A gunman remains on the loose after shooting two people outside a South Los Angeles bar Thursday night — another violent incident where the suspect vanished before law enforcement could close in.
The shooting happened around 10:30 p.m. at El Diamante Sports Bar on Figueroa Street, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. A man and a woman were both injured and transported to local hospitals in stable condition. The gunman fled in an unknown vehicle and remains at large. The LAPD says the motive is unknown and the investigation is ongoing.
That's the entire public record so far. No suspect description released. No vehicle description. No known motive. Two people shot on a Thursday night in their own neighborhood, and the person responsible drove off into the dark without a trace.
The Los Angeles Times reported the bare facts — time, location, victim conditions — and nothing more. The paper offered no context on whether the bar has been a repeated site of violence, no word on whether the gunman was known to victims or to law enforcement, and no questions about why a suspect could open fire on a public street and disappear so completely. The Patch story circulating alongside this incident covered a lost hiker rescue in Connecticut — a telling editorial priority when Americans are being shot in their own communities.
For South LA residents, the pattern is familiar. A shooting happens. Police respond after the fact. The suspect is gone. Officials promise an investigation. And the neighborhood is left to wonder whether the next bullet has their name on it.
The same political class that spent years demonizing police and emptying jails will inevitably point to the gun. They won't point to their own policies that eroded patrol presence, that made arrests harder to prosecute, that signaled to criminals the consequences would be light. Two people shot on Figueroa Street is a consequence of those choices.
The gunman is still out there. The LAPD is still investigating. And the people of South Los Angeles are still waiting for a system that protects them as aggressively as it protects the politicians who broke it.








