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LAPD'S FIRE RESPONSE WAS IN DISARRAY
Los Angeles Times
|November 05, 2025
The unprecedented scale of the Palisades disaster led to chaos, the department says.
WALLY SKALIJ Los Angeles Times A FIREFIGHTER works on a house in Malibu in January. At times the flames were advancing at 300 yards a minute, the LAPD said.
The Los Angeles Police Department has released a report that identifies several shortcomings in its response to the devastating Palisades fire, including communication breakdowns, inconsistent record-keeping and poor coordination at times with other agencies—most notably the city's Fire Department.
The after-action report called the January blaze a “once in a lifetime cataclysmic event” and praised the heroic actions of many officers, but said the LAPD's missteps presented a “valuable learning opportunity” with more climate-related disasters likely looming in the future.
LAPD leaders released the 92-page report and presented the findings to the Police Commission at the civilian oversight panel's public meeting Tuesday.
The report found that while the Fire Department was the lead agency, coordination with the LAPD was “poor” on Jan. 7, the first day of the fire. Though personnel from both agencies were working out of the same command post, they failed to “collectively establish a unified command structure or identify shared objectives, missions, or strategies,” the report said.
Uncertainty about who was in charge was another persistent issue, with more confusion sown by National Guard troops that were deployed to the area. Department leaders were given no clear guidelines on what the Guard's role would be when they arrived, the report said.
The mix-ups were the result of responding to a wildfire of unprecedented scale, officials said. At times the flames were advancing at 300 yards a minute, LAPD Assistant Chief Michael Rimkunas told the commission.
This story is from the November 05, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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