Suspect arrested in LA homeless stabbings

Suspect arrested in LA homeless stabbings
Updated 25 July 2012
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Suspect arrested in LA homeless stabbings

Suspect arrested in LA homeless stabbings

LOS ANGELES: Police arrested a suspect in the stabbings of three Los Angeles-area homeless people in recent weeks, a man they say goes by a name signed on “death warrants” found with the wounded victims.
Courtney Anthony Robinson, 38, called the emergency dispatcher Friday and said it was his face being distributed on flyers around the city, Commander Andrew Smith said Saturday. Officers found Robinson inside a fast food restaurant in Hollywood and took him into custody without incident.
He was charged with attempted murder and is being held on $500,000 bail.
Police previously described him as a possibly homeless man from Santa Barbara who also goes by David Ben Keyes, a name written on notes left at all three stabbing scenes that the writer called “death warrants.” Robinson admitted signing the notes, Smith said.
One victim in Santa Monica and two in Los Angeles were stabbed in the back as they slept. The first stabbing occurred July 3 in downtown Los Angeles, the only incident where a witness saw a suspect fleeing. The second on Tuesday targeted a man as he slept on a bus bench in Santa Monica. The most recent was on Thursday, when a woman was stabbed in Hollywood.
The three victims, all in their 50s, survived.
Smith said investigators believe Robinson may also be connected to the unsolved stabbings of two homeless men in Santa Barbara.
Detectives described Robinson as lucid and able to converse but with possible “mental health issues,” Smith said.
Earlier Friday, police and advocates urged homeless people to seek safety in shelters as news spread of an at-large serial stabber. But they faced the challenge that many street dwellers like being alone because they feel it’s less risky or simply because they can’t cope with people due to mental illness.
With robberies, assaults or even rapes frequently occurring on the streets and in shelters, many homeless people have found that survival comes down to finding places where no one can see them.
But advocates for the homeless say that’s also what makes them easy marks for criminals looking for victims in general or homeless people specifically.
“People on the street know it’s dangerous, but many people want to be on their own,” said Herb Smith, president and chief executive of the Los Angeles Mission in Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles. “They’re not socialized. It’s part of their condition.”
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Associated Press writer Christina Hoag contributed to this report.