For Immediate Release October 20, 2011 | Susan Kang Schroeder Chief of Staff Office: 714-347-8408 Cell: 714-292-2718 Farrah Emami |
OCDA TO OPPOSE PAROLE OF INMATE CONVICTED OF 1986 FAMILY FEUD REVENGE KILLING
SANTA ANA – Orange County District Attorney (OCDA) Tony Rackauckas is opposing the parole of a man convicted of shooting and killing a man in 1986 over a family feud. Odon Borja, 56, formerly of Cypress, is currently being held at Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego, CA. Borja was sentenced Jan. 23, 1987, to 25 years to life in state prison for one felony count each of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder. The special circumstance of the personal use of a firearm during the commission of a murder was found true. Edward Munoz was the former deputy district attorney assigned to prosecute this case. He was originally scheduled for a parole hearing July 22, 2011, but the hearing was postponed due to an equipment malfunction to tomorrow, Oct. 21, 2011, at 8:30 a.m., at the prison before the Board of Parole Hearings (Board), California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Orange County Deputy District Attorney Elisabeth McKinley will appear at the hearing to oppose Borja’s parole.
Facts of the Case
In December 1983, during a festival in the city of Acapulco, Mexico, the brothers of Borja and Gumaro Pineda got into a heated argument. Later that night, Borja’s three brothers killed Pineda’s three brothers as they were walking home from the festivities. A family friend of the Pineda’s observed the murders and was later murdered as well. Borja’s father was also killed. These murders all occurred within a week’s time. Almost three years later, on the evening of April 16, 1986, while sharing drinks, Borja’s cousin Juan Cruz Torres urged the inmate to avenge his father’s death. The inmate was living in Orange County at the time. They took two weapons, a .38 caliber pistol and a long barrel .22 caliber pistol, with nearly 100 rounds of ammunition and set out for a strawberry field where another Pineda brother was known to work.
On the morning of April 17, 1986, then-30-year-old Borja and 22-year-old Torres drove to the strawberry field at the southwest corner of Katella Avenue and Valley View Street in the City of Cypress. They parked the vehicle on a dirt driveway and approached the field on foot. Torres pointed out the victim, Gumaro Pineda, 33, who was working as a laborer. Borja called out the victim’s name from less than 15 feet away and when Pineda rose to face him, Borja fired his .38 caliber pistol multiple times, shooting the victim. The unarmed Pineda fell to the ground. As the victim lay wounded, Borja walked closer and fired several more shots, murdering Pineda as a result of four bullet wounds to his head, chest and back. Torres and Borja began to leave the field, firing their pistols into the air and at the crowd of more than 100 workers.
Borja and Torres attempted to flee the scene and led Cypress Police Department (CPD) officers on a vehicle chase. After five miles of pursuit, the two were captured and arrested.