A Los Angeles man charged with fatally shooting his 
29-year-old son for being gay had repeatedly threatened to kill him over
 his sexual orientation, prosecutors say.
Amir
 Issa, 29, was found shot to death just outside the family home on 
Tuesday. While the Los Angeles County district attorney's office charged
 father Shehada Issa, 69, on Friday with murder as a hate crime in the 
son's death, investigators on Saturday still were trying to determine 
responsibility for a second killing at the home discovered by police at 
the same time, that of Amir's mother, police spokesman Officer Mike 
Lopez said.
The mother, 68-year-old Rabihah Issa, had been stabbed repeatedly, coroner's Lt. David Smith said.
Shehada Issa told police he shot his son Amir in self-defense after he discovered his wife's body in their house.
Prosecutors
 gave a different motive for the son's killing, however. "The murder was
 committed because of the victim's sexual orientation and because of the
 defendant's perception of that status and the victims' association with
 a person and a group of that status," prosecutors said in a statement.
They did not elaborate. Police had no details Saturday on any of the alleged threats the father had made against his gay son.
Police arrested Issa at the scene Tuesday, after he made statements incriminating himself in the death of his son, Lopez said.
"He
 claimed (the son) was armed with a knife, and there was no knife to be 
found. It was a horrible family tragedy," Detective John Doerbecker told
 the Los Angeles Daily News.
Authorities say the father used a shotgun to shoot his son in the abdomen and face, the Los Angeles Times reported .
Neighbors
 told the newspaper the young man had a troubled history and was 
involved in several incidents that led to police being called to the 
house. Francisco Gonzalez Jr. said the elder Issa once told him: "Drugs 
can mess up your life. My son had a great life, and then he did drugs 
and it all went away."
Joel Munoz said Shehada Issa had complained to him about what he described as his son's problems with drugs and mental illness.
"He was a good guy. The son was a bad guy," Munoz said. "I'm so sorry for the old man."
Sgt.
 Greg Bruce told the Times the young man had been using the back of the 
house as an apartment, but his parents were seeking to sell the house 
and evict their son.
"Our
 detectives were involved in the eviction process to try to get him 
removed from the property," he said. Bruce said he wasn't aware of any 
disputes related to the son's sexual orientation.
Issa is being held without bail pending his arraignment on April 11. He faces up to life in prison if convicted of the charge.



 
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