Man convicted in Thanksgiving road-rage shooting in Costa Mesa
A 42-year-old man was convicted Tuesday of opening fire on a pickup full of six men in a road-rage dispute in Costa Mesa on Thanksgiving Day that killed one and wounded four.
Lee Queuon Walker was convicted of first-degree murder and five counts of attempted murder. Jurors took about two hours to also find true sentencing enhancements for discharge of a gun causing death or great bodily injury. Walker is scheduled to be sentenced June 16, and could be facing 20 years to life in prison.
Walker was convicted of fatally shooting 30-year-old Lucas Rivera-Velasco of Costa Mesa on Nov. 24, 2022, at 423 W. Bay St. Also wounded in the shooting were Salvador Pulido-Nieto, Bernardo Millan-Pulido, Hugo Medina-Rivera and Gilberto Medina-Rivera, while Jaime Nieto-Millan escaped injury.
“Judge, jury and executioner,” Senior Dep. Dist. Atty. Dan Feldman said Monday, pointing to Walker during the prosecutor’s closing argument.
The victims worked as gardeners and landscapers and spent a rare day off on the holiday watching soccer, drinking and dining at Costa Brava restaurant in Costa Mesa, Feldman said.
“The unarmed friends and family members struck his mirror and startled him so what was his first choice? He grabbed a gun,” Feldman said. “Mr. Walker made the choice to get out of his car ... and confront them. When they gave him a ‘get the [expletive] out of my face’ look that was it. First they startled him, then they insulted him. He pounced. You saw it yourself. He didn’t walk, he ran to confront them ... with the gun pulled back to his side and racked a round so he’d be ready because he decided this is going down. They were going to pay.”
Walker and his girlfriend, Denise Segura, were searching for an open McDonald’s on the holiday because their 4-year-old son craved chicken nuggets, Feldman said. After their third failed try, they crossed paths with Rivera-Velasco and the others when the 2003 Chevrolet Silverado they were in clipped Walker’s 2021 Chevrolet Silverado and the side-view mirror snapped out of place before popping back into place, Feldman said.
Walker followed the other vehicle and when it was in a left turn lane on 19th Street to go north on Harbor Boulevard the defendant jumped out of his pickup truck and dashed over to them and “pounded on the window,” according to Feldman.
Walker testified that he saw two guns in the pickup truck and the six men.
“He told you it was his right to go and follow them, to stand his ground,’’ Feldman told the jury. “That is a poor, unfortunate reading of the law that might be found in a legal dictionary. It’s like people with their WebMD and self-diagnosing.”
Feldman also pointed to the defendant’s claim that he had a “warrior instinct” in the moment. Walker testified it meant he was in a fight-or-flight mode and “I was not about to run.”
Feldman said Walker’s claim of fearing imminent danger made no sense, as he kept following the men and when their vehicle pulled over he got out, scampered over to the passenger side and opened fire on the victims before taking an extra shot to Rivera-Velasco’s head and then dashing back to grab the hat that flew off his head.
“The danger was so great he had time to go back and get his hat,” Feldman said sarcastically. “He waited for them to get out. If the danger is so great why let them get out?’”
Jurors considered a full-on self-defense claim that would have led to acquittal, but they also had the option to consider lesser charges of voluntary and involuntary manslaughter, which would have required a buy-in to an argument of what lawyers consider “imperfect defense,” which means the defendant believed he was in danger but acted in a way that was unreasonable.
“The law is not on his side,” Feldman said. “A person does not have a right to self-defense if he provokes a fight with the intent to create an excuse to use force.”
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