Suspect in Malibu Lagoon killing charged with second murder - Los Angeles Times
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Suspect in Malibu Lagoon killing charged with second murder in Inglewood

A body was discovered inside a 55-gallon drum in July at Malibu Lagoon State Beach.
A body was discovered inside a 55-gallon drum in July at Malibu Lagoon State Beach. The suspect in that case has been charged with a second murder committed last January.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
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The man charged in the murder of a musician whose body was found last summer inside a barrel at Malibu Lagoon State Beach has been charged with a second murder, committed a year ago in Inglewood, police say.

Joshua Lee Simmons has been charged in the fatal shooting of Anthony Soloc, 50, Jan. 20 at a home on the 2300 block of West 79th Street. Inglewood police officers found Soloc’s body in front of the home with a single gunshot wound to the head. Neighbors reported hearing a shooting around 5:00 a.m.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives arrested Simmons in October after tying him to the body recovered from the Malibu lagoon. Simmons was charged in the killing of Javonnta Murphy, who was fatally shot before his body was placed inside a 55-gallon plastic drum and dumped into the lagoon.

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Prosecutors allege that Simmons shot Murphy, 32, on July 27, three days before a maintenance worker spotted the barrel in a shallow inlet. The worker paddled out in a kayak and pulled the container to the shore but didn’t open it. The next day, a lifeguard saw the barrel back in the lagoon, swam out and brought it to the beach, where he opened it and discovered the body.

Prosecutors allege that an accomplice, Dennis Eugene Vance, helped cover up the fatal shooting of Murphy and have charged him as an accessory after the fact.

Joshua Lee Simmons.
Joshua Lee Simmons, one of two men arrested in connection with the killing of a man whose body was found last summer at Malibu Lagoon State Beach, has been charged in a second murder.
(El Monte Police Department)
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Simmons is also charged with making criminal threats against Brandon Gray on the same day he is accused of killing Murphy. Gray was taken into custody at the Malibu/Lost Hills sheriff’s station on Oct. 5 but was not charged.

A man discovered in a barrel at Malibu Lagoon State Beach is found to have been shot in the head, according to the Los Angeles County medical examiner.

Simmons is also the suspect in an attempted robbery Sept. 2 at Meza Jewelry in El Monte that was thwarted by the store’s owner and family members. Surveillance cameras captured the burglary suspect around 2 p.m. walking on Main Street dressed in black and a face mask and carrying a cardboard box. Authorities say Simmons used a hammer to break into display cases and sprayed bear repellent on workers.

A video identifying Simmons as the suspect was circulated by detectives seeking to apprehend him just days after the attempted robbery.

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The man was identified as 32-year-old Javonnta Murphy. The case is being investigated by Los Angeles County sheriff’s homicide detectives.

Simmons and Vance were arrested Oct. 3. Two days later, Simmons was charged with Murphy’s murder, the criminal threats against Gray, attempted robbery of the jewelry store and two counts of criminal threats against the store owner.

Simmons is due in court Friday to be arraigned on the new murder charge. He is being held on bail of nearly $3.28 million in Men’s Central Jail of L.A. County. Vance, who has been released on a $50,000 bond, is also set to appear that day.

Court records show that Simmons has a history of violent offenses, including a 2019 conviction for assault with a deadly weapon in connection with a 2013 crime.

Murphy grew up in South L.A. and was living in Sylmar at the time he was killed, according to authorities and a family friend, Patrick Nelson. He was pursuing a career in rap music and had a young son.

The body of a man was found inside a 55-gallon barrel Monday morning at Malibu Lagoon State Beach, authorities said.

“He was a good kid, good person. He didn’t gang-bang. What happened to him, I just don’t understand,†Nelson said.

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