Crime & Safety
SGV Security Guard Charged With Murdering Alleged Shoplifter
The security guard faces a possible life sentence for allegedly shooting an unarmed man in the back of the neck as he fled Walgreens.

LOS ANGELES, CA — A security guard at the Walgreens on Sunset and Vine will face murder charges for shooting an killing a young man he suspected of shoplifting. The victim's family claims he wasn't a shoplifter, however. They say he was harrassed and killed for being a gay black man.
Donald Vincent Ciota, 28, of Covina, could face 50 years to life in prison if convicted, according to prosecutors. He is also facing multiple gun allegations in the deadly shooting of 21-year-old Jonathan Hart. Ciota's arraignment was postponed Monday after he appeared in a downtown courtroom with his defense attorney Mark Geragos, but did not enter a plea. He is being held on $3 million bail.
According to investigators, Ciota confronted Hart inside the Walgreens on Dec. 2 and the two men began fighting. That's when Ciota pulled out his firearm and allegedly shot Hart in the back of his neck as he ran away, prosecutors contend.
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An attorney for the Hart family offered a stark assessment of the shooting.
"Jonathan was not shoplifting," said attorney Carl Douglas. "Let me repeat that. Jonathan was not shoplifting when he was shot. That's the propaganda Walgreens wants you to report...I dare say, Jonathan Hart was profiled because he was homeless. He was harassed because he was gay, and he was shot because he was black."
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Douglas said the Hart family plans to file a lawsuit against Walgreens seeking $525 million in damages. He questioned why Walgreens only has armed security guards at four stores in the Los Angeles area.
"Each of these stores are in the black, brown and homeless and LGBT communities, and we want to know why," Douglas said at a Dec. 11 news conference.
Walgreens issued a statement in response saying the company has "extended our deepest and most sincere condolences" to Hart's family, and noted that as a result of the shooting, "we immediately terminated the security company."
Walgreens issued a statement defending the company's security strategy.
"We are committed to providing a safe environment for our employees, patients and customers in the communities we serve," according to the company. "We contract for armed and unarmed security, as well as video surveillance, in our stores based on the public safety needs of each location. We operate in thousands of communities and neighborhoods across the nation and the suggestion that we would inappropriately serve any community is simply false. We firmly believe everyone should be welcomed and treated equally in all of our stores."
Douglas insisted that Hart, also known as Sky Young, was not shoplifting. He said Hart and another black man were in the store, and at one point while inside the store, one of them picked up a $2.99 water flavoring product. The guard confronted the men and got into an argument with Hart, the attorney said.
"The guard feels the man pushed him one time," Douglas said. "The guard pushes the man back one time. The guard watches as the man turns to run toward the back door. The guard raises his gun and points at the man. The guard says, `Freeze,' as the man travels toward the door. The guard fires one shot, striking the man in the back of the neck. The guard watches as the man crumbles to the ground."
Hart died at a hospital. Douglas said the only thing in Hart's hands when he died was a California ID card.
City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report. Photo: Shutterstock
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