-
Amazon’s new AI search creates images as you type to find products - 47 mins ago
-
High-school students build mortgage-free homes for injured veterans - 2 hours ago
-
What COVID is teaching doctors about the relationship between viruses and cancer - 2 hours ago
-
Behind the rising costs of ticket prices for concerts, sports and more - 4 hours ago
-
Oliver Tree, musician and Santa Cruz native, dies in helicopter crash - 8 hours ago
-
How SpaceX is influencing the local economy in Texas - 10 hours ago
-
4 Takeaways From Ivory Coast’s Last-Gasp Win Over Ecuador At World Cup - 11 hours ago
-
Singer Oliver Tree killed in helicopter collision in Rio de Janeiro - 14 hours ago
-
Trump says U.S. deal with Iran “is now complete,” authorizes removal of Navy blockade of Strait of Hormuz - 14 hours ago
-
California high surf and coastal flooding risk continues until Wednesday - 15 hours ago
Reward increased in cold-case killing of L.A. County 4-year-old
A reward for information that could solve the cold-case killing of a 4-year-old Altadena boy has jumped to $85,000.
The L.A. County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved reinstating the reward in the decade-old slaying and increasing it by $10,000.
“We hope that with this reward reinstated, someone out there is willing to come forward and give us answers that can bring justice and peace to my family,” said Juana Esparza, grandmother of the young victim, in a news release. “If you know something — anything — we beg you to come forward and give us closure.”
The boy, Salvador “Chavita” Esparza, was shot and killed on the porch of a relative’s home in July 2016.
Salvador Esparza III, age 4, was killed in Altadena on July 5, 2016.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Salvador was shot July 5, when a man walked up to a home in the 500 block of Figueroa Drive and began shooting at people on the porch, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The gunman fled in a dark-colored car, investigators said. Authorities at the time believed that the target might have been a 27-year-old gang member who was at the home. He was injured in the attack but survived, The Times reported.
When the investigation began in August of that year, the reward was $20,000. Over the last decade, the reward has been incrementally increased by the Board of Supervisors as the search continues for any clues in the case. In the last update, the reward increased by $10,000, according to the county motion.
The increased reward represents a renewed effort to generate leads in the homicide investigation and bring justice to the Esparza family, the Board of Supervisors said in a news release.
“Little Salvador’s life was taken in a senseless act of violence a decade ago, but our commitment to seeking justice for him and his family remains unchanged,” Supervisor Kathryn Barger said in a statement.
Former Times staff writer Nicole Santa Cruz contributed to this report.





