Santa Monica Synagogue explosion

Firefighters examine a large object lodged in the roof of a home neighboring the the Chabad House Lubevitch in Santa Monica.

I, and many in Santa Monica, had an interesting morning this Thursday. What was initially thought to be a bomb of some sort was found lodged in the roof of a home neighboring the Chabad House Lubevitch following an early morning explosion, causing the authorities, including the FBI, to swarm in and evacuate around 100 people from the area and rope off a two block radius. When I arrived it seemed there was no way to get a clear view of the scene, with the house at the center of the widely roped off area and the police had set up a media staging area far from the scene. Not content to sit there and wait, I starting hiking around the perimeter of the evacuation zone until I finally found myself with a slight view of the building, but no view of the roof. I then headed back the other way and happened to look down an alley right as a police officer was walking on the neighboring roof. I stopped in my tracks and, looking closer, realized that I could see the device sticking out of the roof a few feet from where he stood. I was soon joined by an LA Times photographer and, for awhile we had the only view of the scene other than those from the numerous helicopters hovering above. We were curious how it could be a bomb with police, firefighters and even someone from the gas company, walking so close to it and even touching it. We soon received confirmation that it wasn’t a bomb when a fireman came over and told us that it appeared to be a pipe stuck into a large block of cement and that the explosion had been caused by an agent someone must have applied to the cement to soften it so it could be removed from the ground without the aid of jackhammer. The pressure had somehow built up and launched the thing up in the air, where it ricocheted off the neighboring Chabad House (note the hole on the bottom right) and landed on the neighboring home. Seemed odd, especially when we found out the entire thing weighed 300 lbs. – must have been some explosion! – but that was what they thought. After safely removing it from the roof, which required a team of firemen and an large axe – we all soon cleared out.

The next day I’m reading the news and see a headline regarding a suspect in the Santa Monica synagogue bombing. My first thought was “Again!?” But upon reading it I realized that after further inspection of the scene it was now thought that it WAS in fact a bomb of some sort that was detonated early that morning, launching the cement block. The suspect turns out to be a homeless man who was known to frequent Jewish centers in the area looking for handouts. Apparently, the suspect is still at large as of this afternoon and no motive is yet known. A brief article about that here. Kind of scary, but given the approach taken, I can’t imagine what he was trying to accomplish other than to scare people. I’m interested to see how this turns out.

Cal Lutheran Secular Student Alliance

Attendees of the Secular Student Alliance Southern California Leadership Conference pose for a photo in front of the Luther Statue at California Lutheran University

Evan Clark Secular Student Alliance

Cal Lutheran Secular Student Alliance founder and student body president Evan Clark

Last month I shot several assignments for the Chronicle of Higher Education. I always enjoy shooting for the Chronicle, because I get to meet fascinating people working in the numerous universities of Southern California, including leaders in cutting edge stem cell research and Academy Award-winning physicists responsible for the lifelike animation in the film “Avatar.” One of the more interesting of my recent assignments was for a story on a national leadership meeting of the Secular Student Alliance at California Lutheran University, a school of about 2,000 in Thousand Oaks, Calif. The event was brought to the school by the founder of the school’s first ever SSA chapter, Evan Clark, who also has the unique distinction of being the school’s first ever atheist student body president. The meeting centered around strategies that the chapter leaders at various schools around the country can use to run their chapters, peacefully spread their message and handle confrontations with those who don’t share their views. Although the day was pretty much a series of meetings (i.e. not visually stimulating for this photographer) the fact that it was taking place at a religiously affiliated school with the blessing of the administration was very cool and is something to think about. Should everyone be so open-minded!

wanderlustblogzentz092009002

Saut D'eau image in Wanderlust Magazine

It’s been a long time since I posted, but I thought before putting up some new images from our trip east I’d put up some good news I received today. The fine folks at Aurora Photos, who represent a number of my images, passed along a link to their blog featuring a post mentioning that one of my images from Saut D’eau was printed in Wanderlust, Britain’s premier travel magazine. Woohoo!  More images from the series are available on my main site. Stay tuned for some new images from Maine, Boston and PA in the coming days.

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