Jurors vote for death penalty for man who tortured and killed eight-year-old he thought was gay
Jurors have voted for the death penalty for a man who brutally tortured and killing an eight-year-old who he thought he was gay.
Isauro Aguirre, 37, was convicted last month of the first-degree murder of Gabriel Fernandez, who he terrorised over the course of eight months.
During that period, Aguirre was going out with Gabrielās mother, Pearl Fernandez, who has pleaded not guilty ahead of her separate trial over her sonās death.
The jury forewoman gave a statement in court about the deliberations, which lasted around seven hours over three days, according to The LA Times.
āWe were plucked out of our everyday lives and brought together to serve,ā she said. āWe came together to bring justice for Gabriel.ā
The court had heard how Aguirreās inhumane torture of the 4ā1ā³ child including beating, whipping, shooting and starving him, as well as feeding him cat faeces and his own vomit.
Detective Elliot Uribe told the court that the suffering inflicted on Gabriel constituted āthe worst injuries Iāve ever seen on a child.ā
When the penalty was read out, Gabrielās father sat solemnly, staring at the courtroom floor.
As he walked out, he locked eyes with a sheriffās detective who investigated the case. āThank you,ā he whispered.
The detective nodded, patting the parent on the back.
Criminalists said during the trial that Aguirre had repeatedly slammed Gabrielās head into the walls of their home, causing hundreds of blood stains and dents.
The victimās teenage siblings also testified, causing jurors to sob uncontrollably as they described the horrific torture they had seen.
Ezequiel, 16, and Virginia, 14, said Aguirre shot Gabriel in the face and groin with a BB gun and beat him daily using wire hangers and a belt buckle.
He was also pepper sprayed and bound and forced into a tiny cubby for long periods, they said.
Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Jon Hatami called the 6ā2ā³, 270-pound Aguirre āevilā during the trial, adding that he āgot off onā torturing Gabriel.
āNo human with a heart and soul could do that to an innocent little boy,ā he told jurors before their deliberations, arguing that Aguirre hated Gabriel because he thought he was gay.
As Hatami reminded the jury of the abuse which the eight-year-old suffered, two jurors wept softly and several shut their eyes.
He asked them to āshow the defendant the exact same mercy he showed Gabriel.ā
Mercy was also on Deputy Public Defender John Alanās mind as he called on the jury to sentence his client to life in prison without parole, rather than death.
He said: āMercy isnāt something thatās ever earned. Itās something that is freely granted.ā
When the jurorsā vote was revealed, the prosecutor had a tissue in his hand, and seemed to be holding back tears.
Outside the courthouse, one juror ā who wanted to be known only as a 25-year-old working in social media, said that capital punishment still didnāt seem like āenough justice.ā
She added that during the trial, she thought of Gabriel every day, when she woke up and when she went to sleep.
The photos shown to the jury of his small, tortured body ā with many bruises and blood on his neck ā would stay with her forever, she said.
āItās heartbreaking.ā
In March, four social workers were charged with child abuse for their roles in Gabrielās death, with Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mary Lou Villar saying that āred flags were everywhere.ā
The social workers have pleaded not guilty.
Aguirre is set to be sentenced on March 8.