
Early Thursday in Porter Ranch, a quiet stretch of hillside homes got an unwanted wake-up call when Los Angeles police descended on a large house after reports of an attempted break-in that local reporting links to Christian “King” Combs, son of music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs. Officers say the suspects never made it inside, the homeowners were not home at the time, and the investigation is still very much active. Neighbors in the San Fernando Valley said the late-night police response rattled an otherwise calm, upscale block as detectives went door to door.
LAPD officers were called out around 12:45 a.m. to the 11900 block of Churchill Way in the Porter Ranch/Chatsworth area, where they took a burglary report after neighbors flagged suspicious activity. Investigators told reporters that whoever targeted the property did not gain entry and that no one inside the home was hurt. Video obtained by KTLA shows multiple patrol cars clustered around the home, and the station notes that police have not publicly identified any residents connected to the case.
Devonshire Division Says Burglaries Down but Door-Checks on the Rise
The house sits in the LAPD’s Devonshire Division, which recently reported that overall burglaries are down year-to-date compared with 2025, while warning of a "hot trend" involving groups roaming neighborhoods at night, checking car and house door handles. The division’s February minutes repeat its familiar prevention slogan, “Lock It, Keep It, Hide It,” and urge residents to file reports and show up to Basic Car meetings to stay plugged into crime trends, according to the Devonshire Area minutes.
Public Records, a Porter Ranch Mansion, and a Celebrity Link
Public reporting says property records associate the address with a woman named Raven Tracy McEachin, who has been publicly linked to King Combs. KTLA highlighted those public-record ties while emphasizing that police have not identified or charged any residents in connection with the attempted burglary.
Detectives Work the Block as Residents Urged to Speak Up
Detectives have been canvassing the neighborhood, gathering video and talking to potential witnesses as part of the ongoing probe, and no arrests have been announced at the time of the initial report. The Devonshire Area minutes encourage neighbors to report anything that seems off to their senior lead officers and to attend community meetings so police can spot patterns more quickly. Residents with security footage or information related to the case are being asked to contact LAPD detectives or reach out through Crime Stoppers, in line with the division’s community guidance (Devonshire Area minutes).
This story will be updated as officials release more details. Anyone who saw activity in the area or captured video around the time of the incident is urged to contact the LAPD or submit an anonymous tip to Crime Stoppers.









