UPDATE, 5 p.m.: From the District Attorney’s Office:

On May 18, 2015, in the case of the People of the State of California v. Juan Ferrer, the jury found the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter for the November 25, 2013, killing of Douglas Anderson-Jordet. The jury also found that the defendant personally used a deadly weapon, a knife, in the commission of that crime. The jury found the defendant not guilty of second degree murder. Mr. Anderson-Jordet’s family has been notified of this result and they have expressed their gratitude that the case finally has been decided by a jury.

The case was prosecuted by Deputy District Attorney Roger C. Rees, with assistance from District Attorney Investigator Jack Bernstein and Victim/Witness Advocate Marybeth Bian. The defendant was represented throughout the proceedings by Deputy Conflict Counsel Marek Reavis.

The scheduled sentencing date is June 15, 2015. The sentence for the crime of voluntary manslaughter with a deadly weapon has the following range: a mitigated term of four years, a middle term of seven years, and an aggravated term of twelve years in prison.

###

Around noon today, Juan Joseph Ferrer, age 36, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter for the Nov. 25, 2013 stabbing death of Abruzzi chef Douglas Anderson-Jordet, according to the Mad River Union. The jury found Ferrer not guilty of the more serious second-degree murder charge. Additionally, Ferrer was found guilty of brandishing a lethal weapon.

Ferrer’s sentencing will occur June 15. Generally, individuals convicted of voluntary manslaughter in California can receive a maximum 11 years.

More over at the MRU.

PREVIOUSLY