Los Angeles Times - 26.11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

$2.75DESIGNATED AREAS HIGHER © 2019 WSCE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2019 latimes.com


The Conception dive
boat, on which 34 people
died in a Labor Day fire, had
been exempted by the U.S.
Coast Guard from stricter
safety rules designed to
make it easier for passen-
gers to escape, documents
and interviews by The Times
show.
The Conception was one
of about 325 small passenger
vessels built before 1996 and
given special exemptions
from safety standards that
the Coast Guard imposed on
new vessels, some of which
required larger escape
hatches and illuminated exit
signs, records show.
The rules require vessels
to have an escape hatch at
least 32 inches wide and exit
signs that are illuminated.
The Conception, built in
1981, had an escape hatch
that was only 24 inches wide,
according to several federal
regulators who requested
anonymity in order to speak
on the matter. It also did not
have illuminated exit signs.
It’s unclear whether such
measures would have made
a difference on the Concep-
tion, on which passengers on
a weekend diving expedition
weretrapped in the hull dur-
ing an early morning fire and
unable to escape. Crew
members on the deck said
they were unable to reach
the passengers because of
intense flames.
But federal officials in-
vestigating the worst mar-
itime disaster in modern

California history immedi-
ately zeroed in on the func-
tionality of the two exits in
the area where passengers
slept in stacked bunks be-
neath the waterline. Na-
tional Transportation Safe-
ty Board investigator Jenni-
fer Homendy told The
Times in September that
she was“taken aback” by the
small size of the emergency
escape hatches, adding that
she thought it would be diffi-
cult for passengers to exit
during an emergency in the
dark.

Boat that burned


was exempt from


tighter standards


Newer Coast Guard


rules for exit signs and


escape hatches didn’t


apply to Conception,


documents show.


By Mark Puente
and Richard Winton

[SeeConception,A12]

F


red Rogers proposed to Sara Joanne Byrd in a
letter. A letter she lost almost immediately in a
flurry of excitement as she rushed to a pay
phone to give him her answer: “Yes, yes, yes!”
Both 24, she just 11 days his senior, they
were friends but not yet lovers. It was 1952 and they
were in the midst of a long-distance courtship that
began at Rollins College in Florida. She recalls being
attracted to Fred, but they weren’t particularly physical
with each other outside of the sorority and fraternity
dances they attended together. Joanne — she dropped
“Sara” early on, deeming it too stuffy — was raised in a
Puritan home, and she was repulsed by her school-
mates who talked about “sucking face.” Any kissing she
said she and Fred did was “pretty unpracticed.”
When Fred headed to New York after graduation for
an apprenticeship at NBC — the first stop on his way to
“Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” — she stayed in Florida
to get her master’s degree in music. They kept in touch
through the mail, though they weren’t very good writ-
ers, Joanne says. Fred told Joanne about his hopes for
the future — about the kind of people he wanted the two
of them to become. Even though she didn’t know him all
that well by the time he proposed, that’s what she clung
to — the idea that this was a man with a strong moral
center.
She still has most of the letters from their early
courtship. They’re tucked in a


COLUMN ONE


A welcome to the


‘Neighborhood’


from Mrs. Rogers


While advancing her Mister’s


legacy, she corrects the legend


By Amy Kaufman


DON’Tput him on a pedestal, says Joanne Rogers
of the man she was married to for over 50 years.


Lynn Johnson

[SeeRogers,A8]

WASHINGTON —A fed-
eral judge strengthened the
power of Congress in its bat-
tles with President Trump
on Monday, ruling that for-
mer White House Counsel
Donald McGahn may be re-
quired to testify under oath
about what he heard and
saw during special counsel
Robert S. Mueller III’s probe
of Russian election med-
dling.
The judge’s decision up-
holding a congressional sub-
poena is a victory for House
Democrats, who have been
anxious to establish a legal
precedent that could force
other top Trump adminis-
tration officials to testify be-
fore Congress.
And although the case
began as a result of the
Mueller inquiry, it could
have an impact in the cur-
rent impeachment proceed-
ings against Trump. It sets
the stage for what could be a
historic court test of the
president’s ability to prevent
senior aides from testifying.
In her ruling, U.S. District
Judge Ketanji Brown Jack-
son rejected Trump’s claim
that McGahn was “abso-
lutely immune” from being
called to testify, even though
he was no longer a White
House employee. McGahn
was following Trump’s order
not to cooperate with House
investigators.
“With respect to senior-
level presidential aides, ab-
solute immunity from com-
pelled congressional proc-
ess simply does not exist,”
the judge wrote in a 120-page
opinion. This claimed im-
munity “appears to be a fic-
tion that has been fastidi-
ously maintained over time
through the force of sheer

RULING IS


WIN FOR


HOUSE IN


TRUMP


BATTLE


A judge says former


White House Counsel


Donald McGahn


may be required to


testify under oath.


By David G. Savage

[SeeMcGahn,A7]

RAMS TROUNCED BY THE RAVENS


Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times

Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson — who threw for five touchdowns at the Coliseum on Monday
night — is stopped short of the goal line by Jalen Ramsey of the Rams, who lost, 45-6. SPORTS, D

AVDIIVKA, Ukraine —
Everybody could hear the
burst of automatic weapons
in the distance. But inside
the dimly lighted halls of the
Avdiivka City Hospital, doc-
tors and nurses paid it little
mind.
The hospital sits three
miles from the front line of
the five-year war between
Ukraine and Russia-backed
separatists. The echoes of
battle have long been their
daily soundtrack.
The hospital director, Dr.
Iryna Lagoda, can identify
the caliber of each mortar
round and whether it’s in-
coming or outgoing.
She and the staff often
feel forgotten out here near
the front — perhaps never
more so than when they
learned along with the
rest of the world that Presi-
dent Trump had withheld
$391 million in military aid to

VIKTOR RODCHENKO is among the civilian patients at the Avdiivka hospital.

Brendan HoffmanFor The Times

A city hospital soldiers on


at front line of Ukraine war


The facility now treats more troops than civilians


RUSSIA

RUSSIA

UKRAINE DONBAS

CRIMEAN
PENINSULA

Sea of Azov

Donetsk

Avdiivka

OCCUPIED BY
PRO-RUSSIA
MILITIAS

Hospital in Ukraine’s war zone


A hospital in Avdiivka sits about three miles from the
front line of the five-year war between Ukraine and
Russia-backed separatists.

OpenStreetMap,liveuamap.com
Los Angeles Times

By Sabra Ayres

[SeeUkraine,A4]

SAN FRANCISCO — Trolling the
East Coast and Midwest with tales of
Thanksgiving dinner while wearing
shorts under sunny skies is a Califor-
nia tradition.
But this year is going to be differ-
ent.
Forecasters are warning of a
stormy Thanksgiving holiday week
marked by rain across the state and


snow levels so low in elevation they
could close major freeways such as In-
terstates 5, 15 and 80. The storm is ex-
pected to bring such cold tempera-
tures that snow may accumulate even
on the floor of high-desert cities such
as Lancaster, Hesperia and Barstow.
Up to 2 feet of snow could hit Big Bear
and Wrightwood and up to 4 feet
around Lake Tahoe and Mammoth.
The forecast has holiday travelers
checking their plans and hosts fret-
ting about whether turkey al fresco for
20 could end in disaster. Just two years

ago, Los Angeles sat down to a
Thanksgiving feast just after the high
temperature hit a crispy 92 degrees —
an all-time record. This year, San Di-
ego could be facing one of its coldest
Thanksgivings since records began
being kept in 1874, with a forecast high
of just 60 degrees.
“Everybody can definitely break
out their Uggs and Lands’ End par-
kas,” climatologist Bill Patzert said.
L.A.’s high temperature on turkey day
could remain in the 50s; San Fran-

Not your postcard holiday


Rain and snow will make for a challenging Thanksgiving


in a region used to sunshine and Instagram-ready shots


By Rong-Gong Lin II
and Hannah Fry


[SeeStorm,A9]

Frank Biondi
Jr., former chief
at studios, dies

The industry leader
helped build HBO
and Viacom into
formidable companies.
He was also chairman
and CEO of Universal
in the 1990s. He was 74.
CALENDAR, E

Weather
Mostly sunny.
L.A. Basin: 66/51. B

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