People v. Kurbegovic

138 Cal. App. 3d 731, 188 Cal. Rptr. 268, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2275
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1982
DocketCrim. 39123
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 138 Cal. App. 3d 731 (People v. Kurbegovic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Kurbegovic, 138 Cal. App. 3d 731, 188 Cal. Rptr. 268, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2275 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

YOUNGER, J. *

Muharem Kurbegovic, the self-proclaimed “Alphabet Bomber,” was convicted of twenty-five felonies, including seven arsons, three murders and eight charges based on injuries resulting from the bombing of Los Angeles International Airport. We affirm the judgment.

I

The Facts

A. The Crimes

As the facts of the crimes are neither in dispute nor important to the issues raised in this appeal, a brief summary of them will suffice.

*736 In the early morning hours of November 9, 1973, three residences were burned by an arsonist. Their owners were Allan G. Campbell, a municipal court judge, 1 and Marguerite Justice and Emmet McGaughey, two members of the Los Angeles Police Commission. 2 It took only 19 minutes to drive from house to house, so it was possible for one person to have set all three fires.

Seven months later, an arson device was placed in the gas tank of Commissioner McGaughey’s car, and he received two strange telephone calls. In the first, the person on the other end made sounds of heavy breathing, without saying anything, but in the second, a male caller said he was from the S.L.A. 3 and that the date for Mr. McGaughey’s execution was set within 30 days.

On June 16, 1974, nine postcards, each with a small metal disc under the stamp, got caught in the cancelling machine in the Palm Springs Post Office. The postcards were addressed to the justices of the United States Supreme Court, and each bore a picture of Bob Hope on one side of the card and his signature on the other.

On July 4, 1974, fires were set using gasoline at three apartment buildings in Santa Monica and Marina del Rey. KFWB, an all-news radio station, received a telephone call from a man identifying himself as Isaiak Rasim, a “field commander in the Symbionese Liberation Army,” stating that in celebration of the Fourth of July and recognition of the S.L.A., he had set the three fires by means of “bombs.”

*737 The next day, a security guard at the Los Angeles Times found the first of several tapes, 4 to be connected over the coming weeks with appellant, in the planter box in the lobby. It purported to be from Rasim, who now claimed to be “Chief Military Officer” of “Aliens of America” and claimed that deadly nerve gas had been mailed to each Supreme Court justice under a postcard stamp.

On August 6, a bomb exploded in a locker at the Los Angeles International Airport, and shrapnel-like pieces of metal and broken glass showered the terminal, killing three men. A fourth man had his right leg blown off and several other persons suffered injuries. Late that night, Conrad Casler, city editor of the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, received a telephone call claiming credit for the bombing. The caller identified himself as Rasim and claimed that the bombing was done by “Aliens of America,” correctly giving the publicly undisclosed locker number “T 225” as the location of the bomb.

Over the next several days, Mr. Casler received further telephone calls 5 from the same man, who, on each occasion, used the code number “T 225.” During these telephone conversations, the caller spoke further of a group he called “Aliens of America.” The first bomb, he explained, was placed at the airport because the letter “A” in the word “airport” was the first letter in “Aliens of America.”

*738 Another cassette 6 message was found, this time announcing a bomb at the Greyhound Bus depot. The depot was evacuated and police removed one of the largest bombs in the history of Los Angeles from the locker designated by the caller. Casler was again called and told the bomber had chosen the depot because the letter “L” in the word “locker” was the second letter in “Aliens of America.” The caller stated that ultimately a series of bombs placed at different locations would spell out “Aliens of America.”

B. Muharem Kurbegovic

Appellant was bom in 1943 in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. His mother may have been mentally ill and he claims to have suffered headaches as a child. 7 After *739 studying engineering at universities in Europe, he immigrated to Los Angeles in 1967 via Canada.

Between 1967 and 1974, he moved between various engineering jobs as a result of the cyclic nature of high-technology industries. He was mute at work, but was viewed as very bright, an excellent engineer and a personable coworker. He communicated articulately in writing.

In the late 1960’s, appellant began telling friends of a plan to become rich by opening a dance hall, but he was denied a business license by the police commission. (See fn. 2, ante.)

His employment also was to relate circumstantially to the later crimes of the “Alphabet Bomber”: Appellant had worked, for example, at Dynatech Industries and a tank of the type used by that firm became a part of the Greyhound Bus terminal bomb. While at Dynatech, he also learned how to purchase explosive chemicals from Erb and Gray Company by posing as a representative of a customer (he selected Hughes Aircraft). He also had numerous conversations about bomb construction and related matters with at least one coworker, Stephen Smith (see infra, p. 748), including one in which Kurbegovic asked how Smith would undertake a scheme to demand $10 million after setting off a bomb, in exchange for not setting off a second.

Various witnesses tied appellant to parts of the bombs from both the airport and Greyhound terminal, and by August 20, 1974, Kurbegovic was a suspect. A surveillance began that followed him to an apartment, ultimately proving to be his own. Later the same day, appellant left with a box in his hand and drove to the Santa Monica beach area where he parked his car. Officer Robert Sauter observed Kurbegovic sitting in his car with papers in his hand and his lips moving. The appellant then returned home.

That evening, Kurbegovic left his apartment and drove to Hollywood, wearing a red wig, glasses and a green coat. He parked his car and walked to a Carl’s Jr. restaurant, entering the restroom. After remaining for a few minutes, *740 he walked out of the restaurant. Officer Curtis Hagel thereafter went into the restroom and found a tape cassette wrapped in green paper. The officers listened to the tape in the police car and it was very similar to the others described above. 8

Moments later, appellant returned, ordered a cup of coffee and went into the restroom for a second time.

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Bluebook (online)
138 Cal. App. 3d 731, 188 Cal. Rptr. 268, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kurbegovic-calctapp-1982.