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Woman Asks Public to Help Solve Attack on Husband

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

With her husband barely clinging to life and leads on the crime turning cold, Veronica Mora begged the public for help Monday in capturing the gunman who shot him Christmas night during a family outing to a San Fernando Valley neighborhood called Candy Cane Lane.

“Please come forward and let us know if you know anything,” pleaded the tearful 21-year-old from Winnetka in a news conference at the Los Angeles Police Department’s West Valley station. “He was the best person I ever knew. He was a good daddy.”

Her husband, Francisco Javier Hernandez, 24, remained in gravely critical condition Monday at Northridge Hospital Medical Center. Doctors have told her that Hernandez, who was on life support with a gunshot wound to the head, probably will not survive, Mora said.

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The Winnetka construction worker was shot about 10 p.m. at the intersection of Lubao Avenue and Calvert Street in front of his wife, their 2-year-old son, Javier, and other horrified families.

Hernandez had just taken the toddler in his arms to see the cartoon-character displays at a corner house called Toyland. It was the main attraction of Candy Cane Lane, a Woodland Hills neighborhood near Pierce College famous for its lavish lights and decorations during the holiday season.

After Hernandez returned to the family’s car, he saw someone he seemed to know, Mora said. But the man was not someone she recognized.

Hernandez left the car and approached the man. They began pushing each other, and the man drew a small-caliber, semiautomatic pistol and shot Hernandez in the head and upper body, said Capt. Jim Cansler of the LAPD’s West Valley Division.

The exchange between the men lasted only about 30 seconds but long enough for mother and son to see almost everything--except the gunman’s face--from about 100 feet away.

“He fall on the floor, Mommy!” Javier exclaimed to Mora as his father slumped on the sidewalk.

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Later, Mora explained to the 2-year-old: “Daddy is sick.”

Although a police helicopter arrived within minutes and swept the area, the gunman could not be found, which suggests he escaped in a car, said Det. Rick Swanston.

Witnesses have not provided police with enough information to identify the suspect nor to draw a composite sketch.

“I can’t tell you how desperately we need 1/8more 3/8 witnesses to come forward,” said Det. Andrew Purdy. “There must have been at least 40 or 50 people on that corner. There were a lot of cars, bumper to bumper, in both directions. A lot of people saw something.”

At the West Valley station Monday, Los Angeles City Councilwoman Laura Chick said the council stands ready to offer a reward “to help us solve this heinous crime.”

“There is no place and no time anywhere in the city of Los Angeles that people shooting someone down is tolerated,” Chick said. “But on this particular night and in this particular neighborhood, Candy Cane Lane . . . it is particularly intolerable.”

On Monday, police released a fuller description of the gunman last seen running east on Calvert Street past an elementary school. Witnesses described him as a Latino with a stocky build and about 5 feet 5 inches tall. He had a mustache and wore a white, long-sleeved shirt, dark pants and a black baseball cap.

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Another man and a woman were seen running down Calvert after the shooting in the same direction as the gunman.

“They may be connected, they may not be,” Purdy said.

Witnesses said they saw a skinny boy about 10 years old, perhaps in his early teens, standing with the man during his confrontation with Hernandez.

Police are asking anyone with more information to call West Valley homicide detectives at (818) 756-8546 weekdays or detective headquarters at (213) 485-2504 nights or weekends.

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