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Tag: Fremont

  • K9 attack on Fremont police sergeant leads to accidental shooting of suspect

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    An officer-involved shooting that injured a suspect on Valentine’s Day in Fremont was triggered when a police dog bit a police sergeant and caused him to unintentionally fire his gun, authorities said Thursday.

    About 9:45 p.m. Saturday, as police Sgt. James Taylor was trying to apprehend a suspect, he “was bitten by a police canine and he unintentionally discharged his service weapon, striking the suspect,” Fremont police said in an update on Thursday.

    Taylor has 17 years of service with the Fremont Police Department, 12 years as an officer and about five years as a sergeant. He was treated for the dog bite at a local trauma center.

    The suspect who was shot, 25-year-old Freddy Magana Gonzales of Redwood City, was taken to a hospital for treatment of a non-life-threatening injury. When he is released from the hospital, Fremont police said he will be booked on suspicion of multiple outstanding residential burglary warrants by Bay Area municipal law enforcement agencies.

    The officer-involved shooting happened in the area of Blacow Road and Mattos Court, near Alta Drive and Racine Avenue.

    Fremont officers had been assisting outside agencies in catching alleged vehicle and residential burglary suspects. Fremont police believe the same suspects were involved in similar crimes in their city last year.

    The suspects allegedly committed multiple burglaries on Saturday in other cities before returning to Fremont. When officers there attempted to arrest them, a vehicle pursuit began. After the suspect’s car was disabled, four suspects fled on foot.

    The shooting happened as Taylor was trying to apprehend Gonzales, police said.

    The three other suspects were taken into custody by Fremont police and later turned over to another Bay Area law enforcement agency and were booked on suspicion of crimes that include burglary, possession of stolen property, and possession of burglary tools.

    Fremont Police Department will also be pursuing a variety of criminal charges on all four suspects, including reckless evasion of a peace officer, possession of a concealed firearm, a felon in possession of a firearm, obliteration of a serial number on a firearm, resisting arrest, and theft.

    The Fremont Police Department is conducting an investigation into the officer-involved shooting and will released additional information as required by state law.

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    Bay City News

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  • Letters: Betty Yee is our best choice to run the state

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    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Yee is best choice to run the state

    Re: “Sparks fly at initial debate” (Page A1, Feb. 5).

    California doesn’t need a governor who “wins” a two-hour TV show. We need a leader who can fix the budget, steady our economy and make government actually work.

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    Letters To The Editor

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  • Fremont police investigating fatal shooting near Central Avenue, Joseph Street

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    Fremont police said a person was shot and killed on Tuesday. 

    Around 4:19 p.m., multiple people called 911 to report that there was a shooting in the area of Central Avenue and Joseph Street.

    Officers responded to the area and found a person on the ground who was seriously injured. They were given trauma care but died, police said. 

    According to Hayward police, Fremont police alerted them to a vehicle wanted in connection with an assault with a deadly weapon that may be in their city. Hayward police said officers did spot the vehicle, but before they could attempt a traffic stop, the driver got onto the freeway.

    Fremont police said it is the city’s first homicide of 2026.

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    Jose Fabian

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  • Bay Area county committee passes ICE response plan for future enforcement operations, bans agency from county property

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    Saying they were spurred by the shooting of Renee Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis, an Alameda County Board of Supervisors committee has passed two proposals to establish a Bay Area regional response in the event that federal immigration agents launch a new operation locally.

    “We have to move very quickly,” Alameda County District 5 Supervisor Nikki Fortunato Bas told Bay Area News Group before the Board of Supervisors meeting on Thursday before the Together For All Committee vote. “Since the Minneapolis killing – more than ever – it is incredibly dangerous for people to enter the immigration system.”

    During a surge of immigration enforcement in Minneapolis, ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot Minneapolis resident Renee Good in the head while she was driving away. Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, was posthumously labeled as a “domestic terrorist” by Vice President JD Vance and Department of Homeland Security Sec. Kristi Noem, whose defense of Ross’ actions ignited furor among Minnesota residents who have taken to the streets in protest.

    The incident evoked memories of last October when Border Patrol agents launched an operation in the Bay Area that led to a protest at the entrance to Coast Guard Island. During the standoff, a U-Haul truck driven by Bella Thompson reversed and accelerated toward officers. Thompson was shot by federal officers before she could strike them and was charged with one count of assault of a federal officer. She was released on bail in November and remanded to her parents in Southern California while attending a mental health program pending trial.

    In the lead-up to the October incident, Bas said she had drafted a proposal to strengthen the county’s response to immigration enforcement operations. The first of these proposals calls for a coordinated regional response to federal immigration raids, following the example set by Santa Clara County, with public outreach plans and staff trainings on how to protect residents accessing the county’s social services, courts and health care facilities.

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    Chase Hunter

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  • H Mart’s largest U.S. location will be opening in the Bay Area

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    Asian supermarket chain H Mart will be opening its largest U.S. location in Fremont, with construction expected to begin in late 2026.

    The two-story H Mart will be at Pacific Commons Shopping Center. Vestar, the company that manages the shopping center, made the announcement Tuesday, saying, “This project represents the largest investment in the company’s history and will also be its largest store in California.”

    According to Vestar, there will be a food hall with a variety of fast-casual eateries, dine-in restaurants, a bar and entertainment offerings inside the two-story store. Those features will mark the supermarket as a first-of-its-kind H Mart location.

    “This new location represents a bold new chapter for us,” said H Mart President Brian Kwon. “By blending elevated dining and community spaces, we are creating a premier destination for food lovers where diverse ethnicities of friends and neighbors can gather.”

    Fremont Mayor Raj Salwan described the plans for the 100,000 square-foot flagship store as a “transformative investment.”

    “The innovative reuse of a vacant large-format retail space reflects the City’s strategic commitment to reimagining vacant commercial properties into destinations that generate jobs, amenities, and lasting community value,” Salwan said.

    Pacific Commons is located at 43440 Boscell Road.

    The Fremont spot will be H Mart’s fourth location in the Bay Area. H Mart has stores in San Francisco and Dublin, and it has two in San Jose.

    The supermarket chain was founded in 1982 and began in Woodside, Queens. 

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    Jose Fabian

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  • Fremont experiences second fatal traffic accident of 2026

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    A motorcyclist involved in a traffic incident in Fremont on Monday afternoon has died.

    It was the second fatal traffic collision in Fremont in 2026.

    Just after 3 p.m., Fremont police officers responded to the “major injury collision” — which happened at the intersection of Cushing Parkway and Northport Loop East — involving a pickup truck and a motorcyclist, according to a news release from Fremont police.

    “The motorcyclist suffered major injuries and was transported to a local area hospital,” according to the release. “The driver of the pickup was uninjured and remained on scene.”

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    Jim Harrington

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  • Fremont rancher refuses to remove gate after city claims it blocks park access

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    FREMONT — A bison rancher is appealing the city’s order demanding he remove a gate that blocks public access to a regional park, with a hearing over the matter expected to take place soon.

    Rancher Chris George is fighting tooth-and-nail to keep the gate on Morrison Canyon Road in rural Fremont, despite city officials determining it was illegally constructed and blocks a city right-of-way.

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    Kyle Martin

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  • 93-year-old accused of killing 83-year-old spouse in Fremont

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    A 93-year-old was arrested after allegedly telling officers he shot his spouse Saturday in Fremont, the police department said.

    Police report officers responded to a parking lot on the 5000 block of Mowry Avenue for a report of a shooting at around 12:22 a.m. According to authorities, the caller advised he shot his spouse and wanted to turn himself into custody.

    At the scene, authorities report 93-year-old Richard Hocking was found by his vehicle. Inside, officers found the deceased 86-year-old victim, according to police.

    The police department said Hocking was placed into custody and transported back to the Fremont Police Department. He then provided a statement to officers with the reasoning behind the incident, according to officials.

    The police department report Hocking was booked into custody on suspicion of homicide and gun-related enhancement. This is the city’s first homicide in 2026.

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    Victoria Meza

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  • Fremont man accused of killing sex offender expected back in court soon

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    An attorney for the Fremont man charged with the murder of an elderly registered sex offender asked a judge Thursday for an extension to enter a plea due to the man’s alleged mental health issues, according to NBC Bay Area.

    Varun Suresh, 29, appeared in the East County Hall of Justice in Dublin as the judge granted his defense more time before entering a plea in the case that reportedly left David Brimmer, 71, dead from multiple stab wounds in a neighborhood near the Fremont Hills.

    Suresh’s attorney told NBC Bay Area in a recent interview that “there are significant mental health issues we are exploring.” Suresh is expected back in court on Dec. 17.

    In the case, Suresh is accused of using the Megan’s Law website, a state database which tracks the home addresses of registered sex offenders, to develop a plan to stab Brimmer to death.

    Suresh allegedly posed as a door-to-door accountant looking for clients to coax Brimmer into speaking with him at Brimmer’s home. Suresh allegedly chased Brimmer into another nearby home with a knife, slashed him in the kitchen and stalked the bloody man to the front yard before fatally stabbing him several times. Suresh then allegedly stood up, smoked a cigarette and gave himself up to police.

    The fatal incident police originally reported as a fight in a hillside neighborhood near Mission Peak was the result of Suresh’s pre-planned plot to kill “child molesters” and “sex offenders,” according to court documents. After Suresh surrendered to police, he reportedly admitted the whole scheme to investigators.

    Suresh allegedly told police that he chose Brimmer because he wanted “someone who is easy to kill” and that “white guys are so much more graceful. … They have no victimhood.”

    “I’m hoping … that because he’s a pedophile … like, everyone hates pedophiles … so like, it should be cool,” Suresh said, according to police. “I honestly don’t like pedophiles. They deserve to die.”

    According to the Megan’s Law website, Brimmer, who lived at 743 Solstice Ct., had four prior convictions of sexual offenses involving children in Alameda County between 1995 and 2004.

    The incident marked Fremont’s fifth homicide of the year.

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    Kyle Martin

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  • Letters: Vote no on the unfair Proposition 50

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    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Say no to unfairness;
    vote down Prop. 50

    In 2010, Californians voted to create a nonpartisan Citizens Redistricting Commission to stop decades of gerrymandering. That reform was meant to restore fairness and ensure that all Californians — regardless of political affiliation — had a meaningful voice in representation.

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    Letters To The Editor

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  • 4 suspects in Fremont robbery arrested in San Leandro when police chase ends in crash

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    4 suspects in Fremont robbery arrested after pursuit ends in San Leandro



    4 suspects in Fremont robbery arrested after pursuit ends in San Leandro

    00:37

    Four suspects in a robbery in Fremont were arrested when a police chase ended in a crash in San Leandro, police said. 

    Around 12:30 p.m. Friday, police said a person was robbed outside a bank on Mission Boulevard in Fremont. The victim provided a description to the police of the suspects. 

    Officers said they were able to track down the suspect’s car using automatic license plate readers. When they attempted to pull over the vehicle, the driver took off, starting a police chase on northbound Interstate 880.

    The chase continued into San Leandro, where police said the car came to a stop and the four suspects tried to run away. They were quickly taken into custody and items belonging to the victim were located in the vehicle, police said.

    Police said additional information later determined the suspects were involved in a similar robbery in a nearby city earlier Friday. 

    Police said the suspect vehicle was involved in a crash during the pursuit on the highway and two crashes on the streets of San Leandro. No injuries were reported. 

    The suspects have not been identified.

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    Brandon Downs

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  • Is it better to rent or own in California? That depends.

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    The debate over renting vs. owning has long posed a challenge for households in California. Arguments have morphed in recent years as home prices and mortgage rates soared beyond the increasing rents. To illustrate the complexities, we’ve created a hypothetical rent vs. buy scenario to track housing finances over a 30-year period. However, the math doesn’t account for the intangibles: the flexibility of renting compared to the stability of owning.

    HOW MONTHLY COSTS COMPARE

    Key in any housing calculation is monthly cost. Our example estimates California house rent today at $4,000 a month vs. buying a $900,000 house with a 10% down mortgage at 6.5% plus property taxes, insurance, association fees, and repairs. The scenario assumes costs grow with historical inflation and the mortgage rate is lowered twice by a half-point through refinancing.

     

    RUNNING THE TAB

    Homeowners need to repay their mortgage plus cover a range of additional costs. So renting’s total costs run cheaper for nearly two decades. But owning ends up costing slightly less over time. Here’s cumulative costs by year, in thousands of dollars.

    THE BOUNTY: Ownership’s edge

    Owning’s true financial benefit arises from the increasing value of the home. Assuming historical gains of 5% per year, the owners gets a $3.8 million asset after 30 years. The renter, who hypothetically invested the $90,000 down payment in the stock market, would accumulate $929,000. Here’s investment value by year, in thousands of dollars.

    WHERE IT GOES

    Look at the slices of 30 years of housing expenditures, rent vs. own. The renter just pays the landlord. Owner costs go to principal and interest on the mortgage, property taxes, home insurance, association fees, and repair and maintenance costs. Note: Interest payments and property taxes can be tax deductible.

    A HISTORY LESSON

    Look at the past 30 years of historical returns for three key factors in this rent vs. buy calculation, using 10-year moving averages for rent (California Consumer Price Indexes); home values (federal California index) and stocks (Standard & Poor’s 500).

    Unfathomable, unaffordable

    California’s long-running and steep affordability crunch makes the rent vs. buy debate a moot argument for many people. Housing costs throttle numerous California family budgets. The state’s flock of high- paying jobs pushes up housing costs well past what more typical paychecks can easily afford. That’s true for households considering renting or buying.

    Stagnant ownership

    Stubbornly high ownership costs have kept California’s share of people living in homes they own relatively stable, except for a temporary surge in the early 2000s when mortgages were too easily obtained. Those risky loans played a key role in the Great Recession, as borrowers defaulted in huge numbers.

    Housing afforability index

    It’s tough to be a California homebuyer. The estimated number of Californians earning the statewide median income who could comfortably purchase a single-family home is falling sharply, according to a California Association of Realtors index. The Golden State share of qualified buyers is significantly below the national norm.

    Housing-cost stresses

    The 2024 edition of Census housing data details how California’s cost of shelter varies between renters and homeowners — with or without mortgages on the property.

    But because renters typically earn less than owners, it’s more likely that their housing costs exceed 50% of their household incomes, an extreme level of financial stress.

    Big housing worries

    A statewide survey last year asked “How often do you worry about the cost of housing for you and your family?” Those who said “every day” or “almost every day” …

     

     

     

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    Jeff Goertzen1, Jonathan Lansner

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  • Map: Starbucks in the Bay Area that are on the closure list

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    After Starbucks announced it would be shutting hundreds of stores, its website is listing dozens in the Bay Area as being closed as of Sunday, Sept. 28.

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    Bay Area News Group

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  • Deadly stabbing in Fremont under investigation

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    A man was stabbed to death in Fremont Thursday, according to the police union.

    The Fremont Police Association said a physical altercation on Upper Vintners Circle ended with one man being fatally stabbed.

    This marks Fremont’s fifth homicide of the year, the police union said.

    Further information wasn’t immediately available.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • Small earthquake rattles East Bay

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    A small earthquake shook the East Bay on Sunday morning.

    The 3.2 magnitude quake occurred at 10:03 a.m. Sunday morning about three miles north of Pleasanton, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. 

    People reported feeling light shaking from the earthquake across the East Bay in San Ramon, Castro Valley, Livermore, Hayward and Fremont.

    An earthquake with a magnitude around 3.0 is generally considered a minor earthquake and often felt but causes little to no damage.

    Originally Published:

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    Molly Gibbs

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  • Drive-by shooting in Fremont leaves 2 people dead

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    A drive-by shooting in Fremont late Friday left two people dead, police said on Saturday morning.

    Around 11:12 p.m., police responded to reports of a shooting on the 6000 block of Stevenson Boulevard.

    According to police, two people were in a large parking lot when someone in a vehicle approached them. An occupant of the vehicle then opened fire and struck them.

    Police said one person died at the scene, and another victim died at the hospital. 

    The police department initially reported there was a third victim in the hospital. However, in an updated news release issued Saturday afternoon, police stated that there is no third victim. 

    “It’s very shocking, very hard to hear,” said Carlo Figueroa, a swimming instructor at the Hippo Swim Club located a few doors down from the banquet hall. “The most shocking part to me is that [the shooting happened] right outside the place that I come [to work] every day.” 

    Figueroa described the area as normally quiet. 

    “It’s crazy to me. This area has always been very safe, a lot of nice people around here,” he said.

    Another Fremont resident, Rex, said the violence was unexpected. 

    “Definitely terrible, shocking news. I’d never expect this would happen here. Fremont, in general, is a quiet, safe place, especially here. Never expect someone would drive by and randomly kill. That’s really, really terrible.” 

    Police released portions of radio traffic between a 911 dispatcher and responding officers. One officer reported, “about 100 people still inside the building. Negative injuries inside.” 

    While nearby businesses told CBS News Bay Area the gathering may have been a wedding reception, police have not confirmed the nature of the event. Witnesses said the parking lot was full, with many people attending. 

    The owner of the banquet hall, Jamal Saddiqi, declined to comment. When approached by CBS News Bay Area in front of the business, he shut the door without answering questions.

    This is not the first time violence has erupted at the Royal Palace Banquet Hall. In May 2017, a wedding with an estimated 900 guests ended in multiple fights. Police said at the time, about 70 people were involved, and one man was beaten so badly he was left in a coma.

    Figueroa said Friday’s shooting has left him uneasy. “I pray for the families of the victims. It’s a sad thing to hear and I really hope that the victims can rest peacefully,” he said.

    Police said they are investigating and canvassing the area for witnesses and any potential security footage.

    As of Saturday, no arrests had been made. Fremont police are asking anyone with information to contact them. It is the city’s third and fourth homicide this year, police said. 

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    Jose Fabian

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  • Tesla is slow in reporting crashes and the feds have launched an investigation to find out why

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    By BERNARD CONDON, Associated Press

    NEW YORK  — Federal auto safety regulators are investigating why Tesla has repeatedly broken rules requiring it to quickly tell them about crashes involving its self-driving technology, a potentially significant development given the company’s plans to put hundreds of thousands of driverless cars on U.S. roads over the next year.

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    Associated Press

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  • Fremont community struck again with mailbox robbery

    Fremont community struck again with mailbox robbery

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    A Fremont condo community is frustrated after thieves repeatedly targeted the community’s cluster mailboxes.  

    A surveillance video shared with NBC Bay Area on Friday showed a pair pulling up the community mailboxes in a white SUV and using a key to access them on Friday. Mayank Chorpa, who shared the footage, said he was shocked.  

    “They are able to open the whole cluster box and start taking out all the stuff that’s inside,” he said.  

    A similar incident took place in January when thieves hauled away an entire cluster of mailboxes. Seeing it happen again in the same year has been unsettling for residents.  

    “You kind of feel violated, sort of,” said Samuel Shannon of Fremont.  

    Although Friday’s incident did not directly impact Shannon, he said he’s been on alert since the first time it happened.

    “If I see I got a package while I’m at work, I’ll kind of rush home because if it gets too late in the evening, things kind of start disappearing,” he said.  

    According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, robberies were the fastest-growing and most common crime against postal workers. In 2023, more than 600 incidents were reported.  

    “The robberies have been the number one way in the Bay Area that we’ve had these keys taken. Depending on some of the older locks, there may be a counterfeit key, but the mere possession of a real or counterfeit postal key is up to ten years in federal prison. That’s another federal offense,” said U.S. postal inspector Jeff Fitch.  

    Fitch said people should never engage with suspects because they are often armed. He recommended reporting the incident and capturing video if possible.  

    Now, Chorpa is concerned about how he is going to secure his mail.  

    “These things [will] probably force us to install some gates,” he said. 
     

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    Gia Vang

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  • Missing 3-year-old Fremont girl found dead at San Jose recycling facility

    Missing 3-year-old Fremont girl found dead at San Jose recycling facility

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    FREMONT — The case of a missing child in Fremont now has a tragic ending.  Police say the body of a three-year-old girl was discovered at a dump site in San Jose just hours after her father was found dead in San Francisco. There isn’t a lot of information being released about the case of missing Ellie Lorenzo but what there is is all bad.

    Late Friday night, Fremont police put out an urgent call for help.  A man had been found dead in San Francisco and his three-year-old daughter who had been in his custody was nowhere to be found. 

    “The mother of the three-year-old girl called us, asking if we can check on her welfare at her father’s apartment, located here in Fremont,” said Fremont Police Sgt. Kim McDonald at a late night news conference. “The mother of the child got news that the father was deceased in San Francisco and the child was not with him at that time. The Fremont police department went to his apartment in Fremont and the child was not located there.”

    Jared Lorenzo allegedly lived in a second-story unit at the Casa Arroyo Apartments in Fremont. In LinkedIn photos, he can be seen holding his young daughter Ellie.  No details were released about how Jared died but police were desperate to locate Ellie as quickly as possible.

    “Yeah, this is not a normal sort of call,” said Sgt. McDonald. “It’s terrifying, it’s frightening for certainly the family, for all of us in law enforcement. I mean, we’re doing — we’re going to be here late trying to locate this missing child.”

    Later in the day, Fremont police issued a sad notice on social media, saying: “It is with a heavy heart we report this morning, Saturday, July 13, 2024, we were contacted by San Jose Police Department regarding the investigation into Ellie Lorenzo. Tragically, a juvenile female resembling Ellie was located deceased in their city.”

    The only details released were that Ellie’s body was found at one of the city’s recycling facilities. There was no information offered about how she died but, back at Jared’s apartment complex, the fear among neighbors was that her father may have been involved.

    “I got more information from a gentleman who was walking away from the police officers and he was the one who kind of filled me in on what was happening,” said complex resident Michael Vasquez. “Heartbroken, angry. No … I … there’s really no good way to describe it, other than just all these negative emotions.”

    At about 4 p.m. Saturday, a line of official cars began entering the complex. Police were seen in Lorenzo’s apartment, presumedly searching for clues about how the two deaths may be connected. San Jose and Fremont police will be investigating the discovery of the child’s body. At this point, San Francisco police are coordinating the investigation of Jared Lorenzo’s death.

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    John Ramos

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  • 3-year-old missing child found dead, police say

    3-year-old missing child found dead, police say

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    A young girl last seen on Thursday in Fremont has been found dead at a recycling facility in San Jose, police said.

    3-year-old Ellie Lorenzo was last seen about 6 p.m. on Thursday at the Casa Arroyo Apartments on Rancho Arroyo Parkway in Fremont, police said.

    The girl was with her father under a custody agreement, the Fremont Police Department said.

    Her biological mother Chrystal Obi reported the child missing about 12:25 p.m. Friday after she learned that the father was found dead in a nearby city, police said.

    Obi told police that the father was to have returned Ellie to her Friday night.

    Police have not confirmed how the father died.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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