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Page 2 July 21, 2016 Police Reports Tue 7/5/16 to Sun 7/10/16 ROBBERY 4600 W EL SEGUNDO BL APARTMENT COMMON AREAS (LNDRY,CLB HSE,ETC) Tue 7/5/16 21:56 Property Taken: silver iphone 6 with a pink case ROBBERY W 118TH ST/S GREVILLEA AV STREET, HIGHWAY, ALLEY Wed 7/6/16 06:17 Property Taken: Black Purse, Debit cards, California ID card, Medications, U.S. currency ROBBERY 12800 S PRAIRIE AV PARKING LOT Wed 7/6/16 18:05 ROBBERY 12500 S HAWTHORNE BL STREET, HIGHWAY, ALLEY Thu 7/7/16 18:29 AREAS (LNDRY,CLB HSE,ETC) BURGLARY 13600 S YUKON AV Thu 7/7/16 11:53 ROBBERY 14100 S CERISE AV STREET, HIGHWAY, ALLEY Fri 7/8/16 00:24 Property Taken: grey color apple iphone s6 909-465-3132 BURGLARY – RESIDENTIAL 13600 S DOTY AV APARTMENT COMMON ROBBERY 13900 S YUKON AV STREET, HIGHWAY, ALLEY Fri 7/8/16 17:45 Property Taken: (4) PIZZAS, THERMAL PIZZA DELIEVERY BAG BURGLARY – RESIDENTIAL 14100 S DOTY AV APARTMENT/CONDO Fri 7/8/16 20:02 Property Taken: play station 3, hp laptop computer, tailgator karaoke, garage door opener Method of Entry: UNKNOWN BURGLARY – COMMERCIAL 4700 W EL SEGUNDO BL CHECK CASHING Fri 7/8/16 21:39 Method of Entry: PRIED BURGLARY – RESIDENTIAL 14100 S DOTY AV APARTMENT/CONDO Fri 7/8/16 21:52 Property Taken: BLK/WHT DELL STUDIO LAPTOP, CHILD BIRTH CERTIFICATE. Method of Entry: UNKNOWN BURGLARY – COMMERCIAL 14700 S OCEAN GATE AV DEPARTMENT STORE Sat 7/9/16 05:27 Property Taken: Xbox 1 consoletc division, Xbox 1 lego movie bundle, Galaxy Tablet 7.0 Method of Entry: PRIED BURGLARY 11900 S ACACIA AV Sat 7/9/16 09:24 BURGLARY 11500 S OXFORD AV Sat 7/9/16 13:38 ROBBERY 12800 S CRENSHAW BL FAST FOOD STORE Sun 7/10/16 00:16 Property Taken: CA ID CARD BEARING THE NAME POE: SINGLE SWING DOOR Entry Loc: FRONT Weapon: HANDGUN • Obituaries AUDREY B. ROGERS September 20, 1926 - July 13, 2016 Mrs. Audrey Madge (Brown) Rogers passed away at home in Inglewood, California on July 13, 2016, after a long battle with Parkinsons Disease and a recent stroke during hospitalization for pneumonia. She would have been 90 years of age on her next birthday in September. She had been an Inglewood resident since the 1950’s. Her body will be flown from Inglewood Mortuary to be buried alongside her husband at Coop Prairie Cemetery in Mansfield, Arkansas. The ashes of her sister and four beloved pets will be buried with her. She was born in Barber township in Logan County, Arkansas in 1926 to parents Arthur Brown and Lula (Davis) Brown; and she was raised in Huntington, Arkansas (south of Ft. Smith). Her mother was one-half Native American Indian. Audrey survived cancer twice in her lifetime, and a major stroke in 2006. The death of her husband, John David Rogers, preceded hers by 23 years, and she also outlived her siblings -- two brothers, Ray and Roy, and her sister, Edra. She is survived by several loving nieces and nephews, their children, their childrens’ children, and recently her first great-great-grandniece, Scarlett; as well as loving friends, in-laws, and caregivers. Most of her closest relatives live in Oklahoma, with some in-laws and one niece in California. Audrey was a waitress all her working life, and loved it, finding jobs in Arkansas and Oklahoma first; then moving to Southern California in her twenties where she worked at various restaurants, including a few years at Jola Bowl (long since closed) on La Brea in Inglewood; then many years at Ollie Hammond’s Steakhouse on restaurant row in Beverly Hills, until it closed; and also many years at Ships Coffee Shop at La Cienega and Olympic, until it closed as well. Her last job was at Denny’s on Manchester in Inglewood. Her waitress friends say she was the best, both as a friend and waitress. She worked into her seventies before Parkinsons forced her to give it up, and she always wished she could go back to work. She was a gentle person -- notable for her kindness to animals and concern for children, her generosity in helping loved ones in need (you didn’t even have to ask), her good-natured attitude/repartee with everyone she met, and her tendency to find humor in even the worst of times. She was a rock of dependability, and surprisingly strong-willed when it came to doing what she thought was right. She carried herself like a lady, had long, beautiful nails, and loved wearing fingernail polish (preferably fire-engine red) and costume jewelry. She was a ”people person” -- fun to be around, always uplifting and supportive, and will be sorely missed by those fortunate enough to have known and loved her. • Film Review “Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru” Captures Grandeur of Mega Self-Help Event By Ryan Rojas for www.cinemacy.com “Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru,” a new documentary about the larger-than-life motivational speaker and communicator, will be watched by three different types of people: the first, of course, will be Robbins’ ever-devout fans and followers, who most likely will praise the movie for its very existence. The second type of person will be the cynical, critical person, arguably having a pre-loaded bias or thought of Robbins as more huckster than savior. The third type of person, someone who might find themselves more comfortably in the middle, will no doubt get the most out of what this movie has to offer. From Academy Award-winning director Joe Berlinger, the man behind such seminal non-fiction documentaries as the “Paradise Lost” trilogy and “Metallica: Some Kind of Monster” (the latter film, which Robbins approved of in getting this documentary made), trades in his darker, more investigative documentary exposé for something unapologetically hopeful, choosing to show the more uplifting side of Robbins’ work rather than a take-down approach. On that note, those looking for a deeper, more personal, profile of Robbins may be left unsatisfied. Those who are looking for a peek behind the curtains of one of the most famous self-help Tony Robbins electrifies the audience in ‘Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru.’ Courtesy of Netflix. events, however, will have more than enough footage to take in here. Covering the six-days of Robbins’ famous “Date With Destiny” at a convention center in Boca Raton, Florida (a hop-skip-and-jump away from his ocean side mansion), more than 2,500 people from 71 different countries excitedly await their own personal life-changing transformations. At about $5,000 a ticket for the weeklong event, Anthony “Tony” Robbins, (though he would prefer “life-strategist”) has built his empire on loyalty, charisma, and results. Standing at an immense  6’7” with  a gravely voice and fixed gaze (while dropping profanity-laden language to snap people into the present moment), Robbins’ work is the epitome of tough love by calling people out on the things they are choosing not to confront. At one hour and 55 minutes, “I Am Not Your Guru” shows the entire gamut of the seminar. Condensed down from 12 hours a day to a highlight reel of select participants sharing their stories of hardship and traumatic pasts (try not to think anything of the fact that the people who make the cut are mostly attractive women), it is the raw emotion and vulnerability of the crowd that offers real moments of honesty. Horrific scenes of childhood sex slavery, suicidal thoughts, and the general feeling of being unloved are just some of the issues brought up here, most of which Robbins relates to with his own abused past. Now, back to the overarching uneasiness that a self-help documentary might inspire: people will take whatever they wish out of a movie like this, depending on what they are looking for. Objectively, documentaries are thought to be real when they are without personal bias, rather than amplifying a certain side of a story. In this regard, Berlinger is unapologetic about how he portrays his subject, intending to highlight the good a film like this can bring. In an industry of evergrowing takedown documentaries that seek out the bad in the world, Berlinger attempts to be among the minorities of good-hearted and inspiring films. What is entirely undeniable, however, is that Robbins helps people in need of help, seemingly telling them the things that they already know but in his trademark will-power framed mindset. Perhaps Robbins is as divisive as he is because what he’s selling might be smoke and mirrors: is the idea of happiness an illusion? Is willing yourself to be happy delusional? Does it last beyond the six-day event? And if it works, does it really matter? As Christian Bale’s Batman says at the end of 2008’s “The Dark Knight” in response to a series of crimes that have been pinned on the caped crusader, “Sometimes,  the truth isn’t good enough. Sometimes people deserve more. Sometimes, people deserve to have their faith rewarded.” “Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru” is unrated, but features strong language. 115 minutes. Now streaming on Netflix. •


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