Suspect in LA Metro Bus shooting, hijacking appears in court

Lamont Campbell, 51, was wheeled into a downtown courtroom Tuesday strapped into a safety chair. He remains jailed in lieu of more than $5.5 million bail.

Suspect in LA Metro Bus shooting, hijacking appears in court

By TERRI VERMEULEN KEITH

A man accused of fatally shooting a passenger aboard a Los Angeles Metro bus, then hijacking the vehicle and sparking a chase from South LA to downtown, made his first court appearance Tuesday, but his arraignment on murder and other charges was delayed.

Lamont Campbell, 51, was charged Monday with one count each of murder, carjacking, kidnapping during a carjacking, assault with a handgun, attempted murder, robbery, felony evading and being a felon in possession of a firearm, along with four counts of kidnapping, according to Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón.

The charges include allegations that he personally used a handgun during the bulk of the crimes early last Wednesday morning.

Campbell was wheeled into a downtown courtroom Tuesday strapped into a safety chair, but his arraignment was postponed until Oct. 29. He remains jailed in lieu of more than $5.5 million bail.

RELATED: Metro ridership reaches new heights amid public safety concerns

Campbell faces nearly 91 years to life in prison if convicted as charged, the district attorney said.

Gascón — who called what happened “tragic and senseless violence ” — said a total of six victims are identified in the criminal complaint, including the man who died — Anthony Rivera, 48, of Los Angeles — and the bus driver, Dennis Contreras.

Another passenger was found hiding on the bus when Campbell was eventually taken into custody, but there were other passengers who managed to escape from the vehicle, according to the district attorney.

Gascón lauded the bus driver for acting “with courage amid intense pressure” and “making decisions that likely saved others’ lives.”

He also praised the hostages aboard the bus for “demonstrating extraordinary strength and resilience in the face of extreme danger.”

The shooting and hijacking occurred about 12:45 a.m. Sept. 25 near Manchester Avenue and Figueroa Street, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Campbell allegedly pulled out a gun and shot Rivera multiple times, demanded that the bus operator drive the vehicle and robbed a fellow passenger, according to the D.A.’s office.

LAPD Assistant Chief Blake Chow told reporters that officers initially went to the area of Manchester Avenue and Figueroa Street in response to radio calls of a disturbance and possible assault with a deadly weapon on a bus, and that the bus driver had activated a panic alarm.

Police ultimately found the bus at 117th Street and Figueroa in South Los Angeles, set up near the vehicle and interviewed someone who had gotten off the bus, then realized that there might be an armed suspect aboard, Chow said Tuesday.

Officers tried to make contact with the bus occupants using public address systems, but the bus slowly rolled away and led officers on what wound up being about an hour-long pursuit that ended as a result of a spike strip and officers disabling the vehicle, the assistant chief said.

SWAT officers had joined the chase after police determined there might be a “possible hostage situation,” and arrested the suspect in downtown Los Angeles after using “distraction techniques” and boarding the bus, where the driver and a passenger who had been hiding were rescued, Chow said.

Rivera was found with multiple gunshot wounds and died after being taken to a hospital, the assistant chief said.

A motive for the crimes was under investigation, according to Gascón.

Prosecutors contend Campbell has a string of drug-related convictions dating back as far as 1993.

The shooting and hijacking again renewed concerns about safety aboard the Metro transit system. Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, who chairs the Metro Board of Directors, said she wants to see an expansion in the use of weapon-detection systems — which are being tested at Union Station — across the Metro system to prevent people from carrying guns or other deadly items on buses and trains. The Metro board is expected to receive a report in October on those systems.

Hahn noted that Rivera, a former National Guardsman, had relied on Metro to get back and forth from his job as a parking attendant at Dodger Stadium. She lauded the bus driver, saying he “safely drove his bus for over an hour” before police were able to stop the vehicle.

“Holding the person who committed this heinous crime accountable for his actions is an important step in helping to dissuade further crime in our system,” said Metro CEO Stephanie Wiggins.