A 44-year-old Torrance man faces up to 100 years to life in state prison after the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office charged him with attempted murder for allegedly stabbing a Long Beach police officer multiple times with a folding knife during a call response near the Billy Jean King Library on April 17.
Arturo Scott Fernandez now sits in jail on bail exceeding $2 million. The charges, one count of attempted murder of a peace officer, two counts of assault on a peace officer, and two counts of resisting an executive officer, reflect the severity of what prosecutors say happened on a Friday afternoon in broad daylight near Pacific Avenue and First Street in Long Beach.
The officer survived. He was treated at a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries and released. But the fact that he walked out of that hospital at all may owe something to two federal air marshals who happened to witness the attack and stepped in to help take Fernandez into custody.
What authorities say happened in Long Beach
At about 2:20 p.m. on Friday, April 17, Long Beach police officers responded to a call about a possibly armed man near Pacific Avenue and First Street. The man turned out to be Fernandez, the Southern California News Group reported. Officers spoke with him at the scene. He refused to comply with commands.
When the officers attempted to physically detain Fernandez, prosecutors say he grabbed one of them and began stabbing the officer in the head and torso with a folding knife. The officer's partner was also present during the struggle.
Two federal air marshals who saw the events unfolding intervened, officials said. Their help was instrumental in getting Fernandez into custody. The injured officer was transported to a hospital, treated, and released.
No motive has been publicly disclosed. The original reason someone called police about a "possibly armed man" remains unclear. Neither the injured officer nor his partner has been publicly identified, and the names of the two air marshals have not been released.
District Attorney Hochman responds
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman issued a statement that spoke plainly about what officers face every day on California streets. His words carried a tone of frustration familiar to anyone who follows the risks law enforcement officers shoulder in a state where violent crime and anti-police sentiment have collided for years.
"Officers respond to calls for service daily expecting to help residents in need. Their goal is straightforward: to protect and serve. In carrying out their duties, they don't expect to become victims themselves."
That last line lands hard. Officers do not expect to become victims themselves, and yet, with increasing regularity, they do. A routine call about a possibly armed individual turned into a knife attack on an officer's head and torso. The only thing separating this case from a murder prosecution is the fact that the officer survived.
The charges and what they carry
The five-count charging package assembled by the DA's office reflects the gravity of the alleged conduct. Attempted murder of a peace officer alone carries enormous sentencing exposure in California. Combined with two counts of assault on a peace officer and two counts of resisting an executive officer, Fernandez faces a potential sentence of 100 years to life in state prison if convicted as charged.
As of Friday, April 24, Fernandez remained jailed with bail set at more than $2 million. No arraignment or preliminary hearing date has been publicly disclosed. The specific court where charges were filed and any applicable case number have not been reported.
Cases like this one test whether California's justice system will follow through with consequences that match the conduct. In recent years, the state has seen high-profile prosecutions where defendants received life sentences for acts of extreme violence, but the state's broader criminal justice trajectory has left many officers and their families skeptical that the system has their backs.
Federal air marshals: the unsung factor
One detail in this case deserves more attention than it has received. Two federal air marshals, officials whose primary mission involves aviation security, happened to be near the scene and intervened as Fernandez allegedly attacked the officer.
Their presence was coincidental, but their willingness to act was not. Without their intervention, the outcome for the stabbed officer could have been far worse. Officials credited the marshals with helping subdue Fernandez, though details about how exactly they intervened have not been released.
It is a reminder that when violence erupts, the people who step forward matter. The air marshals were under no obligation to engage in a street-level altercation outside the scope of their federal duties. They did it anyway.
A broader pattern of violence against officers
Attacks on law enforcement officers are not abstractions. They are flesh-and-blood events with consequences that ripple through departments, families, and communities. A folding knife to the head and torso of a police officer responding to a call for service is not a policy debate. It is an attempted killing.
Across the country, prosecutors have pursued severe charges in cases involving shocking acts of violence that leave communities demanding accountability. The Fernandez case will test whether Los Angeles County's justice system delivers on the charges it has filed.
Hochman's statement suggests the DA's office intends to prosecute aggressively. But filing charges and securing convictions are two different things. California courtrooms have a way of producing outcomes that leave victims and officers wondering what the system is really designed to protect.
High-profile criminal cases elsewhere have reminded the public that even the most serious charges can take years to resolve, and that the distance between an arrest and a final sentence can feel like an eternity for victims and their families.
What remains unknown
Several key questions remain unanswered. Who called police about a possibly armed man near Pacific Avenue and First Street? What prompted that call? Did Fernandez have a prior criminal record? Was the folding knife visible when officers first made contact?
The injured officer's identity has been withheld, which is standard practice in many departments when officers are victims of violent crime. But the public deserves to know, in time, whether this officer returns to duty, and whether the system that charged Fernandez follows through with the kind of prosecution that matches five felony counts and a century of potential prison time.
In other major criminal cases, the justice system has shown it can hold dangerous offenders accountable when the will exists to do so. Whether that will holds in Los Angeles County remains an open question.
An officer went to work on a Friday afternoon to answer a call for help. He ended up in a hospital with stab wounds to his head and torso. If the system can't deliver justice for that, it isn't a justice system at all.

