Jury Recommends Death Penalty for ‘Boy Next Door Killer’

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
October 20, 2019US News
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Jury Recommends Death Penalty for ‘Boy Next Door Killer’
Michael Gargiulo listens as the death penalty is announced during the sentencing phase of his trial in Los Angeles Superior Court, on Oct. 18, 2019. (Mario Tama/AP Photo)

LOS ANGELES—A Los Angeles jury recommended the death penalty on Friday, Oct. 18, for a man dubbed “The Boy Next Door Killer” after he was found guilty of two murders and an attempted murder.

The victims of Michael Gargiulo, 43, included 22-year-old Ashley Ellerin, who was killed on a night in 2001 when she had plans with actor Ashton Kutcher.

He testified during the trial that he arrived late for his date with Ellerin, looked into her house when there was no answer at the door, and saw what he thought were wine stains before leaving.

Gargiulo showed no reaction as the court clerk read the death sentence at the brief hearing. Jurors also could have recommended life in prison with no possibility of parole.

Michael Gargiulo
Michael Gargiulo listens as the death penalty is announced during the sentencing phase of his trial in Los Angeles Superior Court, on Oct. 18, 2019. (Mario Tama/AP Photo)

Defense attorneys and a psychologist said in court that Gargiulo has dissociative personality disorder, formerly known as multiple personality disorder.

Prosecutors, who did not talk to reporters after the hearing, called Gargiulo “The Boy Next Door Killer” because he lived near all the victims.

He also was convicted of the 2005 murder of 32-year-old Maria Bruno and the 2008 attempted murder of Michelle Murphy, who testified during the trial’s penalty phase that she lived in fear for years after the attack.

Murphy fought when she was attacked in bed in her Santa Monica apartment. Authorities said Gargiulo cut himself and left a trail of blood that allowed prosecutors to tie him to the other cases, including a 1997 killing in Illinois for which he is still awaiting trial.

Michael Gargiulo
A picture of defendant Michael Gargiulo (C) and his victims is flashed on a screen during closing arguments for the trial, in Los Angeles, on Aug. 6, 2019. (Lucy Nicholson/AP Photo)

Murphy was also a key witness during the first phase of the trial.

“In the days, weeks and months after it happened, I barely even slept,” Murphy testified. “I feared the nighttime and going to bed. I still slept with the lights on for a long time.”

Gargiulo’s attorneys contended that other men committed the murders of Bruno and Ellerin. They conceded their client had attacked Murphy but said he was in a “fugue state” because of his personality disorder and did not know where he was at the time.

All three women were attacked in their Southern California homes when Gargiulo lived nearby and watched his victims. Ellerin become an acquaintance before the attacks.

Michael Gargiulo's victim photos
Victim photos are shown as Michael Gargiulo appears in court for opening statements in his murder trial in Los Angeles, Calif., on May 2, 2019. (Al Seib-Pool/Getty Images)

Ellerin’s mother and other victims’ family members also testified during the penalty phase.

When she learned about the death of her daughter, Cynthia Ellerin said, “I fell to my knees on the floor and started crawling around the bedroom on my hands and knees like an animal, screaming.”

“I ache for her,” Cynthia Ellerin said. “I ache to hold her. I ache to hear her voice, to hug her. But that’s not going to happen.”

Michael Gargiulo
Michael Gargiulo, (R), listens to his sentencing as his attorney Daniel Nardoni, (L), looks on as the death penalty is announced during Gargiulo’s trial in Los Angeles Superior Court, on Oct. 18, 2019. (Mario Tama/AP Photo)

After the jury’s decision was read, Superior Court Judge Larry P. Fidler ordered Gargiulo to return for formal sentencing on Feb. 28, when he will also consider motions for a new trial or a reduced sentence.

California has not executed anyone since 2006, and Gov. Gavin Newsom earlier this year halted executions for as long as he is in office.

Courts have been proceeding on the assumption that executions may one day resume.

The case received extra attention because of the connection of Kutcher, who was a 23-year-old rising star on “That ’70s Show” when Ellerin was killed.

Ashton Kutcher testifies
Actor Ashton Kutcher testifies in the murder trial of Michael Gargiulo in Los Angeles Superior Court on May 29, 2019. (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via AP)

He testified in May that he feared he might become a suspect after going to Ellerin’s home.

“I remember the next day after I heard about what happened, I went to the detectives and said, ‘My fingerprints are on the door,’” Kutcher testified. “I was freaking out.”

The defense asserted that Ellerin was killed by another man who was romantically linked to her and was jealous that she was about to go on a date with the actor.

By Andrew Dalton

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