Sonja Sharp is a Metro reporter for the Los Angeles Times. She writes narrative stories with a focus on disability in California culture. Before joining the newsroom in 2019, she worked as an NYPD-credentialed member of the New York City press corps, writing stranger-than-fiction stories of crime and culture for VICE, the Wall Street Journal and the Village Voice, among others. She is a Bay Area native, a graduate of UC Berkeley and Columbia, and a proud Jewish mother.
Latest From This Author
Remember the climate protesters who threw soup at a Van Gogh? When activists use art as a canvas, does everyone understand the message they hope to send?
In the race for district attorney, Hochman is attacking Gascón as soft on crime, but he has his own hurdles, including a lack of name recognition and a past that includes being a Republican in a deep-blue county.
The campaign by an antiabortion group to block the opening of a specialized clinic in Beverly Hills may offer a playbook for similar efforts in other cities and states.
Both the police and Gascón’s chief of staff, Joseph Iniguez, claim the video vindicates their respective interpretations of events.
The 2022 mayoral hopeful is perhaps the biggest name yet to join the growing list of endorsements for George Gascón’s challenger in the November election.
The man accused of raping and beating two women in the Venice Canals has been charged with murder after one of the victims was taken off life support.
A traveler with measles flew through Los Angeles on the way to Fresno this month, exposing thousands of California travelers.
Ventura County neighbors were sure they’d seen a baby mountain lion on security cameras this month.
Programs that serve victims of domestic violence are bracing for unprecedented cuts that will also affect rape crisis hotlines, child abuse centers and legal service providers across California.
California colleges are giving student protesters ‘interim suspension’ notices, a disciplinary process typically reserved for the most serious misconduct.