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Trial Starts for Alleged Driver of Hit Man in Irvine Shooting

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

The masked gunman who shot drug company executive James Patrick Riley at the Irvine Spectrum last year remains at large. And the alleged mastermind of last year’s botched assassination, his partner Dr. Larry C. Ford, committed suicide.

On Monday, the alleged getaway driver, Dino D’Saachs, went on trial for attempted murder in proceedings that could shed light on the bizarre series of events and international intrigue that followed the shooting outside the offices of Biofem Inc.

In opening statements, prosecutors for the first time provided an alleged motive, saying that Ford wanted Riley killed because their company was on the verge of making millions of dollars from new medical products for women.

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D’Saachs, a “contract killer” and longtime friend of Ford’s, was hired to pick up the gunman in his van after the shooting, said Deputy Dist. Atty. Ebrahim Baytieh in the Santa Ana courtroom. Though Riley survived, Baytieh said, the plot’s aim was to eliminate Riley so Ford could reap a huge windfall from a revolutionary female contraceptive product and a drug that could potentially cure AIDS.

“Riley got in the way because of the money and when Riley got in the way, Dr. Ford and the defendant decided that a man was going to run with a gun . . . and shoot [Riley] in the head,” Baytieh said.

But defense attorney Daniel Davis scoffed at the notion that Ford would want to rid himself of a man crucial to his company’s success. He told jurors the case would unravel because no one saw D’Saachs at the crime scene and because there was no motive.

“Ford would be undoing his entire professional identity,” Davis said. “And if you can’t find motive, it’s going to be real hard to find any evidence.”

D’Saachs, 58, a heavyset man with bushy, salt-and-pepper hair, showed no emotion as Riley took the witness stand and described the moments after what he called an “explosion” of gunfire sounded near his head. “I touched my face and felt blood. I said to myself, ‘My God, I think I’ve been shot.’ ”

Riley, who suffered a cheek wound, testified that he couldn’t believe his “genius” partner had played a role in the plot. “I thought that it was absurd, unfathomable that someone would solve the problem with another human being by killing him,” he said.

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The shooting occurred on the morning of Feb. 28, 2000, as Riley was getting out of his car in the company’s parking lot. An unidentified gunman suddenly appeared and fired a pistol from close range, sending a bullet ricocheting off Riley’s cheekbone and smashing through a nearby office window.

The gunman, in full view of several bank employees, fled between two buildings and dove into a passing van that prosecutors said was driven by D’Saachs. He was arrested later that day after police found a “how-to” book on assassinations and other evidence in his Los Angeles office.

Days later, detectives searched Ford’s home and discovered a cache of illegal weapons and explosives buried in his backyard. They also found cholera- and typhoid fever-causing bacteria in the home that forced the evacuation of 200 Irvine residents.

The discoveries triggered a probe into “weapons of mass destruction” by the FBI. Ford, who has been linked to South Africa’s apartheid-era biochemical warfare program, committed suicide shortly after the search began.

Riley called Ford an eccentric genius with an IQ of 200 who was renowned worldwide as an expert on infectious diseases. Ford’s life goal, he said, was to develop a powerful drug that could cure AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.

Biofem was preparing to launch a female contraceptive product that Riley estimated would generate $100 million in profits. Riley said each man owned 25% of the company, but he controlled the firm by having greater stockholder voting rights.

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After Ford’s suicide, Riley said, he discovered that Ford had violated their partnership contract by working with other physicians on research projects for other pharmaceutical companies.

Ford allegedly had known D’Saachs for many years and was the gynecologist for D’Saachs wife and daughters. The prosecutor said D’Saachs owned a body shop, grocery store, tax preparation service and was a “contract killer.”

Riley’s testimony was scheduled to continue today.

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