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Police and emergency managers outline no‑fly rules, alert tests and patrol plans ahead of World Cup

June 13, 2026 | Inglewood, Los Angeles County, California


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Police and emergency managers outline no‑fly rules, alert tests and patrol plans ahead of World Cup
Chief Mark Fronterada and emergency management officials briefed residents on public safety preparations for World Cup matches at SoFi Stadium and confirmed that Inglewood will deploy a high volume of law enforcement and emergency communications resources.

"We have been preparing... Englewood PD for well over two years for this event," Chief Fronterada said, describing multi‑agency tabletop exercises and fusion‑center information sharing with federal, state and local partners. He urged residents to sign up for event alerts and gave a one‑line text option for information: text "FIFA LA26" to 888‑777 for traffic, safety and crowd updates.

Fronterada said the department will enforce a no‑fly restriction for matches and will take enforcement action against unauthorized drone operations. He also described plans to monitor fan marches and to use rolling street closures timed to allow a short, controlled march to proceed without long disruptions to neighborhood traffic. "We call it rolling closures," the chief said. He added that officers will be positioned at sensitive locations and that a command center near the stadium footprint will coordinate operations.

Residents raised neighborhood safety concerns — for example, people jumping walls near Derby Park and overflow activity near Spruce and Vans retail — and asked whether officers would patrol those spots. The chief said the department will monitor those areas and provided the nonemergency dispatch number for local police (310‑412‑8771) for reporting issues.

Emergency management staff also announced a wireless emergency alert test for the South Bay region the following day to validate alerting systems for international visitors and local residents; officials said the test will function like an Amber Alert and will only reach devices connected to cell towers in the test area. They planned a post‑test survey to collect feedback and improve communications.

On resident services, Fronterada emphasized that frontline services for residents will be preserved: "Those are not touched," he said of local police resources dedicated to everyday community needs.

The safety presentation closed with an instruction to sign up for alerts and to report suspicious activity via the provided nonemergency number.

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