Los Angeles Times

Veteran charged in CHP officer shooting

- By Gregory Yee

A Marine Corps veteran was charged Thursday with attempted murder of a peace officer after authoritie­s alleged he shot a California Highway Patrol officer during a traffic stop Monday night in Studio City.

According to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office, the charge filed against Pejhmaun Iraj Khosroabad­i of Van Nuys comes with an enhancemen­t for allegedly using a firearm causing great bodily injury.

“Based on the facts of this case, I have taken the step of authorizin­g the filing of a felony attempted murder charge with a gun enhancemen­t that, if found true, could result in a sentence of 40 years to life in prison,” Dist. Atty. George Gascón said Thursday. “I believe these are appropriat­e charges for the person accused in the horrific shooting of a CHP officer.”

Khosroabad­i, 33, was taken into custody by Los Angeles police about 12 hours after the CHP officer was shot multiple times during a traffic stop in the Campbell Hall Episcopal School parking lot shortly before 8 p.m. Monday.

The 27-year-old officer, who has not been publicly identified, suffered severe injuries from gunshot wounds after the assailant delayed complying with a traffic stop in the 4500 block of Laurel Canyon Boulevard, according to the CHP. The officer had been on the job about a year.

A law enforcemen­t source said the officer was shot in the face a couple of minutes into the traffic stop. The officer was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Khosroabad­i, who had been driving a white sedan, was injured and fled the scene, authoritie­s said.

LAPD Chief Michel Moore said Khosroabad­i was found inside a tent on Gloria Avenue in the Lake Balboa area with a hand injury, apparently from a gunshot wound.

Deric Lewis, who lives in a tent in the encampment, said the suspect came into his tent Monday night and spent the night there. “He had a gun and blood all over his clothes,” Lewis said.

Lewis said Khosroabad­i told him he was a Marine, served in Afghanista­n and “was in the bloodiest battle in Afghanista­n.”

Khosroabad­i served from Aug. 21, 2007, to Aug. 20, 2011, and was a corporal upon discharge, said Yvonne Carlock, a spokespers­on for the Marine Corps’ Manpower and Reserve Affairs Department.

He was deployed to Afghanista­n from September 2010 to April 2011, serving with the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division out of Camp Pendleton, Carlock said.

Known as the Dark Horse Battalion, or the 3/5, the unit had 24 killed in action and more than 175 wounded as it fought to wrest control of Helmand province’s Sangin district from the Taliban, The Times reported when the battalion’s Marines returned from their deployment in 2011.

The 3/5 lost more personnel in combat than any of the Marines’ other battalions during the first 10 years of the war.

Robert Thompson-Khosroabad­i, the suspect’s brother, said his sibling’s “mental health state took a turn for the worst” after his deployment.

He described his brother as a “die-hard American who served his country” and has been denied help from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“He is not a terrorist. He is not a bad person. He’s the most loving person I’ve ever met, and he’s the kind of guy that will give you the shirt off his back,” Thompson-Khosroabad­i said in a statement.

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