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Neighbors express concern for man over frequent train-horn blasts
Los Angeles Times
|August 15, 2025
“Oh, it’s Gary’s house,” Espinoza said with a note of surprise.
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She’s lived in the neighborhood for 24 years and couldn't pinpoint the source of the horn blasts. She had planned to call police and noted that the frequency of the horn had increased in the last few weeks.
“He's a nice enough man and I say hello to him whenever I walk by,” she said. “You know this is in the Book of Revelations. The horns. Well, trumpets. But it’s like the same thing. It’s alarming.”
The officers knocked on his door for several minutes.
“We just want to talk,” one of the officers said as a Times reporter watched from the sidewalk.
Boyadzhyan appeared at his door in shorts and a T-shirt. He spoke to the officers for several minutes. After the conversation, Officer Chase Lambert said the call to the residence was over a neighborly dispute. He and other officers declined to elaborate on the dispute.
“We are aware,” Lambert said motioning to the property and the horn. “There are things that are being worked on to alleviate the horn issue.”
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