• Investigation underway after body found during search for missing 13-ye

    From Burn Loot Murder@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 5 06:17:34 2025
    XPost: alt.gangs, alt.los-angeles, alt.politics.immigration
    XPost: sac.politics

    An investigation is underway after authorities found a body matching the description of a missing 13-year-old boy, Los Angeles police said.

    Oscar Omar Hernandez, of the San Fernando Valley, was reported missing by
    his family on Sunday after he "failed to return home from visiting an acquaintance in Lancaster," LAPD Capt. Scot Williams said in a statement.

    The Los Angeles Police Department's Robbery-Homicide Division assumed the
    lead Tuesday in the investigation, which subsequently led them to an "area
    of interest" in the city of Oxnard, west of Los Angeles, Williams said.

    "In collaboration with our partners at the FBI, a coordinated foot search
    of that area took place," Williams said. "During the search, a body
    matching the description of the missing teen was discovered."

    The identity of the deceased has not been officially confirmed, and the
    cause of death remains undetermined, police said.

    Detectives are pursuing leads to "determine the cause of death and to
    identify any individuals who may be involved or possess information
    relevant to this investigation," Williams said.

    LAPD Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton told reporters at the scene in Oxnard on Wednesday that they were working to establish a timeline in the case.

    "The family was aware of his destination, and I'm going to kind of leave
    it at that as part of the investigation," he said.

    Police would not say what led them to Oxnard.

    "All we can say is that our investigation led us to this point here ... in
    the unincorporated area of Ventura County," Hamilton said.

    Family and friends of Oscar paid tribute to the teen on Thursday at the
    site where the body was found on the side of a road in Oxnard.

    "He didn't need to be treated like an animal. That was my son," his
    mother, Gladys Bautista, cried out in Spanish, ABC News' Los Angeles
    station KABC reported.

    Loved ones also gathered outside his home in the North Hollywood area,
    where friends remembered him as the "nicest person" who was "always kindhearted" and a great dancer.

    Police did not have an update on the investigation on Friday.

    "Anyone that thinks they're going to get away with any kind of foul play
    or nefarious activity or criminal activity, they're going to learn that
    the Los Angeles Police Department will stop at nothing to bring people to justice," Hamilton said at the scene Wednesday.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/los-angeles-missing-teen-investigation- oxnard/story?id=120504602

    Hamilton is a lying black DEI token piece of shit.

    ALAN S HAMILTON

    Rank: Deputy Chief
    Division: Valley Bureau
    Email: 27393@lapd.online
    Serial: 27393
    Badge: 108
    Ethnicity: Black
    Gender: Male
    Age: 57
    Year Hired: 1990
    Height: 5'11"
    Weight: 185 lbs
    Payments

    2022

    2023
    • Regular Pay: $306,123.39
    • Overtime Pay: $884.10
    • Other Pay: $41,061.05
    • Health Benefits: $12,382.22
    • Retirement Pay: $143,418.81
    All of the officer information displayed on this page was made public by
    the City of Los Angeles in accordance with the California Public Records
    Act.

    Division, Rank, Serial Number, Ethnicity, Gender, Height, Weight, and Year
    of Hire are from rosters that LAPD published in January 2023 and August
    2024. All of this information is only accurate as of January 2023. Many
    officer division assignments and ranks have likely changed since then. In addition, LAPD has stated that height and weight are self-reported by
    officers at the time of their hire, so this information could be
    inaccurate either because an officer's height or weight changed over time
    or the officer lied about their height or weight.

    Serial is a unique LAPD identifier assigned to each officer, typically not displayed on the officer. Badge is the number displayed on an officer's
    badge. These numbers can change when an officer receives a new badge due
    to a promotion or for other reasons, and an officer can be assigned a
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    number listed here are from a roster LAPD published in September 2024 to
    comply with a lawsuit we filed in March 2024, so the numbers are only
    accurate as of that date. Email Address is pieced together from the
    standard LAPD email format of [Serial Number]@lapd.online.

    Age is an approximation calculated using a roster that LAPD published in
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    Payments are from data listing the money paid to each city employee in
    that calendar year (January to December), published in March 2023 and
    January 2024.

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