BOTH KILLERS ARRESTED: TWO WORTHLESS BLACK-KILLERS KILL at least TWO WORKING WHITE MEN

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TWO WORTHLESS BLACK-KILLERS KILL at least TWO WORKING WHITE MEN

BLACK-ON-WHITE: Two worthless criminal killer BLACK suspects arrested in string of deadly robberies at California 7-Eleven stores
suspect
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The two men arrested Friday in connection with a series of deadly robberies at Southern California 7-Eleven stores are now in jail, authorities said Saturday.

The Santa Ana Police Department released the booking photos of Malik Patt and Jason Payne, both of Los Angeles. Police said Patt, 20, is believed to have been the shooter and is considered the main suspect. Jason Payne, 44, is the other suspect.

A half-dozen 7-Elevens and a doughnut shop were robbed within five hours early Monday in San Bernardino, Orange and Riverside counties, setting off an intensive manhunt that resulted in the arrests of the two men in Los Angeles.

Matthew Hirsch, a 40-year-old clerk, was shot and killed at a Brea store, and Matthew Rule, 24, was shot and killed in the parking lot of a Santa Ana store. Race of some victim(s) with NOT-negro name(s) not reported

Two of the three wounded have been released from hospitals.

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Authorities said the men are also suspected of a July 9 killing in Los Angeles, but have provided few details in the case.

The men were booked into the Santa Ana city jail. It was not known if the suspects had attorneys who could speak on their behalf.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said prosecutors expect to file murder, attempted murder and robbery charges as soon as Monday.

7-Eleven offers $100,000 reward for info on deadly shooting suspect Store clerk Matthew Hirsch was the gunman’s first victim when he was shot and killed at a store in Brea, Orange County, at around 4.18am on Monday. His father Jim Hirsch told ABC7 that the 40-year-old had recently turned his life around after battling addiction for years. “The minute he is doing well somebody shoots him,” Mr Hirsch said of his son. Matthew Rule, 24, was shot dead in the parking lot of a store in Santa Ana while standing up for a homeless military veteran. The man, who was identified by his first name Richard, told CBS News the gunman demanded his wallet after he had just left the store.

The suspect became angry when Richard showed him his empty wallet, and threw it back at him.

When Mr Rule tried to intervene to help him, the witness said he was shot dead at close range.

He credits Mr Rule with saving his life.

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A customer was also shot in the head and gravely wounded at a Riverside store and two people, one of them a clerk, were shot in La Habra. Both were expected to survive.

The Riverside shooting victim was identified by his family as Jason Harrell, 46. He was breathing on his own and was no longer in a coma, his brother David Makin told KNBC-TV.

“He has to keep fighting. Jason is a fighter and so we fully expect him to fight through his whole thing and win this battle,” Mr Makin said.

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7/11 shootings: Devastated father mourns son killed by SoCal 7-Eleven gunman – KABC-TV BREA, Calif. (KABC) — Matthew Hirsch was just turning his life around after decades of battling drug addiction. His father Jim Hirsch says his son was clean, had a steady job, a girlfriend and an apartment.

Then came the crushing heartache.

“The minute he is doing well somebody shoots him,” Jim Hirsch said.

Around 4:18 a.m. Monday, a masked shooter fatally shot the 40-year-old Hirsch inside a 7-Eleven store on Lambert Road and N. Brea Boulevard during a robbery. Hirsch was working as a clerk there.

(Black-on-White)
 
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'A reign of terror': Two men arrested in deadly 7-Eleven shootings, also linked to earlier killing​

Richard Winton, Ruben Vives
July 15, 2022·5 min read
160


Brea, CA - July 12: A rash of robbery-shootings at Southland 7-Eleven stores has left at least two people dead, with police saying today some of the crimes appear to be related. A makeshift memorial for 40-year-old Matthew Hirsch, a 7-Eleven store clerk who was fatally shot in early hours of Monday morning at the store located at 100 block of W Lambert Rd on Tuesday, July 12, 2022 in Brea, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

A makeshift memorial for 40-year-old Matthew Hirsch, a 7-Eleven store clerk who was fatally shot early Monday morning at the store in Brea. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Two men were arrested Friday in Los Angeles in connection with a string of deadly shootings at 7-Eleven stores in Southern California that left two dead and three injured, as well as the fatal shooting of a homeless man in L.A.
Malik Patt, 20, and Jason Payne, 44, were captured after being tracked by the Orange County Violent Crime Task Force following the series of robberies and homicides that began a week ago in Los Angeles and cut across Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.
"This was a reign of terror," Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in announcing the arrests along with authorities from across the region. "To be thinking that you go to a convenience store or a doughnut shop or a sandwich shop and to get shot in the face or call your loved one with your last gasps for breath."
The task force consisting of Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents and investigators from Orange County police agencies tracked the men for almost a day to a home in the 1900 block of West 23rd Street and took them into custody shortly after 1 p.m.
Patt, authorities said, was the gunman in the 7-Eleven shootings Monday. Security video from one of the robberies showed his face covered by a mask under a hooded sweatshirt, with only his eyes visible; that image was widely circulated as police conducted an extensive manhunt and 7-Eleven offered a $100,000 reward for a tip leading to an arrest.
Patt and Payne are prime suspects in 11 robberies, and they are expected to be charged Monday in Orange County with at least two murders with special circumstances that could result in the death penalty, according to Spitzer, Santa Ana Police Chief David Valentin and L.A. Deputy Police Chief Alan Hamilton.
Hamilton said the men are also suspects in a July 9 shooting of an unhoused man in North Hills, which occurred shortly before four robberies nearby, and they may be tied to other crimes in the weeks before.
"We believe that there are a number of crimes throughout the Los Angeles region that may also lead back to this suspect," Hamilton said, referring to Patt.
Authorities initially sought the serial violent robbers after a holdup occurred in Ontario just after midnight Monday, followed by a robbery at a 7-Eleven store in Upland about 40 minutes later. Neither resulted in injuries.
At 1:50 a.m. in Riverside, a 7-Eleven in the 5100 block of La Sierra Avenue was robbed. During the crime, the robber pulled a handgun and shot a customer, who was in grave condition at the time. That victim has been identified as 46-year-old Jason Harrel.
Then, about 3 a.m., another armed robbery occurred at a Yum Yum Donuts in Santa Ana. Shortly after, police responded to a shooting at a 7-Eleven location in Santa Ana, in the 300 block of East 17th Street.
Matthew Rule, 24, was robbed and fatally shot outside the store, police said, adding that it did not appear the gunman entered the store.
At 4:17 a.m., police responded to another robbery at a 7-Eleven in Brea. Store clerk Matthew Hirsch, 40, was fatally shot.
Finally, La Habra police responded to a robbery at a 7-Eleven on East Whittier Boulevard at 4:55 a.m. Two unidentified victims, who are believed to have been the clerk and a customer, were shot. Both are expected to survive, authorities said.
Law enforcement sources said evidence recovered in one of the Orange County robberies connects it to the four July 9 robberies at two 7-Elevens and two doughnut shops that police were investigating in the San Fernando Valley, as well as the killing of an unhoused man near one of those scenes.
The armed robberies occurred over roughly 1½ hours early that day in North Hills, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Detectives quickly determined that series of crimes was "linked" to the shooting of a man in the head in the 16100 block of Parthenia Street, Hamilton said, adding that detectives also connected it to the Orange County robberies.
On Thursday, 7-Eleven Inc. offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction those involved in the shootings. “Our hearts remain with the victims and their loved ones, and our focus continues to be on Franchisee, associate and customer safety,” the company wrote in a statement.
A tip tied to a suspect was called in to authorities after that reward was announced, a law enforcement source said.
Georgan Browning, wife of 60-year-old Russell Browning, who survived being shot in the face outside the La Habra store, said she and her husband were happy to learn of the arrests.
“It brings a peace of mind to us that he’s captured and that he can’t hurt anyone else or disrupt any more lives,” the 74-year-old said in a phone interview with The Times. “We’re going to pray for him, for mercy.”
She said the shooter must be hurting to have taken such a violent path that day.
Russell Browning, a truck driver, was sitting in his car outside the convenience store when he noticed a person next to his passenger window. Before he realized what was happening, a handgun was fired at him.
Browning’s wife said the bullet struck her husband's lip and exited his jaw area. She said he’s continuing to recover.
“He’s got a long road ahead of him,” she said. “He’s alive and he’s home.”
At least one of the suspects was injured while being taken into custody and needed treatment. ATF agents and task force members had been following the pair before the arrests.
DA Spitzer said he expects that the criminal proceedings for all the offenses will be handled in one county. "There are murder, attempted murder, robbery charges," Spitzer said. "We need to connect a lot of dots. But the murder in Brea at the 7-Eleven and the murder in Santa Ana, we plan to file those charges by as soon as Monday."
Times staff writers Grace Toohey and Itzel Luna contributed to this report.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Time
 
Malik Patt
The two niggers were neighbors.



20-year-old Malik Patt eligible for death after being charged with 3 counts of murder in 7-Eleven crime spree​


losangeles
By KCAL-News Staff

Updated on: July 18, 2022 / 10:08 PM PDT / KCAL News

A 20-year-old man was charged with three counts of murder and several sentencing enhancements in connection with a deadly crime spree at 7-Eleven stores stretching from the Inland Empire into Orange County, making him eligible for the death penalty.

Malik Donyae Patt, 20,
and Jason Lamont Payne, 44, were arrested Friday. The relationship between the two men is still under investigation, but they are neighbors in Los Angeles, according to Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer.

7-eleven-arrests-malik-patt-jason-payne.jpg

Patt was being held without bail in Santa Ana jail. The charges against Patt include three counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder, three counts of robbery, one count of carjacking, and several enhancements for engaging in multiple murders and the use of a firearm during the commission of these crimes.

"Malik Patt is a stone-cold serial killer.
There's no other way to describe him," Spitzer said. "He executed innocent people and he shot others, and his behavior and the crime spree he engaged in...is, I literally got chills up my own spine. It's chilling."


Spitzer said the communities where each of these crimes took place were paralyzed by fear that a last-minute visit into a doughnut shop or a convenient store could be fatal.


"To see somebody who could kill someone in cold blood like this is just unfathomable," Spitzer said.

Payne, who is being held on $1 million bail, was taken to a Los Angeles-area hospital for treatment of minor injuries he sustained while being arrested by the ATF Orange County Violent Crime Task Force. He has been charged with three counts of robbery and one count of attempted robbery in connection with the Santa Ana, La Habra, and Brea crimes, and faces more than 9 years in prison if sentenced as charged.

Both men are scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday.

Patt was identified by police as the gunman behind a string of violent robberies at 7-Eleven stores that left two people dead, and wounded several others. The crimes began just after midnight on July 11, which happened to be the convenience store chain's annual 7-11 holiday, with a holdup in Ontario where no shots were fired and no one was injured. It was followed about an hour-and-a-half later with a robbery in Upland at a 7-Eleven store on Arrow Route.


Not even a half hour later, a customer was shot in the head during a robbery at a 7-Eleven in Riverside. The customer remains in "dire condition," Spitzer said.

A doughnut shop in Santa Ana was robbed just after 3 a.m. Twenty minutes later, 24-year-old Matthew Rule of Santa Ana was shot and killed outside the 7-Eleven on 17th Street. Rule had been on his way to the store to get his girlfriend a drink when he intervened on behalf of a homeless man who was being robbed.

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(credit: Orange County District Attorney's Office)
At about 4:15 a.m., 40-year-old Matthew Hirsch was shot to death while working at the 7-Eleven store on Lambert Road in Brea. About a half-hour later, Patt allegedly shot a man sitting in his vehicle outside another 7-Eleven store in La Habra, then the store clerk who came out, but those people are expected to survive.

Patt is also charged with carjacking a person leaving his home after the shootings, then later abandoning the stolen vehicle.

Based on store surveillance images, police linked the same suspect to each of the robberies.

Patt is also being charged with the murder of a homeless man in the North Hills area, near a 7-Eleven store robbed on July 9. The store was one of four that had been robbed in the North Hills area that day. No injuries were reported in those robberies, but the suspect was armed with a handgun.

Spitzer said any murder trial will be held in one county for all the alleged crimes, and he would work with fellow prosecutors in Riverside and Los Angeles counties. Separate charges for the San Bernardino County robberies will also be filed against Patt, and investigators are still working to determine if the pair are behind a Fourth of July robbery at a Yum Yum Donuts in unincorporated Whittier, and other unsolved crimes throughout the region.


7-Eleven had offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a suspect in the robberies. It's not clear if anyone was eligible to claim the reward.

"We are grateful that the Orange County District Attorney has announced local law enforcement has apprehended suspects related to the recent violent incidents. we will continue to fully support law enforcement with their investigation," 7-Eleven said in a statement.
 
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Jason Payne

7-Eleven robberies: 1 of 2 suspects in deadly crime spree across SoCal sentenced​


By FOX 11 Digital Team

Published January 9, 2023

Los Angeles

FOX 11




OC DA discusses charging 2 7-Eleven robbery suspects​


Orange County DA Todd Spitzer joined the Special Report to discuss the charges he filed against the two men arrested in connection to the deadly crime spree that terrorized 7-Eleven staff and customers across Southern California.

LOS ANGELES - One of two suspects arrested in connection with a string of 7-Eleven robberies and three murders as part of a violent crime spree spanning four Southern California counties last July was sentenced Monday.

Jason Payne, 44, of Los Angeles, was sentenced to seven years in state prison following a guilty plea in which he admitted his role in the deadly crime spree targeting 7-Eleven stores in Ontario, Brea, La Habra, Santa Ana, Upland, and Riverside, according to the Orange County District Attorney's Office.




Payne was charged in connection with the robberies in Santa Ana, La Habra, and Brea, in addition to attempted robbery. Officials said Payne did not physically go inside any of the robbery locations.

Malik Patt and Jason Payne

Malik Patt (left), 20, and Jason Payne (right), 44. (FOX 11)



A second suspect, Malik Patt, 20, was identified by law enforcement as the person who shot and killed three people and wounded three others during the crime spree. He faces several charges including three felony counts of murder with the special circumstance of multiple murder and two counts of attempted murder with the personal discharged of a firearm causing injury. If convicted, he could face the death penalty.

Timeline of events


The deadly string of armed robberies began the morning of July 11 just after midnight at a store in Ontario. Police say the suspect walked into the store with a gun and demanded money from the cashier, before fleeing.

About 40 minutes later, another robbery occurred at the 7-Eleven on 2410 W. Arrow Route in Upland. No one was hurt in the first two incidents.

But then things took a turn for the worse. Just before 2 a.m., another armed robbery was reported at a 7-Eleven on La Sierra Avenue in Riverside.

According to police, a customer was shot in the head inside the convenience store. There is no indication the customer did anything to intervene in the robbery but was still shot by the suspect, police said.

At 3:03 a.m. a Yum Yum donuts shop on 2441 N. Tustin in Santa Ana was robbed. No injuries were reported in that incident.

Around 3:23 a.m. another robbery was reported at the 7-Eleven in the 300 block of 17th Street in Santa Ana. 24-year-old Matthew Rule was found dead in the parking lot, suffering from a gunshot wound to his upper torso.

"This victim was not an intended victim. The suspect was looking to rob another person and this victim stepped in and tried to redirect the suspect. The suspect turns around and shoots our victim, kills him on the spot," said Santa Ana Police Chief David Valetin.

RELATED:


About an hour later, the suspect hit again... this time at a 7-Eleven in Brea. Store clerk Matthew Hirsch was killed.

And just before 5 a.m. in La Habra, the robber shoots the store clerk and another man.

The shootings coincide with National 7/11 Day, when the national 7-Eleven brand celebrates its anniversary and gives customers a chance to receive a free Slurpee.

Officer Ryan Railsback from the Riverside Police Department said the date was no accident.

Patt and Payne were arrested four days later.
 
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