San Diego

Jurors Hear Closing Arguments in Bizarre Baja Homicide

David Enrique Meza is on trial for the killing of Jake Merendino

A San Diego man accused of living a double life that led to the fatal stabbing of a wealthy Texas man listened as closing arguments were presented in court Monday. Prosecutors describe the crime as “a love affair gone wrong.”

David Enrique Meza, and his then-girlfriend, Taylor Marie Langston, were indicted in the December 2015 death of 52-year-old Jake Clyde Merendino.

Because Merendino was killed in Baja, California, the trial is in federal court.

U.S. District Court Judget Jeffrey Miller gave jurors strict guidelines for their deliberations Monday.

Prosecutors led off closing arguments, building a timeline of events in which the government alleges Meza and Langston intended to take advantage of Merendino and for Meza to eventually kill Merendino for gain.

Federal prosecutors allege Meza stabbed Merendino to death in the early hours of May 2 in Baja California.

Merendino’s body was found in a ravine near the highway that links Rosarito and Ensenada, according to the FBI. Meza and Langston were captured on video re-entering the U.S. soon after, according to investigators.

When questioned by investigators, Meza and Langston allegedly claimed they had been visiting with a friend named “Joe” in Tijuana at the time of Merendino’s murder. But Foster said phone records and Facebook posts contradicted that alibi, and “Joe” told investigators he had not seen the couple for a year and a half and they have never visited his home.

The prosecution’s evidence included text messages sent by Meza to Merendino professing his love for him. Messages were also shared in which Meza expressed his disdain for Merendino to his then-pregnant fiancée

Documentation was also shown to the jury suggesting Meza was the sole beneficiary of Merendino’s Baja condo worth nearly $300,000.

Langston entered a plea agreement in February. The San Diego-Union Tribune reports Langston pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice.

Meza's attorney argued it would be difficult for Meza to drag Merendino's body since the victim was 6-foot, 4-inches tall and approximately 310 pounds.

The attorney also told jurors there is no DNA evidence linking Meza to the crime.

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