Crime & Safety
Man Sentenced For East County Stabbing Spree
Patrick Douglas, 52, was convicted last month of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and evading arrest.
LA MESA, CA – A man who stabbed and seriously wounded two women in El Cajon and unincorporated La Mesa, then led police on a high-speed pursuit, was sentenced Friday to nearly 70 years to life in state prison.
Patrick Douglas, 52, was convicted by an El Cajon jury last month of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and evading arrest for the attacks that took place in the early morning hours of Nov 7, 2017, and the ensuing high-speed car chase into Dulzura, where he abandoned his car and made a failed attempt to escape on foot into rugged back-country terrain.
The first of the two assaults was reported shortly before 3 a.m. in a commercial area about a mile west of Granite Hills High School, according to the El Cajon Police Department.
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Patrol officers found the victim in a parking lot at a strip mall in the 300 block of North Second Street, ECPD Lt. Eric Taylor said. A witness reported seeing the bloodied woman emerge from a Mercedes-Benz sedan that was then driven out of the area.
Paramedics took her to a trauma center, where she underwent emergency surgery for upper-body wounds.
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A few minutes after the first assault was reported, authorities got a 911 call about an attack on a Frito-Lay delivery driver outside a 7-Eleven store in the 4600 block of Avocado Boulevard in the Calavo Gardens neighborhood, near Mount Helix.
That victim stumbled into the convenience store and collapsed onto the floor. Paramedics took her to a hospital, where she was admitted for treatment of serious, but non-life-threatening stab wounds.
Deputies soon spotted a man matching witness descriptions of the assailant behind the wheel of a Mercedes near the site of the second crime, sheriff's Lt. Tom Seiver said.
Douglas sped off when the patrol personnel approached, prompting a pursuit over surface streets and along state Route 94 into Spring Valley. The fleeing motorist wound up cornered in a cul-de-sac, at which point he put his hands out the driver's side window as if surrendering.
As deputies drew near to him, however, the man accelerated toward them, narrowly missing one, according to Seiver. The suspect then drove off once again, heading east through Rancho San Diego at speeds exceeding 100 mph.
In the Jamul area, one of the pursuing deputies lost control of his cruiser and crashed it, suffering minor injuries. When the lawman's colleagues stopped to assist him, the suspect got away, Seiver said.
Later in the morning, authorities found the Mercedes damaged and abandoned on Campo Road, a short distance from Dulzura Vineyard. Deputies then began searching the remote locale with help from U.S. Border Patrol agents and eventually detained Douglas in a remote, brushy area off Freezer Road.
--City News Service