Advertisement

Brother charged in Leila Fowler slaying called ‘shy ... reserved’

Barney Fowler, the father of Leila Fowler, leaves the Calaveras County Courthouse after the arraignment of his 12-year-old son on a charge of murder in the slaying of Leila, 8, who was stabbed to death in their Valley Springs home last month.
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)
Share via

A 12-year-old boy accused of stabbing his little sister, Leila Fowler, to death in Valley Springs was described as a “shy, quiet and reserved boy” by his attorney.

The boy, whose identity was not released because of his age, is charged with murder and made his initial appearance Wednesday in a Calaveras County juvenile court.

Attorney Mark Reichel said his client, who did not enter a plea, faces a second-degree murder charge along with a special allegation that he used a dangerous weapon in the stabbing of his 8-year-old sister.

Advertisement

Reichel declined to go into detail about the case until after he and his partner had reviewed the evidence, but said they “have the same questions as everyone.”

“This involves a 12-year-old who supposedly committed a crime that didn’t result in his immediate arrest,” Reichel said. “Instead, it took about two weeks and thousands of hours of investigation to make him the suspect who was charged.”

The boy and his family, were “doing remarkably well under the circumstances,” Reichel said. The boy remains in custody at a juvenile facility in Placerville, he added.

Advertisement

The boy’s family has stood by him. On the eve of his arrest, his mother told a Sacramento television station her son was innocent.

“They never even used to fight when they were little,” Priscilla Rodriguez told KOVR-TV in Sacramento. “I would never see him be mean to her.”

The boy’s father said authorities need to show him evidence before he’ll believe that his son is a killer.

Advertisement

“Until they have the proper evidence to show it’s my son, we’re standing behind him,” Barney Fowler told the Associated Press. “If they have the evidence, well, that’s another story. We’re an honest family.”

Calaveras County sheriff’s Sgt. Chris Hewitt said Leila and the boy were two of several children who lived at the Valley Springs home with Fowler and Leila’s stepmother. The parents were at a Little League game at the time of the slaying.

The boy called his parents, then 911, after the attack, officials said. The stepmother, Crystal Walters, also called 911.

“My children are at home alone and a man just ran out of our house and my older son was in the bathroom and my daughter started screaming,” Walters told the 911 call operator, according to KOVR.

“Did they see the man?” the call operator asked.

“They did see him, yes. My daughter is freaking out right now,” Walters said.

Calaveras County authorities have remained tight-lipped about the boy’s arrest, which sent another wave of shock through the small, Sierra foothill community that was already stunned by Leila’s death.

The children were home alone April 27 when the boy told authorities an intruder attacked his sister, then ran away. A witness initially said she also saw a man running from the home, but officials said she later recanted.

Advertisement

The sheriff’s department launched a property-to-property search and boosted patrols at area schools as frightened families kept their children close. Sheriff Gary Kuntz said authorities spent more than 2,000 hours on the case, which also involved the FBI.

ALSO:

Edison, Mitsubishi hit roadblock on San Onofre’s future

At least 17 suspected explosives found; man in custody

Broad Foundation gives scholarships to 8 Corona-Norco seniors

kate.mather@latimes.com

Advertisement
Advertisement