Killler Dads and Custody Lists

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Dad who threatened to kill kids if they aren't "with him" stabs kids to death and their mother (Riverside County, California)

This is how abuser daddies think, folks. They want custody of the kids. Not because they love them and want to raise them. It's because they want to own and control them. And the mother too. And if he can't own them, then stabbing them to death in a gory bloodbath is just as good in their sick little heads. Maybe even better. Somewhere, on one of the fathers' rights forums, this guy is being praised as the latest Martyr to the Holy Cause. Bet on it.

And this is how f***ing judges think. Even though dad SELVIN CHAJON RODRIQUEZ had threatened to kill them all, he was still entitled to a child custody hearing!

And this is how the police think. Serving dad that temporary restraining order just really wasn't high on their priority list. Not that it would have stopped a s*** like this father.

Rodriquez has now been added to the Killer Dads and Custody List (see pages listed to the left).

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0905-family-killed-20120905,0,7131876.story

Rejected marriage proposal allegedly leads to triple murder

A Riverside woman who sought a restraining order against her ex-boyfriend after refusing to marry him is found stabbed to death along with their young children.

A Riverside mother and her two young children were stabbed to death

By Hailey Branson-Potts and Kate Mather, Los Angeles Times

September 5, 2012, 2:17 a.m.

Selvin Chajon Rodriguez asked the mother of his young children to marry him.

But if she said no, the couple and their son and daughter would "all be laid to rest."

The alleged threats, detailed in court papers filed last week in Riverside County Superior Court, were enough for Laura Reveriano to request a restraining against her ex-boyfriend.

"Selvin called and told me he would follow me to the end of the earth and he would kill the kids if they are not with him and there would be nowhere I could hide," Reveriano wrote in the request for a domestic violence restraining order filed Aug. 27.

But the temporary restraining order she was granted the next day did little good.

Early Thursday, Reveriano, 25, and her children, Selvin Chajon, 4, and Emily Chajon, 1, were found stabbed to death in her home on a quiet cul-de-sac in west Riverside.

Rodriguez, 23, of Riverside, was found minutes later, covered in blood, walking along the 91 Freeway and carrying a knife, police said. When police arrived, Rodriguez ran and was shot by a Corona police officer. He remains hospitalized in critical but stable condition, officials said.

As of Tuesday, the Riverside County district attorney's office had not filed charges, said John Hall, a spokesman for the office.

Riverside Police Lt. Guy Toussaint said that even though Reveriano was in the process of trying to escape from Rodriguez, the restraining order might not have been enough to save her.

"We feel terrible that this incident took place.... But even had that restraining order been in place, it might not have stopped this guy from doing the evil thing that he did," Toussaint said.

A Riverside County judge granted the temporary restraining order Aug. 28, saying Rodriguez had to stay at least 100 yards away from Reveriano and her children and could not contact them, according to court papers. A judge set hearings for child custody and establishing a permanent restraining order for later in September.

Although the temporary restraining order had been granted, it had not been served on Rodriguez, so police weren't involved at that point, Toussaint said.

"It doesn't mean that the restraining order isn't valid from a judge, but it does mean that we can't act on it until he's been served," Toussaint said.

On Aug. 25, Rodriguez took Reveriano and their children to a park. He had flowers and a ring and asked her to marry him, neighbors said. After Reveriano said no, he began threatening her, said Carmela Barrera, who owns and lives in the home where Reveriano rented a room.

Barrera said Reveriano was from a small town in Guerrero, Mexico, and worked at a factory packaging energy drinks, where she met Rodriguez.

In court papers, Reveriano wrote that Rodriguez stole her car key and cellphone the day she turned down his proposal, and she called police. Rodriguez broke a window in the house, sending broken glass flying onto her son, who had been sleeping near the window. The glass cut her son's chest, she wrote.

Rodriguez then called Reveriano repeatedly and sent her a constant stream of threatening text messages, she wrote. He told Reveriano he would "put a knife to [her] waist" and would take the children with or without her, Reveriano wrote.

Reveriano feared Rodriguez would take their children without permission to Oregon or to Guatemala, where he had family, according to court papers.

Neighbors have been shaken by the deaths, said Susana Perez, 29, who lives a few houses away. The residential neighborhood is tight-knit and mostly occupied by families, Perez said. Reveriano and her children had been in the neighborhood only about six months, she said.

"It was a big shocker," Perez said. "We all know each other. It's really always quiet."