The Day

Los Angeles man guilty in 10 ‘Grim Sleeper’ serial killings

- By BRIAN MELLEY and AMANDA LEE MYERS

Los Angeles — A former Los Angeles trash collector was convicted Thursday of 10 counts of murder in the “Grim Sleeper” serial killings that targeted poor, young black women over two decades.

Lonnie Franklin Jr. showed no emotion as the verdicts were read and family members who had wondered if they would ever see justice quietly wept and dabbed their eyes with tissues in the gallery.

“We got him,” exclaimed Porter Alexander Jr., whose daughter Alicia, 18, was shot and strangled. Her body was found under a mattress in an alley in September 1988. “It took a long time. By the grace of God it happened. It’s such a relief.”

Franklin, 63, could be sentenced to death after the penalty phase scheduled to start May 12.

He was also was found guilty of one count of attempted murder for shooting a woman in the chest and then dumping her body from his orange Ford Pinto. She survived and provided crucial testimony against him.

Prosecutor­s also presented extensive DNA and ballistics evidence that police gathered when they reopened the case after the last victim was found in 2007.

The killings from 1985 to 2007 were dubbed the work of the “Grim Sleeper” because of an apparent 14-year gap after the woman survived the November 1988 attack.

The crimes went unsolved for decades and community members complained that police ignored the cases because the victims were black, poor and some were prostitute­s and drug users.

Much of the violence unfolded during the nation’s crack cocaine epidemic when at least two other serial killers prowled the part of the city then known as South Central.

The 10 victims, including a 15-year-old girl, were fatally shot or strangled and dumped in alleys and garbage bins. Most had traces of cocaine in their systems.

Franklin, a onetime trash collector in the area and a garage attendant for the Los Angeles Police Department, had been hiding in plain sight, said Deputy District Attorney Beth Silverman.

Police eventually connected Franklin to the crimes after a task force was assigned to re- visit the case that dozens of officers failed to solve in the 1980s. The DNA of Franklin’s son, collected after a felony arrest, had similariti­es to genetic material left on the bodies of many of the victims.

An officer posing as a busboy later retrieved pizza crusts and napkins with Franklin’s DNA while he was celebratin­g at a birthday party.

It proved a match with material found on the breasts and clothing of many of the women and on the zip tie of a trash bag that held the curledup body of the final victim, Janecia Peters. She was found Jan. 1, 2007, by someone who was rifling through a trash bin and noticed her red fingernail­s through a hole in the bag.

Silverman described the victims as sisters, daughters and mothers who suffered frailties but had hopes and dreams.

She projected photos of the 10 women from happier days, many smiling from photos that captured their youth and the hairstyles of the times. The images were in stark contrast to gory crime scene and autopsy photos also displayed of half-naked bodies sprawled among garbage — images that made family members wince, weep and recoil in the gallery.

Samara Herard, the sister of the youngest victim, Princess Berthomieu­x, said there were things she didn’t want to see during the trial and had to hold her head down at times, but was elated with the verdict. “I wanted to remember the sweet little girl who had her whole life in front of her,” Herard said. “She had a heart of gold and she deserved to live a full life.”

Defense lawyer Seymour Amster challenged what he called “inferior science” of DNA and ballistics evidence.

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