Sentence upheld for Whittier man who tried to kill wife with chainsaw in front of 3 young children – Whittier Daily News Skip to content
Alejandro Alvarez-Villegas sits next to his interpreter during his arraignment in Superior Court in Bellflower on Monday, July 16, 2018. Alvarez’s arraignment was continued to a later date and he is charged with multiple felonies including attempted murder for allegedly attacking his wife with a chainsaw. Immigration officials have said that Alvarez has been deported 11 times since 2005. (Photo by Scott Varley, Staff Photographer)
Alejandro Alvarez-Villegas sits next to his interpreter during his arraignment in Superior Court in Bellflower on Monday, July 16, 2018. Alvarez’s arraignment was continued to a later date and he is charged with multiple felonies including attempted murder for allegedly attacking his wife with a chainsaw. Immigration officials have said that Alvarez has been deported 11 times since 2005. (Photo by Scott Varley, Staff Photographer)
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A state appeals court panel rejected a man’s challenge Tuesday to his sentence of two consecutive life prison terms for nearly killing his wife with a chainsaw in front of their three young children in Whittier.

The three-justice panel from California’s 2nd District Court of Appeal found that the record provides “ample justification for the trial court’s sentencing decisions” involving Alejandro Villegas Alvarez.

Alvarez, now 37, was convicted during a non-jury trial of attempted murder and mayhem involving the July 11, 2018, attack on his wife, along with child abuse under circumstances likely to produce great bodily injury or death involving their three children.

In its 18-page ruling, the appellate court panel cited the manner in which Alvarez “repeatedly and relentlessly attacked his unarmed and defenseless wife with a chainsaw in front of their three young children.” The justices noted that the couple’s then-5-year-old son tried to “physically shield his mother to try to protect her from his chainsaw-wielding father.”

The defendant had walked up to his wife — whose back was turned — and started the chainsaw, lowering it into the back of her head and cutting her scalp, according to the ruling. The chainsaw stalled after getting caught in the woman’s hair, and she suffered about 50 cuts on her face and left hand when he lowered the chainsaw after she slipped in her own blood, the justices noted.

The victim screamed for her children to run for help, and her husband grabbed her hair with both hands and bashed her head against the floor after the chainsaw turned off, according to the ruling.

The woman had to undergo several surgeries after the attack and has been left with extensive scarring and limited movement of her left hand, the justices noted.

Alvarez was arrested a day later in Chula Vista by the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department.