Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia Sentenced To Death

Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia has been sentenced to death by the State of California for a quadruple murder in RIverside

According to court documents Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia was driving in a vehicle with three of the victims and they were headed to meet the fourth victim. When the group arrived the four victims, including a pregnant woman, would be executed by Larin Garcia

The four victims were: Carlos Campos-Rivera, 25, Jacob Montgomery, 19, Juan Duarte-Raya, 18 and Yuliana Garcia, 17, who was also pregnant at the time

Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia would be arrested at the scene and taken to a hospital for injuries however he would later escape only to be arrested again the next day

Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia would be convicted of the four murders and sentenced to death

Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia Case

A Cathedral City man was convicted Monday of gunning down four people in Palm Springs almost exactly four years ago.

Jose Vladimir Larin-Garcia, 23, was convicted of four counts of first-degree murder for the Feb. 3, 2019, deaths of Jacob Montgomery, 19; Juan Duarte Raya, 18; Yuliana Garcia, 17; and Carlos Campos Rivera, 25. Jurors, who began deliberating Monday morning and reached a verdict before lunch, also found true a special-circumstance allegation of multiple murders and sentence-enhancing gun and great bodily injury allegations.

The trial will now move into a penalty phase, during which jurors will recommend whether Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia should be sentenced to death or life in prison without the possibility of parole. The penalty phase of trial is set to begin Wednesday.

Prosecutors said Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia was sitting in a stopped car with Montgomery, Raya and Garcia on the night of the killings, and first fatally shot Rivera, who was leaning against the stopped vehicle.

The driver sped away after that shooting, but prosecutors say Larin-Garcia — who was in the back seat — then fatally shot the trio inside the vehicle to eliminate witnesses to the first killing.

Jurors in his first trial deliberated over seven days but were unable to reach a verdict in March of last year. A new jury was sworn in for the retrial on Sept. 26, 2022.

Defense attorney John Dolan unsuccessfully tried to point blame for the killing on then-15-year-old John Olvera, saying he made incriminating statements and social media posts that amounted to a confession to the killings. Dolan claimed that it was Olvera in the back seat of the car, and that Larin-Garcia jumped out of the moving vehicle to escape the gunfire.

Olvera testified in both of Larin-Garcia’s trials, denying culpability in the case, saying his comments amounted to empty boasting or were simply lyrics by rapper Young Boy.

“If you weighed the evidence against Mr. Olvera and the evidence against Mr. Larin-Garcia, Mr. Olvera is clearly the person who committed the crime,” Dolan said. “If you’ve got a third person who’s claimed credit for this, who’s a meth user, who was not checked out in the investigation properly and communicates these (confessions) to a young girl … that guy has way more evidence against him than Larin-Garcia.”

Deputy District Attorney Samantha Paixao, however, told the jury that Olvera had nothing to do with the killings, and while law enforcement could have done a better job with the investigation and handling of evidence, it shouldn’t create reasonable doubt for jurors.

She said she doesn’t know why Olvera would get on social media and falsely confess to the killings, but said he had done it before when he lied and took credit for a murder at Zelda’s nightclub and when he lied about being in custody “to impress chicks.”

During the prosecution’s closing argument last week, Paixao insisted that Larin-Garcia — not Olvera — was in the car the night of the killings, and said the defendant was clearly attempting to flee or hide on three occasions following the shootings. She also said the victims were deliberately killed, supporting allegations that the defendant was lying in wait, acted with intent to kill, with deliberation and with premeditation.

“Some people are just bad,” Paixao told jurors. “Some people just want to kill, and when you kill four people within a matter of minutes, you like to kill.”

Paixao said that someone who pulls a trigger and shoots each victim two times knows what they’re doing and is acting with intent to kill. Photos were then shown to jurors of each victim from when their injuries were evaluated by an expert as Paixao listed how each victim was fatally injured.

“We know he took (Montgomery) by surprise because look at where Jacob was shot (twice on the right side of his face.). Look how he was murdered,” Paixao said. “Sitting in the car next to Vladimir Larin-Garcia. There is no other way that this execution happens unless he had a secret plan, then he took them by surprise.”

During opening statements of the retrial, Paixao told jurors that three of the shooting victims — Montgomery, Raya and Garcia — were found in a green Toyota Corolla that crashed at Sunny Dunes and El Placer roads about 11:40 p.m. the night of the killings, while the fourth victim — Rivera was found on a street about a half-mile away.

Prosecutors contend Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia was in the car, first killing Rivera as he stood outside the vehicle, then killing the others because they had witnessed the first shooting.

In both of Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia’s trials, Dolan created a scene for the jury in which Olvera was in the middle seat of the car shooting the others, and that Larin-Garcia jumped from the vehicle when the killings began. But Paixao argued there was no evidence to suggest a fifth person was in the vehicle, pointing to eyewitness testimony of only four people being present.

Paixao said Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia was inside the Corolla with the three victims, and that Montgomery was planning to make a drug deal. She said the defendant was in the back seat when he allegedly fatally shot Rivera, who was leaning against the car on Canon Drive, south of Theresa Drive.

After the shooting, the driver of the Corolla sped off, but Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia allegedly shot the driver as well as the other two occupants, then jumped from the moving car before it crashed into a parked Jeep at Sunny Dunes and El Placer roads, according to the prosecution.

According to Paixao, blood on Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia’s shoes and jacket had the DNA of the victims on it, placing him inside the vehicle at the time of the murders. She further argued that bullet casings at the crime scene matched those that were found in the defendant’s bedroom and vehicle, further attaching him to the events.

Dolan asserted during his closing argument in the first trial that the blood spatter identified on Larin-Garcia’s clothing did not prove murder, and there was no search for a gun the prosecution claims he used in the crime, only bullet casings.

According to preliminary hearing testimony, Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia was found by officers hiding under a pickup just blocks from the scene of the Corolla crash. He was taken to Desert Regional Medical Center for treatment of minor injuries but was not arrested.

Jose Vladimir Larin Garcia left the hospital after being questioned by Palm Springs police, going to a friend’s house. Detective Steve Grissom testified that the friend went to his mother’s home to retrieve fresh clothing and an ID card for the defendant.

Later in the day, the friend also bought bandages for Larin-Garcia, along with a Greyhound bus ticket to Florida under the name “Joseph Browning,” Grissom testified.

At some point that day, Larin-Garcia shaved his head to change his appearance, then the friend drove him to the bus station in Indio, where Larin-Garcia was arrested, Grissom testified.

https://patch.com/california/palmdesert/coachella-valley-quadruple-slaying-conviction-handed-down

FacebookTwitterEmailPinterestRedditTumblrShare
Exit mobile version