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Birmingham High School

1953 establishments in CaliforniaBirmingham High School alumniCharter high schools in CaliforniaEducational institutions established in 1953High schools in Los Angeles County, California
High schools in the San Fernando ValleyLake Balboa, Los AngelesLos Angeles Unified School District schoolsVague or ambiguous time from April 2022Van Nuys, Los Angeles
Bhs 2014 01 18 20 33
Bhs 2014 01 18 20 33

Birmingham Community Charter High School (formerly Birmingham High School) is a charter coeducational high school in the neighborhood/district of Lake Balboa in the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles, California, United States. It was founded in 1953 as a 7-12 grade combined high school and became solely a senior high school in 1963. The school has a Van Nuys address and serves Lake Balboa, parts of Encino, and Amestoy Estates. It is within the Los Angeles Unified School District but operates as an internal charter school.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Birmingham High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Birmingham High School
Haynes Street, Los Angeles Lake Balboa

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.18837 ° E -118.50507 °
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Address

Birmingham Community Charter High School

Haynes Street 17000
91406 Los Angeles, Lake Balboa
California, United States
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Website
birminghamcharter.com

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Bhs 2014 01 18 20 33
Bhs 2014 01 18 20 33
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Murder of Sherri Rasmussen

On February 24, 1986, the body of Sherri Rasmussen (born February 7, 1957) was found in the apartment she shared with her husband, John Ruetten, in Van Nuys, California, United States. She had been beaten and shot three times in a struggle. The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) initially considered the case a botched burglary and were unable to identify a suspect. Rasmussen's father believed that LAPD officer Stephanie Lazarus, who maintained a relationship with Ruetten, was a prime suspect. Detectives who re-examined the cold case files in 2009 were eventually led to Lazarus, by then herself a detective. A DNA sample from a cup she had thrown away was matched to one from a bite on Rasmussen's body that had remained in the files. Lazarus was convicted of the murder in 2012 and is serving a sentence of 27 years to life for first-degree murder at the California Institution for Women in Corona.Lazarus appealed the conviction, claiming the age of the case and the evidence denied her due process. She also alleged that the search warrant was improperly granted, her statements in an interview prior to her arrest were compelled and that evidence supporting the original case theory should have been admitted at trial. In 2015, the guilty verdict was upheld by the California Court of Appeal for the Second District of the state (which includes Los Angeles).Some of the police files suggest that evidence that could have implicated Lazarus earlier in the investigation was later removed, perhaps by others in the LAPD. Rasmussen's parents unsuccessfully sued the department over this and other aspects of the investigation. Jennifer Francis, the criminalist who found key evidence from the bite mark, unsuccessfully sued the City of Los Angeles, claiming she was pressured by police to favor certain suspects in this and other high-profile cases and was retaliated against when she brought this to the LAPD's attention.