Advertisement

Burbank Man Sought in Fatal Shootings of 2 Women

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITERS

A Burbank man, convicted hours earlier of beating his next-door neighbor in a quarrel over trimming roses, burst into the man’s home with a rifle Wednesday, killing two women and wounding two others, police said.

All the victims had either testified against the gunman or been involved in the assault case, Burbank Police Sgt. Bob Brode said.

The incident in the 2800 block of North Keystone Street began about 4 p.m. when Thomas Paul Humenik, 25, crashed into his neighbor’s back yard and began firing at several women there, Burbank police said. Humenik pursued the women, all his neighbors, into the house, firing at them, Burbank Police Lt. Chris Welker said.

Advertisement

Welker said Humenik fled in a 1970s-era white El Camino and was still at large Wednesday night.

“He was seen going into the house with a rifle and then seeing leaving with a rifle,” Welker said.

Merle Boyd, 73, was pronounced dead at the scene and Sheila Young, 45, died about 7 p.m. at Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills, authorities said.

Geraldine Correll, 70, was in good condition at Thompson Memorial Medical Center in Burbank with a gunshot wound to her shoulder, authorities said. Elfriede Brauchle, 48, was treated at the scene for cuts from flying glass.

Less than two hours before the shootings, Humenik was convicted in Burbank Municipal Court of one charge of battery and sentenced to three years probation and fined $830 for attacking Merle Boyd’s husband, Don, police said.

Don Boyd was standing on Humenik’s property Jan. 3 while trimming roses that border the two yards, when Humenik told Boyd to get back on his own property and then struck him, said Bill Vick, a neighbor who witnessed the incident and testified in the trial. Boyd, who is in 70s, was knocked unconscious and received several cuts from falling into the bushes, Vick said.

Advertisement

After neighbors helped revive him, Boyd called police and filed a report, Vick said, which led to the battery charges.

The trial began about 9:30 a.m. Wednesday and ended about 2 p.m. Vick, who attended the trial, said that after the verdict was announced, Humenik gave Don Boyd “a menacing look.”

After the trial, several neighbors agreed to meet at the Boyds’ home. Don Boyd and Chuck Correll were on their way there when the shootings occurred.

The block consists of single-family homes with well-manicured lawns. Humenik, who lives with his mother, was known for making noise late at night and leaving his property unkempt, neighbors said. Humenik apparently worked as a mechanic and would often work on cars at his home late at night, neighbors said.

Humenik “had quite a reputation” locally, said neighbor Kay Scullin. “He flew off the handle over the slightest things.”

Advertisement