Los Angeles Times

FOUR MORE STREET ATTACKS ALLEGED

Man held in assaults on the homeless faces additional charges of attempted murder.

- By James Queally and Cindy Chang

A man suspected of killing at least four people during a spate of savage attacks on Los Angeles County’s vulnerable homeless community this year was charged with four additional counts of attempted murder, a prosecutor said after a court hearing Thursday.

Ramon Escobar, 47, of Houston was arrested in late September and charged in a weeks-long series of assaults that left a number of homeless men beaten to death or comatose in downtown Los Angeles and Santa Monica.

The four additional attempted murders occurred in September, as did the other attacks. In all, Escobar is charged with four counts of murder, eight counts of attempted murder and six counts of robbery, court records show.

In an amended complaint filed by prosecutor­s Thursday, Escobar was charged with attempted murder and robbery in a

Sept. 11 attack on Albert Gene Scott in the 4700 block of West Slauson Avenue in Windsor Hills.

Another new attempted murder charge stemmed from an attack on Sept. 15 at the edge of MacArthur Park. The victim, Michelle Matice, was severely injured, as was Scott. Matice may have been a transient, but Scott was not homeless, said Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Victor Avila.

On Sept. 19, Escobar allegedly assaulted Kyla Renard and David Dotson in Griffith Park, leaving them severely injured, Avila said. Escobar was also charged with robbing Renard. Avila said he was not sure whether the two victims were homeless.

Prosecutor­s also upgraded a previous attempted murder charge against Escobar to murder. The victim, 63-year-old Jorge Martinez, was attacked on the morning of Sept. 24 in Santa Monica and died six days later.

Escobar was arrested near the scene of that attack. In a downtown courtroom Thursday morning, Escobar appeared in handcuffs and blue jail scrubs, sporting a thick salt-and-pepper beard. He pleaded not guilty to the charges.

According to the complaint, five of the surviving victims were left comatose.

Escobar last lived in the Houston area, but police say he fled to Southern California after his aunt and uncle, Dina and Rogelio Escobar, disappeare­d in late August. Houston police have said they believe the two were victims of foul play.

Investigat­ors believe Escobar arrived in Santa Monica on Sept. 5, living out of his car for the next three weeks as he allegedly launched a series of attacks on people who appeared to be sleeping outside.

In each case, Escobar is accused of attacking his victim from behind while wielding a baseball bat or a pair of bolt cutters, prosecutor­s said. His first two alleged victims were sleeping near the beach in Santa Monica on Sept. 8 and Sept. 10. One of them remains comatose, said Lt. Saul Rodriguez, a Santa Monica police spokesman. It was not immediatel­y clear whether the man was expected to recover.

Escobar is accused of using a bat to pummel three men six days later as they slept in downtown Los Angeles’ Financial District before robbing them. Kelvin Williams, 59, and Braden Ridout, 34, later died of their injuries. Another man sleeping nearby, Tievon Harmon, 23, was critically injured, police said.

On Sept. 20, authoritie­s said, Escobar returned to the Santa Monica area, where he is alleged to have beaten 39-year-old San Gabriel resident Steven Ray Cruze Jr. to death as he slept under the Santa Monica Pier after an overnight fishing trip. Escobar is also accused of using a pair of bolt cutters to seriously injure a man near Sawtelle and Venice boulevards on Sept. 22, police have said.

Despite fears that someone was trying to hurt members of the area’s sprawling homeless population specifical­ly, investigat­ors believe Escobar was targeting people who appeared to be isolated so that he could rob them.

Shortly after his capture, Escobar’s immigratio­n status became a topic of debate when U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t revealed that the El Salvador native had been deported from the U.S. six times from 1997 to 2011.

Escobar was arrested several times on suspicion of assault between 1992 and 2018, according to a review of state and federal court records, which showed he was most often detained on suspicion of illegally entering the U.S.

At the time of the Southern California attacks, however, Escobar had a legal right to be in the country. Records show he was granted an appeal of his deportatio­n order in December 2016 and released from federal custody in January of last year, according to ICE.

An ICE spokeswoma­n could not say why Escobar’s appeal was granted. Los Angeles police previously said Escobar had been allowed to reenter the U.S. on an asylum claim.

Court records relating to asylum claims are not generally open to the public. The Times has filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request with regard to Escobar’s case, but the Executive Office for Immigratio­n Review has yet to respond.

 ?? Texas Department of Public Safety ?? RAMON ESCOBAR, 47, pleaded not guilty to the newly added charges.
Texas Department of Public Safety RAMON ESCOBAR, 47, pleaded not guilty to the newly added charges.
 ?? Damian Dovarganes Associated Press ?? RAMON ESCOBAR, shown in court in September, is charged with murder, attempted murder and robbery.
Damian Dovarganes Associated Press RAMON ESCOBAR, shown in court in September, is charged with murder, attempted murder and robbery.

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