Daily Breeze (Torrance)

`Truly diabolical criminal' gets more time for breaking out of Orange County jail

- By Sean Emery semery@scng.com

A convicted torturer and former internatio­nal fugitive accused of mastermind­ing an audacious 2016 escape from an Orange County jail was sentenced Friday to two years and eight months behind bars for his role in the headline-grabbing jailbreak.

A week after an Orange County Superior Court jury convicted Hossein Nayeri of taking part in the brazen break-out from the Men's Central jail in Santa Ana and also found him guilty of stealing a van while on the lam, Nayeri's lengthy legal journey appears to have come to an end.

This case won't likely affect Nayeri's future much — he was already sentenced to a life in prison.

Over the past decade Nayeri, now 44, has become one of Orange County's most notorious inmates — a man District Attorney Todd Spitzer recently described as “one of America's most dangerous criminals,” who past prosecutor­s have called a “psychopath” and a “truly diabolical criminal” and compared to the fictional Hannibal Lecter.

Orange County Superior Court Judge Larry Yellin on Friday, just a block from where the escape took place, cited the sophistica­ted nature of the jailbreak while handing down what was effectivel­y the maximum sentenced available under current state law.

“`Shawshank Redemption' had nothing on you guys,” Yellin told Nayeri, referring to a tenacious jail escape in the 1994 film. “It played out like a movie.”

Nayeri did not speak during Friday's hearing. He kept his eyes downcast while seated next to his attorney, his hands tucked in his suit's pockets as he was led in and out of the courtroom.

Nayeri has freely admitted to breaking out of the jail with two fellow escapees, kicking off an intense weeklong manhunt that ended with three men back in custody. But, during his trial, Nayeri repeatedly denied abducting and holding against his will an independen­t taxi driver who drove the three to various hotels in Southern California and the Bay Area while on the run.

Prior to his most recent trial, Nayeri was already serving multiple prison terms of life without the possibilit­y of parole for mastermind­ing one of the most violent and shocking crimes tied to Orange County in recent memory. In 2012, Nayeri and two high school friends abducted a marijuana dispensary owner from his Newport Beach home.

They wanted him to turn over a non-existent $1 million they believed he had buried in the Mojave Desert. They beat him with plastic tubing, Tased him and burned the man with a blowtorch before cutting his penis off and leaving him bound in the desert. A woman who was also abducted escaped and found a law enforcemen­t officer, likely saving both of their lives. The missing body part was never found.

Nayeri fled to his native Iran before police identifed him as a suspect. His then-wife — who unbeknowns­t to Nayeri was cooperatin­g with police — persuaded him to travel to another country where he could be arrested and extradited back to the United States.

Once in local custody, Nayeri was housed in a dormstyle unit in Men's Central Jail, part of the Central Jail Complex alongside the Sheriff's Department's headquarte­rs in the Civic Center near downtown Santa Ana.

Nayeri spent months working with other inmates — including his eventual fellow escapees Bac Tien Duong and Jonathan Tieu — on a plan to break out. Nayeri would film the escape on a smuggled cellphone.

The inmates cut through half-inch steel bars to access plumbing tunnels. They crafted makeshift ropes out of bedsheets to access the jail's roof. On at least two occasions they made their way to the roof so they could use the makeshift ropes to pull up backpacks full of supplies that included actual rope and cellphones. Duong had gotten a friend to bring the contraband to just outside the jail.

On Jan. 22, 2016, in the early-morning hours, the three men used the ropes to rappel down the five-story jail and then slipped away into a Santa Ana neighborho­od.

Nayeri continued to call the shots, prosecutor­s have said.

The escapees were scooped up by a friend of Duong's. Then, prosecutor­s say, they contacted an unsuspecti­ng, unlicensed taxi driver named Long Ma, who would testify to driving the men to Rosemead before they pulled a gun on him.

Ma said the escapees held him against his will for five days while they moved among hotels, first in Rosemead and then heading north to San Jose in both Ma's vehicle and a van Duong had stolen in Los Angeles. Tension between Nayeri and Duong exploded in a violent confrontat­ion in a Bay Area hotel room over whether to kill the taxi driver, prosecutor­s say. Ma credited Duong with saving his life, and said he persuaded Duong to drive the two of them back to Orange County so Duong could turn himself in.

A day later, Nayeri and Tieu were arrested in San Francisco.

Nayeri, in testimony, described the taxi driver not as a kidnap victim — but as an accomplice who agreed to ferry the escapees away from Southern California and house them as they tried to elude law enforcemen­t for $10,000.

In his telling, Nayer's initial plan to have some man pick him up outside the jail and take him to Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport with a passport and a plane ticket to Turkey fell apart when the wouldbe accomplice “ghosted” him. Nayeri said he then had no choice — he would stick with Duong and Tieu.

Nayeri denied that the escapees had a gun, and alleged that they made the trip to the Bay Area so that Ma could talk to family members and see if they could house the three men. Nayeri said his fight with Duong actually occurred after he learned that Duong had stolen the van in Los Angeles rather than purchasing it, potentiall­y bringing more attention to the escapees. Nayeri's attorney told jurors the cab driver decided to leave with Duong after realizing that he could make more money collecting part of a reward for the escapees' capture; it had swelled to $200,000.

In court, Deputy District Attorney David McMurrin repeatedly challenged Nayeri's story — pointing to internet searches at least one of the men made in the Bay Area for gun ranges. The prosecutor also noted 17 bullets were found in a plastic bag within the van after Nayeri and Tieu's arrests, with the van's owner saying he had fully cleared out the vehicle before it was stolen.

McMurrin told jurors Nayeri and the others needed the taxi driver: He had an ID that could be used to check them into hotel rooms and to collect money orders, including cash Nayeri's grandmothe­r wired from Iran.

During his own testimony in Nayeri's recent trial, the taxi driver was often combative and indignant, at times contradict­ing what he had said in a previous trial and in police interviews, including concerning his descriptio­n of the reported firearm.

Nayeri was acquitted on the kidnapping charge that carried that trial's most serious sentence, a potential life term.

But Nayeri had already been convicted of the abduction and torture of the marijuana dispensary owner that had landed him behind bars in the first place, getting him those two consecutiv­e life terms, as well as an additional seven years to life behind bars.

Previously, Duong was convicted for his role in the jail escape, along with the car theft and the kidnapping. Ma, who credits Duong with saving his life, asked that Duong be shown mercy. A judge last year sentenced Duong to 20 years in prison.

Tieu is still awaiting trial on the jailbreak.

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