Los Angeles Times

4th beating victim dies

Man was among those who were attacked while sleeping outside in Santa Monica, L.A.

- By James Queally james.queally@latimes.com Twitter: @JamesQueal­lyLAT Times staff writers Brittny Mejia and Richard Winton contribute­d to this report.

A man who was battered in Santa Monica during a spate of attacks on the region’s sprawling and vulnerable homeless population last month died of his injuries Sunday, authoritie­s said.

The victim, who was not immediatel­y identified, was struck in the head while sleeping in the area of 7th Street and Broadway in Santa Monica early on the morning of Sept. 24, police have said.

He was the last in a string of victims police believe were beaten by Ramon Escobar, a 47-year-old Houston man suspected of killing four men and seriously injuring four others as they slept outside in Los Angeles and Santa Monica from Sept. 8 to Sept. 24. Escobar, who is also a person of interest in the disappeara­nce of two of his relatives in Texas, was captured by Santa Monica police shortly after the Sept. 24 attack.

Santa Monica Police Lt. Saul Rodriguez said investigat­ors will ask the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office to file an additional murder charge against Escobar.

Escobar was charged with three counts of murder, five counts of attempted murder and four counts of robbery late last month.

Detectives have said Escobar fled to Southern California from Houston in early September after his aunt and uncle, Dina and Rogelio Escobar, vanished in the Houston area. The charred remains of Dina Escobar’s vehicle were found on a beach in Galveston, Texas, in late August, and Houston police have said they suspect foul play in the disappeara­nces.

In Southern California, police say, Escobar wielded a baseball bat or bolt cutters in a series of attacks that left three men dead.

Kelvin Williams, 59, and Braden Ridout, 34, were beaten to death with a wooden baseball bat as they slept outside in downtown Los Angeles’ Financial District on Sept. 16. Another man sleeping nearby, Tievon Harmon, 23, was critically injured in those attacks, police said.

Four days later, 39-yearold Steven Ray Cruze Jr. of San Gabriel was found dead under the Santa Monica Pier smashed in the head. Cruze had been sleeping there after an overnight fishing trip and was not homeless, his family said.

Detectives believe Escobar also assaulted two other homeless men near the beach in Santa Monica on Sept. 8 and 10. One of those victims has been released from the hospital, but the other remains comatose, Rodriguez said.

On Sept. 22, he also attacked a man in the Palms neighborho­od, according to the LAPD. The victim, who suffered critical injuries, has been interviewe­d by police and is expected to survive, said Capt. Patricia Sandoval, an LAPD spokeswoma­n.

Harmon remained in critical condition Wednesday, Sandoval said.

In the days following his arrest, questions about Escobar’s immigratio­n status and mental competency began to swirl. Escobar was born in El Salvador and had been deported six times between 1997 and 2011, according to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

He was ordered deported again in 2016, but an appeal of his removal was granted by a federal judge, records show.

ICE has not responded to multiple requests from The Times for additional informatio­n. The Department of Justice denied a request for additional informatio­n, citing privacy laws.

Escobar has yet to enter a plea in the pending murder and attempted murder cases in Southern California. He is scheduled to appear in court again Nov. 8.

A review of court records also showed Escobar was diagnosed with schizophre­nia in 2001 and spent time in the Harris County Psychiatri­c Center in Houston. A federal judge also ordered a hearing on his competency during a deportatio­n proceeding in 2012, records show. Records about Escobar’s mental health were sealed.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? RAMON ESCOBAR, shown in court in Los Angeles last week, has been charged with three counts of murder. Santa Monica police now are seeking an additional murder charge after a fourth person died of his injuries.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times RAMON ESCOBAR, shown in court in Los Angeles last week, has been charged with three counts of murder. Santa Monica police now are seeking an additional murder charge after a fourth person died of his injuries.
 ?? Los Angeles Police Department ?? POLICE say this surveillan­ce image shows Escobar in downtown L.A. at the time of several attacks nearby. He also faces attempted murder and robbery charges.
Los Angeles Police Department POLICE say this surveillan­ce image shows Escobar in downtown L.A. at the time of several attacks nearby. He also faces attempted murder and robbery charges.

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