Crime & Safety
Home Invasion 'Assassination' In Menifee: Trial Date Set For Accused
Rodolfo Garcia, 40, of Perris is charged with first-degree murder and other crimes in the 2018 slaying of Silvano Gutierrez Esteves, 43.
MENIFEE, CA — A Sept. 11 trial date was confirmed Friday for an ex-con accused of joining his best friend in a "home invasion assassination" of a 43-year-old Menifee man and perpetrating a takeover robbery during which children and others were threatened and assaulted.
Rodolfo Garcia, 40, of Perris is charged with first-degree murder, four counts of armed robbery, three counts of kidnapping to commit robbery, two counts each of false imprisonment and firearm assault and one count each of burglary, making criminal threats and carjacking.
During a hearing Friday at the Riverside Hall of Justice, Riverside County Superior Court Judge Timothy Hollenhorst conferred with the prosecution and defense regarding scheduling, and both sides agreed to have their calendars cleared in order to move forward with trial proceedings during the second week of September.
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Garcia is being held without bail at the Robert Presley Jail in Riverside.
His former co-defendant and friend from childhood, 34-year-old Jesus Ledesma Guzman of Lancaster, was similarly charged but was killed in a gunfight with U.S. Marshals trying to arrest him in Northern California in November 2018.
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The men are accused of gunning down Silvano Gutierrez Esteves at his residence in February 2018.
According to a trial brief filed by the District Attorney's Office, the pair were allegedly part of a "home invasion robbery crew" comprised of about a dozen men, who clad themselves in ballistic vests and masks, wielded high-capacity rifles and waged campaigns of terror against their targets throughout Southern California.
Guzman was believed to be the ringleader and buried at least five victims around his Lancaster property, according to the brief.
Nearly seven months before the slaying of Esteves, on July 17, 2017, the crew went to a Nuevo home where illegal marijuana was grown and forced their way into the residence in the middle of the night, leveling guns at the half-dozen occupants, including three children, ages 3 to 9 years old, the trial brief alleged.
One of the intruders threatened to rape the young girl in the house unless their demands for money and other valuables were met, according to court papers. Her two male siblings were wrested away from their parents and isolated in a room separate from the adults, who were told that the youngsters would be abducted unless everyone cooperated, the brief said.
The robbery crew kicked, struck with rifle butts and shoved the victims to the floor, according to documents.
The victims didn't resist, surrendering "over $10,000, two horse- mounting chairs, marijuana, a counting machine, a safe, super .38 pistol, jewelry, a (pickup) truck and a van," the brief said.
The loot was taken to Garcia's house and divvied up, the prosecution said.
According to the brief, Garcia had been at odds with Esteves because the victim believed that the defendant had stolen "large quantities of marijuana" from him. The feud between the men ultimately led to Garcia and an unidentified man appearing in front of the victim's Monroe Avenue house, brandishing handguns and threatening to kidnap him if he persisted in his antagonism, according to the brief.
A few weeks later, in the predawn hours of Feb. 5, 2018, Garcia and Guzman allegedly stormed the victim's home, prompting Esteves to hide his wife and son in a closet while he attempted to negotiate with the pair, prosecutors said.
The D.A.'s office alleged that the defendants ignored his pleas and "repeatedly shot him, then left without stealing a single item from the home."
Sheriff's Sgt. Walter Mendez said a "large amount of marijuana" was found at the location, but hadn't been touched.
"There is no indication of a robbery, simply a premeditated home invasion assassination," according to the brief.
Sheriff's detectives ultimately gathered sufficient evidence pointing to Garcia's alleged involvement, and by extension, Guzman's. However, by that time, the latter was under investigation by authorities in Los Angeles County for alleged drug-related killings there, according to prosecutors.
Garcia was arrested without incident on Oct. 29, 2018, in Menifee.
Guzman was tracked down by federal agents in Inyo County, where they attempted to take him into custody for the Menifee killing, as well as killings in northern Los Angeles County, according to Mendez.
He said the fugitive opened fire on the agents, who returned fire and killed him.
According to court records, Garcia has prior convictions for felony driving under the influence, auto theft and receiving stolen property.