kevin walker cooper can't believe his eyes looked at also even though after the far as it was all real it's. i'm. is this the structure. it's the 1st time since the fire that he's been back to the all to dina home. he built 21 years ago, amid the ashes, there's little left for him to salvage the handlebars of the morning. the blaze broke out. he tried in vain to save it with a garden hose. and this is what you saw that night. what i thought in the cell phone video he took then shows a hellish scene as i was utilizing the water of a big this current almost knocked me over. it was black. it was black. i couldn't, i couldn't see my hand in front of my face. that's when i said i gotta go before the civil rights movement and the outline of racially discriminatory housing practices. also, dino was one of the few places in the los angeles area were black people could own a home walk or cooper remembers it as a tolerant working class area. it was diverse. algebra is what else are diverse that out to be and it was a great place to live. community leaders say they're worried that big developers