A former Long Beach Police Department patrol officer accused of brutal ongoing abuses against his wife during a four month period in 2011 was convicted Tuesday of a dozen felonies and multiple misdemeanors relating to the case.

30 year-old Brandon Preciado was convicted of six felony counts of corporal injury to a spouse, three counts each of assault with a deadly weapon and assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury and one count of criminal threats. In addition, the jury—which took a day to deliberate—convicted him of five misdemeanor charges including three counts of assault and two counts of battery.

He was acquitted of resisting, obstructing or delaying a law enforcement officer, charges that stemmed from his arrest in January of this year, which occurred after a five-hour police standoff at the couple’s Pico Rivera home. He is scheduled for sentencing October 29. 

Prosecutors said Preciado’s attacks on his wife, Yessenia, occurred between Sept. 18, 2011 and Jan. 12, 2012 and included multiple threats and instances of physical abuse. During a preliminary hearing, Yessenia testified that Preciado assaulted her with everything from a police baton to a metal flashlight to a broom and on several occasions left her with visible injuries that caused her to miss days of work.

She said she suffered bleeding from her nose during an attack November 11, 2011 in which her husband put her in a headlock. She also said he choked her during a New Year’s Day assault, but he told her he wouldn’t kill her at the time because her brothers were in the home. The woman testified that her husband pushed her into a tile shower wall, struck her with a closed fist, threatened to hit her with a hammer and break her jaw and then struck her with a broom on January 4. She then said that Preciado hit her repeatedly January 9 with his police-issued baton then woke her up a day later with his forearm against her neck.

During the last alleged attack, Yessenia testified that she suffered a swollen left eye and bloody lips, saying her spouse repeatedly slapped her across the face, bent her left pinky back, bit her face and threatened that she should “prepare to die” before she eventually ran to a neighbor’s house to seek help.

Defense attorneys argued that there are no corroborating witnesses to any of the alleged attacks prior to January 12 when police were called to the house and also cite Yessenia’s inability to remember precisely what happened during her testimony at the trial (though her statements during the preliminary hearing are consistent with earlier interviews).

“She doesn’t want to remember,” Deputy District Attorney Amy Pentz said of Yessenia’s trial testimony. “That is how we expect a domestic violence victim to react.'”

Preciado was temporarily releived of his duties immediately following his arrest and is no longer employed with LBPD, according to spokeswoman Nancy Pratt.