The Palo Alto History Project
The Bert Kay Murder
                                                                                            
                                                                                               900 Gilman Street
The Bert Kay Murder: A Community Grieves

People consider many things when choosing the communities in which they will live.  The school system,
proximity to work, housing values and local culture are all certainly factors in this important decision. But in
the crime conscious environment of 21st Century America, safety is probably the most fundamental factor of
all.  Any worthwhile real estate agent will emphasize a safe environment, quiet streets and a child-friendly
neighborhood when pitching residential property --- and if it’s a gated community, well, so much the better.  
And while Palo Alto has never quite catered to gated exclusivity, its image as a safe place to live has long
been part of its attraction.  With a heralded school system, bountiful parks and an array of child-friendly
cultural institutions, Palo Alto is inclined to advertise itself as an ideal place to raise a family.  

But as the evening news is always quick to point out, no American city is immune from violence these days.  
And every so often there is a local crime that leads citizens to question their collective wellbeing.

Perhaps the most jarring of all Palo Alto crimes was the 1997 murder of 38 year old Bert Kay on quiet
Gilman Street, just a block and a half from the downtown police station.  Since that night, Palo Alto’s sense
of security has never really been the same.

Upon his death, so many friends, family members and neighbors would have stories of Kay’s life.  Bert was
born in the suburbs of Boston, Massachusetts in 1959.  Growing up he loved playing Captain Kirk in an old
attic chair, dreaming of stars and outer space.  In grade school, Bert excelled in math and science and when
he headed west for college, he furthered those passions at Caltech.  A job at Hewlett-Packard first brought
him to Silicon Valley where he met and married Meg Fletcher.  After time abroad in Switzerland, Bert
earned his doctorate in Computer Science at the University of Texas, and he and Meg eventually settled
down in a Palo Alto duplex on Waverley Street.  Soon he was able to realize some of those childhood
Captain Kirk dreams while working at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, where he was
working on developing modern spacecraft.  

In 1995, Bert and Meg had twin girls, Nina and Sonia, which Bert considered “the funniest things on Earth.”  
They led an idyllic Silicon Valley life --- raising their girls, hiking and biking in the mountains on Saturdays
and enjoying Bert’s love for cooking.  

On the night of June 12th, 1997 all that would come to an end.  After putting their two-year old twins to
bed, Meg dozed off and Bert set out from his apartment for his nightly “thinking walk.”  Meanwhile over in
East Palo Alto, six members of a Samoan gang called the True Blue Crips were drinking Mad Dog 20/20, a
type of potent wine, and making plans to “jack someone.”  They piled into the blue Isuzu Rodeo owned by
20 year old Christian Valdes and headed across the 101.  Circling downtown around 10:30pm, they spotted
Kay walking down Gilman Street, a typically serene setting that serves as the Saturday morning home for the
Palo Alto Farmer’s Market.

While Valdes remained in his car around the corner, his five friends snuck up on the unsuspecting scientist.  
One of the attackers brutally struck Kay in the head, knocking him to the ground.  Searching Kay’s pockets,
they only found a little girl’s ponytail holder (Kay had actually left his wallet at home).  Two of the other gang
members then savagely beat Kay while he lay writhing in pain on the pavement.  Eventually they dragged
Kay behind the bench that stands behind the Laning Chateau Apartments and fled the scene.  The injuries to
Kay’s face, head and neck were so severe that by the time police arrived just minutes later, Bert Kay was
dead.

The next morning when Meg and the twins awoke, the house lights were still on and Bert was missing.  After
calls to friends and family, Meg reported Bert’s disappearance to the police.  It took most of the day for
police to confirm what they already suspected, that Bert Kay matched the identity of the body discovered
behind the Gilman Street bench.

As the news of the murder hit the papers, the residents of Palo Alto went through a kind of collective
progression from shock to grief to anger.  Many Palo Altans couldn’t believe that such a crime could occur
in such a location.  Phyllis Mayberg, a Forest Avenue resident told the Palo Alto Weekly, "It's absolutely
shocking.  We're only a block from the police station. I've never felt that I had to worry about walking in the
neighborhood at night.”  The following night a candlelight vigil was held at the Gilman Street bench where
Kay had died, as well wishers lay flowers and lit candles in a makeshift memorial to the former scientist.  A
week later, more than 500 mourners gathered for a vigil and quiet walk through the downtown streets
honoring Kay’s memory.  Generous Palo Altans would end up contributing more than $93,000 to a trust
fund set up for the Nina and Sonia Kay’s college education.

But soon the community began to vent its anger and fear for its future safety.  One resident wrote in to the
Palo Alto Weekly to rant that, “It is disgusting that this accomplished and respectable man died at the hands
of several greedy and remorseless gang bangers…the legal authorities supervising this case [should] sentence
these six degenerates to the maximum sentence.” Another complained about an increase in crime: “The level
of safety here 30 years ago was absolute," he said. "Now people are hesitant to walk around after 8 p.m."   

Only days later, police announced the confessions of the True Blue Crips.  This produced mixed emotions
from Palo Altans.  While many praised the quick police work, the news that the suspects were from East
Palo Alto furthered frayed already existing tensions between the two cities.  The last major murder in Palo
Alto --- the 1994 slaying of David Liu during a robbery near Greer Park --- had also been committed by an
East Palo Altan.  The devastated Samoan community, however, went a long way to helping ease the
tensions when some three dozen community members attended the candlelight vigil for Kay --- including two
of the fathers of the arrested suspects.

The prosecution, furthered by the Palo Alto community outrage, basically threw the book at the accused ---
even though none of them had prior criminal records.  Iapesa Simanu was sentenced to life in prison in 1999.
Christian Valdes (age 20), Danny Tevaga (age 17) and Falala Lelei (age 15) were convicted of first degree
murder. Tevaga, Lelei and Valdes were sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. In 2000, Olopitoamoa
Tapuloa was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison.  But for Meg and the twins, the convictions did nothing
to bring back Bert Kay.   "Closure is a fantasy word," Meg would say, "They took away my best friend, the
person I loved most in the world.”  

Shortly after Kay’s death, Palo Altan Brian Williams had this to say about his neighbor, Bert Kay.  “I
consider myself lucky that Meg and Bert moved into an old house in downtown Palo Alto only a couple
blocks away…Meg and Bert both brought with them an incredible neighborly spirit, through their
spontaneous visits with the twins, their weekend barbecues, or the many chance meetings we've had in a
nearby park. In the few short months they've been here they've created the kind of neighborhood that I only
thought existed back in my childhood.”

With the murder of Bert Kay on June 12th, 1997, Palo Alto lost one of its dearest neighbors and perhaps
the neighborhoods of our childhood.
                                                                                                             -Matt Bowling
Herbert Kay
Kay's body was
dragged behind this
bench on Gilman
Street.  The Laning
Chateau is to the left.
Palo Alto Home Page
Police & Crime
Downtown East
Bert Kay with his wife Meg in
Austin, Texas, while Bert was
attending the University of
Texas.
Bert with Nina at home in
Palo Alto.
Quiet Gilman Street, a
seemingly peaceful
Downtown street.
The attack took place just two
blocks from police
headquarters at the Civic
Center.
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of the Bert Kay murder?  Post
them in our memory bank.  
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Subject:
Meg and Bert at Sonia's first
swim lesson.
The Kays while in Zurich,  
Switzerland.
Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Historical Association,
Herbert Kay's NASA Website, Americanpatrol.com, Kara
Meg Kay in a more recent
picture with Sonia and Nina
The girls playing with scarves.
Bert Kay and little one.