Santa Monica, CA|News|
Man Injured in Fall From Freeway Overcrossing
The man, described only as in his 20s, fell at about 8:30 a.m.

Jenna Chandler is the editor of Santa Monica Patch (read her introduction to the site here). She studied journalism at Chapman University, where she was editor-in-chief of the student newspaper, <i>The Panther</i>, and interned in the newsroom at the <i>Orange County Register</i> and NBC News Los Angeles. In 2008, she was distinguished as the Register's Outstanding Student Journalist of the Year.
Jenna joined Patch in October 2010 as the editor of San Juan Capistrano Patch after covering crime and government at the <i>Porterville Recorder </i>in California's Central Valley. There she built a portfolio of stories that had resounding effects in the community, including a series that forced the City Council to reallocate thousands of dollars in misspent funds, and a weeklong report on public-sector salaries that led to the resignation of a city manager.
When she's not working, you'll find Jenna perusing record stores for Neil Young vinyl, eating pizza and hiking.
The man, described only as in his 20s, fell at about 8:30 a.m.

Burly wrestler Baron Michele Leone... black and white beach scenes... the 1984 Olympics... The Santa Monica History Museum puts 1,800 of its photos into a searchable online database.
The college Board of Trustees votes unanimously after students were pepper-sprayed by campus police Tuesday. Postponement gives them time to gather more feedback.
The Santa Monica College Board of Trustees will meet at 10:30 a.m. Friday to discuss the Chancellor's request that it postpone a controversial two-tiered tuition policy. The meeting is open to the public.
Police officers escort the marching Santa Monica College students down Pico Boulevard.
The Board of Trustees has said it will move forward with the plan. No word from Santa Monica College Superintendent Chui Tsang.
Santa Monica College Superintendent Chui L. Tsang reacts after as many as 30 student demonstrators are pepper-sprayed on campus. Hundreds of students from Beverly Hills attend the college.
Tsang says student protesters acted "unlawfully," but doesn't comment on campus police's use of pepper spray. The head of California's community college system asks that the contentious plan to raise the cost of some classes be put on hold.
Mobs of students disrupt a Board of Trustees meeting upset over a highly controversial plan to offer pricier classes. Answer our poll question at the bottom of the story.
Students demand a referendum on Santa Monica College's controversial plan to offer some higher-priced, non-subsidized classes at-cost to students. Trustees say they won't be bullied.
Excavation is slated to start mid-April between 14th and 17th courts along Colorado.
College officials are investigating campus police's reaction to students who disrupted a Board of Trustees meeting upset over a highly controversial plan to offer pricier classes.
Golden State Collective has to file its appeal with the city over its denial of a business license before it can ask the courts to intervene, a judge says.
Santa Monica resident Isauro Benavides and 17 others were arrested in an undercover operation that found men were having sex in public restroom in Manhattan Beach.
Golden State Collective wants the courts to prevent the city from penalizing it from operating in Santa Monica without a business license. They disagree over whether the laboratories are allowed under state law.
Jacqueline Seabrooks had a long history with the Santa Monica Police Department before serving as the chief of police in Inglewood. She returns to Santa Monica May 1.
New trees and wider sidewalks are in store for the area between the the 10 freeway and Pico Boulevard.
Juxtapoz is a valued voice off the beaten path, a coughing fit in the middle of a stuffy gallery. The 18th anniversary show runs through April 14.
Santa Monica College students will ask the district to slash administrators' salaries to offset the budget cuts drastically limiting course offerings.
In the immediate future, the new formula to calculate pensions for workers hired after July 1 will save the city less than $300,000 a year.