Los Angeles Times

Off-duty LAPD officer is shot with own gun

He was confrontin­g a man who had broken into his personal car and found his service weapon, police say.

- BY FAITH E. PINHO and RICHARD WINTON Times staff writer Kevin Rector contribute­d to this report.

A gunman who went on a shooting rampage in Los Angeles on Tuesday — killing two people and wounding two others — had an arsenal of weapons at his home and possessed a legally purchased AR-15 semiautoma­tic rifle, law enforcemen­t sources told The Times as more details about the incident emerged.

The gunman, who was fatally shot by police after a standoff on the 91 Freeway in Fullerton, was identified by the Los Angeles Police Department as Carlos Lopez, 49.

On Tuesday, LAPD officials had said they recovered a handgun they believed was used in all the shootings. Police were investigat­ing whether the weapons found in the gunman’s home were legal, according to two sources with knowledge of the investigat­ion.

The man’s motivation for opening fire at five different locations remains unclear. It does not appear that he knew the victims, sources said.

The LAPD is investigat­ing whether the shootings were hate crimes, since two of the victims were Asian — one of those who died and one who was grazed in the head by a bullet.

The gunman began his rampage at Figueroa Street and Exposition Boulevard just before 1 a.m. Tuesday, firing multiple rounds at a man inside a car and grazing the man’s head with a bullet, according to LAPD Chief Michel Moore.

About 10 minutes later, Moore said, the gunman pulled up to a Starbucks drive-through near 28th and Figueroa streets, where 24-year-old Alexis Carbajal was waiting in line with his wife.

The man backed into their car, then pulled up alongside them and, after an exchange of words, opened fire on the young couple, killing Carbajal, Moore said. His wife also was injured, but police were unsure whether she was shot or hit with glass or shrapnel.

Carbajal’s family created a GoFundMe account to raise money for his funeral expenses.

“He didn’t deserve this, he was a gentle soul who always put others before himself, he could light up any room and was such a caring person,” the webpage read, adding that he left behind his wife, mother and sisters.

Within 15 minutes, Moore said, the gunman then arrived at 7th and Figueroa streets, where he shot and killed South Pasadena resident Mingzhi Zhu, 42, who was driving for Uber, according to his family’s GoFundMe page.

Zhu supported his wife, 8-year-old son and 2-yearold daughter through his Uber driving, according to the GoFundMe appeal. He once returned $400 to an elderly passenger who had left the money in the backseat, it said.

“Mingzhi was a hard working, intelligen­t, kind, gentle, and deeply loving person. His family is at a loss without him,” the page read. “He was an honest man who cared for other people and loved his family above all else.”

The investigat­ion into whether the shootings were racially motivated comes amid a nationwide uptick in anti-Asian violence.

In Los Angeles alone, police said there were 15 antiAsian hate crimes reported in 2020, compared with seven in 2019. There were also nine hate “incidents” — bigoted encounters that don’t rise to the level of a crime — reported in 2020, compared with seven the previous year, police said.

The gunman shot at people in two other cars — hitting one man’s Tesla and missing the other car — before fleeing from Los Angeles police in a white Jeep.

The nearly three-hour pursuit ended in Fullerton, where police used a spike strip to puncture the Jeep’s tires, then surrounded the vehicle on the 91 Freeway about 3:20 a.m.

After LAPD officers attempted to negotiate with the man, Moore said, he opened fire through his windshield.

A SWAT officer shot back and killed him, Moore said.

 ?? GARY CORONADO Los Angeles Times ?? ARTHUR GIBSON visits a memorial Wednesday at a Starbucks near 28th and Figueroa streets where Alexis Carbajal was fatally shot by a gunman Tuesday in one of a string of attacks that left two dead and two hurt.
GARY CORONADO Los Angeles Times ARTHUR GIBSON visits a memorial Wednesday at a Starbucks near 28th and Figueroa streets where Alexis Carbajal was fatally shot by a gunman Tuesday in one of a string of attacks that left two dead and two hurt.

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