Los Angeles Times

Man sentenced in girlfriend­s’ deaths

- By Paresh Dave paresh.dave@latimes.com

A Los Angeles man who pleaded guilty to murdering two girlfriend­s, including one whose dismembere­d body was found in Mexico, was sentenced Wednesday to 25 years to life in prison.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge George Lomeli, who said he saw photos of the dismembere­d corpse, called the murders “horrendous” and “sickening” before imposing the sentence on 55-year-old Aurangzeb Aiyoob Manjra.

The remains of Esperanza Torio, 39, were found 17 miles apart in the Mexican beach city of Rosarito south of the U.S. border. The head was separated from the body, and the hands and feet were missing. A DNA match in 2009 identified the remains.

Torio’s sister, Edna Magpayo, was the first to report the disappeara­nce of “Espy” in 1996. In a downtown courthouse Wednesday, Magpayo asked Manjra to face her as she spoke, but he declined.

“We may look normal — we may have moved on,” she told him. “But there’s a space in our hearts that will never be filled.”

Torio had two children, as did the second victim, 44year-old Maria Santos. She was reported missing in 2004, but her body has not been found.

Speaking on behalf of Santos’ family in the Philip- pines, L.A. County Deputy Dist. Atty. Habib Balian said that what Manjra “had taken away from two young children can’t be replaced.”

Manjra owned a used car dealership at the time of the first murder and a computer-parts store when he was arrested in 2010.

Prosecutor­s said that Manjra stalked and harassed his girlfriend­s. His wife of three years in the 1980s and a subsequent girlfriend had “escaped” him, police said. But his last two girlfriend­s could not. He went as far as traveling to the Philippine­s to bring Torio back when she tried to run away, authoritie­s said.

After seven years with Manjra, Torio had started living with her sister at the time of her death and was set to move into her own apartment the weekend she disappeare­d.

Torio suffered beatings and endured sessions of Russian roulette at the hands of Manjra, according to her journal, which was recovered by police.

In Santos’ case, a sentencing report stated that Manjra “asserted a pattern of jealousy, domination and violence” to successful­ly scare her into staying with him. Authoritie­s said he targeted women with children and low self-esteem and used a set of “14 rules” that he devised to guide his controllin­g relationsh­ip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States