Hollywood producer and serial r@pist David Brian Pearce has been sentenced to 146 years to life in prison for his role in the tragic overdose deaths of model Christy Giles and her friend Hilda Marcela Cabrales-Arzola, as well as a series of violent s3xual assaults spanning more than a decade.
Pearce was convicted in February of first-degree murder in connection with the women’s deaths, alongside multiple s3x crimes, including forcible r@pe, r@pe of an unconscious person, s3xual penetration by force, and sodomy by use of force, according to ABC7 Los Angeles.
Prosecutors said Pearce met Giles and Cabrales-Arzola at an after-hours rave and later drugged them to facilitate a s3xual assault.
The chilling sequence of events began on November 13, 2021, when 24-year-old Giles, a model and aspiring actress, was already dead when she was dumped outside Southern California Hospital in Culver City. Two hours later, 26-year-old Cabrales-Arzola, an architect, was found in critical condition outside Kaiser Permanente West Los Angeles Hospital. Her family later made the devastating decision to take her off life support.
Investigators determined that Giles died of a lethal mix of cocaine, fentanyl, gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), and ketamine, while Cabrales-Arzola died of multiple organ failure after ingesting cocaine, ecstasy, and other drugs.
Prosecutors told the court that Pearce and his roommate, Brandt Walter Osborn, were the ones who dropped the victims’ bodies at the hospitals after they overdosed inside their apartment.
Pearce denied supplying the drugs, but after two and a half days of jury deliberation, the panel found him guilty on all major counts.
Osborn, 46, who was charged with two counts of being an accessory after the fact, is still awaiting a possible retrial after jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict.
Giles’ mother, Dusty Giles, expressed gratitude to prosecutors after the sentencing, saying she was “so proud” of the legal team for securing justice and that Pearce’s s3xual assault victims had “finally had their day in court.”
The sentencing marks the end of a high-profile case that exposed Pearce’s long history of predatory behavior and brought long-overdue justice to the families of his victims.
