Police said the Long Beach teenager was taken into custody on suspicion of murder.
Long Beach Rite Aid closing as company starts bankruptcy process again
The Rite Aid at Anaheim Street and Redondo Avenue will close June 2, and the chain’s other stores will eventually be sold or shut down.
Schooner or Later, a beloved brunch spot that revels in Long Beach history, is turning 40
To celebrate, owner Denise Lund will be serving customers with the same joy and comfort she’s dished out for decades.
Long Beach’s open streets festival is Saturday; here’s when, where and a list of activities
For the first time, it’s coming to West Long Beach with plenty of room to ride bikes alongside live music, DJs, kids’ activities, food and a beer garden.
Extra Frames: The photos we didn’t publish in April
Extra Frames is an occasional collection of images taken by the Long Beach Post’s photographers that, for various reasons, were not included in any stories but are too remarkable to be forgotten or left unpublished in the archives.
Sex abuse convictions upheld against ex-LBUSD teacher who preyed on students
Mark Anthony Santo, who taught at Lindbergh Middle School and Jordan High School, was seeking to overturn his prison sentence of 80 years to life.
Demolition begins on defunct shopping center to make way for 8-story building with 272 apartments
The old City Place Shopping Center is being knocked down as part of a major plan to redevelop entire blocks of Downtown Long Beach.
After Long Beach repealed a tax exemption, SoCal Edison wants to pass the cost along to local ratepayers
An increase in your electrical bill is coming, but how big the price tag is will depend on who pays it: just Long Beach customers or everyone in the region.
California lawmakers kill bid to force HOAs to follow open meeting laws
A Republican bill to require more transparency from California’s 50,000 homeowners associations failed to advance out of committee despite bipartisan support.
Unprecedented vote shows Dems fractured over housing policy
Two consecutive committee chairs getting overruled by their committee members signifies a growing rift among California Democrats about how to address the housing crisis.