Garcia was born on June 7, 1973, in Los Angeles, California, to Fred, a postal service worker, and Estella, a Mexican native who was a nurse. He has two younger siblings. Garcia received his medical degree from the
University of Utah in 1999. He then began a residency at Bassett-St. Elizabeth Family Medicine program in Utica, NY where he remained for approximately six months before being forced to resign for "unprofessional and inappropriate conduct." The New York State Board of Professional Medical Conduct gave Garcia an administrative warning for his conduct on July 25, 2001, and said his name would be flagged if he applied for a state
medical license in the future. In July 2000, Garcia began another residency in the pathology department at the
Creighton University Medical Center - Bergan Mercy in Omaha, Nebraska. She also made formal complaints against Garcia to Dr. William Hunter, who oversaw the pathology residency program, later testifying it was the first time she had recommended a pathology resident be suspended: "He was the worst resident in my 40 years of teaching. Not good. Right from the beginning he was adversarial, he did not like me. He was rude in the class, and he was quite disruptive in my class." Garcia responded to Bewtra's reviews with threats to sue, but never followed through. Hunter witnessed for himself Garcia's mishandling of an autopsy and documented his "belligerent and defensive" attitude in response to criticism in a memo in Garcia's file. Bewtra later elaborated to reporters: "He had an attitude problem. He just did not want to learn. I thought he was arrogant; he was mean. He liked to hurt people and derive pleasure from there. And so he was not a nice person." It was Garcia's "erratic behavior" that resulted in his termination within the year. Dr. Roger Brumback, Chair of the Pathology Department, wanted to terminate Garcia from the program, but the university was advised that its employment practices required placing Garcia on probation. Even though Garcia knew he was under review, he then called the wife of Dr. Hisham Hashish, a second-year resident, whom he had previously harassed and who was off taking a critical exam, telling her that the "pathology department" insisted her husband interrupt it to return and attend a mandatory meeting. The department was immediately notified of the call by both Dr. Hashish and his wife, and subsequent investigation uncovered personnel who had overheard Garcia plotting the call to derail Hashish's exam opportunity with another resident, Bryan Nguyen. Nguyen admitted he did nothing to stop Garcia, who was convinced that Hashish had previously used exams as an excuse to take time off, and was "very upset that he had left work for him to do." Despite Garcia's denials, both residents were immediately terminated on May 22, 2001, by Brumback and Hunter. Both were given the option to resign, but Garcia refused this and immediately filed an appeal. The appeal panel upheld his termination, stating the call to Hashish's home "represents unwarranted and unacceptable harassment and, as such, represents unethical conduct that damages and undermines the pathology program." Garcia was then hired by Dr. Anita Kablinger, then director of a psychiatry residency program at
LSU Health Sciences Center Shreveport in
Shreveport, Louisiana in July 2007. He remained there until early 2008, when the State Board of Medical Examiners informed him that he might not qualify for a medical license, due to the fact he had not reported his failure to finish the pathology programs at Creighton or UIC. They also notified Kablinger, who had concerns about his performance early on. She terminated him on February 27, 2008, for not revealing the disciplinary action taken against him at Creighton, which Dr. Hunter had verified, as well as the reasons for his termination. Garcia told her he was fired because his former bosses at Creighton were "racist against him." Garcia left the next day. Two weeks later, Thomas Hunter, the eleven-year-old son of Dr. William Hunter, and Shirlee Sherman were murdered in the Hunters' home. In December, Garcia applied for, and received, a temporary license to practice medicine in Indiana, until he withdrew his application. In 2009, Garcia was hired to work as a contract physician in Chicago. In September 2012, he again applied for a medical license in Indiana, but when the Indiana Medical Licensing Board asked Creighton to verify his former employment, Brumback informed them that Garcia was dismissed for "unprofessional behavior." He was denied the license in December, due to failure to complete residencies in New York, Illinois and Louisiana, as well as Nebraska. Five months later, Garcia attempted to break into Dr. Bewtra's house in Omaha, and immediately after that thwarted attempt, proceeded to murder Dr. Roger Brumback and his wife, Mary. ==The Creighton murders==