Murder of Kristin Smart

Birthday February 20, 1977

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Augsburg, Bavaria, West Germany

Age 47 years old

Nationality Germany

Height 6 ft

#10893 Most Popular

1977

Kristin Denise Smart (February 20, 1977 – disappeared May 25, 1996 ; declared legally dead May 25, 2002) was a 19-year-old American woman murdered by Paul Flores at the end of her first year on the campus of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (Cal Poly San Luis Obispo).

Kristin Denise Smart was born February 20, 1977, in Augsburg, Bavaria, West Germany, to Stan and Denise Smart, both teachers to children of American military personnel.

She had one brother and one sister.

When she was a child, Smart moved with her family to Stockton, California.

1995

She attended and graduated from Stockton's Lincoln High School in 1995.

Before her disappearance, she worked as a lifeguard and camp counselor at Camp Mokuleia in Hawaii.

Smart enrolled at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (Cal Poly) in San Luis Obispo, California, in 1995.

1996

On May 25, 1996, Smart attended a fellow Cal Poly student's off-campus party.

At approximately 2 a.m., she was found passed out on a neighbor's lawn, and two students began to help her walk to her dorm room.

A third student named Paul Flores joined the group, and due to the proximity of his dorm to Smart's, Flores told the other two students he would get Kristin home safely.

Smart was never seen again, and searches conducted since her disappearance have not yet located her, or her remains.

Smart's disappearance resulted in state legislation, including the Kristin Smart Campus Security Act, a bill which requires all public colleges and publicly funded educational institutions in California to have their security services make agreements with local police departments about reporting cases involving or possibly involving violence against students, including missing students.

The bill was passed unanimously by the California State Legislature and was signed into law by Governor Pete Wilson.

On April 13, 2021, Flores and his father, Ruben Flores, were arrested and taken into custody on suspicion of Smart's disappearance.

Their homes were searched, and investigators found numerous "items of interest" in the son's home.

Their trial began in July 2022.

On October 18, 2022, Paul Flores was found guilty of the murder of Kristin Smart, and Ruben Flores was acquitted of 'accessory after the fact'.

On March 10, 2023, Paul was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

The trial was held in Monterey County Superior Court in Salinas, California.

On the night of May 25, 1996, which fell on Memorial Day weekend, she attended a birthday party where she did not know anyone at a fraternity house.

She walked to and attended the party alone as a friend of hers had decided to return to the dorms earlier that night.

At approximately 2 a.m. Smart was found passed out on a neighbor's lawn by two fellow students, Cheryl Anderson and Tim Davis, who both had just left the party.

They helped Smart to her feet and decided to walk her back to her nearby dormitory.

Another student from the party, Paul Flores, joined their group and offered to help the two return Smart to her dorm room.

Davis departed the group first since he lived off-campus and had driven to the party.

Anderson was the second to depart the group, heading to Sierra Madre Hall, after Flores, who lived closer to Smart's dorm, assured Anderson that he could walk her there.

Flores stated to police that he walked Smart as far as his dormitory, Santa Lucia Hall, and then allowed her to walk back to her Muir Hall dorm by herself.

This was the last known sighting of her.

Smart did not have any money or credit cards at the time she went missing.

The University Police Department originally suspected that Smart had gone on an unannounced vacation and as a result were slow in reporting her as a missing person to local law enforcement.

She was only reported missing after a week, despite her family calling the police earlier.

Several volunteers searched for Smart.

Some of them were on horseback while others used ground-penetrating radar devices.

During the Laci Peterson murder investigation, there were unfounded rumors in the media that Laci's husband Scott Peterson had something to do with Smart's disappearance due to their simultaneous attendance at the Cal Poly campus.

There was a brief initial inquiry into whether Peterson was tied to the disappearance, with Peterson denying any involvement, and he was eventually ruled out as a suspect by police.

Although her body was never discovered, an earring that might have belonged to Smart was found by a tenant at the former residence of Paul Flores's mother.

This earring was not marked as evidence and has since been lost by the police.

Between 1996 and 2007, various searches for her remains and other evidence were conducted, some using cadaver dogs trained to detect the scent of human remains, including searches of properties owned by the Flores family.

No useful leads were found for nearly two decades.

2016

On September 6, 2016, officials from the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office announced they were investigating a new lead in the case.