CA - Sam Haskell, 35, arrested after woman's torso found in a trash bin in Encino LA, Tarzana, wife & two adult family members missing, 8 Nov 2023

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Human remains were just found in North Hills of a male, believed to be related to a missing person’s case. A number of people had the same thought I did that it could be related to the Encino case. Preliminary, it seems to be unrelated, but we’ll see what unfolds.
 
The men said they feared for their lives.
'Started seeing body parts': Tarzana murder suspect hired day laborers to move bags of human remains
(note, statements from the day laborers about specifically what the felt and saw in those bags for those with the stomach for it at this link)


SO MANY QUESTIONS!

Who hires day laborers to remove a few body part filled garbage bags from their home for $500?
Entitled, drug addled, violent morons.
Who finds body parts in bags someone paid you $500 to dispose of and then RETURNS SAID BAGS TO OWNER??

I kind of understand why the 3 workers returned the bags and money---if they drove away any further w/the incriminating money and the bags, and were pulled over, they'd be in a heap of very bad trouble.
What sort of police officer tells men who are reporting having seen and handled a dismembered body or bodies you are at the wrong police station???
I don't get this---It's true that CHP don't handle this type of case---but why not just call LAPD and hand the case over?
What sort of police officer tells men who are reporting having seen and handled a dismembered body or bodies you can't report that in here you should go stand in the courtyard and call 911????
I don't get this part either. It makes no sense to me at all...Except maybe they weren't making much sense in trying to explain it, and the officer inside wanted them to go outside, for safety's sake.

I think that police station on Topanga is just an outpost---not really a station with a lot of officers on hand. Three people acted scared and erratic may have made the officer nervous?
and as for Elle Benami - her story gets more and more involved and appears to be evolving depending on which interview of the day it is for her. Methinks it is time for her to get back to her life and let go of this 15 minutes JMO
 
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Human remains were just found in North Hills of a male, believed to be related to a missing person’s case. A number of people had the same thought I did that it could be related to the Encino case. Preliminary, it seems to be unrelated, but we’ll see what unfolds.
Local report on KTLA said the remains were supposedly from a man reported missing in June of 2023, from North Hills. And was a friend of the man who owned the property where the remains were found.

So probably not connected to this tragic case.
 
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Entitled, drug addled, violent morons.


I kind of understand why the 3 workers returned the bags and money---if they drove away any further w/the incriminating money and the bags, and were pulled over, they'd be in a heap of very bad trouble.

I don't get this---It's true that CHP don't handle this type of case---but why not just call LAPD and hand the case over?

I don't get this part either. It makes no sense to me at all...Except maybe they weren't making much sense in trying to explain it, and the officer inside wanted them to go outside, for safety's sake.

I think that police station on Topanga is just an outpost---not really a station with a lot of officers on hand. Three people acted scared and erratic may have made the officer nervous?
I'm sorry, but I find it hard to believe that a police officer isn't trained to deal with scared, nervous people walking into a police station.
 

...co-executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said his group is trying to track down the Tarzana workers in hopes of arranging — if needed — for them to get U Visas, which give immigrant victims of certain crimes the chance to live and work legally in the U.S. if they cooperate with authorities.

“It’s terrible what happened to them,” he said. “Day laborers are subjected to these types of things. Not murder, but very weird job assignments.”
.
.
.
To the day laborers who heard the story, it felt like another indignity in a vocation that’s full of them.

“They went to the police and they didn’t listen to them,”... “We’re day laborers, we’re Hispanic and they treat us like we don’t have value to report situations like that.”...“They had to go various times to make this report before they were listened to,”... “If another day laborer hears that and finds themselves in a similar situation, what are they going to think?”
 

...co-executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said his group is trying to track down the Tarzana workers in hopes of arranging — if needed — for them to get U Visas, which give immigrant victims of certain crimes the chance to live and work legally in the U.S. if they cooperate with authorities.

“It’s terrible what happened to them,” he said. “Day laborers are subjected to these types of things. Not murder, but very weird job assignments.”
.
.
.
To the day laborers who heard the story, it felt like another indignity in a vocation that’s full of them.

“They went to the police and they didn’t listen to them,”... “We’re day laborers, we’re Hispanic and they treat us like we don’t have value to report situations like that.”...“They had to go various times to make this report before they were listened to,”... “If another day laborer hears that and finds themselves in a similar situation, what are they going to think?”
I'm so glad they are being given this offer!! Thank you for sharing!
 
Yanqing Wang had a bad feeling.

He had not heard from his sister in days, and his calls were going unanswered. Then, he went to her WeChat social media profile and discovered that all her friends and photos, dating back 10 years, had been deleted.

Where was she? What was going on?

Wang got the grim news a day later, on Nov. 8. His sister, Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her husband, Gaoshan Li, 72, were missing. The torso of their daughter, Mei Haskell, 37, had been found in a dumpster, according to authorities. And the daughter’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV, 35, was arrested on suspicion of murder.

The gruesome case has made international headlines. But for Wang, 59, and other family members, coming to terms with what happened — and why — has been impossible.

Wang said he saw no hints of problems at the Tarzana home the two couples shared. Haskell’s three children, who were at school when police got involved in the case, were found safe and are now in foster care, according to Wang.

Law enforcement sources not authorized to publicly discuss the case told The Times that they believe Haskell killed his wife and in-laws and dismembered their bodies. They say he dumped Mei’s torso in an Encino trash bin and his in-laws’ bodies somewhere else. Two vehicles that had been missing from the Haskells’ Tarzana property — a white Volkswagen Tiguan and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder — were found in the San Fernando Valley.

Wang and his extended family, many of whom live in China, are distraught. One of five siblings, Wang said he still hadn’t told his two older sisters that Yanxiang was missing and likely killed.

days,” Wang said in an interview with The Times last week. “How can he hide it so well for so long?

“If he murdered three people, he must have a deep-seated hatred,” Wang said in Mandarin, shaking his head in disbelief.

Robert Schwartz, Haskell’s lawyer, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Haskell, who remains in jail in lieu of $2-million bail, is scheduled to appear in court Friday. He has not entered a plea to any of the charges against him.

Haskell, the son of a well-known Hollywood executive, started dating Mei when the two were students at Cal State Northridge, her uncle said.

The young woman moved to the United States in the mid-2000s to study accounting; her mother and stepfather had to sell their house in China to afford her tuition. Wang, who lives in Monterey Park, started working at a local restaurant to help pay for her education.

Mei wanted her uncle to approve of her partner and introduced him to Haskell, whom Wang described as “strange” and “quiet and reserved” but also a seemingly “good guy.” He said they didn’t speak much because Wang doesn’t speak much English.

The couple married after graduation, and following the birth of their first child 13 years ago, Mei’s mother and stepfather moved from China to live with the Haskells, Wang said.

As the family grew to include two more children, Mei’s parents helped look after the kids while she worked. They all lived together in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana.

Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.

He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.

Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.

Little is known about what led up to the violence.

Inside the Haskells’ Tarzana home, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with death and dismemberment, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman said.

Authorities say Haskell first tried to dispose of human remains on Nov. 7, when he hired day laborers to remove bags from his property. The workers, who were paid $500 and initially told they were hauling away rocks, then Halloween decorations, said the bags felt soggy and soft, like meat. They quickly realized what they had loaded into the back of their truck was body parts and they hurried to return the bags — and the money — before reporting the incident, according to KNBC-TV Channel 4. But by the time police arrived, the bags were gone.

Yanqing Wang shows a picture of himself flanked by his sister Yanxiang Wang, left, and brother-in-law, Gaoshan Li. The couple and their daughter, Mei Haskell, have been missing since early November.

Yanqing Wang had a bad feeling.
He had not heard from his sister in days, and his calls were going unanswered. Then, he went to her WeChat social media profile and discovered that all her friends and photos, dating back 10 years, had been deleted.
Where was she? What was going on?
Wang got the grim news a day later, on Nov. 8. His sister, Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her husband, Gaoshan Li, 72, were missing. The torso of their daughter, Mei Haskell, 37, had been found in a dumpster, according to authorities. And the daughter’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV, 35, was arrested on suspicion of murder.

The gruesome case has made international headlines. But for Wang, 59, and other family members, coming to terms with what happened — and why — has been impossible.
Wang said he saw no hints of problems at the Tarzana home the two couples shared. Haskell’s three children, who were at school when police got involved in the case, were found safe and are now in foster care, according to Wang.

Law enforcement sources not authorized to publicly discuss the case told The Times that they believe Haskell killed his wife and in-laws and dismembered their bodies. They say he dumped Mei’s torso in an Encino trash bin and his in-laws’ bodies somewhere else. Two vehicles that had been missing from the Haskells’ Tarzana property — a white Volkswagen Tiguan and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder — were found in the San Fernando Valley.
Wang and his extended family, many of whom live in China, are distraught. One of five siblings, Wang said he still hadn’t told his two older sisters that Yanxiang was missing and likely killed.

And he’s frustrated that law enforcement hasn’t offered more answers. Wang has tried calling police and left messages, but he says no one has gotten back to him. He wonders whether a language barrier is hindering communication.
“They have been missing for 20 days,” Wang said in an interview with The Times last week. “How can he hide it so well for so long?
“If he murdered three people, he must have a deep-seated hatred,” Wang said in Mandarin, shaking his head in disbelief.

Robert Schwartz, Haskell’s lawyer, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Haskell, who remains in jail in lieu of $2-million bail, is scheduled to appear in court Friday. He has not entered a plea to any of the charges against him.
Haskell, the son of a well-known Hollywood executive, started dating Mei when the two were students at Cal State Northridge, her uncle said.
The young woman moved to the United States in the mid-2000s to study accounting; her mother and stepfather had to sell their house in China to afford her tuition. Wang, who lives in Monterey Park, started working at a local restaurant to help pay for her education.

Mei wanted her uncle to approve of her partner and introduced him to Haskell, whom Wang described as “strange” and “quiet and reserved” but also a seemingly “good guy.” He said they didn’t speak much because Wang doesn’t speak much English.
The couple married after graduation, and following the birth of their first child 13 years ago, Mei’s mother and stepfather moved from China to live with the Haskells, Wang said.
Yanqing Wang, the uncle of Mei Haskell, said he never heard of any fights between his niece and her husband, who is accused of killing Mei and her parents.

As the family grew to include two more children, Mei’s parents helped look after the kids while she worked. They all lived together in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana.
Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.
He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.

Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.

Little is known about what led up to the violence.
Inside the Haskells’ Tarzana home, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with death and dismemberment, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman said.
Authorities say Haskell first tried to dispose of human remains on Nov. 7, when he hired day laborers to remove bags from his property. The workers, who were paid $500 and initially told they were hauling away rocks, then Halloween decorations, said the bags felt soggy and soft, like meat. They quickly realized what they had loaded into the back of their truck was body parts and they hurried to return the bags — and the money — before reporting the incident, according to KNBC-TV Channel 4. But by the time police arrived, the bags were gone.

Mei Haskell, left, and her parents, Yanxiang Wang, center, and Gaoshan Li, all lived in a Tarzana home with Haskell’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV.
(Los Angeles Police Department)
Haskell later was caught on video dumping a large bag from the back of his Tesla about five miles from his home, authorities said. A man scavenging for recyclables in a dumpster in an Encino strip mall found a duffel bag containing a human torso the following morning.
Los Angeles police Capt. Scot Williams of the Robbery-Homicide Division said the torso is assumed to be that of Mei, who has not been located. But forensics will be needed to confirm the identity.
LAPD Det. Efren Gutierrez said efforts to reach the woman’s parents have also yielded no results.

Yanqing Wang shows a picture of himself flanked by his sister Yanxiang Wang, left, and brother-in-law, Gaoshan Li. The couple and their daughter, Mei Haskell, have been missing since early November.

Yanqing Wang had a bad feeling.
He had not heard from his sister in days, and his calls were going unanswered. Then, he went to her WeChat social media profile and discovered that all her friends and photos, dating back 10 years, had been deleted.
Where was she? What was going on?
Wang got the grim news a day later, on Nov. 8. His sister, Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her husband, Gaoshan Li, 72, were missing. The torso of their daughter, Mei Haskell, 37, had been found in a dumpster, according to authorities. And the daughter’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV, 35, was arrested on suspicion of murder.

The gruesome case has made international headlines. But for Wang, 59, and other family members, coming to terms with what happened — and why — has been impossible.
Wang said he saw no hints of problems at the Tarzana home the two couples shared. Haskell’s three children, who were at school when police got involved in the case, were found safe and are now in foster care, according to Wang.

Law enforcement sources not authorized to publicly discuss the case told The Times that they believe Haskell killed his wife and in-laws and dismembered their bodies. They say he dumped Mei’s torso in an Encino trash bin and his in-laws’ bodies somewhere else. Two vehicles that had been missing from the Haskells’ Tarzana property — a white Volkswagen Tiguan and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder — were found in the San Fernando Valley.
Wang and his extended family, many of whom live in China, are distraught. One of five siblings, Wang said he still hadn’t told his two older sisters that Yanxiang was missing and likely killed.

And he’s frustrated that law enforcement hasn’t offered more answers. Wang has tried calling police and left messages, but he says no one has gotten back to him. He wonders whether a language barrier is hindering communication.
“They have been missing for 20 days,” Wang said in an interview with The Times last week. “How can he hide it so well for so long?
“If he murdered three people, he must have a deep-seated hatred,” Wang said in Mandarin, shaking his head in disbelief.


Robert Schwartz, Haskell’s lawyer, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Haskell, who remains in jail in lieu of $2-million bail, is scheduled to appear in court Friday. He has not entered a plea to any of the charges against him.
Haskell, the son of a well-known Hollywood executive, started dating Mei when the two were students at Cal State Northridge, her uncle said.
The young woman moved to the United States in the mid-2000s to study accounting; her mother and stepfather had to sell their house in China to afford her tuition. Wang, who lives in Monterey Park, started working at a local restaurant to help pay for her education.

Mei wanted her uncle to approve of her partner and introduced him to Haskell, whom Wang described as “strange” and “quiet and reserved” but also a seemingly “good guy.” He said they didn’t speak much because Wang doesn’t speak much English.
The couple married after graduation, and following the birth of their first child 13 years ago, Mei’s mother and stepfather moved from China to live with the Haskells, Wang said.

Yanqing Wang, the uncle of Mei Haskell, said he never heard of any fights between his niece and her husband, who is accused of killing Mei and her parents.

As the family grew to include two more children, Mei’s parents helped look after the kids while she worked. They all lived together in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana.
Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.
He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.

Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.

Little is known about what led up to the violence.
Inside the Haskells’ Tarzana home, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with death and dismemberment, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman said.
Authorities say Haskell first tried to dispose of human remains on Nov. 7, when he hired day laborers to remove bags from his property. The workers, who were paid $500 and initially told they were hauling away rocks, then Halloween decorations, said the bags felt soggy and soft, like meat. They quickly realized what they had loaded into the back of their truck was body parts and they hurried to return the bags — and the money — before reporting the incident, according to KNBC-TV Channel 4. But by the time police arrived, the bags were gone.

Mei Haskell, left, and her parents, Yanxiang Wang, center, and Gaoshan Li, all lived in a Tarzana home with Haskell’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV.
(Los Angeles Police Department)
Haskell later was caught on video dumping a large bag from the back of his Tesla about five miles from his home, authorities said. A man scavenging for recyclables in a dumpster in an Encino strip mall found a duffel bag containing a human torso the following morning.
Los Angeles police Capt. Scot Williams of the Robbery-Homicide Division said the torso is assumed to be that of Mei, who has not been located. But forensics will be needed to confirm the identity.
LAPD Det. Efren Gutierrez said efforts to reach the woman’s parents have also yielded no results.

Mei and her parents continue to be the focus of intense search efforts. Williams said police have scoured “all the places we believe [Haskell] may have gone in the days leading up to his arrest.”
But Deputy Dist. Atty. Silverman thinks the three are dead and said Haskell disposed of their bodies. “He had several days and drove through Los Angeles County,” she added.

Silverman said earlier this month that no other bags containing body parts or remains have been recovered.
“But I don’t need a body to charge a murder,” the prosecutor said.
 
Oops my bad copy and paste went wrong here is the story..
.
Dumped body parts, a missing couple, abandoned kids: Horror, mystery inside Tarzana home

Yanqing Wang had a bad feeling
He had not heard from his sister in days, and his calls were going unanswered. Then, he went to her WeChat social media profile and discovered that all her friends and photos, dating back 10 years, had been deleted.

Where was she? What was going on?
Wang got the grim news a day later, on Nov. 8. His sister, Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her husband, Gaoshan Li, 72, were missing. The torso of their daughter, Mei Haskell, 37, had been found in a dumpster, according to authorities. And the daughter’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV, 35, was arrested on suspicion of murder.

The gruesome case has made international headlines. But for Wang, 59, and other family members, coming to terms with what happened — and why — has been impossible.

Wang said he saw no hints of problems at the Tarzana home the two couples shared. Haskell’s three children, who were at school when police got involved in the case, were found safe and are now in foster care, according to Wang.

Law enforcement sources not authorized to publicly discuss the case told The Times that they believe Haskell killed his wife and in-laws and dismembered their bodies. They say he dumped Mei’s torso in an Encino trash bin and his in-laws’ bodies somewhere else. Two vehicles that had been missing from the Haskells’ Tarzana property — a white Volkswagen Tiguan and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder — were found in the San Fernando Valley.

Wang and his extended family, many of whom live in China, are distraught. One of five siblings, Wang said he still hadn’t told his two older sisters that Yanxiang was missing and likely killed.

And he’s frustrated that law enforcement hasn’t offered more answers. Wang has tried calling police and left messages, but he says no one has gotten back to him. He wonders whether a language barrier is hindering communication.

“They have been missing for 20 days,” Wang said in an interview with The Times last week. “How can he hide it so well for so long?

“If he murdered three people, he must have a deep-seated hatred,” Wang said in Mandarin, shaking his head in disbelief.

Robert Schwartz, Haskell’s lawyer, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Haskell, who remains in jail in lieu of $2-million bail, is scheduled to appear in court Friday. He has not entered a plea to any of the charges against him.

Haskell, the son of a well-known Hollywood executive, started dating Mei when the two were students at Cal State Northridge, her uncle said.

The young woman moved to the United States in the mid-2000s to study accounting; her mother and stepfather had to sell their house in China to afford her tuition. Wang, who lives in Monterey Park, started working at a local restaurant to help pay for her education.

Mei wanted her uncle to approve of her partner and introduced him to Haskell, whom Wang described as “strange” and “quiet and reserved” but also a seemingly “good guy.” He said they didn’t speak much because Wang doesn’t speak much English.

The couple married after graduation, and following the birth of their first child 13 years ago, Mei’s mother and stepfather moved from China to live with the Haskells, Wang said.

As the family grew to include two more children, Mei’s parents helped look after the kids while she worked. They all lived together in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana.

Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.

He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.

Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.

Little is known about what led up to the violence.

Inside the Haskells’ Tarzana home, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with death and dismemberment, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman said.

Authorities say Haskell first tried to dispose of human remains on Nov. 7, when he hired day laborers to remove bags from his property. The workers, who were paid $500 and initially told they were hauling away rocks, then Halloween decorations, said the bags felt soggy and soft, like meat. They quickly realized what they had loaded into the back of their truck was body parts and they hurried to return the bags — and the money — before reporting the incident, according to KNBC-TV Channel 4. But by the time police arrived, the bags were gone.

Haskell later was caught on video dumping a large bag from the back of his Tesla about five miles from his home, authorities said. A man scavenging for recyclables in a dumpster in an Encino strip mall found a duffel bag containing a human torso the following morning.

Los Angeles police Capt. Scot Williams of the Robbery-Homicide Division said the torso is assumed to be that of Mei, who has not been located. But forensics will be needed to confirm the identity.

LAPD Det. Efren Gutierrez said efforts to reach the woman’s parents have also yielded no results.

Mei and her parents continue to be the focus of intense search efforts. Williams said police have scoured “all the places we believe [Haskell] may have gone in the days leading up to his arrest.”

But Deputy Dist. Atty. Silverman thinks the three are dead and said Haskell disposed of their bodies. “He had several days and drove through Los Angeles County,” she added.

Silverman said earlier this month that no other bags containing body parts or remains have been recovered.

“But I don’t need a body to charge a murder,” the prosecutor said.
 
Oops my bad copy and paste went wrong here is the story..

Dumped body parts, a missing couple, abandoned kids: Horror, mystery inside Tarzana home
Yanqing Wang had a bad feeling.

He had not heard from his sister in days, and his calls were going unanswered. Then, he went to her WeChat social media profile and discovered that all her friends and photos, dating back 10 years, had been deleted.

Where was she? What was going on?

Wang got the grim news a day later, on Nov. 8. His sister, Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her husband, Gaoshan Li, 72, were missing. The torso of their daughter, Mei Haskell, 37, had been found in a dumpster, according to authorities. And the daughter’s husband, Samuel Bond Haskell IV, 35, was arrested on suspicion of murder.


The gruesome case has made international headlines. But for Wang, 59, and other family members, coming to terms with what happened — and why — has been impossible.



Wang said he saw no hints of problems at the Tarzana home the two couples shared. Haskell’s three children, who were at school when police got involved in the case, were found safe and are now in foster care, according to Wang.


Law enforcement sources not authorized to publicly discuss the case told The Times that they believe Haskell killed his wife and in-laws and dismembered their bodies. They say he dumped Mei’s torso in an Encino trash bin and his in-laws’ bodies somewhere else. Two vehicles that had been missing from the Haskells’ Tarzana property — a white Volkswagen Tiguan and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder — were found in the San Fernando Valley.



Wang and his extended family, many of whom live in China, are distraught. One of five siblings, Wang said he still hadn’t told his two older sisters that Yanxiang was missing and likely killed.



And he’s frustrated that law enforcement hasn’t offered more answers. Wang has tried calling police and left messages, but he says no one has gotten back to him. He wonders whether a language barrier is hindering communication.



“They have been missing for 20 days,” Wang said in an interview with The Times last week. “How can he hide it so well for so long?



“If he murdered three people, he must have a deep-seated hatred,” Wang said in Mandarin, shaking his head in disbelief.



Robert Schwartz, Haskell’s lawyer, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Haskell, who remains in jail in lieu of $2-million bail, is scheduled to appear in court Friday. He has not entered a plea to any of the charges against him.


Haskell, the son of a well-known Hollywood executive, started dating Mei when the two were students at Cal State Northridge, her uncle said.



The young woman moved to the United States in the mid-2000s to study accounting; her mother and stepfather had to sell their house in China to afford her tuition. Wang, who lives in Monterey Park, started working at a local restaurant to help pay for her education.


Mei wanted her uncle to approve of her partner and introduced him to Haskell, whom Wang described as “strange” and “quiet and reserved” but also a seemingly “good guy.” He said they didn’t speak much because Wang doesn’t speak much English.



The couple married after graduation, and following the birth of their first child 13 years ago, Mei’s mother and stepfather moved from China to live with the Haskells, Wang said.



As the family grew to include two more children, Mei’s parents helped look after the kids while she worked. They all lived together in a single-story home in the 4100 block of Coldstream Terrace in Tarzana.



Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.



He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.


Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.


Little is known about what led up to the violence.

Inside the Haskells’ Tarzana home, detectives discovered blood and other evidence consistent with death and dismemberment, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman said.



Authorities say Haskell first tried to dispose of human remains on Nov. 7, when he hired day laborers to remove bags from his property. The workers, who were paid $500 and initially told they were hauling away rocks, then Halloween decorations, said the bags felt soggy and soft, like meat. They quickly realized what they had loaded into the back of their truck was body parts and they hurried to return the bags — and the money — before reporting the incident, according to KNBC-TV Channel 4. But by the time police arrived, the bags were gone.


Haskell later was caught on video dumping a large bag from the back of his Tesla about five miles from his home, authorities said. A man scavenging for recyclables in a dumpster in an Encino strip mall found a duffel bag containing a human torso the following morning.



Los Angeles police Capt. Scot Williams of the Robbery-Homicide Division said the torso is assumed to be that of Mei, who has not been located. But forensics will be needed to confirm the identity.



LAPD Det. Efren Gutierrez said efforts to reach the woman’s parents have also yielded no results.



Mei and her parents continue to be the focus of intense search efforts. Williams said police have scoured “all the places we believe [Haskell] may have gone in the days leading up to his arrest.”



But Deputy Dist. Atty. Silverman thinks the three are dead and said Haskell disposed of their bodies. “He had several days and drove through Los Angeles County,” she added.



Silverman said earlier this month that no other bags containing body parts or remains have been recovered.



“But I don’t need a body to charge a murder,” the prosecutor said.
I think SH must have been getting money from his parents as well. There's no way that Mei could have worked enough to pay 7k monthly mortgage, expenses for 3 kids, food for family of 7, utilities for 7, and in LA the water and electric bill is VERY high, 3 cars, including a new Tesla, clothing, weekly private violin lessons---they'd need about 10 to 12 k a month----SOMEBODY was helping her pay the monthly bills, if SH wasn't working.IMO
 
Although Wang never heard of any fights between the couple or any talk of divorce, he said his sister complained that Mei was the only one paying for their $7,000-a-month mortgage and that Haskell hadn’t offered financial support when they were looking to buy a house three years ago.

He said his sister had a stroke a few years ago, which made it more difficult for her to walk. But she still did a lot of the cooking and cleaning, as well as looking after the children.

Meanwhile, to afford their monthly house payments, Wang said Mei had to work multiple jobs, including at a consulting business for families who want their children to study in the United States.

Mei and her parents continue to be the focus of intense search efforts. Williams said police have scoured “all the places we believe [Haskell] may have gone in the days leading up to his arrest.”

But Deputy Dist. Atty. Silverman thinks the three are dead and said Haskell disposed of their bodies. “He had several days and drove through Los Angeles County,” she added.

Silverman said earlier this month that no other bags containing body parts or remains have been recovered.

“But I don’t need a body to charge a murder,” the prosecutor said.
 
I think SH must have been getting money from his parents as well. There's no way that Mei could have worked enough to pay 7k monthly mortgage, expenses for 3 kids, food for family of 7, utilities for 7, and in LA the water and electric bill is VERY high, 3 cars, including a new Tesla, clothing, weekly private violin lessons---they'd need about 10 to 12 k a month----SOMEBODY was helping her pay the monthly bills, if SH wasn't working.IMO
I agree the family finances were likely supported by the perp's dad, but no doubt that Mei was one hard-working wife, mother, and daughter. Seems like she was the pillar that held the family stability.

jmo
 
It's sad to see in that article that the kids are 'in foster care.' I hope that just means they are with family now but still under CPS care until things are finalised.

I'm still very curious about 2 things----How did LE know he was at the Westfield Mall when they went and arrested him?
And what was he doing there?

I guess maybe they tracked his phone?
 
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It's sad to see in that article that the kids are 'in foster care.' I hope that just means they are with family now but still under CPS care until things are finalised.

I'm still very curious about 2 things----How did LE know he was at the Westfield Mall when they went and arrested him?
And what was he doing there?

I guess maybe they tracked his phone?
I cannot say but if you've seen SHs' TikTok, you will see that he seems to go to malls and restaurants a lot, it's kinda weird imo.
 
I think SH must have been getting money from his parents as well. There's no way that Mei could have worked enough to pay 7k monthly mortgage, expenses for 3 kids, food for family of 7, utilities for 7, and in LA the water and electric bill is VERY high, 3 cars, including a new Tesla, clothing, weekly private violin lessons---they'd need about 10 to 12 k a month----SOMEBODY was helping her pay the monthly bills, if SH wasn't working.IMO
NM deleted
 
I think SH must have been getting money from his parents as well. There's no way that Mei could have worked enough to pay 7k monthly mortgage, expenses for 3 kids, food for family of 7, utilities for 7, and in LA the water and electric bill is VERY high, 3 cars, including a new Tesla, clothing, weekly private violin lessons---they'd need about 10 to 12 k a month----SOMEBODY was helping her pay the monthly bills, if SH wasn't working.IMO
Yes, it's a very expensive area. My father's house- less than 2 miles away- sold unflipped (and it needed a lot of reno) for $1million.
 
“I cannot believe it,” YanQing Wang said. “For the last month since learning the news I could not sleep I could only sleep for one hour, less than one hour. I have nightmares.”

“I’m very confused, first the news reported that Sam is being charged with the murder, but the police never give me an answer as whereabout are my sister and my brother-in-law,” Wang said. “My sister had a stroke and she could not walk. And why anyone would do something and hurt an old lady who is suffering physical illness I do not understand.”
 

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