Even after a heinous murder that was not resolved in a high -end residential complex in the upscale Valley Village last month, tenants still see what seems to be crossing around the building halls.
On April 26, the 53 -year -old Menash “Hidra” was found inside his unit on the fifth floor, the upper story of Ashton Sherman Village apartments in the 126000 mass of Riverside Drive.
Three days before the disturbing and tragic discovery, one of the residents who lives near the Ktla murder was told that at about three in the morning on April 23, he heard screams and a person screaming for help.
“I just woke up to some loud noise, which is a crash,” KTLA told KTLA. “There was screaming, calling our security, and also, immediately after that, I called the police.”
This resident, like many tenants who build others, does not want to share his name.
The doobell camera shots that KTLA obtained, and later, released by investigators at the Los Angeles Police Department, showed a man saying the police suspected of killing, wandering in the building halls before three in the morning and trying to enter the apartments.
LAPD was tight about the details of the killing, saying only in a press statement that “the suspect illegally entered the victim’s apartment, followed by a physical quarrel, which led to the death of the victim.”
In the latest security shots that KTLA obtained, a man with a bike that does not live in the apartments was seen, according to the residents, as he wanders in the halls of the second building of the Ashton Complex recently on Tuesday morning, May 6.
In the video that was taken at 3:41 am, the man who wears a red jacket hat was seen walking at one of the stairs exits with his bike. Six minutes later, he was seen again with his bike wandering in the halls on a different resident camera.
On April 30, just four days after the 53 -year -old body was found, watch footage shows another man that residents say is not a tenant, with a trash bag over his shoulder inside the second building.
Alertness about security building, Ashton residents have repeatedly complained that the administration has failed to address many issues that preceded horrific killing.
In the wake of a murder, many feel that they did little, outside the employment of “courtesy patrols”, to fix the broken external doors and the issues of crossing over the surface.
Parts of the building, which is currently getting a function of paint, contains scales in front of it, which is referred to as a resident who does not want to recognize it as “straits and true stairs” for anyone who wants to reach the building.
KTLA has repeatedly communicated with the administration at Ashton Sherman’s village apartments for comment, though, has not yet received any response.
Any person who recognizes the suspect with regard to killing or has information about the investigation to contact the LAPD office is urged at 818-374-9559. Those who wish not to disclose their identity can call the hotline in Los Angeles crime plugwww.lacrimstoppers.org.