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Tag: Antioch Police

  • School officials were raising alarms about safety at Antioch’s Deer Valley High. Then a boy was killed on campus

    ANTIOCH — The Antioch school district has agreed to pay $1.25 million to the family of a 16-year-old student killed in a campus shooting, after officials had raised repeated concerns about safety at Deer Valley High School.

    Court filings in the family’s lawsuit paint a grim picture of conditions at the campus and how it prepared for crosstown rival sporting events known to attract large crowds. The school was in violation of state laws requiring a comprehensive safety plan and certification of security guards, according to the lawsuit. There also were not enough guards assigned to the campus.

    Looking back, one former school board member gave the high school a “D” grade in safety in response to a question during a 2025 deposition. Another testified that top officials became fearful and “were trying to cover their tracks” after 16-year-old Jonathon Parker was killed, because they were aware of serious safety shortcomings.

    “We could do better, and I think the district should have done better,” Ellie Householder, a school board trustee from 2018 to 2022, testified last year. “And I think that Jonathon Parker didn’t have to die.”

    School officials say they have made campuses safer in the years since Parker was killed.

    “The district has taken meaningful steps to strengthen safety measures, refine oversight, work closely with community partners to support secure campuses, and intentionally build a culture of care where every student feels safe, supported, and connected,” said Jag Lathan, AUSD’s board president, in a statement.

    At a Deer Valley High basketball game against Antioch High, Parker was shot and killed in a dark campus parking lot while he, his brother and two friends were attempting to fend off an estimated 25 attackers — a mix of teen boys and adults. Three months earlier, police testified, an estimated 20 students had fought near the campus football stadium.

    Despite the warning signs, when Parker’s 15-year-old killer fired the fatal shot, there were no police officers on campus, no security guards in the area and site safety officers were not trained to handle a school shooting, according to witness testimony.

    Parker’s mother told this news organization that his killers may have been angry that Parker had intervened when they were bullying another student days earlier. He was 6-foot-4 and sometimes served as a “protector” to students who had a harder time defending themselves, she said in 2020.

    Court records show Parker sensed danger the night he was killed and called his brother for help, telling him, “there’s some people up here from an incident that happened before,” his brother testified at a 2022 civil deposition.

    Parker’s brother arrived to take him home, but Parker stopped to chat with friends on his way to the parking lot, including a campus security guard who headed in the opposite direction.

    Moments later, a crowd began to form and appeared confrontational. Parker told his brother to “hurry up” and get to the car, but it was too late. Parker, his brother and two friends were surrounded by more than two dozen people.

    They chose what seemed like the only option, his brother testified. Parker squared off in a one-on-one fight with Daiveon Allison, then 15, of Pittsburg, who later was adjudicated in juvenile court for the killing.

    About a minute into the fight, chaos erupted. The four teens were mobbed by the crowd. Parker’s brother was knocked to the ground and kicked until one of his ribs broke. From the pavement, he heard gunfire and scrambled to help his brother. Parker lost consciousness and died the next day at a hospital.

    “(He) called for my name. That’s the last thing he said,” his brother testified.

    In the aftermath, police described warning signs that violence had been escalating at the high school.

    In 2017, officers responded to five reports of fights. In 2018, there were four, Sgt. Loren Bledsoe testified. By 2019, that number had climbed to 11.

    In 2020, then-Superintendent Stephanie Anello — who was ousted in 2024 amid a staff bullying and harassment scandal — said staffing levels were “adequate” and there was “absolutely no indication that someone was planning to commit such a heinous act.”

    But former AUSD trustee Crystal Sawyer-White testified that safety concerns had been raised before Parker’s death.

    She recounted how a Richmond parent had threatened a Deer Valley vice principal before a sporting event and said lighting concerns had surfaced at that time. During a campus tour, she noticed there were no cameras in the parking lot where Parker was later killed. She testified that the district had “failed” to keep him safe and, when asked, also gave school safety a “D” grade.

    “As far as sporting events, you know, that wasn’t a safe area for John John to be,” she said, using Parker’s nickname.

    Householder agreed. She testified that the district appeared more focused on adopting a safety plan that simply “checks off a box,” adding, “I had this intuition that things were really sketchy, but I was kind of stonewalled with information.”

    Looking back, she said adults never should have allowed such a large crowd to gather without intervention.

    “The lights were dim. The gates were locked. Why were there so many children there?” Householder testified. “To me, it’s not rocket science.”

    Since then, Householder agreed things have changed for the better, but added she doesn’t keep up with the details as well as when she served on the school board. In an email to this news organization, she said AUSD has shown “genuine growth … regarding student safety.” Six months after Parker was slain, the city accepted a $750,000 grant to return police officers to school campuses.

    Authorities say Parker’s death also fueled a cycle of retaliation among teens in Antioch and Pittsburg.

    A letter obtained by this news organization from one of Parker’s teachers, written shortly after his death, described the lasting impact.

    She wrote that several teens were preparing to rob her on BART property until they recognized her as a teacher Parker liked and stopped.

    “Jonathon wouldn’t have liked what we’ve become,” one said, according to the letter.

    Judith Prieve contributed to this report. 

    Nate Gartrell, Hema Sivanandam

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  • Antioch cashes out ex-chief: City to pay $190K over media leak

    ANTIOCH — In the latest police-related controversy to hit this beleaguered city, officials here have agreed to pay $190,000 to the former chief, who filed a legal claim after details about a then-pending administrative investigation were leaked to the press.

    In the end, officials cleared ex-police Chief Steven Ford of allegations he had an improper relationship with a city staffer, finding them “unfounded,” according to documents the city released Thursday. A legal settlement signed Aug. 25 promised the city would pay Ford $190,000 and, “at a minimum,” inform a specific newspaper reporter about the agreement.

    A statement released by the city says that information about the investigation was “inappropriately revealed to the press” before Ford even learned of it, and that this resulted in “damaging media coverage on or about” the day this news organization published a story on the probe last December.

    “Under California law, investigations regarding peace officers may only be revealed publicly when allegations are sustained. In this matter, the allegation against Chief Ford was found not true,” the statement says. “The city expresses its appreciation to Chief Ford for his previous service as Antioch police chief. It wishes Chief Ford the best for his future law enforcement career.”

    Ford, a longtime veteran of the San Francisco Police Department before coming to Antioch, didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

    Ford’s claims against the city centered on an administrative investigation that was opened in late 2024 — nearly a-year-and-a-half after his departure. It was an initiated by a civilian tipster who accused Ford of having an improper relationship with a staffer, according to an email by City Manager Bessie M. Scott informing Lamar Hernandez Thorpe, Antioch’s then-mayor, about the investigation. The email doesn’t name the tipster but was sent roughly two-weeks after Ford’s estranged wife emailed city officials accusing Ford of “dating someone who worked in Antioch” during his tenure.

    In 2022, Ford took over a department that appeared headed for stormy waters, assuming control after the FBI and Contra Costa District Attorney conducted a series of raids targeting officers who were suspected of crimes. Much of Ford’s tenure was spent crafting reforms, attending community events and promising to win back public trust. He abruptly resigned in July 2023, but tried and failed to get his job back in 2025, which later became a piece of his legal claim.

    The claim accused the city of “defamation,” invasion of privacy, inflicting emotional distress and a “failure to re-hire in retaliation” when Ford sought the chief’s job in 2025.

    He filed the claim last April, after officials announced they’d selected Joseph Vigil, a veteran Antioch officer who’d served as acting chief, for the job. On Feb. 18, Vigil sent Ford a letter stating a third-party investigation had cleared him.

    Ford never stated his reason for leaving the department. His divorce proceedings began around the time of his resignation. After leaving Antioch, he tried and failed to obtain chief jobs in Oakland and at Cal State East Bay.

    In August 2023, a federal grand jury and Contra Costa prosecutors charged a total of 14 ex-Antioch and Pittsburg police officers with various crimes, including three ex-Antioch officers charged with violent civil rights abuses. One was later convicted at trial, a second pleaded guilty to become a government’s witness and the third is set to go before a jury next month.

    By then, details of another related scandal had already been made public, involving Antioch officers who shared racist, sexist and homophobic communications in text groups. These included slurs and disparaging comments about Ford, who is Black, as well as local politicians and other officers.

    In a letter announcing his resignation in July 2023, Ford said he was “proud” of accomplishments during his relatively short tenure.

    “I sincerely hope our engagement with the community will continue and flourish,” he wrote.

    Nate Gartrell

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  • ‘No resident should live in fear’: Antioch mayor calls for more police resources following shooting spree

    ‘No resident should live in fear’: Antioch mayor calls for more police resources following shooting spree

    Antioch Mayor Lamar Hernandez-Thorpe is calling on county and state services to help the city address an “unprecedented level of gun violence ” after several shootings took place this month near a local corridor.

    Stephanie Lam

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