By Terry Collins and Jason Dearen
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — An immigration judge in 2006 had ordered the suspect in the recent slayings of five people in San Francisco to be removed from the country, officials said on March 26.
However, he remained in the United States after the Vietnamese government declined to provide necessary documents.
Suspect Binh Thai Luc, 35, a Vietnamese citizen, was contacted by ICE, while he was serving a prison sentence for robbery and assault with a deadly weapon at San Quentin in California.
Gillian Christensen, ICE’s deputy press secretary, said that under U.S. law, Luc could not be held for more than 180 days, while the government sought his removal, so he was released from ICE custody in 2006.
Christensen said ICE makes every possible effort to remove all final-order aliens within a reasonable period, which the Supreme Court has determined is 180 days. After that period, if the actual removal cannot occur within the reasonably foreseeable future, ICE must release them.
“He continued to report to the ICE office in San Francisco as required after his release from ICE custody, and had no other incidents or arrests during that period,” Christensen said.
Binh served nearly a decade in prison for robbery and assault with a deadly weapon, records show.
State records indicate that he was convicted in 1998 of the armed robbery of a Chinese restaurant in San Jose in 1996. He was in prison from 1998 to 2006, then served two years of parole.
Police on Sunday booked Luc on five counts of murder and said he knew the victims, who were identified Monday by the San Francisco medical examiner as Hua Shun Lei, 65, and Wan Yi Xi, 62, who were married, and their children Vincent Lei, 32, and Ying Xue Lei, 37. The other victim was Chia Huei Chu, 30, the girlfriend of Vincent Lei.
Police initially thought it was a murder-suicide case. The medical examiner has not released a cause of death for any of the five, and said it could take several weeks to determine.
Ying Xue “Jess” Lei was described by a co-worker as a quiet, capable colleague who shared few details about her personal life.
“She was always a hopeful, nice, fun-loving person,” said Todd Sidebottom, who worked with her at Quantitative Medical Systems, a medical device company in Emeryville.
“I came because I wanted to pay my respects to her and the family,” he said, as he dropped off a bouquet of flowers outside her home over the weekend.
The bodies were found Friday. Police said the three women and two men appeared to have been killed by blunt force trauma.
A relative, Lena Huang, reached by The Associated Press, said the family was in mourning and would not comment.
Police Chief Greg Suhr said 40 investigators were working on the case.
Investigators initially couldn’t determine if a suspect was at large, and they thought at least two of the victims were shot. The chief said an “edged weapon” was involved in the slayings of the three women and two men.
The bodies were found by a woman with access to the home in the Ingleside District, a middle-class neighborhood in the southern part of the city. The home near San Francisco’s City College is in a thriving immigrant community, largely from Asia.
Also arrested was Luc’s brother, Brian Luc, 32, on unrelated charges involving drugs, ammunition possession, and violation of probation.
Brian Luc was serving three years of probation for drunken driving and firing a gun in a reckless manner, records show.
Suhr did not provide details of that arrest but said the siblings lived together.
The brothers were both being held without bail.
Prosecutors were still awaiting a report from police before filing charges, though an arraignment could happen this week, said Chief Assistant District Attorney Sharon Woo.
Jail records didn’t show if either man had retained a lawyer. (end)
Associated Press reporter Garance Burke contributed to this report.