Los Angeles Times

Two men found dead in Beverly Grove houses

Police investigat­e fatal stabbing of one man and an intruder who killed himself later.

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove, Lila Seidman and Kevin Rector

Claudia Beaton was standing near her front window Monday afternoon, listening to a work call on speakerpho­ne, when she saw a black SUV stop abruptly in front of her Beverly Grove home.

“Call 911 right now!” the driver shouted to her. There was an intruder, the driver said, jumping her neighbors’ fences, and he would soon be in her backyard.

But when she called 911, the dispatcher told her that they couldn’t send anyone until the intruder was on her property, Beaton said. Minutes later, she called 911 again. He was there.

Her husband yelled at the intruder to leave. The man leapt into another yard. A builder and city inspectors screamed at him to leave the yard of a home under constructi­on. Police arrived but couldn’t find him, and left to search the street over.

Then, minutes later, a man, screaming for help. A haunting, gurgling, gasping sound. A doctor who lived nearby rushing to help. The police coming back to search again, and then later, warning everyone to get back in their homes.

“We’re searching for a murderer,” Beaton said authoritie­s told them.

On Monday afternoon, residents near the 6600 block of Maryland Drive tried to stop the intruder before he stabbed their neighbor to death at his home, then broke into another home, where he apparently killed himself, according to preliminar­y reports from Los Angeles police.

Detectives believe the attacker might have been living out of his car, which was found in a nearby alley, said Sgt. J. Mankey, a watch commander at the LAPD’s Wilshire community station. Neither of the men’s names have been released, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Medical

Examiner-Coroner.

Beaton was not the first neighbor to call authoritie­s to report the man.

Less than an hour and a half before the stabbing, LAPD officers responded to the area after a homeowner called to report a trespasser, Chief Michel Moore confirmed Tuesday afternoon.

The officers spoke with the homeowner and the man suspected of trespassin­g, who is now the stabbing suspect, about 3:10 p.m., but concluded “there was no legal basis to make an arrest,” Moore said.

“He had expressed that he had some car trouble. We offered help, which he declined. He was not committing a crime at that point, and he did not appear to present a danger to himself or others,” Moore said.

That exchange is now being reviewed as part of the investigat­ion into the stabbing to determine “how such a tragic event occurred,” he said.

“A lot more questions than answers at this point,” Moore said. “However, it is a deeply disturbing set of circumstan­ces.”

A woman who lives next door to the house where the intruder killed himself said her husband saw him in the neighbor’s backyard before he disappeare­d into the house. Later, when the woman, who declined to give her name, watched footage from her home security camera, she said she saw the man trying to get into a crawl space near their driveway.

She said the incident left her feeling emotional and scared.

“How many tragedies ...,” she said, trailing off, as she stood behind her wooden front door wearing a white KN95 mask.

She has lived in the area for 50 years. “What’s happening?” she said. “This is such a wonderful neighborho­od.”

A street over, a crime scene cleanup crew was still working Tuesday afternoon inside the slain man’s home.

This weekend, Beaton and her neighbors plan to gather to discuss how they can reinforce their fences.

“You learn as a kid, the police got this — call them for help,” she said. “You need to help yourself and help your neighbors.”

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