California fires updates: Death toll in Los Angeles fires rises to 24

Thousands of firefighters are battling the sprawling wildfires across LA.

At least 24 people are believed to be dead and more than a dozen others remain unaccounted for as multiple fires, fueled by severe drought conditions and strong Santa Ana winds, continue to rage across Southern California, leaving fire crews scrambling to contain the historic destruction.

Thousands of firefighters are battling several sprawling wildfires across 45 square miles of densely populated Los Angeles County. The largest, the Palisades Fire, in Pacific Palisades, has scorched nearly 24,000 acres, destroyed thousands of structures and is 11% contained. The Eaton Fire, in Altadena, now stands at more than 14,100 acres and is 27% contained. The Hurst Fire near Sylmar has burned 799 acres and is 89% contained.

About 105,000 people remain under mandatory evacuation orders and another 87,000 are under evacuation warnings.

Jan 22, 10:08 am

Status of Palisades, Eaton fires

The Palisades Fire, which began in the Pacific Palisades on Jan. 7, has destroyed or damaged more than 6,000 structures. It's covered more than 23,700 acres and is at 68% containment.

The Eaton Fire north of Pasadena also began on Jan. 7 and has destroyed or damaged more than 10,000 structures. It's burned over 14,000 acres and is at 91% containment.

Jan 10, 2025, 11:07 PM EST

LA Clippers game postponed due to wildfires

The LA Clippers game Saturday against the Charlotte Hornets at Intuit Dome has been postponed due to the wildfires in Los Angeles.

Next week's Clippers' games at Intuit Dome against the Miami Heat on Jan. 13 and against the Brooklyn Nets on Jan. 15 will continue as scheduled, the venue said.

Jan 10, 2025, 10:29 PM EST

LA County investigating why millions of residents got erroneous evacuation order

LA County officials said they are getting to the bottom of why an evacuation order erroneously went to millions of people on Thursday during the outbreak of a new, rapidly spreading fire.

The evacuation alert Thursday was meant for residents of the West Hills area near the Kenneth Fire -- but instead, the alert went to nearly 10 million residents across the county.

The county said its Emergency Operations Center sent an accurate, targeted alert about 4 p.m. local time on Thursday, but that it was erroneously distributed "far outside the intended geographic area" once it left the county's center. The company that operates the software for the county's emergency alert messages is now conducting testing and has also added software safeguards, the county said.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Federal Communications Commission -- along with the county -- are also investigating why "echoes" of the original faulty alert "continued to land on phones across LA County, alarming residents already facing the horrifying effects of destructive wildfires that are still burning."

The county called the error a "serious breach of public trust" and said, for now, the state's Office of Emergency Services would be handling alerts to the public.

Jan 10, 2025, 9:28 PM EST

LA mayor's office denies report fire chief was dismissed

The Los Angeles mayor's office said reports that LA Fire Department Chief Kristin Crowley has been fired or quit her post are false.

"The Mayor and Chief met," a statement from the office of Mayor Karen Bass said. "The priority remains fighting these fires and protecting Angelenos."

The statement came after a published report that Crowley had been fired.

Crowley has appeared with the mayor at news conferences this week but gave multiple media interviews Friday criticizing city leadership over fire department funding.

Jan 10, 2025, 9:05 PM EST

Flare-up of Palisades Fire in Santa Monica mountains brings intense flames

A flare-up of the Palisades Fire in the Santa Monica mountains sent firefighters retreating as the flames approached some of their equipment.

The scene was captured by KABC's news helicopter. The flames approached and then appeared to overtake fire department vehicles near two helispots, which are designated areas where helicopters can safely land, take off and refuel.

Large flames are seen during the Palisades Fire in California, Jan. 10, 2025.
KABC

No homes were immediately threatened by the flare-up and there were no new evacuation orders, according to KABC.

--ABC News' Jennifer Watts and Jeffrey Cook

Related Topics