Los Angeles Times

Man is found guilty of killing 2 in O.C.

Jamon Buggs, 47, is convicted of shooting couple in a Newport Beach town house.

- By Hannah Fry

An Orange County man was convicted Tuesday of murder for fatally shooting a man and woman inside a Newport Beach town house, allegedly because of jealousy over an ex-girlfriend.

Jamon Buggs, 47, stared straight ahead as a jury found him guilty of gunning down Darren Partch and Wendi Miller inside Partch’s bedroom in 2019 in an execution-style killing.

Miller’s mother and Partch’s mother hugged and cried together outside the courtroom in Newport Beach after the verdict. Several family members thanked jurors. Buggs faces a maximum sentence of life without the possibilit­y of parole at his sentencing hearing next month.

The case has been mired in controvers­y since Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer made racist comments about the dating habits of Black men during an October meeting about whether to pursue the death penalty against Buggs.

At the meeting, Spitzer told prosecutor­s that he knows “many black people who get themselves out of their bad circumstan­ces and bad situations by only dating white women,” according to a memo by then-prosecutor Ebrahim Baytieh.

Buggs is Black, and Buggs’ ex-girlfriend and Miller are white. Spitzer has alleged that Baytieh wrote the memo in retaliatio­n because Spitzer had initiated an investigat­ion of him tied to another murder case.

Judge Gregg Prickett is more than halfway finished combing through documents turned over by the district attorney’s office relating to Spitzer’s comments. Prickett will decide what, if any, of the informatio­n should be turned over to Buggs’ defense attorneys at a hearing next month.

Defense attorney Michael Hill filed a motion at the start of the trial seeking to dismiss the case based on Spitzer’s alleged violation of the Racial Justice Act.

The law, passed in 2020, prohibits prosecutor­s from seeking or obtaining a criminal conviction or imposing a sentence based upon race, ethnicity or national origin.

During the roughly twoweek trial, Buggs’ attorneys argued that he killed Partch, 38, and Miller, 48, in the heat of passion, fueled by what they described as a toxic relationsh­ip between Buggs and his ex-girlfriend, Samantha Brewers.

They asked jurors to consider downgradin­g the murder charge to voluntary manslaught­er.

In late February or early March 2019, Brewers and Partch met at the gym and exchanged usernames on Instagram so they could keep in touch. The two were not dating, but Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. David Porter said Buggs was mistakenly convinced they were.

Buggs’ jealousy drew him to Partch’s apartment sometime after 1:45 a.m. on April 20, armed with a .38caliber handgun, Porter said.

While standing in the courtyard of the town house, Buggs apparently heard Partch and Miller being intimate in the upstairs bedroom and entered through an unlocked door with his gun drawn. He shot Partch twice and Miller once.

Buggs’ attorneys say he mistook Miller for Brewers.

Spitzer has said he asked questions about the race of Buggs’ former girlfriend­s during the October meeting to address the possible issue of cross-racial identifica­tion — how well Buggs, as a Black man, could identify a white woman such as Miller.

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