Shipley worker fatally stabbed
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Jenny Marder
The small apartment in Anaheim that used to buzz with old-school
tunes, funk and oldies music has been quiet since Yolanda Acevedo
Veloz was fatally stabbed on Friday in an alley behind her home.
A stillness has also settled over Surf City’s Shipley Nature
Center, where the 17-year-old worked, pulling weeds and tending to
trails and native plants.
Veloz and her sister-in-law Yesenia Mendoza, 19, were allegedly
attacked by two women just after 10 p.m. Friday in the 1800 block of
West Glencrest Avenue in Anaheim.
“Friday night, there was an exchange of words between Yolanda and
her companion and the two suspects,” Anaheim Police Sgt. Rick
Martinez said. “The exchange of words led into a fight involving beer
bottles and ended up with Yolanda being stabbed.”
Veloz died of stab wounds later that night. Anaheim police
arrested two teenage girls on Saturday, and the girls have been
charged with her murder. They are being held without bail at Orange
County Juvenile Hall.
Mendoza was treated for minor injuries after being hit above the
eye by a glass bottle while trying to defend her sister-in-law.
Veloz was a member of the Orange County Conservation Corps’
Huntington Beach crew. The Conservation Corps is a nonprofit group
that helps at-risk men and women ages 18 to 26 develop a work ethic
and gain leadership skills and self-esteem while completing their
high school education.
The Conservation Corps is collecting money to help Veloz’s family
with funeral and basic living expenses.
“We were just outside, like we were any day,” Mendoza said. “These
girls just showed up. In a way, we knew what they wanted.”
Mendoza believes the attackers were motivated by jealousy. Family
and friends describe Veloz as arrestingly beautiful, joyful and
outgoing. Even at work, which often involved planting and pulling
weeds in the dirt, her hair and makeup were flawless.
“She was a striking beauty that just kind of stopped you in your
tracks,” said LouAnn Murray, Independent columnist and a volunteer at
the center. “She showed up every day in full makeup and beautiful
hairdo.”
Colleagues described Veloz as a hard worker, likable and
easygoing.
“She worked to the best of her ability and she was a fast
learner,” said Benny Ramirez, the crew’s supervisor. “She was what
they call an upbeat person. She wasn’t one that always stays to
herself.”
Known by close friends as “Nana,” Veloz was the baby of the
family, Mendoza said. She helped her mother around the house and
hoped to one day work in a beauty salon. But her greatest dream was
to graduate from high school.
“Mostly, she wanted to get her diploma, improve her life and do
better,” Mendoza said.
Mendoza had been close friends with Veloz since high school.
Tearfully, she remembers how her sister-in-law helped her through the
birth of her child.
“She was there when I had my baby,” Mendoza said. “She was there
with me in the room. Now she’s gone, we can’t really do nothing now.”
“I just really miss her a lot,” Mendoza said. “She always will be
in our hearts no matter what.”
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