A random attack in a quiet neighborhood left a family shattered and a community searching for answers for over a decade.
It is the kind of nightmare that haunts a neighborhood. A simple morning walk to school turned into a scene of sudden, senseless violence that left a community feeling unsafe in its own parks.
On November 13, 2014, 55-year-old Labh Nigah was walking home after dropping his son off at a local elementary school. He was in Sierra Linda Park in Oxnard when he was attacked. He died from stab wounds right there on the path.
The attack happened in broad daylight. People in the park and staff at the nearby school witnessed the event. Despite the number of people nearby, the case went cold for more than 11 years.
What the money/evidence shows
- The attack occurred on November 13, 2014, at 8:43 a.m.
- The victim was 55-year-old Labh Nigah.
- DNA evidence from the scene was uploaded to the FBI database in 2014 but found no match at the time.
- Jose Antonio Jimenez was arrested on April 2, 2026, after new DNA technology provided a lead.
- Jimenez is being held on $1 million bail.
The bigger question
How many other cold cases are sitting in a database waiting for the right piece of technology to unlock them? We often talk about justice as a race, but for families like the Nigahs, it is a slow, painful crawl.
We should ask why it took over a decade to apply these new DNA methods to this specific case. Is it a lack of funding, or just the sheer volume of unsolved crimes that keeps these files gathering dust?
Jose Antonio Jimenez has pleaded not guilty to the murder charge and the special allegations against him. His defense team will have the chance to challenge the DNA evidence and the timeline of the investigation in court. At this stage, the prosecution's case rests heavily on the new forensic links found by the cold case unit.
What happens now
Jimenez is currently in custody awaiting his next court date. An early disposition conference is set for August 13, 2026, in Ventura County Superior Court.
For the people of Oxnard, this arrest brings a small measure of closure to a long-standing mystery. It serves as a reminder that even years later, police may still be working to find those responsible for past crimes.
What we still don't know
- Why was this specific victim targeted in what authorities believe was a random attack?
- What specific advancements in DNA technology finally allowed investigators to identify the suspect after 11 years?
- Were there any other witnesses or pieces of evidence that were overlooked during the initial 2014 investigation?
Transparency notes
Published: May 22, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
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Sources
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