MAN TO FACE TRIAL FOR MURDER OF 77-YEAR-OLD HANDYMAN DURING ROBBERY OF VICTIM’S VAN

For Immediate Release
Case # 09CF1955

May 8, 2012

Susan Kang Schroeder
Chief of Staff
Office: 714-347-8408
Cell: 714-292-2718

Farrah Emami
Spokesperson
Office: 714-347-8405
Cell: 714-323-4486

 

 

MAN TO FACE TRIAL FOR MURDER OF 77-YEAR-OLD HANDYMAN DURING ROBBERY OF VICTIM’S VAN

*Defendant and co-defendant left victim in a coma for three years and were charged with murder after the victim’s death

SANTA ANA – A man faces trial tomorrow for the beating-murder of a 77-year-old handyman during a robbery of the victim’s van. The victim was left in a coma for over three years until he died as a direct result of his injuries sustained in the 2003 attack. John Kirk McKinney, 30, Huntington Beach, is charged with one felony count of special circumstances murder in the commission of a robbery and faces a sentence of life in state prison without the possibility of parole if convicted. Opening statements are expected to begin tomorrow, Wednesday, May 9, 2012, at 10:00 a.m. in Department C-41, Central Justice Center, Santa Ana.  

 

Co-defendant Curtis James Hill, 29, Huntington Beach, was found guilty by a jury Nov. 1, 2011, of one felony count of special circumstances murder in the commission of a robbery. Hill was sentenced Dec. 16, 2011, to life in state prison without the possibility of parole.

 

Hill was convicted of and McKinney is accused of committing the following crimes:

 

At approximately 4:45 a.m. on Nov. 11, 2003, McKinney and Hill entered the parked van of 77-year-old Cecil Warren with the intention of stealing items from inside. The victim, who was working as a handyman cleaning the Huntington Beach bank parking lot where his van was parked, noticed the defendants in his van. When Warren asked Hill and McKinney what they were doing, the defendants attacked the victim. The defendants hit and kicked Warren in the head, robbed him of his wallet, and left the victim on the ground before fleeing the scene.

 

Approximately 30 minutes later, a pedestrian found Warren bleeding and moaning on the ground in the parking lot and called 911. The victim gave police a brief description of the two defendants before losing consciousness. Warren was transported to the hospital, where he spent the next three and a half years in a coma.

 

For this crime, Hill pleaded guilty and was sentenced Oct. 10, 2006,  to nine years in state prison for one felony count of second degree robbery, one felony count of aggravated assault, and admitted to sentencing enhancements for great bodily injury to an elder and committing a crime against a vulnerable victim (Case #03WF2996).

 

McKinney was found guilty by a jury Nov. 15, 2006, of one felony count of second degree robbery and one felony count of aggravated assault. The sentencing enhancement for committing a crime against a vulnerable victim was found true (Case #03WF2996). He was sentenced on Feb. 2, 2007, to four years in state prison.

 

After spending more than three and a half years on life support in a coma, 81-year-old Warren died.