Man deported six times charged with
murder in California bludgeonings
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[September 27, 2018]
By Steve Gorman and Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A man who police
said fled to California from Texas after being questioned in the
disappearance of two relatives was charged on Wednesday in Los Angeles
with bludgeoning eight men, three fatally, in a string of attacks aimed
mostly at homeless victims.
Ramon Alberto Escobar, 47, an El Salvador native and convicted burglar
who has been repeatedly deported from the United States, was arrested on
Monday after he allegedly clubbed a sleeping man in the head with
bolt-cutters in the ocean-front city of Santa Monica, authorities said.
Seven other men were similarly attacked in Santa Monica and Los Angeles
earlier this month, according to the Los Angeles County District
Attorney's Office.
Police have said one victim was sleeping under a pier after a night of
fishing and that most of the rest of the victims were homeless,
including three men battered with a baseball bat in downtown Los Angeles
on Sept. 16.
Two of those victims and the man attacked beneath the pier died of their
injuries. Some survivors were left in a coma.
On Wednesday, the district attorney's office formally charged Escobar
with three counts of murder, five counts of attempted murder and four
counts of robbery. If convicted of murder, he faces a minimum sentence
of life without parole.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials said Tuesday
that Escobar had been deported back to El Salvador six times between
1977 and 2011 and has six felony convictions for burglary and illegal
re-entry. Police have said he spent five years in a Texas prison for
burglary from 1995 to 2000.
Escobar in 2016 filed an appeal of his immigration case, which U.S.
courts granted in December of that year, and he was released from ICE
custody on an "order of supervision" in January 2017, ICE spokesperson
Paige Hughes said by email.
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Escobar, now jailed without bond, briefly appeared in Los Angeles
Superior Court on Wednesday, but the arraignment was postponed until
Nov. 8. No plea was entered.
Judge Gustavo Sztraicher granted a defense motion barring public
dissemination of the defendant's image, including by photograph or
courtroom sketch drawing, so as not to prejudice potential witnesses
who might identify him for prosecutors.
Escobar appeared expressionless and said nothing except to answer,
"Yes, sir," when asked if he agreed to the postponement.
Defense lawyers declined to speak to reporters.
Meanwhile, police in Houston said Escobar was a "person of interest"
in the investigation into the disappearance of an aunt and uncle
with whom Escobar lived before they were reported missing in late
August by other relatives.
The aunt's van was later found burned and abandoned in Galveston,
Texas, according to Houston police spokesman Kese Smith.
Escobar was questioned by Houston homicide detectives on Aug. 30,
but they lacked probable cause to detain him at the time, Smith told
Reuters on Wednesday, adding that Houston detectives would seek to
"re-interview" Escobar in California.
Hayes said Escobar "fled" Texas by car soon after he was questioned
in Houston, arriving in Los Angeles on Sept. 5. The first attack
police linked to him occurred three days later.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman and Alex Dobuzinskis; Additional
reporting by Gina Cherelus in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman
and Lisa Shumaker)
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