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Home / News / Crime / Retrial begins in killing and dumping of body in Irvine

Retrial begins in killing and dumping of body in Irvine

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By PAUL ANDERSON

A 36-year-old man beat and strangled a woman he and his brother picked up in Santa Ana and then dumped her body, which was set afire, in a parking lot of an Irvine business on a Labor Day weekend 13 years ago, a prosecutor told jurors Monday — as the defendant’s attorney said the man has a low IQ and didn’t have the frame of mind at the time to commit first- degree murder.

Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman is charged with special circumstances murder with a kidnapping. He faces life in prison without the possibility of parole if convicted.

A mistrial was declared in 2016 when jurors deadlocked 11-1 in favor of guilt on first-degree murder.

The defendant’s brother, Gabino Baldivia-Guzman, is awaiting trial.

Baldivia-Guzman is accused of killing the still-unidentified woman Sept. 5, 2009.

The body was found in the parking lot of a business at 1851 Kettering in Irvine about 8:30 a.m. when an employee headed into work spotted it, according to Senior Deputy District Attorney Robert Goodkin. She did not have any personal effects on her, but she appeared to be in her 20s and was about 6 feet tall and weighed 150 pounds.

The case went unsolved for a year until genetic material collected from the victim’s left hand matched the DNA of the defendant, who had provided a genetic sample to resolve a misdemeanor domestic violence case in which he choked his girlfriend and threw her 9-year-old son against a wall when he tried to intervene, Goodkin said in court papers.

Irvine police placed the brothers under surveillance and arrested them following a traffic stop in November 2010, Goodkin said.

Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman initially told police he knew nothing about a murder and then said he was too drunk at the time of the incident to remember, Goodkin said.

When confronted with evidence, he “admitted certain things,” Goodkin said.

The two brothers picked up the woman in a high-prostitution area of Santa Ana at First Street and Harbor Boulevard the night of Sept. 4, 2009, Goodkin said.

“The evidence will show you (the defendant) was hiding in the back of the van and she doesn’t see him,” Goodkin said.

When the victim notices Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman in the back of the van, while the defendant’s brother was driving, she, “starts screaming, `Let me out of this van,”‘ Goodkin said. “She doesn’t want to be in a van with two guys. That wasn’t part of the deal.”

The defendant pulled her into the back of the van as she shouts for help, Goodkin said. As she fought back, the defendant “hits her in the face and hits her hard,” Goodkin said, adding, “he hits her till she’s quiet.”

The defendant admitted that he “squeezed a little bit” around her neck, but evidence shows the victim was strangled, Goodkin said.

“She didn’t die from blunt force trauma to the face,” Goodkin said.

The brothers drove around for about 90 minutes before settling on a secluded place in an industrial area of Irvine to dump the body, Goodkin said. The two brothers, who were in the auto detailing business, had gasoline in the van that Gabino Baldivia-Guzman allegedly used to help ignite the body, the prosecutor said.

Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman did not help set fire to the body, but he didn’t do anything to stop his brother, Goodkin said.

“They do not want to be caught with this crime,” so the body was burned to conceal evidence, Goodkin said.

The victim’s DNA was found “under (the victim’s) fingernails,” Goodkin said.

“There was no soot in her lungs,” indicating that the victim was already dead when she was set afire, Goodkin said.

Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman also wrote a letter of apology to the family, which is a common tactic among police to solicit a confession. That will also be part of the evidence jurors will consider.

Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman’s attorney, Irene Pai of the Public Defender’s Office, said, “There’s no dispute that the way her life ended was heartbreaking.”

But, “the issue in this trial is what was going on his head at the time” of the killing, Pai said.

Pai characterized her client’s questioning as an “interrogation.” She asked jurors to “go through that interrogation with a fine-tooth comb.”

Pai indicated she would be arguing for lesser charges at the end of the trial.

Gabino Baldivia-Guzman came to the U.S. from Mexico about seven years before his brother and helped bring the defendant here when he was 17, Pai said. Zenaido Baldivia-Guzman mostly did menial tasks for the business like washing and waxing the cars of clients.

Experts will testify in the trial that the defendant has a low IQ and is intellectually on about a third-grade level, Pai said. An MRI of the defendant’s brain indicated portions that are smaller than normal, and there is damage seen from traumatic brain injuries, she said.

The struggle in the back of the van was a “scene of tremendous chaos – – it happened so fast,” Pai said.

“He admitted doing what he did was wrong — this is not a whodunit,” Pai said.

But she disagreed with the prosecution’s “interpretation” of the defendant’s statements about what happened.

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