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Cut down on the brink of making her mark

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Times Staff Writer

Cynthia Vargas was a high school dropout.

Still, she promised her family that she would do something with her life.

She enrolled at a career school to become a medical assistant. Her test scores averaged between 85% and 95%, according to her older sister, Evelyn Vargas, 21.

Last month, eight days before graduating, Cynthia Vargas, 20, was shot in the back of the head in the 12700 block of 58th Street in Huntington Park.

Evelyn Vargas said she was on her way to pick up her younger sister for breakfast when she spotted police cars and yellow tape. She never imagined that her sister was dead, and she drove away.

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“It should have hit me,” Evelyn said. “Everybody should have been outside, but no one was around, so I thought she was inside.”

An hour later, Evelyn Vargas drove back to the neighborhood. She told an officer that her sister had been in the area and that she hadn’t arrived home. An officer took down her information.

Later, she got a phone call from the police. They said her younger sister was at St. Francis Medical Center. At the hospital, doctors told the family that Vargas had been declared brain dead but was kept on life support because she was an organ donor. Evelyn Vargas said she walked to her sister’s bed. Cynthia’s face was swollen; blood flowed from her nose, eyes and ears, Evelyn recalled in a phone interview. She said her sister’s hair was stiff with dried blood.

“I thought I was hallucinating,” she said.

Detectives told the family they had arrested a 16-year-old on suspicion of murder. Family members said Cynthia Vargas had been dating the suspect.

For the family, it was no longer about who had shot Vargas but about whether she knew the shooting was about to happen.

Occasionally, Evelyn Vargas spends time in her sister’s old room, expecting her to come home. She said she tries to take comfort in knowing that her sister’s donated organs are helping others.

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“Someone will have her heart, her lungs. It’s good that she’s going to help,” she said. “In her own way she accomplished a lot.”

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ruben.vives@latimes.com

For more, go to latimes.com/homicidereport.

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