
Brianne Gilbert, managing director of LMU’s Center for the Study of Los Angeles and a senior lecturer in urban and environmental studies and political science, said researchers had hoped that the 2017 increase was an anomaly. “But it wasn’t. Not even close,” Gilbert said in a statement. “Now a full 68% of residents in Los Angeles think something like what happened in 1992 could happen again.”
Source: Los Angeles Daily News
L.A. Riots 30 Years Later: From ‘City on Fire’ to the George Floyd Era