Woman With Knife Arrested at Venice News Conference About Public Safety

Los Angeles City Councilman and mayoral candidate Joe Buscaino was speaking about the city's homelessness crisis and announcing his plan for creating a safer city during the morning news conference.

A woman with a knife is arrested at a Venice news conference.
NBCLA

A woman with a knife was arrested Monday during a Venice Beach news conference at which a city council member and mayoral candidate was speaking about Los Angeles' homelessness crisis and public safety. 

Los Angeles City Councilman and mayoral candidate Joe Buscaino was speaking about the city's homelessness crisis and announcing his plan for creating a safer city during the morning news conference. A Los Angeles Police Department captain was cut by the knife while assisting Buscaino's private security team in detaining the woman, according to the LAPD Officer Lizeth Lomeli, who said the injury was minor.

Video shows the officers taking the knife from the woman, who was not immediatley identified. She told officers she uses to knife to protect herself.

It was not immediately clear what occurred before the woman was detained, but the LAPD said that she was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. 

“I am grateful for my safety, the safety of the public, and the quick action of the Los Angeles Police Department,'' Buscaino said in a statement released this morning. "This is exactly why I was in Venice Beach today, charting a new course for our city, and I am convinced now, more than ever, that bold action is needed to make our city safer for everyone, regardless of housing status.''

Buscaino announced on March 15 that he will run for mayor in 2022. The 46-year-old former police officer, who represents the 15th Council District, said he will focus his campaign on quality of life through improving

public safety and addressing homelessness.

Local

Get Los Angeles's latest local news on crime, entertainment, weather, schools, COVID, cost of living and more. Here's your go-to source for today's LA news.

Living Desert announces death of critically endangered leopard

7 people hurt in rollover crash in downtown LA

“Our city has devolved into a place where chaos is common ... people tell me every day that they no longer feel safe in our city,'' Buscaino said.

Stating that ``homelessness makes our city less safe for everyone,'' Buscaino laid out his plan to create a safer L.A., which he said would include three components:

Build more housing.

Connect people experiencing homelessness with temporary housing.

Enforce a ban on encampments in parks, beaches and sidewalks.

Copyright City News Service
Contact Us