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Category: Los Angeles Sheriff's Department

Manslaughter charge to be sought against Pepperdine president's son

Los Angeles County investigators plan to pursue a felony manslaughter charge against the son of Pepperdine University President Andrew K. Benton for his alleged involvement in a Malibu woman's fatal heroin overdose.

Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore confirmed Friday the homicide bureau will recommend that Christopher Benton be charged with involuntary manslaughter and taking a vehicle without an owner's consent. It was not known when the recommendation would be presented to the district attorney.

The charges stem from the April 2012 death of Katie Wilkins, a 25-year-old graphic designer whose body was found in her parents' Malibu garage. Wilkins died of an apparent heroin overdose, and detectives believe Benton was likely the last person to see her alive.

Surveillance footage showed Benton getting into a car with Wilkins at a McDonald’s restaurant on Pacific Coast Highway hours before her brother discovered her body. Her car was found two weeks later in Woodland Hills.

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L.A. County sheriff's deputy charged with beating girlfriend

A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy has been charged with repeatedly assaulting a woman after she discovered on Christmas Day that he was involved with another woman, Orange County prosecutors said Friday.

Mark Eric Hibner, 44, of Anaheim, is charged with three felony counts of domestic battery with corporal injury and one felony count of criminal threats involving his now former longtime girlfriend. He is also charged with threatening to kill another woman, with whom he had previously had children, prosecutors said. 

He is expected to be arraigned Friday morning in Fullerton. He was arrested Dec. 30 by Anaheim police after a series of alleged attacks. He has been relieved of duty without pay, said L.A. County sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore.

Hibner got into an argument with the alleged victim on Christmas Day after she discovered a "sexually suggestive voicemail from another woman on the defendant’s cellphone," according to prosecutors. The alleged victim then contacted the woman, who confirmed she was having a sexual relationship with the deputy, prosecutors said.

The 22-year veteran of the L.A. County Sheriff's Department is accused of escalating the argument by grabbing the woman's hair and spitting and throwing a lighted cigarette at her while also punching her in the chest, according to prosecutors.

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Human remains found in Lancaster

Authorities are investigating the circumstances surrounding the discovery of human remains in a nonresidential area of Lancaster.

A passerby found the remains around 6:20 p.m. Thursday at Division Street and East Avenue H in Lancaster, according to a statement from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Los Angeles County Coroner officials will collect the remains and try to determine the cause of death, officials said. The gender of the individual was unknown and no further information was available, they said.

Anyone with information is asked to call the sheriff's homicide bureau at (323) 890-5500. Tips can also be reported anonymously to L.A. Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477.

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$1 million in marijuana found at Vandenberg base was camouflaged

-- Ann M. Simmons in Santa Clarita

Antelope Valley gang suspects arrested in assault case

Two suspects who authorities believe were among about a dozen gang members who assaulted three victims earlier this year have been arrested, Los Angeles County sheriff’s officials said Thursday.

The arrests were made after gang units and other teams from the department served five warrants across the Antelope Valley, according to a statement from the Palmdale Sheriff’s Station. The warrants were related to a Jan. 17 incident in which authorities said 10 to 12 gang members attacked two people and beat a third victim “to near unconsciousness” when that person tried to help the first two.

David Holmes, 21, was arrested on suspicion of receiving stolen property following the search of a home in the 3100 block of Tourmaline Lane in Palmdale, authorities said. Investigators found a stolen computer, a rug and a lockbox containing identification of the assault victims, officials said. They suspect Holmes was involved in the January assault.

During the search of another Palmdale residence in the 37600 block of Harvey Street, authorities said they found evidence indicating a second suspect’s ties to a local gang. The person’s name was withheld because the suspect is a minor.  

Lt. Larry Gregg, coordinator for  the Antelope Valley Crime Fighting Initiatives, said most of Thursday’s warrant searches were related to juvenile gang members, who were not only involved in January’s assault but were also “very possibly responsible for a recent rise in burglaries in the Palmdale area.”

Authorities declined to name the gang suspected of the robberies and violence.

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Man charged with raping teenage girl at Tustin park

Boat with drugs crashes on beach near Vandenberg AFB

Death of woman found on beach still a mystery, police say

-- Ann M. Simmons

State high court overturns murder conviction in deputy's death

Cole Allen WilkinsThe California Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously overturned the first-degree murder conviction  of a man who stole appliances and caused a fatal accident an hour later when a stove fell off his truck.

Cole Allen Wilkins of Long Beach was convicted under the "felony-murder rule," which says a defendant may be convicted of first-degree murder if someone dies while the suspect is committing a felony, such as a burglary or rape. Intention to kill is not required for conviction.

Relying on that rule, an Orange County jury convicted Wilkins in 2008 of first-degree murder because he stole appliances, a felony, and caused the death of Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy David Piquette when a stove fell onto the road.

Piquette, who was driving to work from his home in Corona, was killed when he swerved to avoid the stove on the 91 Freeway in Anaheim and was crushed by a cement truck.

The judge had instructed the jury that Wilkins, then 32, could be found guilty of murder if the fatal accident and the burglary were part of a “continuous transaction.” The jury convicted, and Wilkins was sentenced to 25 years to life.

The state high court overturned Wilkins’ conviction on the grounds the jury had not been instructed properly. If a perpetrator of a felony has already escaped and reached a “temporary place of safety,” any death he then causes is not felony murder, the court said.

“The prosecution did not dispute that at the time of the accident the burglary had not yet been discovered, and defendant was at least 60 miles and one hour from the crime scene, had made a telephone call a half-hour earlier, and had been driving at a normal speed,” Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye wrote for a unanimous court.

“Given the evidence, there is a reasonable probability that a jury properly instructed … would have concluded that defendant had reached a place of temporary safety before the fatal act occurred and was not guilty of felony murder.”

Orange County prosecutors will now have to decide whether to retry Wilkins.

Deputy Atty. Gen. Steven T. Oetting complained the court had created a “new rule” that would reduce criminals’ culpability. He said Wilkins did not tie down the appliances after burglarizing a home under construction because he wanted to get away from the crime scene as fast as possible.

“He is not just some guy who just failed to secure his load,” Oetting said. “The reason he failed to secure his load is because of the burglary, and this ruling fails to take this into account.”

Richard A. Levy, who represented Wilkins on appeal, called the ruling a clarification of existing law and “absolutely the correct decision.”

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-- Maura Dolan in San Francisco

Photo: Cole Allen Wilkins. Credit: Orange County district attorney's office

Four men injured by gunfire at Lancaster club, suspects sought

Approximate location of incident shown in red.

Authorities in Lancaster are seeking the public’s help in uncovering any information about a recent firefight at a local nightclub that left four men wounded.

According to a statement from the Lancaster station of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department,  the shooting occurred about 3 a.m. on Feb. 23 at the It Club  in the 4300 block of Business Center Drive  in Lancaster.  The shooting occurred after an argument between two parties, authorities said.

They listed four men, ages 18, 22, 27 and 37, as being injured by gunfire but their injuries were not life-threatening, authorities said.

The identity of the victims was not released.

Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call the detective handling the case at (310) 351-7764. Tips can also be reported anonymously to LA Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477.

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Polling station worker shot at school in Watts

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-- Ann M. Simmons

Map: Approximate location of incident shown in red. Credit: Google Maps

Undersheriff Paul Tanaka leaving L.A. Sheriff's Department

Los Angeles County Undersheriff Paul Tanaka in July 2012. Credit: Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times

Paul Tanaka, the second in  command at the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, who had come under criticism for problems that have plagued the agency, announced Wednesday that he is stepping down.

Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said Tanaka is retiring after 33 years with the department effective Aug. 1.

Whitmore said Tanaka's move was not related to a federal probe into allegations of inmate brutality in the county's jail system.

“I asked him that and he said no, it's just time,” Whitmore said. “The sheriff didn’t ask him to leave. This was done by his own volition."

Last year, a blue-ribbon commission issued a searing critique of  Baca, Tanaka and others, accusing them of fostering a culture in which deputies were permitted to beat and humiliate inmates, cover up misconduct and form aggressive deputy cliques in the Los Angeles County jails.

Tanaka came under harsh criticism from investigators for helping to promote the corrosive culture that contributed to many of the jails' problems.

Current and retired sheriff's officials have blamed Tanaka for some of the department's woes, saying that he openly fostered a climate in which deputies engaged in aggressive policing that violated the law and department policies.

Sheriff's officials rejected that criticism, saying that Tanaka was a well-respected leader in the department.

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Lion that attacked and killed worker is euthanized, report says

--Robert Faturechi

Photo: Los Angeles County Undersheriff Paul Tanaka in July 2012. Credit: Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times

Body found in mobile-home fire in Monrovia

Image: Map shows location of where a body was found in Monrovia. Source: Google Maps
Authorities Sunday were investigating the death of a man who was found in a burned-out mobile home in Monrovia.

Firefighters were dispatched to the home in the 2500 block of Peck Road about 8:46 a.m. Saturday and found it fully engulfed in flames. The remains of a badly burned adult male was discovered in the debris, said Los Angeles County sheriff’s officials.

Authorities did not release the identity of the man pending notification of next of kin. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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At least two injured in explosion at Sport Chalet in La Canada Flintridge

— Carla Rivera

Image: Map shows location of where a body was found in Monrovia. Source: Google Maps

Shooting victim dies after 3 weeks in hospital, suspect still at large

A man who was shot almost three weeks ago in Lakewood died Saturday at the hospital where he was being treated, authorities said.

The man, whose identity has not been released, was shot on Feb. 11 in the 11600 block of 205th Street, according to a statement from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The victim was taken to Long Beach Memorial Hospital, where authorities said he remained until succumbing to his injuries.

The case is being investigated as a homicide, authorities said. The gunman remains at large.

Anyone with information about this incident is urged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Homicide Bureau at (323) 890-5500. Tips can also be reported anonymously to Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477.

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Authorities investigate shooting death in Maywood

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-- Ann M. Simmons

Authorities investigate shooting death in Maywood

Authorities say they are investigating the circumstances surrounding a shooting in Maywood on Saturday that left a 26-year-old man dead.

The incident occurred  about 3:30 a.m. in the 3800 block of East 52nd Street, according to a statement from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

The unidentified victim, described only as a Latino man, was shot once in the upper torso while in the back yard of his residence, authorities said. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The motive for the shooting was unclear, authorities said.

Anyone with information about this incident is urged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Homicide Bureau at (323) 890-5500. Tips can also be reported anonymously to Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477.

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-- Ann M. Simmons

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