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Juan Corona
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Juan Vallejo Corona (February 7, 1934 – March 4, 2019) was a Mexican serial killer who was convicted of the murders of 25 transient laborers found buried in peach orchards along the Feather River in Sutter County, California, in 1971. Corona was considered the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history until the discovery of Dean Corll's crimes two years later.[1] He remains the most prolific serial killer in the state of California.[2]

Key Information

Corona was convicted of 25 counts of first-degree murder in 1973. An appellate court overturned the conviction in 1978 on the basis of incompetent legal representation and granted him a new trial. In 1982, he was again found guilty on all counts. He served a life sentence in California State Prison, Corcoran, and died in 2019.

Early life

[edit]

Juan Corona was born in Ayutla, Jalisco, Mexico, on February 7, 1934.[3] He first illegally entered the United States through the California border in 1950 at age 16, following the footsteps of his four brothers and one sister.[4][5] He picked carrots and melons in the Imperial Valley for three months before moving on north to the Sacramento Valley.[6] His half-brother, José Natividad Corona Sánchez, later attacked a man with a machete-like weapon in Marysville and after losing the lawsuit, fled back to his native Mexico.[5][7] Corona was a Catholic and went to St. Isadore's Roman Catholic Church.[5]

In May 1953, Corona moved to the Marysville-Yuba City area at the suggestion of Natividad, finding work on a local ranch. He was first married to Gabriella E. Hermosillo on October 24, 1953, in Reno, Nevada.[8] In 1958, he married Gloria I. Moreno, and they had four daughters, Martha, Victoria, Yolanda and Guadalupe.[5]

Mental illness

[edit]

In January 1956, after what was thought to be a schizophrenic episode,[9] Natividad had Corona committed to DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn, California, where he was diagnosed with "schizophrenic reaction, paranoid type."[10] He received 23 electroconvulsive therapy sessions before he was declared recovered and released three months later. He was deported to Mexico upon his release.[10][11]

In 1962, Corona was given a green card and returned to the United States legally, where he was regarded as a hard worker with schizophrenic episodes and a violent temper. He became a licensed labor contractor, in charge of hiring fruit ranch workers.[12] In March 1970, he was again admitted to Dewitt for treatment. In March 1971, he applied for and was denied welfare.[5]

Evidence

[edit]

On May 19, 1971, a farm owner who had used Corona to contract field workers noticed a freshly dug hole in his peach orchard,[13] which was filled the next day. In the hole was the body of a man who had been stabbed and hacked.[14]

In one grave, deputies found two meat receipts bearing Corona's signature.[15] In another two graves, there were two crumpled Bank of America deposit slips printed with Corona's name and address. This circumstantial evidence supported their case.[16]

Witnesses later told police that some of the victims had been last seen riding in Corona's pickup truck.[17]

In the early morning hours of May 26, 1971, police entered Corona's Yuba City home with a search warrant and arrested him.[18] Evidence indicating his guilt was discovered and seized, such as two bloodstained knives, a machete, a pistol, and blood-stained clothing. There was also a work ledger that contained 34 names and dates, including seven of the known victims. The ledger came to be referred to as a "death list" by the prosecution, who alleged it recorded the dates the men were murdered.[19]

Corona had been supplying workers to the ranches where the victims were discovered. Most of the victims were discovered on the Sullivan Ranch, which had a bunkhouse where Corona housed many of the men who worked for him.

Victims

[edit]

All of Corona's victims were middle-aged Caucasian male drifters between the ages of 40 and 64; most of them had criminal records, and all but one were stabbed or slashed with a knife or machete.

Victims (charged)
Number Name Age Death Date Method of Killing
1 John Joseph Haluka 52 February 25 – May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
2 Sigurd E. "Pete" Beierman 62 February 25 – May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
3 John Doe (4th victim found) Unknown February 25 – May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
4 John Doe (7th victim found) Unknown February 25 – May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
5 William Emery Kamp 62 February 26 – May 12, 1971 Shot in the head w/ a 9mm.
6 Clarence Hocking 53 February 26 – May 12, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
7 John Doe (10th victim found) Unknown February 26 – May 12, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
8 John Doe (12th victim found) Unknown February 26 – May 12, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
9 Albert Leon "Scratchy" Hayes 58 February 27 – May 13, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
10 Warren Jerome Kelley 62 c. March 30, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
11 John Henry Jackson 64 May 3–14, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
12 Joseph J. Maczak 54 April 26 – May 21, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
13 Mark Beverly Shields 56 c. April 28, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
14 Donald Dale "Red" Smith 60 April 30 – May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
15 James Wylie Howard 64 May 1–13, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
16 Sam Bonafiede (a.k.a. Joe Carriveau) 55 c. May 6, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
17 Edward Martin Cupp 43 May 9–13, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
18 Charles Levy Fleming 67 c. May 11, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
19 Jonah Raggio Smallwood 56 c. May 12, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
20 Elbert J.T. Riley 45 c. May 12, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
21 Lloyd Wallace Wenztel 60 May 14–22, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
22 Paul Buel Allen 59 c. May 15, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
23 Raymond Reand Muchache 47 c. May 18, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
24 Kenneth Edward Whitacre 40 c. May 19, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
25 Melford Everett Sample 59 c. May 21, 1971 Stabbed/slashed w/ a knife or machete.
[edit]

Corona was provided legal aid and assigned a public defender, Roy Van den Heuvel, who hired several psychiatrists to perform a psychological evaluation. Although the sheriff, Roy Whiteaker, said the prisoner was in no apparent or immediate danger from his fellow townsmen, Corona was moved to the new and larger county jail in Marysville on May 30, 1971, for "security reasons."[20]

On June 2, Corona was returned to Sutter County for arraignment, which was closed to the media and public. A plea of not guilty was entered, and a date was set for Corona's preliminary hearing.[21]

By the time the search was terminated on June 4, a total of 25 male victims had been discovered. Four of them were unidentified.

On June 14, Van den Heuvel was replaced by Richard Hawk, a privately retained defense attorney.[22] In return for his legal representation, an agreement was made granting Hawk exclusive literary and dramatic property rights to the defendant's life story, including the proceedings against him. Under the agreement, Corona waived the attorney–client privilege. Shortly after taking over the defense, and even before seeing Corona's medical record or reading any of the reports, Hawk decided against having him plead not guilty by reason of insanity and fired the psychiatrists.[23]

Corona complained of chest pain from his cell in Yuba City on June 18 and was taken to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with having had a mild heart attack.[24] The grand jury returned a 25-count murder indictment against him on July 12.[25] In early August, Corona was hospitalized again after complaining of chest pain and saying he had not been able to sleep because of it.[26]

Trial

[edit]

It took over a year after the murders were discovered for the case against Corona to come to trial. The California Supreme Court voided the death penalty in the state on February 18, 1972, ruling it unconstitutional, cruel, and unusual.[27] Therefore, it would not be a capital case. Hawk succeeded in getting a change of venue from Sutter County to Solano County.

The trial began on September 11, 1972, at the courthouse in Fairfield, California, more than 60 miles (97 km) from Yuba City. Jury selection took several weeks, and the trial took another three months.[28]

Though Corona denied culpability, he was not called to the stand to testify in his own defense, and no defense witnesses were called. The jury deliberated for 45 hours and returned a verdict on January 18, 1973, finding Corona guilty of first-degree murder on all 25 counts charged.[29] The judge, Richard Patton, sentenced Corona to 25 terms of life imprisonment, to run consecutively, without the possibility of parole.[30] Despite being sentenced to so many consecutive terms, the Department of Corrections said that Corona would be eligible for parole in seven years, citing Section 669 of the penal code, which mandates that when a crime is punished by life imprisonment, with or without the possibility of parole, then all other convictions shall be merged and run concurrently.[31]

Second trial

[edit]

On May 18, 1978, the California Court of Appeal granted Juan Corona a new trial based on his appeal and petition for the writ of habeas corpus filed by his lawyers, Alan Exelrod and Michael Mendelson. The Appeals Court based its decision on two primary issues raised by appellate counsel: first, trial counsel did not do the requisite legal and factual investigations required; and second, trial counsel's obtaining publication rights as part of his fee created an impermissible conflict between trial counsel and Corona.[citation needed]

The second trial began on February 22, 1982, in Hayward, California.[32] Corona's defense posited that the real murderer of the ranch workers was most likely his brother, Natividad Corona, a known homosexual who was accused of attacking Romero Raya with a machete-like weapon at his cafe in Marysville and, after losing the lawsuit Raya filed, had fled back to his native Mexico.[7][5] Natividad had died in 1973 in Guadalajara.[33]

This time, more than 50 defense witnesses were called to the stand by Terrence Hallinan. Corona was called in his own defense. He was asked only two questions through an interpreter, taking only two minutes. "Do you understand the state has accused you of killing 25 men?" "Yes," Corona answered, almost inaudibly. "Did you have anything to do with killing those men?" "No," Corona replied. Hallinan then turned Corona over to the prosecutor, Ronald Fahey, for cross-examination. Startled prosecution attorneys requested a brief recess to gather their wits and prepare some of the more than 630 exhibits for their cross.[34] Later, Fahey questioned Corona about the various vans and cars he used at the ranch where he worked and lived and where some weapons were found.

Corona in 2018

The trial lasted seven months. Corona was again convicted of the crimes on September 23, 1982, and returned to prison after the strategy failed to persuade the jury, which deliberated for 54 hours over a two-week period, of his innocence. Afterward, the foreman told the press that the most incriminating piece of evidence against Corona was his work ledger, for which the labor contractor had "no reasonable explanation."[35] He said the jury had dismissed the defense's contention that Natividad committed the murders. "He wasn't in Marysville enough to have committed the bulk of the killings," he said.[36]

Imprisonment and death

[edit]

Corona was first incarcerated at Vacaville's California Medical Facility, nine miles (14 km) from Fairfield, because of the heart irregularities. In December 1973, he was stabbed 32 times in his cell, lost his left eye, and had a blade permanently lodged behind his right eye because he had bumped into a fellow inmate in a corridor and failed to say "excuse me." Of the five men questioned, including the one involved in the bumping incident, one identified as the bumped man's sexual partner, and three inmates identified as friends of the partner, four were charged with assault with a deadly weapon.[37][38][39]

Corona was transferred to Correctional Training Facility (CTF), in Soledad, California. In 1974 his wife filed for divorce,[40] which was granted on July 30.[41] In 1992, Corona was transferred from CTF to Corcoran State Prison.[42] It was reported in 1998 that Corona was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.[43][44] He was denied parole eight times.[12] During a 2011 parole hearing, Corona admitted to the murders, saying that the victims were "winos" who had been trespassing on his property.[3][44][45] However, at a parole hearing in 2016, Corona said he could not recall committing the murders.[46]

On March 4, 2019, Corona died from natural causes at the age of 85, at a hospital near Corcoran State Prison.[4][47]

[edit]
  • Lyvia’s House, (film), Stonecutter Media, 2023. The film's sub-plot references a fictionalised version of the murders.[48]

See also

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References

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Further reading

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Juan Vallejo Corona (1934 – March 4, 2019) was a Mexican-born farm labor contractor convicted of 25 counts of first-degree murder for killing transient male farm workers in , during early 1971. The victims' bodies, numbering 25, were unearthed in shallow graves across peach and almond orchards near Yuba City between May and June 1971, each showing signs of binding, , and fatal wounds from or machete hacks to the head and chest. Corona, who had immigrated illegally from in 1950 and later obtained legal status, supplied laborers to local ranchers and was arrested in June 1971 after evidence including bloodied weapons and receipts linked him to the sites. Tried in Colusa County, he was convicted in and sentenced to 25 concurrent life terms, though the verdict was overturned in 1978 due to ineffective counsel; a 1982 retrial in Alameda County reaffirmed the convictions and sentence. Denied parole multiple times, Corona died of natural causes at age 85 while incarcerated at California State Prison-Corcoran.

Early Life and Background

Childhood and Family Origins in

Juan Vallejo Corona was born on February 7, 1934, in Autlán, a rural town in the state of , . He grew up in modest circumstances typical of many in the region, with limited public records detailing his immediate family beyond the mention of older brothers Natividad and Felix, who later influenced his path by migrating northward. Corona's family origins reflect the socioeconomic challenges faced by working-class Mexicans in mid-20th-century , an area known for and migration pressures, though specific details about his parents or precise household dynamics remain sparsely documented in available accounts. By his mid-teens, familial connections to opportunities abroad prompted his own departure from around , marking the end of his formative years there.

Immigration to the United States

Juan Vallejo Corona, born on February 7, 1934, in Autlán, Jalisco, , immigrated to the illegally in 1950 at the age of 16. Following the path of his older brothers Natividad and Felix, who had already crossed into , Corona slipped across the U.S.- border to seek opportunities in agricultural labor, arriving penniless and without formal documentation. Upon entry, Corona settled in the Yuba City area of California's , a hub for seasonal farm work that attracted many Mexican migrants during the mid-20th century. He initially took low-wage positions as a fruit picker and general laborer, navigating the challenges of undocumented status amid the era, which formalized some migrant labor but excluded many like Corona who entered surreptitiously. This illegal entry marked the beginning of his long-term residence in the U.S., where he gradually built connections within the itinerant worker community without apparent pursuit of legal immigration pathways at the time.

Pre-Crime Life in California

Employment and Role as Labor Contractor

Juan Vallejo Corona operated as a farm labor contractor in , primarily supplying itinerant workers to peach and fruit orchards in the Yuba City area during the late and early . He recruited transient laborers, including homeless individuals and alcoholics from nearby towns such as Marysville and Yuba City, transporting them to job sites via his and managing their placement on ranches. Corona's involved deducting a 10% commission from workers' wages, in addition to charging fees for in labor camps he oversaw, which generated him an estimated annual income of around $20,000. He maintained contracts with specific ranch owners, most notably Walter Sullivan of the Sullivan Ranch, where many of the later-discovered victims had been employed under his recruitment; ranchers generally viewed him favorably compared to other contractors, citing his reliability in providing labor during harvest seasons. His brother also worked as a contractor at the nearby Berg Ranch, though Juan's operations centered on independent recruitment rather than formal employment by a single farm. This role positioned Corona as an intermediary in the local migrant agricultural workforce, a common practice in California's Central Valley fruit industry at the time, where contractors bridged ranchers' needs with available transient labor.

Family Life and Relationships

Juan Vallejo Corona married Gloria I. Moreno on an unspecified date in 1958 at the Our Lady of Guadalupe Roman Catholic chapel in Live Oak, California. The couple had four daughters: Martha (born 1960), Victoria, Yolanda, and Guadalupe. In November 1968, the family moved into a $20,500 cream-colored stucco house at 768 Richland Road in Yuba City, having previously resided in a small rented frame house in Live Oak. Gloria Corona spoke limited English and maintained a protective home environment, restricting the daughters to their walled-in backyard. Corona had been previously married to Gabriella E. Hermosillo in 1953, ending in divorce by 1956. The Corona family presented an outwardly stable image, with Corona supporting them through his work as a labor contractor for migrant farm workers. Following Corona's 1973 conviction, Gloria filed for divorce in 1974, finalized while he was imprisoned. She later testified as a prosecution witness in his 1982 retrial.

Documented Mental Health Episodes and Medical History

In 1955, Corona experienced a violent episode during which he chased his sister-in-law with a , leading to his commitment to a mental institution where he was diagnosed with paranoid . He underwent electroconvulsive shock therapy and was subsequently released after being deemed cured. Corona's medical records indicated a dating back to at least 1956, with documented symptoms including and violent tendencies potentially exacerbated by the disorder. In late 1970, approximately one year before the murders for which he was convicted, Corona was hospitalized for psychiatric treatment amid recurring issues, consistent with his prior diagnosis. During pretrial evaluations and the 1973 trial, psychiatrists reviewed Corona's mental history, confirming the presence of , though the defense elected not to pursue an insanity plea or present it as a , instead focusing on other aspects of the case. Appellate records later referenced this history, including paranoid schizophrenia, but upheld the conviction on grounds of sanity at the time of the offenses. No further documented episodes were reported post-conviction, though his condition was noted in prison medical oversight until his death in 2019.

The 1971 Murders

Discovery of the Bodies

On May 26, 1971, Sutter County Sheriff's deputies discovered the first body while investigating reports of stolen firearms and an illegal garbage dump on a off Larkin Road owned by Goro Kagchiro, near . The remains belonged to Kenneth Whitacre, a 50-year-old transient , who had been bludgeoned and stabbed, with defensive wounds evident on his body, and buried in a shallow grave. This find prompted expanded searches across nearby peach and prune orchards, including the J.L. Sullivan Ranch, where a had reported a suspicious hole a few days earlier. By May 28, three additional bodies had been exhumed, raising the count to four, with further excavations under floodlights continuing over the next two weeks despite challenges from seasonal flooding and orchard needs. One early grave contained two meat receipts dated May 21, 1971, initialed "Juan V. Corona," which drew initial investigative attention. Searches ultimately uncovered 25 bodies in total by early June 1971, all male transient farmworkers aged 40 to 68, primarily buried face-up in shallow graves with arms extended, showing consistent patterns of severe head trauma from machete-like weapons and stab wounds to the chest. The victims included 22 white men, two men, and one Native American, with most identified as itinerant "fruit tramps" from the Marysville-Yuba City area; some graves featured partially undressed bodies or untied shoes, suggesting post-mortem disturbances. Excavations ceased after 25 recoveries, as no further graves were located amid the agricultural terrain.

Victim Profiles and Identification

The victims in the Juan Corona case were 25 men whose bodies were discovered buried in shallow graves on fruit orchards and river-bottom land near , primarily between May 19 and June 4, 1971. They shared a common profile as itinerant, transient laborers, many of whom were recruited by Corona himself as a farm labor contractor for seasonal peach-thinning and prune-picking work in the . Most were middle-aged to elderly men, ranging in age from approximately 40 to 68, often described as social outcasts, alcoholics, or "winos" who lived in makeshift or flophouses and were not immediately reported missing due to their marginal lifestyles and lack of close family ties in the area. Demographically, 22 were white ("Anglos," including migrants from , , and other rural U.S. regions), with two Black men and one Pit River Indian among them; victims included U.S. natives, immigrants, and drifters who had traveled for agricultural jobs. Identification proved challenging due to the victims' transient nature, advanced decomposition of some bodies (which had been buried for weeks or months), and the rural setting where disappearances went unnoticed. Authorities relied on personal effects recovered from the graves, such as wallets, identification papers, receipts, labels, and unique items like homosexual in one case or a in another, which were cross-referenced against over 1,500 missing persons inquiries from families, employers, and associates. Eyewitness accounts placed some victims in Corona's company shortly before their deaths, and a ledger found in his possession listed names and dates corresponding to seven victims, aiding matches. Fingerprints, dental records, and findings supplemented these efforts where possible, though four bodies remained unidentified despite extensive investigation. Of the 21 identified victims, notable examples included Paul B. Allen (born 1911 in , a transient worker with 45 prior arrests for and petty crimes) and Kenneth Whitacre (a native and veteran who worked seasonal harvests). The full list of identified victims comprised: Kenneth Whitacre, Charles Fleming, Melford Sample, Donald Smith, John J. Haluka, Warren Kelley, Sigurd Beierman, William Emery Kamp, Clarence Hocking, James W. Howard, Jonah R. Smallwood, Elbert T. Riley, Paul B. Allen, Edward Martin Cupp, Albert Hayes, Raymond Muchache, John H. Jackson, Lloyd Wallace Wenzel, Mark Beverly Shields, Sam Bonafide (also known as Joe Carriveau), and Joseph Maczak. These men were often last seen seeking work or lodging in Yuba City, underscoring how their vulnerability as disposable laborers in a remote agricultural region facilitated the crimes.

Crime Scene Characteristics and Modus Operandi

The bodies of Juan Corona's victims were discovered in shallow graves scattered across fruit orchards, primarily on the Sullivan Ranch near Yuba City in Sutter County, California, with burials concentrated in peach and prune orchard areas as well as river-bottom brush. Graves were typically dug 6 to 18 inches deep, often marked by disturbed earth or a simple cross, and contained the victims' personal belongings such as receipts, bank slips, and clothing, indicating hasty post-mortem disposal without removal of identifiers. One such grave was found empty but prepared in advance, suggesting premeditated planning for disposal sites. Victim conditions at the scenes exhibited consistent patterns: most were adult male transient farm laborers, buried face down, with some fully clothed, others found with pants lowered or unzipped, and shoes untied, pointing to possible restraint or struggle prior to death. Injuries primarily involved severe blunt force trauma and slashing to the head, inflicted by a or similar blade, with multiple strikes common; defensive wounds appeared on some arms, and a few cases showed post-mortem or additional . One victim sustained a alongside machete injuries, indicating occasional use of a , while the majority died from cranial trauma alone. Corona's modus operandi involved targeting itinerant migrant workers, likely luring them via his role as a labor contractor with offers of or in a to remote locations. Attacks occurred in these isolated sites, employing a for efficient, close-range incapacitation through head-focused blows, followed by immediate burial in proximity to the kill site to minimize risks and detection. The uniformity in weapon choice, injury patterns, and shallow, clustered grave placements across multiple ranches underscored a opportunistic yet ritualistic disposal method tailored to the rural, transient victim pool, with no evidence of prolonged but indications of potential sexual elements in select cases based on disarray.

Investigation and Evidence

Initial Police Response and Search Methods

On May 19, 1971, a farmer digging a ditch in a peach orchard on the outskirts of , discovered a suspicious four-foot-deep hole containing a human toe, prompting him to alert the Sutter County Sheriff's Office. Deputies promptly excavated the site, unearthing the first body of an unidentified middle-aged man who had been stabbed in the chest and suffered a severe head from a heavy blade. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker directed the initial response, mobilizing deputies to expand the search across nearby fruit orchards and river-bottom brushland, suspecting additional victims based on the fresh disturbance of the soil. Within hours, a farmhand identified a second mound of earth nearby, leading to the recovery of another corpse bearing similar machete-like injuries, which intensified the operation. Search methods began with manual labor using shovels to probe and dig suspected sites, transitioning to mechanical tools such as a equipped with a scoop for faster excavation over the expansive terrain. Deputies focused on areas of recently turned earth, particularly on properties like the Sullivan Ranch where multiple shallow graves—some days old and others weeks old—were concentrated, with teams working extended hours under floodlights to accelerate discoveries. By late May, this systematic grid-like probing had yielded over a dozen bodies, all of itinerant farm laborers killed by blunt and cutting trauma, revealing a pattern confined largely to agricultural lands frequented by seasonal workers.

Physical and Forensic Evidence Linking Corona

A search of Juan Corona's residence in Yuba City on May 26, 1971, yielded a .22-caliber , two knives, and a , all of which tested positive for stains. The 's caliber matched a fragment recovered from the of one victim, though testing could not conclusively link it to the specific weapon due to the fragment's condition. A testified that the knives could have inflicted the chest stab observed on several victims, while the was consistent with the types of head trauma sustained, but experimental tests on a did not produce exact matches to the patterns. Human was detected in the trunk of Corona's personal car and throughout his work , including on boots and a seized from the ; serological analysis revealed the van's samples contained all four ABO types, collectively matching those of the victims. Prosecutors argued this evidenced transport of bodies or cleanup efforts, as the blood volume and distribution suggested recent activity aligned with the burial timelines between and May 1971. A discovered in Corona's bedroom listed the names of seven identified victims alongside dates proximate to their disappearances, with handwriting experts testifying that the entries matched Corona's script based on exemplars from his receipts and checks. Additionally, receipts bearing Corona's signature and dated May 21, 1971—after several killings—were found in a containing the body of victim Mark Wine, while bank deposit slips were recovered from the twenty-fifth ; these documents were presented as indicating Corona's presence at or near the disposal sites. No fingerprints or fibers from Corona were directly matched to the graves or bodies, and defense experts contested the blood evidence as inconclusive for individual identification given the era's serological limitations.

Circumstantial Evidence and Witness Accounts

As a licensed farm labor contractor in , Juan Corona frequently hired and supplied itinerant migrant workers to local orchards, including the Sullivan Ranch and Kagehiro Ranch where many bodies were buried; prosecution records noted that several victims matched descriptions of workers he had placed or interacted with in the months prior to their disappearances. A seized from Corona's possession contained entries for at least seven identified victims, listing their names alongside dates proximate to their last known sightings, with handwriting analysis confirming the writing as his. Tire tracks near one grave matched the tread pattern of Corona's vehicle, establishing his presence in the vicinity of burial sites on ranches associated with his business operations. Personal documents linked Corona directly to specific graves: two meat market receipts dated May 21, 1971, and signed "Juan V. Corona" were discovered in one burial site containing a corpse, while deposit slips bearing his name and address appeared in the graves of the 24th victim and at least one other. A separate page, described by investigators as a potential " list," included names of up to 34 individuals—overlapping with confirmed victims—along with dates and notations possibly indicating burial locations, further tying Corona's record-keeping to the timeline of the killings. Witness testimonies provided accounts of Corona's interactions with victims shortly before they vanished. Transient worker Kenneth DeLong reported seeing Corona pick up victim Sigurd Bierman in his vehicle just prior to Bierman's disappearance, as noted in investigative affidavits. Byron Shannon testified that on May 12, 1971, he observed Corona loading victim and two other eventual victims into his pickup truck outside the Guadalajara Café in Marysville, after which the men were never seen again. José Raya recounted that his own name and the date February 24, 1970—entries matching Corona's ledger—stemmed from Corona soliciting him for work at the Sullivan Ranch that proved unavailable, suggesting a of luring workers under . Additional ranch workers described spotting Corona at irregular hours on the Sullivan property, which assisted police in pinpointing locations during the search.

Arrest and Prosecution

Apprehension of Corona

On May 25, 1971, investigators discovered two meat receipts in one of the shallow graves near Yuba City, California, dated May 21 and bearing the signature "Juan V. Corona." These receipts directly implicated Corona, a 37-year-old Mexican-American farm labor contractor who operated at the Sullivan Ranch, where several bodies had been unearthed in the preceding days. Additionally, a missing persons report connected Corona to victim Sigurd E. Bierman, who had been last seen in Corona's company near the Guadalajara Café in Yuba City shortly before his disappearance. Early on May 26, 1971, at approximately 4:30 A.M., Sutter County sheriff's deputies arrested Corona without incident in the living room of his Yuba City home. He was initially charged with the murders of 12 itinerant farmworkers whose bodies had been recovered from orchards along the , with victims exhibiting deep lacerations consistent with a or similar blade. At the time of his apprehension, 12 bodies had been found since May 20, when the first grave was reported by peach orchard owner Goro Kagehiro; subsequent excavations would uncover 13 more, bringing the total to 25. A search of Corona's residence and adjacent following his revealed several weapons, including a .38-caliber , knives, and a , along with a containing the names of seven confirmed victims. Roy D. Whiteaker, who oversaw the investigation, stated that no other suspects were being pursued, emphasizing the evidence tying Corona to the crime scenes on properties he managed. Corona maintained his innocence throughout, but the physical links from the receipts and associations prompted his immediate detention pending formal charges.

Charges and Pre-Trial Developments

Juan Vallejo Corona was arrested on May 26, 1971, by Sutter County authorities on suspicion of multiple murders after evidence linked him to the burial sites. That same afternoon, he appeared before a justice court judge, where a public defender was appointed to represent him. On June 2, 1971, Corona entered a plea of not guilty to initial murder charges during a pretrial hearing in Yuba City. A grand jury subsequently indicted him on July 12, 1971, in Sutter County Superior Court on 25 counts of first-degree murder, corresponding to the bodies recovered from peach orchards where he had worked as a labor contractor. Corona's defense sought bail release in October 1971, arguing against , but Sutter County Judge William Pattee denied the motion on October 9, citing the severity of the charges and flight risk. The court also rejected a concurrent request to at that time. Amid intense media coverage, which included leaked investigative details, the trial court issued restraining orders on May 26 and July 22, 1971, to curb prejudicial publicity. Corona petitioned for a due to community bias and saturation reporting in Sutter County; after initial denial, the California Court of Appeal, Third District, granted the writ of mandate on April 13, 1972, ordering the trial moved to Solano County to ensure a fair proceeding.

Trials and Convictions

First Trial Proceedings (1971)

The trial of Juan Vallejo Corona for 25 counts of first-degree murder commenced on September 11, 1972, with jury selection in Fairfield, Solano County, California, after the case was moved from Sutter County due to extensive pretrial publicity that risked biasing local jurors. Judge Richard E. Patton of Colusa County presided, with Sutter County District Attorney G. Dave Teja leading the prosecution alongside deputies Bart Williams and Ronald Fahey; defense was handled by Marysville attorney Richard Hawk. The jury, consisting of 10 men and 2 women, was sworn in on September 27, 1972, following a selection process that screened potential jurors for exposure to media coverage of the 1971 discoveries of the victims' bodies. Prosecutors presented linking Corona to the crimes, including two ledger books seized from his home containing 34 entries, among them names and dates matching at least four confirmed victims; a and knives found in his possession; traces in his vehicle and on tools; and personal items stolen from victims recovered at his residence. Key prosecution witnesses included Byron Shannon, who testified to seeing Corona with several victims shortly before their disappearances, and forensic experts detailing findings of stab wounds to the heart and distinctive cross-shaped head gashes consistent across bodies, inflicted by a heavy blade like a . Additional comprised meat receipts dated May 21, 1971, and bank deposit slips found in some graves, tying to purchases Corona made around the time bodies were buried. The prosecution argued these formed a "mosaic" of guilt, emphasizing Corona's role as a labor contractor who interacted with the transient migrant workers victimized. The defense strategy focused on cross-examining prosecution witnesses to highlight inconsistencies, such as potential misidentification of bodies and minimal blood quantities at crime scenes inconsistent with the violence described, while suggesting alternative perpetrators including Corona's brother Natividad, farmhand Emilio Rangel, and associate Ray Duron. called no witnesses for the defense, instead positing a frame-up possibly involving a and arguing lack of proven motive or , though he faced 74 contempt citations from Judge Patton for disruptive tactics and publicity violations. Mid-trial, Patton criticized the police investigation as "inept" in rulings, which somewhat undermined the prosecution's narrative. Closing arguments spanned several days, with Teja portraying the as overwhelming despite defense attacks, Hawk urging and accusing the state of shifting the proof burden, and Fahey rebutting by methodically reviewing physical links while dismissing motive as unnecessary for conviction. The case went to the on January 11, 1973, after approximately four months of proceedings; after seven days of deliberation marked by a single holdout juror, the panel returned unanimous guilty verdicts on all 25 counts of first-degree murder on January 18, 1973. On February 6, 1973, Judge Patton sentenced Corona to 25 consecutive terms without possibility of parole, later merged into a single life sentence under law.

Appeal and Grounds for Reversal

Corona appealed his January 18, 1973, conviction for 25 counts of first-degree murder to the California Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District. On May 8, 1978, the court reversed the conviction and ordered a , ruling that the proceedings had devolved into a " and a mockery" due to . The primary grounds centered on the incompetence of trial attorney Richard Hawk, who failed to investigate or raise viable defenses of mental incompetence, diminished capacity, or legal insanity despite substantial indicators of Corona's mental health issues. Corona had a documented history as a patient in Stockton State Hospital from 1956 to 1957, where he was treated for schizophrenia and delusions, including beliefs that he was being poisoned and conspired against. Post-arrest psychiatric evaluations in 1971 revealed ongoing delusions, such as Corona claiming invisible entities controlled his actions and that he was targeted by government plots. Hawk acknowledged awareness of this history but prioritized challenging police conduct over pursuing mental health defenses, neglecting to call expert witnesses or request competency hearings. An additional ground was Hawk's conflict of interest arising from a pre-trial granting him literary and dramatic to Corona's story in exchange for reduced or deferred fees, potentially incentivizing a that exploited the case for profit rather than prioritizing or strategies. This arrangement, executed without full disclosure to Corona, violated ethical standards under prohibiting attorneys from acquiring personal interests in clients' cases that could impair loyalty. The deemed these failures cumulatively denied Corona a fair trial, independent of the evidence's strength.

Second Trial (1982) and Final Conviction

The California Supreme Court overturned Corona's 1971 conviction in 1978, citing due to his attorney's incompetence, failure to investigate and present such as Corona's history of mental illness, and potential conflicts of interest. The reversal necessitated a retrial, with the venue moved to Colusa County Superior Court to mitigate pretrial publicity from the original Sutter County location. Corona's second trial began on February 22, 1982, and spanned nearly seven months, marking one of the longest single-defendant s in history at the time, with costs exceeding $5 million. Prosecutors reiterated circumstantial and forensic from the first trial, including the .38-caliber and found at Corona's matching victim wounds, bloodstains in his consistent with victim blood types, and accounts placing him near sites. The defense, led by attorneys who addressed prior shortcomings, introduced psychiatric testimony on Corona's and blackouts to argue diminished capacity or , while alleging his brother Natividad as an alternative based on sightings and motive tied to a prior altercation. A of seven men and five women deliberated for 54 hours over 10 days before returning guilty verdicts on all 25 counts of first-degree murder on September 24, 1982. Judge Richard Patton sentenced Corona on , 1982, to 25 consecutive terms of , reflecting the premeditated nature of the killings but forgoing the death penalty as the crimes predated California's 1976 reinstatement of . The defense filed motions for a citing evidentiary inconsistencies and juror bias, but these were denied, and subsequent appeals upheld the conviction, solidifying it as final.

Controversies Surrounding Guilt

Defense Arguments on Insufficient Evidence

The defense in both of Juan Corona's trials contended that the prosecution's case lacked direct evidence tying him to the murders, relying instead on a chain of circumstantial connections that could plausibly have alternative explanations. No eyewitnesses observed Corona committing any killings, and he provided no or incriminating statements during . Key physical items, such as a .22-caliber stolen from a managed by Corona's brother and recovered from Corona's property, were presented as links to gunshot wounds in some victims, but defense attorneys argued that testing failed to conclusively match the weapon to the recovered bullets, and possession alone did not prove use in the crimes. Forensic , including bloodstains found in Corona's van and on tools at his home, was challenged as inconclusive and methodologically flawed. The blood was identified as type O, which matched Corona but also approximately 45% of the general population, offering no unique identification; defense experts in the retrial described the serological analysis as "faulty and unscientific," asserting that risks and outdated testing standards undermined its reliability. Similarly, personal effects like receipts and identification papers belonging to victims—some bearing Corona's name as a labor contractor—were discovered in shallow graves, but the defense maintained these items reflected routine business transactions with transient farmworkers he had hired or housed, not of or grave-digging. Corona's work ledger, listing names resembling those of victims alongside dates preceding the burials, formed a cornerstone of the prosecution's timeline, yet defense counsel argued it constituted an incomplete business record of labor placements rather than a "murder list," with discrepancies in spelling and omissions weakening any causal inference. Absent fingerprints, DNA (unavailable at the time), or trace materials directly from the burial sites to Corona's person or vehicle, attorneys emphasized that the absence of modus operandi consistency—victims killed by varied methods including machete wounds, stabbings, and shootings—further diluted the evidentiary web, failing to meet the beyond-reasonable-doubt standard. In closing arguments of the first trial, Corona's lead counsel moved for dismissal, declaring the state's proof "insufficient for this to even go to the jury." These points persisted into appeals and the retrial, where the defense highlighted investigative lapses, such as unrecovered murder weapons and untested potential alternative sources for incriminating items, as gaps eroding the case's foundation.

Alternative Suspect Theories Involving Family

Defense attorneys for Juan Corona, during his 1982 retrial in Alameda County Superior Court, argued that his half-brother Natividad Corona was the perpetrator of the 25 murders, citing Natividad's history of violence and proximity to the crime scenes in Sutter County orchards. Natividad, who had immigrated to ahead of Juan in the 1940s and resided in nearby Marysville, was described by as having assaulted individuals with weapons, including an incident in 1963 where he shot a man during a bar fight over a homosexual advance. The defense presented testimony from a who claimed to have seen Natividad near the Sullivan Ranch—the primary burial site—on the day a victim was last seen alive, and sought to introduce evidence of bloodstains on Natividad's clothing and tools that matched victim profiles. Proponents of this theory emphasized Natividad's access to the migrant laborer community through shared in farm work, as well as his reputed aggressive demeanor toward transients, contrasting it with the against Juan, such as the .38 revolver found in Juan's possession that contained traces of human blood not conclusively linked to the victims. However, Judge William D. Mudge limited some defense evidence on Natividad's prior acts to avoid undue prejudice, and the prosecution countered that no direct forensic ties existed between Natividad and the gravesites or weapons like the machetes and pistols used in the killings. Natividad, who died in 1977 from cirrhosis-related complications before the retrial, could not be questioned, leaving the claims reliant on secondhand accounts and unverified statements. Alternative speculations extended to potential complicity by other Corona family members, such as 's brother Felix, who also worked in the Yuba City area labor contracting business, though no specific evidence implicated him beyond familial association and shared access to the orchards. These theories, advanced primarily to undermine the original conviction's reliance on circumstantial links like stolen property from victims found at Juan's home, were ultimately rejected by the jury, which reconvicted Juan on November 24, 1982, after deliberating for 15 days. Critics of the family-involvement note the absence of tying Natividad to the systematic patterns or the sexual assaults on several victims, patterns more aligned with documented behaviors in Juan's possession of pornography depicting such acts.

Criticisms of Investigation Quality and Potential Oversights

The police investigation into the 1971 orchard murders has faced scrutiny for procedural lapses at the crime scenes, including deputies trampling potential while excavating graves under floodlights at night, which compromised the of the burial sites. Body identification errors further undermined evidence reliability, as four corpses were confused during recovery, with some reported in multiple graves—such as three victims documented in two graves each and one potentially in three—exacerbating timeline discrepancies, including a body linked to receipts dated May 21, 1971, bearing Juan Corona's name. Blood evidence was deemed inadequate, with minimal traces found at scenes or on Corona's possessions, such as knives and a van, insufficient to conclusively link to victims; defense observations noted quantities too small for definitive forensic matching. Investigative focus narrowed prematurely on Corona following discovery of a stolen, post-dated his possession, leading to that overlooked alternative suspects, including his half-brother Natividad Corona—who had pistol-whipped a on May 20, 1971—Emilio Rangel, and Ray Duron; no thorough pursuit of these leads occurred. Forensic oversights included failure to collect fingerprints from key items seized from Corona, such as the "murder ledger" listing victim names, a .38-caliber , and a stolen . Autopsies suffered from superficiality, as in the case of the first victim, Whiteacre, where examiners omitted testing for despite the transient laborers' vulnerability, potentially missing causal details about the attacks. The trial judge characterized the overall investigation as inept, prosecutorial preparation as inefficient, and case presentation as inadequate, highlighting systemic deficiencies in evidence handling and lead evaluation.

Imprisonment, Parole, and Death

Prison Life and Health Decline

Juan Corona spent the majority of his imprisonment at California State Prison-Corcoran, serving 25 concurrent life sentences without possibility of following his 1982 conviction. Early in his incarceration, while housed at the in Vacaville, he survived a severe on December 2, 1973, when he was stabbed 32 times in his cell by another inmate, suffering critical injuries but recovering after medical intervention. As a high-profile , Corona was likely placed in , though specific details on his daily routine or interactions within the facility remain limited in public records. In his final years, Corona experienced significant health deterioration associated with advanced age, including that rendered him wheelchair-bound and dependent on assistance for mobility. These conditions contributed to his overall frailty, culminating in his transfer to an outside medical facility where he died of natural causes on March 4, 2019, at the age of 85. No details or specific diagnoses beyond natural causes were publicly released by correctional authorities.

Multiple Parole Denials

Corona's parole suitability hearings before the Board of Parole Hearings began in the 1980s and continued periodically until his death, resulting in consistent denials based on the unprecedented scale and brutality of his crimes, his history of violence, and clinical evaluations assessing him as a persistent to . In June 1984, the board refused to set a date, emphasizing the slayings of 25 migrant farmworkers whose bodies were mutilated and buried in shallow graves near Yuba City orchards. A 1987 hearing led to another rejection after psychiatrists reported that Corona would remain "extremely dangerous" upon release, citing his lack of insight into the offenses and potential for . Further denials accumulated through the and , with the board repeatedly highlighting the "horrible nature" of the murders and Corona's inadequate or rehabilitation progress. During his 2011 hearing—reported as either the sixth or seventh denial—Corona admitted for the first time to committing the killings, declaring, "I killed those people," yet the panel found him unsuitable due to the crimes' gravity and unresolved risk factors. Parole was denied again in November 2016, despite Corona's advanced age of 82, as he professed no memory or knowledge of the murders; the decision underscored enduring public safety concerns tied to the case's notoriety and victim impact.

Cause and Circumstances of Death (2019)

Juan Vallejo Corona, aged 85, died of natural causes on March 4, 2019, at 8:15 a.m. at an outside facility. He had been housed in the Protective Housing Unit at California State Prison-Corcoran since 1992, serving 25 concurrent life sentences for first-degree murder. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation confirmed the death as resulting from natural causes, with no further details on precipitating medical events released publicly. At the time, Corona's next suitability hearing was scheduled for 2021, following eight prior denials.

References

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