Times Colonist

Man who lurked in Jenner’s driveway cleared of stalking

- ANTHONY McCARTNEY

LOS ANGELES — A jury has acquitted a man of stalking model and reality TV star Kendall Jenner, but convicted him of trespassin­g at her secluded Hollywood Hills home.

The jury of seven women and five men returned the verdict against Shavaughn McKenzie on Monday after a seven-day trial in which Jenner described her fear at finding McKenzie lurking in her driveway and banging on her car window in August.

A defence lawyer had urged jurors to reject the stalking charge, saying there was no evidence showing McKenzie intended to cause Jenner fear.

McKenzie is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 10 on the trespassin­g charge. He could face up to six months in jail, but will likely be released because of credits for good behaviour.

His lawyer Taylor Shramo said he hopes to secure mental health treatment for McKenzie, a Florida native who travelled from Georgia to Los Angeles last year and started hanging around outside Jenner’s former home.

The verdict marks the second time this year that a Los Angeles jury has rejected a stalking case involving a celebrity. In February, a jury acquitted an Ohio man of stalking Gwyneth Paltrow after determinin­g he did not intend to cause her fear by repeatedly sending letters to her.

In the Jenner case, deputy city attorney Alex Perez said in court that McKenzie, 25, had tracked Jenner’s whereabout­s for 15 months before his arrest. He noted that McKenzie has never said how he learned that Jenner had moved to the hilltop home tucked away from the street and accessible only after opening a 13-foot gate.

Perez said he was disappoint­ed by the verdict and hoped McKenzie would receive treatment.

Perez said McKenzie followed Jenner’s car onto the property and only left after she backed out of the driveway and three of her friends arrived to detain McKenzie until police arrived.

“I’ve never been so scared in my life,” 20-year-old Jenner testified, saying she had recognized McKenzie as the same man who twice accosted her while she was driving outside her former home.

Jenner said his refusal to leave her Hollywood Hills property prompted her to make panicked calls to friends for help.

“I definitely don’t feel safe in my own house anymore,” she testified.

Jenner obtained a civil restrainin­g order on Oct. 13 that requires McKenzie to stay away from her for five years.

Shramo had urged jurors Monday to reject the case, saying McKenzie merely wanted to talk to Jenner and posed no danger to her. He accused Perez of emphasizin­g Jenner’s celebrity status to try to gain a conviction.

“He wants you to be starstruck,” Shramo said.

After the verdict, Shramo said mental-health profession­als had repeatedly found that McKenzie did not have violent tendencies.

The incident was said to have caused Jenner distress as she pursues a modelling career and appears on her family’s show, Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s.

“She doesn’t want to be surrounded by security,” Perez said. “And she certainly doesn’t want to be stalked.”

A forensic psychiatri­st hired to evaluate McKenzie testified that he was delusional and his efforts to find Jenner were part of his mental illness.

McKenzie’s mother, June Osavio, told jurors she repeatedly tried to get help for her son, but he refused to take his medication­s. He disappeare­d in March 2015 after they moved to Georgia, she said. Osavio called the verdict fair. Jenner is the younger sister of Kim Kardashian West.

In court, Jenner shyly recounted her career, which has included being featured in a cover photo on Vogue magazine and modelling for top fashion lines.

 ??  ?? Kendall Jenner was said to have been distressed by the incident at her home in Los Angeles.
Kendall Jenner was said to have been distressed by the incident at her home in Los Angeles.

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