Los Angeles Times

Father was shot in head at park

Coroner’s finding comes as detectives investigat­e other shootings at camp.

- By Richard Winton

Tristan Beaudette, a father who was killed while camping with his two young daughters at Malibu Creek State Park campground, was shot in the head, a coroner’s spokesman revealed Wednesday.

The announceme­nt comes as Los Angeles County sheriff’s homicide detectives continue to investigat­e the slaying while examining a series of other shootings in the area of the state park off Las Virgenes Road.

County coroner’s Deputy Chief Ed Winter said that an autopsy had determined that Beaudette, 35, of Irvine was killed by a gunshot to the head shortly before 5 a.m. last Friday at the campground. Winter said further details of the medical examiner’s findings would be available once a full medical report is transcribe­d.

Beaudette, a scientist who worked in pharmaceut­icals, and his 2- and 4-yearold daughters were sleeping in his tent at the state park in Calabasas when he was shot.

Since the slaying, informatio­n has emerged that at least five other shootings have occurred in the area in the last two years, outraging some neighbors who complained that the Sheriff’s Department had not notified them of the attacks.

Nicole Nishida, a Sheriff’s Department spokeswoma­n, said three other shootings occurred in the last year “nearby within the sheriff’s jurisdicti­on.” Nishida said the previous shootings happened June 6, 2017; July 22, 2017; and June 18, 2018.

Detectives will work with officials from the California State Parks Department to compare any similar incidents that have occurred within Malibu Creek State Park, Nishida said.

Nishida provided the number of shootings to The Times after the newspaper published accounts from 2016 and January 2017 of shootings that targeted campers.

A young man hiking the Backbone Trail and sleeping overnight in a hammock in Tapia Park, just south of Malibu Creek State Park, was struck by birdshot from a shotgun on Nov. 3, 2016.

James Rogers said he needed surgery to remove the pellets that hit him. “I heard a loud bang and then felt a burning sensation in my arm and fell to the ground,” he said. “Before I could look at my wound, I did a quick check of the perimeter and I saw nothing.

“I sleep with my arm up by my head, and I suspect I was shot at close range,” he said.

Rogers said there has been no headway in the investigat­ion of his shooting. He said he was not sleeping in a formal campground and was about 200 yards from Malibu Canyon Road when he was shot in his right arm.

“I was told by those working out there, there have been several other shootings,” he said.

Meliss Tatangelo was camping in her Honda when she heard a loud noise around 5 a.m. one day in January 2017. She and another camper did not go outside, but she later found part of an ammunition round in the back of her car where she had been sleeping. She reported the incident to authoritie­s, she noted on her Facebook page.

She wrote that she believes a shotgun was fired from about 20 feet away and that if the line of fire had been an inch higher, she would have been struck as she slept.

Sheriff’s Lt. Rodney Moore, who is overseeing the latest investigat­ion, said in an interview Monday that detectives had no evidence connecting any prior shootings to Beaudette’s death but that they also could not rule out any potential links.

The campground at Malibu Creek State Park remains closed indefinite­ly since Friday’s shooting.

“The safety of park visitors is our top priority,” parks officials said in a statement. “Our hearts go out to the victim and his family during this difficult time.”

Beaudette, an Irvine resident and a veteran of the outdoors, was camping to allow his wife, an Orange County obstetrici­an, some quiet time to study for an examinatio­n. Before 5 a.m., sheriff ’s deputies responded to a call regarding shots fired in the area and found Beaudette bleeding. He died before he could be taken to a hospital.

Deputies and police dogs scoured the campground and surroundin­g trails for clues.

In a statement, Nishida said: “Malibu/Lost Hills Station has previously increased patrols in the areas nearby following the prior incidents, and has canvassed the surroundin­g residences in an effort to obtain any workable informatio­n. Deputies will continue to maintain a highly visible presence in the vicinity to ensure public safety.”

richard.winton @latimes.com Twitter: @lacrimes

 ??  ?? TRISTAN BEAUDETTE with his wife, Erica Wu, and their daughters. Beaudette was killed June 22.
TRISTAN BEAUDETTE with his wife, Erica Wu, and their daughters. Beaudette was killed June 22.

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