Los Angeles Times

Hunt for missing woman leads to landfill

- By Hayley Smith and Gregory Yee

The tortuous search for a missing Los Angeles woman has led investigat­ors to a landfill in Castaic, police said Monday.

Heidi Planck, 39, was last seen Oct. 17 at a luxury apartment building on South Hope Street in downtown L.A., according to the Los Angeles Police Department. Her former husband, Jim Wayne, reported her missing three days later when she failed to pick up their son from school.

In the days and weeks that followed, the case generated headlines and raised eyebrows as investigat­ors gathered leads. By Oct. 29, it had been turned over to the LAPD’s Robbery-Homicide Division, with Wayne at one point voicing concerns about his former wife’s position working for a high-profile wealth management executive under investigat­ion by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Police said Monday that Planck’s dog was found inside the Hope Street apartment building, where she did not live.

“Forensic evidence was located inside the building which has led detectives to believe an incident occurred resulting in Planck’s death,” the LAPD said in a statement.

An LAPD spokespers­on would not elaborate Monday on what evidence was found or on how Planck may have died. In early November, her Range Rover was found in the undergroun­d parking garage of a residentia­l building several blocks away.

Reached by phone Monday, Wayne said Planck had been at their son’s football game in Downey the day she was last seen, but she left at halftime and seemed “a little antsy.”

“I just remember her saying, ‘I’ve got to leave,’ ” he said.

He couldn’t think of any connection­s she may have had to the building on Hope Street but said the dog’s microchip is what led police there.

Video footage showed Planck walking the dog in an alley nearby. The dog was found loose on the building ’s 29th floor, Wayne said.

Officials said the search at Chiquita Canyon Landfill in Castaic could take up to 10 days to complete.

“The ultimate outcome would have been to find her,” Wayne said. “Now it’s recovering her remains, and that in itself is just so sad on so many different levels, and so awful and so ugly.”

Wayne had previously told reporters he thought Planck’s disappeara­nce could be connected to her job as a financial controller at Camden Capital Partners. Her boss there, Jason Sugarman, is facing SEC charges for his alleged role in a scheme to bilk $43 million in client funds intended for Native American tribal bonds.

Attempts to reach Sugarman on Monday were unsuccessf­ul.

Sugarman’s father-inlaw, Peter Guber, is chief executive of Mandalay Entertainm­ent and co-owner of several sports teams, including the Dodgers and the Golden State Warriors.

Wayne said the SEC had contacted him four days after Planck’s disappeara­nce to ask about Sugarman and the company. Later, security footage from Planck’s Mid-City home appeared to show Sugarman leaving muffins on her doorstep after her disappeara­nce.

On Monday, Wayne said he did not want to continue to speculate about who may have been involved in Planck’s disappeara­nce, even though he felt Sugarman was “more worried about where his laptop was” than Planck’s whereabout­s.

The LAPD has “really dug deep, and I’ve got to take a back seat and let them do their job,” he said.

Police said they have no informatio­n on a suspect.

Aerial footage of the Chiquita Canyon Landfill on Monday showed heavy machinery digging amid the dry dirt.

Wayne said “there’s somebody out there for sure” who knows what happened, and he hoped anyone with informatio­n would come forward.

Few need resolution more than their son, he said.

“An 11-year-old boy needs to know what happened,” he said.

‘Forensic evidence ... has led detectives to believe an incident occurred resulting in [Heidi] Planck’s death.’

— LAPD statement

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