By
Jeff Nguyen
Jeff Nguyen covers breaking news and contributes to the CBS California Investigates franchise.
Read Full Bio
Updated on: June 30, 2026 / 5:50 PM PDT
After nearly two weeks of emergency vehicles, the smell of rotting food and a massive warehouse fire impacting Boyle Heights residents, some families are now facing extra financial strain after their vehicles were towed by Los Angeles police in the midst of the firefighting efforts.
By
Jeff Nguyen
Jeff Nguyen covers breaking news and contributes to the CBS California Investigates franchise.
Read Full Bio
Updated on: June 30, 2026 / 5:50 PM PDT

‘Like a dead body’: after warehouse fire, LA residents say air thick with smell of rotting food

El incendio terminó, pero los residentes de Boyle Heights se enfrentan a otro problema: el olor a carne podrida

LA warehouse fire pollution surpassed some 2025 wildfire records

Cleanup under way after week-long fire at a Boyle Heights facility spoiled tens of millions of pounds of frozen food

The fire at a privately owned cold-storage warehouse in the city's Boyle Heights neighborhood started Wednesday.

Firefighters continue to battle a massive fire at a Los Angeles warehouse that has been burning since last week, as officials…

Smoke concerns are growing as firefighters continue battling a massive cold storage warehouse fire in Boyle Heights that…

Firefighters faced renewed challenges Saturday at a large Boyle Heights warehouse fire, where conditions remain highly complex as…

Firefighters faced renewed challenges Saturday at a large Boyle Heights warehouse fire, where conditions remain highly complex as…