Culver City, CA|News|
Police Blotter: Burglaries and a Robbery
A Chase Bank teller gets a demanding note and a store owner is held up at gunpoint.

<b>Email winter@patch.com</b>
<b>Phone (310) 714-9411</b>
<b>Hometown Los Angeles, Calif.</b>
<b>Birthday February </b><b>26</b>
<b>Bio </b>Winter is a Los Angeles resident with a Master of Science in Journalism from Northwestern University. While she considers herself a Californian at heart, she has had the privilege of living in Seattle, Wash., as a young girl, New York for an internship and Chicago (of course) during grad school. As a passionate reader, she majored in American Literature at UCLA, but found her calling in journalism after graduating with her bachelor's. Since graduation, she has worked for Brentwood magazine, Essence magazine, the Santa Monica Daily Press and most recently, Momlogic.com. At Momlogic.com, she covered everything from green news to issues affecting children with special needs. Now in Culver City, she is devoted to listening, learning and writing about the issues that matter most to its citizens. Check out her welcome video by clicking here. <br><br><b>Beliefs</b><br>At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.<br><br><b>Politics </b>
* How would you describe your political beliefs?
I consider myself a Democrat with some conservative values.<br><br><b>Religion</b>
* How religious would you say you are? Casual, observant, devout, non-religious?
I am a devout Christian. <br><b><br>Local Hot-Button Issues</b>
* What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?<br><br>I am still learning about and actively researching hot-button issues in Culver City, but so far, I have seen that budget cuts to both the city and the schools is a major issue facing Culver City.
A Chase Bank teller gets a demanding note and a store owner is held up at gunpoint.

In Culver City Patch's first couple of months, we have received a warm welcome from the community.
This week was a busy one in Culver City--the West Los Angeles College SEIR was made final, the City Council backed an affordable housing initiative and pot was the talk of the town.
The Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees certified an environmental impact report that will allow the community college to add new facilities and renovate existing structures.
The city’s first affordable housing project in 10 years has many residents up in arms.
The Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees decides Wednesday on an environmental impact report that could allow campus construction and renovation that have sparked controversy in the community.
Patch finds out how much the city manager is making, talks to the mayor about his agenda and meets a man with a passion for swordplay.
When John Nachbar assumes his post on Aug. 16, he will make an above-average salary for a city manager in the West.
Patch takes a historic walk through the city, an important vote on city commissions is postponed and the chief of police addresses allegations made by union members.
The long-awaited light installation is nearing completion after having been pushed back nearly five years by design delays and frozen funds.
John Kuechle, a Culver Crest homeowner, gave Patch his view on construction at the community college.
The ruckus surrounding the community college centers on the terms laid out in two documents. Patch compares them and gives you the scoop.
This week, the Downtown Business Association threw a party, 'super juice' draws health-conscious patrons and Patch compared the two documents in the middle of the West LA College construction debacle.
This week, homeowners fought against West Los Angeles College, kids took flight and the school board limited the amount of kids who can 'permit' into the district.
Due to downtown area popularity and growth, the City Council is thinking of ways to increase parking supply at city structures.
But they haven't won the war. Despite the City Council's disapproval of the proposed development, the measure can still be passed by the community college's board of trustees.
A Los Angeles Superior judge rules in favor of Martha Harris, whose daughter was killed in 2007.
The organizations are helping with transportation fees imposed by the cash-strapped athletic department.
The National Association for Equal Justice in America is concerned about the conduct of some officers in the Culver City Police Department.
Wondering what’s hot on the agenda tonight? Patch has the scoop.