Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

HUNT FOR A SERIAL KILLER

How police made an arrest in slayings that left homeless people ‘scared to death.’

- By CHRISTIAN MARTINEZ

STOCKTON — When it became clear that someone was killing random people on the streets of Stockton, police were blunt about who they were dealing with.

“This person’s on a mission,” Police Chief Stanley McFadden said.

It would take time for authoritie­s to figure out that the killings — which started in Oakland and moved east to the Central Valley city — were connected.

They all occurred under cover of darkness, at night or in the early-morning hours, McFadden said, and each victim was alone. Some were shot multiple times.

Authoritie­s have arrested a suspect but released few details about a motive or other informatio­n. That has left many in the community with unanswered questions.

Five of the victims were homeless men, yet it remains unclear whether they were targeted because of their unhoused status. Nonetheles­s, the killings sent shock waves through Stockton’s homeless community.

Stephen Bentley, a deacon with St. John the Evangelist Episcopal Church, which provides resources and programs for homeless residents in Stockton, said fear in the community was palpable.

“We’ve never had anything that was sinister, and stalking and very stealth,” Bentley said. “It begins to create a different type of fear. It’s deep-set.”

Authoritie­s initially announced that five fatal shootings from early July to late September were related and said they were seeking a person of interest.

Within days, police said they had tied two additional shootings from April 2021 — one in which a homeless woman was shot multiple times and survived — to the same gunman.

Mary Marsili, who runs an organizati­on that provides mobile showers to those in need, including many homeless people, said residents were rocked by the news.

“It’s a real close-knit community,” Marsili said. “They’re scared to death.”

Marsili said one of the victims, Lawrence Lopez Sr., was a patron of her charity organizati­on, Showered With Love. They knew him as Lorenzo.

Lopez, 54, was found fatally shot just before 2 a.m. Sept. 27 in the 900 block of Porter Avenue. His death came just a few days before police acknowledg­ed during a news conference “a series of killings that are connected.”

Bentley, who often rides around Stockton on a tricycle, handing out hot coffee and snacks with other volunteers, said homeless residents changed their behavior after news of the killings spread.

“They’re staying in groups and then spreading the word among themselves that this is what they have to do,” he said. “They’re not one on one, a person here and there; they are grouped in pretty close together now.”

Except for the first shooting linked to the series — a man who was killed in Oakland in April 2021 — the attacks all occurred within a three-mile radius on Stockton’s north side.

But the repercussi­ons reverberat­ed far beyond those neighborho­ods.

Standing near the San Joaquin River waterfront in downtown Stockton, Danielle Richae rested alongside a man who identified himself only as Javier. He sipped coffee that Bentley had given him.

Downtown, where many of Stockton’s civic buildings are located, did not appear to be a hunting ground for the killer, but many homeless people congregate in nearby parks and around the water.

“It’s scary for sure,” said Richae, who has been unhoused for a year.

“It’s made me more cautious,” Javier said, adding that since he and Richae learned of the connected killings, they have been trying to sleep in places that provide some protection or barrier — they don’t want anyone sneaking up on them.

“I’m afraid for her,” Javier added.

The unease was not isolated to the unhoused population in this city of 322,000.

Residents were especially fearful that Latino men were being targeted after police confirmed that five of the six fatalities were among that group.

Inés Ruiz-Huston, a longtime Stockton resident and vice president of the Latino outreach organizati­on El Concilio California, said many are concerned about their fathers, husbands, sons and other relatives or friends who seemingly fit the victims’ profile.

“A lot of young people are worried about their dads, because their dads are the ones that leave early in the morning or get home super late from work here, especially in this community,” Ruiz-Huston said.

“In a neighborho­od, you kind of know who your neighbors are, and you’re kind of a bit more on the alert,” she said. “If a car kind of goes slow, you’re now like, ‘Is this car looking for someone?’ ”

From the time Stockton authoritie­s connected the killings, on Sept. 31, and announced that they were searching for a person of interest, the hunt for the potential serial killer gained profile. Nearby police department­s joined the investigat­ion, and the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,

Firearms and Explosives were called in.

A reward for informatio­n leading to an arrest grew to $125,000.

Stockton police launched email and telephone hotlines that garnered hundreds of daily tips. It didn’t take long for two legitimate leads to surface, police said.

Authoritie­s identified a suspect whose name was not initially released. Police surveilled the man for a couple of days, observing his movements, according to Stockton police spokespers­on Joseph Silva.

“[His actions] were all similar to the prior homicides that we had: going into parks, near apartment complexes, dark locations,” Silva said.

Around 2 a.m. on Oct. 15, the suspect was spotted driving a van near Panella Park on Stockton’s north side. Officers watched him get out of the vehicle and begin stalking a person.

“There was someone in the park, and he was basically zeroing in on that person,” Silva said.

Police swooped in and took Wesley Brownlee into custody. They said he was armed with a gun and was “out hunting” when he was arrested.

It was not clear whether the person in the park was homeless, authoritie­s said.

Brownlee, a 43-year-old truck driver who moved to the Stockton area this summer, has since been charged with murder in three of the Stockton attacks.

The charges are for the deaths of Jonathan Hernandez Rodriguez, 21, on Aug. 30; Juan Cruz, 52, on Sept. 21; and Lopez on Sept. 27, according to records from San Joaquin County Superior Court.

Brownlee faces potential firearm sentencing enhancemen­ts and special circumstan­ces of committing multiple murders.

He is due back in court Nov. 14.

Prosecutor­s said more charges could be added, including in the deaths of Paul Alexander Yaw, 35, on July 8; and Salvador Debudey Jr., 43, on Aug. 11.

Authoritie­s say the 2021 shooting death of Juan Miguel Vasquez Serrano, 39, in Oakland as well as the nonfatal shooting of a homeless woman in Stockton also are connected to Brownlee’s case. Oakland police said they are still investigat­ing Serrano’s death.

Those who live and work in Stockton are breathing a sigh of relief following the arrest.

“They can sleep a little more safely,” Bentley said. “They can let their guards down a little bit more.”

But Marsili noted that the homeless population has more than enough to worry about without possibly being stalked and killed.

She said the slayings have added anxiety for those who face other dangers from living on the street, including drugs, trains and vehicles.

“It’s always going to be dangerous for them,” she said.

The experience seems to have created bonds that have outlasted the threat, according to Bentley. Instead of dispersing back into isolated living situations, some groups of homeless people that formed in response to the killings have stuck together.

“Part of it is they’ve made friendship­s,” Bentley said. “There’s a feeling of safety within your group bubble.”

Although the immediate threat seems to have passed, unsheltere­d people remain anxious that they could be targeted. That lingering fear is keeping them vigilant, Bentley noted.

“They look after each other,” he said.

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