PALOS VERDES ESTATES, Calif. (AP) — Lawyers say there’s a growing list of people who want to join a proposed class-action lawsuit that claims local surfers have used violence and intimidation to protect their Southern California surf spot from intrusion by outsiders.
The lawsuit asks a federal judge to prevent the group of surfers known as the Lunada Bay Boys from congregating at beaches in wealthy Palos Verdes Estates south of Los Angeles.
Authorities have been accused of looking the other way as the gang threatened outsiders, tossed rocks at them and vandalized their cars.
Attorney Kurt Franklin tells the Daily News his firm has received dozens of calls and emails from people who say they’ve experienced harassment at the surf spot.
The suit targets the city, its police chief and eight alleged Bay Boys.
- Posted April 5, 2016
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Attorney: More want to join suit against surfers
headlines Macomb
headlines National
- How Casetext utilized the latest GPT technology to create an AI legal assistant
- Trump motion seeks to block evidence from Georgia special purpose grand jury, disqualify district attorney
- Growing Trend of Data Sharing Litigation: Federal Judge OKs 'Subscriber's' VPPA Suit Against PBS
- Stanford Law Dean: Associate Dean Steinbach Placed on Leave After Disrupting Judge Duncan's Speech
- Justices debate propriety of litigation in trial courts while defendants are on appeal seeking arbitration
- The morning read for Wednesday, March 22