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Donny Hopkins Rewarded For Catching Homeless Serial Killer Suspect

By AMY TAXIN   01/26/12 04:39 AM ET   AP

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Donny Hopkins was buying his wife cigarettes at a drug store when a man burst inside and screamed the unbelievable: A serial killer was savagely stabbing a man in the parking lot.

Hopkins, who knew a killer was stalking homeless men, bolted from the store to find a man repeatedly plunging a knife into a Vietnam veteran behind a Carl's Jr. restaurant.

"I'm yelling as loud as I can, `Hey, stop!' at the top of my lungs. He just kept going and kept going," Hopkins told The Associated Press on Wednesday as he recounted the Jan. 13 attack.

Fumbling to dial 911 on his cellphone, Hopkins chased the suspect across the Anaheim strip mall and into a mobile home park, where police eventually collared a blood-covered suspect.

Hopkins, a 32-year-old forklift driver, was hailed a hero Wednesday and given a $5,000 reward for his role in the capture of Itzcoatl Ocampo, a former Marine.

"While we never encourage citizens to put themselves in danger, his actions saved unknown lives," said Tom Dominguez, president of The Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs, which paid the reward.

Ocampo, 23, an Iraq war veteran from Yorba Linda, has been charged with murdering four homeless men in Orange County over nearly a month. Police fanned out across the county better known as the home to Disneyland and multi-million dollar beachfront homes to urge the homeless to be careful and seek shelter indoors.

Hopkins, who lives with his wife, two children and mother in the trailer park where Ocampo was nabbed, received the check at a news conference outside the fast-food restaurant where 64-year-old victim John Berry is remembered with a collection of candles, flowers and teddy bears.

Hopkins, who had given money to Berry in the past, said he didn't feel like a hero because the man died.

"I did what I hope anybody would do if you see somebody in trouble," he said. "I'm just a guy who did the right thing. John was a Vietnam vet – he's a hero. That's a real hero."

Hopkins intends to use the reward to pay bills and help his mother, who lost her job a few weeks ago.

Prosecutors said Ocampo stalked each victim and stabbed them repeatedly with a knife sharp enough to cut through bone.

Authorities found a knife sharpener, a book titled "The Most Notorious Crimes in American History," dark clothes and a medical marijuana prescription letter in Ocampo's bedroom at his Yorba Linda home, according to court documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

Ocampo's father, who is homeless and lives in a disabled big-rig truck, said his son was troubled after he returned from Iraq in 2008. Refugio Ocampo said his son showed him a picture of one of the slain men and warned him to be careful just days before his arrest.

Prosecutors said Itzcoatl Ocampo targeted Berry after he appeared in a Los Angeles Times story about police warning the homeless about the serial killings.

The first victim in the killing spree was James Patrick McGillivray, 53, who was stabbed near a shopping center in Placentia on Dec. 20. The body of Lloyd Middaugh, 42, was found near a riverbed trail in Anaheim on Dec. 28. Paulus Smit, 57, was stabbed to death outside a Yorba Linda library Dec. 30.

Ocampo was being held without bail and is scheduled to be arraigned Feb. 17. Prosecutors have not announced whether they will seek the death penalty in the case.

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Donny Hopkins, 32, right, a forklift driver who helped chase down a suspect in a string of homeless killings after seeing one of the victims stabbed to death receives a $5,000 reward from the Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs's president Tom Dominguez Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. Prosecutors have charged 23-year-old Itzcoatl Ocampo, a former Marine, and a Iraq war veteran with the murders of four homeless men in a nearly month-long spree that prompted police in Orange County to urge the homeless to seek shelter indoors. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
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02:49 PM on 02/06/2012
and some people still want to argue that PTSD is not real. as a war vet, i have no doubt the crimes he witnessed while serving created the monster he became.
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02:23 PM on 02/06/2012
interesting how you include the medical marijuana information. are you saying people who smoke pot will stab homeless people to death? Or simply implying that marijuana users are immoral? Nice job of twisting the story to suit your agenda.
06:03 PM on 01/30/2012
Didn't this guy star in American History X?
03:17 PM on 01/29/2012
Phenominal job Donny Hopkins!!! You've got guts. Thats a REAL man
03:15 PM on 01/29/2012
To the homeless: Seek shelter indoors for protection. Oh reeeeaallyyy??? As if they were outdoors because there is a choice!!!! Stupidest thing I ever heard. If they HAD a place to go INDOORS, theyd BE THERE!!! Dolts!
11:20 AM on 01/27/2012
For people who are unfamiliar with the area where these gruesome killings took place it's not a slum. The young man who must have suffered a psychotic brake and killed these men was not raised in a bad area. He went to good schools and was not always a bad person according to his friends and family. Sadly he changed for the worse! As for Donny Hopkins he may be modest, but he is still a hero in my book! Any man who would chase down a killer while calling the police on his cell phone is a person with heart and so much more!