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Gusty winds pushed their way through Southern California overnight, toppling trees and leaving thousands of people without power Wednesday morning.
Power lines were knocked down in more than 15 locations after they were hit by damaging winds, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power tweeted Wednesday.
The Los Angeles Metro area to the south of Hollywood Hills was among the hardest hit, according to the LADWP.
Areas most affected by #LAWind related outages include parts of the Hollywood Hills, South LA, Koreatown, Mid-Wilshire, Fairfax, Silver Lake, Los Feliz, Mar Vista, Mid-Wilshire, Wilmington, among other neighborhoods located in the LA Metro area south of Hollywood Hills.
— LADWP (@LADWP) April 10, 2019
Thousands without power
Power outages peaked at 42,000 overnight, with about 33,000 customers still without power as of 5:30 a.m., the department tweeted. Customers should plan to possibly be without power for 24 hours, according to the LADWP. Southern California Edison was reporting just under 4,000 outages as of 4 a.m. The National Weather Service is expecting widespread winds, with gusts between 60 and 70 mph, to continue through Wednesday morning.Tree topples onto apartment building in Westwood
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Downed trees reported across the Southland
One tree crushed a police cruiser in Mar Vista. The officers were not injured in the incident. Crews needed to be called to the Jefferson Park area after a tree fell and blocked several lanes of the 10 Freeway near Crenshaw Boulevard. The lanes have since reopened. Officials have warned drivers, especially those in high-profile vehicles, to be careful while traveling on Southern California freeways and highways.
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