With their Los Angeles-area homes still smoldering, families return to search the ruins for memories
- The wildfires in California have killed at least 11 people and destroyed or damaged over 10,000 structures, according to authorities.
- Many residents, including Paul Lewis, have returned to find their homes completely burned down, leaving them homeless.
- The Palisades fire has burned 5,300 structures, making it the most destructive fire in Los Angeles history.
- Tens of thousands remain under evacuation orders as the fires have consumed about 56 square miles.
70 Articles
70 Articles
Fires are still raging in Los Angeles County, but the first residents are returning to the rubble. A site visit.
Pacific Palisades. Kyle Kucharski found a box of wine on the sidewalk with the legend “Purgatory.” It was what was left of the home he shared with his wife and children in a luxurious neighborhood, now charred by the forest fires in Los Angeles. Kucharski and his family lived in Pacific Palisades, a suburb nestled in the hills of the West Coast of the United States, destroyed by the fire that started on Tuesday. Fires in Los Angeles: complaints …
Steve Miller's mother once survived the Holocaust and started a new life in America. Her son had just moved all the memorabilia into his house in Los Angeles when the fire came.
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Bias Distribution
- 52% of the sources are Center
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