San Francisco Chronicle

Spa bombing in 2018 nets two life sentences

- By Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES — A Southern California man was sentenced Friday to two concurrent life sentences, plus 30 years, for blowing up his ex-girlfriend’s spa business with a package bomb in 2018, killing her and seriously injuring two others.

Friday’s hearing concluded a case against Stephen Beal, 64, that was fraught with missteps for investigat­ors and prosecutor­s since the May 15, 2018, bombing in an Aliso Viejo spa, about 50 miles south of Los Angeles.

Ildiko Krajnyak, 48, was killed in the fiery blast when she opened a box with a homemade bomb inside that Beal had slipped into the spa while she was in Hungary visiting family. Two clients she had just treated — a mother and daughter — were knocked off their feet. The blast destroyed the business and tore a large hunk from the building. Body parts were found in the parking lot.

“Mr. Beal will never be able to get out to harm innocent victims again,” said E. Martin Estrada, the U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, at a news conference after the sentencing.

A federal judge sentenced Beal to two concurrent life sentences for the charges of use of a weapon of mass destructio­n resulting in death and malicious destructio­n of a building resulting in death.

Beal also received a 30year sentence for the use of a destructiv­e device during and in relation to a crime of violence, which will run consecutiv­ely, and a 10-year concurrent sentence for possession of an unregister­ed destructiv­e device.

Beal’s federal public defender, Craig Harbaugh, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

“After five years of waiting and wondering, our family and friends have peace knowing that Mr. Beal will spend his remaining days in prison,” Eva Boni, Krajnyak’s cousin, said at the news conference.

Beal, a partner in the business, was jealous Krajnyak had been dating someone else after their 18month relationsh­ip ended, prosecutor­s said.

Beal was arrested shortly after the explosion on a single charge of possessing an unregister­ed destructiv­e device but was never officially named as a suspect in the blast in the days that followed. The charge was dropped after prosecutor­s questioned whether material found at his Long Beach home constitute­d a “destructiv­e device.” Beal claimed that explosive material found at his house was for his model rockets.

He was free for nearly 10 months before being re-arrested following a painstakin­g analysis of the evidence. Beal’s first trial in 2022 ended in a mistrial after the federal jury deadlocked.

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