Santa Monica College Shooting Victims

Santa Monica College Shooting Victims




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The shooting rampage in Santa Monica on Friday claimed the lives of five victims and injured several others. Authorities shot and killed the gunman. Here are the stories of those who lost their lives.
“Carlos was truly a family man,” said Santa Monica College President Dr. Chui Tsang of the college's groundskeeper. “He was a dedicated husband and father and an integral part of the Santa Monica College family.” He worked hard and tried to make people happy, said his supervisor Tom Corpus. "Everything Carlos did was for the college and for his family." Carlos’ extended SMC family includes nephew Mario Franco, student Services Specialist Sandra Franco and Board of Trustee Member Margaret Quiñones-Pérez, Tsang said. The Santa Monica College Foundation has established a memorial fund honoring Carlos Franco. Donate to The Carlos Franco Family Memorial Fund or mail donations to: The Santa Monica College Foundation 1900 Pico Boulevard Santa Monica, CA 90405.
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Marcela Franco, 26, was a senior at at California State University, Dominguez Hills, pursuing a degree in psychology, the university said. Franco had signed up for summer classes at Santa Monica College, and went with her father to the campus Friday to purchase textbooks. She was gravely wounded in the shooting, was taken off life support at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center on Sunday, her aunt Margaret Quinones-Perez said. "Marcela and Carlos were very close," Perez said. "She was a daddy's girl, so the blessing is they went together." She enrolled at the university in fall 2012 as a transfer student from West Los Angeles College. She was involved in the Campus Food Pantry Program, Welcome Week, and Take Your Daughters and Sons to Work Day. She also was a student member of the Campus Alcohol Awareness Coordinating Team, having become a certified trainer to help present workshops to students. In April she attended the CSU Alcohol and Other Drugs Conference and returned with new ideas to implement at CSU Dominguez Hills. She was a member of the campus chapter of the Psi Chi International Honor Society in Psychology and was looking forward to earning advanced degrees in the field to help individuals and her community.
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Margarita Gomez, a Santa Monica resident, was not a student, but was often seen on campus and was well-known to students, said Albert Vasquez, chief of the Santa Monica College Police Department. Gomez lived across the street from the school, friends said. She was collecting cans, as she often did on campus, when she was shot at the college's library entrance. She gave a portion of her earnings from recycling the cans to charity. “An SMC neighbor, Margarita was a familiar figure on campus, visiting frequently to collect and recycle discarded items,” said Santa Monica College President Chui L. Tsang. “Margarita was well-liked by the SMC groundskeepers, students, faculty, and staff that she interacted with, and who remember her as someone who was always happy,” Tsang said.
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Police said Chris Zawahri, 24, the older brother of the gunman, was in the Santa Monica house where the violence began. The gunman was a day shy of turning 24 when he went on the shooting spree, which makes the brother very close in age. A neighbor said that the brothers' parents split custody of their sons after going through a difficult divorce.
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The father of the gunman, owned the Santa Monica house where the violence began in a neighborhood tucked up against Interstate 10. He moved there with his wife and two sons in 1996 from an apartment across town, according to property records and neighbors. He and Randa Abdou, 54, married on New Year's Eve 1985, but the couple split up later, though the date of their divorce was not immediately clear from public records. Samir Zawahri bought the house from his ex-wife in 2002. Neighbors said one son lived at the house with the father and one lived with the mother in an apartment about two miles away.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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A gunman killed five people in a rampage through the streets of Santa Monica that ended when police fatally shot him at a college library where students were studying for exams. The Los Angeles Times will add names and details as they become available.
Carlos Navarro Franco was killed when a gunman identified by police as John Zawahri opened fire on him and his daughter Marcela, 26, as they drove to the campus of Santa Monica College. Franco was a longtime groundskeeper at the college.
“Carlos was truly a family man,” Santa Monica College President Chui L. Tsang wrote in a letter to the campus community. “He was a dedicated husband and father and an integral part of the Santa Monica College family. His dedicated work to the campus grounds was enjoyed by students and visitors for two decades. He will be sorely missed.”
Moments before he and his daughter were killed, Franco left his wife a voicemail.
“I’m running a little late,” Franco said in the message. “But I want you to know that I still love you.”
Family said he rarely showed emotion, preferring instead to show love by putting food on the dinner table and paying college tuitions.
Marcela Franco was on her way to Santa Monica College with her father to buy books for her summer classes. Both were fatally wounded. Her father, Carlos Navarro Franco, 68, died at the scene.
Marcela Franco died two days later at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
“Her family was with her by her side. Marcela had registered to attend classes this summer at SMC and was with her father Carlos when Friday’s tragedy struck,” Santa Monica College President Chui L. Tsang said in a statement posted on the school’s website.
Margaret Quinones-Perez, the woman’s aunt, described her niece as “smart, beautiful, sexy, frisky, outgoing.”
Marcela Franco wanted to be a clinical psychologist. When her main college, Cal State Dominguez Hills, couldn’t provide the units she needed to graduate in the fall, she decided to take the courses at Santa Monica, where her father worked.
The Santa Monica College Foundation has started the Carlos Franco Family Memorial Fund.
Margarita Gomez, 68, was shot outside the Santa Monica College library and died Friday afternoon at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
Gomez collected recyclables on campus to help pay the bills, said her son Rafael Torres, 39.
Santa Monica College spokesman Don Girard called Gomez a “neighbor” to the school, stressing that she never broke campus rules and was well-liked by groundskeepers.
“She honored the code,” he stressed.
Torres said his mother worked at a ceramics company for nearly two decades but didn’t get much of a pension. She did what she could to pay the bills. For the last two years, he said, she walked the campus each morning and afternoon — but usually not on Fridays.
“Around the college, everybody knows her,” Torres, said. “Nobody knows her name because she never got in trouble. She was the lady with the cans.”
Torres said his mother grew up in Mexico but lived in Santa Monica for about 28 years. She loved the city and her church, he said, and was well-liked. She loved her grandchildren and helping people, he said.
Gomez’s home near 19th Street and Pico Boulevard — right next to the campus — has been flooded by visitors, Torres said, and the answering machine was full of messages, he said.
John Zawahri began his rampage shortly before noon June 7 by killing his father, Samir Zawahri, 55, and his brother, Chris, 25, at their Yorkshire Avenue home in Santa Monica. The house was subsequently set ablaze.
Zawahri’s parents had been divorced for years, neighbors said. Court records show two divorce filings. One was filed in 1993, by Samir Zawahri. Another, noting domestic violence, was filed by John Zawahri’s mother, Randa Abdou, in 1998.
Chris Zawahri, 25, was killed shortly before noon June 7 by his brother, John Zawahri. Chris and his father, Samir Zawahri, were found dead at their Santa Monica home, which had been set on fire.
Credits: Los Angeles Times Staff Programming by Anthony Pesce.

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