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LAPD station evacuates after military ordnances dropped off

Two people came into LAPD’s Pacoima station and said they had been cleaning out the home of a family member who recently died when they found the explosives

Procession of bomb squad members killed in Los Angeles, CA

LOS ANGELES , CA - JULY 18, 2025: L.A. County Sheriff Deputies salute as a law enforcement procession leaves the Biscailuz Training Center with the bodies of three L.A County Sheriff Deputy bomb squad members who were killed Friday morning during an explosion at the Biscailuz Training Center on July 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Gina Ferazzi/TNS

By Rebecca Ellis
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — A couple brought military explosive devices into a Los Angeles Police Department station Saturday afternoon in an attempt to dispose of them, spurring officials to temporarily evacuate the Pacoima station and nearby homes.

The incident came less than two weeks after an explosion killed three Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives — the deadliest incident for the Sheriff’s Department in more than 150 years. The three agency veterans who were killed were Dets. Joshua Kelley-Eklund , Victor Lemus and William Osborn .

On Saturday, according to the LAPD , two people came into the Pacoima station at 2:30 p.m. and said they had been cleaning out the home of a family member who recently died when they found what they believed were explosives.

The department’s bomb squad used a robot to take images of the plastic box the couple had brought, which had “several military ordnances inside.”

After deeming them safe to transfer, the bomb squad moved them to a storage facility for the U.S. military to collect.

In the latest twist in the case in which the sheriff’s detectives were killed, one of the grenades found before the explosion is missing, authorities said Friday.

Two hand grenades had been discovered in a Santa Monica townhome complex; one of them exploded with deadly results, and the other one “is unaccounted for at this time,” Sheriff Robert Luna said.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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