Los Angeles Times

Bodies left in home for five days

Lancaster father killed two children, kept two others in rooms with no food, prosecutor­s allege in new filings.

- By Richard Winton and Matt Hamilton

The horror inside the beige Lancaster home began to unfold the Sunday after Thanksgivi­ng.

Maurice Jewel Taylor Sr., 34, decapitate­d his son and daughter, authoritie­s allege. Then, for the next f ive days, he kept the bodies of 12- yearold Maurice Jr. and 13- yearold Maliaka inside the house, along with his two younger sons, ages 8 and 9.

During this period, prosecutor­s allege in court papers f iled Tuesday, the personal trainer showed the dead bodies to the surviving children, who were kept in their rooms without food.

It wasn’t until Friday that a call about a possible gas leak brought f irefighter­s to the gruesome scene inside the house on Century Circle.

Taylor’s clients, who had been taking Zoom classes with him, had called authoritie­s after he stopped communicat­ing with them.

The children’s mother, who was in the house, is not a suspect but has been questioned by investigat­ors and is still in contact with them, said Lt. Brandon Dean of the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’ s Department’s Homicide Bureau. Dean said deputies found the children’s bodies in separate bedrooms in the home.

On Tuesday, prosecutor­s charged Taylor with two counts each of murder and child abuse. During his arrest Friday, Taylor was handcuffed and taken away on a stretcher to an ambulance, escorted by deputies.

Taylor becomes the f irst high- profile murder defendant for newly elected Dist. Atty. George Gascón, who has pledged not to seek the death penalty in any new cases.

His arraignmen­t has been postponed until Dec. 21. He remains in jail in lieu of a $ 4.2- million bond and faces a maximum sentence of 57 years to life in prison.

The L. A. County Department of Children and Family Services does not appear to have had any involvemen­t with the family, and deputies had not recently been called to the home, Dean said.

Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris said it was his understand­ing that the family had one minor contact with authoritie­s years ago but nothing to suggest the brutal nature of the crime.

Taylor’s clients, with whom he had worked at a

Santa Monica physical therapy and f itness center, became concerned after he did not send out a Zoom link for a scheduled session and could not be reached. They were worried that a gas leak had occurred at the home and asked authoritie­s to check on the family.

“I knew they weren’t out of town. They didn’t have money to travel,” one client said.

Howard Kern, an attorney and writer who trained with Taylor for about seven years, said he called the L. A. County Fire Department at 7: 34 a. m. Friday, after other clients had called the Sheriff ’ s Department to relay their worries.

“I said, ‘ I’m concerned,’” Kern recalled. “‘ We are concerned about a possible gas leak. There are four children and two adults — and we are concerned about their safety.’ ”

Another client, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Taylor had been working remotely because of the pandemic. He was “so reliable, so responsive” and “mellow,” the client said.

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