San Diego Veterinarian Died of Heart Attack in Alleged Break-In Attempt: Medical Examiner

San Diego Veterinarian Died of Heart Attack in Alleged Break-In Attempt: Medical Examiner
A file photograph of a judge's gavel. (Andrew Harnik/Pool/Getty Images)
City News Service
5/20/2023
Updated:
5/20/2023

SAN DIEGO—An 88-year-old veterinarian who died after an alleged attempted break-in at his Rolando-area clinic died of a heart attack caused by stress, San Diego County’s chief medical examiner testified May 18.

Patrick O'Brien, 38, is charged in the June 15, 2022, death of Clark Kelly, a longtime veterinarian at Boulevard Animal Clinic on El Cajon Boulevard. He was ordered May 19 to stand trial on a murder charge.

Though Kelly was found inside the clinic with a significant head wound, San Diego County’s chief medical examiner testified Thursday that Kelly died of a stress-induced heart attack, then likely fell and struck the floor or a desk.

Dr. Steven Campman testified that though Kelly died of a heart attack on June 15, 2022, the death was classified as a homicide.

“In a circumstance when the stress is outside an activity of daily living ... then the death can be classified as a homicide,” Campman testified Thursday.

Boulevard Animal Clinic on El Cajon Boulevard in San Diego. (Screenshot via GoogleMaps.com)
Boulevard Animal Clinic on El Cajon Boulevard in San Diego. (Screenshot via GoogleMaps.com)

In arguing to hold O'Brien to answer for murder, Deputy District Attorney Andrew Aguilar cited another case in which a victim died of a heart attack and a defendant was convicted of first-degree murder. In that case, the victim was punched by the defendant and died of a heart attack one hour later. Aguilar said the evidence showed the death was not caused by the assault, but rather by the stress over what occurred, leading to the heart attack.

O‘Brien’s defense attorney, Peter Will, argued that while O’Brien was seen outside the clinic, there wasn’t sufficient evidence to show his client tried to break into the business.

He also said the other fatal heart attack case mentioned by the prosecution involved an assault, while there was no evidence showing any physical contact whatsoever occurred between O'Brien and Kelly.

San Diego Superior Court Judge Joan Weber said the evidence supported that O'Brien attempted to get into the clinic and that he had a verbal altercation with Kelly.

Weber cited a recording that was played in court of the 911 call Kelly made, in which he told a dispatcher, “There’s an intruder who’s broken into the clinic.”

Weber called the “fear” in Kelly’s voice during the call “compelling evidence” of the stress Kelly was under at the time. She also referenced Campman’s testimony that the stress Kelly underwent was the direct cause of the fatal heart attack, despite the fact that he had a documented history of heart problems.

O'Brien made statements to officers after his arrest, in which he allegedly said Kelly was rude to him and angered him, the judge said.

Though she described it as “obviously a very unusual felony murder case,” Weber ruled there was enough evidence to support the murder charge.

O‘Brien was arrested near the clinic shortly after the alleged attempted break-in. According to testimony, witnesses pointed O’Brien out to officers and they found him sitting near a trash bin about 30 feet from the clinic.

Kristian Howard testified that he was at a nearby liquor store when a woman ran into the store asking for help. The woman, who he later learned was Kelly’s wife, said a man was “trying to break into our place,” Howard testified.

Howard and another man walked over and saw O‘Brien outside the clinic. O’Brien told the men, “I just bought the place.”

Testimony during O‘Brien’s two-day preliminary hearing touched on two other incidents in which O’Brien allegedly broke into vehicles, then claimed to officers that he was the vehicles’ rightful owner. Aguilar argued Friday that this similarity in the statements indicated O'Brien’s intent to break into Kelly’s clinic and steal property.