Los Angeles Times

Triple slaying at cemetery strikes fear into town

Mysterious act of violence leaves Perris awash in rumors.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

On a brisk Sunday evening, four men shared food and drinks before stumbling the next morning into a humble little cemetery dotted with leafless trees.

They came to pay their respects to an old friend, Uver Hernandez Castañeda.

Only one of the men would walk out of Perris Valley Cemetery.

Near the grave of Hernandez Castañeda lay the bodies of three of the men. The fourth became the subject of a manhunt.

On Thursday, 10 days after the slayings, law enforcemen­t in Cheyenne, Wyo., arrested Jose Luis Torres Garcia after a traffic stop of a 2007 silver GMC. Riverside County sheriff’s officials said 15 pounds of marijuana was recovered from the suspect’s vehicle.

Detectives say Torres Garcia, 33, killed Jaime Co

varrubias Espindola, 50; Jose Maria Aguilar-Espejel, 38; and Rodrigo Aguilar-Espejel, 28.

The triple killing Feb. 17 in Perris, a town of nearly 78,000 people, caused a ripple of fear after the Riverside County sheriff invoked the specter of cartel involvemen­t.

Sheriff Chad Bianco was attempting to quell residents’ concerns at a news conference the next day, saying that they should not feel in danger and that the killings were not related to several others in the county. On Feb. 2, a man was shot at an Arco gas station across from Perris’ Mariscos Playa de Ixtapa restaurant, and 10 days later, a man was killed at a nearby park. (A couple of days after the cemetery killings, three women were found dead in pools of blood inside a home in nearby Hemet.)

“We’re receiving some of the same informatio­n that you are, that it’s gang-related, that it’s cartel-related,” Bianco said. “We’re looking into all of that.”

The sheriff didn’t answer questions about how the men were killed, whether a weapon was used or how they were found. Autopsies were completed on Feb. 24, but coroner officials referred questions to homicide investigat­ors. The investigat­or on the case, Alberto Loureiro, declined to speak to a Times reporter about the details.

Asked during the news conference whether the men were killed “executions­tyle,” Bianco said, “You could get into semantics of what you would call it, but it certainly seems that way.”

No motive has been establishe­d for the killings. But that hasn’t stopped rumors from flowing in town.

The grave the men had been visiting belonged to a man who met a violent end just months before, more than 1,700 miles away in central Mexico. Hernandez Castañeda had been tortured and killed near the highlands of Opopeo, in the state of Michoacan, while on his way to visit family for the holidays.

On Dec. 18, he was driving a white Range Rover to his family’s home in Turicato, a town dominated by a strong cartel presence, according to Mexican news reports.

He never made it. On Dec. 20, his family reported him missing, and two days later, his body was found with gunshot wounds and other “signs of violence” near Opopeo, a pueblo of fewer than 9,000 people where locals have formed self-defense teams against drug trafficker­s.

On social media and at the cemetery, family and friends insisted he had no enemies. He was remembered as a kind, giving father and husband who had inadverten­tly become entangled in the violence convulsing parts of Mexico.

On a recent morning, a crowd of curious cemetery visitors gathered to take a peek at the grave of Hernandez Castañeda. Suddenly, a white Nissan SUV drove into the cemetery. A man in a black T-shirt and a woman dressed all in orange exited the vehicle with their young son and walked toward Hernandez Castañeda’s grave. Seeing the family approach, the small group scattered.

The woman identified herself as the sister-in-law of Hernandez Castañeda. Ac cording to her, the man had lived in the U.S. for 20 years with his family. But he had a lover, she said.

The sister-in-law said the woman apparently had a powerful lover in Mexico. When Hernandez Castañeda made the holiday trip to his home country, he was killed, his sister-in-law said. Like many others interviewe­d by The Times, she declined to allow her name to be used, citing concerns about her safety.

“There’s no justice in Mexico,” she said, shaking her head as she looked down at her brother-in-law’s headstone.

By the time the family visited Hernandez Castañeda’s grave, it had been cleaned of any signs that something horrible had happened there in recent days. Under a beaming sun, a wooden crucifix lay over his flat headstone, partially hiding an engraving: “Don’t be saddened by my absence, I haven’t left your side.… You can’t hear my voice, but I’m still with you.”

Earlier that morning, the sound of crows squawking and doves cooing was slowly replaced by chatter and cumbia music as families settled in to spend time with deceased loved ones, laying folding chairs, blankets and snacks on the green grass feet away from Hernandez Castañeda’s grave.

One woman, who gave her name only as Victoria, ventured across the cemetery to visit Hernandez Castañeda’s headstone. She was merely curious. But she turned around before getting too close. Suddenly, she worried about whether the wrong person might be watching.

“It’s better to say you don’t hear anything, because people could be watching,” the woman said. “It’s better to observe from a distance.”

A cemetery employee and his friend — who both asked to remain nameless — nervously tiptoed around the idea that the triple killing might be cartel-related.

“I don’t want to know a thing about that,” the employee said.

Perris is a hot spot for tourists who visit Lake Perris and enjoy adventures like skydiving and hot-air balloon rides. The “skydiving capital of America” rarely makes news — except when skydiving tragedies occur.

It’s a family-oriented town that has appealed to locals for its calmness and safety. More than 75% of the population is Latino.

Olivia Moreno de Gonzalez, who identified herself in a phone interview as the owner of Mariscos Playa de Ixtapa, said she had been busy fending off rumors, including that Hernandez Castañeda was the owner, rather than an employee. One of the victims of the cemetery killings, Covarrubia­s Espindola, was also an employee, she said.

“Many things people are saying are lies, and it’s affecting us,” Moreno de Gonzalez said. “Honestly, we’re the same as you. We don’t know anything.”

At a local swap meet, a woman selling religious memorabili­a said she remembered two men who showed up looking for candles and a prayer book for their cousin. They told her he had been killed in Mexico. She recognized a crucifix she sold as one that ended up on Hernandez Castañeda’s headstone. But the woman said she could not remember who purchased it.

Back in the cemetery, Hernandez Castañeda’s brother knelt in front of the grave and removed the crucifix and two flowers that had been lying there. He wiped the headstone somberly. His brother, he said, was not involved in any cartel activity, despite his slaying and the strange one that befell three men at his plot.

“Everyone who knows us knows it’s not what people are thinking,” he said.

The morning of the killings, the man said, he got a call from a family friend.

“I see three men sleeping on your brother’s grave,” she told Hernandez Castañeda’s brother.

“I’ll be right there and I’ll see who they are,” he said. But before he could, she called again.

“I think they’re dead,” she said.

He raced to the grave to investigat­e for himself, but by then the cemetery was swarmed with sheriff ’s deputies and investigat­ors.

Hernandez Castañeda’s brother said he had a simple theory about the tragic event: The four men were drinking and got into a fight. It wasn’t unusual for his brother’s friends to visit his grave. He had told them repeatedly not to bring bottles to the cemetery, because drinking is forbidden on the grounds.

He was familiar with the four men, the brother said. One of them, Covarrubia­s Espindola, was a beloved chef at Mariscos Playa de Ixtapa, who would leave his kitchen to ask guests whether they enjoyed his food and take personal dish requests from friends.

The other men he knew only as his brother’s friends. Nothing about the suspect, Torres Garcia, struck him as concerning.

“I don’t know this crazy mentality he had,” the brother of Hernandez Castañeda said.

He heard that one of the bodies lay to the right of his brother’s tombstone; the other two, to the left.

Other than that, he said, it’s all a mystery.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? THE GRAVE of Uver Hernandez Castañeda — the scene of a triple homicide in February. Hernandez Castañeda himself was killed in Mexico in December.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times THE GRAVE of Uver Hernandez Castañeda — the scene of a triple homicide in February. Hernandez Castañeda himself was killed in Mexico in December.
 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN who said he was Uver Hernandez Castañeda’s brother visits his grave at Perris Valley Cemetery last month. He said Hernandez Castañeda was not involved with cartels. “Everyone who knows us knows it’s not what people are thinking,” he said.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A MAN who said he was Uver Hernandez Castañeda’s brother visits his grave at Perris Valley Cemetery last month. He said Hernandez Castañeda was not involved with cartels. “Everyone who knows us knows it’s not what people are thinking,” he said.
 ??  ?? MARISCOS PLAYA DE IXTAPA restaurant in Perris, where one of the men slain last month worked.
MARISCOS PLAYA DE IXTAPA restaurant in Perris, where one of the men slain last month worked.

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