Man Sentenced In One Of Glendora’s Oldest Cold Case Murders

Photo courtesy of the San Bernardino County District Attorney's Office.

One of Glendora’s oldest cold cases, along with the victim’s long suffering family, finally has some closure.

Larry James Allred, who was recently charged with the murder of then 18-year-old Cynthia Hernandez in 1976, was sentenced to state prison yesterday for the murder.

62-year-old Allred was sentenced to 7 years to life in prison by a San Bernardino County Judge on Monday.

Picture of the old Fox Theatre in Covina, where Hernandez was headed the night of her disappearance in 1976 *Photo courtesy of Google images.

According to a San Bernardino County District Attorney press release, “According to California law in 1976—at which time the crime was committed—the maximum sentence Allred can serve is 7 years to life in prison”.

The press release goes on to read:

“Thanks to great investigative work of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department and the Glendora Police Department, we were able to identify the suspect who murdered young Cynthia forty years ago,” said District Attorney Mike Ramos. “They never gave up. While Cynthia’s family will never have the chance to see her again, hopefully, they can find some comfort in knowing her killer is locked up in prison where he belongs.”

Glendora Police Chief Tim Staab echoed those thoughts to GCN.

“I’m extremely grateful for the outstanding investigative work by the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department. They were able to obtain a conviction in a horrendous murder that occurred 40 years ago, and I can’t thank them enough. Now Cynthia’s family can finally find closure after all these years”, Staab said.

You can read the details of her disappearance from our previous story by Aaron Casterjon below:

Hernandez, 18, was last seen leaving her Glendora home August 26, 1976 and told family she was on her way to see a late showing of “The Omen” at the now defunct Fox Theater, 211 N. Azusa Ave., in Covina.

Her family is unclear if she even made it inside the theater, said Karen Theilen, a friend of the Hernandez family.

“Her car was found the next morning behind the theater by her brother. The one thing that stood out was how out of character this was for Cindy,” Theilen said in a previous email interview.

Hernandez’s brother went searching for her. He found her white ’63 Chevrolet station wagon backed into a parking space and unlocked behind the Fox Theater, according to information provided by the Doe Network.

Cynthia’s disappearance was deemed suspicious from the start.

A 1976 graduate of Charter Oak High School, Hernandez played volleyball, football and baseball and likely would have fought off an attacker, family told investigators.

Investigators initially suspected Hernandez could have been a victim of Manuel Trinidad Cortez, a man convicted of raping and killing two 11-year-old girls in Ashland, Oregon in 1979, according to a Eugene Register-Guard article from 1980.

Cortez spent time in California into 1977. He even confessed to the Oregon murders in a recorded interview with an Industry Sheriff’s deputy January 5, 1979. Cortez has not been charged with any other murders, however, and is currently serving a life sentence without parole.

Latent fingerprints were taken from Hernandez’s vehicle.

“My brother died when I was 19. My mom can go to Oakdale and visit his grave. I want the same for Cindy’s mom before she dies,” Theilen said.

Allred and another man were arrested in 1974 on suspicion of kidnapping a 17-year-old girl at knifepoint from the Montclair Plaza and later sexually assaulting her, according to a Progress Bulletin newspaper article dated May 15, 1974.

The case will be assigned to Deputy District Attorney Denise Yoakum who is assigned to the cold case unit.

Glendora Police Chief Tim Staab spoke exclusively with GCN regarding the case.

“In 2011, I was the Lieutenant in charge of the Detective Bureau and I reopened this case. There wasn’t much to go on, but family members were reinterviewed and leads were chased down,” Staab said. “About two years ago the case brought us to San Bernardino County, and the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department took over the investigation. I can’t tell you how grateful we are to SBSD and their outstanding and diligent work. Cynthia’s family can now move forward and perhaps find peace after all these years.”

As the investigation continues into the murder, no further details will be released, the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office said.

“Thanks to great investigative work of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department and the Glendora Police Department, we were able to identify the suspect who murdered young Cynthia forty years ago,” said District Attorney Mike Ramos.

 

 

 

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