Los Angeles Times

Man’s death by hanging is ruled a suicide

Investigat­ors reject theory that Robert Fuller was lynched, saying he had talked of taking his own life.

- By Colleen Shalby and Matthew Ormseth

Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department investigat­ors have concluded that Robert Fuller, a Black man whose body was found hanging from a tree in Palmdale last month, died by suicide, saying a thorough investigat­ion found no signs of foul play and showed the 24year-old had previously exhibited suicidal behavior.

The findings, announced Thursday, upheld the preliminar­y determinat­ion of suicide that Fuller’s family and many residents of the Antelope Valley had called into question. Pointing to the region’s history of racism toward Black people; the backdrop of unrest prompted by George Floyd’s death; the hanging death a week earlier of another Black man, Malcolm Harsch, in nearby Victorvill­e; and the setting where Fuller’s body was found — hanging in a public square outside Palmdale’s City Hall — they voiced a suspicion that Fuller had been lynched and demanded a more thorough investigat­ion, monitored by outside agencies.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva complied, and on Thursday, Cmdr. Chris Marks laid out his detectives’ findings, culled from medical records and interviews with family and social workers. Fuller, Marks said, had a documented history of mental illness and self-harm, having been admitted to hospitals in California, Arizona and Nevada after expressing a

desire — and on at least one occasion attempting — to hurt himself.

The Los Angeles County medical examiner-coroner ruled Fuller’s death a suicide, with Matthew J. Miller, a deputy medical examiner, writing in a report that a lack of “significan­t trauma” to Fuller’s neck and limbs, “coupled with the existence of evidence of prior suicidal ideation and a history of mental health issues,” supported that conclusion.

Jamon Hicks, an attorney representi­ng Fuller’s family, said he would respond to the sheriff’s and coroner’s findings Friday. Hicks has commission­ed an independen­t autopsy of Fuller’s body, the results of which have yet to be released. A private investigat­or is also attempting to retrace Fuller’s last steps.

Marks said Fuller’s family was very cooperativ­e, providing detectives with medical records and other “much-needed informatio­n.” Detectives obtained other records by serving hospitals with search warrants.

In January 2017, Fuller was hospitaliz­ed in Arizona and diagnosed with auditory hallucinat­ions after saying he wanted “to put a gun to his head,” Marks said. In February 2019, he checked himself into a hospital in California and reported hearing voices telling him to kill himself. And in November of that year he was hospitaliz­ed in Nevada after saying he planned to harm himself, Marks said.

In February, Fuller tried to light himself on fire, Las Vegas police told sheriff ’s detectives. Fuller, who grew up on the west side of Palmdale, lived at various times in Nevada and Arizona; Marks said a coordinato­r at a Las Vegas shelter for homeless youths told detectives that Fuller was a “periodic resident” there from February 2019 to February of this year.

On May 14, someone using an EBT card registered to Fuller purchased a red rope from a Dollar Tree — a rope consistent with the one found at the scene of Fuller’s death, Marks said.

Because the purchase was made more than one month before detectives inquired about it, they could not recover video from the store showing Fuller buying the rope, Marks said, although he noted that investigat­ors have found video from subsequent weeks showing Fuller using the same EBT card at various stores.

In the early morning hours of June 10, a homeless person walking through Poncitlán Square, near Palmdale’s City Hall, found Fuller’s body hanging from a tree, a coroner’s report said. Judging by how and where the rope was tied to the tree limb, detectives determined Fuller “was not hoisted into that position,” Marks said. His body showed no signs of a struggle or defensive wounds, although detectives noted scarring on his left wrist that indicated selfharm, Marks said. Investigat­ors have found no video footage that shows the tree itself, he said.

It remained to be seen whether those who greeted the initial finding of suicide with skepticism would accept the Sheriff’s Department’s conclusion. When Robert Fuller’s half-brother, Terron Boone, died in a shootout with sheriff ’s deputies one week after Fuller’s body was found, rumors and speculatio­n about a coverup ricocheted through social media.

Villanueva praised his detectives’ work and declared that “people should not translate a lack of informatio­n to a conspiracy,” but he said the finding of suicide does not change the tragedy that is a young man’s death.

“There are no winners or losers in this,” he said.

 ??  ?? ROBERT FULLER had previously exhibited suicidal behavior, sheriff ’s investigat­ors said.
ROBERT FULLER had previously exhibited suicidal behavior, sheriff ’s investigat­ors said.

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