Los Angeles Times

Dysfunctio­n ends in family tragedy

Family’s dysfunctio­n comes to a head with deaths of wife, son.

- By Peter Jamison, Cindy Carcamo and Matt Stevens The house in North Hills is on a street with beautiful rosebushes and bad sidewalks, one in a row of single-

Drugs, mental illness and homophobia may be factors in the deaths of a jailed man’s wife and son.

story homes with iron security gates. Like his neighbors, Shehada “Joe” Issa had ringed his modest property with a strong fence and slapped a sign in the window to warn off trespasser­s.

But in this high- crime neighborho­od, where few speak English and most take pains to guard what little they have, the violence that destroyed the Issa family didn’t come from outside.

New details emerged Saturday about a strange series of events last week that left Shehada Issa in jail and his wife and son dead. Informatio­n from law enforcemen­t agencies and interviews with neighbors suggested that a long- brewing mix of drugs, mental illness, homophobia and extreme family dysfunctio­n had f inally led to a tragic result.

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office announced Friday that Issa, 69, was being charged with f irst- degree murder in the shooting of his 29- year- old son, Amir Issa, who was found dead Tuesday morning outside the family’s home on Rayen Street.

Found inside the house was Shehada’s wife and Amir’s mother, Rabihah Issa, 68. She had been stabbed, police said, and may have been dead for some time before her body was discovered.

Shehada Issa has not been charged in his wife’s death. Police said he admitted to shooting his son with a shotgun. Amir Issa, who had gunshot wounds to the face and abdomen, was pronounced dead at the scene.

The district attorney’s off ice alleged in a statement that Issa killed his son because of his “sexual orientatio­n,” a move that brought national publicity to the case over the weekend. Issa could face stiffer penalties at trial if the shooting is prosecuted as a hate crime.

There were a number of signs that Amir Issa’s killing was not a simple story of a father acting out of murderous rage that his son was gay.

Turmoil appears to have reigned behind closed doors at the Issa home since Amir moved back in with his parents, which neighbors said occurred within the last two years. LAPD Sgt. Greg Bruce said officers had been called to the home to help evict Amir, whose parents were attempting to sell the house against their son’s wishes. The son had even vandalized the house, according to police.

A spokeswoma­n for the district attorney’s office declined Saturday to comment on the case.

Joel Munoz, 38, has lived across the street from the Issas for 15 years. Speaking through the bars of his driveway gate Saturday, Munoz said he had recently done handiwork for Shehada Issa, who complained to him about what he described as his son’s problems with drugs and mental illness.

“He was a good guy. The son was a bad guy,” Munoz said. “I’m so sorry for the old man.”

Neighbor Alfredo Mendez, 67, said Issa tended avidly to his trees — two palms and a mango — and that the two would sometimes discuss arboricult­ure. Mendez said he knew nothing of the Issa family’s problems.

Those problems were evident, among other places, on Amir Issa’s Facebook page. In his last post, 10 days before his death, he said he worried that his parents, brother and sister were “literally controllin­g me in my sleep” and that “they tell people to rape and molest me and make it seem like I enjoy that.”

“If there is a devil or evil spirit, I truly believe it manifests itself in my family,” he wrote. Amir also posted a video to his Facebook page in which he interrogat­es his parents about whether they had performed certain sex acts.

“That’s not appropriat­e for a child to ask his parents,” Rabihah Issa says to the camera as she sits on the sofa, a large crucifix on the wall behind her.

Shehada Issa responds more angrily to his son, calling him a “pervert” and saying, “None of your relatives want to have anything to do with you.”

According to court records, a man with the name Amir Issa whose parents live in Los Angeles was convicted in San Diego of assault with a deadly weapon in 2010. He had slashed his ex- boyfriend across the face with a knife, leaving him hospitaliz­ed. Issa, who f led to Las Vegas during jury deliberati­ons, was sentenced first to treatment at a state mental hospital and then to three years’ probation with further mental health treatment.

Police declined to com- ment on whether the victim in last week’s killing was the same Amir Issa convicted in the knife assault.

No one could be found Saturday at the Issas’ home, a squat yellow structure with a cracked driveway and rusted basketball hoop over the garage.

Further complicati­ng Shehada Issa’s case is the apparent homicide of his wife. Police said the condition of Rabihah’s body indicated she may have been dead “for a while” before Amir Issa was shot. LAPD Officer Mike Lopez said she was “stabbed numerous times.” Asked whether Amir Issa might have killed his mother before being shot by his father, Lopez said, “That’s something that detectives will investigat­e.”

Francisco Gonzalez Jr., whose parents live next door to Shehada Issa, said he had been aware for some time that feelings ran high between Issa and his son. Gonzalez’s parents, who do not speak f luent English, could hear the father and son next door shouting at each other but didn’t understand what was being said. Gonzalez said he saw Shehada Issa several months ago standing out by his fence and asked him what was going on.

“It’s just my son acting crazy again,” Issa told him. “It’s the drugs. I called the cops, so I’m just waiting for them.”

On Tuesday, Gonzalez said, he was babysittin­g his niece at his parents’ house when he heard shots from next door. Running outside, he found Shehada Issa in the frontyard with a cellphone to his ear. Gonzalez thought he heard the voice of a 911 operator on the line.

“Were those bullets?” Gonzalez asked. “Are you OK, Joe?”

Gonzalez said Issa waved reassuring­ly, then answered:

“Everything is fine now.”

 ?? I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? NEXT- DOOR neighbor Maria Gomez holds her cellphone displaying a photo of Amir Issa, 29, who was found shot to death outside his family’s North Hills home.
I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times NEXT- DOOR neighbor Maria Gomez holds her cellphone displaying a photo of Amir Issa, 29, who was found shot to death outside his family’s North Hills home.

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