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Helped others to the end

Man was punched in the head after confronting a man yelling at a woman. He was pronounced brain dead at the hospital.

November 30, 2009|By Joseph Serna

His sister said he was that go-to guy. Mr. I’ll-take-care-of-it.

Until his last waking moments, as his family understands, Clinton “C.J.” Hubbard was doing what he always did, being one of the good guys out there helping someone else.

“He was always there. He put people above himself. Putting other people in front of himself may be the reason this happened,” said Hubbard’s sister, Jessica Johnson, 28.

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Hubbard, 27, was fatally punched outside the Code restaurant, 4221 Dolphin Striker Way, in the early morning of Thanksgiving Day.

It was about 1:40 a.m. when Hubbard, people close to him said, confronted a man who may have been arguing with a woman. Hubbard didn’t know them, his sister said.

The man punched Hubbard on the side of the head, bursting a blood vessel in his brain, she said.

He was rushed to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana and declared brain dead. With his family by his bedside, and with their permission, doctors took Hubbard off life support at 10:30 p.m. Friday. He died soon after.

“The outpouring of love has blown us away. People that we don’t even know their names are saying they’ll live their lives like C.J.,” Johnson said.

People from all over the country and different parts of Hubbard’s life are coming to Southern California to pay their respects.

“Even his second-grade girlfriend, it’s unbelievable,” Johnson said.

Hubbard was the little brother who still looked after his older sister.

On Wednesday, Johnson said she called her little brother and asked for help on her computer.

“He said he’d help me over the weekend. I always thought about him and thought, ‘Yes, thank God there’s C.J.’”

Hubbard was that kind of guy who excelled at whatever he tried, friends and family said. At 5 feet 10, he was undersized for a basketball player, but his drive carried him above the rest.

“He was a bit of a bulldog. He carried that into his business life. He always wanted to have the best deal for his clients and challenged himself,” said Jeff Manley, chief executive of CresaPartners in Newport Beach, where Hubbard worked as a senior analyst. “He wasn’t afraid to say something when it was wrong. He stood his ground and made his point.”

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