Jury Finds Son Guilty of Second Degree Murder in Father's
Killing
By Lookout Staff
Oct. 30 -- Santa Monica resident Albert Victor White, 44, was
found guilty of second degree murder Wednesday for bludgeoning his 77-year-old
father to death earlier this year.
After deliberating for 12 hours the jury unanimously convicted White
of killing his father, Pranas "Frank" Brazinskas, by striking
him more than eight times on the head with a barbell during an altercation
at their apartment in the Wilshire/Montana neighborhood on February 5.
The 12 jurors concluded that the murder was not premeditated and found
White, who also goes by the name Algridas Brazinskas, guilty of the lesser
charge of second degree murder, which carries a minimum penalty of 15
years in prison.
White, who claimed self-defense, pleaded not guilty back in February.
The defense argued that White had acted in self-defense after his father
threatened him with a loaded pistol.
The first of seven homicides this year, Brazinskas' murder made headlines
because of the father and son's role in an international highjacking that
garnered media attention more than 30 years earlier.
A member of the Lithuanian resistance movement, Brazinskas, along with
his then 13-year-old son, hijacked a Soviet jetliner in Southern Russia
during a regularly scheduled flight from Batumi to Krasnodar in 1970.
A gun battle ensued on the jet between the pair and two Soviet guards
that resulted in the death of flight attendant Nadezhda Kurchenko and
the wounding of the plane's pilot and co-pilot who landed the jet in Turkey.
After prison time in Turkey the men traveled to Venezuela and flew to
Canada. During in stopover in New York, they disappeared but were discovered
several weeks later. Ultimately the two were allowed to stay in the states
and settled in Santa Monica.
Sentencing is scheduled for December 6.
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