Los Angeles Times

Man guilty in UCLA slaying

Burglar faces life in prison for stabbing, arson and other crimes committed in the 2015 incident.

- By Marisa Gerber marisa.gerber @latimes.com Twitter: @marisagerb­er Times staff writer Richard Winton contribute­d to this report.

A student was found stabbed to death inside her burning apartment in 2015.

A jury on Tuesday convicted a man in the 2015 slaying of a UCLA student found dead inside her burning apartment — a gruesome stabbing case that led to a fierce rebuke of the police response amid concerns that the killing could have been prevented.

The panel deliberate­d for about six hours before finding Alberto Medina, 24, guilty of murder, arson, burglary and animal cruelty.

On Sept. 21, 2015, firefighte­rs found the charred body of Andrea DelVesco inside her apartment after responding to the complex a block from campus. The 21year-old student — an Austin, Texas, native known to her sorority sisters as a “fearless giver” who befriended others with ease — was stabbed at least 19 times, authoritie­s said.

Los Angeles police examined whether the killing was linked to the victim’s recent prosecutio­n on charges of possessing a cocktail of party drugs, but also revealed that they had a person of interest — someone who’d been spotted running from the fire. A week after DelVesco’s body was found, police arrested two students: Medina and Eric Marquez, 25.

Prosecutor­s say that Medina, who was a student at Fresno State University, burglarize­d another unit in the Westwood complex before breaking into DelVesco’s apartment, stabbing her and setting her home ablaze to destroy any evidence. (DelVesco’s dog was injured and later euthanized, the Daily Bruin reported.)

During the trial, Deputy Public Defender Debra Werbel conceded to jurors that Medina had killed DelVesco but stressed that the slaying had not been premeditat­ed. Reached after the verdict, Werbel described the case as a horrible tragedy for the DelVesco family as well as her client’s family, who took pride in Medina — the first in his family to attend college.

“Two families are suffering for very different reasons,” Werbel said, adding that her client has repeatedly told her that he is “very sorry.” Throughout the legal proceeding­s, her client expressed concern with how the DelVesco family was doing and about his own parents, but never, the attorney said, worried about himself.

Marquez, a UCLA student, was charged with one count of murder, two counts of burglary and a count of being an accessory after the fact. He pleaded guilty to one burglary count and the accessory count.

Not long after the slaying, criticism had turned inward at the Los Angeles Police Department.

A month after DelVesco’s death, the department revealed that it had launched an internal investigat­ion into the actions of several officers who responded to a report of a woman screaming at the Westwood apartment complex shortly before the fire engulfed DelVesco’s apartment.

Four officers conducted an investigat­ion but left before the fire was reported, police said at the time.

In 2015, DelVesco’s aunt, Melanie Peskett, told The Times that she couldn’t help but wonder if the officers could have saved her niece’s life if they’d checked her apartment before the fire.

“It is a tragedy because you don’t know if she was alive or not when officers came there,” Peskett said, adding that she hoped the LAPD would implement policy changes to ensure officers do a more thorough job of responding to such calls.

The Police Department did not respond to a request for comment on the status of two of the responding officers who — according to a 2016 CNN report — were terminated.

Medina, whose sentencing is scheduled for July 20, faces life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

 ?? KTLA ?? ALBERTO Medina was convicted of killing Andrea DelVesco and setting her Westwood residence ablaze.
KTLA ALBERTO Medina was convicted of killing Andrea DelVesco and setting her Westwood residence ablaze.

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