Its a damn shame things like this happen..i personally know the girl Matsuda struck the bat and of course that really angers me but to kill the man is another story..
http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/83823052.html
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. -- Police have made an arrest in the beating death of a man over the weekend, and investigators are looking for at least one more suspect.
Blayne Allen Clifford, 19, was booked into Kern County Jail early Monday, according to a police news release. Court records show he is tentatively set for arraignment Tuesday for one count of first-degree murder.
Patrick Matsuda, 40, was beaten to death early Sunday on the 4300 block of Whitegate Avenue, near the corner of McKee and Akers.
Matsuda had apparently gone across the street to complain about a loud party. Neighbors said the house with the weekend party had been the scene of a lot of noise and commotion in the past months.
A neighbor who didn't want to be identified said the people in the house would fix cars and trucks in the garage and driveway, hold the loud parties and had a lot of people coming and going.
"They have parties all the weekends," the neighbor said Monday morning. "Every time, they were noisy and annoying."
This neighbor also said she had been worried about the situation.
"I have little ones, and I work, my husband does also, and sometimes they have to walk to school, and I don't feel safe with those kinds of neighbors," she said.
Early Sunday morning,
police said Matsuda approached a man and woman outside the neighbor's home.
In a news release Monday afternoon,
police said Matsuda hit the man in the face during the argument. Matsuda also hit the woman when she intervened, police said.
The male partygoer, whose name was withheld, ran inside the house for backup, police said. That's when other partygoers, including Clifford, reportedly went after Matsuda.
The fight escalated, with
Matsuda reportedly getting a baseball bat from his garage and
the partygoers then getting two bats from their house.
Matsuda chased the partygoers back across the street, striking a woman on the arm with his bat in the process, police said.
An unidentified man then hit Matsuda in the head with a bat, and Clifford allegedly started hitting Matsuda with a bat as Matsuda lay on the ground. Other partygoers are accused of hitting and kicking him as he lay on the ground.
The autopsy also revealed Matsuda was stabbed.
All of the partygoers ran away before police arrived. Investigators are trying to identify the other partygoer who is accused of hitting Matsuda with a bat. He's described as a white or Hispanic man in his early 20s who is about 5-foot-10 and 160 pounds with short hair, a possible goatee and tattoos on his arms and neck.
The investigation into the roles of other partygoers is continuing, as well.
Police told Eyewitness News the house had been rented by Clifford and his father.
U.S. Distressed Mortgage Fund now has ownership of the house. A spokesperson told Eyewitness News the company had recently acquired the property through auction, and it had started proceedings to evict the current occupants.
On Monday, a "no occupancy" noticed was posted by Bakersfield Code Compliance. An officer said when they found the windows broken out, they ordered the windows boarded up. No one can live in the house until the boards can be removed and the windows repaired.
Police said they got a 911 call from the victim's wife at 2:28 a.m. on Sunday, and that's when police cars were sent out. Sgt. Mary DeGeare said officers reached the scene at 2:32 a.m.
DeGeare said it can take officers a while to respond to loud party complaints -- especially on the weekends -- but this call had become more than that, and the response time reflects that.
"We were there within a matter of four minutes, because there was a 911 call, and a woman was reporting that her husband was being assaulted," DeGeare said.
Asked what neighbors should do when there's a loud party or disturbance near their homes, DeGeare has strong advice.
"We would recommend that people call the police and let the police come out, and break up the party," DeGeare said.