Community Corner

7-Eleven Shootings: 2 Suspects Arrested After Weeklong Manhunt

A suspect was arrested Friday in connection with a string of 7-Eleven robberies across Orange and Riverside County.

ORANGE COUNTY, CA — Two suspects were arrested in connection with Monday's spree of robberies and shootings — including two killings — at 7-Eleven stores across two Southern Californian counties, authorities said Friday.

The first arrest was announced by the Orange County District Attorney's office on Friday. The La Brea Department later said two people have been arrested in the case.

The suspects were not immediately identified by name, and no further information was released about the arrests.

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Law enforcement authorities will hold a 5 p.m. news conference on Friday in Orange County to discuss the arrest.


RELATED: $100K Reward For Gunman In SoCal 7-Eleven Robberies

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The rash of violence — carried out on July 11, or 7-11 — prompted the 7-Eleven corporation to offer a $100,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest of the suspect.

Investigations were continuing in six cities, but the same suspect may have been involved in a crime spree that stretched from San Bernardino County to Riverside County, then to Orange County — all involving 7-Eleven stores.

The first 7-Eleven holdup in the crime spree may have occurred in Ontario. Police said just after midnight Monday, the 7-Eleven at 636 N. Vine Ave. was robbed. The suspect held up the store with a handgun, but no shots were fired and no one was injured.

At 12:40 a.m. Monday, the 7-Eleven store at 2410 W. Arrow Route in Upland was robbed, police said.

At 1:50 a.m., a 7-Eleven store at 5102 La Sierra Ave. in Riverside was robbed by a gunman. That robbery escalated, with the suspect shooting a customer, who was hospitalized in what was described as grave condition.

Riverside police Officer Ryan Railsback said the victim has shown "slight improvement, but is still very critical."

The suspect in Riverside robbed a clerk at gunpoint and then shot a customer before running away, Railsback said.

Twenty-four-year-old Matthew Rule of Santa Ana was fatally shot at 3:25 a.m. Monday outside the 7-Eleven store in the 300 block of East 17th Street. Officers found Rule in the parking lot with a gunshot wound to the upper body, Santa Ana Police Department Sgt. Maria Lopez said. The victim was pronounced dead at the scene.

The suspect apparently never entered the store in Santa Ana and it appears he robbed Rule, Lopez said. It wasn't clear if Rule was a customer of the store or why he was there.

Brea police said they responded at 4:17 a.m. Monday to the 7-Eleven store at Lambert Road and North Brea Boulevard and found a male store clerk fatally shot in what officers determined to be a robbery.

The clerk was later identified as 40-year-old Matthew Hirsch, who died at the scene, police said.

About a half-hour later, the 7-Eleven store at 381 E. Whittier Blvd. in La Habra was robbed, and two people were shot, according to La Habra police Sgt. Eric Roy. Both victims were taken to a hospital, and both were expected to survive. Police said the victims were a clerk and a customer.

Based on surveillance images, police have said the same suspect is believed to have been involved in the heists in Riverside, Santa Ana, Brea and La Habra. Investigations were continuing in the San Bernardino County robberies.

Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Police Department announced Tuesday afternoon that detectives were investigating a similar string of robberies at two convenience stores and two doughnut shops within the LAPD's Devonshire Division in the San Fernando Valley that occurred between 3:55 and 5:30 a.m. Saturday.

The four businesses that were robbed were located in the 16000 block of Parthenia Street, the 16000 block of Nordhoff Street, the 16000 block of Devonshire Street and the 16000 block of San Fernando Mission Boulevard.

The suspect in those four robberies was described as a man between 25 and 30 years old, 5 feet, 7 inches to 5 feet, 10 inches tall and weighing between 160 and 180 pounds. He was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, a black face covering and dark jeans, and was armed with a black semi-automatic handgun

No injuries were reported in the robberies, and LAPD detectives were working with other agencies to determine if the suspect in the four robberies is linked to Monday's 7-Eleven heists.

The Brea location where Hirsch was fatally shot was one of several stores that opted to close Monday evening and early Tuesday morning. Yellow police tape was strung along the parking lot in the early morning hours and a makeshift memorial next to the parking was created for Hirsch.

Anyone with information was asked to contact Brea Police Department Detective Alfred Rodriguez at 714-671-4438 or alfredr@cityofbrea.net.

City News Service contributed to this report.

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