NEWS
February 25, 1988
A federal judge in San Jose has refused to allow the release of accused high-tech spy Kevin Anderson on $500,000 bail so that he could accept a job offer from computer magnate Gene Amdahl. U.S. District Judge William Ingram, following the advice of federal prosecutors, overturned a federal magistrate's grant of bail for Anderson. "I'm not willing to let (Anderson) live independently in an apartment somewhere in Santa Clara County," Ingram said.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
November 1, 2000 | RICHARD WINTON, TIMES STAFF WRITER
The capital murder trial of Kevin Anderson opened Tuesday with the prosecutor declaring that the prominent Pasadena doctor planned and executed an "almost perfect murder" of his female colleague because she was pregnant with his child, posing a threat to his marriage and career. Deputy Dist. Atty. Marian M.J. Thompson said she intended to show a Pasadena Superior Court jury that Anderson strangled Dr. Deepti Gupta on Nov.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
November 21, 2000 | RICHARD WINTON, TIMES STAFF WRITER
Under cross-examination Monday, Pasadena pediatrician Kevin Anderson said it never occurred to him to try to revive a pregnant colleague he had just strangled with a Snoopy tie. "I didn't think about resuscitation," Anderson testified at his first-degree murder trial in Pasadena. "She appeared dead to me." He said he did not check the pulse of Dr. Deepti Gupta, 33, who authorities say was pregnant with his child. "If I had it to do it all over again, I probably should have checked," he said.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
November 23, 2000 | RICHARD WINTON, TIMES STAFF WRITER
The question of whether a Pasadena pediatrician plotted the killing of a pregnant colleague or killed her in a rage was turned over to a jury Wednesday after seven hours of impassioned closing arguments. The Pasadena Superior Court jury must decide whether Kevin Anderson, who has admitted strangling his lover, dousing her body with gasoline and shoving her car off a cliff in the San Gabriel Mountains, should be convicted of manslaughter or face a possible death sentence for murder. Deputy Dist.
MAGAZINE
April 10, 1988 | JOSHUA HAMMER, Joshua Hammer is a Los Angeles writer.
A new class of international criminal has emerged since the end of the 1970s: the technobandit. With the development of sophisticated electronic weapons and communications systems driven by powerful computers, this renegade band of entrepreneurs has sprung up to serve the technology-hungry nations of the Soviet Bloc.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
October 19, 2000 | RICHARD WINTON, TIMES STAFF WRITER
Scores of potential jurors filed into a Pasadena courtroom Wednesday for jury selection in the trial of Kevin Paul Anderson, a prominent Pasadena doctor accused of strangling a pregnant colleague. Anderson is accused of killing Dr. Deepta Gupta, 33, on Nov. 11 on a secluded San Gabriel Mountain road because he feared she would expose their romantic relationship to his wife, then dumping her car and body off a cliff.