Jury convicts Compton teen of two murders

A jury deliberated less than two hours Wednesday to return with guilty verdicts in the case of a Compton teenager accused of killing the mother and stepfather of his girlfriend in 2011. Giovanni Gallardo, now 18, was found guilty of firstdegree murder for plotting and murdering Gloria Villalta, 58, and Jose Lara, 51, while his girlfriend, Cynthia Alvarez, looked on. Both charges also carried special allegations of lying in wait and multiple murders.

Gallardo, who was tried as an adult, faces life in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced July 31.

What the jury had to decide was whether Gallardo freely confessed, as the prosecution contended, or whether he was improperly led to confess by detectives who took advantage of his developmental disability, as the defense argued.

Earlier this month, Alavarez, 16, was convicted after four hours of deliberation of two counts of firstdegree murder and special allegations connected with the killings.

It took Gallardo’s jury half the time to reach the same decision.

Gallardo strangled Villalta and beat Lara with a baseball bat and stabbed him with Alvarez’s help.

In his closing argument, Deputy District Attorney Eric Siddall described Gallardo by saying: “This is a person who has no shame.”

“You have heard in great detail how this man plotted with his girlfriend Cynthia Alvarez for weeks,” Siddall said. “They coordinated and orchestrated the murder of (Villalta and Lara).”

 

The prosecution’s case was built largely on a statement Gallardo gave when questioned by police.

In that statement, which jurors saw on tape, Gallardo attempted to absolve Alvarez, although he admitted she took part in the killings.

Los Angeles County Deputy Alternate Public Defender Scott Johnson argued the interrogation of Gallardo was “botched” by the detectives, who believed Alvarez when she told them that Gallardo killed the parents.

With that, he said detectives used leading questions to get Gallardo to implicate himself.

He also argued Gallardo was easily steered because he has an IQ of 57, which experts described as mild to moderate mental retardation, and is illiterate.

“(Detectives) got what they wanted, but I don’t think they got the truth,” Johnson said.

Johnson said there were discrepancies in Gallardo’s testimony and contradictions with physical evidence, including how many times Gallardo claimed to stab Lara, the placement of wounds and other details.

Johnson said Gallardo was clearly involved with the disposal of the bodies, but was only an accomplice after the fact.

Siddall in his closing said the level and detail of Gallardo’s statement proved his participation throughout and referenced quotes from a transcript in which Gallardo talked about the planning that went into the attack and items he brought with him to commit the alleged crime.

Siddall also argued that the defense’s own witness described Gallardo’s limitations in a way that showed he could not have concocted the elaborate false confession that Johnson suggested.

Despite Gallardo’s low IQ score, the defense did not argue Gallardo’s competence to stand trial.

The murders of Villalta and Lara, whose bodies were discovered in shallow graves in Norwalk and North Long Beach, respectively, drew considerable attention.

The crimes were notable for their brutality, the alleged assailants’ ages and their subsequent behavior in the wake of the killings.

Both admitted to driving around with the dead mother’s decomposing body in the trunk for days after her death while buying supplies, planning and decorating for a Halloween party.

In Alvarez’s trial, she claimed killing the parents was Gallardo’s idea, although she did nothing to stop him.

Arizona jury to weigh death penalty in Jodi Arias murder case

Arias was found guilty on Wednesday of murdering 30-year-old Travis Alexander, whose body was found in the shower of his Phoenix valley home in June 2008. He had been shot in the face, stabbed 27 times and his throat had been slashed.

Arias, 32, had tried unsuccessfully to convince the jury during the four-month trial that she had acted in self-defense after Alexander attacked her because she had dropped his camera while taking photographs of him in the shower.

The trial, which aired graphic evidence including a sex tape and photographs of the blood-spattered crime scene, became a sensation on cable television news with its tale of an attractive and soft-spoken young woman charged with a brutal crime.

Arias teared up as the jury’s decision was read while a crowd of hundreds erupted into cheers outside the court. Jurors could have convicted Arias of a lesser crime such as second-degree murder or manslaughter, but instead found her guilty of the most serious charge possible.

In a television interview moments after the verdict, Arias indicated that she preferred a death sentence to life in prison, and the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office said she was subsequently placed on suicide watch.

“The worst outcome for me would be natural life, I would much rather die sooner than later,” Arias, speaking slowly and calmly, said in an interview with Fox affiliate KSAZ.

“I said years ago I’d rather get death than life and that still is true today. I believe death is the ultimate freedom, so I’d rather just have my freedom as soon as I can get it,” she said.

AGGRAVATING FACTORS

At the sentencing trial, the prosecution will present evidence trying to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that aggravating factors exist which merit the death penalty. The defense can also present rebuttal evidence.


The decision will then be up to the jury.

Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery said the state planned to present “evidence to prove the murder was committed in an especially heinous, cruel or depraved manner.”

A call to defense attorney Kirk Nurmi seeking comment was not immediately returned on Wednesday.

Prosecutor Juan Martinez painted a picture of Arias as manipulative and prone to jealousy in previous relationships, and he said she had meticulously planned to kill Alexander.

In making his case for premeditated murder, Martinez had accused Arias of bringing the pistol used in the killing, which has not been recovered, with her from California. He said she also rented a car, removed its license plate and bought gasoline cans and fuel to conceal her journey to the Phoenix suburbs to kill Alexander.

Martinez said Arias lied after the killing to deflect any suspicion that she had been involved in his death, leaving a voice mail on Alexander’s cellphone, sending flowers to his grandmother and telling detectives she was not at the crime scene before changing her story.

Nurmi meanwhile argued that the one-time waitress had snapped in the “sudden heat of passion” in the moments between a photograph she took showing Alexander alive and taking a shower, and a subsequent picture of his apparently dead body covered in blood.

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