Los Angeles Times

L.A. body is IDd as suspect’s in 2008 child rape

- By Jireh Deng

The death of a Los Angeles handyman took a twisted turn when authoritie­s discovered the man who had been living a quiet, unassuming life was actually wanted in connection with the rape of a child in the Seattle area more than a decade ago.

The body of a 56-year-old man originally identified as Mark Clemens was found at a residentia­l building in the 700 block of South Spring Street in downtown L.A. on Feb. 26.

The Los Angeles Fire Department had responded to a dispatch call to the area with an ambulance around 3 p.m. that day, although the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the man’s death and how his body was discovered were not immediatel­y clear.

The Los Angeles Police Department said his death did not appear to be a homicide, and the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner’s office deferred citing his cause of death pending additional investigat­ion.

But a routine scan of the man’s fingerprin­ts uncovered his true identity: Christian R. Basham.

Basham had previously worked as a building supervisor at the residentia­l complex in the Fashion District where his body was discovered.

His neighbors say that he had been working as an independen­t contractor since a recent ownership change with the building.

But they were unaware of his infamous past.

Police in Bremerton, Wash., say Basham raped a 13-year-old child in September 2008.

He was out of jail on a $350,000 bond six months later when a witness saw Basham jump off the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. He’d left a suicide note in his vehicle at the scene, Bremerton police Capt. Aaron Elton said.

“Several agencies engaged in a search ... but Basham’s body was never found,” Elton said in a news release dated March 14 on the agency’s Facebook page.

Elton, who was on the Bremerton force in 2008 but wasn’t assigned to Basham’s case, said that because there was no confirmati­on of his death at the time, the criminal case against Basham remain opened — until now.

Bremerton detectives are still hoping to piece together how Basham came to be living in Los Angeles under a pseudonym, Elton said.

They also are working to reach the now-adult victim, who was not related to Bashman, he said.

“It’s important to us to let the victim know [he died] if they don’t already know,” Elton said.

Tenants and neighbors of the downtown L.A. building where Basham lived and worked expressed shock at his alleged criminal past.

Petra Wright, gallery director of Gloria Delson Contempora­ry Arts, said all she knew about Basham was that he was helpful.

“He was a trustworth­y, dependable, hardworkin­g, kind person who was always willing to be there if I needed anything,” Wright said of the man she knew as Mark Clemens.

He often helped Wright install or remove cumbersome pieces at the gallery that were too big for her to handle alone, she said. Several of its curated pieces are 10 feet tall and 4 feet wide.

“He always was super respectful of removing the art, making sure it’s not near any hardware ... so nothing gets damaged,” she said. “And he was a consummate profession­al.”

Tommy Cuellar found the news about his former next-door neighbor “very shocking,” he told ABC-TV Channel 7.

“This was our maintenanc­e guy. This was the guy who had keys to our apartments,” Cuellar said. “It was troubling, to say the least, as you could imagine.”

The building’s previous owners could not be reached for comment about Basham’s employment.

Police in Bremerton are asking anyone with informatio­n about Basham during the years since his faked death in 2009 to contact Det. Derek Ejde at (360) 473-5497 or at Derek.Ejde@ci.bremerton.wa.us.

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