Advertisement

LAPD chief describes capture of suspected Valley Village killer shown on Ring doorbell cameras

Police have arrested a suspect in a killing at a San Fernando Valley apartment building last month.
Police have arrested a suspect in a killing at a San Fernando Valley apartment building last month.
(LAPD)

Los Angeles police have apprehended the man allegedly seen on Ring doorbell cameras stalking the halls of a San Fernando Valley apartment building, then breaking into one of the units and killing the resident inside.

Erick Escamilla, 27, was taken into custody at a West Hills hospital, the culmination of a regional manhunt following a slaying late last month in Valley Village. The killing struck fear into residents and sparked questions about the length of time it took for police to discover the victim’s body. The body was found three days after neighbors reported screaming and a fight inside the unit.

LAPD investigators caught up with Escamilla after tracking his whereabouts and narrowly missing him at least once in the last week. He was arrested Thursday evening on suspicion of murder.

Advertisement

At a news conference Friday, Police Chief Jim McDonnell said that detectives had yet to uncover a motive for the killing, but may learn more once they interview Escamilla.

Escamilla, McDonnell told reporters, had lived a life of uncertainty, going back and forth between staying at his mother’s home in the West Valley and sleeping on the streets. He was convicted of burglary in 2019, for which he served two years in prison, police said.

Menashe Hidra’s body was found April 26 inside his fifth-floor Valley Village apartment after an assailant broke into a neighboring unit, jumped from the balcony to his and attacked him, investigators said.

Advertisement

Three days before, neighbors had called 911 and reported hearing shouting and a struggle coming from the apartment. Officers responded to those calls, knocked on the door and left without finding anything.

Hidra’s body was discovered inside his top-floor unit at the Ashton Sherman Village complex by officers doing a welfare check after a friend became concerned. Hidra was pronounced dead at the scene.

Prior to the latest allegations, Escamilla was facing misdemeanor charges in a February incident in the San Fernando Valley including trespass, entering a noncommercial dwelling and resisting arrest and was free on $10,000 bail. San Fernando police had previously arrested him in December.

Advertisement

LAPD officials said that social media rumors of a serial killer at large in the area were wrong and that, at this point, Hidra’s death has not been connected to any other killings.

At Friday’s news conference, McDonnell reiterated that the department was conducting an internal review of the officers’ response to the initial 911 call, days before Hidra’s body was discovered. Such a probe could take “weeks, or it could be longer than that,” he said.

And while he said that he expected officers in such situations to speak to neighbors to gather more information before clearing a call, he said that police can’t rush into every home given the rise in so-called swatting calls — a dangerous prank in which people make false reports of violence in an effort to provoke a large emergency response.

He added that while he understood the public’s anxiety around the case, he said that some of those fears would be “diminished” by the fact that it was a “very unusual, very isolated case” and not indicative of a broader crime wave.

The same day that Hidra’s body was discovered, so was the body of Aleksandre Modebadze, who was beaten to death inside his Woodland Hills home. In that case, a woman inside the home called 911 and reported the assault, but officers who arrived knocked and left. Only upon returning later did they find Modebadze, mortally injured.

Advertisement

The suspects in the Woodland Hills homicide have been arrested.

Stains on a white wall near a balcony.
A wall between Menashe Hidra’s apartment in Valley Village and a neighboring, vacant one was stained with blood.
(Richard Winton / Los Angeles Times)

In a recording of a police dispatch call before 4 a.m. April 23, a dispatcher is heard reporting the call to officers in the field: “Van Nuys units, possible ADW [assault with a deadly weapon] in progress ... caller hears two males fighting and wrestling, banging and yelling.” Multiple law enforcement sources say police officers responded to the scene but never entered the apartment.

A day before Hidra’s body was discovered, LAPD officers investigated a burglary at the vacant apartment next door. Inside, officers found a shattered skylight and dried blood, according to two sources not authorized to discuss the investigation.

Investigators suspect the killer may have broken into the vacant apartment neighboring Hidra’s through a skylight, then moved from the unit’s balcony to his. McDonnell said Friday that there was no sign of forced entry into Hidra’s apartment.

Blood on a door handle
Blood was left on a stairwell door handle at the Valley Village apartment complex where Menashe Hidra was killed.
(Richard Winton / Los Angeles Times)

Bloody handprints and marks were visible on the wall between Hidra’s balcony and the vacant apartment when a reporter visited with residents last week. Blood was also visible on the door handle of a stairwell exit, where the assailant was seen fleeing the building in a video released by police.

Advertisement

Times staff writer Libor Jany contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Advertisement