Los Angeles Times

Man is arrested in clerk’s killing

A 20-year-old suspect is jailed in the slaying of a Rite Aid worker shot while confrontin­g shoplifter­s in the Glassell Park store.

- By Lila Seidman

A man has been arrested in connection with the death of a Rite Aid clerk who was shot while confrontin­g shoplifter­s in the Glassell Park store, police said.

Anthony Lemus, 20, was arrested Monday on suspicion of murder, the Los Angeles Police Department said.

Two weeks earlier, two men tried to leave the drugstore on Eagle Rock Boulevard without paying for two cases of beer, according to an LAPD statement.

An employee, identified by police as 36-year-old Miguel Penaloza, confronted the pair when they tried to leave just before 9 p.m. July 15, authoritie­s said.

After a brief struggle, one of the men pulled a handgun and shot Penaloza, police said. The clerk died in the store, and both men bolted through the parking lot.

Seeking help from the public, police released images of the two men recorded on the store’s security camera.

Police said Tuesday that there was no informatio­n about the second suspect.

Penaloza had tendered his resignatio­n and was set to leave his job in mid-August, said Chris Savarese, a Rite Aid spokespers­on.

Former closing supervisor David Cruz told news media that “beer runs” were not uncommon at that store, and that sometimes, staffing shortages made it hard to deal with such security problems.

“We always had people coming in [to] steal liquor,” Cruz told ABC-TV Channel 7. “Other guests would see they’d run out with the merchandis­e, and they’d be like, ‘Well, if they did it, why can’t we?’ ”

Shortly after the shooting, the employees union for the store, United Food and Commercial Workers Local 770, said workers had expressed concerns about safety at the location for months.

The company closed the store after the shooting “to aid the police and reassess our security measures,” Savarese said in a statement. He said employees who worked at the location are currently on paid leave.

When the store reopens, a security guard will be stationed on-site and it will be outfitted with an enhanced security system, according to the statement.

Security measures will be added at other stores in the area, “out of an abundance of caution,” according to the statement.

A memorial for Penaloza was set up outside the drugstore, and friends and family held a vigil.

Lesly Garcia, a former coworker, told ABC News that Penaloza was “very loving, he always had a smile on his face,” and worked two jobs to support his parents.

A GoFundMe page was launched to support Penaloza’s funeral costs.

“Miguel’s beautiful spirit touched the hearts of everyone who knew him, and his death has left so many heartbroke­n and in disbelief,” the page says.

Penaloza is survived by his mother, father, brother, sister, three nephews and partner, according to the page.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States