logo
Jury convicts burglar of killing elderly Encino man during home invasion

Jury convicts burglar of killing elderly Encino man during home invasion

Yahoo25-03-2025

After finding his friend Stuart Herman sprawled on the kitchen floor of his Encino home with a gunshot wound to the head, John Berliner tried for more than five minutes to revive him as a 911 operator offered coaching on CPR.
An audio recording of Berliner's anguished 911 call, in which he is heard counting out chest compressions, provided an emotional climax to the recent trial of the man charged with the shooting, which left Herman dead despite his friend's efforts to save him.
On March 18, a San Fernando Valley jury convicted Timothy Kirkpatrick of killing Herman, 80, during what police and prosecutors believe was a home burglary gone awry. Kirkpatrick was found guilty on all charges: first-degree murder, burglary, assault with a firearm and illegal possession of a firearm. He and an alleged accomplice, Hakop Keloyan, were arrested in March 2022, roughly two months after the slaying.
Before the start of trial, Keloyan pleaded guilty on March 10 to two gun charges and entered a no-contest plea to additional charges that included burglary, armed assault, and identity theft.
Both men are expected to be sentenced in April.
Read more: Mayor and LAPD chief tout double-digit drop in homicides compared with last year
Deputy Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Ranna Jahanshahi said Herman and Berliner were best friends who met when Herman married Berliner's sister. Their friendship survived the couple's divorce, and when Berliner lived abroad he came back to L.A. to check on his elderly companion.
An attorney for Kirkpatrick argued that there was no physical evidence tying his client to the crime. The defense called no witnesses during the trial.
In March 2022, Berliner stayed at Herman's English Tudor house in the 4500 block of Densmore Avenue. "They were going to catch up on however long it had been since these two best friends had spoken," Jahanshahi said.
On the day of the shooting, the two friends had just returned from grocery shopping when they noticed an "unfamiliar, brand-new looking BMW in the driveway," Jahanshahi said.
Finding it odd, Berliner told investigators that he proceeded to check the backyard and the pool area before going inside the home to search the rooms.
As he made his way through the house, Berliner told police, he noted that many doors had been left ajar, which was unusual because Herman insisted on keeping doors closed to keep his cats from escaping.
"So with every door that John saw was open, he got a little bit more concerned," she said.
Berliner recalled seeing the barrel of a gun protruding from behind a door and a male voice shouting "We're the police!" and instructing him to get down on the ground. As he did so, the gunman pistol-whipped him before running downstairs.
After a few moments, Berliner heard a gunshot.
"Nothing else. No words said, no screaming, no nothing," Jahanshahi said. An autopsy found marks on Herman's face, torso and arms that the medical examiner said indicated he had been shot at close range.
Berliner told police he tried to take video of the suspect he saw and an accomplice fleeing in the white BMW X6, but his hands were shaking so badly that he could only manage to snap a photograph with his cellphone.
He told investigators that he remembered the shooter as a tall, slender man with a mustache and arms covered in tattoos.
Read more: A slimmed-down LAPD seems here to stay. What happens to crime with fewer cops?
Investigators obtained a warrant for information from Google to identify electronic devices that had been in the area at the time of the murder, which eventually led them to Kirkpatrick and Keloyan.
The men were arrested in late April 2022. Kirkpatrick was taken into custody after barricading himself inside a home in Simi Valley when police arrived with a search warrant. Keloyan was caught later the same day during a police raid of a Sherman Oaks residence where they found an illegal marijuana grow operation in an underground garage on the property.
Prosecutors said surveillance video from a Range Rover dealership showed Kirkpatrick and Keloyan near Herman's home around the time of the incident. They were also captured on video driving past the property, which prosecutors said suggested they were casing the location.
Jahanshahi said in an interview after the verdict was announced that the government pursued the more serious charge of first-degree murder based on the brutality of the crime and the close proximity at which Herman was shot, which "shows it was intentful and purposeful."
After hearing the evidence against Kirkpatrick, the jury got its decision right, she said.
"Anything less than first-degree would've been an injustice," Jahanshahi said, though "it's not going to change the trauma that the surviving victim has gone through."
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LAPD deliberately targeted journalists at protests, press group says in lawsuit
LAPD deliberately targeted journalists at protests, press group says in lawsuit

Axios

time28 minutes ago

  • Axios

LAPD deliberately targeted journalists at protests, press group says in lawsuit

Los Angeles journalists sued the city and head of the police department Monday alleging officers deliberately targeted reporters at recent protests following federal immigration raids. The big picture: The complaint, filed in federal court, accuses law enforcement officers of responding to the demonstrations with excessive force against both the press and the public. The largely peaceful protests in Los Angeles put the city at the center of nationwide unrest around the Trump administration's aggressive deportation agenda. Driving the news: The Los Angeles Press Club and investigative reporting site Status Coup in their complaint accuse LAPD officers of violating journalists' rights under the Constitution and state law. "Being a journalist in Los Angeles is now a dangerous profession," the complaint filed in the Central District of California said. "LAPD unlawfully used force and the threat of force against Plaintiffs, their members and other journalists to intimidate them and interfere with their constitutional right to document public events as the press." Journalists covering the protests have been shot with "less-lethal munitions," charged by horses and forcibly prevented from filming, the suit said. Zoom in: The suit lists Australian journalist Lauren Tomasi, who was shot by a rubber bullet during a live broadcast, as one of its examples of LAPD misconduct. "The video of the shooting shows the LAPD officer looking directly at her and aiming specifically at her without the slightest justification," the complaint said. "She held a microphone; she was accompanied by a camera crew. None of that mattered to the LAPD officers." Tomasi told CNN she had been reporting at the protests in downtown LA for hours when she felt the presence of the LAPD and law enforcement "really ramped up." While she has a bruise from the rubber bullet, she said she thinks "it's so important that journalists are out there doing our job." What they're saying: "With today's lawsuit, the L.A. Press Club is fighting for the rights of all of its nearly 1,000 members to report the news without risking their health and safety," Adam Rose, spokesperson for the nonprofit, said.

Large mob ransacks South Los Angeles AutoZone; incident may be connected to street takeover
Large mob ransacks South Los Angeles AutoZone; incident may be connected to street takeover

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Large mob ransacks South Los Angeles AutoZone; incident may be connected to street takeover

A large mob was seen looting an AutoZone store in South Los Angeles early Monday morning, and the incident was likely connected to a street takeover that took place nearby. According to the Los Angeles Police Department, officers were dispatched to Hoover Street and Century Boulevard in the Vermont Vista neighborhood around 4:25 a.m. Property was taken, LAPD confirmed, although they did not go into detail on what exactly was stolen. Footage posted to the Citizen App shows a crowd of people outside the store and an adjacent gas station, as tires could be heard screeching in the background. Skid marks were later seen on the street. A woman was heard saying, 'Somebody call 911; they're looting the AutoZone again.' KTLA has previously reported on two incidents that took place at the same location, one in June 2024 and another three months later in September. At least 50 people were said to have been involved in the June incident, with 'hundreds' participating in the September ransacking, according to the LAPD. Police did not disclose exactly how many suspects were involved on Sunday, but did say the incident may be connected to a nearby street takeover. Culver City man claims pair of thieves stole his classic car, motorcycle on Father's Day Video from the scene obtained by KTLA shows the aftermath of the looting, which left the front window of the business destroyed and merchandise scattered throughout the store, in addition to on the sidewalk and in the parking lot. Expletives were also spray-painted on the exterior wall, one of which was directed at ICE. Also scrawled on the wall was 'LL Huncho' — the 'LL' likely standing for 'Long Live.' According to LAPD, no arrests were made in connection with the looting on Sunday. Nancy Fontan contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Police search for suspect after U.S. Postal Service carrier shot in South LA
Police search for suspect after U.S. Postal Service carrier shot in South LA

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Police search for suspect after U.S. Postal Service carrier shot in South LA

A U.S. Postal Service carrier was shot in the arm Monday in South Los Angeles, and police are searching for a suspect. Around 11:40 a.m., the carrier was allegedly shot in the area of Century Boulevard and Central Avenue, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. The victim was conscious and breathing when taken to a hospital, an LAPD representative said. "The United States Postal Inspection Service and the Los Angeles Police Department responded after receiving reports of a letter carrier who was shot in the South Los Angeles area," Postal Inspector Patricia Mendoza said in a statement. "The Postal Inspection Service can confirm the postal employee was shot. This is an active investigation, and no additional information can be provided at this time."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store