Los Angeles Times

Murder trial of O.C. businessma­n begins

Edward Younghoon Shin is accused of killing partner in 2010.

- By Christophe­r Goffard christophe­r.goffard @latimes.com

The trial for an Irvine businessma­n who is charged with murdering his former business partner for financial gain and making his body vanish has begun.

The defendant, Edward Younghoon Shin, 40, faces the possibilit­y of life in prison if he is convicted of killing Chris Smith, who was 33 when he disappeare­d in June 2010.

In laying out the case for jurors Nov. 13 in Orange County Superior Court, prosecutor Matt Murphy said that in the weeks leading up to Smith’s disappeara­nce, Smith had stopped trusting Shin. Shin was entangled in lawsuits that accused him of misappropr­iating funds from former employers, and Smith feared that he would plunder their corporate accounts to pay off his debts, Murphy said.

Each man wanted something from the other, Murphy said. Shin wanted Smith’s signature on paperwork to authorize a $700,000 financial settlement in one lawsuit. And Smith wanted Shin to agree to greater financial transparen­cy in their businesses.

“Chris Smith created a big problem for Ed Shin,” Murphy told jurors.

The business partners ran a company called 800XChange out of a San Juan Capistrano business park, focusing on debt consolidat­ion as well as affiliated companies, the prosecutor said.

“This was kind of the Wild West,” Murphy said. “These guys were making money hand over fist.”

Smith, a bachelor and avid surfer, appeared to be living what Murphy called a “dream life,” with an oceanview Laguna Beach apartment and a serious girlfriend.

But his business partner had a serious gambling habit, and would take private jets to casinos where he wagered what a witness called “obscene” amounts of money, the prosecutor said.

“The problem is called ‘Viva Las Vegas,’ ” Murphy said. “He had a penchant for craps.”

On June 4, 2010, Smith vanished. The next day, Shin sent an email to company employees telling them to stay away from the office for the next week for “privacy” as he and Smith discussed the company’s future.

When employees returned, they said they noticed an unexplaine­d smell so foul they burned candles to counter it.

Shin told people that Smith had headed to the Galapagos Islands and planned to surf the world in the company of a new girlfriend named Tiffany Taylor, the prosecutor said.

The prosecutor said Taylor turned out to be a Las Vegas “atmosphere model” and former Playboy model who denied going to the Galapagos with Smith.

Five days after Smith’s disappeara­nce, the prosecutor said, Shin rented a Dodge Ram and put 345 miles on it before returning it — far enough to take Smith’s body to the desert and dispose of it, Murphy said. The remains have not been found.

Four months after Smith disappeare­d, his family received an email purporting to be from him that caused them serious worry. It said he planned to take a yacht trip through the pirate-frequented waters off Somalia, the prosecutor said.

“The most dangerous trip anybody could ever take, because of course he’s never coming home,” Murphy said.

Smith’s father filed a missing persons report with the Laguna Beach Police Department, which found that Smith hadn’t used his credit card since June.

The prosecutor said that when forensic investigat­ors searched the vacant San Juan Capistrano business offices Shin and Smith had shared, they found Smith’s blood on the walls, ceiling and desk and in the cement under the carpet, indicating a scene of “helter-skelter” violence had taken place.

Shin, 40, has pleaded not guilty. His attorney declined to give an opening statement.

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