Woman runs over, kills husband
Greg Risling
NEWPORT BEACH -- A 40-year-old woman, furious because her husband planned
to use the couple’s car, killed him with the very same vehicle Wednesday
morning when she ran over him at least two times, police said.
Leslie Claire Van Houten was arrested several hours later at a Costa Mesa
home where she worked as a caretaker. She was booked on suspicion of
murder and is being held in Newport Beach City Jail in lieu of $250,000
bail.
Authorities said the woman had argued with her 52-year-old husband,
Kenneth Jerome Van Houten, early Wednesday at their trailer park on the
800 block of West 15th Street.
Police said the two were fighting over who would take the couple’s 1993
purple Geo Storm. They couldn’t come to an agreement and Leslie Van
Houten reportedly drove to a spot near Hoag Hospital, where she planned
to hide the car from her husband.
The victim apparently knew where his wife was going and followed her on
his bike, police said. The man was carrying a bar lock he was hoping to
put on the steering wheel once his wife had left.
“He knew where her hiding place was,” said Newport Beach police Sgt. Mike
McDermott. “This was a domestic dispute that escalated into murder.”
Leslie Van Houten reportedly saw her husband riding his bike at about
8:10 a.m. near the intersection of Flagship and Patrice roads, less than
five blocks from the couple’s home.
Witnesses said she accelerated the car toward her husband and struck him
flush. She then reportedly put the car in reverse and ran over him as he
lay in the street. There were varying accounts, but it’s possible the
woman ran over the victim a third time, dragging the bicycle about 20
yards before speeding westbound on Flagship toward Placentia Avenue.
Police found Leslie Van Houten at about 1 p.m. Wednesday, but it was
several more hours before the car was found parked on 19th Street at
Monrovia Avenue.
“It was so vicious,” said Karina Levinson, who witnessed the incident.
“It sounded like someone hit a parked car.
“His legs were horribly mangled. He wasn’t moving at all.”
The crime scene contained a field of evidence that detectives marked
piece by piece. The man’s clothes were scattered along the street -- a
black baseball cap was feet away from a pair of brown shoes. The 10-speed
bicycle was a twisted heap of metal and plastic.
Kenneth Van Houten suffered major head injuries and was rushed to nearby
Hoag Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
“Anyone who would deliberately kill someone like that is plain sick,”
said Eileen Brown, who lives in the apartment-dense neighborhood where
the crime occurred. “I can’t believe someone would purposely do something
like that.”
Police could not explain the suspect’s rationale for allegedly running
over her husband, but suspect it may have to do with a threat of divorce
by the victim. Neighbors said the couple had volatile disputes, prompting
police to respond to their residence five times over the last year.
“They’ve lived here about two years,” said one neighbor. “The cops have
come out here before because of the noise.”
The couple have three children, all teenagers. They were taken into
protective custody.
It’s been a little more than three years since the last homicide in
Newport Beach. On Jan. 23, 1997, two Newport Beach men were involved in a
violent dispute over a woman who claimed she had been sexually assaulted
by one of them. Ryan Kerr, 25, a friend of the woman, stabbed the other
man, 26-year-old John Pavese, in the chest. Pavese grabbed a gun and
fired two shots, killing Kerr. A subsequent investigation concluded
Pavese had acted in self-defense.
* Daily Pilot staff writer Noaki Schwartz contributed to this
report.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.