Los Angeles Times

Independen­t Fuller autopsy finds no foul play

- BY MATTHEW ORMSETH

An autopsy commission­ed by the family of Robert Fuller, a Black man whose body was found hanging from a tree in Palmdale, found no signs of foul play, the family’s attorney said Friday.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said Thursday that its detectives and the Los Angeles Medical Examiner-Coroner had determined that Fuller, 24, died by suicide, affirming a preliminar­y finding that Fuller’s family and many residents of the Antelope Valley had called into question.

Dr. Marvin Pietruszka, a pathologis­t who examined Fuller’s body at the request of his family, found no signs of trauma significan­t enough to indicate a struggle or any foul play, said Jamon Hicks, a lawyer representi­ng the family. Although Pietruszka has yet to officially determine the cause of death and is still completing a written analysis, Hicks said he does not expect it to dispute the coroner’s conclusion.

Although the coroner’s office investigat­ed the possibilit­y that Fuller was hanged by someone other than himself, Matthew J. Miller, a deputy medical examiner, said a lack of “significan­t trauma” to the limbs or neck, “coupled with the existence of evidence of prior suicidal ideation and a history of mental health issues,” supported the finding of suicide.

Sheriff’s investigat­ors said Thursday that, after obtaining medical records and interviewi­ng relatives and social workers, they establishe­d that Fuller had been repeatedly hospitaliz­ed in the last three years for mental illness and suicidal behavior. Fuller had expressed an intention to hurt himself, and on at least one occasion attempted it, investigat­ors said, noting that he had tried to light himself on fire in Las Vegas.

Sheriff ’s detectives learned that an Electronic Benefit Transfer card registered to Fuller was used May 14 to purchase a red rope, consistent with the one used in his death, Cmdr. Chris Marks said Thursday. Detectives haven’t recovered video from the dollar store showing Fuller purchasing the rope, although Marks said they’ve obtained video that shows Fuller using the same debit card at other stores.

Fuller was last seen alive at a 7-Eleven store around 8 p.m. June 9, Hicks said. About seven hours later, a homeless person walking through Poncitlán Square, near Palmdale’s City Hall, found Fuller’s body hanging from a tree and alerted a nearby fire station, a coroner’s report said.

Fuller’s left wrist was scarred; Miller, the deputy medical examiner, said this was “strongly suggestive of prior suicidal ideation.” Hicks said Fuller’s family has since learned he “was what you’d call a ‘cutter’ — he cut himself to relieve pain.”

He added that the family didn’t know the severity of Fuller’s apparent mental illness, as demonstrat­ed in the hospital records that sheriff’s investigat­ors detailed on Thursday, until the department briefed Hicks on their findings a few hours before they were made public.

Hicks said he appreciate­d the oversight of the FBI and state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, who he said spoke personally with Fuller’s family after his office assumed a monitoring role in the sheriff ’s investigat­ion.

“That brings me relief, that there were numerous eyes on this,” Hicks said.

Hicks threw cold water on the notion that Fuller’s death and that of his halfbrothe­r, Terron Boone, were connected. A week after Fuller’s body was found, Boone, 31, died in a shootout with L.A. County sheriff’s detectives in Rosamond, a Kern County town about 20 miles north of Palmdale.

 ?? CAROLYN COLE Los Angeles Times ?? JAMON HICKS, right, attorney for the family of Robert Fuller, walks to a news conference Friday.
CAROLYN COLE Los Angeles Times JAMON HICKS, right, attorney for the family of Robert Fuller, walks to a news conference Friday.

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