Lodi News-Sentinel

Suspect in Smart case was looked at in other probes

- Richard Winton, Matthew Ormseth

Paul Flores, the man accused this week in the slaying of Cal Poly SLO student Kristin Smart in 1996, was years later investigat­ed for sexual assault cases in the Los Angeles area, police and prosecutor­s have revealed.

San Luis Obispo prosecutor­s charged Flores with first-degree murder, alleging that he killed Smart in his college dorm room as he sexually assaulted her. He has in the past denied wrongdoing.

Authoritie­s in Los Angeles County say Flores, who lived in San Pedro, was also the subject of sexual assault investigat­ions locally.

What do we know about the L.A.-area cases?LAPD Capt. Jonathan Tippet, head of the agency's Robbery-Homicide Division, said detectives in recent months gathered evidence against

Flores in two sexual assaults that allegedly occurred over several years.

The L.A. County district attorney's office has not made a decision whether to file criminal charges against Flores in the alleged attacks.

In 2013, Redondo Beach police presented prosecutor­s with a rape allegation. The D.A. declined to charge Flores in that case "due to insufficie­nt evidence," officials said.

Is there an ongoing investigat­ion?L.A. County authoritie­s provided few details about the local cases, but Tippet said the two LAPD cases were open and ongoing.

San Luis Obispo County Dist. Atty. Dan Dow said his office is looking into whether Flores sexually assaulted other women in San Pedro, where he has lived since about 2005.

He asked that women who may have been assaulted by Flores contact San Luis Obispo authoritie­s.

Where does the Smart case stand?Flores, 44, was arrested Tuesday at his home, nearly 25 years after Smart left a party near the Cal Poly campus and van

ished on the way back to her dormitory.

Dow said prosecutor­s decided they could prove Flores' guilt after investigat­ors discovered more evidence and interviewe­d new witnesses in the last two years. He declined to provide specifics, saying only that text messages taken from Flores' phone had been "helpful" and that detectives obtained "very important" informatio­n in March. Investigat­ors that month searched a home owned by Flores' father with cadaver dogs and groundpene­trating radar.

"We've got physical evidence," Dow said, "we have witness statements, things that, in our view, in their totality, have brought us to the point where we believe we can go forward and prosecute Mr. Flores for the murder of Kristin Smart."

Flores' father, Ruben Flores, 80, was charged Wednesday as an accessory to Smart's murder. He is accused of helping his son dispose of Smart's remains.

What is the next step?Both men have yet to enter a plea. An arraignmen­t scheduled for Thursday in San Luis Obispo County Superior Court was postponed until Monday.

Flores' family has steadfastl­y maintained his innocence. Last month, his mother reiterated the claim, telling a television reporter, "We have no responsibi­lity for her disappeara­nce and what happened to that young woman."

The whereabout­s of Smart's body remain a mystery. On Wednesday, Dow said "we do believe we have the location where the body was buried," but would not elaborate. Authoritie­s have not found Smart's remains and are continuing to search for them, Sheriff Ian Parkinson said Tuesday.

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