Professor from Geneva faces trial in 1995 Santa Ana killing

Hours later, the man's body was found dumped alongside a road in Irvine. He had been beaten and hacked with a meat cleaver.

Esparza says she was forced by an aggressive ex-boyfriend to identify her rapist and then conceal his crime for nearly two decades. Prosecutors say Esparza conspired to commit the killing, though she did not actually carry it out.

According to court records, she has changed some details of her story since the arrest.

Esparza, 39, is now charged with one felony count of special circumstances murder during the commission of a kidnapping. She says prosecutors are pressuring her to plead guilty to voluntary manslaughter. No trial date has been set, but a hearing is scheduled for Thursday. She is free on $300,000 bail.

Her ex-boyfriend, Gianni Anthony Van, and two others, Shannon Gries and Diane Tran, were also charged. All three have pleaded not guilty. A fourth suspect, Kody Tran, died in a shootout with police last year.

On Wednesday, Esparza stood with her husband outside a courthouse in Santa Ana to tell her side of the story. Her 4-year-old daughter clung to her waist as she spoke. She said she was a victim, not only of rape, but of sexual abuse since she was a child.

“We're not polished, we're not professional. We're just a family trying to tell our story,” said her husband, Jorge R. Mancillas, a neurobiologist who works on global health issues in Geneva.

Until her arrest, Esparza's story had seemed a slice of the American dream. An immigrant who came to Santa Ana from Mexico as a small child, her life forever changed when she obtained a scholarship to attend the elite Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and then Pomona College.

When she was home in Santa Ana for the weekend in March 1995, she decided to go to the El Cortez nightclub, where she met a man named Gonzalo Ramirez, according to court records.

They hit it off and the next morning he asked her to breakfast along with her sister and a friend from school. After breakfast he offered to drive Esparza and her friend back to her college in Claremont. When they were in her dorm room, he raped her, she said in court records and interviews.

She went to a school nurse who gave her a pill to prevent pregnancy. But she didn't report the rape to authorities and the nurse didn't advise her to, she said in an interview with The Times.

“I don't think I was thinking at that time,” she said. “I felt ashamed. I felt guilty. I didn't want to come forward because I didn't want my family to know.”

A few weeks later she said she told Van, her former boyfriend, about the rape. He was enraged, she said. Esparza told investigators in December 2012 that she, Van and at least one friend went on two occasions to look for Ramirez at El Cortez, according to court records.

When she testified before a grand jury a few months later, she said she remembered going only once — on the night she picked Ramirez out. She testified that Van was “insisting, yelling, telling me that I had to point out the rapist, point out the attacker. And at some point Gonzalo Ramirez walked by, and I cringed and I told Gianni that that was the person.”

She thought “the worst that would happen is that he would rough him up,” she told the grand jury. “Many people say, 'You're so intelligent, you have a PhD, how did you not see that coming?'” Esparza said in the Times interview.

“The fact is there's different types of intelligence. You can be intelligent and not be street-wise … not foreseeing the bad intentions in other people.”

Even after Ramirez was killed, she began dating Van again and later married him, court records show. She says she did so because she feared for her life and was told that if she married him she couldn't be forced to testify against him.

She went on to graduate from Pomona College and to earn her doctorate. Nine years later she divorced Van and married Mancillas, her current husband.

She now lives in a small town in France on the Swiss border near Geneva where she is raising her daughter. She is an assistant professor of psychology and counseling at Webster University, Geneva.

She worries that the life she has built there will soon be taken from her.

“It's very peaceful. It's very quiet,” she said. “It's a very good place to be if you want to raise a daughter that doesn't have to go out at night and fear for what kind of harm can come to her.”

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paloma.esquivel@latimes.com

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