The L.A. County district attorney's office alleges that Gustavo Alvarez hired a member of the Avenues gang to kill his wife, who was gunned down outside a Highland Park restaurant.
May 30, 2010|By Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times
Richard Hartog, Los Angeles Times
On a warm night during the Fourth of July holiday weekend in 2003, Virginia and Gustavo Alvarez went out for dinner to a Mexican restaurant in Highland Park that was recommended by friends for its guacamole.
As Virginia stepped out of the couple's SUV, a man with a shotgun approached and fatally shot the mother of three in the head. The gunman and an accomplice fled in a small white car.
Alvarez's killing was as mysterious as it was brazen. Was it a botched robbery? Did it involve a personal grudge? Or, was it somehow related to her job as a secretary in the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's internal affairs section? Investigators were confounded.
Advertisement
Ads by Google
Seven months after her slaying, the victim's mother appeared at a news conference with half a dozen other relatives, begging anyone with information to call police. "Someone out there knows the truth," Antonia Rivera said.
That person, police now say, is Gustavo Alvarez.
According to court documents obtained by The Times, detectives allege that Gustavo Alvarez hired a member of the notorious Avenues street gang to kill his wife.
"This was a puzzle with a lot of tiny pieces," said Capt. Kevin McClure of the Los Angeles Police Department's Robbery-Homicide Division. "The picture became clearer the more pieces we added."
Ultimately, gang associates and family members helped detectives put it altogether, McClure said.
Jeremy Karpel, Alvarez's defense attorney, said his client is innocent.
According to a search warrant affidavit, the couple was in the process of separating at the time of the killing. On the surface, the split seemed amicable. The couple had agreed to evenly divide their assets. Gustavo Alvarez, 46, a phone company employee, had filed papers signing over the couple's Pico Rivera home, the court documents show.
But Virginia Alvarez, 37, learned that her husband had assets that she had previously been unaware of, including a 61-foot yacht, according to the affidavit and state records.
Rivera told authorities that her daughter already had reason to distrust her husband because he was cheating on her, court records show.
A break came in April 2008, when Gustavo's brother, Jimmy Alvarez, told police his brother had paid an Avenues gang member to deliver the fatal shot, according to the affidavit.
Jimmy Alvarez told police that Joseph Luis Sepulveda, a gang member known as "Pee Wee," shot Virginia Alvarez, according to the court records. Sepulveda and Jimmy Alvarez were old acquaintances who were once arrested for robbery together, the records show.
Sepulveda and Gustavo Alvarez were no strangers either, detectives allege.
An aunt with whom Sepulveda lived told police that Gustavo Alvarez began coming to the house to speak with her nephew.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
No comments:
Post a Comment