Los Angeles Times

Second person convicted in fatal beating of USC student

Xinran Ji was attacked while walking home from campus in 2014.

- By Matt Hamilton matt.hamilton @latimes.com Twitter: @MattHjourn­o

It took about two hours Thursday for a downtown Los Angeles jury to convict Andrew Garcia of beating a USC graduate student to death.

Garcia, 21, is the second person to be convicted of first-degree murder in the 2014 death of Xinran Ji, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

Ji, 24, was walking home near USC’s South L.A. campus after midnight on July 24, 2014, when authoritie­s say Garcia and others confronted him.

Garcia, two other men and a teenage girl attacked Ji with a baseball bat and a wrench, prosecutor­s said.

In interviews with detectives, the defendants said they targeted Ji — an engineerin­g student who had been walking home from a study group — because he was Chinese and they believed he had cash.

The group pummeled Ji, but he managed to flee. Prosecutor­s said Garcia chased him down and struck him several times with the bat.

Ji managed to walk back to his apartment, leaving a trail of blood along the quarter-mile route. He made it to his bed and, hours later, a roommate found him dead, prosecutor­s said.

Later, prosecutor­s said, Garcia and the rest of the group drove to Dockweiler State Beach, where they accosted and robbed a couple. Garcia was convicted of robbery for the beach incident along with attempted robbery and assault with a deadly weapon.

Following Monday’s verdict, Garcia faces life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole, according to Greg Risling, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office.

Ji’s death rattled the university — particular­ly its Chinese community.

Parents and family members of students gathered in Beijing, seeking answers about the brutal killing, while dozens of students descended upon the downtown L.A. courthouse to witness the defendants’ hearings.

About 4,600 of USC’s 10,500 internatio­nal students hail from China, according to figures published on the university’s website.

Ji’s death came amid a string of violent incidents at the university. In 2012, two Chinese graduate students were shot and killed in a botched robbery near campus. Six months later, a man fired gunshots in the middle of campus outside a Halloween party. The shooting injured four people, none of whom were USC students.

In response, USC improved security and added non-armed security “ambassador­s” in off-campus neighborho­ods. Internatio­nal graduate students were also required to complete a safety education program.

Jurors have also convicted Alejandra Guerrero for her role in Ji’s killing.

Guerrero, who was 16 at the time of the slaying, was found guilty in October of first-degree murder, robbery, attempted robbery and assault with a deadly weapon.

She faces life in prison; a sentencing date for her has not been set.

Two others charged in the case, Alberto Ochoa and Jonathan Del Carmen, are in jail and awaiting trial.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ANDREW GARCIA, 21, was found guilty of firstdegre­e murder. Two other defendants await trial.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ANDREW GARCIA, 21, was found guilty of firstdegre­e murder. Two other defendants await trial.

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