Recent documents released by the Bakersfield Police Department outline the events that led to the death of a 13-year-old Bakersfield girl. Patricia Alatorre was allegedly raped and murdered by 24-year-old Armando Cruz of Inglewood who she communicated with on social media.
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Documents: Armando Cruz admits to having the intention to kill Patricia Alatorre
Recent documents released by the Bakersfield Police Department outline the events that led to the death of a 13-year-old Bakersfield girl.
During interviews with police, Cruz admitted to communicating with Alatorre through Instagram and exchanging private photos. He also admitted to meeting Alatorre on two different occasions.
During the second visit, Cruz said Alatorre got into his truck but said she did not want to "go around with him." A short time later Cruz admitted in detail how he killed Alatorre and what he did with her body. In the documents, Cruz admitted that he intended to kill Alatorre.
He also revealed where he disposed of her cell phone, which police were later able to retrieve.
The man charged with raping and killing 13-year-old Patricia Alatorre admitted to law enforcement officers that he was responsible for her death, according to Bakersfield Police Department investigative documents filed
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Police reports: Man charged in Patricia Alatorre's death describes her killing
The man charged with raping and killing 13-year-old Patricia Alatorre admitted to law enforcement officers that he was responsible for her death, according to Bakersfield Police Department investigative documents filed in Kern County Superior Court.
Although Armando Cruz, 24, of Inglewood, has pleaded not guilty to 12 felony charges connected to Alatorre’s alleged sexual assault and murder, the documents indicate he gave extensive details of himself and Alatorre’s activities to BPD officers shortly after his arrest in early July.
In a holding room of the Los Angeles Police Department Rampart Division on July 5, Cruz admitted to having sex with Alatorre against her will, later killing her before burning her body and dumping her cell phone in the center median of a highway, according to the police reports.
Officers wrote in the documents that police later found Alatorre’s cell phone in the location where Cruz said he had gotten rid of it.
Furthermore, details Cruz provided of the manner in which he had disposed of the girl’s body were “extremely similar” to what the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office observed when it found the body of an unidentified female wrapped in a red sleeping bag at the site of a fire near Aviation Boulevard and W. 118 Street in Inglewood on July 3.
When Cruz returned to his home, he told law enforcement he slept in the back of his truck. Later, he told police
he wrapped her body in a red sleeping bag, dropping it off behind a large construction vehicle in a parking lot, where he lit the body on fire and fled.
When LASO responded to a fire in the area of Aviation Boulevard and W. 118 Street in Inglewood, they discovered an unidentified female wrapped in a red sleeping bag, the documents state. Investigators with LASO told BPD duct tape was located on the arms and mouth of the victim, according to the documents.
When investigators viewed a picture of Alatorre, they told BPD it appeared to be the same person who was discovered in the sleeping bag, according to the documents.
Cruz is being held without bail in the Kern County Jail. He is next scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 2.