POLICE BRIEFS
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Huntington Beach detectives were still searching Wednesday for the
culprit or culprits responsible for defacing two religious centers last
week.
Lt. Luis Ochoa of the Huntington Beach Police Department said that
between the evening of April 2 and the morning of April 3, someone
vandalized the Hebrew Academy at 14401 Willow St.
Scrawlings on windows and doors of the center included phrases such as
“Religion is a Lie,” the number 666, as well as profanity, police said.
A similar act of malicious mischief and hate crime was also reported
at the nearby Seventh-day Adventist Church at 14632 Willow St. in
Westminster.
Ochoa added that it is possible that the same suspect or suspects are
responsible for both incidents.
The Hebrew Academy’s Rabbi Moishe Engel said most of the vandalism
occurred at the Seventh-day Adventist Church across the street, with only
two or three scrawlings at the school.
Police are continuing their investigation into the matter.
Suspect in ’97 shooting nabbed
Huntington Beach detectives have tracked down a suspect in a 1997
shooting that claimed the life of a teenager.
After a four-year investigation, officers and detectives took Los
Angeles resident Peter Park, a 23-year-old laborer, into custody after
receiving a tip that he was in the Koreatown district of Los Angeles.
Lt. Bruce Kelly of the Huntington Beach Police Department said Park
was initially cited as a suspect in the 1997 murder of then 17-year-old
Yujung Yang Kong, a Downey student, who was shot to death outside a party
in the 16000 block of Lynn Street on May 6 of that year.
Kelly said the shooting was apparently the result of an ongoing
dispute between rival gangs, the Last Generation Korean Killers, in which
Park was allegedly a member, and the Korean Pride, which Kong belonged
to.
Police took Park into custody without incident at about 7:51 p.m.
April 4, booking him at the city’s jail with bail set at $1 million.
His arraignment in the Orange County Superior Court’s West Justice
Center was originally set for April 5, but was continued to April 20,
court officials said.
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