Los Angeles Times

Boyhood pals die in shooting

UCI doctoral student and expectant dad are shot on South L.A. street of their youth.

- BY ALEJANDRA REYES-VELARDE AND JULIA SCLAFANI

Doctoral student and an expectant father are gunned down in a South L.A. drive-by.

Jose Antonio Flores Velazquez, 23, and Alfredo Carrera, 24, were childhood friends who shared a bright future.

Flores Velazquez was a doctoral student at UC Irvine and well on his way to realizing his dream of becoming an astrophysi­cist.

Carrera was about to become a father.

On Wednesday, both men were fatally shot on the street where they grew up in South L.A. The gunman remains at large, authoritie­s said.

Family members said the two men were not involved in gangs or drugs, and that they had no idea why the men were targeted.

The two were in Carrera’s driveway in the 1100 block of East 68th Street in the Florence-Firestone neighborho­od about 7 p.m. when they were shot, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. A caller told authoritie­s that a vehicle approached and a passenger pulled out a handgun.

An argument ensued and shots rang out, Sheriff ’s Lt. Derrick Alfred said.

Flores Velazquez died at the scene and Carrera was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

No weapons were found on the victims, authoritie­s said. The suspect’s vehicle was described only as a dark-colored sedan.

The families of both men were devastated by their loss.

Flores Velazquez’s dream was to get a good job at a prestigiou­s institutio­n so he could one day afford to buy his parents, immigrants from Mexico, a home and so that his father would not have to work such long hours in his constructi­on job.

“They didn’t let him finish,” his father, Ramon Valdez, said in a telephone interview with The Times, his wife sobbing in the background. “He was just about to see the fruits of his labor.”

Flores Velazquez, who family members said always carried a notebook with him, navigated his two worlds with apparent ease.

Earlier in the week, he had given a talk on galaxy formations to a group of internatio­nal researcher­s at UC Irvine, said James Bullock, dean of the university’s School of Physical Sciences.

“Jose was an incredibly promising student in astrophysi­cs and was a rising star in his field,” Bullock said. “We were fortunate that he came to UCI to pursue his PhD. His loss will be widely felt and mourned on campus and in the community.”

They had recently been discussing a future schedule that would allow Flores Velazquez to work from home and spend more time with his family, Bullock said.

“Before he died, he submitted a draft of his research paper in which he used advanced supercompu­ter simulation­s to interpret telescopes’ observatio­ns about the rate at which galaxies form stars,” Bullock said, adding that the school was working on publishing his “cutting-edge” findings.

Carrera’s girlfriend, Marilyn Cuevas, 24, was expecting their first child next month, family members say.

Anabel Carrera, the man’s sister, said her brother had been studying at Cal State Northridge and was hoping to become a safety inspector for the California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health. But he recently stopped going to school so he could take on a second job and provide for his new baby, she said.

“He was a very sweet guy, never in trouble,” said his sister, crying. “He was trying to get an apartment for his girlfriend and baby. He was excited to celebrate.”

Flores Velazquez had gone to Carrera’s house to drop off gifts for a baby shower scheduled for Saturday, said Jason Flores, Flores Velazquez’s 18-yearold brother.

“He was just delivering presents, being a great friend that he was,” he said.

Jason Flores, who is also studying physics, said his brother aspired to work at NASA. Flores Velazquez graduated from Cal Poly Pomona in 2015 with a degree in physics and had held research assistant positions at Northweste­rn University’s Center for Interdisci­plinary Exploratio­n and Research in Astrophysi­cs and the Harvard-Smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs, his family said.

While studying for his doctorate at UC Irvine, Flores Velazquez usually visited home on Friday evenings, but last week he came home early to prepare for a weekend camping trip with some of his classmates, his family said.

On the weekends, Flores Velazquez’s father said he would often wake early to find his son working on his computer at the kitchen table.

“Almost done,” he would promise his father.

His parents may have understood their son’s ambition, but they didn’t always comprehend his complex studies. The large whiteboard­s that he kept at the house on which he passionate­ly wrote his notes were largely indecipher­able to them.

“Only he understood what he wrote,” his father said. “All you could see were galaxies.”

 ?? UC Irvine | Family photo ?? JOSE FLORES VELAZQUEZ, left, and Alfredo Carrera, who played baseball together in high school, died in a drive-by shooting in the Florence-Firestone area.
UC Irvine | Family photo JOSE FLORES VELAZQUEZ, left, and Alfredo Carrera, who played baseball together in high school, died in a drive-by shooting in the Florence-Firestone area.

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