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Man Convicted Of Second-Degree Murder For Killing San Diego Architect

Architect Graham Downes died April 18, 2013 from injuries suffered during an assault.
Architect Graham Downes died April 18, 2013 from injuries suffered during an assault.

A facilities manager for a prominent architect was convicted of second-degree murder Thursday for beating his boss to death.

Higinio Salgado, 32, was angry over the possibility that a former supervisor could be coming back to work for the firm of Graham Downes, according to Deputy District Attorney Amy Maund.

"This defendant beat, tortured and killed a defenseless human being," Maund told jurors last week in her opening statement.

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After a night of drinking on April 18, 2013, which included a happy hour hosted by Downes and a trip to a bar, Salgado pummeled the victim with 17 to 21 blows to the head on the sidewalk in front of the architect's Bankers Hill residence on West Juniper Street, Maund told the jury.

Downes, 56, "died on the street, on the cold cement," the prosecutor said.

The defendant, a former maintenance man, became angry when the name of his former supervisor, Simon Terry-Lloyd, was brought up, Maund said.

"Graham Downes did nothing wrong the night of his death," Maund said, telling jurors that when Terry-Lloyd's name was mentioned, Salgado exclaimed, "(Expletive) him! (Expletive) that guy!"

Salgado, who faces 15 years to life in prison when sentenced by Judge Joan Weber on June 6, had seen Downes meeting with Terry-Lloyd the day before and assumed his former supervisor was coming back to work at the architectural firm, according to court testimony.

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"The defendant couldn't let it go," Maund told the jury.

When Downes and Salgado went outside about 1 a.m. to say goodbye to the last party guests, the victim and the defendant got into a violent confrontation, the prosecutor said.

A neighbor was awakened by the sound of men arguing and looked out to see a man in a blue shirt, identified as Salgado, on top of the other man, Maund said.

Salgado and Downes were involved in a "one-sided" fight, with Downes' head being pounded into the cement, she said.

Police arrived to find the victim severely injured and the defendant lying next to him, face-down with his arm around Downes. Paramedics on the scene were able to get a pulse on Downes, but he was declared brain dead about 3 a.m. and was taken off life support a few days later.

Defense attorney Jamahl Kersey said Downes' death was "unfortunate," but wasn't a murder.

Kersey said prosecutors wouldn't be able to show what happened leading up to the fight and wouldn't be able to prove that Salgado was guilty of murder.

The attorney said Downes was a demanding boss who promoted a "work hard, play hard" atmosphere at his firm.

Before the fight, Downes assured Salgado that Terry-Lloyd wasn't coming back to work there, Kersey told the jury.

Kersey said his client was extremely intoxicated the night of the altercation, with a blood-alcohol level estimated to be more than .20 percent.