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Tag: california crime

  • Alameda County prosecutors agree to 4-year prison term for man who killed two kids in DUI crash

    Alameda County prosecutors agree to 4-year prison term for man who killed two kids in DUI crash

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    DUBLIN — In two weeks, a San Jose man is scheduled to be sentenced to four years in state prison through a plea agreement over the 2021 crash that killed two Fremont siblings, aged 6 and 11, court records show.

    Cruz Montano Alduenda, 57, pleaded no contest to a single vehicular manslaughter count in the September 2021 crash that killed siblings Honesty Jenkins, 6, and Damarion Jenkins, 11, court records show. In exchange, Alameda County prosecutors dropped drunk driving charges and an additional manslaughter count, and agreed to a four-year prison term.

    The original criminal complaint charged Montano Alduenda with not just killing Honesty and Damarion but also injuring the victims’ mother and then-8-year-old brother, who survived the wreck. Police said at the time that Montano Alduenda was driving a Chevrolet Tahoe on State Route 84, west of Old Vallecitos Road, when he served out of his lane into oncoming traffic and struck the Jenkins family’s car head-on.

    Montano Alduenda was injured during the crash as well, and when police arrived he was still trapped inside the Chevrolet. His blood alcohol level was measured at .1, which is above the legal definition of drunk, and he also tested positive for methamphetamine, police said at the time.

    Damarion was killed outright, but Honesty survived for three months until she, too, succumbed, according to media reports.

    Montano Alduenda is set to be sentenced June 3 in Department 705 in the East County Hall of Justice in Dublin, court records show. In the meantime he is being held at Santa Rita Jail, where he continues to rack up time credits that will work towards his sentence.

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    Nate Gartrell

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  • Former Contra Costa Sheriff ‘Officer of the Year’ pleads no contest to 3 felonies, but can avoid prison term through drug rehab

    Former Contra Costa Sheriff ‘Officer of the Year’ pleads no contest to 3 felonies, but can avoid prison term through drug rehab

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    MARTINEZ — A former Contra Costa County Sheriff’s deputy who allegedly stole an Antioch man’s firearm and kept judges’ e-signatures in his patrol car without permission pleaded no contest to three felonies in a plea deal that allows him to avoid incarceration altogether.

    Matthew Allen Buckley, 42, pleaded no contest to possession of an illegal assault weapon, filing a false police report and preparing false documentary evidence. The terms of the deal, finalized Wednesday, say Buckley will receive a prison sentence of three years and eight months with a major caveat: he can avoid actually going to prison if he completes a six-month drug rehabilitation program.

    Buckley was charged in February 2023 with six felonies and one misdemeanor in an investigation that started when the relative of a deceased man whose firearms had been seized by police made several attempts to recover the guns, but became suspicious when Buckley appeared to be giving him the run-around. The Contra Costa Sheriff’s Office launched an investigation and found an AR-15 — along with two grams of methamphetamine — in Buckley’s Pinole home, according to police testimony.

    Buckley was also found in possession of a thumb drive containing e-signatures of Contra Costa County judges, potentially giving any officer who possessed them the power to sign and serve fraudulent search warrants. A news release by the Contra Costa District Attorney’s Office says authorities found “Buckley created false documents and signed for a judge without his consent on multiple search warrant returns for unrelated cases.”

    During the case in question, Buckley falsely claimed to have booked two guns into evidence, but actually disconnected the lower sections of the guns and kept them for himself, prosecutors said. His attorney didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    At Buckley’s July 2023 preliminary hearing, a sheriff’s investigator testified about another suspicious interaction between Buckley and a sergeant, who reported that during a training exercise, Buckley presented her with a form she’d never seen before, yet contained her signature. When she demanded an explanation, Buckley allegedly responded, “It’s fine, you know about it, so it’s all good.”

    At the time of his arrest, Buckley was a 15-year veteran of the sheriff’s office who was well-respected by peers. He was named the agency’s “Officer of the Year” in 2019.

    Years ago, he also worked as a bailiff for Contra Costa District Attorney Diana Becton, who previously served as a county superior court judge. Becton attempted to recuse her office from the prosecution but the California Attorney General passed it back to the Contra Costa DA’s Office, after telling Becton to simply wall herself off from the case, multiple law enforcement sources said.

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    Nate Gartrell

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