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LA County probation officials want to close more juvenile facilities, shuffle youth

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The Los Angeles County Probation Department wants to close two more juvenile facilities and shuffle dozens of youth across its footprint in an effort to consolidate staff and further reduce the population at the struggling Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall, but the proposal unveiled this week has sparked concerns the shift could instead destabilize the rest of the county’s juvenile system.

Probation Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa presented his vision for the future to the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, Feb. 18, and received almost immediate pushback from board members and advocates who viewed it as half-baked. Supervisors questioned Viera Rosa’s decision to develop the proposal without input from other stakeholders, including the county departments that supply teachers, social workers and services to the juvenile facilities and would need to make their own adjustments.

“I’m interested in your vision, but I’m wondering if this is the right time to be really serious about a global plan of facilities construction, renovation, moving huge numbers of populations around when we are struggling with staffing issues,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn. “A lot of what you are proposing would cause a lot of disruption to the young people in our care.”

Viera Rosa, in response to criticisms, stressed his plan is a starting point to elicit feedback. Other departments and community members will get a chance to weigh in before it is brought back, he said, but the county has deferred work on a long-term plan for too long.

“If I waited for unanimity by department heads, or this board, it would be five years from now,” Viera Rosa shot back at one point.

A handful of those department heads sat behind Viera Rosa during his presentation and made it clear, through their facial expressions, that they hadn’t been consulted, prompting Supervisor Kathryn Barger to joke that they were “lousy poker players.” Barger urged the probation chief to include them in the next round, but stressed her colleagues needed to let him “put the meat on the bone” before shooting down his ideas.

“If we don’t give clear direction, or the ability for our chief probation officer to make a determination, based on what we hired him for as a subject expert, then we’re going to be back here next year having the same discussion,” Barger said. “I just don’t think that’s what we want.”

The supervisors did not take any formal action on the plan and have asked Viera Rosa to further develop it, with more input from stakeholders, before bringing it back in early April.

Though much of the Viera Rosa’s vision is not set in stone, the department does intend to permanently close Camp Joseph Paige in La Verne and the former Central Juvenile Hall in Los Angeles, a facility now used as a hub for medical services, by the end of April.

The roughly 30 youth at Camp Paige would shift to either Camp Afflerbaugh, located on the same property, or Camp Glenn Rockey in San Dimas, while employees and service providers would be divvied up among all of the county’s juvenile facilities as needed, according to Viera Rosa.

Thomas Bell, who represents the camps for the Los Angeles County Deputy Probation Officers’ Union, urged probation to reconsider during public comment.

“How are we going to have a small community if we close the camp that deals with the older minors, older juvenile youth and throw them into the other camps, making them larger?” Bell said. “The camps are working. If you do that, the camps won’t work.”

Other parts of the plan remained a work in progress.

Perhaps the most controversial part would empty Campus Kilpatrick, a facility in the Santa Monica Mountains often touted as the flagship for the county’s “L.A. Model” for rehabilitation. The campus houses about 20 young men and is often praised for having a home-like environment where youth get a level of autonomy and responsibility that isn’t possible at the larger facilities. Placements at Kilpatrick are highly sought by both youth and staff due to its stability in a system otherwise plagued by constant turmoil.

“Transferring boys out of Kilpatrick, a camp that was literally designed to meet their needs, is like pulling the rug out from beneath them,” said DeAnna Pittman, program manager with the Young Women’s Freedom Center.

Eduardo Mundo, chair of the county’s Probation Oversight Commission and a former probation supervisor, agreed.

“You’re taking away one of the better programs that we have for the secure youth track kids,” he said. “It doesn’t seem well thought out.”

Under Viera Rosa’s proposal, Kilpatrick would stop taking new youth in June and would empty naturally by August. Those who would have been sent to Kilpatrick will instead go to the Secure Youth Treatment Facility (SYTF) at the former Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar. The Nidorf campus, home to about 90 currently, would evolve over the next two years into a series of specialized smaller communities, such as a college academy or a step-down facility where youth could transition to less restrictive housing, including potentially to small, prefabricated homes, based on their progress and behavior, according to Viera Rosa.

“We need to create space for the young SYTF population at Nidorf to see that they have options in front of them beyond the restrictive environments that they have when they first go to the facility,” he said.

Once Kilpatrick is empty, Probation would transfer all of the girls and gender expansive youth in its custody — about 50 total — onto the campus, to be renamed as the Campus Kilpatrick Client Assessment, Readiness & Engagement (CARE) Center, by the end of the year. That move would reduce Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall’s population by about 30, bringing its total down to around 200, if it stays consistent, and may ease some of the staffing issues experienced there.

The other 20 girls would come from the Dorothy Kirby Center, which would instead focus on providing mental health and special needs services to boys and young men in the department’s custody.

The potential change to Kilpatrick drew a flurry of questions from the supervisors that Viera Rosa could not to answer yet. The supervisors questioned whether the location would make it more difficult for family to visit and whether it would create strain on staff to have to ferry youth from the Santa Monica Mountains to court cases elsewhere. Kilpatrick, as it is currently, only houses youth with adjudicated cases, but under the new proposal, about 30 of the girls would be “predisposition,” meaning their cases are active and ongoing.

Such a move is likely to face outside opposition, too. Residents in Malibu have historically come out against increases to the population at Kilpatrick and the proposal would more than double the number of youth on site.

The Probation Department has spent years putting out constant fires, most recently related to Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall. The facility, ordered to close by state regulators over its substandard conditions back in December, remains open in defiance of state law.

Under his proposal, Viera Rosa imagines a restructuring of Los Padrinos, the county’s only juvenile hall, that splits it into two separate halves. One would hold youth expected to stay in the facility for less than 30 days, while the other would be for longer stays and focus on “reducing recidivism and fostering resilience,” according to Viera Rosa.

That would allow the county to provide educational and mental health services, for example, that are tailored to the needs of the differing groups, he said.

The plan, however, requires the troubled facility to undergo construction while it is in operation, with youth being shifted from one side, to the other, depending on where the construction is taking place. Viera Rosa told the supervisors that work is necessary and must take place — whether they approve of his plan or not — because of the facility’s age.

A report estimated the construction could take up to three years.

The same state regulators that declared Los Padrinos “unsuitable” to house youth would need to sign off on the move to Kilpatrick and potentially on the structural changes to Los Padrinos.

The state found Los Padrinos unsuitable last year after it repeatedly failed inspections as a result of its inability to properly staff the juvenile hall. The county has refused to comply with the order to close, prompting a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge to drag the county, the District Attorney’s Office and the public defender into court to address why the facility shouldn’t be shuttered.

The proposal to move the girls out of Los Padrinos to Kilpatrick comes after two months of court testimony in which probation officials suggested moving youth from Los Padrinos to the county’s other facilities would not be feasible.

Judge Miguel Espinoza, who has expressed worry about destabilizing other facilities by forcing the department to move youth, has delayed a decision three times now. Espinoza’s delays came, in part, out of a desire to see how two ongoing reviews by the Board of State and Community Corrections, the agency that oversees California’s juvenile halls, played out.

L.A. County tried to appeal the BSCC’s findings during a reinspection in December, but the BSCC rejected that appeal on the same day that Viera Rosa gave his presentation to the supervisors. In a letter, Aaron Maguire, the BSCC’s acting executive director, concluded that its inspectors “correctly assessed that, at the time of the inspection, Los Padrinos did not have an adequate number of personnel sufficient to carry out the overall facility operation and its programming, to provide for safety and security of youth and staff, and meet established standards and regulations.”

A separate reinspection of the facility, conducted in early February, is still ongoing, according to the BSCC.

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Ducks edge Predators to gain ground in wild-card chase

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ANAHEIM — It might not have been a work of art, but two vital points went into the standings rather than any museum, as the Ducks defeated the Nashville Predators, 2-1, on Friday night at Honda Center.

They moved to within six points of a wild-card playoff berth with the victory, while the Predators, now playing primarily for pride, were unable to extend their four-game winning streak.

Alex Killorn and Troy Terry scored for the Ducks. Lukáš Dostál held the hosts in a battle that saw them out-shot nearly two to one, with that proportion being even more lopsided at points in the third period, by halting 28 pucks.

Jakub Vrana scored Nashville’s only goal, and Juuse Saros had 13 saves.

“It’s a huge win because the boys really pulled together,” Dostál said. “Nashville had a push there. They’re an experienced team. They have veteran guys, but I think we held our ground. It’s important for the win and for the growth [of the team].”

A stalemate persisted for much of the evening, with transparent turning points late in the second period and in the middle of the third.

With 8:40 to play, Killorn’s 15th goal of the season came after Trevor Zegras threw an area pass into the slot, where Killorn criss-crossed with Drew Helleson, swooping on the puck and skating across the crease for the game-deciding goal, and a bit of redemption.

Leo Carlsson added a secondary assist on the goal, bringing his and Zegras’ scoring streaks to four games apiece.

“I thought Leo and Z got better in the third period, and they got rewarded with (Killorn’s) goal there,” Ducks coach Greg Cronin said.

The Ducks had been in a tie game after Killorn’s interference penalty gave Nashville a power play. Early on, Dostál made a resplendent save, once again managing to reach out and knock down a puck that was labeled to one post as he slid toward the other.

“I can’t not mention Dostál, he was unbelievable,” Terry said.

On that same power play, however, Nashville regrouped to knot up the contest at the 4:25 mark behind Vrana’s hard one-timer from inside the blue line, which hit Dostál but squibbled through him.

The Ducks spent another 2:50 shorthanded, including 1:10 with a two-man disadvantage, escaping unscathed and propelling them to Killorn’s late, tie-breaking goal.

“The five-on-three that we had to kill was either going to make or break us,” Cronin said. “It was a trigger to get us to play a little bit more on our toes. There was more energy on the bench and in the building after that.”

For almost 36 minutes of the match, there was no score and few events to speak of, but a short spurt late in the middle frame enlivened the action and left the Ducks up 1-0 at the second intermission.

Terry had been dangerous for much of the night, weaving to the net for chances of his own and creating for others, before he scored at the 15:52 mark of the second period. A minute later, all hell broke loose in the Ducks’ crease as they scrambled frantically to prevent a tying goal.

Mason McTavish and Terry applied forecheck pressure, with Vatrano recovering the puck and sliding it across to Terry at the left faceoff dot, where he launched a missile that found its target under the bar to the far side. It was Terry’s 18th goal of the season and second since Jan. 29, but it reminded the world how he was able to score 37 times in 2021-22.

“It felt good. I haven’t been short on chances,” Terry said. “When Frank got it, I knew their (defenseman) had broken his stick, so I just tried to get over to that weak side. I knew (Ryan Strome) was going to the back post, and once I saw the D slide, I tried to get it off before (the shot was blocked).”

The Predators nearly clawed that goal right back, but Jackson LaCombe was on his toes and Radko Gudas was on his back, his belly and whatever else had to touch the ice to keep the puck from reaching Dostál, who also made a save during the sequence and then nearly slid the puck into his own net.

“It was a lot of fuss, but I think the guys blocked every single one of them, so they helped me out pretty much there,” Dostál said.

Twenty minutes came and went without a goal, with the Ducks failing to capitalize on a pair of power-play opportunities. LaCombe showed off his skating on a breakout that saw him elude three Predators by himself, as well as his deception when he looked off a penalty killer to set up a one-timer for McTavish in the right circle. Dostál helped keep the period scoreles with a cat-like glove save on Michael Bunting.

“It was a strange game. There was not a lot of energy. There wasn’t a lot of ice. It was kind of a tight-checking game,” Cronin said. “They were throwing pucks out and we were trying to gap up, and it seemed to be a little of a tennis match in the first period. There was just no rhythm to it.”

The Ducks will take to the skies for a three-game journey that will open against Cam Fowler and the St. Louis Blues, before heading to Dallas and concluding against these same Predators.

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Short-handed Lakers nearly stun Nuggets in finale of 0-4 trip

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DENVER — The nature of the NBA’s 82-game regular season naturally creates situations like the one the Lakers faced on Friday night against the Denver Nuggets.

On the road, down four of five starters. Without six of their top-eight rotation players. All during a stretch of six games in eight days, including three back-to-back sets, with Friday capping the first one.

When the Lakers’ injury report was released on Friday, which revealed that Luka Doncic, Dorian Finney-Smith and Gabe Vincent would join the list of the team’s unavailable players, the matchup against the Nuggets could have been viewed as a schedule loss.

The Lakers didn’t treat it that way.

Austin Reaves, Dalton Knecht and their teammates nearly pulled off an improbable victory at Ball Arena before falling to the Nuggets, 131-126, after Jamal Murray’s tiebreaking 3-pointer with 5.6 seconds left and Russell Westbrook’s exclamation point dunk that sealed the win for Denver (43-24).

“I’m proud of the group for their level of fight and resiliency,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “There’s a lot we could have done better. But the group competed and we gave ourselves a chance to win.”

Reaves (37 points, 13 assists, eight rebounds) and Knecht (32 points) led the short-handed Lakers (40-25), with both players making clutch plays down the stretch that kept the team in the game before eventually suffering their fourth straight loss to close an 0-4 trip.

“You always want to win,” Reaves said. “And regardless of who you take the floor with, we feel like we could win, and we went and put ourselves in a good position to do that. Losing sucks, but I’m happy with what these guys in the locker room did.”

With the Lakers trailing 124-123, Reaves stripped reigning league MVP Nikola Jokic for his third steal of the game and converted a layup on the other end to put the Lakers ahead by one with just over a minute left after they had trailed by 13 in the third.

Knecht helped add to that lead after a Murray turnover led to the rookie dunking in transition to put the visitors up by three – with Knecht cramping up on takeoff and taking a hard fall on his head/shoulders but staying in the game with the Lakers up 126-123 with 52 seconds left.

With little time to go over defensive plans during a timeout as Redick checked on Knecht after his fall, Jokic (28 points, seven rebounds, five assists, three steals) converted an and-1 floater over Christian Koloko, making the free throw to tie the score at 126 apiece with 48 seconds left.

“The play that Jokic got the and-one, I’ll take some ownership of that just because that was a short timeout and I ran on the floor to check on DK,” Redick said. “And then I ran back and I didn’t have time to really get us the right substitutions and matchups that I would have wanted. And that’s not a knock on CK, but I just kind of put him in a tough spot knowing that Jokic was going to go quick.”

After Reaves missed a jumper that would have put the Lakers up by two, Murray (26 points, five assists, four rebounds) sprung free out of a pick-and-roll with Jokic and knocked down a pull-up 3-pointer for a 129-126 Nuggets lead – just the latest big shot he has hit against the Lakers.

“[Jokic and I] were tangled up, trying to get up there when I saw Murray come up,” Knecht said of the play. “And CK told me to go out there and switch. It was kind of hard.”

Westbrook (17 points, seven assists, six rebounds) picked off Shake Milton’s inbounds pass on the Lakers’ ensuing possession, scoring the game-sealing basket.

After leading by 11 in the first and keeping the game close at halftime, trailing 71-67, the Lakers were on the cusp of being blown out before they used a 19-9 run to close the third quarter and cut a 13-point deficit to 102-99.

Knecht, starting near his hometown of Thornton, Colorado, had his highest-scoring game since mid-November.

“I told him in the huddle, I said, ‘Hey, if you want to shoot it, shoot it. I don’t care if you shoot it 35 times, we’re going to need every bucket you can get,’” Reaves said of Knecht. “So he’s a hooper.”

Milton (16 points, five rebounds, three assists) and two-way guard Jordan Goodwin (10 points, six rebounds) both scored in double figures for the Lakers with the increased playing time opportunities.

Koloko (eight points, seven rebounds) impressed with his second-half defense, altering multiple shots at the rim that didn’t end with blocks and denying Jokic the ball late.

“The spirit was great,” said Redick, whose team had an eight-game winning streak before this trip. “It’s been that and will continue to be that. And I think it was a good opportunity for a number of guys to play bigger minutes, Shake, in particular. Christian, defensively, in the second half was awesome. So happy for those guys that they played well.”

Despite feeling under the weather, Bronny James played 16 minutes and contributed five points.

LeBron James missed his third straight game with a left groin strain and returned to Los Angeles along with Rui Hachimura (left patellar tendinopathy) and Jaxson Hayes (bruised right knee) ahead of the Lakers’ game in Denver.

“We went 0-4, so it’s a pretty bad trip,” Reaves said. “But JJ said a week ago, ‘Everybody’s like Lakers in five.’ So we just don’t listen to any of it. We know when we’re fully healthy and got everybody on the team that we have a really good chance to beat anybody.

“I just see this group, coming together, locking in on one common goal and that’s to win. And [Friday] is the biggest testament to that. Very shorthanded and went and played a really good basketball team with probably the best player in the world. And went toe to toe and had an opportunity to win it. Just didn’t execute the last 50 seconds.”

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Amalia Holguin dazzles but Sage Hill girls basketball falls to Carondelet in CIF state Division I final

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Kamdyn Klamberg, left, consoles teammate Addison Uphoff of Sage Hill Lightning after Carondelet Cougars defeated Sage Hill Lightning 51-48 to win a girls CIF State Division I championship basketball game at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)
Kamdyn Klamberg, left, consoles teammate Addison Uphoff of Sage Hill Lightning after Carondelet Cougars defeated Sage Hill Lightning 51-48 to win a girls CIF State Division I championship basketball game at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)

SACRAMENTO — It’s been just over five years since Kobe Bryant and eight others died in a tragic helicopter crash. It’s been nine months since four of Bryant’s proteges from his Mambas youth girls basketball team graduated from Sage Hill.

Yet, with his youngest apprentice — Amalia Holguin — still playing for the Lightning and coach Kerwin Walters still at the helm, the influence of the Lakers great remains immense.

“Kobe is always going to be straight in the heart for all of us,” Walters said this week, “especially for myself and Amalia. It’s just really, really a personal thing. But he’s always going to be there.”

Bryant’s vision for Sage Hill continued to unfold Friday night at the CIF State championships.

The Lightning aspired for a second state title in four seasons as they squared off against Carondelet in the Division I final at Golden 1 Center.

With Holguin wowing the crowd with her 3-point shooting and passing, Sage Hill brought the energy. Unfortunately, the Lightning struggled at the foul line, and it cost them.

Sage Hill made 4 of 14 free throws and fell to Carondelet 51-48 in its bid to become a two-time state champion.

Carondelet sank 8 of 11 foul shots, including all four of its chances in the final 45 seconds for the final points of the game.

Walters, in his 13th season, and Holguin, the youngest player on Bryant’s famed youth team, shared a long embrace after the final buzzer as the Cougars (30-6) celebrated their first state title since 2004.

“This one hurts,” said Walters, who led Sage Hill to the state Division II title in 2022. “They hit free throws, we didn’t. If you can see the numbers, that’s where it all falls right now.”

“It’s abnormal for us,” the coach added. “We’re generally in the low 70s, mid 70s in free throw percentage.”

Sage Hill (23-12) missed a 3-pointer in the closing seconds in a chance to force overtime

Holguin, a junior, hit two of her four 3-pointers in the fourth period en route to a game-high 21 points. While her long-range shooting impressed the crowd, so did her spin move and assist to Kamdyn Klamberg (13 points) to give Sage Hill a 48-47 lead with about one minute left.

Amalia Holguin #10 of Sage Hill Lightning drives to the basket against the Carondelet Cougars in the first half of a girls CIF State Division I championship basketball game at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)
Amalia Holguin #10 of Sage Hill Lightning drives to the basket against the Carondelet Cougars in the first half of a girls CIF State Division I championship basketball game at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Friday, March 14, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)

The play came off one of Holguin’s four steals.

Sage Hill started two freshmen, a sophomore and two juniors.

“(Bryant) always wanted us to look in the mirror every day,” Holguin said. “I’m going to go home and probably watch some film on this and see how we can get better already for next year. … We’re always looking toward the future and I think we have a bright one.”

Carondelet led by as many as seven points in the first half before taking a 24-18 lead into intermission.

Holguin (10 points) and Klamberg (eight points) combined for all of the Lightning’s first-half points while seven players scored for Carondelet.

The Lightning received more contributions in the second half as freshman Addison Uphoff scored eight points and finished with six rebounds. Freshman center Eve Fowler scored four points to go along with four blocks and nine rebounds.

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