Los Angeles Times

26 to life for killer ID’d by initials scrawled in blood

Prosecutor­s say he talked of throat-slicing before 2011 murder.

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com

Of all the lies that James Grzeslo spread about himself — like claiming that he was a decorated Marine who served in Vietnam and telling people he was a cardiothor­acic surgeon even though he was really a nurse — one claim in particular stood out for sheer gruesomene­ss, prosecutor­s say.

“He was supposed to turn people into Pez dispensers by sneaking up behind them and slicing their throat,” said Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Oksana Sigal.

Though Grzeslo, 59, did serve in the military, Sigal said he entered the service after the Vietnam War and there was no evidence he had ever killed anyone.

No evidence, that is, until Oct. 26, 2011. That’s when Sigal says Grzeslo acted upon his throat-cutting “fantasy” and nearly decapitate­d his girlfriend, 58-year-old Cathy Ann Carrasco-Zanini, in her Beverly Hills apartment. He was convicted of the killing last month and sentenced Monday to 26 years to life in prison.

According to prosecutor­s, Carrasco-Zanini had few defensive wounds, suggesting that Grzeslo approached her from behind and attacked.

Court testimony indicated the couple had no history of domestic violence, but Grzeslo kept a journal in which he vented about his paranoid jealousies, Sigal said.

“He wrote a lot about obsessing about her relationsh­ips with other people … even with relatives,” she said.

If Grzeslo saw CarrascoZa­ninitalkin­g with a man, he would think the man was flirting with her or vice versa, Sigal said. Grzeslo enrolled in anger management classes to help the relationsh­ip.

But on that October morning, it all fell apart. Authoritie­s aren’t sure exactly what transpired, but Sigal speculated that Grzeslo had gone to Carrasco-Zanini’sapartment that morning to confront her about another one of her friendship­s.

“The victim was a pretty assertive woman, and he couldn’t control her, and she most likely stood her ground,” Sigal said.

After cutting her throat, Grzeslo fled, authoritie­s said. Carrasco-Zanini managed to write two letters on her apartment wall in blood: “JG,” Grzeslo’s initials.

“I think it aligned with his fantasy of how he killed people. The way he murdered her was almost like cutting her head off,” Sigal said.

After the slaying, Grzeslo called his son, his brother and then his anger management counselor and said “he thinks he killed his girlfriend,” Sigal said.

Grzeslo was arrested at his anger counselor’s office after confessing to the slaying a second time to police.

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