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Forgotten items on L.A. Metro buses and rail lines make their way to this warehouse in Cypress Park. Riders have 90 days to claim them.

: Wallets, cellphones and backpacks are some of the most common items found on the public transit. Then there are the odder things, like dentures and even a fake leg. Between 20% to 30% of items are returned to their owners. After three months, unclaimed items are sent to a public auction.

Metro L.A. moves a lot of people every day through more than 100 miles of rail and a service area for buses of more than 1,000 square miles. With all that space and all those people, some things are bound to get left behind. The tan-and-concrete building on Pasadena Avenue across from the A Line’s Heritage Square station in Cypress Park looks like any old warehouse.

But a peek behind the curtain reveals a treasure trove of forgotten — and sometimes, curious — things.

“ We've seen prosthetic legs, we've gotten dentures come through here,” said Brian Ledeay, a customer service agent at Metro Lost & Found. “We've gotten a lot of luggage, to be honest. A lot of really nice luggage comes through here. ”“We now process about 1,200 items a month, which equals about 15,000 items a year,” Patrick Diaz, Metro’s Lost & Found manager, said.

The Lost & Found is busiest in the summer, when tourism picks up. During the World Cup in June and July, Diaz expects even more riders — and agency is adding staffing in response.

“We’re gonna have people stationed throughout our system, providing general information, not just on our transit system, but on our Lost & Found as well,” Diaz said. Found items first make their way to smaller Lost & Founds at divisions — the terminals where bus and rail lines begin and end. There are 18 divisions across L.A. County.

Divisions must log and process these items within three to five business days. From there they are brought to the main Lost & Found on Pasadena Avenue. Items get processed inside the main warehouse, along with shelves upon shelves of things people left behind. providing basic information, including what was lost, when, and where. If an item is found, staff will notify you via phone or email. At pickup, you are asked for specific information about the misplaced items for verification.

“Cell phones often have a pin, so we ask for their pin to open it. We're always looking for some type of verification,” Ledeay said. Ledeay’s worked at the Metro Lost & Found for nine years, and he’s seen a lot of stuff come through. Some of the most common are electronics like flat-screen TVs or video game consoles, but there’s also the more off-kilter.

“We have an about three foot replica of the Eiffel Tower that somebody left behind,” Diaz said. “That's been here for a while. ”After 90 days, unclaimed items are cleared of any identifying information and go to a third-party auction. The exception is bicycles.

Those are sent to a warehouse near Union Station because of the volume. Bicycles in the best condition become a part of Metro’s Adopt A BikeLuis Sanchez has worked as a customer service agent for a couple of years. His most memorable encounters include a man looking for his dentures. His favorite items to return are musical instruments — be it to students or to professional musicians, their reactions are the same.

For Ledeay it’s been a similar experience. Recently, a woman came in to ask about the five wooden recorders she had lost on the Metro. The recorders hadn’t been logged at the station yet, but he could tell how much they meant to her.

“So I just called down to the divisions to see if they had it, they did. And so they sent it over,” Ledeay said. President Donald Trump is now communicating with the public sometimes dozens of times a day on a social media platform that he himself created, and most Americans never see most of those posts.

During his first presidential campaign, Trump's constant stream of seemingly unvetted tweets was a sideshow that quickly became inescapable — the boasts, insults, and lies at times hijacked news cycles. Once he was elected, they presented a new frontier in American politics: a real-time view into a president's mind.

Ten years, one Twitter ejection, one Twitter return, and a move to Truth Social later, Trump's posts still make news — like when he announces a war or tries to pick a fight with the pope — but for many have become the background noise of American politics.for a picture of exactly what, in the aggregate, the president of the United States is thinking about and saying to the world at all hours.

On March 1, the day after U.S. forces bombed Iran and began a war that's now more than nine weeks long, President Donald Trump posted 30 times on Truth Social.an update on the war . Mid-afternoon, he posted a string of Trump-friendly news coverage, including ain the presidential race.

Shortly thereafter, in the span of five minutes, he posted 10 times, all of them lists ofmarked as being from an Instagram user called @truthaboutfluoride, purporting to show San Francisco as a run-down city filled with poverty. During his first presidential campaign, Trump's constant stream of seemingly unvetted tweets was a sideshow that quickly became inescapable — the boasts, insults, and lies at times hijacked news cycles.

Once he was elected, they presented a new frontier in American politics: a real-time view into a president's mind. Ten years, one Twitter ejection, one Twitter return, and a move to Truth Social later, Trump's posts still make news — like when he announces a war or tries to pick a fight with the pope — but for many have become the background noise of American politics.

The president of the United States is now communicating with the public sometimes dozens of times a day on a social media platform that he himself created, and most Americans never see most of those posts. Of course, most of those posts are not individually newsworthy.

But looking at them together provides a picture of exactly what, in the aggregate, the president of the United States is thinking about and saying to the world at all hours. To try to grasp that, NPR analyzed the first four months of Trump's Truth Social posts this year.

What emerged is a portrait of an extremely online president with scattered focus — who, even while he dealt with fallout from his policies such as war in Iran and immigration enforcement in Minneapolis, was also busy insulting his critics, posting pictures of his proposed ballroom, and continuing to insist on the lie that he won the 2020 election. The president also has unorthodox posting habits that illustrate that, even as arguably the most powerful person on earth, he remains focused on how he is seen..

We then classified each post based on its topic and the type of post it was . Trump posted 2,249 times in the first four months of 2026, an average of just under 19 posts per day. The most common topic Trump posted about – at about 14% of his posts – was 2026 elections.

These posts — more than 300 of them — consist largely of either candidate endorsements or posts touting a Trump-backed candidate's win. However, Trump at times did not give a simple endorsement, instead adding attacks on an endorsee's opponents.

For example, in endorsing Republican candidates for the Indiana state Senate, the posts became paragraph-long screeds as TrumpThe next most common topics after elections were Iran and the economy . He also posted dozens of times about alleged fraud in Minnesota's safety net programs, the SAVE Act, and his belief that the justice system was weaponized against him.

To the degree that his posts measure what he's thinking about, the president's social media feed suggests he is as preoccupied — or even more so — with his personal projects and vendettas than he is with pressing policy matters. President Trump posted about the 2020 election 71 times in the first four months of 2026, more than he posted even about tariffs .

Those 2020 election posts all promoted the lie that via massive voter fraud or other malfeasance, Joe Biden stole that election. Trump posted 68 times about his various Washington, D.C. , building projects, including his White House ballroom and a proposed massive arch across the Potomac near Arlington National Cemetery.

That's slightly more than he posted about Venezuela, more than he posted about the SAVE Act he's promoting, and more than he posted about protesters and federal agents in Minneapolis, including federal agents killing two U.S. citizens. He posted more than six times as often about his various legal grievances than he did about healthcare policy . Also notable are the topics that get little attention.

While tariffs and the war in Iran do affect, for example, the farm economy, Trump posted just four times specifically about American farming during the first four months of the year — less than half as many times as he posted about his anger at comedian Bill Maher. As for the top types of posts, the largest category – at just under one-quarter of his posts – are social media reshares.

These take several formats — some are screenshots of posts from X, and others are videos reposted from other social media sites, such as TikTok. Near the end of his first term, the videos Trump posted were largely from Fox News or other right-leaning news outlets, or they were videos produced by the White House. Now, there's an endless array of TikTok and Instagram videos and memes the president can repost, many of them from amateurs or generated by AI.

Some have been outright offensive, as when he posted a racist video that depicted former President Obama and Michelle Obama as apes. The White House initially defended the video, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt telling reporters,"Please stop the fake outrage.

" Trump later said he hadn't seen the full video, telling reporters,"I looked at the beginning of it. It was fine.

" He did not apologize, and the post was later deleted.that baselessly proposed that Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz was involved in the 2025 killing of Minnesota Democratic State Rep. Melissa Hortman. Occasionally, those videos have nothing to do with current events, or even Trump, but are the kind of inane posts littering many people's Facebook feeds.

Around 11 p.m. one night in February,a TikTok video of a person's pet corgi reacting to a can of Reddi-wip. A minute later, he reposted that video along with aThis posting-then-reposting pattern is one of the more notable oddities of the president's Truth Social posts.

It appears to be a makeshift way of reposting things from X. The president regularly grabs, for example, a video someone else has posted on X, posts it without attribution on Truth Social, then immediately quote-posts his own post along with a screenshot of the original X post. Some of these reposts are about current events, but they cover many other topics as well – they include a variety of amateur-made videos praising Trump, attacking his enemies, and concurring with his false claim that he in fact won the 2020 election.

In recent months, Trump has reposted aThe pattern of snagging content from X highlights two important facts about Truth Social. One is that X appears to dwarf it in size. The Center for Campaign Innovation, a right-leaning political strategy organization, provided NPR with polling from around the 2024 election, finding that only 6% of people used Truth Social for news on even a weekly basis.

That's compared to 30% who used X. Trump may therefore go to X to get material because there are just more users there, and especially more big names like politicians, news organizations, and MAGA influencers. Secondly, Truth Social's smaller size means it serves a different purpose for Trump than Twitter ever did, before Trump was kicked off of the platform after the January 6 riot. "I think really the best way to understand it is this is where you get your marching orders if you're MAGA," said Eric James Wilson, a Republican strategist and executive director of the Center for Campaign Innovation.

"And too, it is direct communication from him, in the way that maybe a statement, an administration policy or a press release would have to go through multiple layers of, if not revisions, certainly approvals. " Leavitt told NPR in a statement that Truth Social is"the most powerful and popular social media platform in the world because it serves as President Trump's authentic voice.

", he is"generally obligated to make any social media post on TruthSocial and may not make the same post on another social media site for 6 hours. " This gives the site"limited time to benefit from" his postings. NPR emailed Truth Social's press team to check if this agreement is still in effect, but the email bounced back. It's not entirely clear how many of the posts on the president's Truth Social account come directly from him.

Leavitt also told NPR that some posts are made by staffers.

"President Trump posts at all hours because he is constantly working, but sometimes these posts are also published by staff who are simply catching up on the many articles and reading materials President Trump approves the day prior," she said in another statement. One of the most telling indicators of what's on Trump's mind can be found in the news articles he posts — more than 1 in 5 of the president's social media posts in the first four months of this year were news articles, op-eds, and videos.

Those news pieces almost uniformly praise the president or promote administration-friendly storylines, including persecuting his perceived enemies. On March 29, in a span of six minutes, his account posted 10 news pieces about criminal referrals against New York Attorney General Letitia James, who prosecuted Trump in a civil business fraud case. A substantial number of the news stories Trump's account posts are not current.

At least 1 in 4 of the news stories posted were more than 10 days old at the time he posted them . In some cases, such as the article about Lady Gaga's father, the news pieces were months old. At other times, he posted several older articles in rapid succession about the same event.

On March 16, TrumpLeavitt told NPR in a statement:"The President is extraordinarily well read, and he likes to share stories or content that he finds interesting on his account.

"In the first four months of the year, President Trump made 98 posts we classified as"announcements" — which we defined as the president purporting to give the public new information. These covered a range of topics — there was the video announcing the U.S. had bombed Iran. There was the announcement of a new DHS secretary nominee — Markwayne Mullin. There were announcements about disaster aid to states affected by a massive winter storm.

There were notifications of upcoming interviews or press conferences. Not all of these announcement posts turned out to be accurate, however, as with anHe also made 29 posts we classified as"threats.

" These range from the specific to the vague . The president hasn't followed through on all of these threats with concrete action. Altogether, that's 127 of Trump's most newsmaking posts — around one per day. Those posts have introduced an unprecedented unpredictability into presidential policymaking.

His tariff policy posts, for example, have created widespread uncertainty in the business world. This can make life in a Trump White House particularly difficult, especially in the realm of foreign policy. John Bolton, who served as National Security Advisor in Trump's first term, tells a story about Trump's chaotic posts.

"My deputy was there when was shown — this is in 2019 — overhead pictures of a failed Iranian missile launch," Bolton says. "And he said to the intelligence briefer, can I keep this picture? And she said, 'Well, yes, but it's very sensitive, Mr. President.

' He said, 'Okay. ' And about 20 minutes after they left, he tweeted the picture out with some of the markings still on the picture. ", the photo was revealed to be classified. Experts told NPR that tweeting the picture potentially helped America's adversaries, including Iran and Russia, because it revealed U.S. satellite capabilities.

Since his time in the first Trump administration, Bolton has been willing to sharply criticize the president. In October, the Trump Department of Justice obtained indictments against Bolton on 18 charges alleging that he unlawfully retained and transmitted classified documents. Bolton pleaded not guilty. Bolton sees Trump tweeting the picture as part of a larger pattern: to attempt maximum bluster and in the process reveal more than he intends to.

Trump's recent posts about the war in Iran are another example.

"The very ferocity of his tweets or the outrage you can hear just tell the Iranians 'If we just stay, if we just be patient a little while longer, he's just going to flip right out entirely, and he wants out. So we're going to drag it out and get every concession we can from him,'" Bolton said.

"I don't understand why he can't see that. " Pundits have theorized that with his threatening posts about Iran, President Trump is practicing the"madman theory" of foreign relations. H.R. Haldeman, who served as chief of staff to President Nixonthat Nixon's strategy was to make the U.S.S.

R. and the government in North Vietnam think that the fervently anticommunist president was willing to go to even extreme lengths, such as dropping a nuclear bomb, to end the Vietnam War.

"Nixon had credibility. He was strongly anti-communist," Bolton said, adding that communist adversaries might have thought,"Good God, that guy is crazy enough that he would drop a nuclear weapon.

"To some degree, the president's posting can be seen as an extension of his communications strategy of simply communicating a lot. Trump regularly does lengthy press gaggles in the Oval Office, and he also has the unprecedented habit of fielding calls directly from reporters who have his phone number.

However, with posts, unlike interviews, the president is not having a conversation. Rather than being prompted by a reporter, the president in his posts seemingly reveals what is on his mind at any given time. On April 2, the day he announced that Pam Bondi would be leaving her post as attorney general, President Trump was also thinking about Bruce Springsteen.

He insulted the singer in two posts shared at Indeed, the president's insults and tirades have become so commonplace that they at times don't get much notice. Some of these posts go on at length. On April 9, he wrote a more thanthat insulted a series of right-wing commentators but also veered into the topics of Iran, election results, media outlets he dislikes, and his approval rating.

This kind of naked fury from the president of the United States toward his perceived opponents might once have made headlines. NPR also analyzed the length of Trump's posts this year through the end of April. He wrote 93 posts of 1,500 characters or more in that time period, accounting for around 4% of all his posts.

About half of those are endorsements, in which the president praises his chosen candidates and at times rails against the opponent . Many of these endorsements appear to be variations on boilerplate language as Trump endorses a string of candidates in a short timeframe. Trump had more of those ultra-long posts in April than in any other month. And if you take out endorsements, it's even more stark.

In April, Trump posted 22 extra-long posts about things other than endorsements — slamming Supreme Court justices, repeatedly promoting his ballroom, and railing against particular media outlets. That's twice as many such posts, or more, as he had in any other month. To the degree, then, that the length of his posts correlates to Trump's anger, or perhaps enthusiasm, April was a particularly enthusiastic month for the president.

The president's Truth Social account primarily gets wide attention when the president either makes an announcement or writes something particularly coarse or offensive. That was the case on Easter morning this year, at around 8:00 a.m., when President Trump threatened Iran.

"Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F*****' Strait, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah," he wrote.

— along with an obscenity and a tongue-in-cheek praise to Allah, all on one of Christianity's holiest days, together were stunning choices for a president whose core supporters are white evangelical Christians. In a recent NPR focus group of Georgia swing voters — people who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 and Trump in 2024 — no one reacted positively to that post. Participants were identified by their first names as a condition of their participation.

One voter named Joe said that posts like that one inspire fear.

"It's not presidential. They're supposed to be doing diplomatic negotiations. You know, he's the agent of chaos when it comes to this kind of thing. It just – it scares me," he said.

"He's a loose cannon, in my opinion, when it comes to this kind of stuff. "At least 40 quakes have struck in the last 24 hours, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. No injuries or significant damage have been reported. The jolts are concentrated around the Brawley Fault Zone, an area connecting the Imperial and San Andreas faults known for frequent earthquake swarms.

A swarm of earthquakes has hit the Imperial Valley city of Brawley, ranging in magnitude from 2 to 4.6. At least 40 quakes have struck in the last 24 hours, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The first, a magnitude 3.4, struck around 4 p.m. Saturday. The latest was a magnitude 2.9 that hit at 4 a.m. Sunday.

The jolts are concentrated around the Brawley Fault Zone, an area known for earthquake swarms connecting the Imperial and San Andreas faults. You’re at Union Station when the big one hits. The next two minutes are terrifying. By the time you make your way outside, the Los Angeles you know is gone.

In Episode One, you experience what the first hours after a massive earthquake could be like.. We don't know when, but we know it'll be at least 44 times stronger than Northridge and 11 times stronger than the Ridgecrest quakes in 2019. To help you get prepared, we've compiled a handy reading list If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report.

Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less. A Frontier Airlines plane bound for Los Angeles on Friday night struck and killed a pedestrian who was crossing the runway, according to Denver International Airport.224 passengers and seven crew members were aboard and evacuated with minor injuries. Airport authorities said the majority of those passengers have since taken off for Los Angeles on a new Frontier flight.

A Frontier Airlines plane bound for Los Angeles on Friday night struck and killed a pedestrian who was crossing the runway, according to Denver International Airport. The collision happened around 11:19 p.m. local time as the aircraft prepared to take off to California.

"Passengers were then safely evacuated via slides as a matter of precaution. "reported that the person struck was"at least partially consumed" by one of the craft's engines, leading to a brief fire. "DEN can confirm the pedestrian jumped the perimeter fence and was hit just two minutes later while crossing the runway," the airport said in a statement. "The pedestrian is deceased, and is not believed to be an employee of the airport nor have they been identified.

The airport has examined the fenceline and found it to be intact.

" The airport said 12 people reported minor injuries, with five of those individuals taken to local hospitals for treatment. The Airbus A321 was at the time carrying 224 passengers and seven crew members. Airport authorities said the majority of those passengers have since taken off for Los Angeles on a new Frontier flight. They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio!

” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way. For the mothers of Pico Gardens and Aliso Village, a pair of housing projects in Boyle Heights, the peace walks in the 1980s and 1990s were an act of protest and survival. Violence had become a fact of daily life. Middle school students were joining gangs.

Shootings happened in the morning and at night. Father Greg Boyle of Dolores Mission Catholic Church later, the women organized weekly peace walks at the height of gang violence in Boyle Heights. They held candles and prayed their rosaries as they walked with each other and their children. Formally, they were known as Comité Pro Paz en el Barrio .

They sought to end the violence and demand respect for one another. They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio! ” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way.

For the mothers of Pico Gardens and Aliso Village, a pair of housing projects in Boyle Heights, the peace walks in the 1980s and 1990s were an act of protest and survival. Violence had become a fact of daily life. Middle school students were joining gangs. Shootings happened in the morning and at night.

Father Greg Boyle of Dolores Mission Catholic Church later“We wanted peace,” Leticia Galvan, now 74, told Boyle Heights Beat.

“We wanted to spread a message to the youngsters to be united, to not fight, to respect themselves and the people. ” They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio! ” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way.

, the women organized weekly peace walks at the height of gang violence in Boyle Heights. They held candles and prayed their rosaries as they walked with each other and their children. Formally, they were known as Comité Pro Paz en el Barrio . They sought to end the violence and demand respect for one another.

Their activism helped shape the foundation for Boyle’s anti-gang work, which later developed into Homeboy Industries, the largest gang-intervention and rehabilitation program in the world. Four decades later, these mothers find it crucial to continue talking about those violent years in Boyle Heights as a reminder of how far they’ve come and how hard they fought to get here.

Some of the women from Aliso Village affectionately called themselves La UVA, or Union de Viejas Arguenderas — the Old Gossips Union. Though years have passed, many of the women remember the violence of those days as if it were yesterday. They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio!

” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way. Amada Holguin, now 86, a mother of seven, recalled being caught in the middle of gunfire between two rival gangs after stepping out of the bus on 4th Street more than 30 years ago.

“No había dado ni cuatro pasos cuando empezó la balacera,” Holguin said. I hadn’t even taken four steps when the shootout began. Holguin, who took part in the peace walks, said a young man shielded her face with his jacket and rushed her into a nearby house as gunshots flew past her from all sides. Inside, she stood in shock in a stranger’s living room, eating bread to calm her nerves.

Although traumatic, Holguin now laughs about the shooting, remembering how Dolores Mission parishioners prayed for her that night, mistakenly believing she had been killed. Galvan, a mother of two daughters, also faced violent encounters herself. On one occasion, she remembered fighting back when she was being robbed. Galvan said she kicked the perpetrator and yelled at him until he left her alone.

“Tenias que estar a la defensiva,” Galvan said. “Nunca pensé yo en . ” In an interview with Boyle Heights Beat, Boyle recalled the Thanksgiving dinners the women would host for gang members in the neighborhood.

“The dinner said, ‘You’re not the enemy. You’re our sons, whether we brought you into the world or not. ’ It was very beautiful,” Boyle said. They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio!

” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way. That meant forbidding their kids from wearing Nikes because “the cholos wore them,” or barring their children from being outside past a certain time, even if others their age were out past midnight.

“We raised our children here, but there were rules,” said Maria Flores, now 73, a mother of three, who enforced a strict curfew and participated in the peace walks. Flores and her husband required their children to eat meals together as a family. They also ensured their daughter and two sons kept up with household chores. Each had to take turns washing dishes and cleaning the kitchen.

To Flores, running a strict household is what helped steer her children away from gangs. In 1986, Boyle and parishioners at Dolores Mission founded Proyecto Pastoral in response to the poverty and gang violence around them. Now, the organization focuses on community-building and social justice. They would walk every Friday evening from one public housing project to another, chanting, “Paz, queremos paz y libertad en nuestro barrio!

” — peace, we want peace and freedom in our neighborhood — inviting their neighbors to join them along the way. Angela Gutierrez, 58, a community organizing coordinator at Proyecto Pastoral, was part of the peace walks as a young mother living in Boyle Heights. She continues to find strength and inspiration from the activism of the women she saw as motherly figures.

“Many people don’t know everything we endured. But we lived here. We know,” Gutierrez said.

“… As I always say, the women fought and continue to fight against these injustices. ” That fighting spirit remains alive even if gang violence is not what it was before, Gutierrez said. While quality of life in Boyle Heights may have improved, Gutierrez said there is still a lot to do when it comes to pedestrian safety, street cleanliness and homelessness. Now, it’s about advocating through forums with community members and local politicians, Gutierrez said.

Just recently, Proyecto Pastoral hosted a community meeting informing residents and business owners about a proposed Business Improvement District in Boyle Heights. They also held a forum for candidates seeking to replace Sen. Maria Elena Durazo in California’s 26th Senate District.

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