
Downtown Los Angeles tensed up Sunday as emergency crews rushed to a report of a person threatening to jump at 756 S. Flower Street, according to a brief alert from the Los Angeles Fire Department. The initial notice listed Fire Station 10 as the assigned unit, labeled the incident "situation static," and included both a map and a DETAILS link. The post did not specify injuries, a resolution, or what ultimately happened at the scene, and officials had not released additional information at the time of the alert.
LAFD Alert- Downtown Jumper - Situation Static 756 S Flower St MAP: https://t.co/98IvzsEreb FS10; DETAILS: https://t.co/i4S57lyeAw
— LAFD 🔥 (@LAFD) April 5, 2026
The Scene And Response
According to LAFD, crews were dispatched to the address on South Flower Street, with FS10 listed among the responding companies. The department labeled the incident "situation static" in the post, a sign that responders were on scene and monitoring conditions while sharing only the basics publicly. The alert offered a map and a DETAILS link for those following in real time, but did not mention any patient transport, involvement of LAPD negotiators, or how the call concluded. Officials had not provided further updates as of the time of the department’s message.
How LAFD Alerts Usually Unfold
LAFD’s real-time posts on X often start short on narrative and long on logistics, with location and unit assignments front and center while fuller information filters in later. As we reported in a Downtown street scare, early alerts sometimes list little more than a map and responding companies until firefighters have secured the scene. A separate jumper scare lockdown story highlighted how responders staged rescue cushions, held a perimeter, and worked alongside negotiators while the department’s public updates stayed relatively bare-bones. Together, those examples show how the earliest alerts tend to focus on coordination over play-by-play detail.
Who Responds In This Part Of Downtown
Fire Station 10, the company named in Sunday’s alert, covers the Convention Center and Fashion District area, according to the LAFD station directory. The station frequently handles calls across central Downtown Los Angeles and is often among the first dispatched to medical and rescue incidents in the surrounding blocks.
If you are near the area of 756 S. Flower Street, follow instructions from on-scene personnel and keep clear so emergency crews can work without interference. For immediate emergencies, call 911. Hoodline will update this story if officials release additional details about Sunday’s response.









