Los Angeles Times

‘He was just a loner’

Early identifica­tion of Pacific Palisades body sheds some light but raises more questions.

- By Veronica Rocha and Richard Winton veronica.rocha @latimes.com Twitter: @VeronicaRo­chaLA richard.winton @latimes.com Twitter: @lacrimes

A man found dead who was linked to a cache of 1,200 guns has been identified.

A man who was found dead in a vehicle in a Pacific Palisades neighborho­od last week and linked to a home where police discovered a massive cache of firearms appears to have been a 60year-old longtime Los Angeles County gun collector, police and others said Wednesday.

An attorney representi­ng the dead man’s fiancée identified him as Jeffrey Alan Lash. Several law enforcemen­t sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because an LAPD investigat­ion into the death is ongoing, said detectives believe the dead man was Lash but have not made a conclusive identifica­tion.

Shirley Anderson, the longtime partner of Lash’s late father, said she hadn’t seen Lash since 2010 but received a call last week from the L.A. County coroner’s office.

A coroner’s official, she said, told her that authoritie­s had just found a man’s body inside an abandoned vehicle on Palisades Drive, and that they believed the man was Lash. Anderson said Lash had not provided her with an address or phone number for years.

“We never knew where he lived,” she said.

Coroner Chief Craig Harvey said his office had been in contact with a distant family member of the dead man and was “working with that name [Lash] as a possibilit­y.” A formal identifica­tion has yet to be made of the body, which was badly decomposed.

After discoverin­g the man’s body on Friday, Los Angeles police investigat­ors found more than 1,200 firearms and about two tons of ammunition inside his fiancée’s Pacific Palisades home.

LAPD Capt. William Hayes, who heads the Robbery-Homicide Division, said the private gun collection was worth at least $500,000 and possibly more than $1 million.

“He was either into doomsday survivalis­m, gun collecting or both,” Hayes said, adding that the man appeared to be wealthy.

LAPD Deputy Chief Kirk Albanese said the man was a collector and there was no evidence he ever sold weapons or was a licensed firearms dealer.

Several people who live in the area where the body was found said the man was known only as “Bob” and described him as a gun fanatic who claimed to have worked covertly for the government. Police have said the man did not do such work.

His fiancée’s attorney, Harland Braun, previously said the man died in the parking lot of Bristol Farms on Wilshire Boulevard in Santa Monica on July 4. His fiancée, the lawyer said, wasn’t sure what to do with the body and left it in a vehicle on Palisades Drive while she headed to Oregon. Braun said his client believed that a government agency that the man had claimed to work for would come to collect him.

Anderson said she was stunned to learn of Lash’s death.

Born in the mid-1950s, Lash grew up in a modest Westcheste­r neighborho­od, she said. His mother was a pianist and his father was a microbiolo­gist who owned a medical laboratory, said Anderson, who said she had known Lash for at least 25 years.

For a while it appeared that Lash would follow in his father’s footsteps. In the 1980s, he told his parents he was attending UCLA and studying to become a scientist. But he dropped out and never returned, she said.

UCLA spokesman Ricardo Vasquez said Lash was a student at one point but said he could not release details because Lash had requested that his records remain private.

Anderson, 93, said she knew little about what Lash did after he left UCLA because his communicat­ion with the family was limited. He never told her what he did for a living or where his money came from, she said.

“He was just a loner, as far as we were concerned,” she said. “He just became weird because he changed all of a sudden.”

Anderson said Lash was sick and at one point sought holistic medicine for treatment. Police said he had late-stage cancer.

Anderson said she never knew Lash was a gun collector, but she said he used to frequent gun shops.

“He was not very forthcomin­g about what he was doing,” Anderson said. “He had to be doing something to collect all those guns.”

‘He was either into doomsday survivalis­m, gun collecting or both.’

—William Hayes, LAPD captain

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