think she is the complete package. She’s got the intellect, she got the values, she’s got the political skills, she has a compelling personal story,” Huffman said. “She’s a terrific candidate and she’s going to be a great U.S. senator.” Huffman said he and Sanchez have talked about why he backs Harris. “It’s always a little awkward when you have a colleague running against someone that you think very highly of, but this is a huge, high-stakes, long-term proposition, who is going to be our second U.S. senator. We’ve got to get it right,” he said. Huffman said the Democrats in California’s delegation don’t spend much time talking about the race. “We know that within the delegation there are some fault lines that make it a little bit awkward, and so, to each his own, or her own,” he said. Rep. Juan Vargas (D-San Diego) has been campaigning for Sanchez . “I strongly believe Loretta would be a fantastic senator and I’m happy to try to help her in any way. That’s in no way deprecating to Kamala,” Vargas said. “It’s an embarrassment of riches. We have two people who are just absolutely fantastic people … but I think Loretta’s the better candidate.” As two Democrats, they should try to keep the contest from becoming bitter, he said. “I hope there isn’t a nasty fight between the both of them. I hope they keep it on the issues. That would be good for everybody,” Vargas said. Rep. Mark Takano (DRiverside) campaigned for Sanchez when she won the seat over Rep. Bob Dornan in 1996. Takano said other lawmakers ask him about Sanchez’s path forward. “Republicans and independents, I think, are up for grabs. Where do they go?” Takano said. “There is, I think, a very plausible scenario under which the race is going to be close.” The dozen members who have stayed out of the race entirely are in a tough spot. Rep. Jackie Speier (DHillsborough) said she’s still thinking about it. “It’s who you think is going to be the best representative, who is going to be the most persuasive and articulate and able to fulfill the responsibilities,” she said. Rep. Julia Brownley (DWestlake Village) said Har- ris and Sanchez each have strengths. She wants to take a close look at how her district voted in the primary before making a choice. “We have two good candidates running and I think it’s going to really narrow in the general. I think that Loretta has a very good chance of winning, I think Kamala has a good chance, I just haven’t made a decision,” Brownley said. Rep. Adam Schiff (DBurbank) said he tries to stay out of contests between Democrats. “Most of us hate when we get in between two good Democrats running for the same office, and so I haven’t gotten involved yet,” said Schiff, who may one day seek higher office in California. “I’ve done my best to remain neutral, but that’s hard when you have friends running against friends.” California Democratic Caucus Chairwoman Zoe Lofgren said that as head of the state’s Democrats, it’s better for her to stay on the sidelines. “My delegation is split, so I’ve so far just decided to see what all my members are doing,” Lofgren said. “It’s all in good faith, it’s all friendly, but I’m just thinking, do I need to be divisive in my delegation?” sarah.wire@latimes.com Congressional Quarterly CQ-Roll Call,Inc. REP. MIKE THOMPSON (D-St. Helena) said he’s worked with Kamala Harris on gun violence, an issue that’s dear to him. “I was impressed with her,” he said. Tom Williams CQ-Roll Call,Inc. REP. JUAN VARGAS (D-San Diego) has been campaigning for Loretta Sanchez in the Southland. “I strongly believe Loretta would be a fantastic senator,” he said. C BuSINESS T U E S D A Y , J U N E 1 4 , 2 0 1 6 :: L A T I M E S . C O M / B U S I N E S S DOW 17,732.48 ▼ 132.86 S&P 500 2,079.06 ▼ 17.01 NASDAQ 4,848.44 ▼ 46.11 GOLD $1,284.40 ▲ 11.00 OIL $48.88 ▼ 0.19 EURO $1.1291 ▲ .0032 U.S. T-NOTE (10-yr.) 1.61% ▼ 0.03 Grocers, workers square off COMPANY TOWN Strike authorization vote looms as talks continue between union and two chains. By Natalie Kitroeff Peter Kramer Getty Images VIACOM CEO Philippe Dauman, left, and CBS CEO Leslie Moonves attend an awards event in 2007. Redstone’s men richly rewarded More than a decade after launching the longest major supermarket strike in the nation’s history, union representatives for Southern California grocery store workers are back at the bargaining table. This time, there’s a third party in the room: a $15 minimum wage. California’s schedule of steady increases to the wage floor, which will boost that wage to $15 an hour by 2022, is doing some of the work for the union as it seeks its fourth contract with the Ralphs and Albertsons chains since the epic 141-day strike that brought the region’s supermarkets to their knees in 2003-04. But the two big chains, which include Safeway, Vons and Pavilions stores under the Albertsons umbrella, are looking to offset rising pay in other ways. That is likely to be the basis for any new confrontation. “They are offsetting the cost of the minimum wage, they are trying to find ways to get around it,” said Rick Icaza, the president of United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 770. The starting wage for a worker at the two chains is $10.10 an hour, just over the current state minimum. The companies have proposed a raise of 10 cents an hour per worker over the next three years and cuts to holiday [See Grocers, C6] Stocking up on workers The Los Angeles metro area has added more than 16,000 union and nonunion grocery store employees since 2004. The mogul’s top lieutenants, Leslie Moonves and Philippe Dauman, earn far more than their peers By Meg James When it comes to executive compensation, few corporate chieftains have soared to the sky-high levels enjoyed by Sumner Redstone and his top lieutenants, Leslie Moonves and Philippe Dauman. CBS Corp. Chief Executive Moonves and Viacom Inc. CEO Dauman are the second- and third-highest-paid executives, respectively, among publicly traded U.S. companies, according to the latest survey from data firm Equilar Inc. Moonves pulled in $56.4 million in compensation last year, Equilar said, and Dauman was right behind at $54.1 million. Both men earn far more than their peers who command much bigger media companies. Walt Disney Co. CEO Robert Iger made $43.5 million last year, and he runs a corporate empire with more than $52 billion in annual revenue, or nearly four times the size of either CBS or Viacom. Comcast Chief Executive Brian Roberts collected $27.5 million in 2015, and his realm, which includes media company NBCUniversal, generated nearly $75 billion in revenue. What’s more, Dauman’s pay jumped 22% in fiscal 2015 — even though Viacom’s stock plummeted 42% during that same period, according to Equilar. Dauman’s big bump was powered by a $17-million signing bonus for renewing his employment agreement. Without that, his pay package would have been $37 million, about 16% lower than the previous year, but that’s still substantially more than what most CEOs make. Why are the packages so rich? Mostly it reflects the style of Redstone, who has long run his $40-bil- A GOP plan to gut watchdog A proposal would roll back bank rules and cripple the consumer agency, writes David Lazarus. C2 11 shows to get state tax credits The California Film Commission says the TV projects have been OKd for $65 million in tax breaks. C3 Title Insurance building is sold A development group plans to transform the tower in downtown Los Angeles into creative offices. C4 Business Briefing .. C4 Market Roundup .. C4 Frederick M. Brown Getty Images SUMNER REDSTONE has run his empire like a private fiefdom. lion media empire like a private fiefdom and believes in awarding whopping pay packages to the bosses — himself included. Until this year, Redstone, 93, collected pay from both Viacom and CBS — raking in annual salary, bonuses and stock awards valued at more than $350 million since 2006, the year he split his vast empire into the two companies. “Sumner has always been willing to pay top dollar for his executives ... but the performance just hasn’t been there at Viacom,” said Eric Jackson, managing director of SpringOwl Asset Management, which has agitated for changes at Viacom. “The board of Viacom has been hands-off when it comes to Philippe.” Representatives for Dauman and Moonves declined to comment. Until recently, Dauman, 62, was widely considered to be Redstone’s heir apparent. “He was Sumner’s consigliere for the past 30 years,” said Porter Bibb, managing partner of Mediatech Capital Partners in New York. No more. Tensions between the ailing Redstone and Dauman came to the surface after Redstone’s former companion, Manuela Herzer, sued to have her status overseeing Redstone’s healthcare restored. Herzer lost, but the case put a spotlight on Redstone’s mental competence — and in the run-up to the trial, Redstone stepped down as executive chairman of CBS and Viacom, putting Moonves and Dauman in charge of their companies. While Redstone and Dauman were allies against Herzer, they became at odds over Dauman’s decision, shortly after becoming Viacom’s chairman, to sell a stake in Paramount Pictures movie studio. Redstone and daughter Shari Redstone, who has been a fierce critic of Dauman, are expected to push for new board members who will remove Dauman from his executive suite. Viacom has Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, MTV and other cable channels. “When you are working in a family business, blood is a lot thicker than water,” said William Klepper, a management professor at the Columbia Business School. “Just when Philippe thought he was blood, he found out that he really wasn’t.” If Dauman ends up getting pushed out of Viacom, he won’t go empty-handed: His contract calls for him to get a golden parachute with a payout that includes triple his bonus, which was $14 million last year, and three times his $4-million annual salary, as well as vested stock and options. Moonves since 2006 has received annual packages that add up to more than $500 million, according to CBS’ [See Redstone, C5] 4/1/16 84,100 1/1/14 67,300 2004 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16 Source: The California Employment Development Department K y l e K i m Los Angeles Times Apps get OK to talk to Siri Apple said it’s letting developers integrate products with the virtual aide and more. By Paresh Dave Despite the increasing amount of time people spend on their smartphones, the app market is in a lull. Facebook, Snapchat, Uber and other big-name apps get heaps of downloads. But most everyone else is seeing demand level off. That’s why app makers raved about Apple’s announcement at its Worldwide Developer’s Conference on Monday that apps may integrate with virtual assistant Siri, Apple Maps and iMessage. This would al- low developers to build software that lets iPhone users, say, talk to Siri to send a friend $20 through Venmo, book a ride on Lyft directly on Maps and select and send Dropbox files without leaving iMessage. Cool, new connections between apps could lift downloads and spur new business models. The move carries extra weight as Siri, added to Apple TV last year, arrives on Mac computers this fall. But Apple, which rarely goes all-out with new tools for developers, placed restrictions on the types of apps that can connect with Siri and on the actions users can take by voice. Siri starts with support for only ridehailing, messaging, photo, payments, calling and workout apps. Meanwhile, Maps handles only ride-hailing [See Apple, C4] L.A. TECH Start-up debuts a fashion line for gamers By Paresh Dave Though fans may not always notice, professional athletes put thought into their outfits off and on the field. They’ll choose custom sneakers on the court, fancy jackets at the news conference and color-coordinated headphones in the locker room. But in e-sports, not so much. Professional video game players rarely do better than jeans and oversized hoodies. So at its first of several planned ventures to amp up e-sports, a Los Angeles start-up is hoping to give the growing industry a sophisticated look. Ultimate Media Ventures on Monday launched ULT Kills, a fashion line of T-shirts, hoodies, hats and eventually footwear that, in the words of co-founder Nate Eckman, isn’t the usual “super-embarrassing ... kitschy, nerdy gamer wear.” The Los Angeles-stitched streetwear, priced from $28 to $78, will have woven labels, embroidery, custom printing and generally more attention to detail than the gaming-fashion industry typically sees, Eckman said. It comes in men’s and women’s styles. There’s no “all-over print, colorful fabric, splash art and big throw-up characters on a shirt that costs $2,” Eckman said. “If people keep designing products for nerds in basements, they are going to keep ending up with that,” he said. Ultimate Media Ventures is among dozens of small services companies and product makers seeking space in e-sports niches that include analyzing a player’s value to developing fancy chairs for matches. As deeppocketed investors flock to the booming industry, the start-ups hope to carve out a [See L.A. Tech, C5] Ultimate Media Ventures A SAMPLING of the ULT Kills fashion line from e-sports apparel company Ultimate Media Ventures. C2 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /B U S I NE S S BUSINESS BEAT Republicans cook up plan to gut watchdog Yan Green ABC DAVID LAZARUS TIMOTHY HUTTON, left, and Felicity Huffman If there’s one thing the financial services industry hates, it’s adult supervision. Last week, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican who serves as chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, unveiled a plan that he said would rectify the “grave mistake” that was the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which tightened the regulatory screws on financial firms and created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as an industry watchdog. “Dodd-Frank’s false premise is that an alchemy of Wall Street greed, outsized private risk and massive Washington deregulation almost blew up the world economy,” he said in a speech last week to the Economic Club of New York. “It wasn’t deregulation that caused the financial crisis,” Hensarling said. “It was dumb regulation.” As for greed, he said, “When hasn’t there been an element of greed on Wall Street?” Boys will be boys, right? Hensarling would fix things by throwing out large sections of the law. “He’d gut Dodd-Frank and gut the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,” said Deepak Gupta, a Washington lawyer who previously worked as senior counsel for the watchdog agency. “Jeb Hensarling is a wholly owned subsidiary of the financial services industry.” Too harsh? Not when you consider that, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, Hensarling has received more than $5.5 million from financial firms and industry groups since being elected to the House in 2002. The top two contributors to his political endeavors are JPMorgan Chase ($105,000) and the American Bankers Assn. ($85,000). In the 2014 election cycle, Hensarling was Congress’ No. 1 recipient of cash from payday lenders ($68,000), which are strongly against proposed rules from the CFPB that would rein in their operations. Hensarling’s office 11 shows to get state tax credits in “American Crime,” which will relocate to L.A. By Yvonne Villarreal Mark Wilson Getty Images REP. JEB HENSARLING (R-Texas), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, last week unveiled a plan to revamp the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. steered me to the Financial Services Committee for a comment. Jeff Emerson, a committee spokesman, said Hensarling has opposed Dodd-Frank since its introduction and “his record has been consistent and transparent.” Hensarling’s planned legislation — the misleadingly titled Financial Choice Act — would roll back significant portions of Dodd-Frank. Among other things, it would do away with the so-called Volcker Rule, which limits a bank’s ability to use its own accounts to make risky speculative investments. It would radically revamp the CFPB by renaming it the Consumer Financial Opportunity Commission and replacing its sole director with a five-member bipartisan commission. The commission’s mandate would be not just protecting consumers but also safeguarding the well-being of financial services markets. Hensarling’s bill would make the rejiggered agency more beholden to Congress by giving lawmakers say over the agency’s funding. Currently, the bureau’s funds come not from Congress but from the Federal Reserve. “Hensarling and Repub- licans on the House Financial Services Committee can’t stand this,” Gupta said. “It means they don’t have control over the purse strings.” A spokesman for the bureau declined to comment. Of course, the financial services industry is thrilled with Hensarling’s proposals. “Every law can be improved and Dodd-Frank is no exception,” said Jeff Sigmund, a spokesman for the American Bankers Assn. “Today, it is not unusual to hear bankers from strong, healthy banks say they are ready to sell because the regulatory burden has become too much to manage.” Tom Quaadman, senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, told me the changes proposed for the CFPB would result in a more effective, more accountable agency. “Congressional oversight is important to make sure the rights of people and businesses aren’t being trampled upon,” he said. Consumer advocates see a different agenda at work. “This plan doesn’t get tough on banks,” the advocacy group Americans for Financial Reform said in a statement. “It gets tough on the regulators policing them.” Liz Ryan Murray, policy director of the People’s Action Institute, which represents grass-roots organizations, said the millions in contributions showered on Hensarling “bought a really good friend in Congress.” Is there room for improvement in Dodd-Frank? Yes. Some regulations, such as capital requirements, that are intended to keep big banks healthy might be too stringent for smaller institutions. But there’s no disputing the success of the CFPB. Since its founding in 2010, the bureau has secured more than $11 billion in relief for more than 25 million consumers harmed by dubious financial practices. In other words, it made financial firms behave responsibly, in a grown-up fashion. The industry clearly would prefer to go back to the way things were before. David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter @Davidlaz. Send your tips or feedback to david.lazarus @latimes.com. ‘Hamilton’ boosts Tonys The Broadway smash helps the awards show telecast gets its best ratings in 15 years. yvonne.villarreal@latimes.com Walgreens splits with Theranos associated press A day after the nation’s largest drugstore chain severed ties with Theranos, the troubled blood-testing startup said Monday that it would continue serving customers through independent retail locations. Walgreens said Sunday that it would immediately close all 40 Theranos Wellness Centers at the drugstore chain’s Arizona locations. In January, Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. told Theranos to stop sending samples collected at its stores to a testing facility that drew regulatory scrutiny over possible patient risks. Theranos said Monday in a brief statement posted on its website that it was disappointed with the Walgreens decision. The blood-testing company said it was working with government officials “to ensure that we not only comply with all federal regulations but exceed them,” and that it still would serve customers in California and Arizona through independent retail locations. Palo Alto-based Theranos has raised millions of dollars by pitching its technology as a cheaper, faster way to run blood tests. The privately held company said in April that it was under investigation from several regulators and agencies. That followed a series of Wall Street Journal reports that raised questions about the company’s tests. Easing student loan debt relief By Stephen Battaglio Broadway’s acclaimed smash “Hamilton” pushed the ratings for the annual Tony Awards telecast Sunday to its highest level in 15 years. The ceremony from the Beacon Theatre in New York City that aired from 8 to 11:15 p.m. averaged 8.73 million viewers, an increase of 35% over the 2015 ceremony. The preliminary figure from Nielsen does not include the last 15 minutes of the broadcast, which aired outside prime time. The Tony Awards telecast is a must for theater fans but has typically been a modest ratings attraction compared with other major awards shows. But it clearly received a boost from offering performances by the cast of “Hamilton,” Lin-Manuel Miranda’s groundbreaking hip-hop musical on the nation’s founding that has become the most coveted ticket on Broadway. “Hamilton” won 11 awards, one short of tying the record set by “The Producers” in 2001, the last time that the Tony Awards had “American Crime” and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” are among the TV shows selected to receive state tax credits. In the first round of credits allocated for the second fiscal year of the expanded tax credit program, the California Film Commission on Monday said 11 TV projects have been approved for $65 million in tax breaks. The projects include ABC’s “American Crime,” which is relocating production of its third season from Austin, Texas, to Los Angeles. With the addition of “American Crime,” California has gained a total of six relocating TV series under the expanded incentive program. Other approved projects include four returning TV series already in the program (the CW’s “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” CBS’ “Code Black,” Fox’s “Rosewood,” and HBO’s “Veep”) and six pilots picked up to series, including Hulu’s “Citizen,” NBC’s “This Is Us,” and Freeform’s “Famous in Love.” “Year two of our expanded program is off to a very encouraging start as we welcome a sixth relocating TV series,” California Film Commission Executive Director Amy Lemisch said in a statement. “It’s also great to host another long-term project like ‘American Crime’ that is set elsewhere.” The 11 projects announced Monday are estimated to generate $464 million in direct in-state spending, including $171 million in wages to below-the-line crew members, according to the film commission. The commission said it expects that such in-state spending and wages will grow substantially for the second fiscal year as the program receives its full $330 million in annual funding. “With the program fully funded for year two, we will be able to attract and retain even more projects, which translates into more in-state spending and high-wage jobs that would otherwise go elsewhere,” Lemisch said. associated press Theo Wargo Getty Images THE CAST of the groundbreaking hip-hop musical “Hamilton” performs onstage during the Tony Awards ceremony at the Beacon Theatre in New York City. such a large TV audience, 8.94 million. The 70th Tony Awards drew an 11.4 rating and 18 share in the New York TV market, averaging 1.23 million viewers. It’s the largest hometown audience for the Tonys since Nielsen started using people meters to measure local market audiences in 2004. In Los Angeles, where the telecast airs on a delay, the show scored a 7.4 rating and a 13 share — up 42% over 2015 — with an audience of 582,000. The rating and share were the same in Chicago — up 23% over last year — with an average audience of 384,000. It was the largest audience in both markets since 2004. Ratings more than doubled year-over-year in smaller TV markets such as Nashville, Hartford-New Haven, Conn., and Jacksonville, Fla. The ceremony, hosted by James Corden of CBS’ “The Late Late Show” and a Tony winner himself, included big-name presenters Oprah Winfrey and Barbra Streisand. Glenn Close also appeared as Hillary Clinton in one comedy bit. Presenters and winners also paid tribute to the victims of the early Sunday morning shooting rampage at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., which had dominated the news in the hours leading up to the telecast. stephen.battaglio @latimes.com The Obama administration is trying to make it easier for students who have been misled or defrauded by their colleges to have their loans forgiven. A rule proposed Monday would lay out a clear relief process for borrowers who believe that they were lied to about job prospects after college or otherwise deceived to get them to enroll in the school. It also aims to hold schools accused of fraud or at financial risk more accountable by requiring them to notify prospective and enrolled students, as well as set aside money that could help cover future claims against the school. The proposal follows the collapse last year of Corinthian Colleges, one of the largest for-profit college companies. The proposal, expected to be in place by July 2017, would streamline debt relief for groups of students if they all experienced the same misconduct by a school, such as instances of wide misrepresentation — meaning that they all wouldn’t have to file individual applications for loan forgiveness. The new provisions also would bar schools from forbidding students from class-action lawsuits as part of enrollment agreements, something Corinthian had done. California’s attorney general filed a lawsuit in 2013, alleging rampant lies to students about job placement. Corinthian filed for bankruptcy protection last year, closing schools and leaving thousands of students with hefty debt and frustrated in their efforts to earn degrees. The U.S. Education Department has so far erased the debt for more than 8,800 former Corinthian students, totaling more than $132 million. But that’s only a small fraction of the estimated $3.6 billion in federal loans given to Corinthian students. L AT I ME S . CO M / B U S IN E S S T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 C3 TECHNOLOGY EA plans to award e-sports prize pool Video game publisher will give $1 million to the top players of latest ‘Madden NFL.’ By Paresh Dave Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty Images MICROSOFT unveils its Xbox One on Monday at the Galen Center. The system offers a 2-terabyte hard drive and will support 4K resolution for Blu-ray discs. The console comes with a stand allowing it to sit vertically. Microsoft unveils its new, slimmer Xbox One The upgraded gaming console, which starts at $299, takes aim at the Sony PlayStation. By Alex Schiffer Microsoft Corp. announced a slimmer version of its Xbox One at USC’s Galen Center on Monday. The new console, unveiled as the Electronic Entertainment Expo gets underway Tuesday in Los Angeles, is the smallest Xbox yet — 40% smaller than its predecessor. The system will feature a large 2-terabyte hard drive and will support 4K resolution for Blu-ray discs. Unlike its predecessor, the console will come with a stand that allows it to sit vertically. It goes on sale in August starting at $299. The announcement came hours before rival Sony Inc. was expected to discuss an updated version of its PlayStation 4. Analysts predict that the upgraded console will have improved graphics, potentially larger storage and support for 4K. Sony has yet to announce the price for the device, but it is expected to be higher than the current PlayStation 4 price of $350. If that holds true, Microsoft may be in position to have early success in sales with its new Xbox One model. “The price is really important here,” said Mike Vorhaus, president of Magid Advisors, a media consulting firm. Because these releases represent minor updates to an existing console — not en- tirely new platforms — a few dollars in savings could sway consumers, he said. “Over and over we saw that the lower-priced guy is going to sell more units in the beginning. And that’s still true,” Vorhaus said. “So Xbox lets [Microsoft] appeal to people who haven’t bought a console yet. The late adopters. And it lets them appeal to people who already bought a PS4.” And there are plenty of those people. Sony has sold double the amount of PS4s to Microsoft’s Xbox Ones. “It’s a tale of two different consoles,” said Andrew Alvarez, a gaming industry research analyst at IBIS World. “For the Xbox it’s an attempt to press the reset button and see if the second life to this console will help increase sales.” In an industry in which consoles must now compete with mobile devices, PCs and even virtual reality helmets, console sales have held strong despite the increasingly crowded field. At its news conference Monday, Microsoft talked about the idea of cross-platform gaming, which is the ability to play a game on a console against someone on a PC and vice versa. It’s something that could help the industry stay competitive even as its rivals continue to grow. “Everyone thought this generation of consoles weren’t going to sell as well as they did,” Alvarez said. “That was a huge boom. There’s a huge core demographic that still exists that’s still interested in using their consoles.” alex.schiffer@latimes.com Snapchat to place more ads The start-up will put commercials that last about 10 seconds between Stories. By Paresh Dave Teen favorite Snapchat Inc. is turning its app into a bigger hub for advertising, announcing Monday plans to place commercials in a new spot and simplify the process of buying an ad. The moves, in effect, turn on the jets on Snapchat’s ad business. Investors have valued the Venice start-up at $16 billion and showered it with $2 billion in cash. But Snapchat only expects to generate a few hundred million dollars in revenue this year and isn’t near profitability. Though the 5-year-old company has built up its advertising business over the last year, its policies required a good deal of handholding with clients. Part of it has had to do with unique ad formats, including vertically oriented videos and branded animation tools for selfies. But the company also has sought to keep tight control over the frequency and presentation of ads. From the start, Snapchat hasn’t offered much data on who had viewed an ad or flexibility on the demographics of users who would see campaigns. It began addressing many of the issues in recent months, adding 10 firms as business partners to Video game publisher Electronic Arts Inc. plans to award $1 million over the next year to top players of its latest “Madden NFL” title. The prize money is a selling point for a new, fourtournament series beginning this fall, marking the first e-sports initiative from the nation’s second-mostprofitable gamemaker since it launched a competitive gaming division in December. The “Madden NFL 17” Championship Series, announced Sunday, came two days before the Electronic Entertainment Expo, or E3, brings the gaming industry to downtown Los Angeles. Turning video games into a sport, with all the traditional complexities of stadiums, free agency and drug testing, is among the hottest topics at this year’s convention, which starts Tuesday. Electronic Arts is committing to a three-year plan, hoping to slowly build up amateur, mid-level and professional tournaments. It’s a more cautious approach than the ambitious media strategy of slightly larger rival Activision Blizzard Inc., which boasted a pair of $1-million prize pools last fall and has among its goals becoming the ESPN of e-sports. At an investor presentation last month, Electronic Arts “did its best to pour cold water on the notion that e-sports will generate significant direct revenue in the near term,” Macquarie Capital analyst Ben Schachter wrote to clients. At the base of EA’s setup are plans to provide resources such as scheduling software to college students and other gaming enthusi- asts that would make it easier for them to organize tournaments. These days, it’s a chore involving clipboards and hauling around gaming consoles. At the mid-level, EA says it will work with events promoters like ESL and Gfinity to run what the company calls premiere tournaments. But what EA truly considers e-sports are global, top-tier tournaments known as Majors. “Madden” is getting the Majors treatment, and so will the popular “Battlefield” shooter and “FIFA” soccer franchises. “Whether you’re an elite player competing for cash and prizes in global e-sports events, or you’re taking your first steps to play online, we want everyone to feel the thrill of competition,” EA Chief Competition Officer Peter Moore said. EA has done tournaments before, but they were more about selling games than thinking through how to get people spending more time playing them, Moore said. Now executives such as Moore are emphasizing the development of features that support dueling and entertainment among players. That includes offering more camera angles, the ability to stream games online for others to watch and generally creating a “spectacle” around who wins and loses, Moore said. If players get into it, they’ll spend more money on packs of virtual items that can boost their characters and street-credibility. Socalled downloadable content is a fast-growing profit generator for large gaming companies. “Every one of our development teams understands what competitive gaming is going to bring in the next many years,” Moore said. “It just takes time to do.” paresh.dave@latimes.com Twitter: @peard33 Apple Music’s new interface By August Brown Luca Teuchmann Getty Images SNAPCHAT EXECUTIVE Nick Bell discusses mobile storytelling in London in April. The company has built up its advertising business over the last year. measure the effectiveness of ads on Snapchat and offering six subsets of users — based on factors such as gender and age — so advertisers can target particular markets. On top of that, Snapchat said Monday that eight companies can now connect to its ad system. It’s a bit of automation that reduces the need for Snapchat to be heavily involved in the videoad creation and buying process, though the company will still evaluate all video ads before they go live. What users are likely to notice is that commercials lasting about 10 seconds will now appear between Stories, which are compilations showing photos and videos that a user shared to followers over the last 24 hours. In March, Snapchat began automatically playing Stories back to back. As users jump from one friend’s story to the next, they’ll now encounter ads from companies such as Hollister, Verizon and Warner Bros. Snapchat says more than 100 million people, including about 41% of adults under age 35 in the U.S., use its app each day for staying on top of their friends’ lives and inter- national news and gossip. They spend sometimes half an hour on Snapchat every day, giving the company plenty of untapped room to show ads. Commercials on Snapchat can be skipped. But they do take up the whole screen when shown and that’s helped them stand out more and generate a greater effect on consumers compared to ads on rival services including Facebook, according to studies. paresh.dave@latimes.com Twitter: @peard33 Apple Music’s 15 million users will soon wake up to a dramatically different layout for the streaming service. The company announced a significant redesign at its Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday in San Francisco. The year-old service, which still trails Spotify’s 30 million paid users, will both streamline its interface and introduce several new features, while pushing others onto the back burner. An early preview of the changes suggest a simpler, clearer interface, as opposed to the sometimes jumbled and confusing first edition. The design will feature larger album art displays and will focus on recent additions to their catalog. But several new features might prove especially interesting to even established users. A new lyrics tab will allow listeners to pull up song lyrics directly from the track page. A new “For You section,” similar to Spotify’s recommendation engine, will create daily playlists and suggestions. And subscribers will be able to send and play songs directly through Apple THE REDESIGNED Apple Music iOS app is seen on an iPhone 6. the Messages feature. There’s a backtrack as well: The “Connect” feature, once touted as the social component of Apple Music, will be shunted to the back of the “For You” section. The features will be updated as part of the new iOS this fall, just as Amazon and Pandora are planning new streaming services that aim to compete with Apple Music, Spotify and others. august.brown @latimes.com C4 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 Major stock indexes L AT I M E S. C O M /B U S I NE S S Close Daily change Dow industrials 17,732.48 -132.86 -0.74 +1.76 S&P 500 2,079.06 -17.01 -0.81 +1.72 Nasdaq composite 4,848.44 -46.11 -0.94 -3.17 S&P 400 1,482.32 -16.75 -1.12 +5.99 Index Daily % change YTD % change Russell 2000 1,150.70 -13.23 -1.14 +1.30 EuroStoxx 50 2,733.09 -52.10 -1.87 -12.35 16,019.18 20,512.99 -582.18 -529.65 -3.51 -2.52 -15.84 -6.39 Nikkei (Japan) Hang Seng (Hong Kong) BUSINESS BRIEFING LABOR Hospital workers vote to unionize Source: AP MARKET ROUNDUP Stocks fall ahead of Fed meeting associated press U.S. and global stocks fell for a third day Monday as concerned investors waited to see what the Federal Reserve would do with interest rates this week and anxiously awaited the fate of Britain’s membership in the European Union. LinkedIn shares jumped $61.13, or 46.6%, to $192.21 after Microsoft announced plans to buy the company. Firearms makers rose as investors wondered if the mass shooting in Orlando, Fla., on Sunday would lead to greater sales. Sturm Ruger advanced $4.88, or 8.5%, to $62.29, its largest one-day gain in more than a year, and Smith & Wesson rose $1.47, or 6.9%, to $22.88. Similar gains have been recorded after other mass shootings such as the one last year in San Bernardino. The prospect of additional background checks and other regulations often boosts demand for guns. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 132.86 points, or 0.7%, to 17,732.48. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 17.01 points, or 0.8%, to 2,079.06 and the Nasdaq composite fell 46.11 points, or 0.9%, to 4,848.44. The Federal Reserve had been expected to start raising interest rates, but now appears likely to remain in a wait-and-see mode. The central bank’s two-day meeting will start Tuesday, with a decision on interest rates Wednesday afternoon. Fed Chairwoman Janet L. Yellen is scheduled to hold a news conference after the interest rate decision. Last month many investors were betting that the Fed would raise interest rates, but the two most recent monthly jobs reports in the U.S. have put a damper on those expectations. Investors’ lack of confidence that the Fed will raise rates could be seen in bonds and the U.S. dollar. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to 1.61% from 1.64% on Friday, its lowest yield so far this year. The dollar, while off its lows, is still also trading near its lows for the year against other major currencies. Combined with the weight of the Fed decision, stocks, particularly in Europe, remain under pressure on investor concerns over whether Britain will choose to remain in the European Union in a June 23 referendum. 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The vacant building will be renovated and turned into office and retail space. Title Insurance building acquired A development group plans to transform the downtown L.A. tower into creative offices. By Andrew Khouri A development group led by Rising Realty Partners plans to transform the vacant Title Insurance and Trust building in downtown Los Angeles into creative offices, a roughly $40-million renovation job. The Los Angeles firm, along with Lionstone Investments and Industry Partners, purchased the historic Art Deco building last week and has already begun work on the project. A purchase price was not disclosed, but the deal is the latest in downtown’s historic core, where old buildings are being revamped and new towers erected. This month a New York City developer revealed plans to renovate the Cecil Hotel on Main Street, and in May another company broke ground on a 24-story apartment tower a short walk from the aging Title Insurance building near the corner of 4th and Spring streets. Hal Bastian, a downtown L.A. development consultant, said the Rising Realty project marks a milestone for the historic core — once an office hub that declined as businesses left for the suburbs and new high-rises on Bunker Hill. In the last two decades, he noted, most renovations along Main, Spring and Broadway have been residential conversions of vacant office towers. But with the area undergoing a revitalization because of those conversions, Rising is betting that businesses once again want a Spring Street address. “It’s coming full circle,” Bastian said. Renovations at the 433 S. Spring St. building will include returning the gleam to the facade and removing lead paint and asbestos. The development group plans to create about 300,000 square feet of modern offices in the 11-story tower — most of which is expected to be of the creative variety, with open floor plans and lots of natural light. The project also calls for retail space on the ground floor and a restaurant on the roof with a 360-degree view of downtown. “It’s going to need a lot of love and care,” said Christopher Rising, president of Rising Realty. “But we are really looking forward to the opportunity to bring it back.” Lionstone, a Houstonbased real estate investment firm, and Industry Partners, a Santa Monica real estate services firm, previously worked with Rising Realty to transform the PacMutual center at 6th and Olive streets into creative offices. The Beaux Arts building, which is closer to Bunker Hill, sold for $200 million last year after Rising Realty acquired it for just $60 million in 2012. The Title Insurance and Trust Building opened in 1928, a time when Spring Street was known as the Wall Street of the West and the firm was “riding high on the wave of Southern California real estate development,” the Los Angeles Conservancy wrote in a request to make the building a historic cultural monument. “Up until the mid-’60s, Spring Street was the place to be” for businesses, Rising said. But by the late 1970s, with Spring Street on the decline, Title Insurance and Trust decamped to Rosemead, following other firms that had already fled the historic core. With businesses leaving for Bunker Hill and the suburbs, Spring and Main streets fell on hard times. But in recent years, the area has seen a revival and is now home to lofts, restaurants and bars. Mike Condon Jr., an executive managing director with Cushman & Wakefield, said Rising Realty’s project will help extend that revitalization north to a stretch of Spring Street that has seen less investment. “It’s a big boost to that northern pocket of the historic core,” said Condon, who represented the seller, Capital Foresight. andrew.khouri @latimes.com WHISTLE-BLOWERS U.S. court sides with Boeing A federal appeals court has sided with Boeing and one of its suppliers in the whistle-blower lawsuit brought by three ex-workers at the aircraft manufacturer's former plant in Wichita, Kan. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with a federal judge's decision that the ex-workers failed to show Boeing defrauded the U.S. government in a $1.6-billion contract. The three-judge appellate panel said it found no evidence that Boeing knowingly submitted a false claim for “bogus parts” in a contract for two dozen 737 Next Generation aircraft. It upheld the 2014 summary judgment in favor of Boeing and California-based supplier Ducommun Inc. COURTS FedEx drug case heads for trial The U.S. government and FedEx are set to battle in a federal court over a claim that the company knowingly delivered illegal prescription drugs such as Ambien from pill mills to dealers and addicts, some of whom died. Fedex denies the charge and says it only shipped what it believed were legal drugs from licensed pharmacies. — times staff and wire reports App makers given access to Siri Callfor forFree Free Consultation Consultation Call • Auto Accidents • Wrongful Death • Rear End Crashes • DUI Victims • Brain Injuries • All Types of Cases • Se Habla Español • No Recovery, No Fees Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times THE OLD VAULT at the Title Insurance and Trust building, which opened in More than 1,100 workers at a Pomona hospital voted to unionize, the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West announced Monday. The workers at Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center included nurses, phlebotomists, ultrasound technologists, janitors and receptionists. The SEIU said the vote, which took place Jan. 22 but was cleared by the National Labor Relations Board on Friday, marked the largest hospital unionization in California in 15 years. Sean Wherley, a spokesman for SEIU-UHW, said the union is waiting to see if the hospital challenges the NLRB ruling on the vote before it schedules contract negotiation meetings. [Apple, from C1] and reservations. Only iMessage is wide open. Tight control over functionality at the outset lets Apple avoid tying up users in unpleasant experiences, whether it’s overpowered apps draining batteries or invasive software demanding too much access to a user’s personal files. Though the reins loosen over time, there are shortterm consequences. Expectations about last year’s launch of the Apple Watch soured after software developers realized that the company’s restrictions would render many of the first apps for the smartwatch sluggish and unsophisticated. Just 20 of the top 100 free iPhone apps and 11 of the top 100 paid apps have an Apple Watch version, according to data from tracking firm Sensor Tower. “We thought we would see more uptake from developers,” said Paul Kopacki, chief marketing officer for Realm, which provides storage technology to 100,000 developers. “But Apple is rubbing against the limits of its first-generation hardware — battery, screen size — and one of their responses has been to limit what developers can do with it.” Uncertainty about how to turn smartwatch apps into significant revenue generators hasn’t given developers the incentive to prioritize apps for the Apple Watch. “I get the impression that some users find watch apps nice to have as an extra, but it’s not a significant driver of sales,” said James Thomson, who develops the PCalc app. Apple ended up with poor early reviews for watch apps, which may have curtailed sales of the device. “The watch hasn’t saturated like the hot device on the market usually does,” Kopacki said. Siri accepting voice commands for apps should generate less severe concerns for Apple compared with the challenges raised by its initial watch model. Siri launched in 2011, and users are accustomed to interacting with it. Issues may arise, though, if people have two apps with similar functionality, said Charles Teague, chief executive of Boston start-up FitNow. His company’s app, Lose It, helps hundreds of thousands of subscribers track their workouts and diets. Should a user with several fitness apps say to Siri, “I just had a ham sandwich,” each of those apps could seek to do something with the statement. The activity could overburden the device or confuse the user — problems that justify Apple erecting barriers such as requiring users to name the app they want to activate. Though Apple didn’t release the Siri floodgates, at least opening them somewhat alongside iMessage provides the strongest sign yet that the company senses itself being squeezed by rivals Google and Facebook. The competitors also want to boost their own virtual assistants and messaging apps by luring programmers — and they aren’t known for putting tight restrictions on developers. “Every major area of iOS is open to developers,” said Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior VP of software engineering. Apple’s desire to compete with Google and Facebook shined through in other announcements Monday too. Starting this fall, facial recognition software in the photos app should improve searching. And artificial intelligence software is expected to suggest replies to messages and automatically convert words to emojis. Rivals already boast some similar features. Apple’s event Monday in San Francisco also introduced other elements of what CEO Tim Cook described as a “gigantic” update scheduled to arrive this fall across the company’s products. Among them, iMessage users will be able to emphasize remarks by changing the size of text or pixelating it until the recipient waves their hand across the screen. Additionally, artists may submit digital stickers for public use in iMessages. An SOS tool for the Apple Watch automatically rings the local emergency number, pings a user’s emergency contacts and displays medical information for first responders. Mac and Macbook users are expected to gain the ability to shop on websites using Apple Pay and have online videos stay on the screen as they switch to a different program. It’s the new tools for Siri and iMessage that provide developers the most inspiration, though. Apple regularly adjusts its policies to remain app makers’ preferred distribution partner. Last week, Ap- ple announced several changes intended to appease programmers. Getting an app — or a new version of it — on the App Store should be faster. Attracting users could become more cost-effective because the App Store will now have spots for ads, giving app makers an alternative to the standard path of marketing on Facebook or Google. And Apple introduced the ability for more app makers to sell apps as a subscription rather than just a one-time fee. Teague saw news about the subscriptions and immediately crunched numbers. After a subscriber’s first year, Apple will charge developers a fee of only 15% of revenue, versus the 30% it siphons from paid apps today. “It’s a big a deal,” Teague said. “You think about people who stick with us for more than a year, it’s plus 15% on all of them.” Apple is of such importance to developers because iPhone apps are more lucrative than Android complements. The more expansive role of iMessages and particularly Siri on the device could be crucial to keeping the app market humming. “Opening up the platform for developers was long overdue,” said Daniel Ives, a financial analyst who followed the company until recently joining mobile software company Synchronoss Technologies. “I view this as a major step in the right direction for Apple to get developers behind Siri and help fend off competition.” paresh.dave@latimes.com L AT I ME S . CO M / B U S IN E S S Mogul’s men get high pay [Redstone, from C1] filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. But Bibb and others say that Moonves, 66, has done an admirable job of keeping CBS at the top of the network heap, and that has he been aggressive in making CBS programming available on digital platforms. Last year, Moonves and Dauman’s compensation packages were eclipsed only by Expedia CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, whose $94.6-million compensation was boosted by a one-time stock award. Some shareholders have complained, to little effect. The Redstone family owns nearly 80% of the voting stock in the two companies, so no one had the power to object. Viacom and CBS have two classes of stock, and investors who own Viacom’s Class B common shares or CBS Class B common shares have no vote. “Dual class stock means there is no accountability to other investors,” said Charles Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware. “The accountability is to the controlling shareholder.” And that’s Redstone. The outsize compensation has dented the bottom line for both companies. Over the last decade, Viacom and CBS allocated salaries, stock awards, options, bonuses and other benefits valued at the time at $1.6 billion for just four men: Moonves, Dauman, Redstone and Viacom Chief Operating Officer Thomas Dooley, according to company filings. The current value of some those holdings is considerably less because of the drop in the value of Viacom shares since 2014; but had the stock risen, the amount could have been more. On Monday, Viacom shares fell 78 cents, or 1.9%, to $41.24. CBS shares were off 1.2%, or 62 cents, to $52.11. CBS stock is up 10% since OCSE CEO pay Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman and CBS CEO Leslie Moonves are among the highest paid executives in the country. Annual CEO pay (In millions) Leslie Moonves (CBS) Philippe Dauman (Viacom) $70M 2011: $68.4 2015 $56.4 60 50 $43.1 $54.1 40 30 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 Annual shareholder returns CBS 75% 50 Viacom 2011 44% 25 2015 -14% 0 -25 9% -42% -50 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 Source: Equilar Inc. Los Angeles Times January while Viacom is basically flat. Since 2006, when he became CEO, Dauman has collected compensation that, at the time, totaled more than $380 million, according to Viacom filings. But with so many stock options underwater and a decline in value of other equity-based compensation, more than $73 million in value was erased. The high pay, particularly for Dauman, has drawn scrutiny from some investors. BTIG Research media analyst Richard Greenfield has referred to the executive compensation provided to the Viacom executive as “egregious,” in light of Viacom’s recent struggles, and said the core problem was lack of board oversight. Viacom’s 11-member board includes several longtime friends of Redstone. “It’s just a simple failure of the board,” Greenfield said. meg.james@latimes.com T U E S DAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 C5 Start-up targets gamers’ fashion [L.A. Tech, from C1] big business. In accouterments, Eckman saw extra opportunity because, in his view, established athletics wear giants such as Nike are hesitant to enter e-sports because they could catch flak from their traditional sportswear customers. Among many sports fans, playing video games remains anything but a sport. Nike declined to comment. By the end of the year, Eckman would like to have uniforms on players. The jerseys would be made from multiple undisclosed materials in an effort to make them breathable and sweat-wicking. Uniforms also must stand up to the chill players feel in heavily air-conditioned video studios. “It’s not going to be a cheap soccer shirt,” Eckman said, adding that there would be matching pants and shorts. He and his fellow cofounders have been consulting video game publishers on marketing initiatives for several years. They recently decided to combine efforts and raised start-up capital from Dallas firm Cedars Spring Capital. Other projects include developing e-sports-related shows and organizing events on behalf of gaming companies. 2 security software companies get cash Irvine cybersecurity company Cylance, whose software is meant to predict what a cyberattack might look like and what vulnerability it will exploit, picked up $100 million as it ramps up sales. Cylance says it has about 1,000 customers but now wants to add many more because its software has achieved initial goals. The funds from Blackstone Tactical Opportunities, Insight Venture Partners and others add to $77 million the nearly 4-yearold company previously raised. The latest investment values the company at $1 billion, according to reports. Also, Los Angeles security company Armorway, which got its start with federally funded research at USC, announced a $2.5-million investment from Texas venture capital firm Aristos Ventures and several individuals. Armorway’s latest software aims to suck in data about employees to identify ones that could pose a threat, potentially because they would try to leak information. The company also offers software that aims to help law enforcement determine the best spots to position officers. On the Web 8 Music manager and venture capitalist Troy Carter, based in Culver City, is taking a global role at music streaming app Spotify, where he will oversee the company's relationship with musicians, songwriters and record labels, according to the New York Times. 8 El Segundo fashion brand JustFab named Todd Tappin as chief financial officer. He held the same role at Rubicon Project and helped the Los Angeles ad technology company go public, according to the Wall Street Journal. 8 Virtual Reality Co., a Steven Spielberg-backed film studio making content for virtual reality headsets, announced a $23-million investment from Chinese technology company Hengxin Mobile Business, according to the Wall Street Journal. 8 Google at last has signed a lease for a 319,000square-foot hangar in Playa Vista, according to the Real Deal. 8 KTLA-Channel 5 spotlights the 11 start-ups in hospital Cedars-Sinai’s healthtechnology start-up mentorship program. 8 Brogan BamBrogan, co-founder at Hyperloop One, says the transportation start-up is considering developing an underwater version of the high-speed rail system that has only been seen in above-ground renderings so far, according to Science Friday. In case you missed it 8 Snapchat Inc. downplayed a popular feature in an update as it attempts to better promote lesswatched content from the likes of ESPN, BuzzFeed and Cosmo. 8 Peter Csathy, a digital media executive who has tracked the rise of online video for more than a decade, has launched an advisory and investment company named Creatv. 8 Video game publisher Electronic Arts Inc. plans to award $1 million over the next year to top players of its latest “Madden NFL” title. 8 Airbnb used its annual conference to address the tech world’s present public relations crisis, with panels on building an inclusive company, mitigating bias in hiring and managing and nurturing trust. Coming up A Tel Aviv University alumni group hosts a conference on digital media Wednesday and Thursday in Santa Monica, with topics including virtual reality, mental health in the digital age and online distribution strategies. paresh.dave@latimes.com Twitter: @peard33 Low-Rate Home Loans OUR LOCK INRYATE LOW ! NOW Purchase or Refi Today! Rate/Start Rate1 15 Year Fixed 30 Year Fixed 5/5 ARM 4 7/1 ARM 5 2.750 3.500 2.875 2.875 APR1 % % % % 2.910 3.590 3.431 3.270 %2 %3 % % Ask a Representative for details today! 888.920.1752 www.SouthlandCU.org 1)APR=Annual Percentage Rate. Sample payments based on a $200,000 loan amount quoted as of 6.13.2016 and subject to change without notice. Loan & accompanying interest rates, points, and APRs may differ and be adjusted based on your credit history, loan-to-value (LTV), occupancy, property type, loan amount, and loan purpose. 2)180 monthly payments of $1,358.00. 3)360 monthly payments of $898.00. 4) ARM=Adjustable Rate Mortgage. 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C O M /B U S I NE S S Grocery chains square off with union Callaghan O'Hare Los Angeles Times ERIKA BENTZEN relaxes after working the graveyard shift at a Ralphs store this month in Thousand Oaks. She finds the chain’s proposal disheartening. ing for more, we are just looking to survive here. We are looking for a decent wage for a good job,” Bentzen said. Both sides are wearier and weaker today than they were in 2004. “The strike in ’03-’04 was like Armageddon; we did tons of damage but it also damaged the companies, to the extent that it hurt everyone,” said Kathy Finn, director of collective bargaining at UFCW Local 770. The mayhem of picket lines more than a decade ago sent shoppers to ethnic markets or neighborhood alternatives such as Trader Joe’s, which do not have unions to fight with. 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Wages for clerks, baggers and others have actually declined after adjust- Legal Notices INVITATION FOR BIDS (IFB) SOLICITATION FOR FIRE FLEET MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR SERVICES The Consolidated Fire Protection District of Los Angeles County (District) is soliciting bids from qualified companies interested in providing fire fleet maintenance and repair services under eight (8) separate categories, as follows: 1. Glass and Upholstery Services 2. Allison Transmission Overhaul and Repair 3. Brake, Clutch and Drivetrain Component Overhaul and Repair 4. Mobile Air Conditioning Service 5. Off Highway Equipment Services and Aerial Device Repair 6. Light and Medium Vehicle Repair (EMERGENCY VEHICLES ONLY) 7. Heavy Truck Repair (EMERGENCY VEHICLES ONLY) 8. Engine External Component Repair (EMERGENCY VEHICLES ONLY) Terms of the contract will be initially for three (3) years with two (2) possible one-year extensions followed by an additional twelve (12) possible one-month extensions, for a possible maximum contract term of six (6) years. To obtain solicitation documents, please contact Carlos Santiago by email at carlos.santiago@fire.lacounty.gov . The deadline for submitting a bid is July 6, 2016, by 2:00 p.m. (PST) at 5801 S. Eastern Avenue, Suite 100, Commerce, California 90040, Attn: Carlos Santiago. ABSOLUTELY NO BIDS WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER THE SUBMISSION DEAD LINE CN925712 FIRE FLEET Jun 10,11,12,13,14, 2016 Legal Notices Xarelto users have you had complications due to internal bleeding (after January 2012)? If so, you MAY be due financial compensation. If you don’t have an attorney, CALL Injuryfone today! 1-800-523-1874 (CDCN) SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-276-7931 to start your application today! (CDCN) ing for inflation, hitting $28,964 annually per Los Angeles worker on average, down from about $31,175 a year in 2005. The food industry, meanwhile, is growing. In 10 counties — from Imperial and San Diego north to San Luis Obispo and Kern — giant chains and independents are fighting over a market that is more than twice as big as the next largest, the New York-New Jersey metropolitan area, Flickinger said. Since the strike was resolved, employment has increased 25% in Los Angeles locations. But the new workers are signing up for jobs with fewer perks and dwindling hours. In 2004, the UFCW represented 59,000 workers at Ralphs, Albertsons and Vons. Now the union has about 12,000 fewer members at those and affiliated stores. “Grocery store jobs look much more like fast-food jobs than they used to,” said Chris Tilly, director of the UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. “Lower pay, fewer benefits, more people parttime.” Tom Hancock said that’s a familiar story. When the 60year-old started working at Vons in 1995, he says it took him about two years to work his way from bagging groceries to the highest clerk-level pay at the store. Most of the people around him were working more than 30 hours a week. Now he says the store is giving employees fewer hours, while increasing the amount Employment DRIVER SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS $2000 SIGNING BONUS OR LEARN TO BE A SCHOOL BUS DRIVER Experienced Route and Field Trip drivers 21 yrs old. $15-$18/HR. Or Training classes starting soon. Bring DMV H-6 printout. Bonus paid after lic obtained. 401K, Med/Dental bnfts, & holiday pay. 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A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal state or common law (see section 14411 et seq. Business and Professions code). Dean C. Logan, Los Angeles County Clerk. BY: D. Chau, Deputy. Published 5/24, 5/31, 6/7, 6/14/2016. From brokers to buyers. In one place. TELEMARKETING HIRING NOW! Sell Home Remodeling Services In the Best Work Environment In the City! No Background/Credit Check We Train you, Because your Success is our Success! Up to $15/Hour! Call Now! LA Times Real Estate Classified 213-915-0179 or 213-915-0180 430 S. Western WAREHOUSE Warehouse Associate Forklift operation and food distribution experience required. Apply 2021 E. 52nd St., Vernon, CA 90058 or Fax resume to (323) 589-1996 Advertise Today (800) 234-4444 Rentals Hotels/Motel NORTHERN AZ WILDERNESS RANCH $249 MONTH. 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DOMESTIC EMPLOYMENT of time they need to put in before they can get a promotion. “It takes longer for them to get anywhere,” Hancock said. “It takes three times as long as it used to.” Under the current contract, employees have to work upward of seven years to make $20.10, the pay ceiling at the chains. Albertsons and Ralphs want to require employees to work several months more before reaching that pay rate, union officials said. Hancock said he’s most worried about his retirement savings, which took a hit when the union made concessions to secure a deal in 2004. “They tore up the pension pretty much,” he said. In 2004, the union agreed to a 35% cut in future pension returns for those working for companies before the strike; newcomers faced an even sharper reduction. The UFCW said the companies are now pushing to increase their contributions to employee pensions by just 10 cents an hour per year, down from a 20-cent increase they agreed to in the last contract. The stores also want to force employees to retire at age 65, rather than 60, the union said. Hancock bought his first computer a month and a half ago and chose a Gmail address that referred to him as a retired clerk. “I’m looking ahead,” he said. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME HOW TO PLACE AN AD Self-service 24/7: latimes.com/placead Contact us by phone 24/7: by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. HOVCU 800-234-4444 ADVERTISING POLICIES The Times reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertisement, to correctly classify any advertisement and to delete objectionable words or phrases. Submission of an advertisement does not constitute a commitment by The Times to publish the advertisement. To maintain quality customer service, The Times randomly monitors telephone transactions. Publication of an advertisement does not constitute an agreement for continued publication. The Times will not be liable for failure to publish an ad as requested or for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement. In the event of an error, or omission in printing or publication of an advertisement, The Times’ liability shall be limited to an adjustment for the cost of the space occupied by the error, with maximum liability being cancellation of the cost of the first incorrect advertisement or republication of the correct advertisement. Under no circumstances shall The Times be liable for consequential damages of any kind. To place an ad, please call 800-234-4444 or go to latimes.com/placead. ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. FOREY TAYNLE INEFIT Yesterday’s Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app [Grocers, from C1] pay; they also want to make it harder for entry-level employees to reach the highest pay grade, union officials said. On Monday, 47,000 clerks, meat cutters, and merchandise stockers will have the chance to vote on whether to authorize a strike. The union and the companies met Monday and have four other meetings scheduled over the next few weeks. “I see negotiations as ongoing at this point, and certainly moving through the process to reach an agreement that is good for our associates and also keeps us competitive in a very tough market,” said Kendra Doyel, a spokeswoman for Ralphs. A spokesperson for Albertsons did not respond to requests for comment. Erika Bentzen, who has worked for Ralphs for 31 years, finds the company’s proposal disheartening. “It does hurt, it’s like a slap in the face,” Bentzen said. The single mother works the graveyard shift, stocking merchandise at a Thousand Oaks store from midnight to 8:30 a.m., and makes $20.10 an hour, the most a Ralphs or Albertsons clerk can make without becoming a department head. Bentzen has no desire to repeat the trauma of the strike, which forced her to take a second job and dip into her savings. But she says that her pay hasn’t kept up with the cost of living in the Los Angeles area. “I don’t look at it as ask- Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ONION KAYAK MEADOW CASHEW Answer: After going fishing for the first time, he was — HOOKED D SPORTS T U E S D A Y , J U N E 1 4 , 2 0 1 6 :: L A T I M E S . C O M / S P O R T S N BA FINALS GA ME 5: C LE VE LA ND 112, G OLDEN S TATE 97 WARRIORS LEAD SERIES, 3-2 | GAME 6: THURSDAY AT CLEVELAND, 6 P.M. PDT, TV: CHANNEL 7 DUCKS TAP PAST SUCCESS Carlyle, who led team to only Stanley Cup title, is expected to be named coach again. By Curtis Zupke Ezra Shaw Getty Images IN ADDITION TO scoring 41 points in what could have been his team’s final game of he season, Kyrie Irving of the Cleveland Cavaliers was more than willing to get down and dirty with Andre Iguodala of the Golden State Warriors in pursuit of a loose ball. JAMES GANG STILL STANDING It’s been nearly a decade since Randy Carlyle guided the Ducks to their only Stanley Cup title, apparently long enough for them to tap back into that glorious past. Carlyle is expected to be named Ducks coach again. An announcement could be made Tuesday, barring issues negotiating a contract, if not later this week. The team did not comment Monday night and Ducks General Manager Bob Murray did not respond to a message left by The Times, but his expected selection would wrap up a sixweek-long search to fill the vacancy left by Bruce Boudreau, fired April 29 shortly after Anaheim was eliminated at home in a Game 7 for the fourth straight season. Carlyle was believed to be among three finalists that included Travis Green, a former Ducks player who is coach of the Vancouver Canucks’ minor league team, and Rick Bowness, an assistant coach with the Tampa Bay Lightning and a former head coach of the Ottawa Senators. [See Carlyle, D3] Cavaliers stay alive behind their motivated star, deny Warriors By Mike Bresnahan OAKLAND — LeBron James had a simple mantra before Game 5, and he shared it publicly. Win or lose, the Cleveland Cavaliers had to return home after playing Monday at Golden State. So why not win and force a Game 6 on the Cavaliers’ court? James almost single-handedly made it happen by dominating Game 5 in too many ways to capture in a sentence, let alone a paragraph. He scored 41 points, took 16 rebounds and added seven assists in a game-high 43 minutes of a 112-97 victory that prevented the Warriors from winning a second consecutive championship. Cleveland still trails in the NBA Finals, 3-2, and faces the steep challenge known as history: No NBA team has ever successfully rallied from a 3-1 Finals deficit in 32 previous tries. But James clung to his dream of bringing the Cavaliers the first NBA title of their 46-year existence. He made 16 of 30 shots, flying past Golden State defenders on plenty of them, and hit four of eight attempts from three-point range. His defense bordered on ma- niacal. He ferociously blocked two shots from behind on Warriors fastbreaks and disrupted Shaun Livingston’s fastbreak dunk attempt as well. “We had a mind-set that we wanted to come here and just try to extend our [playoff] period,” James said. “I understood the magnitude of this game. I knew how great of a team we were [See Finals, D3] Messi has just one goal in mind Argentine star wants nothing more than to bring home the Copa America title. Jonathan Daniel Getty Images LIONEL MESSI is lifted up by Ever Banega after scoring against Panama. COPA AMERICA Argentina vs. Bolivia at CenturyLink Field, Seattle TV: Today, 7 p.m., FS1 Changes that helped Penguins Switching coaches and promoting youngsters helped Pittsburgh win the Stanley Cup. D3 On the mend after crucial surgery College pitcher and liver donor Joey Carney has been walking more than three miles a day D5 first stint in Anaheim ended with his firing on Nov. 30, 2011. Greinke is tough on his old team A former mainstay of Dodgers keeps them at bay and gets a hit before decisive run. By Kevin Baxter It took Lionel Messi 28 years to get around to playing a competitive game in the U.S. It was worth waiting for. After sitting out Argentina’s first game in the Copa America Centenario, Messi entered the second match, against Panama, as a second-half substitute, then scored three goals and assisted on a fourth in just 29 minutes. In less than half an hour, Messi was tied for the tournament lead in scoring and had taken his team through to the quarterfinals. Entering Monday’s games, seven [See Messi, D2] Christian Petersen Getty Images RANDY CARLYLE’S DIAMONDBACKS 3 DODGERS 2 By Andy McCullough Mark J. Terrill Associated Press DETERMINED RAMS HOPEFUL Nelson Spruce set a Pac-12 record with 294 receptions for 3,347 yards and 23 touchdowns during four seasons at Colorado. Westlake High product tries to stick with Rams undrafted receiver Spruce hoping to defy the odds By Jesse Dougherty With hundreds of local high school coaches at the Rams’ organized team activities Friday, Jim Benkert thought he’d blend into the crowd. There was a steady buzz as coaches rapped about their upcoming seasons. Some jotted notes on the team rosters that were distributed. Others shuffled up and down the field to steal glances at the more notable players: defensive tackle Aaron Donald; running back Todd Gurley; No. 1 draft pick Jared Goff. But Benkert kept his eyes trained on Nelson Spruce. He was probably the only visiting coach keeping close tabs on an undrafted free agent. He also was the only visiting coach watching one of his former players try to [See Spruce, D3] PHOENIX — The shock of his departure faded months ago, but Monday offered the Dodgers an in-person encounter with Zack Greinke for the first time in 2016. He wore the oddly styled uniform of the Diamondbacks, with splotches of red on the shoulders and ankles, and he toiled for a team already drifting away from playoff contention. But on this night, in a 3-2 Dodgers defeat, he reminded his former club of his work. Across seven innings of two-run baseball, he sidestepped the Dodgers’ attempts at an offensive revival and extended their losing streak to three games. Justin Turner tagged Greinke with a run-scoring double in the first. Corey Seager supplied a solo home [See Dodgers, D5] D2 T U E S DAY , J U NE 14 , 2 016 L AT I M ES . C O M / SP O RTS COPA AMERICA PRO CALENDAR TUE. 14 WED. 15 at Arizona at Arizona 6:30 12:30 SNLA SNLA DODGERS MINN. 7 FSW ANGELS THU. 16 FRI. 17 SAT. 18 MILW. 7 SNLA MILW. 7 SNLA MILW. 7 SNLA at Oakland at Oakland 6:30 1 FSW FSW MINN. 7 FSW at Toronto 4:30 TWC, Dep. LA MAQUINA 7:30* GALAXY Shade denotes home game. *-U.S. Open Cup SPARKS: Tonight, Chicago, 7:30, TWC, Dep. TODAY ON THE AIR TIME BASEBALL 9:30 a.m. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m. EVENT ON THE AIR Philadelphia at Toronto Chicago Cubs at Washington Dodgers at Arizona TV: MLB TV: MLB TV: SNLA R: 570, 1020, 1540 TV: FS West R: 830, 1330 Minnesota at Angels HORSE RACING 2 p.m. Racing Coast to Coast PRO BASKETBALL, WNBA 5 p.m. Indiana at Minnesota 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Sparks SOCCER 8:30 a.m. European Championship, Austria vs. Hungary TV: Prime TV: ESPN2 TV: TWCSN TV: ESPN, ESPND R: 1220 TV: ESPN, ESPND R: 1330 TV: FS1, UniMas, UDN TV: FS1, KMEX, UniMas, Univision TV: ESPN, ESPND R: 1330 11:30 a.m. European Championship, Portugal vs. Iceland 5 p.m. Copa America, Chile vs. Panama 7 p.m. Copa America, Argentina vs. Bolivia 5:30 a.m. European Championship, Russia vs. Slovakia (Wed.) TENNIS 11 a.m. Center Court: WTA, Birmingham; ATP, Halle; ATP, TV: Tennis London TV programming subject to blackout. For TV channel questions and availability please contact your cable or satellite provider; Note: Times may be different for satellite TV users; consult your guide. COPA AMERICA STANDINGS GROUP A Country GROUP C W L T Pts GF GA Country W L T Pts GF GA United States 2 1 0 6 5 2 Mexico 2 0 1 7 6 Colombia 2 1 0 6 6 4 Venezuela 2 0 1 7 3 1 Costa Rica 1 1 1 4 3 6 Uruguay 1 2 0 3 4 4 Paraguay 0 2 1 1 1 3 Jamaica 0 3 0 0 0 6 June 3 Colombia 2, United States 0 June 5 Venezuela 1, Jamaica 0 Mexico 3, Uruguay 1 June 4 Costa Rica 0, Paraguay 0 Thursday Venezuela 1, Uruguay 0 Mexico 2, Jamaica 0 Tuesday United States 4, Costa Rica 0 Colombia 2, Paraguay 1 Monday’s results Mexico 1, Venezuela 1 Uruguay 3, Jamaica 0 Saturday United States 1, Paraguay 0 Costa Rica 3, Colombia 2 GROUP D GROUP B Country Peru Country W L T Pts GF GA 2 0 1 2 7 4 W L T Pts GF GA Argentina 2 0 0 6 7 1 2 Chile 1 1 0 3 3 3 Ecuador 1 0 2 5 6 2 Panama 1 1 0 3 2 6 Brazil 1 1 1 4 7 2 Bolivia 0 2 0 0 2 4 Haiti 0 3 0 0 1 12 June 4 Peru 1, Haiti 0 Brazil 0, Ecuador 0 Wednesday Brazil 7, Haiti 1 Ecuador 2, Peru 2 Sunday Ecuador 4, Haiti 0 Peru 1, Brazil 0 June 6 Panama 2, Bolivia 1 Argentina 2, Chile 1 Friday Chile 2, Bolivia 1 Argentina 5, Panama 0 Today’s matches Chile vs. Panama, 5 p.m. Argentina vs. Bolivia, 7 p.m. All times PDT SCHEDULE Thursday 6:30 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Saturday 4 p.m. 7 p.m. JUNE 21 6 p.m. JUNE 22 5 p.m. JUNE 25 5 p.m. JUNE 26 5 p.m. M25: U.S. vs. Ecuador FS1, UniMas, UDN M26: Peru vs. Colombia FS1, UniMas, UDN M27: Venezuela vs. TBA M28: Mexico vs. TBA FX, Univision, UDN FX, Univision, UDN M25 winner vs. M27 winner FS1, UniMas, UDN M26 winner vs. M28 winner FS1, UniMas, UDN Third-place game Fox TBA, Univision, UDN Final FS1, Univision, UDN SUMMARIES At Houston Venezuela....................................................1 0—1 Mexico .......................................................0 1—1 FIRST HALF—1, Venezuela, Jose Manuel Velazquez (Christian Santos, Alejandro Guerra), 10th minute. SECOND HALF—2, Mexico, Jesus Manuel Corona (Miguel Layun), 80th. Yellow Cards—Alexander Gonzalez, Venezuela, 3rd; Hector Herrera, Mexico, 45+1; Christian Santos, Venezuela, 52nd; Jesus Molina, Mexico, 59th; Adalberto Penaranda, Venezuela, 69th. Red Cards—None. Referee—Yadel Martinez, Cuba. Assistant Referees—Joe Fletcher, Canada; Dario Gaona, Paraguay. Fourth Official—Armando Villareal, United States, Reserve Assistant Referee—Hiran Dopico, Cuba. A—67,319. Lineups Venezuela—Dani Hernandez, Alexander Gonzalez, Wilker Angel, Jose Manuel Velazquez, Rolf Feltscher, Alejandro Guerra (Romulo Otero, 83rd), Tomas Rincon, Luis Seijas, Adalberto Penaranda, Christian Santos (Salomon Rondon, 78th), Yonathan Del Valle (Josef Martinez, 65th). Mexico—Jesus Corona, Paul Aguilar, Diego Reyes, Hector Moreno, Jorge Torres Nilo (Miguel Layun, 46th), Jesus Molina (Chicharito, 68th), Javier Aquino (Jesus Manuel Corona, 18th), Hector Herrera, Andres Guardado, Hirving Lozano, Oribe Peralta. At Santa Clara, Calif. Jamaica.....................................................0 0—0 Uruguay......................................................1 2—3 FIRST HALF—1, Uruguay, Abel Hernandez (Nicolas Lodeiro), 21st minute. SECOND HALF—2, Uruguay, Je-Vaughn Watson (OG), 66th; 3, Uruguay, Mathias Corujo, 88th. Yellow Cards—Michael Hector, Jamaica, 32nd; Rodolph Austin, Jamaica, 84th. Red Cards—None. Referee—Wilson Lamouroux, Colombia. Assistant Referees— Alexander Guzman, Colombia; Corey Parker, United States. Fourth Official—Ricardo Montero, Costa Rica, Reserve Assistant Referee—Juan Mora, Costa Rica. A—40,166. Lineups Jamaica—Andre Blake, Adrian Mariappa, Wes Morgan, Jermaine Taylor, Je-Vaughn Watson, Garath McCleary (Dever Orgill, 73rd), Lee Williamson (Rodolph Austin, 69th), Michael Hector, Jobi McAnuff (Michael Binns, 80th), Clayton Donaldson, Giles Barnes. Uruguay—Fernando Muslera, Maxi Pereira, Gimenez, Diego Godin, Gaston Silva, Carlos Sanchez (Matias Vecino, 66th), Arevalo Rios, Alvaro Gonzalez (Mathias Corujo, 81st), Nicolas Lodeiro, Abel Hernandez (Gaston Ramirez, 74th), Edinson Cavani. TODAY’S MATCH GROUP D: CHILE vs. PANAMA Where: Philadelphia. Time: 5 p.m. PDT. TV: FS1, UniMas, UDN. The buzz: Although both teams go into the group-play final with three points, Panama’s minus-four goal differential means Chile goes through to the quarterfinals with a win or a draw while Panama goes home with anything short of a victory. Panama can blame Lionel Messi for its predicament since it was Messi who scored three goals in the final 30 minutes of Argentina’s 5-0 victory over Panama, turning a close game into a rout. Chile, meanwhile, is coming off a 2-1 squeaker against Bolivia that was decided on Arturo Vidal’s penalty-kick goal in stoppage time. — Kevin Baxter Mexico ties Venezuela and sits atop Group C fall. The team has scored 16 goals and allowed just two since Osorio took over. wire reports Jesus Manuel “Tecatito” Corona’s goal in the 80th minute gave Mexico a 1-1 tie against Venezuela on Monday night and first place in Group C of the Copa America. Corona had missed several previous opportunities to score when he took on five defenders before firing off a shot from 10 yards to tie it and thrill the overwhelmingly pro-Mexico crowd at Houston. By winning its group, El Tri avoids a quarterfinal matchup with Lionel Messi and tournament favorite Argentina. Mexico is likely headed for an easier matchup with Chile in the knockout round, leaving Venezuela to face mighty Argentina. Venezuela surprised Mexico with an early goal. The Vinotinto used a free kick to get it in the box, and David J. Phillip Associated Press MEXICO’S Jesus Manuel Corona (10) celebrates his goal against Venezuela with his El Tri teammates. Jose Manuel Velazquez gave Venezuela the lead in the 10th minute after taking an assist on a header from Christian Santos and volleying it in for the goal. Venezuela had a chance to take the lead in the 84th minute, but goalkeeper Jose de Jesus Corona saved a bicycle kick shot by Josef Martinez. Mexico has a 22-game unbeaten streak, its longest ever, and has nine wins and a draw since Juan Carlos Osorio took over for interim coach Ricardo Ferretti last Uruguay 3, Jamaica 0: Uruguay signed off from the Copa America Centenario with a win over Jamaica despite Edinson Cavani’s continued woes in front of the goal. Abel Hernandez, starting up front as Luis Suarez was again left on the bench, gave Uruguay a halftime lead at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. In the second period, JeVaughn Watson’s unlucky own goal and Mathias Carujo’s first international strike made it 3-0. Jamaica keeper Andre Blake made an early save on Hernandez, with the resulting corner headed wide by Cavani. Blake cleared a ball straight to Cavani but the striker took too long over the chance and saw his shot saved. What will he do for an encore? [Messi, from D1] of the 16 teams in the tournament hadn’t scored as much. “Messi,” Panama Coach Hernan Dario Gomez said with equal parts awe and respect, “is a monster.” All of which raises one big question heading into the final day of group play Tuesday: What will Messi do for an encore when Argentina, the world’s top-ranked team, plays winless Bolivia, at No. 82 the lowest-rated team in the tournament, in Seattle? If you believe Messi, there’s a lot of room to improve after he sat out two weeks because of a bruised back. “It was difficult,” Messi told the Argentine sports daily Ole of the injury. “It felt like an eternity because I was unable to move for many days, practically not doing anything. “The first 30 minutes of football after being out … it’s not easy to get back into the rhythm of matches.” But Messi has a lot more to accomplish than simply getting his groove back. It’s been 23 years since Argentina has raised a trophy in a major senior competition, a drought that has come to define Messi as one of the greatest players never to win an international soccer championship. In the last World Cup he carried Argentina through group play, scoring four of his team’s six goals. He arrived for the final exhausted and was rarely dangerous, so Germany took home the Cup and Messi got the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player. Last summer he got Argentina to the Copa America final unbeaten, only to lose to Chile on penalty kicks. Messi was again named the tournament’s best player, but this time he declined the consolation award. He’s made it clear there’s only one prize he’s interested in this summer. “I hope it is our Copa, it is what we want, but we must be calm,” he told Ole. “First we have to think of Bolivia Jonathan Daniel Getty Images LIONEL MESSI , left, moves against Felipe Baloy of Panama on his way to scor- ing his third goal in Argentina’s 5-0 victory over Panama. He also had an assist. and after [that game] the quarterfinal. Every game will be difficult.” Especially if Argentina midfield threat Angel di Maria is unavailable. Two years ago in the World Cup, Argentina scored seven goals in its first four games but none in its final three after losing Di Maria to a torn muscle in his right thigh. Di Maria limped off the field again Friday in Chicago with an abductor problem and was originally thought to be done for the tournament. The team later upgraded his condition, saying Di Maria had “minimal swelling” in his right leg and could be available by the quarterfinals. But if Messi won’t look ahead to the knockout round until after Tuesday’s group-play final, others have already begun considering the possibility of a U.S.-Argentina matchup in the semifinals. The U.S. will first have to win Thursday’s quarterfinal against Ecuador, a team it beat in a warmup less than three weeks ago. And Argentina still has to win its group — Chile and Panama each have a mathematical possibility at the group title if Argentina falls to Bolivia — and its quarterfinal. Should all that happen, it would bring the world’s best player face to face with the home team. It would match a legend seeking his first international title against a U.S. national team seeking respect. “This is a wonderful opportunity to see how our team is compared to those top nations,” U.S. Coach EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP Spain defeats Czech Republic, 1-0 associated press Gerard Pique finally broke down the Czech Republic’s stubborn defense in the final minutes, giving defending champion Spain a 1-0 victory Monday at the European Championship. Pique ran behind the defenders and calmly headed the ball into the net after a well-placed cross by Andres Iniesta in the 87th minute. The two-time defending champions had created a series of scoring chances throughout the match at France’s Stadium de Toulouse. But they looked set to be denied victory by a combination of poor finishing and a superb performance from Czech Republic goalkeeper Petr Cech. The Czechs had a chance to break the deadlock in the 65th minute but Cesc Fabregas saved Spain with a goal-line clearance after a header by Theodor Gebre Selassie. The result left Spain and Croatia at the top of Group D with three points each. Croatia defeated Turkey, 1-0, on Sunday. Spain’s unbeaten streak at European Championships was extended to 13 games, with 10 wins and three draws. Sweden 1, Ireland 1: Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the star who calls himself a legend, saved Sweden yet again. Even if he couldn’t get a goal and set a European Championship scoring record, the 34-year-old Ibrahimovic rescued a draw after being stifled by an impressive Ireland for most of the match. Sweden trailed until the 71st minute, when Ibrahimovic glided forward and sent a teasing ball across the goal mouth that Ireland defender Ciaran Clark stooped to head into his own net at Saint-Denis, France. Ibrahimovic was seeking to become the first player to score in four different European Championships but was limited to half-chances. Italy 2, Belgium 0: Goals from Emanuele Giaccherini and Graziano Pelle combined with excellent defending helped Italy to a win over Belgium in its first match at the European Championship. Described as one of the worst Squadra Azzurra ever by Italian media, Antonio Conte’s aging team defied the odds to take the lead in Group E with an impressive collective display at Lyon, France’s Grand Stade. Juergen Klinsmann said. “That’s why you want to put a stamp on the tournament. You want to send out a strong signal to everybody that we are growing, that we’re getting better.” Panama, too, came here eager to get a look at Messi — until they did. When the Argentine star finished warming up and walked to the sideline to check into the game, Gomez, the Panama coach, turned to the fourth official and asked, “How much time [is] left?” “Thirty minutes,” came the reply. For Panama, it was 30 minutes too many. For Messi, on the other hand, it may prove to have been just the start of something. kevin.baxter@latimes.com Galaxy tonight When: 7:30. Where: StubHub Center. On the air: Live streaming on LAGalaxy.com. Record vs. La Maquina: First meeting. Update: The Galaxy’s first game in the U.S. Open Cup will be a neighborhood tussle against Santa Ana’s La Maquina, which plays in the United Premier Soccer League, a 5-year-old amateur league based in Southern California. La Maquina is taking part in the domestic cup competition for the first time and qualified for this fourth-round game by beating a UPSL rival, the L.A. Wolves, two weeks ago. With the Galaxy nearing the end of a two-week Major League Soccer break, Coach Bruce Arena may use this match to give some of his first-team bench players some game action. — Kevin Baxter L AT I ME S . CO M / S P O RT S T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 D3 Little changes were pivotal for Penguins Champions took flight after switching coaches, adding speed at midseason. HELENE ELLIOTT Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press LEBRON JAMES glides to the rim in the first half for two of his 41 points. The Cleveland Cavaliers star also had 16 rebounds and seven assists in 43 minutes. James, Irving write 41-point headlines [Finals, from D1] playing.” Cavaliers teammate Kyrie Irving was plenty sharp too, scoring 41points to complement James in many ways, typically from the outside. Irving made 17 of 24 shots (70.8%), accuracy usually reserved for a big night from a big man, not a point guard. He added six assists. “Just Kyrie being special,” Cleveland Coach Tyronn Lue said. Klay Thompson had 37 points for the Warriors, who clearly missed their most versatile player. Draymond Green sat out because of a one-game suspension after striking James in the groin in Game 4. As such, Warriors fans chanted “Free Draymond” during timeouts Monday and booed James whenever he touched the ball. Warriors Coach Steve Kerr didn’t want to address much about Green, ending reporters’ what-if questions about the fine defender and well-rounded offensive threat. “We’re not talking about that,” Kerr said. “Draymond wasn’t here so we played without him. We didn’t play well enough to win. I’m not going into all that stuff.” The Warriors are the ones facing some question marks now. NBA most valuable player Stephen Curry fell back from his stirring Game 4 effort and missed13 of 21shots. He scored 25 points. The Warriors will prob- NBA FINALS Cleveland vs. Golden St. Warriors lead series, 3-2 Gm 1 Gm 2 Gm 3 Gm 4 Gm 5 Gm 6 Gm 7 Golden State 104, Cleve. 89 Golden State 110, Cleve. 77 Cleve. 120, Golden State 90 Golden State 108, Cleve. 97 Cleve. 112, Golden State 97 Thursday at Cleveland, 6 Sunday at Golden State, 5* * if necessary Times p.m., PDT ably go forward without center Andrew Bogut, who suffered an undisclosed left knee injury in the third quarter and had to be helped off the court. Bogut’s contributions aren’t as splashy as his Warriors’ teammates but his defensive presence can cause trouble for opponents. Golden State, normally a top-notch threat from threepoint range, missed 18 of 21 from behind the arc in the second half Monday. The Warriors get Green back for Game 6 but if they lose Thursday, the series is tied at three games each. Golden State would host Game 7. Beyond James and Irving, there wasn’t much for Cleveland. Kevin Love, for example, returned to the starting lineup and had two points in 33 minutes in his second game back from a concussion. It didn’t really matter. James’ power and Irving’s grace were enough to silence a keyed-up Oracle Arena crowd that wanted to Cavaliers 112, Warriors 97 CLEVELAND ......................Min FG-A FT-A OR-T A P T James ...............42 16-30 5-8 4-16 7 1 41 Love .................32 1-5 0-0 0-3 1 4 2 T.Thompson........41 1-3 4-10 3-15 0 1 6 Irving ................39 17-24 2-2 0-3 6 4 41 Smith................30 3-9 3-3 1-2 1 5 10 Shumpert ..........25 2-4 0-0 0-1 0 0 4 Jefferson............14 4-6 0-0 0-1 0 1 8 Dellavedova .........3 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 3 0 Williams..............3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Mozgov ...............1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 J.Jones ................1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 D.Jones ...............1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Totals 44-83 14-23 8-41 15 22 112 Shooting: Field goals, 53.0%; free throws, 60.9% Three-point goals: 10-24 (Irving 5-7, James 4-8, Smith 1-2, Jefferson 0-1, Shumpert 0-1, Dellavedova 0-2, Love 0-3). Team Rebounds: 11. Team Turnovers: 16 (11 PTS). Blocked Shots: 9 (James 3, Shumpert 2, T.Thompson 2, Irving, Love). Turnovers: 16 (Irving 4, Jefferson 3, Dellavedova 2, James 2, Love 2, Shumpert, Smith, Williams). Steals: 11 (James 3, Jefferson 3, Irving 2, Shumpert, Smith, T.Thompson). Technical Fouls: None. GOLDEN STATE ......................Min FG-A FT-A OR-T A P T Barnes ..............37 2-14 0-2 1-5 1 1 5 Iguodala............41 6-13 2-2 4-11 6 0 15 Bogut .................7 0-0 0-0 1-3 0 4 0 Curry ................40 8-21 4-4 2-7 4 2 25 K.Thompson.......40 11-20 9-9 0-3 1 2 37 Livingston ..........21 3-7 1-1 1-4 3 1 7 Speights............11 0-6 0-0 1-3 2 2 0 Barbosa ..............9 1-3 0-0 0-0 0 3 3 Ezeli ...................9 1-3 0-0 2-3 0 2 2 Varejao ...............8 0-0 3-8 1-1 1 0 3 McAdoo ..............7 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 3 0 Rush...................4 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Totals 32-88 19-26 13-43 18 21 97 Shooting: Field goals, 36.4%; free throws, 73.1% Three-point goals: 14-42 (K.Thompson 6-11, Curry 5-14, Barbosa 1-2, Iguodala 1-4, Barnes 1-6, Livingston 0-1, Rush 0-1, Speights 0-3). Team Rebounds: 16. Team Turnovers: 17 (18 PTS). Blocked Shots: 9 (Bogut 3, Curry 3, Barnes, Ezeli, Rush). Turnovers: 17 (Curry 4, Iguodala 3, Livingston 3, Barbosa 2, Bogut 2, Speights 2, K.Thompson). Steals: 6 (Iguodala 2, Barnes, Livingston, Rush, Speights). Technical Fouls: None. Cleveland 29 32 32 19— 112 Golden State 32 29 23 13— 97 A—19,596. T—2:39. O—Derrick Stafford, Marc Davis, Monty McCutchen, Ed Malloy. witness a clincher. James returned to the Cavaliers two years ago in hopes of earning that elusive championship for them. He still has a chance to do it, much more than was expected before Game 5. mike.bresnahan@latimes.com The Pittsburgh Penguins’ Stanley Cup triumph is good news for teams built around speed and youth but it might be bad news for coaches who have been entrenched in one place for a while. When things were looking dim for the Penguins around midseason, General Manager Jim Rutherford changed coaches — from Mike Johnston to Mike Sullivan — and called up several youngsters that Sullivan had coached with Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) of the American Hockey League, most notably forwards Bryan Rust and Conor Sheary. The kids brought energy and added speed to a team that could outpace nearly anybody when the defense got the puck up quickly to the forwards and let them fly. Acquiring fleet left wing Carl Hagelin, who had inexplicably failed to click with the Ducks, gave them more speed and enough depth to assemble three impressive scoring lines. Six months to the day after the Penguins promoted Sullivan, they completed a six-game Cup victory over the gritty but outclassed San Jose Sharks. “I don’t think you could expect it,” defenseman Ian Cole said Sunday while players lingered on the ice at SAP Center in San Jose to celebrate. “When we were at that point in December or maybe January, when we hit our low point of the season, there was a lot of frustration built up. There were a lot of guys frustrated over how they were playing and how the team was playing. “But I don’t think anyone ever doubted that we had a very special team that could potentially go all the way. I think we were still really confident in the players we had. We just had to figure out some things. We figured them out, and then you saw how well we ran with that at the end of the year and then continued that right through the playoffs.” But without Sullivan to guide them through the Eric Risberg Associated Press COACH MIKE SULLIVAN raises the Stanley Cup on Sunday after the Penguins won the NHL title. process, the Penguins would not have been hugging each other and their families Sunday while marveling at the path they took to earn the franchise’s fourth championship. Sullivan is the sixth coach in NHL history to win the Cup after taking over at midseason and the first since the Kings hired Darryl Sutter to replace Terry Murray in December 2011. Sullivan provided the clear, smart direction players needed and craved and, much as Sutter did with the Kings, Sullivan gave the Penguins an identity. Sutter played to the strengths of his personnel by emphasizing a heavy, punishing game and enhancing the defensive foundation Murray had put in place. Sullivan also maximized his resources and pushed a speed game that turned opponents’ defenses inside out. He held players accountable, challenged them to turn things around together. Penguins captain Sidney Crosby bought in. Everyone else followed. “After a coaching change, I think everyone takes that personal, puts the responsibility on their shoulders to be better,” Crosby said. “I think individually and as a group we had high expectations, we knew we needed to be better. I thought we just slowly got better and better. “Mike came in and made it pretty clear how he wanted us to play, what he expected from each individual guy. I think guys just welcomed the opportunity, welcomed the challenge, tried to get back on track.” Crosby won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the playoffs, a choice that was debated because he had no goals and four assists in the Cup Final and ranked seventh in playoff scoring with six goals and 19 points in 24 games. But his fire in Game 6 was a galvanizing force, and his overall play reflected the Penguins’ evolution into a team after too many seasons of being a bunch of stars skating around the same rink. “We’ve been through an awful lot this year and we really became a close-knit group and it was pretty cool how everybody seemed to play a special part as we went through the end of the year and into the playoffs,” said center Matt Cullen, 39, who had won the Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006. “Everybody shares a big piece of it. It’s truly a team win.” The Cup winner’s style usually becomes a blueprint for those who fell short, so look for an increase in the trend toward speed, finesse and team defense and away from big, heavy lineups. And if a team is underperforming, its general manager might be more likely to change coaches in midstream in search of a fresh voice. Rutherford found the right guy and made the switch at the right time, producing an outcome that seemed impossible six months ago. helene.elliott@latimes.com Twitter: @helenenothelen Carlyle’s past success with team commands respect [Carlyle, from D1] The move is surprising given that Carlyle’s first stint in Anaheim ended with Murray firing him immediately after a win against Montreal on Nov. 30, 2011. Carlyle’s message was thought to have gotten stale in the Ducks’ room, and his tendency toward a dumpand-chase attack seems illsuited to their current personnel. But Carlyle is believed to have support from Ducks players again, and his stern approach could be what Anaheim needs after the “players coach” personality of Boudreau. Murray had said he needed a coach to manage the team’s per- sonalities, and Carlyle is familiar with Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Cam Fowler and Andrew Cogliano, who remain from Carlyle’s previous stint in Anaheim. Ryan Kesler and Kevin Bieksa played for Carlyle for the Manitoba Moose of the American Hockey League in 2004-05. Carlyle’s previous success commands respect. He led the Ducks to the Western Conference finals in his first season in Anaheim before the 2007 Cup win with a starstudded lineup that included defensemen Chris Pronger and Scott Niedermayer. Subsequent seasons saw the Ducks reach 40 wins three times, but they won only one playoff round in his remaining tenure. Carlyle coached the Toronto Maple Leafs for three seasons, making the playoffs once, before he was fired last year. Carlyle stayed tied to Southern California. He has a residence in Encinitas and the family runs the pro shop at the Escondido rink of the Ducks’ minor league affiliate, the San Diego Gulls. He was often seen in the press box at Ducks games, scouting teams. The Ducks are believed to have contacted between five and 10 candidates for the position. sports@latimes.com Lack of blazing speed might have kept recruiters away [Spruce, from D1] make the Rams. “I really felt like a proud papa,” said Benkert, who coached Spruce at Westlake High and now heads the varsity at Oaks Christian. “I wasn’t sure if he’d see me, but I was watching him.” The last time Spruce played in front of high school coaches, he couldn’t attract the attention of local colleges such as USC or UCLA. He had some contact but apparently wasn’t big enough or fast enough, his only Pac-12 offer coming from Colorado. He took it, and five years later he’s the conference’s all-time leading re- ceiver and close to realizing his dream of playing in the NFL. And the path to that dream cuts straight through his backyard. “I feel like I’ve always been a bit under the radar,” Spruce, who grew up 30 minutes from the Oxnard facility, said last week. “There’s something in me that always wants to prove everybody wrong.” That started at Westlake, where Spruce excelled in football and baseball but took long strides instead of short, quick steps. Benkert thinks it was Spruce’s lack of blazing speed that kept big- ger schools away. So he redshirted at Colorado before starting, and shining, for four years. Spruce’s college totals — 294 receptions, 3,347 receiving yards, 23 touchdowns, an average of at least 10 yards per catch each season — show that a wide receiver can be effective without notable size or speed. “If you’re not going to wow with your athleticism, you need to do everything else,” Benkert said. “Nelson made himself into a complete player because he had to.” There’s a lot for Spruce to adjust to, and think about, as OTAs continued Monday before wrapping up Thursday. All of his routes need to be more precise. The offense is similar to what he ran at Colorado with a lot more wrinkles. Since the Rams drafted two receivers and signed four as undrafted free agents, it’s easy for Spruce to survey the field and calculate the odds. But he mostly focuses on short-term goals: not dropping passes, running hard and with precision during relaxed skeleton drills designed to teach offensive concepts, not bobbling punts when fielding returns with fourth-round pick Pharoh Cooper and fourthyear receiver Tavon Austin. And when he gets an opportunity with the second- or third-team offense, Spruce looks to make himself an option on every play. It worked just enough to get him to Colorado, then just enough for him to latch on to an NFL team. Next, Spruce will see whether it’s enough to stick around. “Whenever I see him out there he gets into space well and I try to put it on him,” said Goff, who trained with Spruce leading up to the draft. “He’s done a really good job so far.” After making a catch in an early practice drill last Friday, Spruce surprised Benkert by spotting his former coach from the field. They made eye contact and Spruce offered a subtle nod. Benkert subtly nodded back. Then Spruce dropped his head, jogged to the end of the line and prepared for the next rep. “I feel like it’s a young group and not a lot of returning experience,” Spruce said. “So guys like me ... it’s just an opportunity to go out there and make the coaches notice us.” jesse.dougherty@latimes.com D4 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S . CO M / S P O RT S BASEBALL D’BACKS DODGERS NL STANDINGS West W L Pct. GB L10 — 6-4 San Francisco 39 26 .600 DODGERS 33 32 .508 6 5-5 Colorado 30 33 .476 8 6-4 Arizona 29 37 .439 101⁄2 5-5 San Diego 26 39 .400 13 5-5 GB L10 Central W L Pct. Chicago 43 19 .694 — 6-4 St. Louis 35 28 .556 81⁄2 7-3 Pittsburgh 32 31 .508 111⁄2 3-7 Milwaukee 30 34 .469 14 5-5 Cincinnati 25 39 .391 19 6-4 GB L10 — 7-3 East W L Pct. Washington 40 24 .625 New York 34 28 .548 Miami Philadelphia 5 5-5 33 31 .516 7 4-6 30 34 .469 10 4-6 211⁄2 2-8 Atlanta 18 45 .286 Monday’s results at Arizona 3, DODGERS 2 at Washington 4, Chicago 1 Philadelphia 7, at Toronto 0 Cincinnati 9, at Atlanta 8 Miami 13, at San Diego 4 at San Francisco 11, Milwaukee 5 AL STANDINGS GB L10 Texas West 39 25 .609 W — 7-3 Seattle 34 29 .540 41⁄2 3-7 Houston 30 35 .462 91⁄2 5-5 Oakland 27 36 .429 111⁄2 3-7 ANGELS 27 37 .422 12 2-8 GB L10 — 6-4 Central Cleveland L W L Pct. Pct. 35 28 .556 Kansas City 33 30 .524 2 3-7 Detroit 32 31 .508 3 7-3 Chicago 32 32 .500 31⁄2 Minnesota 20 43 .317 East W L Pct. 3-7 15 4-6 GB L10 Baltimore 36 26 .581 — 6-4 Boston 36 26 .581 — 4-6 Toronto 35 31 .530 3 5-5 New York 31 32 .492 51⁄2 6-4 Tampa Bay 29 32 .475 Monday’s results 61⁄2 7-3 Minnesota 9, at ANGELS 4 Philadelphia 7, at Toronto 0 at Chicago 10, Detroit 9, 12 inn. at Kansas City 2, Cleveland 1 at Oakland 14, Texas 5 TODAY’S GAMES NATIONAL LEAGUE MATCHUP Dodgers/Maeda (R) ARI/Bradley (R) CHI/Lackey (R) WAS/Gonzalez (L) CIN/Finnegan (L) ATL/Teheran (R) PIT/TBD (R) NY/deGrom (R) MIA/Koehler (R) SD/Pomeranz (L) MIL/Garza (R) SF/Bumgarner (L) W-L 5-4 2-2 7-2 3-5 2-4 2-6 — 3-2 4-6 5-6 — 7-2 ERA TIME 2.70 6:30 p.m. 5.22 SNLA 2.63 4 p.m. 3.93 MLB 3.77 4 p.m. 2.85 — 4 p.m. 2.80 4.36 7 p.m. 2.44 — 7:15 p.m. 1.88 W-L 1-6 1-2 8-1 7-3 3-6 3-3 8-3 1-1 8-1 2-6 5-4 0-3 ERA 4.77 4.42 3.01 4.63 3.48 3.47 3.30 3.57 3.48 6.37 3.22 6.41 AMERICAN LEAGUE MATCHUP MIN/Santana (R) Angels/Chacin (R) BAL/Tillman (R) BOS/Price (L) SEA/Walker (R) TB/Odorizzi (R) DET/Zimmermann (R) CHI/Gonzalez (R) CLE/Tomlin (R) KC/Young (R) TEX/Perez (L) OAK/Surkamp (L) TIME 7 p.m. FSW 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 7 p.m. INTERLEAGUE MATCHUP PHI/Eflin (R) TOR/Stroman (R) HOU/Fister (R) STL/Garcia (L) NY (AL)/ Eovaldi (R) COL/De La Rosa (L) W-L — 5-2 6-3 4-5 6-2 2-4 ERA TIME — 9:40 a.m. 4.94 MLB 3.34 5:15 p.m. 3.89 4.42 5:30 p.m. 8.81 LEADERS Through Monday (late game not included) NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING AVERAGE Murphy, Washington...... .367 Ramos, Washington...... .337 Marte, Pittsburgh ......... .332 Prado, Miami .............. .323 Ozuna, Miami .............. .319 Zobrist, Chicago........... .319 Yelich, Miami............... .317 Braun, Milwaukee ........ .316 A. Diaz, St. Louis ......... .315 LeMahieu, Colorado ..... .314 Herrera, Philadelphia .... .314 HOME RUNS Arenado, Colorado ....... 19 Duvall, Cincinnati ......... 18 Carter, Milwaukee ........ 17 Cespedes, New York ..... 16 Story, Colorado............ 16 Bryant, Chicago ........... 15 Seager, DODGERS........ 15 RUNS BATTED IN Arenado, Colorado ....... 53 Rizzo, Chicago ............. 47 Bruce, Cincinnati ......... 46 Bryant, Chicago ........... 45 Duvall, Cincinnati ......... 44 Murphy, Washington...... 42 Kemp, San Diego......... 42 Story, Colorado............ 42 Carpenter, St. Louis...... 42 3 tied at..................... 40 STOLEN BASES Villar, Milwaukee.......... 23 Marte, Pittsburgh ......... 19 Hamilton, Cincinnati ..... 16 Upton, Jr., San Diego.... 13 EARNED RUN AVERAGE Kershaw, DODGERS...... 1.52 Arrieta, Chicago ........... 1.86 Bumgarner, S.F............. 1.88 Lester, Chicago ............ 1.89 Syndergaard, New York.. 2.00 Cueto, San Francisco.... 2.16 Hammel, Chicago......... 2.36 Pomeranz, San Diego.... 2.44 Fernandez, Miami ........ 2.57 Lackey, Chicago ........... 2.63 VICTORIES Strasburg, Washington .. 10-0 Arrieta, Chicago ........... 10-1 Kershaw, DODGERS...... 9-1 Cueto, San Francisco.... 9-1 Fernandez, Miami ........ 9-3 Greinke, Arizona........... 9-3 Lester, Chicago ............ 8-3 Chatwood, Colorado ..... 8-4 Scherzer, Washington.... 8-4 STRIKEOUTS Kershaw, DODGERS...... 122 Fernandez, Miami ........ 118 Scherzer, Washington.... 118 Strasburg, Washington .. 110 Bumgarner, S.F............. 99 Syndergaard, New York.. 95 Arrieta, Chicago ........... 90 Nola, Philadelphia........ 88 BATTING AVERAGE Bogaerts, Boston ......... .359 Altuv,e Houston ........... .344 Ortiz, Boston ............... .340 V. Martinez, Detroit....... .333 Nunez, Minnesota ........ .324 Hosmer, Kansas City..... .318 Kinsler, Detroit............. .317 Mazara, Texas.............. .315 Saunders, Toronto ........ .311 Bradley Jr,. Boston ....... .311 HOME RUNS Trumbo, Baltimore........ 20 Frazier, Chicago ........... 19 Cano, Seattle .............. 18 Beltran, New York......... 16 Ortiz, Boston ............... 16 C. Davis, Baltimore....... 16 Machado, Baltimore ..... 16 3 tied at..................... 15 RUNS BATTED IN Ortiz, Boston ............... 55 Encarnacion, Toronto .... 54 Cano, Seattle .............. 51 Trumbo, Baltimore........ 49 Betts, Boston .............. 47 Napoli, Cleveland......... 45 Trout, ANGELS ............. 44 Beltran, New York......... 44 Bogaerts, Boston ......... 44 Kinsley, Detroit............. 44 STOLEN BASES Altuve, Houston ........... 18 Davis, Cleveland .......... 15 Nunez, Minnesota ........ 15 3 tied at..................... 12 EARNED RUN AVERAGE Wright, Boston............. 2.09 Salazar, Cleveland........ 2.19 Hill, Oakland ............... 2.25 Estrada, Toronto........... 2.57 Quintana, Chicago........ 2.66 Hernandez, Seattle....... 2.86 Sale, Chicago.............. 2.87 Lewis, Texas ................ 3.00 Tillman, Baltimore ........ 3.01 Tanaka, New York ......... 3.08 VICTORIES Sale, Chicago.............. 10-2 Tillman, Baltimore ........ 8-1 Tomlin, Cleveland ......... 8-1 Zimmermann, Detroit.... 8-3 Hill, Oakland ............... 8-3 Fulmer, Detroit............. 7-1 Porcello, Boston........... 7-2 Happ, Toronto.............. 7-3 Price, Boston............... 7-3 Salazar, Cleveland, ....... 7-3 STRIKEOUTS Archer, Tampa Bay........ 96 Price, Boston............... 91 Verlander, Detroit ......... 90 Salazar, Cleveland........ 89 Kluber, Cleveland ......... 87 Sale, Chicago.............. 86 Sanchez, Toronto.......... 83 ANGELS REPORT 3 2 Streak Lost 3 This month 5-7 Home 17-14 Road 16-18 Division 14-13 Interleague 4-5 Next: Tonight at Arizona, 6:30 TV/Radio: SportsNet LA/570, 1020, 1540 Dodgers Utley 2b Seager ss Turner 3b Gonzlz 1b Thmpsn rf Pedrsn cf Grandal c VanSlyke lf b-Hrnandz Bolsngr p Kndrck lf Totals AB 5 4 5 4 2 3 3 3 1 2 2 34 R 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 H 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 7 BI 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Avg. .262 .284 .225 .274 .265 .229 .187 .095 .204 .000 .222 Dodgers Arizona Arizona AB R H BI Avg. Segura 2b 4 0 2 1 .299 Lamb 3b 3 1 1 1 .263 Gldsmdt 1b 4 1 1 1 .282 Peralta rf 3 0 1 0 .259 Castillo c 3 0 0 0 .272 O’Brien lf 2 0 0 0 .091 Bourn cf 0 0 0 0 .250 Tomas lf 3 0 0 0 .260 Greinke p 2 0 1 0 .290 a-Weeks 1 0 0 0 .233 Ahmed ss 3 1 0 0 .217 Totals 28 3 6 3 100 010 000 —2 101 010 00x —3 7 6 0 0 a-lined out for Greinke in the 7th. b-struck out for Baez in the 8th. Walks—Dodgers 5: Seager 1, Thompson 2, Pederson 1, Grandal 1. Arizona 2: Lamb 1, Bourn 1. Strikeouts—Dodgers 7: Utley 1, Turner 1, Gonzalez 1, Thompson 1, Hernandez 1, Bolsinger 2. Arizona 8: Goldschmidt 1, Peralta 2, Castillo 3, O’Brien 1, Ahmed 1. LOB—Dodgers 10, Arizona 3. 2B—Turner (10), Pederson (15), Van Slyke (2). HR—Seager (15), off Greinke; Goldschmidt (12), off Bolsinger; Lamb (12), off Bolsinger. RBIs—Seager (36), Turner (22), Segura (29), Lamb (39), Goldschmidt (40). SB—Ahmed (3). CS—Segura (5). RISP—Dodgers 0 for 11; Arizona 1 for 3. Runners moved up—Gonzalez, Grandal. GIDP—Goldschmidt. DP—Dodgers 1 (Seager, Utley, Gonzalez). Dodgers.....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bolsinger L, 1-4.........4 2⁄3 5 3 3 0 5 76 5.76 Howell ........................2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 4 4.87 Baez........................1 2⁄3 0 0 0 1 3 30 3.18 Coleman .....................1⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 7 2.80 Liberatore ....................0 0 0 0 1 0 7 0.92 Blanton.......................2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.38 Arizona ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Greinke W, 9-3 .............7 7 2 2 2 6 119 3.75 Hudson H, 10 ..............1⁄3 0 0 0 3 0 23 1.80 Ziegler S, 13-13 ........1 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 18 2.93 Inherited runners-scored—Howell 1-0, Liberatore 1-0, Blanton 2-0, Ziegler 3-0. WP—Baez. U—Carlos Torres, Brian Knight, Sam Holbrook, Gerry Davis. T—3:21. Tickets sold—21,374 (48,633). TWINS ANGELS 9 4 Streak Lost 2 This month 3-9 Home 13-20 Road 14-17 Division 12-8 Interleague 6-9 Next: Tonight vs. Minnesota, Angel Stadium, 7 TV/Radio: FS West/830, 1330 Minnesota AB R H BI Avg. Angels AB R H BI Avg. Nunez ss 5 1 1 0 .324 Escobar 3b 4 0 0 0 .307 Grssman lf 4 3 2 1 .325 Calhoun rf 4 0 0 0 .290 Mauer 1b 5 2 2 1 .283 Cron 1b 0 0 0 0 .253 Plouffe 3b 4 1 1 3 .240 Trout dh 4 0 1 0 .308 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 0 .231 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 .228 Park dh 4 0 0 0 .207 Ryan ss 0 0 0 0 .077 Kepler rf 5 0 0 1 .189 Giavtlla 2b 4 2 4 1 .269 Suzuki c 4 0 2 1 .238 Cnnghm rf 3 2 1 0 .091 Buxton cf 4 1 1 1 .207 Petit ss 2 0 1 1 .277 Totals 39 9 10 8 Marte lf 1 0 0 0 .306 Perez c 4 0 0 1 .189 Robnsn cf 3 0 1 1 .235 Totals 33 4 8 4 Minnesota Angels 103 011 300 —9 010 200 001 —4 10 8 1 3 Walks—Minnesota 4: Grossman 1, Plouffe 1, Dozier 1, Park 1. Angels 1: Cunningham 1. Strikeouts—Minnesota 6: Grossman 1, Plouffe 1, Dozier 1, Park 2, Kepler 1. Angels 7: Escobar 1, Calhoun 3, Marte 1, Perez 1, Robinson 1. E—Plouffe (3), Giavotella (3), Petit 2 (3). LOB—Minnesota 7, Angels 4. 2B—Dozier (12), Giavotella (12), Cunningham (1). HR—Plouffe (5), off Weaver; Buxton (1), off Weaver; Grossman (5), off Alburquerque; Giavotella (3), off Ramirez. RBIs—Grossman (15), Mauer (24), Plouffe 3 (19), Kepler (6), Suzuki (16), Buxton (6), Giavotella (19), Petit (10), Perez (15), Robinson (5). SB—Nunez (15). SF—Petit. RISP—Minnesota 3 for 9; Angels 1 for 5. Runners moved up—Plouffe 2, Perez. GIDP—Plouffe, Petit. DP—Minnesota 1 (Plouffe, Dozier, Mauer); Angels 1 (Petit, Giavotella, Pujols). Minnesota .................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nolasco W, 3-4 ............6 7 3 3 1 5 106 5.12 Pressly ........................1 0 0 0 0 1 10 4.29 Boshers.......................1 0 0 0 0 0 11 0.00 Ramirez.......................1 1 1 1 0 1 18 9.00 Angels .......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Weaver L, 5-6...............6 8 6 5 2 4 106 5.71 Alburquerque ...............1 2 3 1 1 0 30 9.00 Achter.........................2 0 0 0 1 2 25 4.05 U—Mike Everitt, D.J. Reyburn, Tim Timmons, Ryan Blakney. T—2:50. Tickets sold—36,424 (43,250). NATIONALS CUBS Once a hot commodity, Kubitza is sent packing By Pedro Moura Seventeen months ago, the Angels jettisoned a young pitcher they had doted on to acquire a player they called their third baseman of the future. Monday, they designated that player for assignment, proving once again that one general manager’s coup is another general manager’s rubble. Jerry Dipoto was elated to acquire Kyle Kubitza. Billy Eppler willingly removed him from the Angels’ 40-man roster in favor of another reliever. In January 2015, the Angels parted ways with highly regarded teenage left-hander Ricardo Sanchez to wrestle Kubitza from the Atlanta Braves. They also added minor league right-hander Nate Hyatt, who has since retired. “At the end of the day,” Dipoto said of the trade, “we’re projecting a third baseman who can play in the big leagues sooner rather than later, who fills a void and who has a strong ceiling himself.” Kubitza, 25, had not been awful as an Angel, but he did not acquit himself well in a brief major league stint last season and lacked an overarching skill. He could still be claimed on waivers by Dipoto’s Seattle Mariners. A removal from the 40-man roster was necessary to purchase the contract of right-hander Al Alburquerque, who finally was added to the Angels bullpen Monday, 10 weeks later than expected. Also, the Angels designated left-hander David Huff for assignment and recalled right-handed reliever A.J. Achter from triple-A Salt Lake for his fourth stint in the majors in 2016. Huff lost both of his abbreviated spot starts as an Angel. Short hops Manager Mike Scioscia said that right-hander Tim Lincecum would “definitely” start over the weekend in Oakland, probably Saturday. …left-hander C.J. Wilson is taking “baby steps” on his road to recovery, Scioscia said. Wilson has not pitched in a major league game 4 1 PHILLIES BLUE JAYS Matt Brown Getty Images KYLE KUBITZA played in only 19 games with the Angels, with seven hits and one run batted in over 36 at-bats, all last season. since July because of elbow surgery and accompanying problems. …Shortstop Andrelton Simmons (torn thumb) made significant progress over the weekend for triple-A Salt Lake and could return to the Angels by Wednesday. …right-hander Nick Tropeano (shoulder tendinitis) threw a bullpen session Monday. … lefthander Andrew Heaney (partially 7 0 ATHLETICS RANGERS Ryan Howard and Odubel Herrera homered, Jerad Eickhoff (4-8) pitched six spotless innings and Philadelphia ended a four-game losing streak. Herrera had three runs batted in. Khris Davis homered and drove in five runs, Marcus Semien and Jake Smolinski each had three hits and Oakland pounded Texas, hours after the Rangers put Yu Darvish on the DL. Chicago AB R H BI Avg. Wash. AB Fowler cf 4 0 0 0 .289 Revere cf 5 Heywrd rf 4 0 0 0 .236 Werth lf 3 Bryant lf 3 0 0 0 .277 Harper rf 5 Rizzo 1b 3 0 1 0 .265 Murphy 2b 4 Zobrist 2b 3 0 0 0 .319 Zmrmn 1b 4 Coghlan lf 2 0 0 0 .222 Ramos c 4 b-Baez 3b 1 0 0 0 .270 Rendon 3b 4 Montero c 2 0 0 0 .206 Espinsa ss 2 c-Ross c 1 0 0 0 .233 Scherzer p 2 Russell ss 3 1 1 1 .234 a-Heisey 1 Hendrcks p 2 0 0 0 .083 Perez p 0 Grimm p 0 0 0 0 --- Kelley p 0 Richard p 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 34 d-Almora 1 0 0 0 .273 Totals 29 1 2 1 Philadelphia Herrera cf Galvis ss Blanco 3b Joseph 1b Howard dh Ruiz c Asche lf CHrndz 2b Bourjos rf Totals Texas Choo rf Dsmnd cf b-Holdy lf Profar 3b Odor 2b Rua cf Fielder dh Andrus ss Morlnd 1b Wilson c Totals Chicago Washington H 2 1 1 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 10 000 001 000 —1 001 003 00x —4 BI 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 Avg. .211 .246 .256 .367 .233 .337 .263 .223 .167 .220 .000 --- 2 10 2 0 a-struck out for Scherzer in the 7th. b-struck out for Coghlan in the 8th. c-struck out for Montero in the 8th. d-struck out for Richard in the 9th. Walks— Washington 5: Werth 2, Murphy 1, Espinosa 2. Strikeouts—Chicago 16: Fowler 3, Heyward 2, Bryant 2, Rizzo 1, Coghlan 1, Baez 1, Montero 1, Ross 1, Russell 2, Hendricks 1, Almora 1. Washington 5: Zimmerman 1, Ramos 1, Espinosa 1, Scherzer 1, Heisey 1. E—Fowler (3), Russell (7). LOB—Chicago 1, Washington 12. 2B—Rizzo (14), Rendon (15). HR—Russell (5), off Scherzer; Ramos (10), off Hendricks. RBIs—Russell (33), Revere (11), Ramos (36), Espinosa (27). SB—Revere 2 (4), Rendon (7). S—Scherzer. RISP—Chicago 0 for 1; Washington 2 for 13. Runners moved up—Werth 2, Harper. ChicagoIP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hendricks L, 4-651/3 6 4 3 3 4 95 3.05 Grimm12/3 3 0 0 0 1 36 5.16 Richard1 1 0 0 0 0 12 6.00 WashingtonIP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Scherzer W, 8-47 2 1 1 0 11 96 3.40 Perez H, 71/3 0 0 0 0 1 6 3.31 Kelley S, 1-112/3 0 0 0 0 4 21 2.70 Inherited runners-scored—Grimm 1-1. IBB—off Hendricks (Murphy), off Grimm (Espinosa). U— Dan Lassogna, Dale Scott, Bob Davidson, Lance Barrett. T—2:44. Tickets sold—37,187 (41,418). ROYALS INDIANS 2 1 Whit Merrifield hit his first career home run, Edinson Volquez (6-6) tossed seven innings of two-hit ball and Kansas City ended a five-game skid against Cleveland. Volquez walked the bases loaded in the first inning before settling down. The Indians’ Jason Kipnis hit a leadoff home run in the eighth. Merrifield also tripled. Cleveland AB R H BI Avg. Santana dh 3 0 0 0 .228 Kipnis 2b 3 1 2 1 .272 Lindor ss 3 0 0 0 .300 Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0 .240 Ramirez 3b 3 0 0 0 .298 Chsnhall rf 3 0 2 0 .279 Gomes c 3 0 0 0 .169 Naquin cf 4 0 0 0 .312 Davis lf 3 0 0 0 .248 Totals 29 1 4 1 K.C. AB R H BI Avg. Merrfld 2b 4 2 2 1 .330 Escobar ss 4 0 1 1 .244 Hosmer 1b 3 0 1 0 .318 Cain cf 4 0 0 0 .285 Perez c 4 0 3 0 .290 Morles dh 4 0 1 0 .204 Fuents rf 4 0 2 0 .351 Cuthbrt 3b 3 0 1 0 .274 Dyson lf 3 0 0 0 .257 Totals 33 2 11 2 Cleveland Kansas City 000 000 010 —1 100 100 00x —2 4 11 0 1 Walks—Cleveland 5: Santana 1, Kipnis 1, Lindor 1, Ramirez 1, Chisenhall 1. Kansas City 1: Hosmer 1. Strikeouts—Cleveland 4: Lindor 1, Napoli 1, Gomes 1, Naquin 1. Kansas City 9: Escobar 2, Hosmer 1, Cain 1, Morales 1, Fuentes 1, Cuthbert 1, Dyson 2. E—Escobar (9). LOB—Cleveland 7, Kansas City 8. 2B—Kipnis (11). 3B—Merrifield (1). HR—Kipnis (8), off Herrera; Merrifield (1), off Carrasco. RBIs—Kipnis (32), Merrifield (6), Escobar (17). CS—Escobar (3). RISP—Cleveland 0 for 8; Kansas City 1 for 6. Runners moved up—Merrifield. GIDP—Ramirez, Gomes 2, Cain. DP—Cleveland 1 (Lindor, Kipnis, Napoli); Kansas City 4 (Merrifield, Escobar, Hosmer), (Escobar, Merrifield, Hosmer), (Merrifield, Escobar, Hosmer), (Escobar, Merrifield, Hosmer). Cleveland...................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Carrasco L, 2-2 ............6 10 2 2 1 8 103 3.40 Manship......................1 0 0 0 0 1 17 2.79 Chamberlain ................1 1 0 0 0 0 19 2.25 Kansas City................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Volquez W, 6-6 .............7 2 0 0 4 3 95 3.90 Herrera H, 18...............1 1 1 1 1 1 19 1.74 W.Davis S, 18-19..........1 1 0 0 0 0 7 1.11 U—Eric Cooper, Jim Wolf, Ramon DeJesus, Gary Cederstrom. T—2:42. Tickets sold—31,269 (37,903). AB 5 4 5 4 4 3 2 4 4 35 R 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 1 7 H 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 2 9 BI 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 7 Avg. .314 .223 .262 .286 .153 .228 .226 .250 .205 Philadelphia Toronto Toronto AB R H BI Avg. Bautista dh 4 0 1 0 .234 Donldsn 3b 3 0 1 0 .255 Saundrs lf 3 0 1 0 .311 Smoak 1b 3 0 1 0 .259 Pillar cf 4 0 0 0 .253 Carrera rf 2 0 0 0 .329 Barney ss 4 0 0 0 .302 Travis 2b 4 0 2 0 .172 Thole c 4 0 0 0 .107 Totals 31 0 6 0 001 000 303 —7 000 000 000 —0 9 6 0 0 Walks—Philadelphia 4: Galvis 1, Ruiz 1, Asche 2. Toronto 5: Donaldson 1, Saunders 1, Smoak 1, Carrera 2. Strikeouts— Philadelphia 9: Herrera 2, Galvis 2, Blanco 1, Joseph 2, Howard 1, C.Hernandez 1. Toronto 8: Bautista 1, Donaldson 1, Saunders 1, Smoak 1, Pillar 2, Carrera 1, Thole 1. LOB—Philadelphia 5, Toronto 9. 2B—Blanco (9), C.Hernandez (6), Bourjos (9). HR—Herrera (6), off Dickey; Howard (10), off Dickey. RBIs—Herrera 3 (22), Howard (21), C.Hernandez (15), Bourjos 2 (11). SB—Asche (3). CS—Asche (1). RISP—Philadelphia 4 for 7; Toronto 0 for 4. Runners moved up—Pillar. GIDP—Pillar, Thole. DP—Philadelphia 2 (Blanco, Joseph), (C.Hernandez, Joseph). Philadelphia...............IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Eickhoff W, 4-8.............6 3 0 0 4 5 106 3.40 D.Hernandez ................1 1 0 0 0 2 18 2.37 Neris ..........................1 1 0 0 1 1 19 2.41 Bailey .........................1 1 0 0 0 0 6 4.09 Toronto ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey L, 4-7 ............6 1⁄3 5 3 3 2 4 104 4.16 Biagini........................1⁄3 1 1 1 0 1 9 2.70 Loup ..........................1⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 7 9.00 Storen.........................1 0 0 0 0 3 10 6.04 Diamond .....................1 2 3 3 2 0 26 27.00 Inherited runners-scored—Biagini 1-1, Loup 1-1. WP—Loup. U—Todd Tichenor, Bill Miller, Tony Randazzo, Tom Woodring. T—2:55. Tickets sold—35,678 (49,282). REDS BRAVES 9 8 Tyler Holt drew a bases-loaded walk off Arodys Vizcaino in the ninth to force in the tiebreaker. Adam Duvall homered and drove in three Cincinnati runs. Atlanta’s pitchers walked eight. Cincinnati Cozart ss Votto 1b Phillips 2b Bruce rf Duvall lf Suarez 3b Holt cf Barnhrt c Wright p a-Waldrop Wood p c-Selsky Totals Cincinnati Atlanta AB 4 3 4 3 4 3 4 5 2 1 0 1 34 R 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 H 1 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 9 BI 0 0 0 2 3 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 8 Avg. .284 .237 .258 .272 .258 .232 .277 .253 .000 .500 .000 .429 Atlanta Smith cf Inciarte cf Freemn 1b Markks rf Garcia 3b Przynski c 1-d’Arnd ss Petrsn 2b Aybar ss Flowers c Blair p b-Snyder d-Francr l Totals AB 3 5 5 5 5 4 0 3 3 0 2 1 0 36 R 2 1 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 H 1 1 3 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 303 002 001 —9 212 020 010 —8 BI 0 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 Avg. .250 .236 .250 .239 .241 .203 .309 .231 .187 .237 .083 .250 .287 9 10 1 0 a-singled for Ramirez in the 6th. b-struck out for Weber in the 6th. c-singled for Wood in the 8th. d-walked for Johnson in the 8th. 1-ran for Pierzynski in the 8th. Walks—Cincinnati 8: Cozart 1, Votto 2, Phillips 1, Bruce 2, Suarez 1, Holt 1. Atlanta 4: Smith 2, Peterson 1, Francoeur 1. Strikeouts—Cincinnati 6: Votto 1, Phillips 1, Suarez 1, Holt 1, Barnhart 2. Atlanta 3: Inciarte 1, Freeman 1, Snyder 1. E—Votto (4). LOB—Cincinnati 8, Atlanta 6. 2B—Votto (12), Freeman (11), Garcia (4), Aybar (6). 3B—Bruce (6). HR—Duvall (18), off Blair; Freeman (10), off Ramirez; Garcia (3), off Ohlendorf. RBIs—Bruce 2 (46), Duvall 3 (44), Suarez (34), Holt (7), Waldrop (1), Freeman 3 (21), Garcia 2 (14), Aybar (7). SB—Smith 2 (11). SF—Duvall, Suarez. RISP—Cincinnati 2 for 8; Atlanta 3 for 13. Runners moved up—Barnhart, Markakis, Inciarte. GIDP—Markakis. DP—Cincinnati 1 (Phillips, Cozart, Votto). Cincinnati ..................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wright.........................3 6 5 3 1 0 57 7.62 Ramirez.......................2 2 2 2 0 0 24 7.20 Wood H, 5 ...................2 0 0 0 1 3 36 3.51 Ohlendorf W, 5-5 ..........1 2 1 1 2 0 27 4.40 Cingrani S, 7-12 ...........1 0 0 0 0 0 7 3.94 Atlanta ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Blair ...........................5 4 6 6 4 3 103 7.59 Weber .........................1 3 2 2 0 0 27 9.28 Kelly ...........................1 0 0 0 0 1 12 4.58 Johnson ......................1 1 0 0 0 1 14 6.27 Vizcaino L, 1-2 .............1 1 1 1 2 1 31 2.33 U—Adam Hamari, Laz Diaz, Marvin Hudson, Jim Joyce. T—3:22. Tickets sold—13,198 (49,586). Texas Oakland AB 4 3 2 4 4 4 3 4 4 4 36 R 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 5 H 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 2 2 0 9 BI 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 5 Avg. .200 .303 .250 .343 .262 .291 .199 .286 .227 .288 Oakland Crisp cf a-Brns cf Smien ss Vlncia 3b Davis lf Butler dh Phgley c Smlnski rf Alnso 1b Ldndrf 2b Totals AB 3 1 5 5 4 3 5 4 4 4 38 R 3 0 1 3 3 2 1 0 0 1 14 H 2 0 3 2 2 2 2 3 0 1 17 000 112 001 — 5 104 540 00x —14 BI 0 0 1 1 5 1 3 2 1 0 14 Avg. .228 .245 .242 .338 .244 .265 .309 .317 .245 .080 9 17 1 3 Texas.........................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ramos L, 1-3............3 2⁄3 8 8 6 5 1 83 4.88 Wilhelmsen..................1 9 6 6 0 0 45 10.55 Tolleson ...................2 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 3 27 8.41 Claudio .......................1 0 0 0 0 0 14 4.02 Oakland.....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Manaea ...................4 1⁄3 4 2 2 1 5 86 6.02 Coulombe W, 1-0 ......1 2⁄3 3 2 2 0 0 24 5.06 Neal S, 1-1..................3 2 1 1 0 0 32 9.00 Inherited runners-scored—Wilhelmsen 2-2, Tolleson 2-0. HBP—Manaea (Fielder). WP—Manaea. U—John Hirschbeck, Vic Carapazza, Bill Welke, Toby Basner. T—3:06. Tickets sold—13,453 (37,090). MARLINS PADRES 13 4 Adeiny Hechavarria had four RBIs for Miami, which built an 8-1 cushion by the third inning. Ichiro Suzuki had three of the Marlins’ season-high 19 hits, and Wei-Yin Chen improved to 4-2. Miami AB R H BI Avg. San Diego AB R H BI Avg. Suzuki rf 4 3 3 1 .350 Jay cf 4 0 0 0 .283 Prado 3b 3 1 3 3 .332 Myers 1b 3 1 1 1 .287 1-Rjas 3b 2 1 0 0 .260 Kemp rf 4 1 2 1 .253 Yelich lf 5 1 2 1 .319 Solarte 3b 3 0 0 0 .274 Jhnsn lf 1 0 0 0 .237 Wallce 3b 1 0 0 0 .209 Ozuna cf 4 1 1 0 .318 Norris c 3 0 0 0 .214 Ellngtn p 1 0 0 0 .000 Ramrez ss 4 0 0 0 .254 Bour 1b 4 1 3 2 .251 Upton cf 4 1 2 1 .240 Rlmto c 6 1 2 2 .300 Rosales 2b 4 1 1 1 .190 Dtrch 2b 5 2 2 0 .296 Rea p 1 0 0 0 .130 Hchvra ss 5 2 2 4 .245 Jnkwski 1 0 1 0 .250 Chen p 3 0 0 0 .000 Amrsta lf 2 0 0 0 .239 Gllspie cf 1 0 1 0 .265 Totals 34 4 7 4 Totals 44 13 19 13 107 040 100 —13 101 011 000 — 4 19 7 WHITE SOX TIGERS 10 9 Adam Eaton singled home the winning run in the 12th inning for his fourth hit of the night, and Chicago rallied from seven runs down in a wild victory. a-grounded out for Crisp in the 6th. b-flied out for Desmond in the 7th. Walks—Texas 1: Choo 1. Oakland 5: Crisp 1, Davis 1, Butler 2, Smolinski 1. Strikeouts—Texas 5: Profar 1, Odor 1, Rua 1, Moreland 1, Wilson 1. Oakland 4: Semien 2, Davis 1, Butler 1. E—Profar (4), Manaea (1), Valencia 2 (9). LOB—Texas 6, Oakland 6. 2B—Andrus (12). HR—Choo (1), off Manaea; Rua (5), off Coulombe; Moreland (10), off Neal; Davis (15), off Ramos; Phegley (1), off Wilhelmsen. RBIs—Choo (2), Rua 2 (15), Andrus (24), Moreland (28), Semien (28), Valencia (25), Davis 5 (42), Butler (17), Phegley 3 (7), Smolinski 2 (10), Alonso (13). SB—Andrus (9), Semien (5). SF—Alonso. RISP—Texas 1 for 5; Oakland 9 for 14. DP—Alonso. DP—Texas 3 (Andrus, Odor, Moreland), (Moreland, Andrus), (Odor, Rua); Oakland 1 (Ladendorf, Semien, Alonso). Miami San Diego pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura 14 5 Max Scherzer (8-4) gave up two hits in seven innings, striking out 11, and Wilson Ramos homered for Washington. Addison Russell’s home run in the sixth ended Scherzer’s no-hit bid. R 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 torn ulnar collateral ligament) had an ultrasound on his left elbow Monday that showed improvement, Eppler said. There is not yet a plan for Heaney to resume throwing, but he is scheduled to undergo another ultrasound in two to three weeks. 0 1 Walks—Miami 6: Suzuki 2, Prado 1, Ozuna 1, Bour 2. San Diego 2: Myers 1, Sanchez 1. Strikeouts—Miami 12: Yelich 2, Ozuna 2, Ellington 1, Bour 1, Realmuto 3, Dietrich 1, Chen 2. San Diego 10: Jay 1, Solarte 3, Wallace 1, Norris 1, Upton 1, Rosales 1, Rea 1, Amarista 1. E—Rosales (7). LOB—Miami 12, San Diego 5. 2B—Yelich (19), Dietrich (12), Hechavarria (7), Kemp (14), Upton (7). 3B—Hechavarria (3). HR—Prado (2), off Rea; Myers (14), off Chen; Kemp (15), off Chen; Rosales (4), off Chen; Upton (8), off Chen. RBIs—Suzuki (9), Prado 3 (21), Yelich (30), Bour 2 (32), Realmuto 2 (18), Hechavarria 4 (21), Myers (38), Kemp (43), Upton (28), Rosales (11). SB—Perdomo (1). S—Chen. RISP—Miami 9 for 19; San Diego 0 for 6. GIDP—Rojas. DP—San Diego 1 (Solarte, Rosales, Myers). Miami .......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Chen W, 4-2 ................6 7 4 4 1 7 104 4.68 Wittgren ......................1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.46 Ellington......................1 0 0 0 1 1 18 0.00 Dunn ..........................1 0 0 0 0 1 6 4.15 San Diego ..................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Rea L, 3-3................2 2⁄3 9 8 6 2 4 69 5.37 Hand .......................2 1⁄3 5 4 4 2 4 48 3.78 Maurer ........................2 2 1 1 1 3 36 6.97 Thornton......................1 2 0 0 0 0 14 5.06 Bethancourt.................1 1 0 0 1 1 18 0.00 Inherited runners-scored—Hand 2-0. HBP—Maurer (Dietrich). U—Jeff Nelson, Nic Lentz, Cory Blaser, Doug Eddings.. T—3:15. Tickets sold—20,988 (42,302). Detroit AB R H BI Avg. Chicago AB R H BI Avg. Kinsler 2b 5 2 2 2 .317 Andrsn ss 6 0 1 0 .200 Maybin cf 6 2 2 2 .372 Eaton cf 5 2 4 2 .270 Cabrera 1b 5 2 1 0 .295 Cbrera lf 6 2 3 0 .290 Castllns 3b 7 0 2 0 .304 Abreu 1b 4 2 2 3 .264 JMrtnez dh 6 0 3 2 .279 Frzier 3b 6 1 0 1 .206 Upton lf 4 0 1 1 .225 Lawrie 2b 6 0 3 2 .242 Sltlmcha c 5 2 2 0 .191 Garcia rf 6 0 1 1 .249 Aviles rf 5 0 0 0 .190 Navrro c 3 2 1 1 .211 Iglesias ss 3 1 1 1 .245 Coats dh 2 0 0 0 .000 Totals 46 9 14 8 Shuck dh 4 1 1 0 .162 Totals 48 10 16 10 Detroit Chicago 331 001 001 000 — 9 002 131 002 001 —10 14 16 0 3 Walks—Detroit 11: Kinsler 1, Maybin 1, Mi.Cabrera 2, J.Martinez 1, Upton 2, Saltalamacchia 1, V.Martinez 1, Iglesias 2. Chicago 6: Eaton 1, Abreu 2, Navarro 3. Strikeouts—Detroit 7: Maybin 2, Mi.Cabrera 2, Upton 1, Saltalamacchia 1, Aviles 1. Chicago 10: Anderson 2, Eaton 1, Frazier 1, Lawrie 1, Garcia 1, Navarro 1, Coats 2, Shuck 1. E—Shields (1), Me.Cabrera (1), Garcia (1). LOB—Detroit 14, Chicago 12. 2B—Mi.Cabrera (14), J.Martinez 2 (16), Me.Cabrera (13), Lawrie (17), Shuck (1). HR—Kinsler (14), off Shields; Abreu (9), off Boyd; Navarro (3), off Boyd. RBIs—Kinsler 2 (44), Maybin 2 (11), J.Martinez 2 (38), Upton (18), Iglesias (11), Eaton 2 (21), Abreu 3 (37), Frazier (43), Lawrie 2 (25), Garcia (23), Navarro (15). SB—Maybin (6), Iglesias (5), Eaton (6). CS—Kinsler (3). SF—Kinsler, Eaton. S—Iglesias, Anderson. RISP—Detroit 4 for 17; Chicago 5 for 13. DP—Chicago 1. Detroit.......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Boyd .......................4 1⁄3 7 6 6 2 3 85 4.91 Parnell ........................1 2 1 1 1 1 29 7.36 Wilson H, 6 ..............1 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 19 4.44 Greene H, 3 .................1 0 0 0 0 1 9 4.79 Rodriguez BS, 2-21 .......1 3 2 2 2 1 33 3.80 Sanchez L, 3-7..........2 1⁄3 3 1 1 0 3 44 6.21 Chicago .....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Shields .......................5 9 7 6 4 1 106 16.71 Danish........................1⁄3 2 1 1 1 0 14 10.80 Jennings...................1 1⁄3 0 0 0 2 1 21 1.86 Albers......................1 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 21 4.03 Jones..........................2 2 1 1 0 2 23 2.89 Robertson....................1 0 0 0 3 0 31 3.86 Duke W, 1-0 ................1 1 0 0 0 1 10 3.22 IBB_off Danish (J.Martinez), off Sanchez (Abreu). WP—Shields, Parnell, Rodriguez. T—4:34. Tickets sold—16,314 (40,615). ON THIS DATE JUNE 14 8 1952 — Warren Spahn of the Boston Braves struck out 18 Cubs in a 3-1, 15-inning loss to Chicago. Spahn also homered. 8 1953 — The New York Yankees swept Cleveland, 6-2 and 3-0, to extend the team's winning streak to 18 games. 8 1963 — Duke Snider hit his 400th career home run to highlight a 10-3 triumph by the New York Mets over the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field. 8 1965 — Jim Maloney struck out 18 and no-hit the New York Mets for 10 innings, but Johnny Lewis' leadoff home run in the 11th inning gave the Mets a 1-0 win. 8 1969 — Reggie Jackson knocked in 10 runs with two homers, a double and two singles in Oakland's 21-7 win over the Red Sox in Boston. In the eighth, he drove in three runs with a single when he easily could have made second base. 8 1974 — Nolan Ryan struck out 19 batters in 12 innings to give the California Angels a 4-3 win over the Boston Red Sox in 15 innings. Cecil Cooper of the Red Sox struck out six times. 8 1978 — Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds had two hits in a 3-1 triumph over the Chicago Cubs to start his 44-game hitting streak. 8 1995 — Mike Benjamin went 6-for-7, setting a major league record with 14 hits in three games, and drove in the winning run in the 13th inning as the San Francisco Giants beat the Chicago Cubs 4-3. 8 2002 — Aaron Boone hit a pair of homers — one to tie the game in the ninth inning and one to win it in the 11th — off Pittsburgh closer Mike Williams as Cincinnati beat the Pirates 4-3. 8 2002 — With all 14 interleague games — and one NL game — taking place in National League parks, the DH was not employed anywhere throughout Major League Baseball. 8 2005 — Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki became the third player since 1900 to reach 1,000 hits in fewer than 700 games when he singled in the bottom of the first inning in Seattle's 3-1 win over Philadelphia. Suzuki's 1,000th hit came in his 696th game. Chuck Klein reached the mark in 1933 in 683 games, and Lloyd Waner reached it in 1932 in 686 games. 8 2005 — Chris Carpenter pitched a one-hitter and struck out 10 to lead St. Louis in a 7-0 win over Toronto. 8 2007 — Craig Monroe tied the major league record for strike outs in a nine inning game when he whiffed five times in Detroit's 6-5 loss to Milwaukee. 8 2013 — Major League Baseball came down hard on the Los Angeles Dodgers and Arizona Diamondbacks, handing out eight suspensions and a dozen fines as punishment for a bench-clearing brawl on June 11. Arizona pitcher Ian Kennedy got 10 games and infielder Eric Hinske five for their roles in the fight. 8 Today's birthday: Hector Neris, 27. L AT I ME S . CO M / S P O RT S T U E S DAY , J U NE 14 , 2 016 D5 BASEBALL DODGERS REPORT Ethier continues his wait for leg to heal By Andy McCullough Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ANGELS PITCHER Jared Weaver looks on as Byron Buxton of the Twins, right, is congratulated by third base coach Gene Glynn after hitting a solo home run. Weaver falters in latest Angels loss Right-hander’s ERA balloons to 5.71 after he gives up six runs in six innings. MINNESOTA 9 ANGELS 4 By Pedro Moura The Angels made the worst team in the American League look like the best again. A poor start from Jered Weaver and insufficient offense led to another loss, this time by a score of 9-4 against the Minnesota Twins at Angel Stadium. The loss, coupled with an Oakland A’s victory, dropped the Angels into sole control of last place in the American League West. It started badly. Weaver gave up a leadoff single and stolen base to Eduardo Nunez, balked him over to third and yielded a run-scoring single on a chuted fastball to Joe Mauer. Johnny Giavotella threw a potential double-play ball away in the third. It could conceivably have ended the inning but instead put runners on the corners with one out. Weaver then left a changeup up to Trevor Plouffe, who hit it over the fence for a three-run home run. With runners again on the corners and no out in the fifth, Weaver induced a double play, which scored the fifth run as a byproduct. In the sixth, he served up a home run to Byron Buxton — the major league-leading 18th homer hit against Weaver this season. Weaver gave up six runs in six innings. Al Albur- querque, in his Angels debut, gave up three more in the seventh inning. In the lineup as the designated hitter after he exited Sunday’s game early because of a bruised right wrist, Mike Trout singled sharply in the first inning but did not reach base thereafter, although he drove a ball 407 feet in the eighth inning. The Angels scored once in the second when Shane Robinson singled to shortstop. Todd Cunningham came home and Gregorio Petit took third when he alertly turned into a Twin when caught in a rundown, causing interference to be called. Cunningham helped push across the Angels’ next runs in the fourth, doubling against Twins starter Ricky Nolasco amid an abbreviated rally. In the sixth, he walked, putting two men on for Petit, who promptly hit into a double play. “We tried to put pressure on them offensively,” Manager Mike Scioscia said. “We did, but we just got too far behind to get where we needed to be.” The Angels put only one other runner on base and their defensive play worsened. In the seventh, Petit mishandled two balls for errors and third baseman Yunel Escobar handled another one oddly, eliciting boos from the remaining fans at Angel Stadium. The Angels said that they sold more than 36,000 tickets for the game. There appeared to be fewer than 5,000 fans still sitting in their seats come the ninth inning, when Giavotella excited them with a home run. It was his fourth hit of the night; no other Angel had mor than one. In the ninth, the Angels also debuted Jefry Marte in left field. The power-hitting infielder had been training there before games for one week and, earlier in the day, Scioscia said that Marte had demonstrated an aptitude for the position. Weaver, his earned-run average at an unsightly 5.71 and his peripheral marks even worse, has been the Angels’ worst starting pitcher. They will incorporate a new starter, Tim Lincecum, into their rotation this weekend. Someone will need to depart, and another man will likely give way to Nick Tropeano when he returns to the rotation this month. Will it be Weaver? Could it be Weaver? The Angels are not going to relegate Matt Shoemaker to the bullpen or back to the minors, not with him pitching well. One option would be to demote 2015 All-Star Hector Santiago to the minor leagues. Another would seem to be to put Weaver in the bullpen. Scioscia would not address Weaver’s status in the rotation or the rotation’s future,,other than to say that he was excited to put it “in order” this weekend. “That’s what we need,” he said. “I think it’s pretty evident.” Scioscia insisted he remained confident the team would improve. Weaver said the same of himself, although he has not exhibited the velocity gain he predicted for himself at the season’s start. pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura PHOENIX — Four weeks ago, Dodgers outfielder Andre Ethier sat for a scan of his fractured right tibia. He had rested for two months, and he viewed the checkup as a formality. Surely the examination would show the healing in his bones and he would be cleared to resume baseball activity. Then he saw the scan. “It was a little bit of a jawdropper when you see the result,” Ethier said Monday afternoon at Chase Field, where he visited his teammates before they faced the Arizona Diamondbacks. “It wasn’t bad. It just wasn’t as healed and as positive as I was hoping and thinking it was.” And so Ethier continues to wait for his leg to heal. He has been allowed to play catch and take some swings off a tee. But he still needs time before he is cleared to take live batting practice. That goal remains weeks away. He suffered the fracture by fouling a baseball of his shin March 18. The initial diagnosis was a few days off. The reality looks closer to several months. When a follow-up examination discovered the spiral fracture, the Dodgers placed a 10- to 14-week timetable on his return. Ethier has now waited12 weeks. He has been marooned at the team’s facility at Camelback Ranch. He said he appreciated the opportunity to spend time with his children. But even they are getting antsy. “They ask me every other day when I’m going back to play,” Ethier said. “I don’t know if that’s a sign that they want me out of the By Mike Hiserman The first time Joey Carney saw his mother after life-saving surgery in which she received part of his liver, she came to him. It was June 4, two days after the transplant, and the University of San Francisco pitcher was nauseated from medication and in significant pain. “I said, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t get up to see her,’ ” Carney recalled. “A little while later, there she is at my door. I couldn't believe it.” Paula Carney, 50, required the transplant because non-alcoholic steatohepatitis had left her with end-stage liver cirrhosis. The surgery, performed at the UC San Francisco Medical Center, took place two years and three months after she was told she might have two years to live — and after several other family members were ruled out as donors. After the transplant, her husband, Dale, said he was told by the medical team that Paula’s liver had been reduced to something resembling a puddle. He was also told she would not have lived to her next birthday, in mid-July. Paula bounced back quickly in the days immediately after the surgery but has since [Dodgers, from D1] run in the fifth. Otherwise, Greinke avoided danger. He struck out six, scattered seven hits and contributed to the go-ahead run against Dodgers starter Mike Bolsinger. The Diamondbacks whacked a pair of home runs against Bolsinger, then manufactured the winning rally after Greinke’s single in the fifth. After Greinke departed, an opportunity arose in the eighth. Diamondbacks reliever Daniel Hudson walked the bases loaded with one out. Into the fire came sidearmer Brad Ziegler. He fanned Enrique Hernandez with ease. Howie Kendrick hit a sinking line drive that center fielder Michael Bourn dived to snag. The pitching matchup posed a question: Why was Greinke, the prize of last winter’s free-agent class, pitching for Arizona? And why were the Dodgers (3332), owners of the sport’s largest payroll, relying on a swingman like Bolsinger? The Diamondbacks capitalized on the Dodgers’ restraint in December and overwhelmed Greinke with a six-year, $206-million offer. The Dodgers regrouped and accumulated assets to fortify the 40-man roster. A slew of injuries forced Bolsinger into the rotation. Neither Greinke nor the Diamondbacks have flourished this season. Arizona sat nine games below .500 heading into Monday. Greinke lugged a 3.84 earned-run average into the game, the product of a torturous April. His performance had improved across his previous eight starts, including a shutout of Tampa Bay in his last start. The matchup granted his former teammates a chance to take stock of his absence. His departure surprised many in the group. Yasmani Grandal found a silver lining. “I was just glad he didn’t go to San Francisco,” Grandal said. Grandal suggested the Dodgers did not particularly miss Greinke, despite his excellence on the mound. The starting rotation carried into the game a collective 3.48 ERA, which ranked sixth in baseball. The 1.52 ERA of Clayton Kershaw propped up the group, but Grandal insisted the team’s largest issue resided with the offense. “I feel like our pitching has really carried us through the whole season,” Grandal said. “I feel like it’s just a matter of time. It’s a ticking time bomb — as soon as the offense goes, I don’t think there’s any team in this league that can compete with us.” The Dodgers showed signs of life in the first inning. After a one-out single by Seager, Turner bashed a 92mph fastball off the centerfield wall. Seager raced home on the double. Arizona delivered a swift answer. Bolsinger hung a slider to first baseman Paul Goldschmidt. He battered the mistake over the wall in center. Two innings later, Bolsinger fed third baseman Jake Lamb a curveball over the middle. Lamb gave his club the lead with a blast to left. Yasiel Puig reported to Class-A Rancho Cucamonga to start a minor league rehabilitation assignment. Puig has been on the disabled list since June 4 because of a hamstring strain. The Dodgers hope he can rejoin the big league club Monday.... Carl Crawford cleared waivers and received his release from the organization. The Dodgers designated Crawford for assignment June 5.... Brandon McCarthy (elbow ligament replacement surgery) and Hyun-Jin Ryu (shoulder surgery) came through their rehab starts over the weekend without issue. Each will pitch again later this week. andy.mccullough@latimes.com Seager knotted the score in the fifth. He pounced on a slider on the inner half of the plate for his 15th homer of the season. Trusting Bolsinger to maintain the deadlock proved foolhardy. Bolsinger lived on the edge for the duration of his outing. Not the edge of the strike zone — the edge of disaster. He served up a series of well-struck outs, with his outfielders repeatedly ranging back to the warning track. Even Greinke smacked a pair of drives, including a single in the fifth inning. The hit by Greinke enlivened the crowd and led to Arizona’s reclaiming the lead. After shortstop Nick Ahmed hit into a fielder’s choice, he swiped second base when Bolsinger bounced a curveball in the dirt. Second baseman Jean Segura ripped a single to put the Diamondbacks in front. In the sixth, Greinke stranded Joc Pederson after a one-out double. He yielded a leadoff single to Kendrick in the seventh, which prompted Arizona Manager Chip Hale to visit the mound. Looming were Seager and Turner, who had damaged Greinke all evening. Greinke lobbied to stay in the game. Hale stuck with him. Seager hit a harmless fly ball to left. Turner chased a low changeup to strike out. Greinke put his head down as he headed to the home dugout, an ace on a losing team, but a winner for an evening. andy.mccullough@latimes.com Twitter: @McCulloughTimes AROUND THE LEAGUES Mets’ Collins plans return associated press Mets Manager Terry Collins has been cleared to leave a Milwaukee hospital and planned to return to New York and be back in the dugout for Tuesday night’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates. The 67-year-old Collins, the oldest manager in the major leagues, felt sick before Sunday’s game against the Brewers and was held overnight at Froedtert Hospital. New York said Monday that Collins was examined by Dr. Brian-Fred Fitzsimmons, that tests were negative, and that he had been cleared to fly home. ‘I’m showering and getting dressed by myself and have been going somewhere with friends just about every day.’ — Joey Carney, University of San Francisco pitcher who underwent surgery this month experienced some setbacks and is still hospitalized. Joey returned to the family’s Millbrae, Calif., home June 7 and recently has been walking more than three miles a day. “In a lot of ways I’m almost back to normal,” he said. “I’m showering and getting dressed by myself and have been going somewhere with friends just about every day.” This past spring, Carney made an unlikely rise to become closer for San Francisco’s baseball team. Formerly an outfielder, he enrolled in school without a scholarship, then became the first player in at least 18 years to make the team through an open tryout. As the season progressed, USF started to rely on him when the Dons were trying to hold slim leads in the late innings. He responded by converting all five of his save opportunities. “An amazing story even before the Short hops Greinke’s reminder to Dodgers Pitcher recovering after liver donation Collegian Joey Carney says he’s ‘almost back to normal’ in many ways since surgery to give part of his liver to his stricken mother. house, or they want to see me play again.” Davis deal finalized Dale Carney USF’S Joey Carney walks at the hospi- tal the day after his recent surgery. transplant,” Coach Nino Giarratano said. When his mother was ill, Carney would make time for nightly bedside chats with her after he returned from long days of baseball workouts and school. Now he’s anticipating having talks with her during long walks as both recover. “That’s going to be a much different deal,” he said. “Before, it was like she was getting a little worse every day. Now we’ll both be getting better.” mike.hiserman@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeHiserman Ike Davis and the New York Yankees have finalized a one-year contract, giving the team more options after putting four first basemen on the disabled list. Davis gets paid at the rate of a $1.5-million salary while in the major leagues and at the rate of a $120,000 salary while in the minors, according to the deal reached Monday. With 112 days remaining in the regular season, his prorated major league salary is $918,033. Etc. Left-hander Eric O’Flaherty has been put on the 15-day disabled list by the Atlanta Braves because of a right knee strain. O’Flaherty is 1-3 with a 6.52 earned-run average in 27 games. The Braves recalled right-hander Ryan Weber from triple-A Gwinnett before Monday night’s game against Cincinnati. Weber is 1-0 with an 8.38 ERA in four games with Atlanta this season. — associated press D6 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M ES . C O M /S P O RT S THE DAY IN SPORTS TENNIS $2.03-MILLION AEGON CHAMPIONSHIPS At London Surface: Grass-Outdoor SINGLES (first round)—Steve Johnson d. Richard Gasquet (4), France, 7-6 (2), 6-2. $1.91-MILLION GERRY WEBER OPEN At Halle, Germany Surface: Grass-Outdoor SINGLES (first round)—Kei Nishikori (2), Japan, d. Lucas Pouille, France, 6-7 (5), 6-1, 6-4. David Goffin (5), Belgium, d. Borna Coric, Croatia, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-4. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, d. Denis Kudla, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3. Benjamin Becker, Germany, d. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, 7-5, 6-3. Yuichi Sugita, Japan, leads Taylor Fritz, 6-6 (5-4), susp., rain. Andreas Seppi, Italy, d. David Ferrer (6), Spain, 6-3, 6-4. $870,650 RICOH OPEN At Den Bosch, Netherlands Surface: Grass-Outdoor MEN’S SINGLES (final)—Nicolas Mahut (8), France, d. Gilles Muller (7), Luxembourg, 6-4, 6-4. $780,900 AEGON CLASSIC BIRMINGHAM At Birmingham, England Surface: Grass-Outdoor SINGLES (first round)—Madison Keys (7) d. Timea Babos, Hungary, 7-6 (3), 6-4. Heather Watson, Britain, d. Camila Giorgi, Italy, 6-4, 7-5. Jelena Ostapenko, Latvia, d. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, 7-6 (2), 6-1. Daria Gavrilova, Australia, leads Naomi Broady, Britain, 0-0 (30-0), susp., rain. $226,750 MALLORCA OPEN At Mallorca, Spain Surface: Grass-Outdoor SINGLES (first round)—Anastasija Sevastova, Latvia, d. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-0, 6-2. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, d. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, 6-1, 6-3. Mariana Duque-Marino, Colombia, d. Alison Van Uytvanck, Belgium, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Caroline Garcia (6), France, d. Carina Witthoeft, Germany, 7-5, 6-4. PRO BASKETBALL WNBA Western Conference Team................... W L Pct. Minnesota ...........10 0 1.000 SPARKS ................9 0 1.000 Phoenix ................4 6 .400 Seattle .................4 6 .400 Dallas ..................3 6 .333 San Antonio ..........1 7 .125 Eastern Conference L Pct. Team................... W Atlanta .................7 3 .700 New York...............5 4 .556 Chicago ................5 5 .500 Indiana.................4 6 .400 Washington ...........4 7 .364 Connecticut ...........2 8 .200 GB — 1 ⁄2 6 6 61⁄2 8 GB — 11⁄2 2 3 31⁄2 5 Today’s schedule Chicago at SPARKS, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at New York, 4 p.m. Washington at Connecticut, 4 p.m. Indiana at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Seattle at San Antonio, 5 p.m. Thursday's schedule New York at Connecticut, 4 p.m. Seattle at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. CYCLING TOUR DE SUISSE At Rheinfelden, Switzerland Third Stage, a 119.6-mile hilly ride from Grosswangen to Rheinfelden 1. Peter Sagan, Slovakia, Tinkoff, 4 hours, 31 minutes, 17 seconds. 2. Michael Albasini, Switzerland, Orica-GreenEdge, same time. 3. Silvan Dillier, Switzerland, BMC Racing, same time. 4. Maximiliano Richeze, Argentina, Etixx-QuickStep, 3 seconds behind. 5. Jurgen Roelandts, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, same time. 6. Jhonatan Restrepo, Colombia, Katusha, same time. 7. Michael Matthews, Australia, Orica-GreenEdge, same time. 8. Rui Faria, Portugal, LampreMerida, same time. 9. Simon Geschke, Germany, Giant-Alpecin, same time. 10. Christopher Juul Jensen, Denmark, Orica-GreenEdge, same time. OVERALL STANDINGS (After three stages) 1. Sagan, 9:14:13. 2. Roelandts, :03. 3. Dillier, same time. 4. Jon Izaguirre, Spain, Movistar, :13. 5. Tim Wellens, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, :14. 6. Gorka Izaguirre, Spain, Movistar, :17. 7. Wilco Kelderman, Netherlands, LottoNL-Jumbo, :17. 8. Matthews, :18. 9. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky, :19. 10. Simon Geschke, Germany, GiantAlpecin, :20. Also 17. Andrew Talansky, U.S., Cannondale, :33. 19. Tejay Van Garderen, U.S., BMC Racing, :35. 37. Joseph Lloyd Dombrowski, U.S., Cannondale, 1:00. 67. Ian Boswell, U.S., Sky, 3:20. 97. Peter Stetina, U.S., Trek-Segafredo, 5:41. 160. Kiel Reijnen, U.S., Trek-Segafredo, 19:13. 165. Tyler Farrar, U.S., Dimension Data, 20:49. THIS DAY IN SPORTS 1987—The Lakers win their 10th NBA championship with a 106-93 victory over the Boston Celtics in Game 6 at the Forum. 1994—The New York Rangers hold off the Vancouver Canucks 3-2 in Game 7 for their first Stanley Cup in 54 years. MVP Brian Leetch, Adam Graves and Mark Messier score goals and Mike Richter makes 28 saves for New York. 1995—The Houston Rockets complete the unlikeliest of NBA championship repeats, sweeping the Orlando Magic with a 113-101 victory. MVP Hakeem Olajuwon finishes with 35 points and 15 rebounds. In the Bleachers by Steve Moore COLLEGE BASEBALL NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT Super Regionals At Gainesville, Fla. Monday’s result Florida 7, Florida State 0, Florida advances COLLEGE WORLD SERIES At Omaha, Neb. TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Double Elimination Saturday’s schedule Game 1—Oklahoma State (41-20) vs. UC Santa Barbara (42-18-1), noon Game 2—Miami (50-12) vs. Arizona (44-21), 5 p.m. Sunday’s schedule Game 3—Texas Tech (46-18) vs. TCU (47-16), noon Game 4—Florida (52-14) vs. Coastal Carolina (49-16), 5 p.m. staff and wire reports MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Monday's results Memphis 4, Nashville 3 New Orleans 6, Round Rock 0 Oklahoma City 9, Omaha 3 El Paso 2, Albuquerque 1 Fresno 4, Sacramento 1 Reno 14, Las Vegas 7 Tacoma 3, Salt Lake 1 Iowa vs. Colorado Springs, ppd. Today’s schedule Memphis at Nashville, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Round Rock, 5 p.m. Omaha at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Albuquerque at El Paso, 6 p.m. Iowa at Colorado Springs, 6 p.m. Tacoma at Salt Lake, 6 p.m. Fresno at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Reno at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. CALIFORNIA LEAGUE Monday's results High Desert 6, Lake Elsinore 4 San Jose 2, Inland Empire 1 Stockton 8, Modesto 4 Rancho Cucamonga 8, Lancaster 1 Visalia 3, Bakersfield 1 Visalia vs. Bakersfield, Game 2, late final Modesto vs. Stockton, late final Today’s schedule Inland Empire at San Jose, 6:30 p.m. Lake Elsinore at High Desert, 7 p.m. Lancaster at Rancho Cucamonga, 7 p.m. Modesto at Stockton, 7 p.m. Visalia at Bakersfield, 7:45 p.m. TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL MLB—Suspended Texas minor league catcher Melvin Novoa (Arizona) 56 games and Boston minor league catcher Jhon Nunez (Lowell-NYP) 25 games for violations of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. DODGERS—Optioned pitcher Frankie Montas to Oklahoma City (PCL). Atlanta—Put pitcher Eric O'Flaherty on the 15day disabled list; recalled pitcher Ryan Weber from Gwinnett (IL). Minnesota—Optioned pitcher J.T. Chargois to Rochester (IL). N.Y. Yankees—Agreed to terms with infielder Ike Davis on a one-year contract; designated pitcher Layne Somsen for assignment; optioned pitcher Chad Green to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Oakland—Sent pitcher Henderson Alvarez to Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment. San Francisco—Optioned pitcher Chris Stratton to Sacramento (PCL); activated pitcher Matt Cain from the 15-day disabled list. Toronto—Optioned switch-pitcher Pat Venditte to Buffalo (IL); selected the contract of pitcher Scott Diamond from Buffalo; transferred pitcher Franklin Morales to the 60-day disabled list. BASKETBALL Detroit—Signed general manager Jeff Bower to a contract extension. FOOTBALL Buffalo—Signed defensive end Leger Douzable and offensive tackle Chris Martin; released defensive end Claudell Louis and offensive tackle Keith Lumpkin. Dallas—Signed cornerbacks Isaiah Frey and Dax Swanson. Detroit—Signed defensive back Keith Lewis and wide receiver Andre Roberts; waived wide receiver Austin Willis; put wide receiver Corey Washington on injured reserve. Philadelphia—Agreed to terms with defensive tackle Fletcher Cox on a six-year contract. HOCKEY Calgary—Signed goalie David Rittich to a oneyear contract. Carolina—Agreed to terms with forward Sebastian Aho and forward Aleksi Saarela to three-year, entry-level contracts. Nashville—Signed goalie Marek Mazanec to a one-year, two-way contract. St. Louis—Named Mike Yeo associate coach. OLYMPIC SPORTS USADA—Suspended rugby athlete Nia Williams four years after testing positive for prohibited substances during the 2015 World Rugby Women's Seven Series; suspended track & field athlete Gwen Berry three months for using an inhaler containing the prohibited substance vilanterol trifenatate at the United States track & field indoor championships. COLLEGE Florida—Announced the retirement of athletic director Jeremy Foley. Kentucky—Named Nick Mingione baseball coach. Bucks give Kidd 3-year extension SOCCER PRO SOCCER MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WEST ............W L T Pts GF Colorado ........8 2 4 28 17 FC Dallas........8 4 4 28 24 Real Salt Lake .7 4 2 23 23 Vancouver .......6 6 3 21 23 GALAXY ..........5 2 6 21 27 San Jose ........5 4 5 20 16 Portland .........5 6 4 19 23 Sporting KC.....5 8 3 18 14 Seattle ...........5 7 1 16 13 Houston .........3 7 4 13 20 EAST.............W L T Pts GF Philadelphia....6 3 5 23 21 New York ........6 7 1 19 24 Montreal.........5 4 4 19 22 New York City FC 5 6 18 22 .....................4 Toronto FC ......4 5 4 16 14 D.C. United .....4 6 4 16 14 Orlando City ....3 3 7 16 23 New England ...3 4 7 16 19 Columbus .......3 5 5 14 18 Chicago..........2 5 5 11 10 Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s schedule GALAXY at Toronto FC, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at New York City FC, 10 a.m. New England at Vancouver, 4 p.m. Montreal at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. San Jose at Orlando City, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at Colorado, 6 p.m. D.C. United at Houston, 6 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Sunday’s schedule FC Dallas at Sporting Kansas City, 2 p.m. Seattle at New York, 4:30 p.m. GA 10 22 21 25 16 16 25 18 15 22 GA 16 20 20 29 15 16 21 25 21 14 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP FIRST ROUND GROUP A Wednesday's schedule Romania vs. Switzerland, 9 a.m. Albania at France, noon Sunday's schedule Switzerland at France, noon Romania vs. Albania, noon GROUP B Wednesday's schedule Russia vs. Slovakia, 6 a.m. Thursday's schedule England vs. Wales, 6 a.m. Monday's schedule Slovakia vs. England, noon Russia vs. Wales, noon GROUP C Thursday's schedule Ukraine vs. Northern Ireland, 9 a.m. Germany vs. Poland, noon June 21 At Paris Northern Ireland vs. Germany, 9 a.m. Ukraine vs. Poland, 9 a.m. GROUP D Monday's result Spain 1, Czech Republic 0 Friday's schedule Czech Republic vs. Croatia, 9 a.m. Spain vs. Turkey, noon June 21 Croatia vs. Spain, noon Czech Republic vs. Turkey, noon NATIONAL WOMEN’S SOCCER LEAGUE ....................W L T Pts GF GA Chicago..........4 1 3 15 8 6 W. New York ....5 3 0 15 13 8 Portland .........3 0 5 14 10 5 Washington .....4 1 2 14 9 6 Orlando..........4 4 0 12 9 6 Seattle ...........3 3 2 11 8 7 Sky Blue FC ....2 3 3 9 9 12 Houston .........2 4 1 7 6 8 FC Kansas City 1 4 3 6 5 7 Boston ...........1 6 1 4 2 12 Three points for victory, one point for tie. Friday’s schedule Portland at Western New York, 4 p.m. Saturday’s schedule Orland at Washington, 4 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 5 p.m. Sunday’s schedule Seattle at Skt Blue FC, 3 p.m. FC Kansas City at Houston, 5:30 p.m. GROUP E Monday's results Ireland 1, Sweden 1 Italy 2, Belgium 0 Friday's schedule Italy vs. Sweden, 6 a.m. Saturday's schedule Belgium vs. Ireland, 6 a.m. June 22 Sweden vs. Belgium, noon Italy vs. Ireland, noon FIGHT SCHEDULE U.S. OPEN CUP FOURTH ROUND Today's schedule Wilmington (USL) at Real Salt Lake (MLS), 7 p.m. San Jose (MLS) at Portland (MLS), 7:30 p.m. Wednesday's schedule La Maquina (Calif.) at GALAXY (MLS), 7:30 p.m. Harrisburg City (USL) at Philadelphia (MLS), 4 p.m. New York (NASL) vs. New York City (MLS) 4 p.m. Tampa Bay (NASL) vs. Columbus (MLS), 4 p.m. New York Red Bulls (MLS) at Rochester (USL), 4 p.m. Orlando City (MLS) at Jacksonville (NASL), 4 p.m. New England (MLS) at Carolina, 4:30 p.m. Fort Lauderdale (NASL) vs. D.C. United (MLS), 4:30 p.m. Indy (NASL) at Chicago (MLS), 5:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City (MLS) at Minnesota (NASL), 5 p.m. OKC Energy (USL) vs. Dallas (MLS), 5:30 p.m. San Antonio (USL) at Houston (MLS), 5:30 p.m. Colorado Springs (USL) at Colorado (MLS), 6 p.m. Kitsap (PDL) vs. Seattle (MLS), 7:30 p.m. Saturday’s schedule At UIC Pavilion, Chicago (NBC), Juan Carlos Payano vs. Rau'shee Warren, 12, for Payano's WBA Super World-IBO World bantamweight titles; Andrzej Fonfara vs. Joe Smith Jr., 10, lightheavyweights; June 24 At Beijing, Javier Fortuna vs. Jason Sosa, 12, for Fortuna's WBA World junior-lightweight title; Jun Qiu Xiao vs. Nehomar Cermeno, 12, for the vacant WBA World super-bantamweight title. June 25 At O2 Arena, London, Anthony Joshua vs. Dominic Breazeale, 12, for Joshua's IBF heavyweight title; George Groves vs. Martin Murray, 12, WBA super-middleweight eliminator; John Wayne Hibbert vs. Andrea Scarpa, 12, for the vacant WBC Silver super-lightweight title; Chris Eubank Jr. vs. Tom Doran, 12, for Eubank's British middleweight title. At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. (CBS), Keith Thurman vs. Shawn Porter, 12, for Thurman's WBA World welterweight title; Jesus Cuellar vs. Abner Mares, 12, for Cuellar's WBA World featherweight title; Jarrett Hurd vs. Oscar Molina, 10, junior-middleweights. GROUP F Today's schedule Austria vs. Hungary, 9 a.m. Portugal vs. Iceland, noon Saturday's schedule Iceland vs. Hungary, 9 a.m. Portugal vs. Austria, noon June 22 Hungary vs. Portugal, 9 a.m. Iceland vs. Austria, 9 a.m. The Milwaukee Bucks are close to reaching a three-year contract extension with Coach Jason Kidd, three people with direct knowledge of the situation told the Associated Press. The three spoke on condition of anonymity Monday because the deal was not final. It is expected to be announced in the next few days. Yahoo! Sports first reported the extension talks. Kidd is entering the last year of a three-year deal with the Bucks initially signed in 2014. The former point guard is 74-90 in two seasons in Milwaukee, including a 41-win season and playoff appearance in 2014-15. He also coached the Brooklyn Nets for one season, guiding them to a 44-38 record and a playoff appearance in 2013-14. The Clippers announced the retirement of assistant coach Kevin Eastman, a longtime lieutenant of Coach Doc Rivers who had also spent a season as vice president of basketball operations with the Clippers. Eastman, 61, previously served as an assistant on Rivers’ staff with the Boston Celtics for eight years. — Ben Bolch PRO FOOTBALL Eagles, Cox agree to six-year contract Standout defensive tackle Fletcher Cox agreed to a six-year contract with the Philadelphia Eagles that could earn him nine figures. The 2012 first-round draft pick has been a starter since midway in his rookie season. One of the NFL’s most versatile defensive linemen, he has 308 tackles and 22 sacks in four pro seasons. Cox, 25, did not attend the team’s organized off-season activities but returned to the team last week. He comes off his best NFL season with 104 tackles (80 solo) and 91⁄2 sacks. Cox had a career-high three sacks in a game against the New Orleans Saints in Week 5. HOCKEY Blues hire Yeo to succeed Hitchcock The St. Louis Blues have hired Mike Yeo as the successor-in-waiting for Coach Ken Hitchcock, who has said that next season will be his last behind the bench before retiring. Blues General Manager Doug Armstrong announced that Yeo, 42, will be an associate coach for one year under Hitchcock and take over the team for the 2017-18 season. The 64-year-old Hitchcock, who led the Blues to the Western Conference finals this season, will enter his sixth season with St. Louis and his 20th as an NHL head coach. Pittsburgh will celebrate the Penguins’ fourth Stanley Cup championship with a parade Wednesday morning. ... Dallas Stars announcer Dave Strader has been diagnosed with cancer. The announcement Monday came a year after Strader, 61, was hired to replace longtime Stars play-by-play voice Ralph Strangis. ETC. Gators reach Series JJ Schwarz broke out of a twoweek hitting slump by driving in five runs, four on a grand slam, and Florida defeated rival Florida State, 7-0, to secure the last spot in the College World Series. The Gators (52-14) won the final two games in the best-of-three super regional to earn their fifth trip to Omaha in the past seven years. Florida, seeded No. 1 overall in the NCAA tournament, will play Coastal Carolina on Sunday night. The International Tennis Federation says that it has banned a Ukrainian doctor from sports for four years for giving a banned substance to WTA Tour player Kateryna Kozlova. The ITF said in a statement that Elena Dorofeyeva gave a supplement containing the banned stimulant DMBA to Kozlova, the current world No. 98, in 2014. Kozlova tested positive and served a six-month ban last year, when the ITF ruled she had not intentionally doped. Kozlova said she had taken what she thought to be vitamins provided by Dorofeyeva. The ITF dismissed an appeal by Dorofeyeva and ruled that she deserved a four-year ban because “a doctor setting him/ herself up as a sports medicine specialist bears an extremely heavy responsibility,” particularly when working with young athletes. Russell Baze, horse racing’s alltime winningest jockey with 12,842 victories, is expected to announce his retirement Tuesday after 42 years of riding. His last race was a secondplace finish aboard Wahine Warrior in the 10th race Sunday at Golden Gate Field. His longtime agent Ray Harris confirmed the announcement to the Paulick Report, a racing site. Baze rode in 53,578 races in a career that started at Yakima Meadows in Washington. He was the leading rider in North America 13 times, his mounts winning almost $200 million. — John Cherwa SoCal Auto Dealer Marketplace New and used car dealer specialls Visit latimes.com/DealerSpecials to view current new and used car specials from reputable auto dealerships throughout Southern California. 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Songs of life and death amid sorrow Ojai festival mixes music, silence after the tragedy in Florida MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC OJAI — As the great Southern California music retreat, the Ojai Music Festival offers venturesome refuge from normal life for locals and visitors to this blissed-out valley. But on the final day of the festival that had begun Thursday, we awoke to the same horrific news from Orlando, Fla., as the rest of the country. This year’s Ojai music director, Peter Sellars, led a moment of silence in Libbey Bowl at 3 p.m., the hour Florida Gov. Rick Scott had asked the nation to remember the 49 killed in the mass shooting in a gay nightclub. The silence here initiated the U.S. premiere of Claude Vivier’s ritual opera, “Kopernikus.” CHARLOTTE Janus and Ray Castellini of Ojai, forefront, relax on the lawn while enjoying a wide range of music at the festival. As staged by Sellars, this wondrously mystical masterpiece became a profound and uncanny guide for the dying as they leave this world and prepare for the transcendent next. That “Kopernikus” happened to be written by a dazzlingly original young Canadian composer murdered by a gay prostitute in Paris in 1983 might have made the premiere of this too-little-known 1979 opera seem all the more uncanny. But for Sellars, the prime function of art is to serve as a spiritual early warning system. The opera itself isn’t exactly obscure. Netherlands Opera produced it a dozen years ago, as did Opera Factory Freiburg more recently, and there are recordings of both. But the European approach [See Ojai, E6] THE PLAYER E3 makes moves to up its game Signs of change at this year’s L.A. event may signal a needed shift for the industry. By Todd Martens For too long, the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) has existed inside a heavily shielded bubble, one in which game makers target retailers and journalists with carefully controlled messages designed to stoke the imagination of the most dedicated of game players. And what have those players wanted? Blood and gore, apparently. Indeed, at the pre-conference events ahead of the Tuesday start of this year’s E3, it seemed at first that nothing had changed. At L.A. Live on Sunday afternoon, Electronic Arts offered insiders a look at a sequel to “Titanfall,” a mili[See Expo, E4] NEW YORK — Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Hamilton” has made history in numerous ways, injecting energy into the musical, populating the stage with people of color and bringing young audiences to a middle-aged Broadway. But there’s one barrier in which the 11-time Tony winner is unlikely to make a dent: the lag between hit show and Hollywood film. “I think the show will end up on screen without a doubt,” star and Tony winner Leslie Odom Jr. said at a Tonys after-party Sunday night. “I just think it will be like 10 years from now.” As with so many big Tony winners before it, “Hamilton” will take a circuitous path to the multiplex, if it gets there at all. Indeed, in the last decade, more best musical winners have come from films (three) than have been turned into films (one). No “Hamilton” rights have been sold, and at least one film producer told The Times that when they sought to have a conversation about them, the show’s [See ‘Hamilton,’ E5] TELEVISION REVIEW ‘Uncle’: Wise up, already MARY McNAMARA TELEVISION CRITIC It’s not always fun to be proved right. Last year, when ABC announced it had greenlighted a serial reboot of the John Candy cult-bomb “Uncle Buck,” the general reaction was a groan of irritated bewilderment. With all the things that need doing in this crazy world, ABC is choosing to remake “Uncle Buck”? That the “twist” was a black cast raised more eyebrows than it did spirits — how, exactly, was that going to help? The “Uncle Buck” concept — ne’er do well bachelor forced to care for children learns, and teaches, life lessons — is as worn out and dated as the idea of “Mr. Mom” or the template of “Baby Boom.” Never mind that “Uncle Buck” already failed once as [See ‘Uncle Buck,’ E3] ‘Wrecked’ works it The brothers behind “Wrecked,” a new prime-time comedy about survivors on an island. Also: a review by Robert Lloyd. E3 It’s a family jungle out there TV drama “Animal Kingdom” commits its crimes under the California sun. E7 Ubisoft UBISOFT’S virtual reality game “Star Trek: Bridge Crew” is among the more interesting displays at E3. Comics ................... E8-9 TV grid .................... E10 E2 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R QUICK TAKES LBO gets Disney opera BUENA PARK METROPLEX 18 8290 La Palma Avenue 714-826-SHOW (7469) THE CONJURING 2 E (10:50, 1:55, 4:25, 4:55), 7:25, 7:55, 10:25 THE CONJURING 2 E DOLBY ATMOS (12:55, 3:55), 6:55, 9:55 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (12:50, 3:50), 6:50, 9:50 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C F (10:35, 1:35, 4:35), 7:35 * WARCRAFT C (10:50, 12:45, 1:15, 1:45, 3:40, 4:10, 4:40), 6:35, 7:05, 7:35, 9:30, 10:30 * WARCRAFT 3D C (3:50), 6:50, 10:00 ME BEFORE YOU C (10:30, 11:00, 1:15, 1:45, 4:15), 6:45, 7:15, 9:30 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E 7:10 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (10:35, 11:05, 1:20, 1:50, 4:05, 4:35), 7:20, 9:35, 10:05 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B F (10:30, 1:20, 4:10), 7:05, 9:45 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (11:50, 3:10), 7:10, 9:50, 10:20 REDLANDS MONROVIA REDLANDS CINEMA 14 340 N. Eureka St. 909-793-6393 THE CONJURING 2 E (12:25, 1:45, 3:40, 4:50), 6:50, 7:50, 9:55, 10:25 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (10:50, 1:45, 4:40), 7:35, 10:30 * WARCRAFT C (10:55, 12:30, 2:20, 3:50, 5:10), 6:45, 8:00, 9:45 * WARCRAFT 3D C (11:30 AM) ME BEFORE YOU C (10:50, 11:35, 1:30, 2:15, 5:00), 7:45, 9:40 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E (4:55), 10:25 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (11:05, 2:05, 4:05, 4:55), 6:45, 7:40, 10:25 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B F (11:00, 1:50, 4:35), 7:25, 10:10 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C F (3:00), 7:05, 10:20 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:00, 1:35, 4:10), 7:20, 9:50 THE LOBSTER E 7:30 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (11:25, 2:00, 4:45), 7:10, 10:00 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR C (11:20, 2:55), 7:00, 10:15 PAN B (10:00 AM, 12:30 PM) MONROVIA CINEMA 12 & LFX 410 S. Myrtle Avenue 626-305-SHOW (7469) LFX LARGE FORMAT EXPERIENCE * WARCRAFT C DOLBY ATMOS (10:50, 1:45, 4:40), 7:30, 10:25 THE CONJURING 2 E (4:05), 7:05, 10:00 THE CONJURING 2 E F (10:45, 1:40, 4:35), 7:40, 10:30 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (10:35, 12:30, 3:40, 4:10), 6:45, 7:15, 10:20 * WARCRAFT C (10:20, 1:15, 3:40), 7:00, 9:25, 9:55 * WARCRAFT 3D C (4:10) ME BEFORE YOU C (10:30, 1:05, 5:00), 6:50, 7:35, 10:10 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E (1:30), 9:45 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (4:20), 7:15, 10:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (11:00, 1:45, 4:40), 7:20, 10:05 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (12:15, 3:45), 7:00, 10:15 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:50, 2:20, 4:50), 7:20, 9:50 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (10:40, 11:10, 1:20, 1:50, 4:10), 7:00, 9:40 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E (4:50), 9:35 * PAN B (10:00 AM, 12:30 PM) CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR C (12:15, 3:40), 7:00, 10:10 DOWNEY DOWNEY CINEMA 10 THE JUNGLE BOOK B (11:45, 2:25, 5:05), 7:40, 10:15 8200 3rd St., Corner of 3rd St. and New Ave. 562-622-3999 PAN B (10:00 AM, 12:30 PM) SAN CLEMENTE THE CONJURING 2 E (11:00, 1:55, 4:50), 7:45, 9:50, 10:40 SAN CLEMENTE CINEMA 6 THE CONJURING 2 E F (1:15, 4:10), 7:05 641-B Camino De Los Mares 949-661-SHOW (7469) NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (11:20, 2:00, 4:40), 7:30, 10:10 * WARCRAFT C (11:25, 12:20, 2:15, 3:25, 5:05), 7:00, 8:00, 10:05, 10:45 THE CONJURING 2 E (10:40, 1:40, 4:40), 7:40, 9:30, 10:40 ME BEFORE YOU C (11:30, 2:10, 4:45), 7:35, 10:15 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C F (10:30, 1:30, 4:30), 7:30, 10:30 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E F (11:05 AM), 10:25 PM * WARCRAFT C (10:40, 1:30) TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C F (11:15, 1:50, 4:25), 7:05, 9:45 * WARCRAFT C F (4:20), 7:10, 10:10 ME BEFORE YOU C (11:20, 4:40), 7:20, 10:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (11:10, 1:40, 4:15), 7:00, 9:40 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (2:15, 5:00), 7:45, 10:20 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (4:00), 7:10, 10:20 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (10:50, 1:20, 4:10), 7:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (12:00, 2:30, 5:00), 7:25 PAN B (10:00 AM, 12:30 PM) * PAN B (10:00 AM, 12:30 PM) *SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT/NO PASSES TIMES FOR TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 PHOTO: LA Times Introducing the free Hot Property newsletter. Celebrity home sales and high-end real estate transactions accompanied by stunning photos. “The Perfect American,” the controversial Philip Glass opera that recounts the final months in the life of Walt Disney, will get its U.S. premiere next year — not by a major institution like the Metropolitan Opera or Los Angeles Opera but by a small company with a reputation for taking artistic risks. Long Beach Opera said that “The Perfect American” would be part of its 2017 season and that it was scheduled to run for two performances, March 12 and 18, at the Terrace Theater. The opera had its world premiere in 2013 as a co-production between the Teatro Real in Madrid and the English National Opera in London. Glass’ piece provoked heated words at the time from Diane Disney Miller, the eldest daughter of Walt Disney. She told The Times that year that she was “disgusted and angry” with the depiction of her father and that nothing in the piece “has any basis in truth whatsoever.” “The Perfect American,” adapted from a novel by Peter Stephan Jungk, depicts Disney as a wildly eccentric man obsessed with death and cryonics, and a giant animatronic version of Abraham Lincoln. He is also depicted as prejudiced against black people and opposed to organized labor. Walt Disney died in 1966 at age 65 in a Burbank hospital. — David Ng The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announced Monday that Bill Murray, 65, would be this year’s recipient of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. The award goes to those who influence society in the tradition of Samuel Clemens, the writer, satirist and social commentator better known as Mark Twain. “I’m honored by the award and by its timing,” Murray said in a statement. “I believe Mark Twain has rolled over in his grave so much for so long that this news won’t disturb his peace.” Like past Twain prize recipients, including Tina Fey, Will Ferrell and last year’s winner, Eddie Murphy, Murray first gained prominence for his work on “Saturday Night Live.” He joined the cast in 1977, replacing Chevy Chase. Murray will accept the prize, first handed out in 1998, at an Oct. 23 gala at the Kennedy Center. — associated press V WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 10:00, 1:00, 7:00 WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 4:00, 10:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 9:30, 11:55, 2:20, 4:45, 7:10, 9:35 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) RESERVE 9:40, 12:55, 4:10, 7:25 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 9:35, 12:50, 5:00, 7:20, 10:35 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 10:40, 1:50, 8:15 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) RESERVE 10:30, 4:05, 10:45 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 11:30, 5:00, 7:45 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS 3D (PG) RESERVE 2:15, 10:30 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) RESERVE 11:15, 1:50, 4:25, 7:00, 9:35 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) RESERVE 12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:35, 9:50 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 11:30, 8:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 2:30, 5:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:05, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 12:25, 3:05, 5:45, 8:25 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 9:50, 11:20, 1:10, 2:30, 4:20, 5:40, 7:30, 8:50, 10:40 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 10:15, 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 10:15 V WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 1:05, 9:55 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 4:00, 7:00 THE MEDDLER (PG-13) 11:15 A.M. THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:45, 2:15, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 11:25, 2:10, 4:55, 7:40, 10:25 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 12:15, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10:05 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 12:20, 3:45, 7:05, 10:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 11:15, 1:10, 4:25, 7:40, 10:55 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 2:30 P.M. MONEY MONSTER (R) 12:45, 3:15, 5:45, 8:15, 10:45 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 12:40, 3:10, 5:40, 8:10, 10:35 THE NICE GUYS (R) 2:05, 4:55, 7:50, 10:40 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:50, 2:35, 5:20, 8:05, 10:50 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:05, 1:55, 4:45, 7:35, 10:20 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 11:00, 1:20, 3:40, 6:00, 8:20, 10:40 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 2:40, 5:35 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:40, 8:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:10, 11:50, 1:55, 2:35, 4:40, 5:20, 7:25, 8:05, 10:10, 10:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 11:45, 12:45, 1:50, 2:55, 3:55, 5:00, 6:15, 7:20, 8:10, V THE CONJURING 2 (R) XD RESERVE 11:20, 2:40, 6:00, THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 10:10, 12:35, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, 10:20 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) RESERVE 9:40, 12:50, 4:10, 7:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 9:30, 11:10, 12:45, 2:30, 4:00, 7:15, 9:10, 10:30 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 10:20, 1:15, 7:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS 3D (PG) RESERVE REALD 3D 10:00 P.M. ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) RESERVE 11:00, 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:35 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) RESERVE 5:50, 10:55 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 1:50, 8:10 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 4:50, 11:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:40, 1:30, 2:20, 4:20, 5:20, 7:10, 8:20, 10:10 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 11:30, 11:15 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 9:50, 1:10, 4:30, 7:50, 11:10 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 10:30, 1:40, 4:40, 7:40, 10:50 LOVE ME TOMORROW (Not Rated) RESERVE 10:00, 1:00, 4:15, 7:25, 10:40 V Paul Buck EPA will never be forgotten, says brother Marcus. ‘Voice’ coach offers funeral aid The brother of slain singer Christina Grimmie said her former “Voice” coach, Adam Levine, had offered to pay for her funeral. “I’m so blown away by everything right now,” Grimmie’s brother Marcus wrote in a Facebook post communicating his gratitude for the donations to a GoFundMe page set up right after his sister’s death. He added that he and his parents intended WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 9:30, 3:50, 7:00 WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 12:40, 10:10 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 9:40, 12:10, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40, 10:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 12:55, 7:45 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 9:25, 4:25, 11:10 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 11:05, THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 10:05, 12:30, 3:00, 5:25, 7:50, 10:20 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) RESERVE 10:40, 1:25, 4:05 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) RESERVE 12:15 P.M. CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) RESERVE 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 10:05 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 10:00, 1:15, 2:55, 4:30, 7:45, 10:10 THE NICE GUYS (R) RESERVE 11:30 A.M. ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 10:50, 1:45, 4:35, 7:15, 10:25 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) RESERVE 10:20, 1:05, 4:00, 7:25, 9:25 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) RESERVE 2:50, 5:05, 7:05, 10:10 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 11:55, 1:20, 5:35, 7:00 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 10:30, 2:45, 4:10, 8:25, 9:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:10, 1:50, 3:20, 4:30, 7:20, 8:40, 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 12:40, 6:00 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 11:55, 2:55, 6:00, 6:55, 9:10, 10:00 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 10:00, 11:35, 1:10, 2:35, 4:20, 5:55, 7:30, 9:05, 10:35 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS: THE ROAD CHIP (PG) 9:45 A.M. MÖTLEY CRÜE: THE END (Not Rated) RESERVE 7:00 P.M. V WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 4:30, 10:35 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 1:30, 7:30 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) RESERVE 1:20, 4:10, 7:00 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 12:45, 4:20, 7:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 12:45, 4:20, 7:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 11:00 P.M. X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 11:00 P.M. THE NICE GUYS (R) RESERVE 11:10, 2:10, 5:05, 8:00, 10:55 THE NICE GUYS (R) RESERVE 11:10, 2:10, 5:05, 8:00, 10:55 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 12:30, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 11:30, 8:30 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 11:30, 8:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 2:30, 5:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 2:30, 5:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:20, 2:15, 5:00, 7:50, 10:40 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:20, 2:15, 5:00, 7:50, 10:40 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 9:50 P.M. NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 11:00, 12:55, 2:00, 4:00, 5:15, 7:15, 8:15, 10:20 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 11:00, 12:55, 2:00, 4:00, 5:15, 7:15, 8:15, 10:20 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS: THE ROAD CHIP (PG) RESERVE 10:00 A.M. 9:25, 10:20 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 11:30, 1:00, 2:30, 4:00, 5:30, 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 THE LOBSTER (R) 10:55, 1:45, 4:35, 7:25, 10:15 MÖTLEY CRÜE: THE END (Not Rated) 7:00 P.M. A AA (Not Rated) 12:15, 3:40, 7:05, 10:30 LOVE ME TOMORROW (Not Rated) 11:00, 2:00, 5:00, 8:00, 10:55 MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) 11:00, 1:45, 4:15, 6:50 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 3:40 P.M. X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12:15, 7:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:15, 2:00, 4:45, 7:30 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 10:40, 1:25, 4:10, 6:55 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 1:40, 7:10 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 1:20, 7:20 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:30, 4:20 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:50, 1:35, 4:25, 7:15 V WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 10:45, 1:45, 7:45 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:00, 4:00, 7:10 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:30, 1:30, 4:30, 7:35 THE LOBSTER (R) 10:45, 4:10 WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 4:40, 10:45 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 11:00, 1:35, 4:10, 6:45, 9:30 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) RESERVE 1:10, 3:55 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 1:20, 4:35, 7:50, 11:10 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 6:50, 10:15 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) RESERVE 12:50, 3:15, 5:45, 8:30, 11:05 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 11:45, 5:15, 8:10 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS 3D (PG) RESERVE 2:30, 11:00 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) RESERVE 11:25, 2:10, 5:00, 7:40, 10:25 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) RESERVE 1:05, 3:25, 6:00, 8:20, 10:40 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 1:00, 7:00 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 4:00, 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 1:40, 2:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:10, 11:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 12:00, 5:30, 8:15 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 12:20, 1:30, 3:30, 4:45, 6:40, 8:00, 9:50, 11:15 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 1:15, 4:20, 7:30, 10:35 ShowtimeS Valid 6/14/16 ONLY V THE CONJURING 2 (R) XD RESERVE 10:00, 1:10, 4:20, 7:30, 10:40 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:00, 1:40, 4:45, 7:20, 9:55 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 10:20, 1:00, 3:50, 6:30, 9:30 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 10:00, 1:15, 4:30, 7:45, 11:00 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 10:05, 1:15, 2:30, 9:10, 10:45 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:20, 6:00 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 10:35, 12:55, 3:15, 5:35, 7:55, 10:20 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 6:10, 8:30, 10:55 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 11:55, 2:45, 5:35, 8:25, 11:15 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:30, 1:20, 4:10, 7:00, 9:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:45, 12:05, 1:25, 4:05, 5:30, 6:45, 9:25, 10:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 2:50, 8:10 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 11:35, 2:40, 5:55, 9:05 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:10, 11:40, 1:05, 2:35, 4:15, 5:45, 7:15, 8:45, 10:15 THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY (PG-13) 10:15, 12:55, 3:35 MÖTLEY CRÜE: THE END (Not Rated) 7:00 P.M. TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 3:00, 8:40 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:30, 3:50, 7:10, 10:20 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:30, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:30 12:00, 2:30, 4:50, 7:25, 9:50 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 11:05, 5:25, 8:35 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 2:15, 11:45 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:15, 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 10:15 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 11:45, 2:45, 5:45, 8:45, 11:50 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 10:00, 11:40, 1:20, 3:00, 4:40, 6:20, THE CONJURING 2 (R) XD RESERVE 10:05, 1:15, 4:25, WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) D-BOX REALD 3D RESERVE 10:30, 4:10, 9:50 THE CONJURING 2 (R) D-BOX RESERVE 11:55, 2:55, 6:00, 9:10 10:35, 12:10, 1:20, 4:10, 5:50, 7:00, 9:45 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 1:40, 4:30, 7:20, 10:05 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) RESERVE 9:35, 7:35, 10:40 1:20, 7:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:20, 1:50, 4:25, 7:05 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 9:35 P.M. X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:15, 3:40, 6:55, 10:05 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:40, 2:20, 5:00, 7:40, 10:20 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 10:30, 4:20, 10:10 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:25, 7:15 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 2:00, 4:55, 7:50, 10:45 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 9:50, 1:10, 4:20, 7:30, 10:40 WARCRAFT (PG-13) D-BOX RESERVE In a year of #Oscars SoWhite, diversity is the name of the game in Hollywood. But Outfest, Los Angeles’ LGBT film festival, has been leading the conversation for years. This year is no different, as its slate of films, announced last week for the July 7-17 festival, features Paul Feig’s “Ghostbusters” and Sundance standouts “Kiki” and “Other People.” A total of 162 films will screen during the two-week festival. They represent 19 countries, and 43% were directed by women. Movies will screen and events will take place at the Harmony Gold theater and Directors Guild of America on Sunset Boulevard as well as at downtown’s REDCAT and the newly renovated Ford Theatres on Cahuenga Boulevard. Opening the festival is Samuel Goldwyn Films’ “The Intervention,” starring Cobie Smulders, Melanie Lynskey and Natasha Lyonne, among others. Outfest will also feature a number of spotlight screenings, including the Season 2 premiere of Hulu’s “Difficult People,” HBO’s “Looking: The Movie” and “The Trans List,” comedian Tig Notaro’s series “One Mississippi” from Amazon. — Tre’vell Anderson CHRISTINA Grimmie 8:00, 9:40, 11:20 V W ‘Ghostbusters,’ ‘Kiki’ at Outfest Twain honor for Bill Murray Sign up at latimes.com/HotProp 9:20 to read every one of the personalized messages left by fans. “Christina will be missed and never, ever forgotten.” Police said Marcus Grimmie tackled the gunman, identified as 27-year-old Kevin James Loibl, after Loibl shot Christina Grimmie late Friday as she met with fans following a show at the Plaza Live theater in Orlando, Fla. Loibl then fatally shot himself. Grimmie, who was 22, first gained notice with videos she posted on YouTube. She later appeared as a contestant on NBC’s “The Voice,” where she finished the singing competition’s sixth season in third place. — Mikael Wood V SLEEPING BEAUTY (G) 1:15 P.M. ENCHANTED (PG) 7:00 P.M. THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G) 4:00 P.M. MAGGIE'S PLAN (R) 12:05, 2:35, 5:05, 7:35, 10:05 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:15, 2:00, 4:30, 7:05, 9:35 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 10:25, 12:10, 2:50 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (PG) 10:25, 12:40, 3:00, 5:20 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 12:55, 4:10, 7:25, 10:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:00, 3:15, 6:30, 7:40, 9:45, 10:35 SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS (G) 10:30 A.M. MONEY MONSTER (R) 10:50 P.M. NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 10:50 P.M. THE NICE GUYS (R) 10:40, 1:25, 4:20, 7:20, 10:20 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:00, 1:40, 4:25, 7:10, V W THE CONJURING 2 (R) XD RESERVE 1:00, 4:15, 7:30, 10:45 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) D-BOX REALD 3D RESERVE 10:45, 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:45 THE CONJURING 2 (R) D-BOX RESERVE 11:55, 3:10, 6:25, 9:40 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 11:55, 2:30, 5:05, 7:40, 10:15 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) 1:40, 5:40, 7:35 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:40, 4:00, 7:20, 10:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:00, 2:20, 9:00 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 11:10, 5:05, 11:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 1:25, 7:05 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 10:35, 4:15, 10:00 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:10, 1:55, 4:40, 7:25, 10:10 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 11:55, 2:20, 4:40, 10:15 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:45, 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:45 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:45, 1:35, 2:25, 4:25, 7:15, 8:05, 10:05 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:35, 12:35, 3:25, 5:15, 6:15, 9:05, 10:55 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 10:50, 11:55, 2:05, 3:10, 5:20, 6:25, 8:35, 9:40 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:35, 1:40, 4:45, 7:55, 11:00 MÖTLEY CRÜE: THE END (Not Rated) 7:00 P.M. A AA (Not Rated) 12:00, 3:30, 7:00, 10:30 TE3N (Not Rated) 12:40, 3:55, 7:10, 10:25 U W WARCRAFT (PG-13) D-BOX RESERVE 2:30, 5:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) D-BOX REALD 3D RESERVE 11:30, 8:30 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) 10:05, 3:10, 9:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE 3D (PG) REALD 3D 12:35, 6:15 THE JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 12:10, 3:00 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:50, 7:40, 10:55 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 6:30, 9:50 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (R) 2:20, 7:10 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) 11:00, 4:50, 10:40 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 1:50, 8:00 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 10:30, 1:10, 3:55, 6:50, 9:40 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 12:00, 4:40, 9:30 WARCRAFT (PG-13) XD RESERVE 10:00, 10:00 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 2:30, 5:30 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX 2:30, 5:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) XD RESERVE REALD 3D 1:00, 4:00, 7:00 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 11:30, 8:30 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) D-BOX REALD 3D RESERVE REALD 3D 11:30, 8:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:40, 1:30, 3:40, 4:20, 7:20, 9:15, 10:20 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12:40, 6:20 THE CONJURING 2 (R) XD RESERVE 12:50, 4:10, 7:30, 11:00 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:10, 11:40, 1:40, 3:20, 5:00, 6:40, 8:20, 10:10 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:20, 1:20, 4:30, 7:50, 10:50 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS: THE ROAD CHIP (PG) 10:00 A.M. 10:00 ME BEFORE YOU (PG-13) 11:30, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING (R) 12:25, 2:45, 5:25, 7:40, 10:15 WARCRAFT (PG-13) 11:25, 2:20, 5:10, 8:00, 10:50 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:25, 1:15, 4:05, 7:00, 9:55 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) 10:30, 1:15, 2:30, 4:00, 6:45, 8:00, 9:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:45, 5:15 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:30, 12:15, 1:45, 3:25, 5:00, 6:35, 8:10, 9:45, 10:20 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 10:25, 12:00, 1:35, 3:10, 4:40, 6:15, 7:45, 9:15, 10:45 MÖTLEY CRÜE: THE END (Not Rated) 7:00 P.M. THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (PG) RESERVE 10:05, 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, 10:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (PG-13) RESERVE 3:40, 10:35 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 12:20, 7:20 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (PG) RESERVE 10:40, 1:40, 4:40, 7:40, 10:25 WARCRAFT (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 1:50, 10:45 WARCRAFT 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 4:50, 7:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:30, 4:10, 9:50 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 1:20, 7:00 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 10:00, 10:50, 1:10, 2:00, 4:20, 5:00, 7:30, 8:10, 10:40 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) RESERVE 9:50, 12:50, 4:00, 7:10, 10:15 L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 E3 Christina House For The Times JORDAN , left, and Justin Shipley were just winging it when they pitched their plane-crash island-survivor comedy “Wrecked.” TBS decided to take off with it. Crashing the comedy world ‘Wrecked’ lands prime-time slot By Greg Braxton Justin Shipley and his younger brother Jordan had little more than ambition when they decided to dive into the TV sitcom arena— no credits, no experience and few connections. But the twentysomething Kansan siblings share an off-kilter sensibility that they hoped might land them a lower-rung job on a writing staff. Their first script was a twisted take on “Lost,” set on an island with a group of wacky plane crash survivors. The set-up was lavish, the cast large, the jokes large-scale and the main character — a heroic leader blessed with good looks and smarts — was killed off in 20 minutes. They were realistic, seeing the idea more as a calling card than a pitch. “It was such a big expensive idea, we knew no one would ever make it,” said Justin, now 27. But when top honchos at TBS read the script, they saw more than a promising writing combo — they wanted the show. Three years after joining forces, the Shipley brothers have accomplished the nearimpossible — striking gold with their first script, jumping the show-biz line from hopeful nobodies to executive producers. “We do realize that stuff like this never happens,” said Justin Shipley last week as he and his brother prepared for the June 14 launch of “Wrecked” on TBS. The comedy, which received a 10episode order, has become a flagship in the re-imagining of the network under the leadership of former Fox entertainment head Kevin Reilly. The siblings are still reeling from their good fortune. When Jordan got the word that TBS wanted to buy their script, he was working his afternoon shift at Trader Joe’s. His brother was holding down a mundane job at a company that makes educational films — “the kind you see in the waiting room of your dentist.” “We just threw everything on the page, not even thinking about how you’d shoot it or produce it. It was just a pilot we’d love to see regardless of cost,” said Jordan, 25. “It’s just so wild to see something become so much bigger than us — and in the best way. We were by far the least-experienced ones in the writer’s room, but everyone was so patient with us.” The series looks, at first glance, like a parody of “Lost.” A large group winds up on a remote island after their plane crashes. But although the brothers were devotees of that drama (“Justin still won’t apologize for the ending,” Jordan quipped), the humor has a more wicked bite. “ ‘Lost’ was about 40 people on an island, but we only saw about 12 people each week,” Justin said. “And those12 were the most handsome and the most capable. But we always wondered about the 30 people in the back, the ones who would say, ‘What’s happening up there? We can’t hear you.’ ” Said Jordan, “We know if we had been in that situation, we would have been the TELEVISION REVIEW Part ‘Lost’ and part ‘Gilligan’ ROBERT LLOYD TELEVISION CRITIC Francisco Roman TBS BRIAN SACCA in a scene from TBS’ new comedy series, “Wrecked,” which hopes to attract millennials. ‘Wrecked’ Where: TBS When: 10 and 10:27 p.m. Tuesday Rating: TV-MA (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 17) first to die. Instead of dealing with the most capable, we wanted to take a plane full of lovable idiots and see how they would deal on the island.” The inept characters at the core of the group include Danny Wallace (Brian Sacca), who lies to his fellow passengers about being a cop; Pack Hara (Asif Ali), a sports agent who panics at every turn, and Owen O’Connor (Zach Cregger), who is as clueless about survival skills as he was about being a flight attendant. Brett Weitz, executive vice president of original programming for TBS, said that in a business that often leans toward formulas and cliches, the Shipleys and their “Wrecked” script were a clear standout that hit a funny bone even with those who have never seen an episode of “Lost.” Said Weitz, “If you give someone who’s different a shot, sometimes brilliance comes through. And when these guys came in, we just wanted to adopt them. They were just so articulate with a fresh point of view, and they were not jaded. They were themselves — that’s what we fell in love with.” Weitz added that the sensibility of “Wrecked” fits in with Reilly’s directive to develop more original, “adventurous” fare aimed largely at millennials. Executives aren’t the only one impressed by the Shipleys. Jessica Lowe, who plays Florence, one of the survivors, said, “It’s incredible these guys are so young but yet so funny. They haven’t been beaten down. Usually creators of shows have to have celebrated their 31st birthday.” The brothers are now crossing their fingers that “Wrecked” finds an audience and gets renewed. Even if that doesn’t happen, their bond — both professional and personal — has been solidified by “Wrecked.” Said Justin, “I can’t imagine writing with anyone else. I’ve heard how some partnerships fall apart. I can’t see that happening with us. No matter how bad it gets, we’re still brothers.” greg.braxton@latimes.com One of those networks you might not think about much, TBS more than doubled its original comedy programming this winter and spring with the addition of “Angie Tribeca,” “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee” and “The Detour,” cocreated by Bee and her husband and fellow “Daily Show” alum, Jason Jones, who also stars. Notwithstanding a couple of game shows, laughter is the medicine they’re selling. “Watch funny TV and movies on tbs,” their website tells you. Joining this modest but estimable lineup is “Wrecked,” which premieres Tuesday and will be described nearly everywhere as a sort of “Gilligan’s Island” meets “Lost.” In a small way it represents a bid for younger eyes: Justin and Jordan Shipley, the series’ first-time’s-thecharm creators, are in their mid-20s, as are the preponderance of their main characters. (Rhys Darby, 42, who was Murray on “Flight of the Conchords” and is concurrently a voice on the Netflix “Voltron” reboot, is the designated old guy. He is always funny.) The Shipleys were teenagers when “Lost” premiered in 2004, and though there is nothing supernatural in their own show it has the flavor of being forged in conversations held while watching that series, of asking natural questions “Lost” never asked, about bath- room privacy and constipation and condoms. Millennial rites, obsessions and occupation are at the center of the comedy. A census of survivors includes “three baristas, one foot doctor, two lifestyle bloggers and the founder of ... an app that lets you see what you would look like with other people’s pubes.” There’s a scene with a dying satellite phone in which several characters realize that none of them knows a friend’s phone number by heart. At the end of the first day, someone finds the drinks cart and there is raveish partying; the next morning, there are hangovers. (There are also references to “The Hangover.”) Like other TBS comedies it does not so much push the envelope as tickle it. There is a modicum of grossness — blood and vomiting and dumb sex jokes (mitigated, in a way, by being put in the mouths of dumbbells), but the series is essentially sweet, its conflicts more affectionate than corrosive. It is largely a comedy of character and character relations, and for all that it is a collection of types, a talented cast finds the individuals within. Just as important, “Wrecked” looks good. That it’s shot and scored (and much of the time acted) as if it were a drama — not exaggeratedly dramatic, with a wink, put played straight — gives the silliness some substance and makes watching a pleasure. robert.lloyd@latimes.com ‘Uncle’ would be wise to buck the tropes [‘Uncle Buck,’ from E1] a television series or that whatever popularity the film enjoys is due entirely to Candy’s particular (and still much missed) skill set. Couldn’t we just, I don’t know, bring “Love, American Style” back again? Maybe, but first we have to deal with “Uncle Buck,” which debuts on Tuesday and is plagued with precisely the sort of problems everyone had expected. Mike Epps plays the title character and does what he can, which is only so much. Comedy pilots are almost always a mess, bogged down in exposition and erring on the side of broad humor, and “Uncle Buck” is messier and broader than most. Creators Steven Cragg and Brian Bradley offer certain updates — a sub- plot involves mild sexting — but the basic premise has all the nuance of a folding chair. We meet Buck Russell (Epps) and his inner manchild as he is wearing a beercan hat and playing silly bar games even though he has assured his girlfriend that he’s looking for a job. As in the film, Buck has a certain infuriating charm, no money and a car that could exist only on a soundstage. By contrast, Buck’s brother Will (James Lesure) and Will’s wife, Alexis (Nia Long), are models of adult responsibility, in that they are overwhelmed in their attempt to balance work and family (though not so overwhelmed that their beautifully appointed home looks anything other than, you know, beautiful). Strangely, the younger members of the family, ‘Uncle Buck’ Where: ABC When: 9 p.m. Tuesday Rating: TV-PG-L (may be unsuitable for young children, with an advisory for coarse language) Tyler Golden ABC “UNCLE BUCK’S” cast includes, from left, Aalyrah Caldwell, Nia Long, James Lesure and Mike Epps. Miles (Sayeed Shahidi) and Maizy (Aalyrah Caldwell), are far less modern, creations of a statelier time in which it was the primary duty of all fictional children to make the nanny quit (see also “Nanny McPhee” and “The Sound of Music”). As for the older daughter, Tia (Iman Benson), well, she wears glasses and yells a lot about doing homework, so you do the math (which she will then correct). Into this familiar scenario careens Buck, enlisted at the last minute so Alexis and Will can take separate business trips. The introduction of the selfishly freespirited uncle into the pattern of post-millennial child-rearing produces some funny moments — watching the younger children sit in expectation of a hot breakfast while Buck guzzles the OJ out of the carton is unexpectedly heart-lifting — but soon the story falls into patterns overly familiar to anyone who has seen either the film or a family sitcom of pretty much any era. The second episode made available, in which Buck takes over Maizy’s club cookie sales, is a bit looser but still formulaic. The cast is solid and more effective than the material they are given, but the Russells seem more like what they are — a cast — than what they should be — a family. Like its main character, “Uncle Buck” seems happy enough with its own definition of success. Of course, the whole point of these stories is mutual transformation, and that may happen here. But only if the creators let go of the “Uncle Buck” concept in favor of an actual show. mary.mcnamara @latimes.com E4 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R OUTSTANDING DRAMA SERIES Fun game encounters point to an E3 switch EVA GREEN L E A D A CT R E S S JOSH HARTNETT L E A D A CTO R TIMOTHY DALTON L E A D A CTO R “IT’S THE BEST OF ITS KIND ON TV RIGHT NOW” THE NEW YO RK TIMES [Expo, from E1] tary-esque shooter featuring giant robots, as well as the gritty, World War I-set “Battlefield I.” Then Monday morning at Microsoft’s bonanza at USC’s Galen Center, cheers erupted during a demo of the latest “Gears of War” when a woman used a gun to obliterate an already downed creature. These sorts of displays do little to debunk age-old stereotypes about games and those who play them. And after another major national tragedy, this one a mass shooting over the weekend in an Orlando, Fla., nightclub, the video game industry’s reliance on games with guns is, admittedly, exhausting, even if Sony, in its evening press event, paid tribute to the victims in Orlando, stressing the power of entertainment to heal in times of pain. Yet at this year’s E3, which will draw about 50,000 industry types and journalists to the Los Angeles Convention Center through Thursday, there are indications that the industry is on the verge of change. As part of E3 Live at L.A. Live, 20,000 wristbands were given away, part of a fan-friendly makeover allowing the public direct access to many of the games previously only shown behind closed doors. The result? While there may be an influx of corporate branding — a tortilla chip company has erected a six-story working arcade machine that will act as a concert stage for the likes of Steve Aoki, Wiz Khalifa and Big Boi — E3 may also better represent the vast, increasingly fractured video game landscape, one where independent titles, nascent virtual reality hardware and mobile games collectively vie for our attention. Amid all the bombast, boasts and silly tech babble (“new water shaders!”), this is shaping up to be one of the most intriguing E3s in recent history. Well, at least if developers and publishers start recognizing the need to reach new constituents. The console and PC base, according to recent data from gaming consultancy Electronic Entertainment Design and Research, continues to lean slightly more male than the industry at large. And with Microsoft and Sony pushing forward on updated devices — Microsoft revealed that its Xbox One would receive a refresh in 2017 — it shows that consoles are moving toward a PC-like future of more frequent updates, a gaming world at risk of catering only to those willing to stay ahead Nick Ut Associated Press FLAGS FLY at half-staff at the E3 event in L.A. to honor the victims of a mass shooting in Orlando, Fla. on the latest tech. There’s a danger now that those not yet sold on this console generation no longer have a reason to buy in. That’s potentially a shame, because when E3 quiets down and focuses on game experiences, there’s a lot to shout about. Electronic Arts is introducing a program it’s calling EA Originals, which highlights odder titles from smaller developers, the first of which is a game called “Fe” from the studio Zoink in Gothenburg, Sweden. “Fe” was described at EA’s press conference as a “personal narrative about our relationship with nature,” starring a spritely, scraggly haired blueish protagonist. The twilight world seems to magically spring to life with each of the creature’s movements. Sony, too, has some potentially audience-expanding games coming for its PlayStation 4, perhaps most notably the long-awaited “The Last Guardian,” in which early clips show a young boy and a mysterious creature working together to traverse ornate ruins. Also worth watching: the highly cinematic “Detroit: Become Human,” which aims to dig deep into the emotions of an artificially intelligent being. While some massive developers won’t be displaying games on the E3 show floor at the convention center — Electronic Arts is staging fan-focused events next door to E3 at its own EA Play through Tuesday — the E3 show floor promises to be full of invigorating, accessible experiences. Microsoft showed off a couple Monday morning. There was “Inside,” a creepy sci-fi tale that follows a young boy trying to survive in a world where humans have become little more than scientific experiments. Weirder still, perhaps, is “We Happy Few,” in which hu- mans must stay medicated to avoid the increasingly trippy horrors of reality. Elsewhere, games expected to shine this week include “Abzu,” a calming exploration of underwater life, as well as the brightly lit “ReCore,” an Xbox One game following a woman and her charming, robotic dog. Then of course there’s virtual reality. Though VR will be the province of early adapters this year — those working in the space expect between 2.5 million and 3.5 million VR headsets to be sold by year’s end — E3 this year will be expected to prove that the tech is not just a nifty, high-end toy. Look, then, to Ubisoft’s “Star Trek: Bridge Crew,” a cooperative game for up to four people. Donning an Oculus Rift headset at an event Sunday was like stepping aboard a “Star Trek” film set, where a ship’s imaginary touch screens bleeped and booped before me. It required only a quick acclimation to the VR space and a love of “Star Trek.” Klingons were posing a threat, humans needed to be rescued and a wave of the hand could activate a transporter or send the ship into warp speed. My crew mates were strangers, but it took only a few seconds to be at ease enough to bark orders at them. Lives — virtual ones, sure — were at risk. It was also a reminder that all the bluster and swagger about computing power and new tech means little if there isn’t an easily explainable experience to accompany it. Updated consoles bring consumer confusion — as well as, perhaps, frustration from those who already bought in — but games remain best when everyone is playing. And that only happens when gaming is easy and doing more than putting digital guns into our hands. todd.martens@latimes.com TELEVISION ACADEMY MEMBERS WATCH FULL EPISODES AT SHO.COM/FYC ©2016 Showtime Networks Inc. All rights reserved. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. Emmy® is a registered trademark of the Television Academy and NATAS. “Penny Dreadful”: ©Showtime Networks Inc. All rights reserved. Armature Studio A NEW GAME expected to shine this week at the Electronic Entertainment Expo is Xbox One’s “ReCore,” which features a woman and her robotic dog. L AT I M E S. C O M / CA L E NDAR T U E S DAY , J U N E 14 , 2 016 E5 OUTSTANDING DRAMA SERIES Theo Wargo Getty Images “HAMILTON’S” Lin-Manuel Miranda, front, is gun-shy of film adaptations. Long, long wait for ‘Hamilton,’ the film [‘Hamilton,’ from E1] team politely said thanks but no thanks, at least for now. Musicals are enjoying a mini-renaissance in Hollywood, whether in the form of original animated pieces like “Frozen” or live telecasts of classics such as “The Wiz” and “Grease.” So, why have new Broadway works not been part of this resurgence? To a large degree, it’s because theatrical producers are reluctant to cannibalize sales of hit shows. “Hamilton” is raking in eye-popping numbers on Broadway, nearly $2 million per week. With a national “Hamilton” tour not beginning until spring, in Los Angeles, and with possible foreign engagements to come, producers are in no rush to kill the golden goose. “ ‘Hamilton’ is a show that will make more than ‘Star Wars.’ Why do they have any incentive to try to be like ‘Star Wars’?” asked one Broadway producer who declined to be identified because the producer was speaking about a rival production. The cautionary tale is “War Horse,” the West End smash whose film adaptation came out in 2011, the same year the show opened on Broadway. The production ran only about a year after the movie opened, and some point to the film as the reason for the early shuttering. Why lay down a few hundred bucks on Broadway, many consumers reason, when there’s Netflix? Audiences are also less likely to embrace a movie until the original — and often more urgent — theatrical version has receded from memory. The evidence? Some of the most successful modern movie musicals (“Chicago,” “Dreamgirls”) came a quarter-century or more after their Broadway openings. Toss in all of Hollywood’s usual development friction and creative disagreements, and you have a recipe for a lot of waiting. This larger reluctance plays out in particular ways with “Hamilton,” whose principals have their own reason to be gun-shy. Miranda has expressed skepticism about Hollywood adaptations of theatrical pieces; if he has Hollywood ambitions, it’s as an original composer or actor — “Star Wars,” a new “Mary Poppins.” (He will, however, work with Harvey Weinstein on another attempt to get his 2008 best musical winner “In the Heights” off the ground and on to a set. Weinstein, who was making the rounds at Tony events Sunday night, is keen for another adaptation of a stage hit a la “Chicago.”) Meanwhile, “Hamilton” producer Jeffrey Seller has his own uneven experience to draw from. Seller was also the man behind “Rent,” the mid-’90s Broadway sensation that, in fact, helped turn Miranda on to the possibilities of theater. The film came out nearly a decade after the show opened, and still it was a commercial and critical disappointment. Indeed, capturing the energy of a live show on screen is an imposing challenge. For every “Chicago,” there are five misfires. “Jersey Boys,” one of the few recent best musical winners to become a film, was a flop, even in the hands of Clint Eastwood and much of the Broadway cast. Ditto for “The Producers,” which retained much of the stage talent behind and in front of the camera when it came out four years later, to a great eye roll. And let’s not even get into “Rock of Ages.” Years ago in the Hollywood development world, new bits about the film version of the 2003 Broadway hit “Wicked” arrived with the regularity of an 8 o’clock curtain. Producer Marc Platt had made new hires, or the project had new energy, or … And still a film waits. “Wicked” has been too big a hit in too many places for anyone to rush. Star Idina Menzel, the original Elphaba, has taken to joking that so many years have passed that she couldn’t star in the movie even if she wanted to — unless it were as the Wizard. That doesn’t mean Hollywood and Broadway won’t strengthen their ties. Some of the biggest Tony nominees in recent years have come from film, including past best musical winners “Once” and “Kinky Boots,” “The Producers” and this year’s commercial breakout, “Waitress.” But the challenges for “Hamilton” will remain in the stage realm. With the show’s Tony triumphs in the bag and its one-year Broadway anniversary approaching, the question will be how to keep the momentum going. Some of that, as recent media speculation has had it, is due to the possible departure of Miranda and other principal cast. But some of it is also about a show finding a niche. Many of the longest-running productions on Broadway tend to locate a consumer sweet spot. “Jersey Boys” has the people in the New York suburbs. “Wicked” has teenage girls. “The Book of Mormon” has comedyseeking tourists. “Hamilton” has a cool factor. But to sell out for years, past a point when it’s novel and when many of the principals have moved on, a show needs to lock down an audience that will come out reliably and repeatedly. In this way, Broadway actually has a lot in common with Hollywood: Finding a target demographic is never easy. steve.zeitchik@latimes.com CLAIRE DANES L E A D A CT R E S S “DANES HITS EACH NOTE WITH GRACEFUL AUTHORITY” INDI EW IRE “THE MOST IMPORTANT SHOW ON TV IN 2015” VAN I T Y FA I R TELEVISION ACADEMY MEMBERS WATCH FULL EPISODES AT SHO.COM/FYC ©2016 Showtime Networks Inc. All rights reserved. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. Emmy® is a registered trademark of the Television Academy and NATAS. “Homeland”: ©Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved. E6 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 WSCE L AT I ME S . C O M/ CA L E N DA R Musical worlds come together in Ojai [Ojai, from E1] has been to treat the 70-minute experimental opera as a Stockhausen-infused Postmodern circus. Vivier’s libretto reads like a phantasmagoric dreamscape. A dying figure, Agni, is surrounded by the countenances of mythic beings, including Mozart, Lewis Carroll, a witch, the Queen of the Night, Copernicus, Tristan and Isolde. Seven singers become their voices on occasion, but mostly they sing Dada-esque nonsense syllables. Oboe, three clarinets, trombone, violin and a trumpet (as a voice calling from the beyond) make up the instrumental ensemble, which is enhanced by electronics. There are recognizable musical formulas, and there is unrecognizable musical chaos, just as there are recognizable words and unrecognizable ones, recognizable singing styles and all kinds of weird vocal sounds. For Sellars this is simply the Balinese ceremony for the dead, so for his ritualistic staging, instrumentalists and singers dressed in white were placed on a high stage over the body of dancer Michael Schumacher. He remained immobile for an hour (devastatingly so during the moment of silence), then rose to the call of the trumpet from behind the audience and began his journey. Allusions in word and music to this world, past and present and future, appeared to enter into his being. The effect was utterly transfixing. The performers, conducted by Eric Dudley, were the respective instrumental and vocal New York en- Photographs by YOUNG MEMBERS of YOLA prepare to rock Libbey Bowl during the music fest. sembles ICE (International Contemporary Ensemble) and Roomful of Teeth. They softened the Modernist edge to Vivier’s score but replaced that with spiritual purpose. “Kopernikus” is an opera we need, and the en- couraging news from Ojai is that Sellars plans to develop this production for international consumption. Program Subject To Change Introducing the free Hot Property newsletter. 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The other Sellars-staged pieces were concerned with social responsibility, and both were solo vehicles for Julia Bullock, who had appeared in the 2011 festival as a student performer and is now on the verge of what promises to be an astounding career. In a new chamber version of Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s 2006 “La Passion de Simone” on Thursday night, Bullock transformed a somber meditation on the disturbing French philosopher and activist Simone Weil’s suicidal self-sacrifice into a ritual of a young African American woman finding her place in a protest movement. In the long, late-night “Josephine Baker: A Portrait,” Bullock sang the famous African American’s Parisian show tunes as dark meditations and protest songs. Avant-garde percussionist and pianist Tyshawn Sorey recomposed everything for members of ICE. Poet Claudia Rankine added introductory texts that were rarely useful, but Bullock’s singing, dancing and sheer stage presence proved hauntingly effective. The baritone, Davóne Tines, is the new name to remember from this festival. Discovered by Sellars as a phenomenal singer of spirituals, Tines was invited by Sellars to be in his production of Saariaho’s new opera, “Only the Sound Remains,” which was to have had its U.S. premiere at Ojai but had to be canceled because of its technical demands. Two brilliant afternoon chamber concerts of Saariaho’s chamber music did, however, remain. They concluded with her recent piece “Sombre,” a setting of three late Ezra Pound cantos — the poet conversing, like Vivier if in a more terrestrial way, with paradise. “I have tried to write Paradise,” Pound writes. Tines doesn’t need to try. He is a singer of immense power and fervor. Everyone in Ojai was talking about him. Saariaho also had the benefit of performers — ICE, flutist Claire Chase, bass flute Camilla Hoitenga, the Calder Quartet and conduc- tor Joana Carneiro — uncovering under her shimmering surfaces strong dramatic musical material. Much more of this festival was, Sellars style, all over the place — and the globe. Sellars imported the blowsy Egyptian singer Dina El Wedidi and her fusion band, as he did the alluring Carnatic Indian singer Aruna Sairam with her inspired traditional Indian musicians. These are paths that didn’t show any need to cross. There were daily doses of Roomful of Teeth, which has become popular for its cute use of extended vocal techniques and because the alto Caroline Shaw is an appealing young star composer. The ensemble needs stretching, which “Kopernikus” is clearly doing. The heavy stretching, though, was with YOLA at HOLA Symphonic Winds, the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s student group. For the free family Sunday afternoon concert that preceded “Kopernikus,” Tania León wrote and conducted “Pa’lante” for the kids and four ICE wind soloists who have been coaching them. They rocked Libbey Bowl. L.A. Phil teenage composer fellows Benjamin Champion, Robby Good, Luca Mendoza and Ethan Treiman provided solo pieces for the ICE winds; L.A. Phil senior composer fellows Sharon Hurvitz and Andrew Moses wrote wind quartets. All revealed spunky curiosity for cleverly unusual sounds and arresting theatricality. Sellars’ most radical move was to end the festival with a free street party in downtown Santa Paula, a flamboyant celebration of life after Vivier’s flamboyant dance of death. The Latino band Los Jornaleros del Norte, YOLA, El Wedidi, Sairam and Tines took turns performing on two stages. By evening’s end, the crowd thinned to a couple hundred festivalgoers and Santa Paula natives dancing to another Latino band, Cambalache, here two worlds meeting not in a refuge but on Main Street. mark.swed@latimes.com myaccount.latimes.com 14MEM358 NOW PLAYING WESTWOOD ORANGE COUNTY EAST LOS ANGELES SAN FERNANDO VALLEY VENTURA COUNTY DIRECTOR’S CUT CINEMA NORWALK 8 VALLEY PLAZA 6 BUENAVENTURA 6 13917 Pioneer Blvd. Rancho Niguel Road 949-831-0446 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE - DOLBY ATMOS C (12:45), 4:15, 7:30, 10:40 GENIUS C (12:05, 2:35, 5:00), 7:25, 9:45 ME BEFORE YOU C (11:05, 1:40, 4:10), 6:45, 9:20 MAGGIE’S PLAN E (11:50, 2:10, 4:30), 7:15, 9:35 THE LOBSTER E (11:20, 2:05, 4:35), 10:10 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:15, 2:30, 4:45), 7:00, 9:15 MONEY MONSTER E (12:00, 2:20, 4:40), 7:05, 9:40 THE MEDDLER C (11:40, 2:00, 4:25), 6:50, 9:10 THE GREAT OUTDOORS B 7:30 PM 948 Broxton Avenue 7822 Warner Ave. at Beach 714-596-3456 961 Broxton Avenue 310-208-5576 310-208-5576 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (1:15), 4:30, 7:45, 10:50 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:30 AM) ORANGE COUNTY WESTMINSTER 10 6721 Westminster Ave. 714-893-4222 $5.50 All Day Sunday (Not Applicable in 3D) THE CONJURING 2 E 1:45, 4:45, 7:40, 10:40 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C 1:50, 4:45, 7:35, 9:00, 10:30 WARCRAFT C 1:00, 4:35, 7:25, 10:10 WARCRAFT 3D C 1:35 PM ME BEFORE YOU C 11:50, 2:10, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E 7:50, 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C 11:40, 2:20, 3:50, 5:00, 6:30, 7:30, 10:15 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B 1:30, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C 12:40, 4:00, 7:20, 10:30 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B 11:20, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:30 THE JUNGLE BOOK B 12:15, 2:45, 5:15 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 26762 Verdugo Street 949-661-3456 ENJOY BEER & WINE IN ALL AUDITORIUMS $6.00 All Day Tuesday (Not Applicable in 3D & VIP) NOW YOU SEE ME 2 - VIP SEATING C 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:55 ME BEFORE YOU C 1:30, 4:10, 6:45, 9:15 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C 12:45, 3:50, 7:15, 8:50 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B 1:15, 3:40, 6:30, 10:20 HISTORIC LIDO THEATER 3459 Via Lido at Newport Blvd. THE NICE GUYS E (1:30, 4:15), 7:00 949-673-8350 SOUTH COAST VILLAGE 3 At South Coast Plaza/Sunflower & Plaza Dr. 714-557-5701 MAGGIE’S PLAN E (12:15, 2:40, 5:00), 7:30, 9:55 WEINER E (11:45, 2:15, 4:30), 7:00, 9:20 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:00, 2:30, 4:45), 7:15, 9:30 Bargain Showtimes in ( ) CHARTER CENTRE 5 $1.50 Sundays, All 2D Films, All Day (3D Surcharge Applies) MOTHER’S DAY C 12:15, 4:40, 6:30 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C 1:00, 4:00, 6:45, 9:30 THE BOSS E 3:15, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C 3:00, 9:10 HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS E 12:00, 2:20, 7:20 ZOOTOPIA B 12:45 PM ZOOTOPIA IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 DEADPOOL E 9:40 PM EAST LOS ANGELES COMMERCE 14 Goodrich & Whittier 323-726-8022 $5.50 All Day Tuesday (Not Applicable in 3D) THE CONJURING 2 E (11:00, 2:00, 5:00), 8:00 THE CONJURING 2 (SPANISH SUBTITLES) E (12:40, 3:50), 7:00, 10:10 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (1:00), 7:15 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (4:00), 10:15 WARCRAFT C (1:05, 2:35), 8:25 WARCRAFT (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (11:35, 5:30), 10:00 WARCRAFT 3D C (4:05 PM) WARCRAFT 3D (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C 7:05 PM POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E 7:30, 9:45 H TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C 10:55, (1:45, 4:30), 7:15, 10:00 H TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (12:00, 2:45, 5:30), 8:15 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (1:50), 7:30 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS (SPANISH SUBTITLES) B (11:05, 4:40), 10:20 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (10:30, 1:40, 5:10), 8:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (11:45, 3:15), 6:45, 9:55 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (12:00, 1:30, 5:05), 6:35 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E (12:40, 5:20), 10:10 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING (SPANISH SUBTITLES) E (3:00), 7:45 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR C (2:35), 9:25 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (11:10), 6:00 562-804-5615 KEANU E (11:50, 2:20, 4:50), 7:30, 10:10 COMPADRES E (5:30), 8:00, 10:30 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C (12:30, 3:10), 6:50, 9:40 BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C (11:40, 2:30, 5:10), 7:50, 10:30 THE BOSS E (12:10, 2:40), 7:40 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C (12:00, 3:30), 7:00, 10:25 MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN B (11:30, 2:05, 4:40) 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE C 7:20, 10:00 ZOOTOPIA B (1:50), 7:10, 9:50 ZOOTOPIA IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B (11:20, 4:30) DEADPOOL E (5:00), 10:20 KUNG FU PANDA 3 B (12:20, 2:50) SAN FERNANDO VALLEY GRANADA HILLS 9 16830 Devonshire Street 818-363-3679 H THE CONJURING 2 E (1:15), 4:30, 6:15, 7:50, 9:20, 10:45 H NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (1:00), 4:10, 7:30, 10:30 H WARCRAFT C (12:00, 3:20), 7:10, 10:10 H ME BEFORE YOU C (11:30, 2:15), 5:00, 10:20 H TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (11:10, 12:30, 2:00, 3:10), 4:40, 7:20, 10:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (11:00, 1:40), 4:20, 7:00, 9:45 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (11:50, 3:30), 7:15, 10:40 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:20, 1:50), 4:15, 6:45, 9:10 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:30 AM) THE GREAT OUTDOORS B 7:30 PM PLANT 16 7876 Van Nuys Blvd. 818-779-0323 THE CONJURING 2 E (10:20, 11:05, 11:35, 1:20, 2:05, 3:05), 4:20, 5:05, 7:20, 8:20, 9:00, 9:40, 10:35 THE CONJURING 2 - DBOX SEATING E (11:35), 9:00 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (10:45, 1:40), 4:35, 7:30, 10:30 WARCRAFT C (10:15, 11:15, 1:10, 2:10), 4:05, 5:00, 6:10, 7:05, 7:50, 10:00, 10:40 WARCRAFT - DBOX SEATING C 6:10 PM WARCRAFT 3D C (3:20 PM) WARCRAFT 3D - DBOX SEATING C (3:20 PM) ME BEFORE YOU C (11:25, 2:00), 4:45, 7:25, 10:05 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E (1:05, 3:10), 5:30, 7:45, 9:55 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (10:35, 11:30, 1:15, 2:15, 3:55), 4:55, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15, 10:25 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (11:00, 1:35), 4:15, 6:50, 9:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (11:45, 12:30, 3:45), 6:15, 7:10, 10:20 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:10, 1:50), 4:10, 7:00, 9:20 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E (12:40, 3:00), 5:25, 7:40, 10:15 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR C (12:05, 3:25), 6:45, 10:10 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:30 AM) “Locally Owned, Proudly Operated” 6355 Bellingham Ave. 818-760-8400 $1.50 Sun. & Tue! (All 2D Movies, All Day!) NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E 12:10, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40, 10:15 KEANU E 12:20, 2:50, 5:20, 7:50, 10:25 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C 11:20, 2:00, 7:20 BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C 4:40, 10:00 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C 12:00, 3:30, 7:00, 10:20 MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN B 11:15, 1:50, 7:10 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE C 4:30, 9:50 ZOOTOPIA B 2:10, 7:30, 10:10 ZOOTOPIA IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 11:30 AM ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B 10:30 AM CONEJO VALLEY AGOURA HILLS STADIUM 8 29045 Agoura Road 818-707-9966 $6 Wednesday all day for all 2D films (upcharge for DBOX & 3D) Now Offering Reserved Seating 1440 Eastman Ave. at Telephone Rd. 805-658-6544 All Seats $3.50 • $1.50 Surcharge for 3D Movies $1.00 All Day Tuesday - 3D Surcharge Applies MONEY MONSTER E 12:10, 2:40, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 MOTHER’S DAY C 1:00, 4:00, 7:00 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C 3:50, 10:15 BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C 4:30, 7:10, 9:55 THE BOSS E 5:10, 10:10 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C 11:50, 6:50, 10:00 HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS E 11:40, 2:00 MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN B 12:00, 2:30, 7:40 ZOOTOPIA B 2:10, 7:30, 10:05 ZOOTOPIA IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 11:30, 4:50 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B 10:30 AM SAN GABRIEL VALLEY ACADEMY CINEMAS 6 1003 E. Colorado Blvd 626-229-9400 All Seats $2.00 before 6pm • $1.00 All Beef Hot Dogs THE CONJURING 2 - DBOX SEATING - DOLBY ATMOS E 7:40, 10:30 THE CONJURING 2 - DOLBY ATMOS E 7:40, 10:30 THE CONJURING 2 E (12:45, 4:00) H NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (11:30, 12:30, 2:40, 4:30), 5:30, 7:30, 8:30, 10:20 WARCRAFT - DBOX SEATING - DOLBY ATMOS C (11:10, 2:10, 4:55) WARCRAFT - DOLBY ATMOS C (11:10, 2:10, 4:55) H WARCRAFT C 7:00, 9:50 H ME BEFORE YOU C (11:40, 2:15, 4:50), 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C (11:00, 1:40, 4:15), 6:50, 9:30 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (12:00, 3:50), 7:10, 10:15 THE NICE GUYS E (11:20, 2:30), 5:10, 7:50, 10:30 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:30 AM) H THE GREAT OUTDOORS B 7:30 PM NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E (12:30, 2:50, 5:20), 7:50, 10:25 KEANU E (12:00, 2:40, 5:10), 7:40, 10:20 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C (4:40), 7:30 BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C 7:20, 10:00 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C (11:50, 3:30), 7:00, 10:15 HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS E (12:10, 2:30, 5:00) 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE C 10:10 PM ZOOTOPIA B (11:30, 2:00, 4:30), 7:10, 9:50 KUNG FU PANDA 3 B (11:40, 2:10) ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:30 AM) WESTLAKE VILLAGE TWIN THE CONJURING 2 E (10:50, 1:50, 4:50), 7:50, 10:50 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (12:50, 4:00), 7:20, 10:20 WARCRAFT C (10:40, 4:30), 10:15 WARCRAFT 3D C (1:40 PM) ME BEFORE YOU C (11:30, 2:05, 4:40), 7:30, 10:05 POPSTAR: NEVER STOP NEVER STOPPING E 7:40, 10:10 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (12:30, 3:55), 7:00, 9:40 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C (12:40, 3:50), 7:10, 10:30 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:10, 1:30, 4:10), 6:40, 9:15 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:00, 2:20), 5:10 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR C (12:10, 3:40), 6:50, 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES C (11:05, 1:45, 4:35), 7:15, 9:55 ICE AGE: THE MELTDOWN B (10:00 AM) THE GREAT OUTDOORS B 7:30 PM 4711 Lakeview Canyon at Agoura Rd. 818-889-8061 THE LOBSTER E (12:30, 3:45), 7:00 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:00, 2:15, 4:40), 7:30 VENTURA COUNTY PASEO CAMARILLO 3 390 N. Lantana at Daily 805-383-2267 MAGGIE’S PLAN E (11:25, 1:45, 4:30), 7:00 THE LOBSTER E (2:00 PM) LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (11:55, 2:25, 4:55), 7:30 THE MEDDLER C (11:40, 4:45) H GRAN TEATRE DEL LICEU: LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR I 7:00 PM FOOTHILL CINEMA 10 854 E. Alosta Ave. at Citrus 626-334-6007 All Seats $6.50 before 5pm Showtimes for June 14 L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 E7 TELEVISION REVIEW A new crime wave with ‘Kingdom’ ROBERT LLOYD TELEVISION CRITIC “Animal Kingdom,” a new drama premiering Tuesday on TNT, begins quietly, with paramedics entering a house where a woman is unconscious on a couch; next to her, a teenage boy watches television. “What’s she taken?” “Heroin,” says the boy (Finn Cole), whose name is Josh but is called “J.” Later, an orphan, he will call his grandmother — a stranger for 11 years — and she will come and fetch him. And so we are gently eased into the world of the Codys, an Oceanside crime family — sun-drenched California beach towns can have crime families too — with Jonathan Lisco (“Southland,” “Halt and Catch Fire”) adapting David Michôd’s 2010 film about a modern Australian Ma Barker (played here by Ellen Barkin) and her frequently shirtless sons (Ben Robson, Jake Weary, Shawn Hatosy). When not doing cannonballs into the backyard pool or surfing off the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, they rob banks and jewelry stores and pick up whatever they see lying around. With her California-girl sunglasses and sharp-cut blond hair, her boxer’s profile, her dare-you-not-tolook, lean-in decolletage, Barkin’s Smurf is a woman whose domestic bustling and seemingly laissez-faire attitude about what goes on ‘Animal Kingdom’ Where: TNT When: 9 and 10:04 p.m. Tuesday Rating: TV-MA-LSV (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 17, with advisories for coarse language, sex and violence) around her upscale ranch house never quite mask her need for control and a lack of boundaries. Making cupcakes, juicing juice, she is a kind of domestic sociopath, a mother and grandmother with a need for, and a use for but something shy of, a love for kin. The not-so-casual juxtaposition of strawberries and bundles of cash in one shot is a nice visual metaphor for her character. Scott Speedman, from “Felicity” and “Last Resort” — a buff, boyish 40, amazingly — is Barry “Baz” Blackwell; among the characters who are not J, Baz is the nearest thing the series has to a responsible adult, with the coolest head and tenderest heart perhaps because he’s not a Cody. (That he wasn’t another brother is not exactly clear, given the literal closeness of the characters, but that might be a whole other kettle of plot lines.) J, whose expression will stay defensively Sphinx-like throughout, is the obvious protagonist, whose acceptance or rejection of the ways of his newfound family — and their acceptance or rejection of him — engage the viewer’s early concerns; the concerned viewer will, of course, want him to get as far away from them as possible, some place where he can do his math homework in peace. At the same time, most every character gives you something to relate to; each has secrets and cares. Executive producer John Wells (“Southland,” “The West Wing”) directed the opening episodes; and the series is expertly made and subtler than the premise suggests. As someone who distrusts the antiheroic attitude, and movies and TV shows in which people who are up to no good are made extra-glamorous by the fact that the people who play them are beautiful and charismatic, I take more convincing than some. But I went with this. 310.478.3836 ROYAL 11523 Santa Monica Blvd. West L.A. NOOFTAFRAID SUBTITLES www.LAEMMLE.com NoHo 7 5240 Lankershim Blvd. NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (1:10 PM 4:10 PM) 7:10 PM 10:10 PM MONICA ME BEFORE YOU C (1:50 PM 4:40 PM) 7:30 PM 10:10 PM Santa Monica HONEYGLUE E (1:30 PM 4:20 PM) 7:00 PM 9:30 PM WARCRAFT C (1:20 PM 4:20 PM) 7:20 PM 10:15 PM BLACKWAY E (12:40 PM 3:00 PM 5:20 PM) 7:40 PM 10:00 PM GURUKULAM I (1:40 PM 4:20 PM) 7:10 PM 9:55 PM THE FITS I (12:30 PM 2:50 PM 5:00 PM) 7:30 PM 9:40 PM THE LOBSTER E (4:10 PM) 7:00 PM 9:50 PM LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:10 PM 2:40 PM 5:10 PM) 7:50 PM 10:15 PM MATTHEW BOURNE’S THE CAR MAN I (1:00 PM) PATHS OF THE SOUL I (1:40 PM 4:30 PM) 7:20 PM 10:10 PM MAGGIE’S PLAN E (1:00 PM 3:20 PM 5:40 PM) 8:00 PM 10:15 PM MUSIC HALL TE3N I (5:30 PM) 8:30 PM 9036 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills THE GOD CELLS I (12:20 PM 2:40 PM 5:00 PM) 7:30 PM 10:00 PM KING JACK (2:50 PM) TRADED I (4:50 PM) 7:20 PM JIMMY VESTVOOD: AMERIKAN HERO I 10:00 PM DHEEPAN E 9:55 PM DOUGH I (12:10 PM 2:30 PM) THE MEDDLER C (12:30 PM 5:10 PM) AHRYA FINE ARTS 8556 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills THE WAILING I 9:00 PM A BIGGER SPLASH E (4:30 PM) MATTHEW BOURNE’S THE CAR MAN I (1:00 PM) PLAYHOUSE 673 E. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena GURUKULAM I (1:10 PM) 7:10 PM THE FITS I (1:00 PM 3:20 PM 5:30 PM) 7:40 PM 9:45 PM THE WAILING I (1:20 PM) 7:20 PM MAGGIE’S PLAN E (12:40 PM 3:00 PM 5:20 PM) 7:50 PM 10:10 PM WEINER E (4:50 PM) A BIGGER SPLASH E (4:20 PM) 10:00 PM THE LOBSTER E (4:30 PM) 7:30 PM 10:15 PM LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:50 PM 3:10 PM 5:30 PM) 8:00 PM 10:15 PM THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY C (1:40 PM) 7:20 PM SING STREET C (4:10 PM) 9:55 PM MATTHEW BOURNE’S THE CAR MAN I (1:00 PM) BARGAIN IN ( ) family, including matriarch Ma Barker (Ellen Barkin), below, in the new TNT drama “Animal Kingdom.” THE NICE GUYS E 10:00 PM 10850 W. Pico at Westwood • West L.A. 3 Hours Free Parking. Additional 2 Hours $3 with Validation. Showtimes and Information: (310) 470-0492 THE WINE BAR HAPPY HOUR • Mon – Thur 4 – 6pm • $2.00 Off House Drinks THE MUSIC OF STRANGERS: YO-YO MA AND THE SILK ROAD ENSEMBLE LOVE & FRIENDSHIP ▼ (PG-13) ●■ (PG-13) (12:35, 2:55, 5:15) 7:40, 9:55 ●■ THE NICE GUYS (R) (11:10, 1:50, 4:30) (12:40, 3:00, 5:20) 7:40, 9:55 ● THE LOBSTER E (1:20 PM 4:10 PM) 7:00 PM 9:50 PM LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:30 PM 2:50 PM 5:15 PM) 7:40 PM TOWN CENTER 17200 Ventura Blvd. ▼●■ JIMMY VESTVOOD: AMERIKAN HERO I 10:00 PM ▼ THE MEDDLER C (12:40 PM 3:10 PM) NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (1:30, 4:25) 7:20, 10:10 ▼●■ (PG-13) explore: MAGGIE’S PLAN (R) DE PALMA (R) ▼●■ (PG-13) LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (1:00 PM 3:20 PM 5:40 PM) 8:00 PM 10:15 PM THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY C (12:30 PM 3:00 PM) ●■ (11:40, 2:05, 4:30) 10:25 ● (11:40, 2:15, 4:50) 7:30, 10:00 A BIGGER SPLASH E 7:00 PM DOUGH I (4:30 PM) THE LOBSTER (R) (11:05, 1:50, 4:35) 7:20, 10:00 GENIUS (PG-13) (11:40, 2:10, 4:40) 7:10. 9:35 Encino MAGGIE’S PLAN E (12:50 PM 3:10 PM 5:30 PM) 7:50 PM 10:10 PM A New explore Special! tickets.landmarktheatres.com No. Hollywood DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID I (1:50 PM 4:40 PM) 7:10 PM 9:35 PM VIKTORIA I (1:00 PM 4:30 PM) 8:00 PM THE WAILING I (3:35 PM) 9:40 PM THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY C (1:00 PM) 7:00 PM 1332 Second Street PEARLS OF THE PLANET WEINER (R) BROWN BEARS (11:40, 2:05, 4:30) ●■ (PG-13) X-MEN: APOCALYPSE ME BEFORE YOU (11:35, 2:10, 4:45) 7:25, 9:55 TUESDAY @ 8:30 PM (1:05, 4:10) 7:15, 10:15 No music. No narration. Just bears in their natural habitat. MONEY MONSTER ●■ (R) (11:50, 2:15) 7:05, 9:25 HOUSEFULL 3 I (5:30 PM) 8:30 PM MATTHEW BOURNE’S THE CAR MAN I (1:00 PM) 11272 Santa Monica Blvd • West L.A. • (310) 473-8530 CLAREMONT THERAPY FOR A VAMPIRE (NR) 450 W. 2nd Street Claremont (1:00, 3:10, 5:20) 7:30, 9:40 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 C (1:10 PM 4:10 PM) 7:10 PM 10:10 PM MAGGIE’S PLAN E (1:00 PM 3:20 PM 5:40 PM) 8:00 PM 10:15 PM WEINER E (4:30 PM) 7:20 PM 9:55 PM 1045 Broxton Ave • Westwood • (310) 208-3250 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR (PG-13) (4:00) 7:00, 10:00 THE LOBSTER E (1:10 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 9:50 PM LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (12:50 PM 3:10 PM 5:30 PM) 7:50 PM 10:10 PM MATTHEW BOURNE’S THE CAR MAN I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 1:00 PM FOR 6/14/2016 ONLY GIFT CARDS Join FilmClub.LandmarkTheatres.com On Sale Now! Landmark strongly supports a NO TEXTING AND NO CELL PHONE policy. ( ) at Discount = No Passes = The Screening Lounge ● Closed Captioning ■ Descriptive Video Service VALID TUESDAY~ JUNE V ONLY Subscribe to TV Weekly magazine and ve big! sa kcet.org/findkcet © 2016 Landmark Theatres EXCLUSIVE OFFER FOR LA TIMES SUBSCRIBERS SAVE UP TO 73% OFF TUNE IN AND GET: THE COVER PRICE ■ 48-pages of localized TV schedules at your fingertips TV Weekly magazine is the best source for planning ■ Comprehensive program grids for your TV viewing. It provides an entire week’s worth of every service provider: Time Warner, Cox localized TV listings – with each day’s schedule easily Charter, Verizon, AT&T, DirecTV and Dish viewed at a glance. It’s much quicker and easier to use than a 50 button remote! ■ Enjoy movie summaries, celebrity interviews, puzzles and sports listings TV Weekly magazine 81¢/wk for 104 weeks BEST To order, visit iwantmytvmagazine.com or PRICE! ■ Plan your DVR and watch your favorite shows on your schedule call 1-866-510-5568. 16DM1990 Eddy Chen TNT robert.lloyd@latimes.com TM Info Line Photographs by FINN COLE, above, portrays J, a suddenly orphaned teen who reunites with his estranged and criminal E8 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R COMICS BRIDGE SUDOKU By Frank Stewart In the Vanderbilt Teams at the ACBL’s Spring NABC, South was world-class player Sabine Auken. When East opened with a third-seat weak two-bid, Auken overcalled three clubs, and West competed with three hearts. Then North, Roy Welland, cue-bid four hearts; Auken leaped to slam. The busy East-West bidding told her that North had a heart singleton or void plus useful values. West led the queen of hearts, and East overtook to lead the queen of spades. Auken won and sandwiched three heart ruffs in dummy around two spade ruffs in her hand (leaving West with the defenders’ only high spade). KENKEN Every box will contain a number; numbers depend on the size of the grid. For a 6x6 puzzle, use Nos. 1-6. Do not repeat a number in any row or column. The numbers in each heavily outlined set of squares must combine to produce the target number found in the top left corner of the cage using the mathematical operation indicated. A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not in the same row or column. 6/14/16 HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis Aries (March 21-April 19): There doesn’t always need to be a reason to draw a boundary, yet there is one now. Taurus (April 20-May 20): Many capable people surround you, all of whom are looking forward to helping you in some way. Gemini (May 21-June 21): The natural world connects people in a way that nothing else can. Get into it. Cancer (June 22-July 22): It is good to be able to represent to yourself and others that you are not afraid and completely able to stand up for your beliefs. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): The one who challenges you isn’t sure about your strength, but he or she will be soon. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The idea that “everything” could hinge on one thing is usually an overstatement. But today it rings true in some way. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23): You don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone. That is the way it goes in the song, and the way it goes in real life, too — for the clueless. Not you. Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21): Today will bring you the entire scope of a particular lesson up front so that you can decide what to do. Sagittarius (Nov. 22Dec. 21): A difference of views will occur. It’s nothing new; this is an ongoing argument. But it won’t go on much longer. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’re great. Why don’t you know this about yourself already? Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your friend has been calling you, and you have been less available than usual. Circumstances — that’s the long and short of it. But all of those situations will clear up. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): What is to be said for a person who can’t deliver what you want? You can only have respect for the intention if it’s followed up by action. Yours will be the first and the last move, so think it through very carefully. Today’s birthday (June 14): Family celebrates you, and an adventure with your kin will kick off this solar return. Next month produces an idea to run with. There will be two cash-out points, one in August and the other at the end of September. Reinvest. It’s worth your time and the best of your attention. November and February show you richer. Aries and Pisces adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 4, 40, 33, 39 and 14. Holiday Mathis writes her column for Creators Syndicate Inc. The horoscope should be read for entertainment. Previous forecasts are at latimes.com/horoscope. Auken then ran her trumps. When she led her last trump at Trick 10, West could keep three cards. He had to save his king of spades — dummy still had a spade — so he bared his Q-J of diamonds. Auken discarded the spade from dummy, took the A-K of diamonds and won the 13th trick with the 10. Question: You hold: ♠ A ♥ J 7 6 4 ♦ A 4 3 ♣ A Q 10 6 2. You are the dealer. What is your opening call? Answer: This situation is awkward. If you open one club, you will lack a good second bid if partner responds one spade. A rebid of two clubs would suggest a sixcard suit, a reverse to two hearts would show more strength, and a bid of 1NT would be an underbid. Many players would open 1NT. I can’t recommend that action, but the problem has no good answer. West dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH ♠9762 ♥5 ♦ K 10 6 ♣KJ983 WEST EAST ♠ K 10 5 4 3 ♠QJ8 ♥Q3 ♥ A K 10 9 8 2 ♦QJ72 ♦985 ♣75 ♣4 SOUTH ♠A ♥J764 ♦A43 ♣ A Q 10 6 2 WEST NORTH EAST SOUTH Pass Pass 2♥ 3♣ 3♥ 4♥ Pass 6♣ All Pass Opening lead — ♥ Q Tribune Media Services ASK AMY Big sister is concerned Dear Amy: I am the proud big sister of my 18-year-old brother “Baxter.” His last day of high school was yesterday, and he is set to graduate in a few weeks. He earned a 4.0 throughout high school and has worked really hard for four years. He called me yesterday (I live out of state) and told me about his last day at school. Then he dropped a bombshell on me, when he said, “Don’t tell mom, but I smoked a lot of weed today!” Amy, I was shocked! We grew up in a no-alcohol, nosmoking household. Now I don’t know what to do. Do I keep his secret? Do I spill to our mom? I know he’s worked so hard, so I think he was celebrating and maybe rebelling a little bit, since he was the “perfect” student for so long. I don’t want this to be a steppingstone to more bad decisions for him. What should I do? Worried in Wisconsin Dear Worried: This is not necessarily a binary choice between either telling or not telling. You can choose to stay quiet now but change your mind later. It might be best for you to communicate your next thoughts in text form, versus talking to him about this. You can write: “First, I want you to know that I appreciate your honesty. Secondly, please don’t ever ask me to keep a secret from our parents. That’s not fair to me, or them, and I will make my own choice about what to do regarding your decision to get toasted on the last day of classes. I am naturally very protective of you. I want you to know that there are extreme risks to what you are doing. You risk not graduating (if you are caught), but you also risk many other things you have worked very hard for. Soon you will be on your own, and I hope you will make healthier choices.” After communicating directly with him, leave it alone. If this is the worst thing this young man ever does, he’ll be OK. Dear Amy: I am currently seeing a man who has two jobs, one as an “everyday civilian” and one in the National Guard. He has been a guardsman for several years. We have been seeing each other for about seven months. I just learned that he may face a deployment within the next year (he’s been through three already). I am very proud of him. I love him, and he loves me. I don’t know how to communicate how I feel and how scared I am; for him, for me, for us — and for my child, who has grown attached to him. My anxiety levels have risen in the past few weeks because of this. He has noticed a change in me. I fell in love with this man without a second thought of what that would mean. I don’t want to leave him over this because he is serving his country. However, I do not know how to live the life that is approaching. I need advice and guidance. Can you help? Worried Dear Worried: The most important thing you can do is to communicate with your guy about what might be in store for all of you if he deploys. The National Guard offers helpful support and information to help you start this conversation. You should also seek friendship and advice from experienced people on this side of deployment. Check www. jointservicesupport.org. Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@tribune.com. FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketcham ARGYLE SWEATER By Scott Hilburn MARMADUKE By Brad & Paul Anderson BLISS By Harry Bliss BALLARD STREET By Jerry Van Amerongen CROSSWORD Edited By Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis By Agnes Davidson and C.C. Burnikel ACROSS 1 Drink-cooling shapes 6 Family girl 9 Neighborhood 13 Seize 14 So very uncool 15 Mascara target 16 *Where hockey transgressors cool their heels 18 Issue a ticket to 19 Shout of discovery 20 Draft classification 21 *Future attorney’s hurdle 25 Where sleeping dogs lie 27 “Give me a break!” 28 Decide one will 29 Sound confirming a locked car door 30 Oil-bearing rocks 33 Jimmy Fallon asset 36 Go wrong 37 June 14th observance ... and a hint to the first word in the answers to starred clues 38 Sudoku section 39 Camping gear brand 40 Winner’s wreath 41 Voice quality 42 Film snippets 44 TV’s “Kate & __” 45 “The ability to fully experience life,” per Thoreau 47 *Polite applause on the tee 50 “Money __ object” 51 Sandy or Roberto of baseball 53 Catch sight of 54 *Vessel for Captain Jack Sparrow 59 Fired, with “off ” 60 Look carefully 61 Gravel unit 62 Colors, as hair 63 NFL gains 64 Cackling scavenger DOWN 1 Many a sports trophy 2 Function 3 Hot dog holder 4 Notable time 5 Organ associated with ill temper 6 “Light” sci-fi weapon 7 “Don’t worry about me” 8 Physical attractiveness 9 “Little Women” novelist 10 *Colorful sushi creation 11 Perfumer Lauder 12 Down the road 14 Harp constellation 17 Shower stall alternative, if it fits 21 Unloaded? 22 “At last!” 23 *“Drove my Chevy to the levee” Don McLean hit 24 Water source 26 Online crafts shop 28 Shoppe adjective 30 Silly to the extreme 31 Fräulein’s abode 32 Farm sci. 34 Ancient Greek region 35 Follower on Twitter, informally 37 Fly like a moth 41 Affectionate attention, briefly 43 London insurance giant 44 From scratch © 2016 Tribune Content Agency 45 Exercise, as power 46 Thoreau work 47 Second family of the 1990s 48 “Rubáiyát” poet 49 Zero deg. at the equator, say 52 Told tall tales 55 Oinker’s pen 56 Clod chopper 57 Ramada __ 58 Green soup base ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 6/14/16 L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R T U E S DAY , J U NE 14 , 2 016 COMICS DOONESBURY By Garry Trudeau Doonesbury is on vacation. This is a reprint. DILBERT By Scott Adams LA CUCARACHA By Lalo Alcaraz BABY BLUES By Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman CANDORVILLE By Darrin Bell CRANKSHAFT By Tom Batiuk & Chuck Ayers HALF FULL By Maria Scrivan PEARLS BEFORE SWINE By Stephan Pastis NON SEQUITUR By Wiley LIO By Mark Tatulli JUMP START By Robb Armstrong 9 CHICKWEED LANE By Brooke McEldowney BLONDIE By Dean Young & John Marshall GET FUZZY By Darby Conley ZITS By Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman BIZARRO By Dan Piraro TUNDRA By Chad Carpenter DRABBLE By Kevin Fagan PRICKLY CITY By Scott Stantis MUTTS By Patrick McDonnell FRAZZ By Jef Mallett PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz E9 E10 T U E S DAY, J U N E 14 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R T V HI G HL IG HT S Tuesday Prime-Time TV SERIES To Tell the Truth One of several classic game shows being revived by ABC this summer begins its run, with Anthony Anderson as host. Betty White, a regular on TV game shows back in the day, will be a panelist along with NeNe Leakes, Jalen Rose and various guests. 8 and 10 p.m. ABC SoCal Connected The local news magazine series reports on the competition between two companies in the development of the Hyperloop system envisioned by Tesla’s Elon Musk. 8 and 10 p.m. KCET Genealogy Roadshow In a Boston-themed episode, one woman explores her connection to the Salem Witch Trials, while another probes whether a loss in her family’s ancestry was the result of 1972’s Great Boston Fire or of a smallpox outbreak. 8 p.m. KOCE Containment A major breakthrough brings Dr. Cannerts (George Young) closer to finding a cure for the virus, as Katie and Jake (Kristen Gutoskie, Chris Wood) discover the truth behind Patient Zero. 9 p.m. KTLA Uncle Buck This new comedy, insprired by the 1989 John Candy movie premieres with with back-toback episodes. Mike Epps stars in the title role with Iman Benson, Sayeed Shahidi, Aalyrah Caldwell, James Lesure and Nia Long. 9 and 9:30 p.m. ABC Animal Kingdom Based on a 2010 Australian movie, this edgy new drama revolves around a Southern California crime family headed by tough-as-nails grandmother (Ellen Barkin), whose recentlyorphaned teenage grandson (Finn Cole) comes to live with her. Scott Speedman, Shawn Hatosy, Ben Robson and Jake Weary also star. 9 and 10 p.m. TNT Person of Interest Finch (Michael Emerson) goes all-out to put an end to Samaritan, but there could be a lot of collateral damage. With Jim Caviezel and Sarah Shahi. 10 p.m. CBS Kelsey McNeal ABC TV LEGEND Betty White in a new version of the classic game show “To Tell the Truth.” Maya & Marty John Cena, Nick Jonas, Eva Longoria and Ben Stiller are guests on this comedy/variety series. 10 p.m. NBC Feed the Beast Using the designs of Tommy’s (David Schwimmer) late wife (Christine Adams), he and Dion (Jim Sturgess) imbue Thirio with a sense of life. 10 p.m. AMC Wrecked The premise of this new series, premiering with two new episodes, is that stranded together on a deserted island after their plane crashes. 10 and 10:27 p.m. TBS MOVIES The Graduate A newly minted college grad (Dustin Hoffman) has an affair with his parent’s friend, neighbor Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft), in director Mike Nichols’ 1967 classic. 7:15 p.m. TCM GBF (2013) 9:35 a.m. Showtime The Martian (2015) 1 and 8:30 p.m. HBO Top Five (2014) 2:40 p.m. EPIX The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015) 3:30 p.m. Showtime All the Way (2016) 5:15 p.m. HBO TALK SHOWS CBS This Morning Nancy Gibbs; Leslie Odom Jr.; Elin Hilderbrand; John Heilemann. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS Today “The West Wing” reunion; Amy Ryan; Olivia Wilde; psychologist Amy Cuddy; Joel Gamoran; Frankie Ballard performs. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC Good Morning America Ellen DeGeneres; Vivica A. Fox; Yao Ming; GMA’s Musical.ly challenge finalists. (N) 7 a.m. KABC Good Day L.A. Jon Tenney (“Big Sky”); Author D.L. Hughley (“Black Man, White House: An Oral History of the Obama Years”); Jazz Jennings(“I Am Jazz”); Justina Machado (“Queen of the South”). (N) 7 a.m. KTTV The View Jason Biggs and wife Jenny Mollen. (N) 10 a.m. KABC The Wendy Williams Show Tito Jackson. (N) 11 a.m. KTTV The Talk Constance Zimmer; Kevin Frazier; Carnie Wilson. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS Steve Harvey Mike Epps (“Uncle Buck”); Susan Lucci and Dania Ramirez (“Devious Maids”); Keith Sweat performs. (N) 2 p.m. KNBC The Dr. Oz Show Reasons for exhaustion. (N) 2 p.m. KTTV The Ellen DeGeneres Show Liev Schreiber (“Ray Donovan”); Eugene Levy. (N) 3 p.m. KNBC Tavis Smiley (N) 11 p.m. KOCE Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR; 11:30 p.m. KOCE The Daily Show Eddie Huang. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central Conan Kate Beckinsale; Marlon Williams; Brian Sacca. (N) 11 p.m. TBS The Nightly Show Malcolm Gladwell. (N) 11:30 p.m. Comedy Central The Tonight Show: Jimmy Fallon Don Rickles; Lena Dunham; DJ Shadow and Run the Jewels. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Daniel Radcliffe; George Lopez; HINDS performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS The Late Late Show Matt LeBlanc; Alison Brie; Eliot Sumner performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS Late Night Maya Rudolph; Michiel Huisman; Brandy Clark performs; John Tempesta performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KNBC 8 pm Sports News Movies (N) New Å Closed Captioning 9:30 10 pm 10:30 Rogues. Å breakthrough. (N) Å ABC To Tell the Truth Tracee Ellis Uncle Buck (TVPG) (Pre- FOX Hotel Hell (TV14) Harper’s Ross. (N) Å KCAL News (N) Ferry. (Part 2 of 2) (N) Å MyNt TMZ Live (TVPG) (N) Å KVCR Globe Trekker (TVG) Å KCET miere) (N) Å News (N) To Tell the Truth (TVPG) Iliza News (N) Shlesinger. (N) Å News (N) Sports Central Mike & Molly Coupled (TV14) A rejection at News (N) Seinfeld Å Seinfeld Å Why Treaties? Å Ecuador: Royal Tour (TVPG) Å SoCal Connect- Explore Artbound Architectural critic SoCal Connect- Explore ed Hyperloop; (TVPG) Alas- Christopher Hawthorne (Los ed Hyperloop; (TVPG) Alasrobot parks cars. Å UNI ka’s Katmai Angeles Times) looks at the robot parks National Park. future of Los Angeles. Å cars. Å Copa América Centenario 2016 (N) Tres Veces Ana (N) KOCE Genealogy Roadshow (TVPG) KLCS AMC ANP BBC BET Bravo CNN Com Disc Disn E! ESPN Food FNC Free FX Hall HGTV Hist IFC Life MSN MTV NGC Nick Ova OWN Spike Sund Syfy TBS TCM TLC TNT Toon Travel Tru TV L USA VH1 WGN Cine Encr EPIX Starz TMC Christopher ka’s Katmai Hawthorne. National Park. Å Un camino hacia el destino (N) The Draft (TVPG) The mili- The O’Reilly Factor Å The Kelly File Hannity Record Å Guilt (7:30) Grease ››› (1978) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John. (PG) The 700 Club Ride Along ›› (2014) Ice Cube, Kevin Hart. (PG-13) Ride Along ›› (2014) Ice Cube. (PG-13) Last Man Å Last Man Å The Middle Å The Middle Å The Middle Å The Middle Å Golden Girls Å Fixer Upper (TVG) Å Fixer Upper (TVG) Å House Hunters Hunters Int. Fixer Upper Counting Cars Counting Cars Top Gear (TVPG) (N) Å Counting Cars Counting Cars Car Hunters ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å Celebrity Wife Swap (TVPG) Celebrity Wife Swap (TVPG) Celebrity Wife Swap Wife Swap All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball Å How High › (2001) Method Man, Redman. (R) How High › (2001) Method Man. (R) America’s National Parks Airport Security: Colombia (N) Airport Security: Colombia (N) Colombia Nicky, Ricky Other Kingdom Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Friends (TV14) Sleeping With the Enemy ›› (1991) (7:30) (R) The American President (1995) Michael Douglas. (PG-13) Haves and Have Nots (TV14) Haves and Have Nots (TV14) Haves and Have Nots (TV14) Haves, Nots Cops (TV14) Cops (TV14) Cops (TVPG) Cops (TV14) Cops (TV14) Cops (TVPG) Cops (TVPG) Cape Fear ››› (1991) (6) (R) The Hunt for Red October ››› (1990) Sean Connery. (PG) Å Blade ›› (1998) (6:30) (R) Watchmen ›› (2009) Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman. (R) Å Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wrecked Wrecked (N) Conan (TV14) (TV14) Å (TV14) Å (TVPG) Å (TVPG) Å (TVMA) (N) (10:27) Sunday, September 4 Fresh tastes from LA’s best chefs Summer’s last hurrah 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hosted by Amy Scattergood and Michael Cimarusti 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hosted by Noelle Carter and Mary Sue Milliken Let the good times pour One city, countless tastes An evening among the culinary stars 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Hosted by Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris, Ray Garcia and Michael Lay 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Hosted by Jonathan Gold and Kris Yenbamroong GET TICKETS: LATIMES.COM/THETASTE Subscribers save $25 on Saturday and Sunday events Presenting sponsor Platinum sponsor (N) Å The Graduate ›››› (1967) (PG) (7:15) Å The Earrings of Madame De... ››› (1953) (9:15) Little People, Big World (N) Å Little People, Big World (N) Å My Giant Life (TV14) (N) Little People We’re the Millers ›› (2013) Animal Kingdom (TVMA) (Se- Animal Kingdom (TVMA) (N) Animal King(R) (6:30) Å ries premiere) (N) Å (10:04) Å dom Å King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy Å Bert the Conqueror (N) Bizarre Foods (TVPG) (N) Å Bizarre Foods: Andrew Zimmern Bizarre Foods Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Hack Life (N) Hack My Life Hack My Life George Lopez (TVPG) (8:12) George Lopez Raymond Å Raymond Å Raymond Å King of Queens Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Chrisley Impressions Modern Family Above the Rim ›› (1994) Duane Martin, Leon. (R) Gridiron Gang ››› (2006) (PG-13) How I Met Å How I Met Å How I Met Å How I Met Å Parks & Rec Å Parks & Rec Å Engagement Å Gone Girl ››› (2014) Ben Affleck. (7:30) (R) Å Hitman: Agent 47 › (2015) (R) Å The Quick and the Dead ›› (1995) Sharon Stone. (R) Å Far and Away ››› (1992) (9:50) American Ultra ›› (2015) (R) Michael Ian Black: Noted Å Addicted › (2014) (10:45) Å Thrones (7:30) The Martian ››› (2015) Matt Damon. (PG-13) Å The Fight Game Miami Vice (2006) Colin Farrell. (7:15) (R) Å House of Lies Penny Dreadful (TVMA) Å Stanley Cup Girlfriend Outlander (TVMA) (8:45) Å Mad Money ›› (2008) Diane Keaton. (9:45) (PG-13) Å The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996) Barbra Streisand. (PG-13) The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) (10:10) (R) Å Saturday, September 3 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Hosted by Noelle Carter, Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris and Amy Scattergood Å Walking Dead Charlie Rose Å Artbound Frontline (TVPG) Gunned Tavis Smiley tary draft divides the citizens Down. The National Rifle As- (N) Å of the United States during sociation’s influence on gun the 1960s and 1970s. Å regulation. Å Raymond Å Raymond Å Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Seinfeld Å Gay L.A. Then The Committee Anyone and Everyone (TVPG) Fast Metabolism Revolution With Haylie Gladiator ››› (2000) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. (R) Å The First 48 Man on Fire ›› (2004) Denzel Washington. (7) (R) Feed the Beast (TV14) (N) Feed the Weird, True & Freaky: Monsters Yeti or Not (TVPG) Dr. Mark Evans explains the “Yeti.” Killer Crocs Man vs. Wild (TVPG) Å Man vs. Wild (TVPG) Å Man vs. Wild (TVPG) Å Weird Wonders The BET Life of (TVPG) (N) Inside the Label (TV14) (N) Inside the Label (TV14) The BET Life Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean (N) Below Deck Mediterranean What Happens CNN Tonight: Don Lemon (N) Stanford Rape Town Hall Anderson Cooper (TVPG) Å CNN Tonight Tosh.0 (7:52) Tosh.0 (8:24) Tosh.0 (8:56) Tosh.0 (9:28) Tosh.0 (TV14) Nikki Glaser Daily Show (N) Deadliest Catch: On Deck (N) Deadliest Catch (TVPG) (N) Dark Woods Justice (N) Deadly Catch Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs ›› (7:40) Liv and Maddie KC Undercover Girl Meets Stuck in Middle Botched (TV14) Å Botched (TV14) (N) Å Famously Single (TV14) (N) E! News (N) SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter Chopped Junior (TVG) (N) Chopped (TVG) Chopped (TVG) (N) Chopped Boston. The Salem witch trials; the Great Boston Fire of 1872. (N) Å KDOC Law & Order: CI (TV14) Å A&E TMZ (TVPG) the bungalows. (N) Å Hollywood Today Live (TVPG) LA’s best tastes, all in one place Friday, September 2 11 pm KTLA NBC Show For today’s sports on TV, see the Sports section. 9 pm NCIS: New Orleans (TV14) Å Person of Interest (N) Å News (N) Å NCIS (TV14) Å America’s Got Talent (TV14) (N) Å Maya & Marty Ben Stiller. (N) News (N) The Flash (TV14) Family of Containment (TV14) A major News (N) Å News (N) Å CBS HBO SPORTS 8:30 Event production Gold sponsors ® #TasteLA