Las Vegas Review-Journal

California serial killer Cano gets life in prison after pleas

- By Christophe­r Goffard

SANTA ANA, Calif. — Franc Cano, who with an accomplice abducted and killed several women in Anaheim and Santa Ana while on sex-offender probation, pleaded guilty to murder Thursday after prosecutor­s dropped their call for the death penalty.

Cano’s guilty pleas to four counts of rape and murder — which brings an automatic prison sentence of life without parole — eliminates the need for his long-delayed trial.

It has been nearly a decade since Cano, 36, embarked on a five-month series of murders with his companion, Steven Gordon. Their targets were women working in street prostituti­on in Anaheim and Santa Ana.

Their first victim, as far as police know, was Kianna Jackson, a Las Vegas woman who had just turned 20 when she disappeare­d from the streets of Santa Ana on Oct. 6, 2013. Her mother, Kathy Menzies, recalls that when she reported her missing, police showed little interest in searching for her, with the explanatio­n that Jackson was a “circuit girl” with a record for prostituti­on.

Her body was never found. Nor was the body of a second woman, Josephine Monique Vargas, 34, who vanished 18 days later. Nor was the body of a third, Martha Anaya, 27, who disappeare­d 19 days after that.

On March 14, 2014, detectives were summoned to Republic Waste Services in Anaheim, where another young woman’s body had been found amid debris. She was identified as Jarrae Estepp, 21, of Ardmore, Okla.

Detectives linked the crimes to Cano using the GPS monitor he was wearing as a condition of his parole as a sex offender. His DNA was also found in Estepp’s body.

Cano’s accomplice, Steven Gordon, went to trial in 2016. Gordon said he deserved the death penalty, and a jury agreed.

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