Long Beach man gets 15 years to life for kidnapping and sex assault in Huntington Beach

A 52-year-old man was sentenced Friday to 15 years to life in prison for his role in the abduction and sexual assault of a woman from a Huntington Beach street.

Florentino Contreras Bacilio of Long Beach was convicted Feb. 23 of kidnapping to commit a sex offense and two counts of attempted sexual penetration by foreign object and force, all felonies.

Jurors acquitted Bacilio of two counts of sexual penetration, opting for the lesser offense.

Bacilio, who has 2,000 days credit behind bars – nearly 5 1/2 years – was ordered to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life.

Jurors heard arguments from attorneys on the case after the verdicts were read to determine if aggravating factors apply at sentencing. Jurors on Feb. 24 found true aggravating factors related to great bodily violence to the victim, but not true on planning and sophistication of the attack.

Co-defendant Angel Lopezevaristo, 34, pleaded guilty Nov. 22, 2024, to kidnapping to commit a sexual assault, forcible rape and sexual penetration by foreign object with sentencing enhancements for kidnapping to commit a sex offense and inflicting great bodily injury in a sex offense, according to court records. He was sentenced to 30 years to life in prison.

The victim was a 27-year-old woman who “loved going downtown” in Huntington Beach, and she especially enjoyed walking there because she lived nearby, Deputy District Attorney Thomas Farnell said in his opening statement of the trial.

The victim “suffered greatly at the hands of the defendant,” Farnell said in his argument regarding aggravating factors. “Her screams for help show how callous he was.”

Bacilio and Lopezevaristo “knew exactly what they were doing” when they abducted her, showing planning and sophistication as an element to prove the aggravating factors, Farnell argued Monday. “As a team they dragged her by her feet and arms to the car.”

But Bacilio’s attorney, Annie Rodriguez of the Orange County Public Defender’s Office, argued her client “didn’t intend any of those things,” referring to violently attacking the victim.

“He stopped the car” when his friend sexually assaulted her, Rodriguez argued.

She noted Bacilio has a “low IQ” to show the lack of planning and sophistication for the abduction.

On the night the victim was abducted June 6, 2021, she went to celebrate a birthday with friends, Farnell said.

“They went to a number of restaurants just to hang out and have a good time with friends,” Farnell said in his opening statement of the trial. “She had four or five drinks, but she was not drunk.”

Bacilio and Lopezevaristo worked at a Louis Burger restaurant in Long Beach and decided after work to also head to Huntington Beach to drink, Farnell said.

“They walked around, got drinks, had a few at bars and then went to buy some beer and got in their vehicle,” Farnell said.

As they were exiting the parking garage, they saw the victim having an argument with her boyfriend on a corner. The woman was on the phone with her ex-boyfriend when the two grabbed her, Farnell said.

The prosecutor showed jurors surveillance video of the men dragging her into the Chevrolet Traverse full-size crossover SUV as she screamed for help just before midnight, Farnell said.

“These were two strangers,” he said. “They didn’t know (the victim). They saw her, wanted her and just took her.”

The victim continued to struggle with the men in the vehicle, “fighting for her life,” Farnell said.

She was “repeatedly punched in the face,” and was “fighting and screaming while she was being sexually assaulted,” he said.

Ultimately, she was “strangled to the point she passed out,” he said.

The next thing the woman remembered was waking up in the middle of Pacific Coast Highway, where she was dumped south of Warner Avenue, Farnell said.

She frantically waved to passing motorists, one of whom eventually stopped and called for help, the prosecutor said.

The woman was unable to identify her attackers, so police turned to surveillance video to get a partial license plate of the vehicle used in her abduction, Farnell said.

Bacilio’s “first interview (with police) was all lies,” he said.

Bacilio eventually said he drove away with the woman because “he was scared” and was “very angry” at his friend for assaulting the victim, Farnell said.

“She’s doing everything she can to get away from these men,” Rodriguez said. “But (Bacilio) can’t see what is happening. … All he knows is he can hear (the victim) fight for her life.”

As she screamed for help, it “clicks” for Bacilio what is happening, so he pulled over, Rodriguez said.

“There was no plan to sexually assault” the victim, Rodriguez said.

Bacilio ensured the victim got out of the car.

“At that point, either she is pushed out or she gets out on her own,” she said, adding the victim was only in the vehicle for about five minutes.

The victim’s “memory is not perfect” about what happened, Rodriguez said. Bacilio is a “simple man with a third-grade education,” she said.

Defense expert, Joseph Cervantes, a psychologist, said the defendant has an “intellectual developmental disorder” as well as a “severe alcohol abuse disorder,” according to Rodriguez. The disorder makes it difficult for Bacilio to process information and make quick decisions, the defense attorney said.

“Mr. Bacilio is guilty, but he’s not guilty of kidnapping for a sexual assault,” Rodriguez said.