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Tag: chavez

  • Fairfield man, 37, arrested on hate crime charges after teen girl assaulted while walking to school

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    AN IMMIGRATION DETAINER ON HIM. WE HAVE OTHER NEWS RIGHT NOW. FAIRFIELD MAN IS FACING HATE CRIME CHARGES TONIGHT AFTER POLICE SAY THAT A STUDENT WAS ATTACKED ON HER WAY TO SCHOOL. THIS HAPPENED YESTERDAY MORNING ON DAHLIA STREET. THAT’S NEAR FAIRFIELD HIGH SCHOOL. POLICE SAY THAT THE STUDENT WAS ATTACKED BY 37 YEAR OLD VICTOR CHAVEZ. INVESTIGATORS SAY THAT CHAVEZ USED VULGAR, RACIST LANGUAGE BEFORE ASSAULTING THAT GIRL. A NEIGHBOR SAYS SHE SAW WHAT HAPPENED AND GOT THE GIRL TO SCHOOL, AND THEN SHE IMMEDIATELY REPORTED THE CRIME. CHAVEZ WAS EVENTUALLY FOUND AND ARRESTED THIS MORNING. HE’S BEEN CH

    Fairfield man, 37, arrested on hate crime charges after teen girl assaulted while walking to school

    Updated: 5:15 PM PDT Oct 23, 2025

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    A 37-year-old Fairfield man has been arrested and faces hate crime charges in connection with the assault of a teen girl who was walking to school, police said.Fairfield High School staff were alerted after the attack on Wednesday and school resource officers responded to assist the victim, police said. Investigators determined the student was walking near the 300 block of Dahlia Street when the man, identified as Victor Viera Chavez, confronted her with “vulgar, race-based language before physically assaulting her, reportedly due to her perceived immigration status.”A witness helped the girl to school and Fairfield police launched a hate crime investigation. Police’s Youth Services Unit detained Chavez the next morning as he was leaving his home. He was booked for assault, child endangerment and hate crime charges.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    A 37-year-old Fairfield man has been arrested and faces hate crime charges in connection with the assault of a teen girl who was walking to school, police said.

    Fairfield High School staff were alerted after the attack on Wednesday and school resource officers responded to assist the victim, police said.

    Investigators determined the student was walking near the 300 block of Dahlia Street when the man, identified as Victor Viera Chavez, confronted her with “vulgar, race-based language before physically assaulting her, reportedly due to her perceived immigration status.”

    A witness helped the girl to school and Fairfield police launched a hate crime investigation.

    Police’s Youth Services Unit detained Chavez the next morning as he was leaving his home. He was booked for assault, child endangerment and hate crime charges.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • High School Playbook Game of the Week Poll: Oct. 24, 2025

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    High School Playbook Game of the Week Poll: Oct. 24, 2025

    Where should KCRA 3 go for the Game of the Week for Week 10 on Friday, Oct. 24?

    High school football is back for 2025 and we could use your help, once again, to produce our High School Playbook show. Where should KCRA 3 go for the Game of the Week for Week 10 on Friday, Oct. 24? The games for consideration are:El Camino vs. Casa RobleInderkum vs. Rio AmericanoWheatland vs. CenterPleasant Grove vs. Elk GroveThe poll below closes at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21.(Mobile users, click here if you don’t see the poll.)| MORE | Share your Fan Fits at games all season long. Watch our High School Playbook show Fridays on the KCRA 3 News at 11 p.m.

    High school football is back for 2025 and we could use your help, once again, to produce our High School Playbook show.

    Where should KCRA 3 go for the Game of the Week for Week 10 on Friday, Oct. 24?

    The games for consideration are:

    • El Camino vs. Casa Roble
    • Inderkum vs. Rio Americano
    • Wheatland vs. Center
    • Pleasant Grove vs. Elk Grove

    The poll below closes at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21.

    (Mobile users, click here if you don’t see the poll.)

    | MORE | Share your Fan Fits at games all season long.


    Watch our High School Playbook show Fridays on the KCRA 3 News at 11 p.m.


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  • Boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. deported to Mexico

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    Julio César Chávez Jr., whose high-profile boxing career was marred by substance abuse and other struggles and never approached the heights of his legendary father, was in Mexican custody Tuesday after being deported from the United States.

    His expulsion had been expected since July, when Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested him outside his Studio City home and accused him of making “fraudulent statements” on his application to become a U.S. permanent resident.

    In Mexico, Chávez, 39, faces charges of organized crime affiliation and arms trafficking, Mexican authorities say.

    He is the son of Julio César Chávez — widely regarded as Mexico’s greatest boxer — and spent his career in the shadow of his fabled father.

    Boxers Julio César Chávez, right, and his son Julio César Chávez Jr., during a news conference in Los Angeles in May.

    (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

    His father both supported his troubled son and chastised his namesake, whose struggles included substance abuse, legal troubles and challenges in making weight for his bouts.

    Despite his highly publicized problems, Chávez won the World Boxing Council middleweight title in 2011 before losing the belt the following year.

    Chávez was turned over to Mexican law enforcement authorities at the Arizona border and was being held Tuesday in a federal lockup in Hermosillo, the capital of Sonora state, authorities here said.

    During her regular morning news conference, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed that the boxer was in Mexican custody.

    Days before his July arrest in Studio City, Chávez faced off in Anaheim for his last bout — against Jake Paul, the influencer-turned-pugilist. Chávez lost the fight.

    When he was arrested in July, U.S. authorities labeled Chávez an “affiliate” of the Sinaloa cartel, which is one of Mexico’s largest — and most lethal — drug-trafficking syndicates.

    Jake Paul, right, and Julio César Chávez Jr., left, exchange punches during their cruiserweight bout in Anaheim on June 28.

    Jake Paul, right, and Julio César Chávez Jr., left, exchange punches during their cruiserweight bout in Anaheim on June 28.

    (Anadolu / Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Chávez has faced criticism over alleged associations with cartel figures, including Ovidio Guzmán, a son of infamous drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, now serving a life sentence in a U.S prison for his leadership role in the Sinaloa cartel. Ovidio Guzmán recently pleaded guilty to drug-trafficking and other charges in federal court in Chicago and is reported to be cooperating with U.S. prosecutors.

    Controversies have long overshadowed the career of Chávez.

    Chávez served 13 days in jail for a 2012 drunk-driving conviction in Los Angeles County and was arrested by Los Angeles police in January 2024 on gun charges. According to his attorney, Michael Goldstein, a court adjudicating the gun case granted Chávez a “mental health diversion,” which, in some cases, can lead to dismissal of criminal charges.

    “I’m confident that the issues in Mexico will be cleared up, and he’ll be able to continue with his mental health diversion” in California, Goldstein said.

    A lingering question in the case is why Chávez was apparently allowed to travel freely between the United States and Mexico on several occasions despite a Mexican arrest warrant issued against him in March 2023.

    On Jan. 4, 2025, according to the Department of Homeland Security, Chávez reentered the United States from Tijuana into San Diego via the San Ysidro port of entry. He was permitted in despite the pending Mexican arrest warrant and a U.S. determination just a few weeks earlier that Chávez represented “an egregious public safety threat,” the DHS stated in a July 3 news release revealing the boxer’s detention.

    Homeland Security said that the Biden administration — which was still in charge at the time of Chávez’s January entry — had determined that the boxer “was not an immigration enforcement priority.”

    While in training for the Paul match, Chávez spoke out publicly against President Trump’s ramped-up deportation agenda, which has sparked protests and denunciations across California. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, he accused the administration of “attacking” Latinos.

    Chávez told The Times: “I wouldn’t want to be deported.”

    McDonnell reported from Mexico City and El Reda from Los Angeles. Special correspondent Cecilia Sánchez Vidal in Mexico City contributed to this report.

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    Patrick J. McDonnell, Jad El Reda

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  • Doctor who helped supply Matthew Perry with ketamine pleads guilty

    Doctor who helped supply Matthew Perry with ketamine pleads guilty

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    One of two doctors charged with supplying ketamine to Matthew Perry pleaded guilty Wednesday to illegally distributing the surgical anesthetic.

    Dr. Mark Chavez is among three defendants who signed a plea deal and are facing lesser charges in Perry’s death, which federal prosecutors chalked up to a conspiracy by multiple individuals to provide the actor with the drug.

    The two other defendants who have entered into plea agreements are Perry’s live-in personal assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, and alleged drug dealer Erik Fleming.

    Two other defendants are not cooperating with prosecutors and face far more serious conspiracy charges.

    Jasveen Sangha, aka the “Ketamine Queen,” presented herself as “a celebrity drug dealer with high quality goods,” according to court documents. She’s accused of supplying Perry’s assistant with ketamine. Dr. Salvador Plasencia, referred to as “Dr. P,” allegedly injected the actor with the drug at his Pacific Palisades home. Both have pleaded not guilty and are set to be tried in March.

    During a brief appearance in federal court in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Chavez was asked how he pleaded and replied, “Guilty, your honor.” He is due back for sentencing in April and could face up to 10 years in federal prison. As part of his plea, Chavez agreed to surrender his medical license. He is free on $50,000 bond.

    Perry, 54, was found dead in the hot tub of his Pacific Palisades home on Oct. 28. He died from “acute effects of ketamine,” according to the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office. His death triggered a multiple-agency federal investigation.

    Prosecutors last month revealed charges against what U.S. Atty Martin Estrada dubbed a “broad underground criminal network” that supplied the actor.

    In late September, about a month before Perry’s death, prosecutors allege, Plasencia learned the actor was interested in obtaining ketamine, a legal medication commonly used as an anesthetic, according to charging documents in the case.

    Perry had taken the drug through his regular physician in an off-label treatment for depression. But abusers of the drug use it recreationally, drawn to its dissociative effects.

    After learning of Perry’s interest, Plasencia contacted Chavez, who previously operated a ketamine clinic, to obtain the drug to sell to the actor, authorities said. In text messages to Chavez, Plasencia discussed how much to charge Perry for the ketamine, stating, “I wonder how much this moron will pay” and “Let’s find out,” according to court records. The doctors charged Perry $2,000 for a dose that cost Chavez $12, prosecutors allege.

    Chavez, as part of the plea agreement, admitted to diverting ketamine from his San Diego clinic to sell to Plasencia. Chavez admitted he lied to a drug distributor and submitted a prescription under the name of a former patient without their consent.

    Chavez transferred 22 vials of ketamine and nine ketamine lozenges, which were fraudulently obtained, to Plasencia for sale to Perry. Chavez “was fully aware that selling vials of ketamine to a patient for self-administration was illegal,” according to the plea agreement.

    Plasencia, although forbidden by the Drug Enforcement Administration from prescribing controlled substances, continues to practice medicine but must inform patients about the ongoing criminal case.

    Plasencia is facing one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, seven counts of distribution of ketamine and two counts of altering and falsifying documents or records related to the federal investigation. If convicted, he faces 10 years for each ketamine-related charge and 20 years for each falsification charge.

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    Richard Winton

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