March 29, 1958
Two cars cruised La Puente on a Friday night. One car carried Fred
Avila, 20, and three unidentified young women. The other carried four
young men from La Puente: Manuel Garcia, 19; Refugio Luna Jr., 20; John
Ramirez Jr., 19; and Robert Charles Perez, 19.
The two groups had crossed paths in La Puente’s business district, The
Times said, calling out insults to one another. Avila headed for the
weekly dance at La Puente High School. The other car followed and
pulled up next to Avila’s auto outside the high school gym, where about
500 students were gathered.
One of Garcia’s friends grabbed a .22-caliber rifle, got out of the car
and pointed it into the window of Avila’s vehicle. "Who’s that guy?" he
asked, presumably talking to one of the young women.
Avila got out and began grappling with the other young man over the
rifle. Garcia and the other two friends joined the struggle and the
rifle went off, hitting Garcia in the head. "You got me," he said,
falling to the ground 10 feet from where he had scratched his nickname,
"Quinky," in wet concrete three years earlier.
He was killed by his own rifle, The Times said.
Luna, Ramirez and Perez were arrested on charges of murder, but The
Times never followed up on the case so we don’t know what happened.
