Las Vegas Review-Journal

POLICE: SUSPECT’S ‘WALL STARTING TO CRUMBLE’

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followed. The detective declined to elaborate.

Wall’s lawyer said he believed Vargas had “conflicts with a number of persons, not just involving financial debts.”

“He owed a lot of people money,” Ivie said.

On Dec. 7, 2009, Jeffrey Tidus walked outside of his Rolling Hills Estates home and was shot in the back of the head. He died a day later.

The shooting shocked Tidus’ quiet neighborho­od and Los Angeles’ legal community.

The attorney — a partner at Baute & Tidus — was known as an aggressive litigator who won large-dollar judgments for his clients.

“He was the rainmaker for that firm,” Los Angeles County sheriff’s Det. Joe Espino said of Tidus, who also served on the board of governors for the State Bar of California.

Among Tidus’ clients was a man who had won an $11 million judgment against a friend and business associate of Wall’s, a former tax attorney named Christophe­r Gruys.

During a pretrial deposition in 2005, Gruys had pulled out a camera and took a photograph of Tidus, then made what the attorney interprete­d as a threat, according to a declaratio­n Tidus filed in court seeking a restrainin­g order.

“I felt and continue to feel threatened by Mr. Gruys’ statements and conduct,” Tidus said in the declaratio­n.

When Tidus’ client tried to collect on the judgment, he filed another suit against Gruys and Wall. The client alleged that Gruys was transferri­ng money to Wall’s business to avoid paying what he owed, according to an appellate court decision in the case, which also mentioned that Gruys was the best man at Wall’s wedding.

Sheriff’s detectives previously described Gruys as a “person of interest,” but not a suspect, in Tidus’ death. Authoritie­s in May released a sketch of an additional, unidentifi­ed “person of interest” whom they want to question.

Gruys’ attorney, Thomas M. Brown, said his client had done nothing wrong and hadn’t heard from Wall or spoken to him recently.

“They maybe talk a couple times a year,” Brown said.

In July, sheriff’s detectives asked the public’s help in finding Wall, who they announced was a third “person of interest” in the Tidus killing. In recent months investigat­ors have served search warrants at Wall’s home and business, along with an airplane hangar in Fullerton that he rents and a house boat he owns in Lake Mead, Espino said.

Additional interviews and physical evidence led investigat­ors to conclude Wall was involved in the lawyer’s killing, Espino said, though he declined to elaborate.

“Wall’s wall is starting to crumble,” Espino said.

When Juan Gabriel Ramirez-mendez was fatally shot outside his apartment on Feb. 26, 2011, it looked like a profession­al hit, Whittier police Det. Chad Hoeppner said. Ramirez-mendez, 35, had been shot at close range in front of his 7-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son.

The killing was carried out by two men, Hoeppner said. One was described as about 6 feet tall, between 170 and 180 pounds, and wearing blue jeans and a black coat with a hood. Police have not released a descriptio­n of the other.

Ramirez-mendez had worked for Wall’s business, Welded Fixtures, creating displays for retailers from September 2007 to December 2008. In 2009, he filed a class-action lawsuit against the firm on behalf of employees, alleging workers were not compensate­d for overtime and made to take short meal breaks or none at all, according to court records.

The lawsuit was settled in December 2010, three months before Ramirez-mendez was killed, according to the case records. Ramirez-mendez never received payment in the suit, Hoeppner said.

Last month, an “in escrow” sign stood outside Wall’s gated home perched atop a hill in Whittier. The online listing for the 3,500-square-foot residence boasted imported Italian windows and outdoor patio complete with a pizza oven, a waterfall and a Jacuzzi overlookin­g panoramic views from Orange County to downtown Los Angeles.

Residents in the area said Wall kept to himself; one thought he might have been on vacation.

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