Prosecutors say Budrow slashed Flores' neck with a 'manufactured weapon'
A California inmate has been charged with attempted murder after he allegedly tried to kill another inmate convicted in the murder of Kristin Smart, according to officials.
According to a release from the Fresno County District Attorney's Office, Jason Richard Budrow, 43, was charged on counts involving crimes by a prisoner and possessing a weapon, as well as enhancements for great bodily injury, after he attacked Paul Flores.
Prosecutors claim that on Aug. 23, Budrow slashed the neck of Flores with a "manufactured weapon" inside Pleasant Valley State Prison in Coalinga. Flores was hospitalized in Fresno, but returned to prison two days later.
Jason Budrow, who murdered the "I-5" strangler in jail, allegedly attacked Kristin Smart's killer, Paul Flores, in prison. (California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation )
Flores was arrested in 2021, convicted in 2022, and sentenced last March, and is serving a 25-year-to-life sentence for the murder of the 19-year-old Smart, who disappeared from California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo over Memorial Day weekend in 1996.
Paul Flores was convicted in the killing of Kristin Smart.
Budrow was serving life without parole for fatally strangling his girlfriend in 2010, when he killed his Mule Creek State Prison cellmate, Roger Reece Kibbe, 81, who was known as the "I-5 Strangler" in 2021.
Prosecutor Chris Puervelle, standing, puts a slide on a projection screen as defense attorney Paul Sanger, left, and defendant Paul Flores look on in Monterey County, California, Superior Court during the Kristin Smart murder trial. (Tribune News Service via Getty Images/File)
If Budrow is convicted of the charges in connection with the assault of Flores, he faces 27 years to life, plus a nine-year determinate sentence for the enhancements, the Fresno County District Attorney's Office said.
Budrow's arraignment is scheduled for Jan. 8.