Los Angeles Times

Murder suspect charged with hate crimes

O.C. prosecutor­s add enhancemen­ts in the May 15 shooting at a Taiwanese church.

- By Hannah Fry

A 68-year-old man accused of killing one person and injuring five others at a Taiwanese Presbyteri­an church in Laguna Woods has been charged with hate crime enhancemen­ts, Orange County prosecutor­s announced Friday.

David Wenwei Chou of Las Vegas had previously been charged with murder, attempted murder and other felony counts in the May 15 shooting.

Prosecutor­s this week added a hate crimes enhancemen­t to the murder charge, alleging that Chou’s killing of Dr. John Cheng, 52, was motivated by race, color, religion, nationalit­y or country of origin.

Prosecutor­s also added hate crime enhancemen­ts for each of the five counts of attempted murder against Chou.

Chou could face the death penalty if convicted of all charges, which also include four counts of possession of an explosive device, enhancemen­ts of lying in wait and personal discharge of a firearm causing death. He has not entered a plea, according to court records.

The hate crime enhancemen­ts were filed after prosecutor­s reviewed additional evidence, Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said. Authoritie­s did not provide details about that evidence.

Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes last month characteri­zed the shootings as a “politicall­y motivated hate incident” and said authoritie­s think Chou “specifical­ly targeted the Taiwanese community.”

Barnes said Chou left notes in Chinese in his car stating that he did not believe Taiwan should be independen­t from China. He apparently had an issue with Taiwanese people because of the way he was treated while living in Taiwan, Barnes said. Chou grew up in Taiwan as a waishengre­n — someone with recent roots in China.

China considers Taiwan a breakaway province and has grown increasing­ly aggressive about reclaiming the democratic, self-ruled island. Within Taiwan, a majority of people favor maintainin­g the status quo, with some wanting to openly declare independen­ce and a small minority wanting to someday unify with China.

The Irvine Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church is known for its support of proindepen­dence causes, and the Laguna Woods congregati­on conducted services in the Taiwanese dialect, rather than Mandarin.

Prosecutor­s allege that Chou entered Geneva Presbyteri­an Church in Laguna Woods, where the Irvine Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church rents space, with two 9-millimeter handguns, several backpacks that contained extra magazines and four Molotov cocktail devices.

He allegedly hid the backpacks in a church banquet hall and chained several doors shut, then mingled with parishione­rs. The group was there for a luncheon honoring longtime Pastor Billy Chang, who was visiting after two years in Taiwan.

When the gunman opened fire, Cheng, the doctor, fought back and was fatally shot. Five others, ranging in age from 66 to 92, were hospitaliz­ed and survived.

After Cheng attempted to stop the gunman, Chang, the visiting pastor, ran up to him with a chair as a weapon.

Chang said he pushed the gunman to the floor, then hogtied him with an electric cord with the help of other parishione­rs, according to officials and eyewitness accounts.

“He got scared. I don’t think he expected someone to attack him,” Chang said in an interview with The Times.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? A MEMORIAL outside the church where the Taiwanese Presbyteri­an congregati­on rents space.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times A MEMORIAL outside the church where the Taiwanese Presbyteri­an congregati­on rents space.

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