The desperate final moments of Top Gun: Maverick James Handy before he was allegedly stabbed to death by his girlfriend’s son have been revealed in a coroner’s report.
Handy, 81, was stabbed in the torso and also suffered ‘neck compression’ when Michael Gledhill, 44, allegedly attacked him outside a Tarzana, Los Angeles home on June 3 at around 9.20am.
Per a Medical Examiner’s report obtained by The Daily Mail, Handy and Gledhill got into a verbal altercation outside the front porch of his girlfriend’s home, before Gledhill allegedly mounted Handy and dragged him to the side of the house.
Gledhill allegedly went back inside the home to retrieve what ‘appeared to be a knife’ before returning to Handy and stabbing him to death, per the report.
It was alleged that while Handy lay dying on the ground with a stab wound to the torso, Gledhill called 911 and said, ‘I am the son of man, I just killed the man of sin.’
Authorities said Gledhill was arrested after telling police he was the person they were looking for. Handy was taken to hospital but pronounced dead at 10.48am.
The desperate final moments of Top Gun: Maverick James Handy before he was allegedly stabbed to death by his girlfriend’s son have been revealed in a coroner’s report. Seen on NYPD Blue
This image made from video provided by KABC shows the scene at a home where authorities were investigating the fatal stabbing of Handy
According to the Medical Examiner Investigator’s report ‘paramedics responded to the scene, initiated life-saving efforts, and transported [Handy] to the hospital, where, despite these efforts, death was pronounced.’
Handy suffered multiple traumatic injuries in the attack, including multiple rib fractures.
Security footage from a house next door obtained by Fox 11 Los Angeles showed Gledhill ambling down the sidewalk, as bloody clothes lay nearby.
A motive for the attack remains unclear, but neighbors claimed Michael and Handy had been arguing overnight.
The Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman charged Gledhill with one count of murder with a special allegation that he personally used a deadly weapon, a knife.
Gledhill appeared before Judge Maria Cavalluzzi on Tuesday at the LA County Mental Health Court in Hollywood for a hearing that lasted less than 10 minutes.
Standing 6-foot-6-inches and wearing a bright yellow LA County jail garb, Gledhill walked into the courtroom and muttered under his breath as he was ordered by deputies to stand behind Deputy Public Defender Robert Krauss.
Krauss noted that Geldhill’s father and stepmother were also in the courtroom audience but Gledhill did not make eye contact with his parents.
The judge ordered Gledhill to be committed to the California Department of State Hospitals until his mental competence is restored.
State Hospitals officials will determine which facility he will be housed and treated, which will start by August 11. In the meantime, Gledhill will remain at LA County’s notorious Twin Towers before he is transferred.
Judge Cavalluzzi ordered for an involuntary medical order to remain effect and his maximum commitment date will extend to July 14, 2028.
As the brief hearing was ending, a frustrated Gledhill spoke to the judge and said, ‘I have an ongoing case. That is not my name. I have another court case.’
Judge Cavalluzi looked at the lanky Gledhill and responded, ‘It’s Ok Mr. Gledhill. We’re going to see you when you come back.’
Handy, 81, was stabbed in the torso and also suffered ‘neck compression’ when Michael Gledhill, 44, allegedly attacked him outside a Tarzana, Los Angeles home on June 3 around 9.20am – Handy seen in Top Gun: Maverick
Suspect Gledhill (pictured in 2000) was a top volleyball player at Taft high
Gledhill was handcuffed and taken into police custody hours after he allegedly killed the beloved actor
After the hearing, a Daily Mail reporter tried to speak to Gledhill’s father and stepmother, but they refused and quickly walked out of the Hollywood courthouse
Handy had been dating his girlfriend and Gledhill’s mother Wendy for 31 years.
Javier Trincado, Gledhill’s lawyer, said last month his client is ‘unable to assist’ in his defense and told the judge that the sheriff’s department did not bring Gledhill to the courtroom, but did not provide a reason.
Superior Court Judge John H. Reid had ordered that Gledhill be sent to mental health court and undergo psychological evaluations.
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman said Handy deserved to enjoy his later years with his loved ones and that the person who took his life should be held accountable.
‘This is not how anyone’s life should end, stabbed in the chest and left dying in the front yard of a home,’ he said in a statement.
Handy was a character actor in films and on TV for decades, including appearances in a variety of television crime procedurals.
Seen left as Charles Ross on CSI: NY with AJ Buckley, right
Actor Brian Delate knew Handy for more than four decades after meeting him at a Vietnam veterans theater company in New York. Delate described him as someone with a great sense of humor who was always curious.
Delate told The Associated Press that a few times over the past couple of years, Handy mentioned in passing that his girlfriend’s son had mental health problems.
‘I didn’t think much of it, because he just kind of mentioned it casually,’ he said.
Handy’s girlfriend had fixed up the garage so her son could live there, Delate said. Handy had his own home.
Bail was set at $2 million for Gledhill, according to authorities. If convicted, Gledhill faces up to 26 years to life in prison, according to the district attorney’s office.
Born in New York, Handy appeared in films and TV shows for decades.
He was known for his role as an exterminator in the 1995 film ‘Jumanji’ and more recently as the bartender Jimmy in the 2022 film Top Gun: Maverick, according to IMDB.
He’s also appeared in some of the top TV crime dramas, including ‘NCIS: Los Angeles,’ ‘The Closer’ and ‘Cold Case.’
He was the doctor who treated Hugh Jackman’s character in 2017 movie Logan, played Milton Briggs in Arachnophobia, and had roles in The Rocketeer, Brighton Beach Memoirs, The Verdict and K-9.
He has appeared in dozens of TV shows too, according to his IMDB page.

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