From the "Daily Breeze" newpaper. Finally!
A 45-year-old woman on Monday, July 1, was ordered to stand trial on murder and robbery charges concerning
the stabbing death of a retired nurse in the parking structure of a Rolling Hills Estates mall in 2018 by a judge who ruled prosecutors had presented enough evidence against her during a four-day hearing in Torrance Superior Court.
After prosecutors presented a mostly circumstantial case against Cherie Lynnette Townsend, Judge Alan B. Honeycutt ruled the case could move forward.
Townsend’s public defender, Elizabeth Landgraf, had argued for a dismissal of the charges, saying prosecutors did not present enough evidence to show that it was more probable than not that Townsend committed the crimes.
Townsend is accused of stabbing 66-year-old Susan Leeds, who was in the driver’s seat of her SUV at the Promenade on the Peninsula mall, 17 times in the neck and upper body on May 3, 2018. Just before 12:15 p.m., Leeds had returned to the parking structure after picking up to-go food from Rubio’s, according to evidence presented during the hearing.
Leeds also had a wound on her left index finger, indicating she may have tried to defend herself, said Dr. Paul Gliniecki, a deputy medical examiner.
Los Angeles County sheriff’s officials have said they believed it was a random robbery, though detectives who took the stand on Friday acknowledged Leeds’ checkbook was found in her passenger seat that day as well as some credit cards. They also said they never found evidence of anyone attempting to use Leeds’ credit cards, gift cards or financial accounts after she was killed.