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Tag: pamela price

  • Rally for Mario Gonzalez demands justice outside Alameda officer’s court appearance

    Rally for Mario Gonzalez demands justice outside Alameda officer’s court appearance

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    The one remaining Alameda police officer being charged in the 2021 death of Mario Gonzalez appeared in court Friday morning.

    A group of Gonzalez’s friends, family, and supporters gathered outside the courthouse to continue their fight for justice.

    “It’s a shame. It’s disgraceful but we are not going to stop, we are going to continue,” said family friend Amanda Majail-Blanco,

    Majail-Blanco is referring to an Alameda County judge’s decision to dismiss involuntary manslaughter charges against two Alameda police officers in the death of Gonzalez.

    The judge ruled prosecutors didn’t file the paperwork needed to bring charges against the officers within the three-year statute of limitations.

    The case against the third officer, Erik McKinley, can continue because a five-month mission trip to South Africa paused his three-year period.

    “I hope something comes good out of pursuing McKinley,” said Majail-Blanco. “I hope they do hold him accountable. Those officers that walked we are going to blast their faces everywhere.”

    Gonzalez died in April of 2021 at the age of 26 after he stopped breathing during an arrest. Body camera footage showed officers restrained him on the ground face down with at least one officer pressing his elbow and knee inot Gonzales’s back for several minutes.

    In April 2022, then district attorney Nancy O’Malley declined to prosecute the officers siting no evidence of wrong-doing.

    The official coroner’s report said, “the cause of death is the toxic effects of methamphetamine, with the physiologic stress of altercation and restraint, morbid obesity, and alcoholism contributing to the process of dying.”

    Last April, current DA Pamela Price announced her office would charge the officers with involuntary manslaughter.

    “This is a scenario that should never happen,” said legal analyst and former prosecutor Steven Clark.

    Clark says there are certain timelines prosecutors need to follow and there’s no good excuse for missing the deadline. He believes the prosecutors mistake could have unexpected consequences.

    “The jurors may wonder why is he being selected and there’s two empty chairs of other officers, so I think it will actually work to Officer McKinley’s benefit,” said Clark.

    He believes there’s a chance both could still end up in the courtroom, in a different capacity.

    “Will these two officers, now that they will not be charged and cannot be charged, come forward as witnesses for their brother officer?” asked Clark.

    Majail-Blanco was visibly emotional as she talked about Gonzalez.

    Gonzalez’s mother, Edith, was so distraught she couldn’t make it to court. Despite that, they have decided to remain hopeful about the future.

    “I’m going to try to be confident about it, because that’s really all we can do as support for the family and as an advocate. And if Edith was here, I’m sure she would say she has a lot of faith in God in holding this man accountable and have justice,” said Majail-Blanco.

    McKinley will enter his plea on Friday, October 25.

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    Amanda Hari

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  • Federal agents raid home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao

    Federal agents raid home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao

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    The federal agents conducted a search of a home owned by Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao early Thursday, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

    Abraham Simmons, spokesperson for the department, did not say who the target of the search warrant was and declined to comment further.

    The search of Thao’s home on Maiden Lane also includes officers from the IRS as well as the U.S. Postal Service. Neither agency could be immediately reached for comment.

    Video footage from local news agencies showed agents carrying boxes and bags out of the house.

    The search comes as Thao and Dist. Atty. Pamela Price are facing a recall election this November. The recall campaign is a response to increased crime and budgetary problems that have challenged city leaders.

    Also Thursday, FBI agents searched a house on View Crest Court in the Oakland hills but authorities did not say if the two search warrants were connected.

    Property records show that latter home is connected to Andy Duong, who also owns Cal Waste Solutions, which has been investigated over campaign contributions to Thao and other elected city officials, the Oaklandside reported.

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    Ruben Vives

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  • Alameda County DA Pamela Price says she’s ready to battle for her job, defeat recall effort

    Alameda County DA Pamela Price says she’s ready to battle for her job, defeat recall effort

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    Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price pronounced victory Wednesday in an early battle to remove her from office, but who will ultimately prevail in the recall effort against her won’t be decided until November.

    Price said that the decision Tuesday by the county Board of Supervisors to consolidate the recall with the Nov. 5 general election is a win for her campaign, especially given the fact that her detractors pushed hard for supervisors to call a special, stand-alone election.

    “We are here today to appreciate that the Board of Supervisors yesterday did the right thing and decided not to invest $20 million of our hard-earned tax dollars for a failed effort to overturn the November 2022 election,” she said during a press conference at Oakland’s famed Everett & Jones BBQ restaurant near Jack London Square.

    “This is a victory for the people of Alameda County. This is a win for democracy,” Price said.

    Price won the 2022 election with roughly 53 percent of the vote and became the first African American woman to hold the county’s top prosecutor job.

    Soon after, however, opponents launched a petition drive and ultimately gathered enough signatures to place her name on a recall ballot, alleging that her progressive reform platform was too soft on criminals and led to increasing crime — making her the first district attorney in the county’s history to face a recall.

    “They have flooded social media and the media with misinformation, they are essentially making things up without any kind of foundation or any understanding actually of how prosecution works,” Price said.

    Price said her opponents are running a “platinum roots” campaign — as opposed to a grassroots campaign — since it’s being primarily funded by what she called wealthy out-of-town real estate and corporate interests who have already raised roughly $3 million to defeat her.

    She also touted her achievements, as described in a 2023 annual report that says she’s created a new prosecution unit to tackle organized retail thefts, hired 12 new victim/witness advocates and added seven new clinicians for the Family Justice Center, which serves victims of domestic violence sexual assault, child and elder abuse.

    She also increased staffing in the mental health, sexual assault, domestic violence, felony trial and juvenile justice units and launched the Public Accountability Unit to tackle official, police and prosecutorial misconduct, according to the report.

    Price said she’s determined not to let the recall effort distract from the work she is responsible for as the district attorney.

    “The Protect the Win campaign has been driven by volunteers for almost a year and they have stood in the gap for the residents of Alameda County, as well as me personally, because I have said to them over and over again, I have to do my job,” Price said. “We’ve won this (2022) election. We should not have to run another election.”

    Also Wednesday, recall organizers, Save Alameda For Everyone, said the supervisors’ decision to place Price’s future on a ballot was a major milestone for their cause.

    “We firmly believe that every member of our community deserves a District Attorney who prioritizes justice, fairness, and accountability. The recall election on November 5 provides an opportunity for residents to voice their concerns and demand the leadership they deserve,” SAFE leader Carl Chan said in a news release.

    Price didn’t comment on the possibility that she will sue either Alameda County Registrar of Voters Tim Dupuis or the Board of Supervisors, or both, over allegations that county officials didn’t follow their own election rules when handling the recall signature gathering drive.

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    Kiley Russell | Bay City News

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  • Murder charges filed against third defendant in slaying of Oakland police officer

    Murder charges filed against third defendant in slaying of Oakland police officer

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    Alameda County prosecutors have filed murder charges against a third defendant in connection with the fatal shooting of an Oakland police officer, who was killed last month while responding to a report of a burglary, according to the district attorney’s office.

    On Friday, prosecutors filed murder charges against Marquise Cooper in the killing of Officer Tuan Le, 34, officials said. Cooper is being held without bail and is scheduled to have an initial court appearance on Tuesday, jail records show.

    Earlier this month, prosecutors announced they had filed murder charges against Mark Demetrious Sanders, 27, and Allen Starr Brown, 28, for their roles in the killing. A fourth defendant, Sebron Ray Russell, 28, was charged with burglary, according to a statement from Alameda County Dist. Atty. Pamela Price.

    “I will leverage the full weight of my office against these people who we believe ruthlessly and wantonly murdered an officer,” Price said.

    Le, an undercover officer, was shot and killed inside an unmarked police vehicle while responding to a report of a burglary on the morning of Dec. 29, police said. He was 36.

    Oakland Police Officers Assn. President Barry Donelan has described the killing as an ambush, saying that Le and the officer with him, who suffered minor injuries, “were taken entirely by surprise” and “never had an opportunity to draw their service weapons.”

    Born in Vietnam, Le emigrated to Oakland and graduated from the police academy in 2020, according to a tribute posted on the website of the City of Oakland.

    “Officer Le was a devoted husband to his wife,” the tribute reads. “His passing leaves a void in the law enforcement community, the city of Oakland, and in the hearts of those who knew him.”

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    Marisa Gerber

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