Jonathan Hale was arrested in December at the corner of Wilkins and Kelton avenues in Westwood. (People's Vision Zero)

By Kavish Harjai  for LAist
Originally published on Jan. 20, 2026

The hearing: At the corner of Wilkins and Kelton avenues, Hale told reporters that his hearing Tuesday lasted just about 10 minutes. According to Hale, the statute of limitations for his charges remains open until Dec. 7, a year after the street safety activist was arrested. “So they can change their mind, and I do risk arrest if I do this again,” Hale said. The hearing had been rescheduled from its original date of Jan. 5.

The crosswalks: Police arrested Hale as he and a group of volunteers, known as People’s Vision Zero, were painting the third of four crosswalk legs at the Westwood intersection. As of Tuesday, the city has not repainted, eliminated or finished the crosswalks at the intersection.

Large rectangles are painted in white on black asphalt. There are bright orange safety bollards and signs laying against a stop sign in the background.
One of the four crosswalks at the Westwood intersection where Hale was arrested remains unfinished. Two legs of the crosswalk were completed by Hale and his group before the L.A. police arrested the street safety activist. (Jonathan Hale)

What’s next: Hale said People’s Vision Zero would continue painting crosswalks if the city does not take concrete steps toward its goal of ending traffic deaths. One way Hale said the city could make progress is by working with his group to create a community-led initiative to paint code-compliant crosswalks.

Dig deeper … into the background on Hale’s arrest.

This report is reprinted with permission from Southern California Public Radio. © 2026 Southern California Public Radio. All rights reserved.

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