A suspect fleeing police allegedly struck a state trooper as they drove off at a high rate of speed
Police say the person of interest was reportedly carrying a weapon on the casino floor
Police in Massachusetts are calling on the public’s help in locating a suspect who allegedly struck a state trooper while fleeing Encore Boston Harbor.
The exterior of Encore Boston Harbor in Everett, Mass. Massachusetts State Police report that a trooper was struck by a suspect driving a vehicle at a high rate of speed on Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. Police and casino security were chasing the suspect after he allegedly possessed a weapon inside the Wynn Resorts property. (Image: Shutterstock)
Located across the Mystic River from Boston in Everett, Massachusetts State Police responded to an incident at the resort operated by Wynn Resorts early Friday morning after a report came in that a person was carrying a weapon on the casino floor. Upon being approached by casino security, the individual allegedly fled, prompting state troopers stationed at the casino to give chase.
The suspect was reportedly able to get to his vehicle, where he drove off at a high rate of speed. As he exited the casino’s premises, police say he struck a state trooper with his vehicle’s side-view mirror.
The troopers involved in the Friday incident are assigned to the state’s Gaming Enforcement Unit. The GEU, a division of the Massachusetts State Police, works with the Massachusetts Gaming Commission’s Investigations and Enforcement Bureau to investigate all possible criminal activity occurring at Encore Boston Harbor, MGM Springfield, and Plainridge Park Casino.
Details Scant
The Massachusetts State Police have not yet commented on the Encore Boston Harbor incident. Boston 25, which broke the story, reported that state officials said only that the suspected carrying of a weapon is what led to casino security approaching the person who fled.
As of this time, there is no word on what sort of weapon was allegedly involved, most critically, whether it was a firearm. Massachusetts does have a concealed carry law, though out-of-state licenses do not apply. The commonwealth is considered among the nation’s most restrictive states when it comes to firearms possession.
Massachusetts law prohibits any person from possessing a firearm within or upon the premises of a gaming establishment.
If the gaming licensee learns that an individual possesses a firearm … the gaming licensee must immediately notify an official within the on-site office of the IEB, and the individual violating the policy shall be removed from the premises of the gaming establishment by officers assigned to the Gaming Enforcement Unit,” Massachusetts’ Internal Control for Gaming reads. “Thereafter, the gaming licensee shall promptly, and in any event no later than 48 hours of such removal, or violation of the policy, notify the Chief of the Gaming Enforcement Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office.”
Exceptions to the regulation include on-duty Massachusetts State Police troopers, local law enforcement officers assigned to the casino, IEB officials, and federal law enforcement officials.
Crime Impact
Crime studies commissioned by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission have concluded that Encore Boston Harbor has had a negligible to “limited impact on crime in the region.” The $2.6 billion integrated resort opened in June 2019.
Crime rates in Everett today are in line with the rates the city experienced in 2019. However, there has been a slight increase in certain public safety issues, including intoxicated driving.
On January 21, ICE agents in Portland, Maine, arrested Emanuel Landila, an asylum seeker from Angola, legally working as a corrections officer recruit. “Good afternoon.” Hours later, Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce publicly defended the officer in training, whom he’d vetted and hired a year ago. “In fact, he was squeaky clean. Squeaky clean.” Sheriff Joyce then delivered one of the most scathing critiques of ICE tactics by local police. “In the three minutes, they got out, they pulled a guy from the car, handcuffed him, put him in the car. They all took off, leaving his car with the windows down, the lights on, unsecure and unoccupied. Folks, that’s bush league policing.” “This guy, I knew, was not a criminal alien.” We caught up with Joyce in Washington, D.C., days after he criticized ICE operations in Maine. He’d come for the National Sheriffs Association annual conference. – “How are you?” – “Good day, Kevin Joyce.” And to share his concerns with lawmakers. “They came at him like storm troopers. The tactics. I called them bush league because it is. This is not professionalism, but it’s meeting a quota. And you can’t set quotas in law enforcement because bad things are going to happen.” To carry out mass deportations, ICE needs the cooperation of local law enforcement, mostly in the form of access to local jails. But sending thousands of masked ICE and Border Patrol agents into American cities has frayed those relations. At the gathering in D.C., hundreds of sheriffs from around the country came for trainings and meetings. “They haven’t stopped one million pounds of cocaine, enough to fill 24 or 42 dump trucks.” And to meet with government officials. Many called for better communication from ICE and more respect. “The communication is worst of the worst. We still can work together, but it takes cooperation. You simply just can’t come in our cities, overshadow us, and then expect us to respond to you.” “It creates a division within my own profession, and there’s a right way to do our job. And there’s also a wrong way to do the job. So what you’re seeing is this type of enforcement that is not making us safer. It’s dividing us.” Whether and how police cooperate with immigration enforcement has long been controversial, but especially now. “Give us access to the illegal alien public safety threat in the safety and security of a jail. Get these agreements in place. That means less agents on the street.” Over the past year, more than 1,000 law enforcement agencies have signed partnership agreements with ICE. Many hold jail inmates for ICE to pick up. “They’re already in custody. It keeps them from having to go out and arrest them in the field. They just come to our jail, pick them up, take them away.” An increasing number of states are barring or restricting some police from working with ICE. Other states have done the opposite and now require police to cooperate with ICE. “My personal opinion, I like it. We get rid of them. If we’re getting rid of the people that don’t need to be here, then it’s great.” “What was the longest that ICE held somebody at your jail?” “I want to say one was 100 days.” Many sheriffs rent out jail space for ICE detention as a way to bring in revenue. “They paid $150 per inmate, per day.” “And about how much did that come to a year?” “About $3 million. For 33 years, we’ve held ICE inmates at the Cumberland County jail. Two hours after my press conference, they pulled their 50 inmates.” In a statement to The Times, a D.H.S. spokesperson said ICE withdrew its detainees from the Cumberland County jail over the hire of illegal aliens and subpoenaed the Sheriff’s Office for its employment records. Joyce said he vetted Landila appropriately. After three weeks in detention, a federal judge ordered Landila released on bond. Sheriff Joyce is assessing whether his office can still employ him. “Kind of wanted to stop by and thank you for your efforts on the increase in immigration issues that we had a couple of weeks ago.” After the conference, Sheriff Joyce met with Maine lawmakers on Capitol Hill, where Democrats are threatening to block funding for D.H.S. if immigration agents are not held to higher policing standards. “So one of the reasons we’re holding up the Homeland Security bill is to talk about adding this kind of criteria that we expect of our own police officers: not wearing masks, requiring body cameras, having actual judicial warrants before they bust down the doors of your house or haul you off somewhere. So things that people have come to expect from law enforcement and that are critical to the ability for citizens to trust law enforcement.” “We have to go back to our cities with a message of things are going to get better by the summer. If we don’t, it’s going to be a long summer. What I worry about is law enforcement fighting with federal government.”
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Brent McDonald, Ben Laffin, Singeli Agnew and Amogh Vaz
FBI agents arrested Alexis Flores in Honduras nearly 26 years after 5-year-old Iriana DeJesus was raped and killed in North Philadelphia. Flores had been on the FBI’s Most Wanted list for nearly two decades.
A North Dakota man says he did not stab a woman to death inside a tribal casino
Casino surveillance doesn’t show any person entering or exiting the hotel room
The suspect says he awoke to find a dead woman in his hotel room
A North Dakota man accused of stabbing a woman to death inside a tribal casino hotel room has pleaded not guilty.
North Dakota’s Rolette County Sheriff’s Office alleges that Rigoberto Mendez Morales, 58, stabbed a woman to death inside his Sky Dancer Casino & Resort hotel room. Mendez Morales claims to have no recollection of the murder and has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in Indian country. (Image: Rolette County Sheriff’s Office)
Last month, law enforcement officers with the Rolette County Sheriff’s Office responded to the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort in Belcourt, North Dakota, where 58-year-old Rigoberto Mendez Morales said he awoke to find a woman dead in his hotel room. The victim was identified as a Native woman enrolled with the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation.
During a Zoom appearance in the North Dakota’s US District Court from the Ward County Jail, Mendez Morales, through his Spanish interpreter, pleaded not guilty to the charge of second-degree murder within Indian country.
US Magistrate Judge Alice Senechal ordered that Mendez Morales remain in custody until his jury trial begins on April 14.
Affidavit Shines Details
The criminal complaint details that at approximately 6:07 am on the morning of Jan. 10, 2026, the Rolette County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call stating there was a person dead at the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort. Police officers responded to the property, owned and operated by the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa, where they found Mendez Morales sitting on the hotel room’s bed.
A female, identified only by her initials BTM, was located on the floor. Investigators said Mendez Morales had blood on his clothing and face, and his right eye was swollen and bleeding. BTM was determined to have been stabbed to death.
Video surveillance from the hotel hallway showed Mendez Morales and BTM enter the room shortly after midnight. No one else entered or exited the room until the police arrived.
When law enforcement detained Mendez Morales, they found he was in possession of a multi-tool (Leatherman-type), which was covered in what appeared to be blood. The FBI later collected the Leatherman multi-tool as evidence pursuant to a search warrant. A substance that appeared to be blood was observed on the knife blade of the Leatherman as well as what appeared to be long black human hairs, which law enforcement observed to be consistent with BTM,” the charging complaint detailed.
“Mendez Morales stated he consumed three alcoholic drinks while gambling. Mendez Morales did not recall returning to his room. Mendez Morales could not recall why he had blood on his pants, shirt, and multi-tool, and denied touching BTM when he saw she was on the floor and covered in blood. Mendez Morales stated he woke up on his bed and saw BTM was not moving,” the affidavit continued.
Possible Sentence
The US attorney alleges that Mendez Morales “did unlawfully kill a human being, namely, BTM, an Indian, with malice aforethought.” The federal crime is prosecuted under the Major Crimes Act.
A person found guilty of second-degree murder in Indian country faces life in prison.
PORTLAND, Ore- Three people are under arrest after a late-night shooting at a motel in Northeast Portland that left two adults hospitalized with gunshot wounds.
Officers from the Portland Police Bureau’s North Precinct responded at about 10:55 p.m. Thursday to reports of a shooting at a motel on Northeast Sandy Boulevard. Inside a room, officers found an adult man and an adult woman suffering from gunshot wounds.
Both were taken to a hospital with injuries believed to be non-life-threatening.
During a search of the surrounding area, officers detained two possible suspects more than 10 blocks away and two additional people near the motel.
Police ultimately arrested three people and booked them into the Multnomah County Detention Center.
Aaron T. Gee, 43, of Portland, was arrested on charges of attempted murder in the second degree (two counts), assault in the first degree, assault in the second degree, unlawful use of a weapon and felon in possession of a firearm.
Joseph E. Allen, 35, of Portland, and Morgan S. Bryden, 29, of Portland, were arrested on outstanding warrants, police said.
Amy Spurlock didn’t cry, at least not that afternoon.
It was the week before Christmas, and she stood on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth’s north side looking at a wooden cross that marked where her 20-year-old son, Crawford Blake Bullock, had died almost exactly a year ago.
In the December chill, Spurlock watched her son’s friends from a church group in Midland, where Bullock grew up, decorate the cross with photos and mementos from a life cut short. Among the items was a light-up snow globe, the kind Spurlock said she would give her son at the holidays.
Jordan Clair, right, and friends place flowers at a memorial for his brother Blake Bullock on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. Bullock’s body was lying on Northwest 20th Street on the night of Dec. 15, 2025, and was subsequently struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Photographs of Blake Burlock and his church group are taped to a wooden cross marking the area where he was found dead more than a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Spurlock reminisced about Bullock and laughed with his friends, but underneath the stoicism and occasional smiles raged an undercurrent of grief, anger and frustration fueled by questions about what happened the night her son was hit by a Fort Worth police vehicle after an altercation with his girlfriend and her mother.
Bullock was later pronounced dead at the scene.
A night out turns deadly
In 2024, Bullock moved from Midland to Weatherford with his girlfriend, Chloe McDonald, 19, and their infant son.
That year, on Dec. 14, the couple, joined by Chloe’s mother, Tomlyn McDonald, 47, went out to Billy Bob’s in the Fort Worth Stockyards.
According to Chloe, Bullock was too drunk to get inside the bar when they arrived. With help from a stranger, she got Bullock back into the car, but she said they fought while they waited for her mother to come out of Billy Bob’s.
In a phone conversation, Chloe alleged Bullock was violent while also admitting she got physical with him.
“Don’t get me wrong, I was fighting him, too,” Chloe said.
The fighting continued in the car on the way home to Weatherford. In a phone interview, Tomlyn, who was driving that night, described it as “bickering” between Chloe and Bullock.
“They were yelling and screaming back and forth at each other,” she said.
Finally, Tomlyn said, she’d had enough. Just before 2:15 a.m. on Dec. 15, she stopped the car next to a wooded area on Northwest 20th Street, near the intersection of Ephriham Avenue. Tomlyn said she intended to intervene between her daughter and Bullock, but Bullock attacked her.
Tomlyn described it as a vicious beating. She said Bullock punched her and bit her. Finally, she said she got him out of the car, and she and Chloe drove away.
A few minutes later, Bullock, who was lying in the street, was struck by a Fort Worth police vehicle driven by an officer responding to a report of gunfire.
Surveillance, bodycam and dashcam footage tell the story of Bullock’s final moments
The Star-Telegram obtained from the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office surveillance footage, police bodycam footage and police dashcam footage that was used in the investigation into Bullock’s death.
The surveillance footage was captured by a camera at a business directly across from where Chloe and Tomlyn left Bullock.
In that video, you see a white compact sedan turn right onto Northwest 20th Street from Ephriham Avenue. It stops with the driver’s side facing the camera. An occupant opens the passenger door. In the dome light, you can see someone throwing punches, though it’s unclear who it is.
A screenshot of a surveillance video shows a vehicle stopped on Northwest 20th Street and what appears to be a struggle taking place at the rear of the vehicle.
Someone then gets out and stands on the passenger side while movement continues inside the car for a few seconds, then everything is still for about a minute and a half. Somehow, Chloe ends up in the driver’s seat, and she moves the car forward a few feet.
That’s when you see Tomlyn and Bullock emerge from behind the vehicle and fall to the ground, one on top of the other, but it’s difficult to tell who’s who. The one on top punches the one on the bottom at least six times before Chloe gets out of the car and pushes that person away.
A struggle ensues, and all three end up on the ground. At this point, it’s impossible to tell what’s happening in the grainy surveillance footage. A few moments later, Chloe helps her mom up. Tomlyn gets in the driver’s seat, Chloe gets in the passenger seat, and they drive away, leaving Bullock in the road. He appears to raise and lower his arm, but there is no further movement.
Three minutes later, Tomlyn and Chloe come back. They idle in the car with the headlights on Bullock, who is lying still, then they drive off. Another vehicle passes Bullock shortly after, but the driver doesn’t stop.
Minutes after that, a Fort Worth police vehicle driven by Officer Brock Atkins turns right onto Northwest 20th Street with its lights flashing. For a second, Bullock is visible in the SUV’s headlights in the surveillance footage. The vehicle strikes Bullock, pushing him sideways, and the officer continues on.
Shortly after, four other police vehicles turn onto Northwest 20th Street. The first vehicle continues past Bullock, but the other three stop and officers get out. The surveillance footage used in the investigation ends at this point.
The officers, Atkins included, were responding to a report of gunfire made by John Garcia, a nearby resident who had called 911 a little after 2 a.m.
John Garcia, who lives on Northwest 20th Street, made the 9-1-1 call on the night of Blake Bullock’s death to report gunshots and the sounds of someone shouting. It was that call that brought police to the scene. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
In phone conversations with the Star-Telegram, Chloe and Tomlyn were adamant that Bullock was fine when they left him. When asked what shape he was in, Tomlyn said he was “alive and well” and had just finished punching and biting her.
A post-mortem toxicology report showed Bullock was intoxicated, but Tomlyn doesn’t believe he passed out in the road, and she and Chloe both said they didn’t injure him.
Garcia, the 911 caller who lives on Northwest 20th Street, said the sound of gunshots isn’t uncommon in his neighborhood, but he also heard what sounded like a young man screaming “I don’t want to die.” Hearing that is what made him call the police that night.
In audio of the 911 call that Spurlock shared, Garcia tells the dispatcher he hears someone yelling out, but he can’t see the person.
In an interview, Garcia said it was too dark for him to tell where the shouts were coming from. But he said he did see Chloe and Tomlyn drive by, honking the car horn. After that, Garcia said, is when he heard the screaming.
Details of Bullock’s death
The medical examiner attributed Bullock’s death to blunt force trauma, but the manner of death was ruled “inconclusive.” In his report, the medical examiner raised the possibility that Bullock had suffered injuries from the altercation with Chloe and Tomlyn, noting abrasions and lacerations on Bullock’s head along with the skull fractures. Bullock also had abrasions on his hands, chest and upper back.
The toxicology report put Bullock’s blood alcohol level at between 0.13 and 0.19, numbers indicating a high level of intoxication.
A Texas Department of Transportation accident report said Bullock had been left “incapacitated” before Atkins’ vehicle hit him.
Viewing Atkins’ bodycam video from that night, there’s a bang after he turns onto Northwest 20th Street at the point where he struck Bullock, but Atkins doesn’t acknowledge he’d hit someone.
Atkins stopped about 200 yards from Bullock at Garcia’s home. Atkins talked with Garcia along with two other officers who responded to the call, then he left and drove around the block in search of the source of the gunshots.
When he returned to Northwest 20th Street, Atkins approached officers gathered near Bullock, who was lying in the road with blood streaming from his head. One officer was giving Bullock chest compressions while others searched for shell casings, believing Bullock had been shot.
(Left) Jordan Clair holds the first cross family members placed on the side of Northwest 20th Street where his brother, Blake Bullock, was killed in 2024. (Right) Amy Spurlock wears a necklace with a cross and fish hook to remember her son, Blake Bullock. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Atkins assisted at the scene, seemingly unaware of what had happened. When he saw a Fort Worth police sergeant several minutes later, though, the sergeant pulled him aside and told him he thought he might have hit Bullock. Atkins called the sergeant “Castillo” in the video. Sgt. Andrew Castillo was Atkins’ supervisor, according to personnel records obtained by the Star-Telegram.
The Star-Telegram attempted to reach Atkins for comment, but was unsuccessful. A police department official said he would see if Atkins and Castillo were willing to speak on the record. Neither has yet responded.
During the conversation captured on the bodycam, Castillo asked Atkins if he felt anything while driving.
“I felt, like bumps,” Atkins replied. “But it’s north side, so I didn’t know if I hit a bump or whatnot.”
Castillo told Atkins to download his dashcam video for review. Shortly after, Atkins watched the footage while sitting in his car, his bodycam showed. An unidentified officer joined him to view the video.
Watching the dashcam footage, Atkins saw Bullock lying in the road and realized that he did indeed hit him with his vehicle.
Upon seeing that, Atkins became visibly upset, the bodycam video showed. The other officer tried to comfort Atkins.
“Hey, bro, you got your mind set on one thing,” the officer told Atkins. “It sucks, but you got your mind set on one thing. And your intentions were good. You were trying to get here and not expecting that s–t at all.”
That officer then told Atkins not to talk to anyone. In a broken voice, Atkins told him he needed a minute to gather himself. After that, he shut off his bodycam.
The Star-Telegram asked three experts to review the video footage and other records associated with the case and give their opinions on what happened.
When asked how Atkins could have hit someone with his car without knowing it, Lyons and Haberfeld attributed it to elevated stress hormones. Lyons, a former police officer who holds a Ph.D. in forensic clinical psychology, said in an email that it was possible Atkins had tunnel vision when he turned onto Northwest 20th Street as he was entering what he believed could have been a dangerous situation. In Lyons’ view, reality dawned on Atkins after his cortisol levels dropped.
Likewise, Haberfeld believed an adrenaline spike could have initially clouded Atkins’ awareness.
“When police officers are on their way to a call for service, as was the case here, and especially when the call involves a potential violent encounter with a suspect, their adrenaline level goes up, fear kicks in and their attention to other environmental factors is impaired due to the stress that they are experiencing,” Haberfeld wrote in an email.
The Star-Telegram requested personnel records through an open records request, but a Fort Worth records clerk at first said there were no responsive documents. Subsequent requests for records through the city clerk’s office produced employment documents Atkins signed in 2022, apparently when he joined the police force. There was also an October 2024 performance review signed by Castillo, who gave Atkins an overall positive evaluation.
“Officer Atkins is a valuable asset to our department, exemplifying the qualities of dedication, integrity and a strong work ethic,” Castillo wrote in the performance review.
When asked if Atkins could be held liable for Bullock’s death, Falk said it was unlikely.
“Officers are generally pretty protected in their actions, unless those actions are really, really egregious, or it’s an ongoing pattern which makes it more egregious,“ Falk said.
From Falk’s perspective, what Atkins did was accidental, and it would be incredibly difficult to prove otherwise.
What did police make of Chloe and Tomlyn’s involvement?
Fort Worth police would not release records to the Star-Telegram related to a homicide investigation into Bullock’s death. A police spokesperson would only say investigators reviewed the evidence before declining to pursue charges against the McDonald women.
“After careful consideration of all information and applicable law, detectives determined that the evidence did not support filing criminal charges against Tomlyn or Chloe,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “These decisions are never taken lightly and are based solely on the law and evidence.”
Spurlock said when she called the police department in early 2025, a sergeant with the homicide unit told her Chloe and Tomlyn would have been within their rights to shoot Bullock after what he’d allegedly done to them during the altercation that preceded his death.
Amy Spurlock is searching for answers about the night her son, Blake Bullock, 20, died over a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. A large wooden cross marks the area where his body was found lying the street after being struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
The Star-Telegram requested comment on that allegation from Chief Eddie Garcia’s chief of staff, but he said he had no knowledge of the case and declined to speak on it.
Indeed, a history of violence marred Chloe and Bullock’s relationship. In October 2024, Bullock was arrested in Weatherford on charges of domestic violence against Chloe. Records reveal he was subsequently arrested two more times that November for violating a protective order.
In a phone conversation, Chloe said she and Bullock willingly broke the order meant to keep them apart.
“We were obsessed with each other,” she said. “It was stupid, young love.”
Police records showed there was another domestic disturbance at Chloe and Bullock’s apartment before they left for Billy Bob’s on Dec. 14. Weatherford police were dispatched, but no arrest was made after Chloe and Tomlyn told officers Bullock wasn’t there.
Talking with the Star-Telegram, Tomlyn admitted Bullock was, in fact, in the apartment.
In 2023, Tomlyn herself was charged with assault in Midland County after throwing a billiard ball at Bullock, according to court records and Tomlyn’s own statements. That charge was dismissed in June 2025 because Bullock was deceased.
Tomlyn said Bullock was living with her and Chloe at the time. According to Tomlyn, she and Bullock got into an argument, and he punched through a glass door at her house. Tomlyn said she ran behind a pool table to get away from Bullock and threw the ball in “anger and terror.”
The billiard ball, Tomlyn said, hit Bullock in the lower leg, and he called police. But Tomlyn disputed the allegation she hit him with the ball intentionally.
After leaving Bullock the night he died, Chloe and Tomlyn ran out of gas near Walsh Ranch Parkway and Interstate 30, on the Parker County border, law enforcement records showed.
A Parker County sheriff’s deputy first stopped to check on the stalled vehicle around 2:40 a.m. That deputy reported seeing blood on Chloe and Tomlyn. He also reported that both women appeared intoxicated.
Tomlyn and Chloe declined medical attention, but they told the deputy that Bullock had assaulted them earlier at Billy Bob’s.
Because of where the alleged assault took place and because the car was still in Fort Worth jurisdiction, the Parker County deputy contacted Fort Worth police, and an officer later arrived on the scene.
That officer’s report said Chloe and Tomlyn told the sheriff’s deputy they fled after Bullock assaulted them. The officer also quoted Chloe as admitting she beat Bullock up “because he was drunk in public, and it was embarrassing.”
Like the Parker County deputy, the Fort Worth officer also believed Chloe and Tomlyn were intoxicated, according to the report, and he noted they were “verbally combative” when asked about the incident with Bullock.
The officer reported that Chloe had bruising on her upper right arm and dried blood on her right hand. Tomlyn, the officer reported, had more extensive injuries and dried blood on her face.
Photos included with the police report showed Chloe with blood around her knuckles. Tomlyn had blood on her nose and around her mouth.
According to the police report, neither Chloe nor Tomlyn would provide written statements. Finally, another Fort Worth police officer who was near the end of his shift drove them home to Weatherford.
Video taken from inside that officer’s car showed Chloe at first laughing and Tomlyn joking about how hard the seat is in the back of the cruiser. Tomlyn then asks if Chloe is cold.
“I’m shivering from everything,” Chloe responded.
During the drive, Tomlyn alluded to Bullock biting her lip during the altercation earlier in the night, and Chloe said he’d bitten her before and that it was “scary.”
“And you think that’s OK?” Tomlyn asked, to which Chloe shook her head no. “Chloe, you’ve got to get this guy out of your life, dude,” Tomlyn continued.
During the conversation, Tomlyn repeatedly encouraged Chloe to break things off with Blake, saying their infant son deserved better and that the relationship was “toxic.” At one point, Tomlyn told Chloe to move and get a new phone number in order to stay away from Bullock.
While Tomlyn spoke, Chloe listened and seemed to agree.
“I wish I just would have not gone out tonight,” Chloe said.
“I just wish you would have never put so much faith in him,” Tomlyn replied, referring to Bullock. She later tells Chloe that she loved her so much that she “took an a– beating for you tonight, by a man.”
At no time does either woman appear to think Bullock may be dead. In fact, Tomlyn said she’d “kill him” if he showed up at the apartment.
“And you can quote me on that, cop,” she declared before laughing.
Tomlyn told the Star-Telegram she and Chloe let police know where they’d left Bullock. She also said she intended to go back and get him before running out of gas.
“I feel awful for leaving him,” Tomlyn said, though she added she did what she did to protect her daughter. When talking about Bullock’s death, Tomlyn got emotional. But she said what happened was “divine intervention” to end what by all accounts was a troubled relationship.
“If he wasn’t dead, she would be,” Tomlyn said.
Tomlyn strongly denied she left Bullock for dead on Northwest 20th Street. She said he could have gotten up and moved had he wanted to.
“I did not hurt that kid,” Tomlyn said. “I did not leave him on the side of the road dead … I did not kill that kid.”
After reviewing the available evidence, Falk, who previously worked as a prosecutor in Harris County and Dallas County, agreed with the Fort Worth Police Department’s decision to not file charges against Chloe and Tomlyn. First, Falk said, it would be nearly impossible to prove they had assaulted Bullock based on the surveillance footage, mainly because it’s unclear who the initial aggressor was in the altercation.
“In order to charge somebody with assault, you need to be able to disprove self-defense,” said Falk. And any claim of self-defense by Tomlyn or Chloe could be bolstered by Bullock’s prior domestic violence charge, Falk added.
Second, Falk said an assault charge would require proof of bodily injury. Given what happened to Bullock, it would be difficult to prove what injuries he sustained in the fight and what injuries he sustained from the vehicle.
As for Chloe and Tomlyn leaving Bullock in the road, Falk said she didn’t believe a crime was committed, especially if Chloe and Tomlyn argued that they feared for their safety. And based on the video taken from inside the police car on the ride from Fort Worth to Weatherford, it doesn’t look as though the McDonalds thought Bullock was seriously injured, so it would be hard to prove they had a legal obligation to render aid.
A mother’s search for answers
Spurlock and Chloe said separately they learned of Bullock’s death when they called the Tarrant County morgue after he didn’t come home and hadn’t phoned anyone.
Spurlock said she has been grieving ever since. She called Bullock her precious boy, and she took great care with placing the memorial where he died, hoping his memory will live on in that spot as it does in her heart. But dealing with the loss has only gotten harder, not easier, over the past year, Spurlock said.
Amy Spurlock walks away from a cross placed in memory of her son, Blake, on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. Spurlock is searching for answers about the night her son died over a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Finding closure is understandably difficult given the circumstances. Spurlock wonders how Atkins missed seeing her son lying in the road. And she still questions what occurred during the fight outside the car between Bullock, Tomlyn and Chloe.
If Spurlock had those answers, she could move on. But she doesn’t. After initially releasing some records related to Bullock’s death to Spurlock, the city of Fort Worth has denied her more recent requests.
Chloe, too, said the last several months have been hard. She said she loved Bullock and called him her best friend. She told the Star-Telegram she fell into a depression after he died and had only recently come out of it.
Even Garcia, the man who called 911, said that night haunts him. He stopped by when Spurlock and Bullock’s friends were putting up the memorial and talked with them awhile, though he wasn’t sure what to say to comfort Spurlock.
In Falk’s estimation, Bullock’s death was the result of a tragic set of circumstances that aligned in the worst possible way.
Was Bullock the aggressor in the fight with Chloe and Tomlyn, and was he simply too intoxicated to get out of the road after the women left him? Or was there more to it?
“This case has a lot of puzzle pieces in order to really understand what happened,” Falk said. “And many of them are just missing.”
Family and friends stand beside a large wooden cross marking the area where Blake Bullock was found lying in the street after being struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.
PALO ALTO – A man forced a woman to the ground and assaulted her during an attempted robbery Tuesday in Palo Alto, police said.
The incident happened around 8:15 a.m. in the 700 block of East Meadow Drive near Mitchell Park, according to the Palo Alto Police Department.
The victim, a woman in her 40s, was walking in the neighborhood when she heard footsteps behind her, police said, adding that she was forced to the ground by the suspect.
The suspect then kicked the victim several times and demanded money, police said. The victim told the suspect she did not have any and yelled for help, after which he left the scene.
Police said the victim returned home and notified authorities about the attempted robbery.
The victim described the suspect as Latino and about 5 feet 8 inches tall with a thin build and shoulder-length hair. He was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt.
An investigation is underway into the incident, police said, adding that no similar crimes have been reported recently in the area.
The victim complained of pain and bruising from being kicked and she sought medical treatment on her own.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact the police department at 650-329-2413. Those wishing to remain anonymous can call or text 650-383-8984 or email paloalto@tipnow.org.
A Denver sheriff’s deputy accused of punching a man in a wheelchair while on duty in 2019 — in a lawsuit the city has now settled — was also arrested on accusations he punched another man in a wheelchair in December.
The Denver City Council approved the $325,000 settlement in the case over the 2019 incident involving Deputy Jason Gentempo, now 44, during a meeting Monday.
Gentempo, who has been a sheriff’s deputy since 2005, is now on investigatory leave from the sheriff’s department following his arrest in the newer matter in December. Both of his cases also involved allegations that other law enforcement officers attempted to cover up or change the factual records of the events.
Gentempo was cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident, according to internal investigation documents.
In December, the Denver Police Department arrested Gentempo and his wife, Sgt. Carla Gentempo, after they were accused of assaulting another man in a wheelchair while they were off duty. The couple learned that a 17-year-old they knew was at a Denver apartment where they believed there was a “sexual torture chamber,” according to affidavits filed in that case.
Jason Gentempo told investigators that he believed the man in the wheelchair met the teen in a chatroom and took the teen to his home, where he showed them “sexual bondage items” and put some of the items on the teen with their consent, an affidavit says.
When the Gentempos drove to pick up the teen, the man in a wheelchair, who is paraplegic, met them in front of his apartment building. The Gentempos then beat the man in an attack that was captured on surveillance footage, the documents say. They were arrested on suspicion of third-degree assault.
The man in the wheelchair, whose identity was redacted in court records, told The Denver Post in December that he didn’t do anything sexual with the teenager and refuted the deputies’ characterization of a “sexual torture chamber.”
A Denver police officer is accused of trying to cover up that assault. Officer Henry Soni, 26, was the responding officer who reviewed surveillance video of the attack and gave the man in the wheelchair a case number, according to an affidavit. He then failed to file a report or enter the surveillance video as evidence in the case.
In official records, Soni wrote that the man in the wheelchair “does not want to file a report at this time.” The officer’s body-worn camera footage of his response to the man’s home was automatically logged into the police evidence storage system as being connected to an assault call, but Soni manually changed the footage the next day to be classified as “All Other/Non-event,” according to an affidavit.
Soni was arrested on suspicion of attempting to influence a public servant, forgery, evidence tampering and misconduct. He was also accused of on-duty sexual assault in an unrelated case. In December, he was suspended without pay, pending the outcome of the criminal investigation.
Internal investigators found Gentempo improperly stored his firearm in 2021 and that he disobeyed rules related to his body-worn camera in 2024, disciplinary records show.
Two Front Range cities are eyeing more oversight for their police departments.
Lakewood’s City Council voted last week to “work toward the establishment” of an independent civilian oversight board for the city’s police department. And in Aurora, the city set aside about $330,000 this year to fund an Office of Police Accountability — even as city officials say they are still considering how oversight should be structured.
The creation of an independent oversight board in Lakewood would put the city into the company of just a handful of Front Range cities with such boards, including Denver and Boulder. The push for more oversight came to a head in Lakewood after the death of Jax Gratton, a 34-year-old transgender woman who disappeared in April and was found dead in June.
Lakewood police faced criticism for their handling of the case, including for announcing Gratton’s death by using her deadname and, later, for a lack of transparency about the investigation. Gratton’s case spurred the move toward an oversight committee, but the push is also rooted in wider issues around trust between police and community, Lakewood Councilwoman Isabel Cruz said.
“Although this specific incident really brought this to the fore, and the demands of community activists really pushed us, it is rooted in a lot of different conversations,” she said.
City Council members overwhelmingly voted Jan. 26 to create a 12-month committee to work toward the creation of a permanent oversight board. The temporary committee will have access to police records, completed internal affairs investigations and body-worn camera footage, and will be able to review complaints submitted to the police department.
At the end of the 12-month period, the committee will report to the City Council about how a permanent police oversight committee would be staffed and structured, among other recommendations.
Council members will then have the power to move forward with the permanent board or end the oversight effort.
Lakewood Police Department spokesman John Romero declined to comment on the push for oversight. About three dozen police officers packed last week’s council meeting, where Lakewood police Agent Quinn Pratt-Cordova, an executive board member of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 21, spoke against independent oversight.
An oversight board would be redundant, he said, and could damage officers’ trust in the city. Such oversight might “deter top talent,” from the police department, Pratt-Cordova said.
“Civilian oversight boards are rare and often follow severe systemic issues like those in other cities, issues that the majority of you don’t agree exist in the local police department,” Pratt-Cordova told council members. “The unnecessary creation of an oversight board attempts to apply an unwarranted national narrative to Lakewood PD.”
Lakewood Mayor Wendi Strom said she hopes any permanent effort will be aimed at improving police-community relations in ways that go beyond traditional independent oversight.
“The oversight word, I think, it is a big sticking point and one that — especially for folks within the public safety realm — has a very specific meaning,” she said in an interview. “So what we end up with, it is hard to tell. But for me, and I think City Council has been pretty clear on this in multiple conversations over the last month, the end goal is ultimately to help our community members feel more comfortable reaching out when there is a need.”
In Aurora, the police department entered into a consent decree — court-ordered reforms overseen by an independent monitor — after the 2019 killing of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after Aurora police officers violently restrained him and paramedics injected him with a too-large dose of a powerful sedative.
McClain’s death was part of a pattern of racial bias and excessive force within the Aurora Police Department, state officials later found.
Aurora City Manager Jason Batchelor hopes the city’s two-person Office of Police Accountability will serve as an independent monitor for the police department when police exit the consent decree and are no longer under the supervision of the court-ordered monitor. The creation of such a position is a requirement of the consent decree.
The new office would report to the city manager, Batchelor said, but would be created with built-in protections aimed at ensuring its independence, including putting into city ordinance the office’s right to have free and unfettered access to information and budgetary safeguards to ensure it could not be defunded by the city manager. The protections would mirror Aurora’s approach to its internal auditor, which operates independently and would work in tandem with the new office, Batchelor said.
“I don’t get to tell the internal auditor, ‘That might make me look bad, don’t publish that,’” Batchelor said. “That can’t happen.”
The Office of Police Accountability, which Batchelor hopes to be ready to hire for in a few months, would have “contemporaneous oversight” of any city investigation, he said. The office would not oversee police discipline and would not conduct its own investigations into police misconduct. Instead, the employees would be able to flag problems or concerns about such investigations to Batchelor, the City Council or to the public.
Aurora Councilwoman Amy Wiles, who has helped to organize community meetings to discuss police oversight as recently as this week, said residents need a neutral place to report police misconduct.
“Right now, if you want to report something — you had a poor interaction with a police officer or you feel something wasn’t right — to call and report that is a bit invasive. You have to call the police department,” she said. “…So we are hoping this provides that level of security to community to say, ‘Hey if something went wrong, here is this neutral person you can reach out to.’”
The Office of Police Accountability could receive complaints of police misconduct directly from the public, Batchelor said, and then would “partner with the (police) department to make sure that any complaints are fully investigated.”
That approach concerns Omar Montgomery, Rocky Mountain state conference president for the NAACP.
“If you are going to have true transparency and true accountability, it can’t be that organization doing the investigation,” he said. “It has to be an independent organization. …If it goes back to the police department, I would have concerns (about whether) that is an independent department that is investigating abuse allegations.”
But he added that the Office of Police Accountability is “a good start,” and noted that it is already funded in a tough budget year.
Batchelor pointed out that some critical incidents, including police shootings, are already investigated by outside agencies. Colorado lawmakers banned police departments from investigating their own police shootings in 2015. Other types of complaints are handled solely by the police department’s internal affairs unit.
The city is still considering what the ultimate structure of the office and oversight will look like, Wiles said. The end design may include an advisory board of residents who work with the Office of Police Accountability in some fashion, though their role is limited by the city’s charter.
Human remains were discovered in the basement of a Brooklyn NYCHA complex on Sunday morning, authorities say.
According to police sources, workers inside the 330 Bushwick Ave. made the grim discovery at around 9:38 a.m. on Feb. 1. The workers told police they found “body parts” inside the garbage area by a trash chute.
Upon arrival, cops from the Police Service Area 3 and 90th Precinct found the body of a woman. She was pronounced dead at the scene. While she has not yet been identified, she is believed to be between 50 and 60 years old.
The Chief Medical Examiner will determine the cause of death.
No arrests have been made, and the investigation remains ongoing.
Fresh snow in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, helped police officers find a suspect in a business break-in and theft over the weekend. Police responded to a business alarm in the 1300 block of Southwest Market Street early Sunday. When they arrived, they discovered the front door was shattered. Officers checked the building and learned a “large quantity” of nicotine vapes were stolen. Outside the business, the suspect left behind a major clue: a trail of footprints in the snow. Police used a thermal-imaging drone, plus the assistance of K-9 officer Roy, to track the footprints back to a nearby home. Officers made contact with the residents inside, and a juvenile reportedly admitted to the burglary and showed officers the stolen vapes. “Thanks to a quick response, teamwork, and some helpful snowy conditions, the suspect was taken into custody, and the stolen property was returned to the business,” police said on social media. Charges are pending, police said. The suspect’s age was not specified, but the case was submitted to juvenile court.
LEE’S SUMMIT, Mo. —
Fresh snow in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, helped police officers find a suspect in a business break-in and theft over the weekend.
Police responded to a business alarm in the 1300 block of Southwest Market Street early Sunday. When they arrived, they discovered the front door was shattered. Officers checked the building and learned a “large quantity” of nicotine vapes were stolen.
Outside the business, the suspect left behind a major clue: a trail of footprints in the snow.
Lee’s Summit Police Department
Police used a thermal-imaging drone, plus the assistance of K-9 officer Roy, to track the footprints back to a nearby home.
Officers made contact with the residents inside, and a juvenile reportedly admitted to the burglary and showed officers the stolen vapes.
“Thanks to a quick response, teamwork, and some helpful snowy conditions, the suspect was taken into custody, and the stolen property was returned to the business,” police said on social media.
Charges are pending, police said. The suspect’s age was not specified, but the case was submitted to juvenile court.
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HAVERHILL — After a seven-month investigation, the Essex County District Attorney’s Office announced Tuesday that criminal charges will not be pursued against local police officers involved in the July 11 incident that preceded the death of Francis Gigliotti.
District Attorney Paul Tucker said criminal charges “are not supportable and will not be pursued” following an investigation of the police encounter led by use-of-force expert Eric P. Daigle.
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Note: All suspects arrested are presumed innocent until found guilty by a court of law. The following are official public records being redistributed by myBurbank.com Inc. and is protected by constitutional, publishing, and other legal rights. These official records were collected in 2026. The person(s) named in these listings have only been arrested on suspicion of the crime indicated and are presumed innocent. Original Police Logs can be found on the Burbank Police Department’s website where this information was obtained from.
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On Sunday, January 11, Dequan Eugene Ballard, a Los Angeles resident was cuffed by Burbank’s police after being charged with 3056 of the state penal code. The time is 7:48 p.m.
John Jay Lawrence Finnigan lives in Burbank and was picked up at Pass Ave. and Oak St. The time is 10:43 a.m. The charge is warrants.
Leonel Gomez resides in Glendale and was pinched at Victory Blvd. and Orange Grove Ave. It took place at 4:37 a.m. The charge is a warrant.
Eriberto Hernandez was handcuffed at 1301 North Victory Place and the time is 9:17 a.m. The charge is petty theft.
Samara Sharee Horn lives in Cleveland and was picked up at the Burbank Airport and the time is 12:22 p.m. The charge is possession of controlled substances for sale.
Michael Anthony Nevarez is a Glendale resident and was taken into custody at Walmart. The time is 11:42 a.m. The charge is petty theft.
North Hollywood resident Jordan Alexandra Ramos was picked up at 1800 West Empire Ave. and the time is 7:16 p.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance – petty theft and a warrant.
Jonathan Rivas Ramirez was cuffed at 100 East Palm Ave. It occurred at 1:04 a.m. The charge is disorderly conduct.
Carlos James Rojas lives in Banning and was apprehended after being charged with assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm and warrants. The time is 00:15 a.m.
Victory Anthony Ross is an Ontario resident and was sacked at San Fernando Blvd. and Allan Ave. The time is 6:45 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.
Richard Lynzene Shepherd lives in Ontario and was picked up at San Fernando Blvd. and Allan Ave. The time is 6:45 a.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and a Burbank municipal code violation.
Benjamin David Smith lives in Glendale and was taken into custody at Magnolia Blvd. and San Fernando Blvd. It took place at 10:38 p.m. The charge is resisting arrest.
Christopher Thompson was arrested after being charged with defrauding an innkeeper and the time is 5:46 p.m.
Sona A. Vardapetyan lives in Burbank and was cuffed at 2130 North Glenoaks Blvd. It occurred at 11:54 p.m. The charge is a warrant.
Amanda Rose Weiss is a North Hollywood resident and was pinched at Pass Ave. and Oak St. It took place at 3:50 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of hard drugs and warrants.
On Saturday, January 10, Edvin Artoonian Savarani, a resident of Sylmar was arrested at 25 East Alameda Ave. The time is 8:57 p.m. The charges are possession of tear gas and possession of hard drugs.
Kimberley Kristi Baughan lives in Mission Hills and was nabbed at 301 North Pass Ave. The time is 5:30 a.m. The charge is possession of a controlled substance and a warrant.
Diego Angel Bolonos Rangel resides in Pacoima and was apprehended at Magnolia Blvd. and First St. The time is 1:04 a.m.
The charges are driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug and driving while under the influence with .08 or above.
Eddy Maximilliano Diaz Solis is a caregiver and was handcuffed at Burbank Blvd. and San Fernando Blvd. and the time is 3:26 a.m.
The charges are driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug – driving while under the influence with .08 or above and driving without a license.
Jesus Maria Galvan Pereyva lives in Los Angeles and was taken into custody at 1800 West Empire Ave. [Target] and the time is 9:26 p.m. The charge is burglary.
Kevin Jason Ponce was nabbed at 301 North Pass Ave. The time is 5:30 a.m. The charges are identity theft and possession of a controlled substance.
Juan Jesus Sanchez Lujan was cuffed at Magnolia Blvd. and Buena Vista St. and the time is 9:55 p.m. The charge is driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug.
On Friday, January 9, Jasmine Rae Alexander, a Los Angeles resident was sacked at 935 North Hollywood Way. The time is 6:28 p.m. The charges are possession of stolen property – possession of Xanax and possession of heroin/cocaine.
Rosalinda Corona lives in Van Nuys and was apprehended at Glenoaks Blvd. and Lincoln St. It took place at 5:56 a.m. The charge is driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug.
Christian Dariel Reyes De La Cruz is a plumber and a Burbank resident and was nabbed at Kenneth Road and Elmwood Ave. The time is 3:22 a.m.
The charges are driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug – driving while under the influence with .08 or above and resisting arrest.
Levon Hakobyan lives in Van Nuys and was taken into custody at 1301 North Victory Place and the time is 11:30 p.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance – possession of Xanax and possession of heroin/cocaine.
Janae Valerie Johnson is a Los Angeles resident and was arrested at 2627 North Hollywood Way [Burbank Airport] and it took place at 3:32 p.m. The charge is possession of marijuana.
Marvin Pompilio Lazaro resides in Hollywood and was handcuffed at Magnolia Blvd. and Cordova St. The time is 4:30 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a dagger and a warrant.
Peter Junior Lopez lives in South Gate and was picked up at Hollywood Way and Oak St. and the time is 3:41 a.m. The charge is possession of nitrous oxide and a warrant.
Dallas Mangia Pane Marlow is a Los Angeles resident and was handcuffed at Hollywood Way and Verdugo Ave. It took place at 8:21 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of heroin/cocaine and a warrant.
Jose Jairo Marroquin is employed in security and was pinched at Riverside Drive and Evergreen St. The time is 7:45 p.m. The charge is possession of heroin/cocaine.
Los Angeles resident Juan Manuel Martinez Alvizurez is a plumber and was apprehended at Kenneth Road and Elmwood Ave. and the time is 3:35 a.m.
The charges are driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug and driving while under the influence with .08 or above.
Christopher Jacob Munsey lives in Phoenix and was arrested after being charged with disorderly conduct. The time is 12:45 p.m.
Truth Murray is a Corona resident and was handcuffed at 101 East Alameda Ave. The time is 3:08 p.m. The charge is repeated thefts.
Fernando Orellana lives in Panorama City and was cuffed at 2000 Hollywood Way. It occurred at 9:30 p.m. The charge is a warrant.
Raul Andres Reyes is a Winnetka resident and was picked up at San Fernando Blvd. and Valencia Ave. The time is 1:35 a.m. The charge is bringing contraband into a jail or prison and warrants.
Haruna Szozi is a barber and a Winnetka resident and was taken into custody at Buena Vista St. and Empire Ave. The time is 7:29 p.m. The charges are driving while under the influence of drugs – possession of marijuana and a warrant.
Joshua Marlon Torres lives in Van Nuys and was sacked at San Fernando Blvd. and Valencia Ave. and the time is 1:35 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a dagger.
Angelica Marie Pelicano Viado is a Carson resident and was brought into custody at 2627 North Hollywood Way [Burbank Airport] and the time is 3:28 p.m. The charge is possession of drug paraphernalia and a warrant.
Byron Cedric Wilson was nabbed at Olive Ave. and Florence St. The time is 1:30 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of hard drugs – repeated thefts and petty theft.
On Thursday, January 8, Luis Antonio Alanis, a Burbank resident was arrested at Magnolia Blvd. and Frederic St. The time is 00:20 a.m. The charge is driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug.
Mauricio Alcala is a handyman and a Sun Valley resident and was nabbed at Cleon Ave. and Stagg St. The time is 9:40 a.m. The charges are repeated thefts – possession of hard drugs and warrants.
Sofia Alejandra Alfaro lives in Los Angeles and was picked up after being charged with petty theft. It took place at 7:15 p.m.
Oscar Alexander Cora is employed in the food industry and was cuffed at 1301 North Victory Place and the time is 4:08 p.m. The charges are petty theft and disorderly conduct.
Bo Ding lives in Rosemead and was apprehended after being charged with disorderly conduct. It occurred at 1:00 p.m.
Edgar Falcon lives in Los Angeles and was sacked at 301 Olive Ave. The time is 9:05 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.
Elizabeth Maria Gonzalez was pinched at the Glendale police department and the time is 3:50 a.m. The charge is warrants.
Bay Maurice Horn lives in Los Angeles and was arrested at 200 North Third St. The time is 3:00 p.m. The charge is repeated thefts and warrants.
Jianyong Liu is a resident of El Montre and was brought into custody at 10:05 a.m. The charge is prostitution.
Jinyu Liu lives in Montebello and was nabbed after being charged with prostitution. The time is 1:00 p.m.
Mehdi Lotfiz Zadeh is a Northridge resident and is an aircraft mechanic and was nabbed at Empire Ave. and the 5 freeway. The time is 9:52 p.m. The charges are possession of brass knuckles and possession of hard drugs.
Jose Alfredo Navarro lives in Los Angeles and was apprehended at Niagara St. and Verdugo Ave. The time is 4:42 p.m. The charges are repeated thefts and identity theft.
Jora Nazary Masihi resides in Glendale and was handcuffed at San Fernando Blvd. and Walnut Ave. It took place at 2:57 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of hard drugs and a warrant.
Jose Rogelio Ortega lives in Canoga Park and was taken into custody at 1301 North Victory Place and the time is 10:44 p.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance – possession of heroin/cocaine – resisting arrest – petty theft – possession of tear gas and a warrant.
Panorama City resident Claudia Maria Osuna was sacked after being charged with possession of tear gas and possession of hard drugs. The time is 10:52 p.m.
Joanna Ochoa Reyes lives in Sun Valley and was cuffed after being charged with possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and petty theft. The time is 9:40 a.m.
Francesca Secheli resides in Anaheim and was apprehended at 1301 North Victory Place. It took place at 12:15 p.m. The charge is petty theft.
Burbank resident Luis Raul Torres was arrested at Shelton St. and Chandler Blvd. The time is 7:01 p.m. The charge is warrants.
Vicky Lynn Ward was taken into custody after being charged with contempt of court. The time is 2:00 p.m.
Quan Yang lives in Monterey Park and was pinched after being charged with disorderly conduct. It occurred at 10:05 a.m.
Yalian Zheng resides in Monterey Park and was handcuffed after being charged with prostitution. It took place at 11:50 a.m.
On Wednesday, January 7, Anthony Arutunian, who is a resident of Glendale and is a construction worker was handcuffed at Forest Lawn Drive and Barham Blvd. The time is 12:15 p.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of heroin/cocaine and possession of nitrous oxide.
Haroutioun Ashekian is a cashier and a Glendale resident and was nabbed at Elmwood Ave. and San Fernando Blvd. The time is 00:41 a.m. The charge is possession of nitrous oxide.
Stevie R. Camel lives in Huntington Beach and was pinched at 1351 Victory Place and the time is 6:45 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.
Luis Castillo Ramirez resides in Palmdale and was pinched at 2:00 a.m. The charges are conspiracy to commit a felony – joyriding and possession burglary tools.
Burbank resident Rafael Corona was apprehended at Victory Blvd. and Providencia Ave. The time is 8:14 p.m. The charge is possession of a controlled substance and warrants.
Lawrence Charles Doerr lives in Sun Valley and was taken into custody at 1301 North Victory Place. It occurred at 1:25 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of methamphetamines.
Maria Magdalena Escobar is a Los Angeles resident and is a house cleaner and was arrested at San Fernando Blvd. and Frederic St. The time is 3:49 p.m. The charge is possession of a controlled substance.
Matthew Aaron Gallegos works as a landscaper and was cuffed at Victory Blvd. and Chandler Blvd. It took place at 4:30 p.m. The charge is resisting arrest and warrants.
Elijah Anthony Garcia lives in Compton and works in security and was pinched after being charged with burglary and warrants. The time is 7:10 a.m.
Christopher Adair Iglesias Hernandez was sacked at 7:06 a.m. The charges are resisting arrest – conspiracy to commit a felony – joyriding – possession of burglary tools and a warrant.
John Jeffrey Johnson was handcuffed at Brighton St. and San Fernando Blvd. and the time is 12:15 p.m. The charge is warrants.
Michael Jose Norberto lives in Covina and was apprehended after being charged with vandalism with $400 or more. It took place at 11:30 p.m.
Daniel Alexander Ramirez is a Reseda resident and was brought into custody at Bonnywood Place and Olive Ave. and the time is 11:15 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of hard drugs.
Sun Valley resident Priscilla Rincon Martinez is a house cleaner and was cuffed at San Fernando Blvd. and Frederic St. It took place at 3:55 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and petty theft.
Raul Santos is a construction worker and lives in Hollywood and was nabbed at Alameda Ave. and Flower St. The time is 8:10 a.m. The charge is petty theft and a warrant.
Maurice Levan Short was picked up at the Gardena police department jail and the time is 8:15 p.m. The charge is a warrant.
Macio David Sibrian Ayala lives in Panorama City and is a mechanic and was pinched at Brighton St. and Victory Blvd. The time is 2:00 a.m. The charges are possession of hard drugs – conspiracy to commit a felony and joyriding.
On Tuesday, January 6, Sunshine Dawn Anderson was apprehended at 4:07 p.m. The charge is petty theft and a warrant.
Edelson Arguello lives in Los Angeles and was sacked at Glenoaks Blvd. and Verdugo Ave. The time is 1:38 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and identity theft.
Mauricio Javier Escobar Guerrero is a construction worker and a Van Nuys resident and was picked up at San Fernando Blvd. and Alameda Ave. The time is 10:33 p.m. The charges are driving with an expired license and possession of a controlled substance.
Connie Zuleya Gonzalez is a resident of Panorama City and was handcuffed at 1601 North Victory Place and the time is 2:45 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and petty theft.
Patrick Selvin Hendy lives in Pacoima and was nabbed at 2000 West Empire Ave. The time is 12:40 p.m. The charge is possession of drug paraphernalia.
Brooke Noelle Marquez resides in Burbank and was brought into custody at 12:40 p.m. The charges are resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.
Arman Martikian is an Uber driver and was arrested at Fifth St and Orange Grove Ave. The time is 4:56 p.m. The charge is possession of drug paraphernalia.
Axel Medel Monroy is a chef and a Los Angeles resident and was sacked at 2323 West Alameda Ave. and the time is 4:07 a.m.
The charges are driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug – driving while under the influence with .08 or above and possession of heroin/cocaine.
Los Angeles resident Jose Luis Pena was cuffed at Glenoaks Blvd. and Verdugo Ave. The time is 1:38 a.m. The charges are possession of brass knuckles and possession of a controlled substance.
Edwin Israel Roman lives in Sylmar and was taken into custody at 1551 North Victory Place and the time is 4:11 p.m. The charge is a warrant.
Lakel Daquan Smith resides in Tustin and was sacked after being charged with possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and arson. The timr is 10:28 p.m.
Holman Jose Suarez Rivera is unemployed and a Los Angeles resident and was picked up at 2511 Buena Vista St. and the time is 00:58 a.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and bringing contraband into a jail or prison.
On Monday, January 5, David Alfaro was picked up at San Fernando Blvd. and Alameda Ave. The time is 6:34 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.
Edgar Bagayan lives in Burbank and was nabbed at Burbank Blvd. and Buena Vista St. The time is 1:50 p.m. The charge is disorderly conduct.
Taylor Noel Dube resides in Oceanside and is a physical therapist and was cuffed at Burbank Blvd. and Griffith Park Drive. It took place at 9:50 p.m. The charge is driving while under the influence of an alcoholic beverage or drug.
John Gary Fisherson is a driver and a Burbank resident and was pinched at Alameda Ave. and Pass Ave. The time is 1:08 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of hard drugs.
Nichole Frances Franco lives in Lancaster and is a pharmacy technician and was handcuffed at the same site and the same time. The charge is possession of drug paraphernalia.
Brandon Michael J. Gardner is a Los Angeles resident and was sacked at 2511 North Buena Vista St. The time is 8:21 p.m.
The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance – resisting arrest and a warrant.
Eliazbeth Gonzalez was apprehended at 2200 West Empire Ave. and the time is 4:54 p.m. The charges are identity theft – possession of a controlled substance and a warrant.
Javon Parker Hayes is a Burbank resident and was picked up at 2337 North Fairview St. The time is 10:13 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and contempt of court.
Burbank resident James Douglas Hill was nabbed at 1028 South San Fernando Blvd. The time is 2:41 a.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance.
Mateo Antonio Miguel lives in Los Angeles and was handcuffed after being charged with vandalism twice. The time is 2:30 p.m.
Michael Morelli is a Burbank resident and was brought into custody after being charged with resisting arrest and vandalism with $400 or more. It took place at 12:15 p.m.
Sun Valley resident Joseph James Sundstrom was arrested at 1301 North Victory Place and the time is 10:50 p.m. The charges are possession of drug paraphernalia – possession of a controlled substance and possession of heroin/cocaine.
SALEM, N.H. — Police arrested a Lawrence, Massachusetts, man following a high-speed pursuit on Interstate 93.
Rafy Villa, 25, faces multiple charges after state police said he was speeding in a BMW X2 on Saturday shortly before 11:30 p.m. on I-93 north in Windham. Villa then allegedly sped up when Trooper Alex Guilbeault attempted to conduct a traffic stop.
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A 15-year-old boy who went missing in Denver on Thursday is described by police as an Alaska Native who was last seen wearing a baggy black and white checkered outfit.
Missing Indigenous Person Alert Activation Michael Davis, described as a 15-year-old Alaskan Native male, last seen at 11:00 AM January 22, 2026 in the 1000 block of North Cherokee Street in Denver, Colorado.
Julius Bernstein, who was convicted of three counts of vehicular manslaughter in a fiery crash that killed a mother and her two daughters, is sentenced before Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Zachary James at the Richard E. Gerstein Justice Building in Miami, Florida, on Friday, January 23, 2026. The crash occurred on the 79th Street Causeway on June 27, 2022.
PHOTO BY AL DIAZ
adiaz@miamiherald.com
Samir Saidi, the husband of the woman and two girls who were killed in a fiery crash in 2022, detailed how he struggles to sleep at night because thoughts about his family’s final moments run in his mind.
“There is not one single day that I haven’t cried for my loss,” Saidi said on the stand, adding that he wishes he could have done something to save the lives of his wife, Cynthia Orsatelliz, and daughters Sofia, 15, and Maria, 12.
On June 27, 2022, Julius Bernstein, 27, was speeding at nearly 100 mph on the 79th Street Causeway in North Bay Village when he rammed his Dodge Charger into a car turning left from the eastbound lanes at Harbor Island Drive. After the crash, Bernstein jumped out of his car and ran. He hadn’t had a driver’s license since 2016.
Julius Bernstein, left, received a 45-year sentence on Friday, January 23, 2026. PHOTO BY AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiherald.com
Bernstein sat quietly as he was sentenced on Friday afternoon to 45 years in state prison followed by 10 years of probation by Miami-Dade County Circuit Court Judge Zachary James. In September, a Miami jury found Bernstein guilty of three counts of vehicular homicide as well as other charges linked to the fatal collision. The sentence is 15 years per count of vehicular homicide.
“What a beautiful family. So full of life, so full of promise… torn away by a vehicle that this defendant turned into a bullet,” James said before announcing the sentence.
Bernstein will get credit for the three years that he has served behind bars in Miami-Dade. A month after the wreck, he was taken into custody by federal agents in North Carolina.
Bernstein was stoic as the family recounted their suffering, wiping their tears. After their impact statements, he stood up and spoke briefly, the rattle of chains echoing in the courtroom.
He apologized.
Bernstein’s attorney, Dustin Tischler, had requested a 25-year sentence, citing a history of mental-health and substance-abuse issues. Prosecutor Laura Adams, however, sought a life sentence under a sentencing enhancement because Bernstein is a “habitual violent felony” offender. At the time of the crash, Bernstein was serving three years of probation for a slew of convictions, including for aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and fleeing law enforcement, Florida prison records show.
Bernstein, Adams argued, annihilated a family when he got behind the wheel.
A never-ending grief
Saidi said he met Cynthia in 1995 when they were studying together — and quickly became inseparable.
“She was my rock, my support,” he said, sniffling. “God blessed us with a … very comfortable life.”
The couple were also blessed with two daughters, he said: Sofia, who was passionate about writing and often embarrassed him by saying words he wouldn’t know, and Maria, who loved cooking shows and told him she wanted to become a chef.
“I thought that there would come a day that there is a book that had Sofia’s name on it or a restaurant that Maria would be so proud of being the main chef,” Saidi said.
Samir Saidi testifies about his suffering since his wife, Cynthia Orsatelliz, and daughters Sofia, 15, and Maria, 12, were killed in a fiery crash in 2022. WTVJ-NBC 6
The girls, Saidi said, were the “most beautiful souls, angels,” and he can’t forgive Bernstein because they, along with their mother, were casualties of Bernstein’s sheer recklessness.
Omar Orsatelliz, Cynthia’s brother, said his sister — who was the oldest daughter of their five siblings — was like a mother to him. She guided, protected and shaped him into who he became.
“As a brother, I grieve for her every day,” Orsatelliz said. “As an uncle to Maria and Sofia, I grieve for the lives that never got to unfold. I’m not the same person I was before that day and neither is our family.”
Orsatelliz said his father — the girls’ grandfather — suffered a stroke around the anniversary of the crash last year and now requires constant care. Orsatelliz said he believes the stroke was brought on by his father’s heartache.
“This tragedy did not end on the day of the crash,” he said. “Its consequences continue to uphold. Family gatherings are quieter. Holidays and birthdays feel incomplete. Ordinary days are filled with reminders of who was missing and what has been taken from us.”
Family attorney Omar Saleh said outside the courtroom: “This is just a small piece of closure to this horrific family tragedy.”
Now-retired Miami-Dade Det. Wanda Milian, who investigated the wreck, said the emotional impact of the scene was “unlike anything I had previously encountered.”
Milian broke down as she testified about how Bernstein launched a barrage of obscenities at her. Bernstein’s erratic behavior, the officer said, was something that she had encountered only two other times in her 17 years as a detective.
“It is said that law enforcement will always remember their first case and their last,” the detective said. “This case, my last, will always remain [with me.]”
The woman accused of stabbing another in Denver’s Union Station bus terminal late Sunday night was “looking for someone who was not paying attention,” according to court documents.
Denver police officers responded to the stabbing at Gate B14 inside the bus terminal at 1700 Wewatta St. just before 10 p.m. Sunday, according to an arrest affidavit.
Witnesses told officers that the suspect, 37-year-old Nakila Green, was pacing around the station before she sat down next to a random woman on a bench and stabbed her, police wrote in the arrest affidavit.
Green allegedly stabbed the woman several times in the leg and chest. The victim screamed for help, and Regional Transportation District officers rushed over to hold Green at gunpoint and subdue her, according to the affidavit.
The victim, who is expected to survive, told investigators that Green didn’t say anything to her during the incident and that she had never met her before, police said in the affidavit.
Green spat on police officers while being arrested, and continuously spat inside a patrol car while in custody, according to the document.
As of Monday afternoon, Green was being held on suspicion of first-degree assault causing serious bodily injury with a deadly weapon, according to Denver County Court records.
Denver jail records indicated officers were investigating additional charges of second-degree assault and second-degree assault to a peace officer in a separate case.
An Indiana state court judge and his wife were in stable condition Monday as authorities continued to search for suspects who shot the couple the day before at their Lafayette home.Steven Meyer, a Tippecanoe Superior Court judge, suffered an injury to his arm, and his wife, Kimberly Meyer, had a hip injury from the attack, authorities said.Officers responded Sunday afternoon to a report of a shooting in the residential area about 60 miles northwest of Indianapolis to find the couple injured. They were treated for their wounds, and officers recovered shell casings from the scene.Lafayette Police said the investigation remains active and involves local, state and federal agencies. They have not released a motive or suspect description.Mayor Tony Roswarski assured the community that every available resource was being used to apprehend the person or people responsible for what he called “this senseless, unacceptable act of violence.”Kimberly Meyer said in a statement Monday that she has “great confidence” in investigators and is grateful to the officers and medical professionals who helped her and her husband.The shooting had other Indiana judges worried for their safety, with state Supreme Court Chief Justice Loretta H. Rush urging them to “please remain vigilant in your own security.”“I worry about the safety of all our judges,” she wrote in a letter to the state’s judges. “As you work to peacefully resolve more than 1 million cases a year, you must not only feel safe, you must also be safe. Any violence against a judge or a judge’s family is completely unacceptable.”
LAFAYETTE, Ind. —
An Indiana state court judge and his wife were in stable condition Monday as authorities continued to search for suspects who shot the couple the day before at their Lafayette home.
Steven Meyer, a Tippecanoe Superior Court judge, suffered an injury to his arm, and his wife, Kimberly Meyer, had a hip injury from the attack, authorities said.
Officers responded Sunday afternoon to a report of a shooting in the residential area about 60 miles northwest of Indianapolis to find the couple injured. They were treated for their wounds, and officers recovered shell casings from the scene.
Lafayette Police said the investigation remains active and involves local, state and federal agencies. They have not released a motive or suspect description.
Mayor Tony Roswarski assured the community that every available resource was being used to apprehend the person or people responsible for what he called “this senseless, unacceptable act of violence.”
Kimberly Meyer said in a statement Monday that she has “great confidence” in investigators and is grateful to the officers and medical professionals who helped her and her husband.
The shooting had other Indiana judges worried for their safety, with state Supreme Court Chief Justice Loretta H. Rush urging them to “please remain vigilant in your own security.”
“I worry about the safety of all our judges,” she wrote in a letter to the state’s judges. “As you work to peacefully resolve more than 1 million cases a year, you must not only feel safe, you must also be safe. Any violence against a judge or a judge’s family is completely unacceptable.”