Los Angeles Times - 16.11.2019

(Wang) #1

B4 LATIMES.COM


Investigators are still try-
ing to determine what led to
a deadly attack at Saugus
High School on Thursday in
which police and witnesses
say a 16-year-old student
opened fire in the campus
quad, killing two classmates
and injuring three others
before turning the gun on
himself.
Detectives have con-
ducted 40 interviews and
still have six to go in their ef-
forts to piece together what
led up to the shooting in
Santa Clarita. It is not clear
how the shooter got the
weapon, a .45-caliber hand-
gun. However, authorities
say that at this point, they
do not think the shooter tar-
geted specific students.
Authorities seized sev-
eral unregistered firearms
from the teenager’s home,
and the Los Angeles County
Sheriff ’s Department is
working with the federal Bu-
reau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives to
trace the origins of the hand-
gun used in the shooting,
Sheriff Alex Villanueva said.
“We are chasing all the
leads available,” Villanueva
said. “At this stage, we don’t
know the motive.”
Just before the start of
second period on Thursday,
authorities and witnesses
say, Nathaniel Berhow
pulled a .45-caliber pistol
from his backpack and
began shooting his
schoolmates. The attack
was launched on his 16th
birthday. The boy died of his
wounds Friday.
A school surveillance
camera recorded the 16 sec-
onds of violence, investiga-
tors said. The teenager
apparently knew how many
shots he had fired and re-
served the final round for
himself, Villanueva said.
Friends and neighbors
were stunned, saying the
teenager had not shown
signs of aggression. He ran
junior varsity cross-country
and helped younger mem-
bers in his Boy Scout troop.
“He would have fun with
the team and was a good
kid,” 11th-grader Aidan Soto


said. “The younger Scouts
really looked up to him. He
was there when they needed
him with anything. I’m be-
wildered and looking for
answers.”
Brooke Risley, a 16-year-
old junior at Saugus High,
has known the teen since ele-
mentary school. Last year,

the two were together in a
group for their engineering
class and grew to become
close friends.
“He was very smart and
really good at history,” she
said.
In AP European history
class, she said, he would help
her study and would often

get the highest test scores in
the class. She said the teen
often planned Boy Scout
trips during their free time in
class last year.
“He was pretty funny
too,” she said. “He had a
higher-level type of humor
that often I couldn’t even get
the joke ’cause it was above
my head.”
When word began to
spread, a friend reached out
and let her know. In shock,
she began texting a mutual
friend.
“Please tell me it’s not
Nathaniel,” she said.
“I heard that too,” he
responded. “I don’t want to
believe it.”
A senior in their class last
year reached out to her Fri-
day, asking whether it was
the same Nathaniel who was

on their group project “be-
cause he couldn’t believe he
would do this,” Risley said.
“Everyone who has heard
about him being the shooter
has said this wasn’t typically
him,” she said. “All those
who know him are really
wondering what the motive
was.”
Public records and a
high-ranking law enforce-
ment source have indicated
signs of trouble at home.
His family life in Santa
Clarita was upended by his
father’s sudden death in De-
cember 2017, acquaintances
said. More recently, a source
told The Times that the boy
was having problems with
his girlfriend, who was his
emotional anchor.
The teen’s father, Mark
Berhow, was arrested on

suspicion of driving under
the influence in 2013 and 2015
and pleaded no contest
twice. The second time, he
was sentenced to 45 days in
jail and five years’ probation.
According to jail records,
he was also booked in 2015 on
suspicion of attempted bat-
tery of a spouse. The Los An-
geles County district attor-
ney’s office declined to file
charges in that case, citing
insufficient evidence.
A judge granted physical
custody of the boy to his
mother in August 2016, even
though both parents still ap-
peared to live in the family’s
small ranch home on Syca-
more Creek Drive.
“He would tell me that he
missed his father and that
he loved him,” said neighbor
Jared Axen, 33.

School shooting stirs a search for answers


Detectives have yet to find a motive; those who knew the teen are left stunned by his attack and suicide


By Brittny Mejia,
Ruben Vives,
Richard Winton
and Alejandra
Reyes-Velarde


SANTA CLARITA RESIDENTSgather in prayer at Grace Baptist Church on Thursday night after the deadly shooting at nearby Saugus
High School. The 16-year-old boy who opened fire on campus was not known for showing signs of aggression, friends and neighbors said.

Luis SincoLos Angeles Times

‘He would have fun with


the [cross-country] team


and was a good kid.... I’m


bewildered and looking for


answers.’


—AIDANSOTO,
11th-grade Saugus High School student

short walk from the high
school. Candles and teddy
bears piled up on the grass
around a pole from which an
American flag flew at half-
staff.
Sebastian Martinez, 12,
placed a football on the
grass in honor of Dominic,
whom he played football
with in a youth program.
The boy arrived at the
park just before nightfall
with his father, Xavier Mar-
tinez, who had grown to
know Dominic’s family
through their sons’ friend-
ship. Martinez said he spent
most of Thursday with
Dominic’s family.
“He was always smiling
and laughing,” the older
Martinez said of Dominic.
“It’s so unfair.”
Dominic was remem-
bered by friends and family
as a jokester with a huge
grin. His Instagram page in-


cludes the name “comedi-
an,” a clear nod to his bud-
ding comedic persona.
Anthony Martinez, a stu-
dent at Canyon High School,
called Dominic not just his
teammate, but his brother.
“He was always smiling,
making people laugh, always
positive, he was the sweetest
kid ever,” Anthony wrote on
Twitter. “We need more peo-
ple like you.”
On a GoFundMe page,
Dominic’s family remem-
bered his “goofy laugh,
cheesy smile, a huge, caring
heart.”
“This world lost a bright,
shining light,” the page
reads. “He was taken from
his family and friends in the
most senseless of ways. His
three brothers will miss their
big brother greatly.”
On Thursday, Saugus
High, home to 2,500 stu-
dents, joined a long list of
schools that have doubled as

sites of mass shootings. Po-
lice said the shooting
started and ended in just 16
seconds.
One victim, a 14-year-old
boy, was treated at a hospi-
tal and released Thursday
afternoon.
Two girls, 15 and 14, re-
main at Providence Holy
Cross Medical Center in Mis-

sion Hills and are now in the
same room, surrounded by
their families.
The 15-year-old was shot
below the navel, authorities
said. The bullet lodged in her
hip and was removed by doc-
tors.
The 14-year-old had
wounds to her left shoulder
and lower abdomen, doctors
said Friday.
Both girls are expected to
be released within a few
days.
Investigators said the at-
tack was planned but they
do not believe specific stu-
dents were targeted.
Gracie had celebrated a
birthday Oct. 10. She was de-
scribed by classmates as
sweet and fun, someone who
had a momentous impact in
her short life.
Alexa Olsen, a freshman
at Saugus High who was in a
dance class with Gracie, re-
membered her as a goofy,

fun girl who cheered her on.
When the girls made eye
contact in the middle of
practice as they danced to
jazz, Gracie would make
funny faces and the two
would burst out laughing,
Alexa said. When they made
a mistake, the two would
laugh together and keep on
dancing.
“She was so nice and kind
to everyone,” said Alexa, 14.
“You would just smile look-
ing at her.”
Chloe White, 17, who
helped coach the girls cheer-
leading team, said Gracie
had a bright personality and
always looked as if she en-
joyed being onstage. She
was quick to throw out en-
couragement to her team-
mates as they got ready to
perform.
“She was always telling
people they could do it,”
Chloe said. “ ‘You got this,
guys, you’re going to be

great.’ ”
Gracie’s parents said in a
GoFundMe campaign that
they are searching for a way
to memorialize their daugh-
ter. The account raised more
than $9,000 in its first hour.
“It is with the most unex-
plainable brokenness that
we share our Gracie went to
be with Jesus on Thursday
morning,” the page reads.
“Our vivacious, funny, loyal,
light of our lives, Cinderella,
the daughter we always
dreamed to have, fiercely
strong and lover of all things
fashionable — was our best
friend. She is going to be
missed more than words will
ever be able to express.”
The Muehlbergers con-
cluded the post with a mes-
sage to Gracie: “We will love
you always Sweetpea.”

Times staff writer Hannah
Fry contributed to this
report.

Remembering a football player and cheerleader


[Victims,from B1]


GRACIE Muehlberger
was described by class-
mates as sweet and fun.

SACRAMENTO — A
third consecutive California
governor is blocking parole
for a former follower of late
cult leader Charles Manson.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on
Friday reversed a parole rec-
ommendation for Bruce
Davis, now 77, for the 1969
slayings of musician Gary
Hinman and stuntman Don-
ald “Shorty” Shea. It was the
sixth time Davis was recom-
mended for parole but
blocked by a governor.
Davis was not involved in
the more notorious killings
of actress Sharon Tate and
six others by the Manson
group the same year.
Davis was convicted of
helping kill both men.
Parole panels have re-
peatedly decided Davis is no
longer a public safety risk,


citing his age and good be-
havior. But his release has
been blocked by Republican
Gov. Arnold Schwarzeneg-
ger and Democrats Jerry
Brown and now Newsom.
Like his predecessors,
Newsom said Davis remains
too dangerous to be free.
Davis has yet to demon-
strate that he has a “com-
prehensive understanding
of how he came to participa-
te in such extreme violence,”
Newsom said. “As a result, I
do not believe that he has
the current insight and skills
to abstain from violent
situations in the future if re-
leased.”
Davis has said he at-
tacked Shea with a knife and
held a gun on Hinman while
Manson cut Hinman’s face
with a sword.
Attorney Michael Beck-
man said his client lacks the
money to challenge New-

som’s decision in court.
“Six parole boards ... de-
cided he’s been rehabilitat-
ed” after extensive hearings,
he said. “He is rehabilitated
and has been for a long
time.”
Davis was convicted with
Manson and another fol-
lower, Steve Grogan, in the
two slayings. Grogan was
paroled in 1985 after he led
police to Shea’s buried body.
Robert Beausoleil, 72, con-
victed in Hinman’s death, re-
mains in prison.
Manson died in prison in
2017 at age 83.
Followers Leslie Van
Houten, 70; Patricia Kren-
winkel, 71; and Charles “Tex”
Watson, 73, are imprisoned
for the Tate killings. Their
co-defendant, Susan Atkins,
died in prison in 2009.
Newsom this year
blocked paroles for Beau-
soleil and Van Houten.

Manson crony’s parole blocked


associated press


SAN FRANCISCO —
A Bay Area real estate heir-
ess whose family posted
$35-million bail to keep her
out of jail until her trial was
acquitted Friday of killing
the father of her children.
After deliberating for 12
days, jurors said Tiffany Li is
not guilty of conspiring with
her boyfriend to kill 27-year-
old Keith Green in 2016 over a
custody dispute.
The case drew global at-
tention when Li’s family,
who made a fortune in con-
struction in China, posted
$35-million bail for her, one
of the highest on record in
the United States.
San Mateo County prose-
cutors said Li lured Green to
her mansion in Hillsbor-
ough, south of San Fran-
cisco, to discuss custody of

their children. They also
said that Li’s boyfriend
Kaveh Bayat shot Green in
the mouth and that the two
hired a friend to dispose of
the body.
Prosecutors presented
evidence that Green’s blood
was found in Li’s Mercedes-
Benz and that gunshot re-

sidue was discovered in her
garage.
Li’s attorneys argued
that Green was killed in a
botched kidnapping plot
and that she had nothing to
do with his death. She had
settled the custody issues
with her former boyfriend,
they said.
Green’s body was found
along a dirt road north of
San Francisco nearly two
weeks after he was last seen
meeting with Li about their
children. The pair met
around 2009.
The prosecution faced a
setback this month when its
chief witness, Olivier Adella,
was arrested on suspicion of
contacting an ex-girlfriend
and witness for the defense.
Adella was expected to tes-
tify that Li and Bayat asked
him to dispose of Green’s
body, but prosecutors did
not call him as a witness.

Heiress is acquitted of murder


associated press

TIFFANY LIwas found
not guilty in the killing
of her children’s father.

San Mateo County Sheriff ’s Office
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