Crime & Safety

Jury Deliberates Mental Competency Of Defendant Accused Of Killing Deputy From Murrieta

Jesse Ceazar Navarro of Lake Elsinore is accused of gunning down Deputy Darnell Calhoun.

Jesse Ceazar Navarro of Lake Elsinore at the time of his 2023 arrest.
Jesse Ceazar Navarro of Lake Elsinore at the time of his 2023 arrest. (Riverside County Sheriff's Dept.)

SOUTHWEST RIVERSIDE COUNTY, CA — Jury deliberations began Tuesday in the mental competency trial of a man accused of ambushing and killing a 30-year-old Riverside County sheriff's deputy responding to a domestic violence call.

Jesse Ceazar Navarro, 45, of Lake Elsinore is charged with first-degree murder of a peace officer, attempted murder of a peace officer, special circumstance allegations of killing a law enforcement official and lying in wait, as well as sentence-enhancing gun and great bodily injury allegations, for the January 2023 death of Deputy Darnell Calhoun who was raised in Murrieta.

Riverside County Sheriff's Deputy Darnell Calhoun. He was fatally shot during a 2023 domestic disturbance call. (Riverside County Sheriff's Dept.)

Testimony in Navarro's competency trial began in mid-December but was interrupted by a two-week hiatus surrounding Christmas and New Year's Day. The prosecution and defense rested Monday and returned to the Southwest Justice Center in Murrieta Tuesday to deliver closing statements, after which Superior Court Judge F. Paul Dickerson sent jurors behind closed doors to weigh evidence from the trial.

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Jurors conferred only briefly before retiring for the day. They're due to resume deliberations Wednesday morning.

Navarro is being held without bail at the Robert Presley Detention Center.

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"The defendant is trying to manipulate the justice system," Deputy District Attorney Marcus Garrett said at the outset of trial.

Navarro's attorney, Lori Myers, argued her client's ongoing mental deficiency had been validated medically, possibly stemming from "bullet fragments" still in his head.

Garrett said Navarro has schemed with loved ones to give the appearance of an individual in need of psychiatric treatment. In a recorded jailhouse conversation with his wife, Yvette Navarro, the defendant told her, "Everything is going according to our plan," the prosecutor told jurors.

"Mr. Navarro is able to multitask and retain information," Garrett said.

Garrett quoted one of the forensic psychologists tasked with examining the defendant, Dr. Stacey Waring, who imparted, "In my professional opinion, he's presently competent" to stand trial.

In another instance, Garrett referenced a brain scan conducted at UC Irvine Medical Center, after which Dr. Mark Tran issued a finding that there are "no significant areas of decreased activity in the cerebrum."

Myers petitioned the court for a mental competency trial, also known as a Penal Code section 1369 trial, after tests by the prosecution and defense experts were completed. Dickerson last year found there were grounds to proceed.

If Navarro is determined to be incompetent to stand trial on the allegations, his case will be referred to correctional health, and he'd likely be committed to a state hospital for treatment on a timetable determined by the court.

According to a sheriff's arrest warrant affidavit filed with the criminal complaint, Calhoun went to a residence in the 18500 block of Hilldale Lane, near Grand Avenue, about 4:30 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 13, 2023, after 911 dispatchers received a call indicating a domestic altercation at the location.

Calhoun arrived alone in his patrol unit and "contacted several individuals in the driveway of the residence," according to the affidavit.

"Navarro partially concealed himself behind an open door of his (pickup) truck, holding a handgun out of sight of Deputy Calhoun," the document stated.

"Within 17 seconds of Deputy Calhoun arriving on scene, Navarro began shooting at him. Navarro fired multiple rounds at Deputy Calhoun, (who) fled on foot. Navarro then entered his truck, drove in the direction that Calhoun had fled and continued to fire at him from the truck."

The affidavit revealed Calhoun returned fire, but "none of the rounds appeared to injure" Navarro.

The lawman was hit several times and collapsed in the street. He was taken to Inland Valley Medical Center in Wildomar, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

A backup deputy engaged Navarro in a gunfight a couple minutes after Calhoun's "deputy under fire" call, wounding the defendant. The responding deputy wasn't injured.

Calhoun is survived by his widow, Vanessa, and young sons Russell, Troy and Malcolm.

The defendant has no documented prior felony convictions in Riverside County.

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