Los Angeles Times - 06.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

LATIMES.COM TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019B


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Odessa B. Washington


September 13, 1936 - August 1, 2019
Odessa B. Washington was an award-winning
mathematics teacher who retired from Crenshaw
High School in Los Angeles. Over the years,
Odessa touched the lives of many students. She
provided them with a solid mathematics foundation
that helped them to become successful in their
chosen fields. Odessa took on many leadership
roles to help ensure that Crenshaw had a stellar
mathematics department. Odessa has tutored
numerous students in Los Angeles and has
mentored many future teachers.
Odessa was a caring spirit who will be missed by
many. Funeral services will be held on Thursday,
August 8, 2019 at 1:30 p.m. at Angeles Mesa
Presbyterian Church, 3751 W. 54th Street in Los
Angeles.

latimes.com/placeobituary

Talmadge Spratt, 92, born in Amory,
Mississippi, passedaway July 24,2019.
His was a triumphant, rich story of
family life, business endeavor and
academic achievement. He was an
Army veteran, a teacher, businessman
and casting director for CBS. He was a
resident of Los Angeles for 75 years.
Services will be held on August
9, 2019 at 2:00 PM, at Forest Lawn,
Glendale–Little Church of the Flowers.
He is survived by his wife Linda and
many nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made to the charity of your choice.

March 10, 1927 - July 24, 2019

SPRATT, Talmadge


Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

SIMON, Roger


Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Simi Valley 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

SILVERTRUST, Harriet Doris


Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

POPPER, Betty


Our beloved mother, Claire Bernstein
Kopp, wife of Eugene H. Kopp for over
68 years, passed away on July 22nd
after a long battle with Alzheimer’s
disease. After earning her Ph.D. in
Psychology our mother dedicated her
life to research on infant and child
development, and her work is cited
in many college texts. She taught at
several prestigious schools, including
Claremont Graduate University and
UCLA. Her daily passions were her
husband, the three of us, her family,
friends, colleagues, and her students.
She loved the daily challenge of the
NYT crosswords.
Our mother loved the pristine
waterfalls and the serenity of Yosemite,
where she would often retreat with
her family to walk, read, sew, ski, and
write. In addition, she was a fabulous
cook, honoring her childhood in New
York by passing on the tradition of
preparing and hosting Passover Seders;
an accomplished seamstress who
made many of her own clothes; and a
college level author. At a later age she
returned to her love of art, and became
a docent at the Huntington Library’s
Portrait Gallery. Not content to be
our father’s passenger, she earned her
pilot’s license and was active in the
“99’s”, a women’s flying club.
At an early age she and our father
instilled both a love and respect for
education, which continues to this day.
As we grew older, she would frequently
remind us of how proud she was of
what each of us had accomplished.
Our mother is survived by her husband
Gene; three children: Carolyn, Michael
(Julie), and Paul (fiancée Alexandra);
three sisters: Sue, Ann (Tobi), and
Ruthie (Phil); and grandson, Andrew
(Lynn Joyner).

July 8, 1931 - July 22, 2019

KOPP, Claire Bernstein


Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

KAUFMAN, Rona


Passed away in Pasadena, CA on July
20, 2019, at the age of 88, surrounded
by his children and grandchildren.
Born in South Bend, IN, and a long-
time resident of Fallbrook, CA, he joins
his wife and two daughters, Katherine
and Rosemary, who made their
journeys ahead of him. He promoted
a rich legacy of family unity and
achievement and leaves a large wake
behind him.

August 11, 1930 - July 20, 2019

GRUNDY, Lawrence Eugene


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Mount Sinai Memorial Parks -
Hollywood Hills 800-600-
http://www.mountsinaiparks.org

WEITZMAN, Sylvia Mae


November 6, 1925 - July 30, 2019

TAYLOR, Peggy Malloy
Brodie

Resident of Concord,
CA. Peggy Malloy Brodie
Taylor passed away
Tuesday peacefully in her
sleep. Her daughter, Trish, was with
her and eased her passing. Peggy lived
her life guided by her love of Hawaii
and her children, and her gracious
spirit. She was, and will continue to be,
the heart of our family. And she will
always be known to us as “Tutu.”

Peggy was born in Honolulu, Hawaii,
to James and Elizabeth Malloy. She is
the middle of three daughters. Peggy
was preceded in death by her sister,
Betty Anne Nilsen; her husbands,
Edward Brodie and Eugene Taylor;
and two children, Douglas Brodie and
Diane Brodie.She is survived by her
sister Pat Malloy; two children, Trish
Brodie and Bruce Brodie (Kathy); five
grandchildren, Beth (Doug Gregory),
David (Missy), Jeff (Courtney), Jean
(Jeremiah James), and Danny; and
nine great-grandchildren, Matilda,
Archie, Luna, Penn, Grace, Theo, Janice,
Eddie and William.

Peggy grew up in Hawaii and
loved horseback riding, surfing and
socializing with her friends. After the
attack on Pearl Harbor, and the fear of
invasion, she sailed in a convoy to the
mainland to finish high school at Flint
Ridge, CA, and then on to Stephens
College in Columbia, MO, where she
met her husband, Ed Brodie. They
moved to Hawaii in 1957 where they
raised four children. Peggy eventually
moved to Houston and then to Walnut
Creek, CA, where she met and married
Gene Taylor.

Memorial Services will be held
on Saturday, August 10 at 2:00 pm,
at Oak Park Hills Mortuary, 3111 N.
Main Street, Walnut Creek, CA, with
reception immediately following.
Burial will be Monday, August 12, at
11:00 am at Oakmont Cemetery, 2099
Reliez Valley Rd., Lafayette, CA 94549.

In lieuof flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to the
Cancer Support Community (925-933-
0107), or Camellia Garden, 2832 Mi
Elana Circle, Walnut Creek, CA 94598,
attn: Rosie Savidge.

gomery, Ala., and Nashville
to attend conferences by the
National Organization of
Black Elected Legislative
Women, which she helped
found as a staff member and
for which she serves on the
board of directors.
“I respect and under-
stand the travel ban and
therefore don’t use public re-
sources,” said Mitchell, who
voted for the law in 2016.
There is some value, she
said, in having state lawmak-
ers talk to counterparts in
boycotted states to educate
them about California’s ide-
as on issues including
LGBTQ rights and criminal
justice reform.
“It’s important for me to
go because I am the only
black woman who serves in
the California state Senate,
and NOBEL is an organiza-
tion of black female state
legislators from across the
country,” Mitchell said. “It is
for me and my own sense of
connection to other women
who look like me, who do my
work.”
Texas was put on the
travel-ban list for a law al-
lowing foster care agencies
to deny adoptions and serv-
ices to children and parents
based on “sincerely held reli-
gious beliefs.”
A representative for Cali-
fornia Secretary of State Al-
ex Padilla defended Padilla’s
decision to use campaign
funds to travel to San Anto-
nio in 2017, saying it was “to
advocate for voting rights in
a state that is ground zero
for voter suppression.”
A similar justification
was provided for state Insur-
ance Commissioner Ricardo
Lara, when as a state sen-
ator he traveled to Dallas in
2017 to attend the annual
conference of the National
Assn. of Latino Elected and


Appointed Officials.
“With LGBT and immi-
grant rights under assault
across the country, I
thought it was important to
join other Latino leaders
and show California’s exam-
ple,” Lara said at the time.
Like Lara and Mitchell,
Assemblywoman Autumn
Burke (D-Marina del Rey)
voted for California’s travel
ban and later reported
spending campaign funds
for travel involving a Tech-
net conference in Austin,
Texas, last November. She
did not respond to a request
for comment.
Two employees of the
state auditor’s office at-
tended an annual confer-
ence in Mississippi last year,
but the trip was paid for by
the National Assn. of State
Auditors so the pair could
present information about
an award-winning audit
they conducted, a repre-
sentative said.
State Auditor Elaine
Howle is past president of
the group and would nor-
mally have attended its an-
nual meeting, but did not
consider traveling to the
event because of the state
law, spokeswoman Margari-
ta Fernández said.
Joel Anderson was a Re-
publican state senator when
he traveled in 2017 to Tennes-
see to attend legislative
meetings sponsored by the
American Legislative Ex-
change Council. The group
paid all of his expenses be-
cause he is a board member,
he said.
“My colleagues had an
opportunity to grandstand
but now that the television
cameras are off it was unen-
forced,” Anderson said of
the travel-ban law he voted
against. “It was the dumbest
thing I’ve heard of in my en-
tire life.”

The law also prohibits us-
ing public resources to send
academics and sports teams
from California universities
to the 10 states, but travel
has continued as teams turn
to private financing, includ-
ing donations from boosters
and corporate sponsors, to
keep their schedules.
When the Cal State Long
Beach men’s basketball
team was invited in Novem-
ber to play in a tournament
in Starkville, Miss., it asked
the company that staged the
tournament to cover its trav-
el and hotel costs. Track
stars were able to participa-
te in the NCAA Track and
Field National Champi-
onships this year because of
private funds raised from
supporters, said Andy Fee,
the university’s athletic di-
rector.
“It’s extra work,” Fee
said. “We’ve been lucky that
we do have folks who under-
stand the need to fundraise
private dollars.”
Fee said he understands
why California has the travel
restrictions and is con-
cerned about discrimi-
natory policies that led to
states being put on the no-go
list.
UC officials support and
comply with the state law,
said spokeswoman Sarah
McBride. “However, UC has
faced challenges imple-
menting this law in areas
such as academic research
and teaching, student re-
cruitment and athletics,”
she said. In one case, stu-
dents at Cal State Fullerton
had to crowdsource funding
to attend a debate competi-
tion.
The policy has drawn the
ire of government leaders in
the boycotted states.
“California’s attempt to
influence public policy in our
state is akin to Tennessee

expressing its disapproval of
California’s exorbitant
taxes, spiraling budget defi-
cits, runaway social welfare
programs, and rampant il-
legal immigration,” said a
resolution approved by the
Tennessee Legislature in
2017.
Tennessee’s Republican
Gov. Bill Lee, who has seen
California businesses in-
cluding Mitsubishi decide to
move operations to his state,
believes the Golden State’s
travel policy is a distraction.
“Gov. Lee thinks it’s bet-
ter to focus less on divisive
politics and more on job cre-
ation,” said Chris Walker, a
spokesman. “If leaders in
other states adopted a simi-
lar perspective, perhaps
companies wouldn’t be leav-
ing those states.”
California leads the na-
tion in new business start-
ups, said Lenny Mendonca,
Newsom’s chief economic
and business advisor and di-
rector of the Governor’s Of-
fice of Business and Econo-
mic Development.
“This is a state that val-
ues inclusion, both in our so-
ciety and in the workplace
and we encourage all busi-
nesses that share that belief
to join us,” Mendonca said.
“They will be in good com-
pany.”
Despite the criticism of
the law and how it has been
followed, Garrett-Pate of
Equality California said it
has had an effect on the na-
tional dialogue on LGBTQ
issues.
“I do think it is now part
of the conversation when
states are considering dis-
criminatory policies like the
ones we have seen in the
states to which travel is
banned in California,” Gar-
rett-Pate said. “We want
them to think twice before
they do this.”

ASSEMBLY SPEAKER Anthony Rendon, center, and state Sen. Holly Mitchell, with then-Gov. Jerry Brown
in 2018, have curbed traveling to states with laws that California says discriminate against LGBTQ people.


Gary CoronadoLos Angeles Times

Still visiting banned states


[Travel ban,from B1]


ing in Orange County Supe-
rior Court. He was previ-
ously charged with one fel-
ony count of murder. If con-
victed, he faces 25 years to
life in state prison.
Last year, Newport
Beach police officials re-
leased the true-crime
podcast “Countdown to
Capture,” which authorities
hoped would drum up inter-
est in the case and lead to
Chadwick’s arrest.
Authorities had long sus-
pected that, even without
passports, Chadwick prob-
ably had been able to leave
the country.
Investigators discovered
several books inside his
home detailing how some-
one can change their iden-
tity and ways to live on the
run.
Chadwick also drained
several hundred thousand
dollars from his bank ac-
counts and took cash ad-
vances on his credit cards
before he disappeared, po-
lice said.
The Orange County dis-
trict attorney’s office and
the Newport Beach Police
Department will hold a joint
news conference Tuesday
regarding Chadwick’s cap-
ture.


Colleen Shalby contributed
to this report.


Suspect


went


missing


in 2015


[Fugitive,from B1]

There’s no record to sub-
stantiate the five-year claim,
and tests performed by in-
vestigators failed to produce
the results the company
boasted, Feuer said. His of-
fice also said two toxic
chemicals were mixed into
the spray, despite the com-
pany’s claims it is nontoxic.
The lawsuit came as a
surprise to Moseley, who
said he’s been in communi-
cation with Feuer’s office for
months over his company’s
claims.
“It’s complete B.S. ... a
witch hunt,” Moseley said.
“They were sent different
samples they could pick and
choose from. They’ve got

everything.”
At least 15 people in
Santa Barbara County and
35 in the city of Los Angeles
have purchased the spray
treatment for their homes,
which is meant to cover exte-
rior walls at a cost of $3.
per square foot, Feuer said.
People “often live in vul-
nerable areas because
they’re in hillsides and other
locations where we’ve seen
fires erupt,” Feuer said. “In
that kind of a setting, you
could imagine people reach-
ing out in the hope that some
[product] is going to work
for them. You can imagine
[them] being desperate and
trying to find some way to
protect their homes.”

Moseley maintains his
product works. He’s had
other inventions featured on
TV and in The Times. But
his website also includes the
logos of agencies such as the
National Fire Protection
Assn., which said Monday
that it has not endorsed any
of Moseley’s products.
“If consumers falsely be-
lieve that their homes are
protected from wildfires
when in fact their homes are
not, those consumers could
delay evacuation, placing
their lives, the lives of their
families and loved ones, and
the lives of first responders
at great risk,” said Santa
Barbara County’s Dudley in
a prepared statement.

CHARREDhomes in Paradise, Calif. L.A. City Atty. Mike Feuer said a company’s
claims that its spray will protect against fires could give homeowners false hope.

Carolyn ColeLos Angeles Times

Product doesn’t work, suit says


[Anti-fire spray,from B1]
Free download pdf