Oceanside

Ex-Marine Sentenced to Life Without Parole for Navy Corpsman's 2018 Oceanside Murder

Prosecutors say the victim was a Navy hospital corpsman stationed at Camp Pendleton who was walking her dog when she was shot

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A man who gunned down a female Navy corpsman at an Oceanside apartment complex nearly four years ago was sentenced Friday to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. NBC 7’s Allison Ash has more.

A man who gunned down a female Navy corpsman at an Oceanside apartment complex nearly four years ago was sentenced Friday to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

Eduardo Arriola, 29, was convicted by a Vista jury earlier this year of first-degree murder, plus a special circumstance allegation of lying in wait, for the July 20, 2018, killing of 24-year-old Devon Rideout.

Both Arriola and Rideout were residents of an apartment building at 550 Los Arbolitos Blvd., where prosecutors allege Arriola shot Rideout multiple times at around 4 p.m. She died at the scene, according to Oceanside police.

Prosecutors say Rideout, Arriola's downstairs neighbor and a Navy hospital corpsman stationed at Camp Pendleton, was walking her dog when Arriola shot her. After the shooting, he repeatedly claimed to bystanders that she was a trespasser.

Investigators searched the defendant's car and found the victim's last name scrawled in black permanent ink on the car's radiator tank. A list of other names and words were also written on the tank, with the final entry "R.I.P." concluding the list.

Arriola was a former Marine who was discharged for desertion and later diagnosed with schizophrenia, leading to four hearings between the killing and his trial to determine whether he was mentally competent to stand trial. Three separate doctors found him competent, according to court documents.

Rideout's mother has since sued the federal government for allegedly failing to prevent Arriola from legally purchasing the murder weapon, which he bought at an Oceanside firing range about two months prior to the killing.

The lawsuit alleges that with Arriola's diagnosis and his discharge from the military, a background check should have prevented him from buying the gun

Copyright City News Service
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