A Lompoc man was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on June 10, 2026, for using a blowtorch to set his father on fire following a domestic dispute in 2022. Joseph Ashley Garcia, 44, received the sentence from Judge Stephen Dunkle in Santa Maria Superior Court, as announced by the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office.
The incident occurred on June 11, 2022, at a residence on the 200 block of North D Street in Lompoc, where Garcia argued with his 68-year-old father, Joseph Michael Garcia. Lompoc police officers responding to the scene reported seeing the elder Garcia inside the home as they attempted to intervene.
While forcing entry, officers heard the victim screaming and found him engulfed in flames. The victim's dog, a terrier named Charlie, also sustained serious burns in the attack.
Joseph Michael Garcia was taken to a Santa Barbara hospital and later transferred to Los Angeles, where doctors documented second- and third-degree burns covering his entire body. He died 10 days later from septic shock during skin graft surgery.
Following his father's death, prosecutors upgraded the charge to first-degree murder. Garcia initially pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, with two court-appointed doctors providing conflicting evaluations of his mental state.
On April 13, 2026, a Santa Barbara County jury convicted Garcia of first-degree murder and found true the special circumstance of torture after a trial prosecuted by Senior Deputy District Attorney Madison Whitmore. On April 21, 2026, the same jury rejected the defense's claim that Garcia did not understand the nature or wrongfulness of his actions, determining he was legally sane at the time of the offense.
District Attorney John Savrnoch described the case as "one of the most disturbing" his office has handled. "The jury heard the evidence and held this defendant fully accountable," Savrnoch said.
"A first-degree murder conviction with the torture special circumstance sends an unambiguous message that this community will not tolerate acts of extreme cruelty." Savrnoch commended Senior Deputy DA Madison Whitmore and DA Investigator Megan Harrison, along with Lompoc Police Department personnel Sergeant Jorge Magana, Officer Sergio Peralta, and Detective Elizabeth Renner for their work on the case. Charlie, the dog injured in the incident, survived and was later put up for adoption, authorities said.