April 2013 - Fugitive Watch
Transcription
April 2013 - Fugitive Watch
April 2013 FREE gratis Los Más Buscados • Bilingual Police Officer Patricia A. Parete Buffalo Police Department ed d n e h e r p Ap 2016 Public Safety Officer Thomas Madole Manokotak Village Public Safety Alaska www.FUGITIVE.com New York fugitive watch® news apr- 13 fw Table of Contents 2 . Featured Fugitives Investigación Federal Sobre Homicidio de Teniente Apunta a Venganza. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 ID Fugitive Want 13-74 Jose Fernando Corona Murder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 How Do We Stop the Exodus of San Jose Police Officers? . . . . . . . . . . . 10 13-78Unknown Assault . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Fugitive Watch Factoids. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 13-96 Murder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 In Memoriam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 13-116 Ricardo Puentes, Jr Murder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Use Your Mobile Phones to Watch Fugitive Watch Podcasts. . . . . . . . . . 17 13-121Unknown Burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Interceptó DEA 2 mil 800 MDD del Narco en 2012. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 13-110 Juan Ramirez Murder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Bustin’ Up. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 13-120 Scott Wayne Baily Robbery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Victim of a Strange San Jose Crime Defied the Odds for Three Decades . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 13-106 Jesse Warren Parsons Escape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Movie Critics Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 13-105 Unknown Auto Burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 13-106 Unknown Attempted Kidknapping. . . . . . . . 16 13-104 Unknown Bank Robbery. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 13-111 Angel Wilfredo Castro Impersonating a Law Enforcement Officer. . . . . . . . . . . 18 13-101 Jonathan Rios Robbery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Become a Fugitive Watch Sponsor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Michael Chad Boysen WANTED Fugitive Watch® Productions,Inc. © 2013 No part of this publication may be reproduced without express permission from Fugitive Watch® Productions, Inc. 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(408) 729-7737 PMB #228 • 353-E East Tenth St. Gilroy, CA 95020-6577 Phone: (408) 729-7737 • Website: www.fugitive.com e-mail: [email protected] Page fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 Gilroy Motorcycle Center 7661 Monterey St • Gilroy, CA 95020 • 408.842.9955 3 . 13-74 Jose Fernando Corona Murder / asesinato The Lewisville, Texas Police Department is asking for the public’s help in locating Jose Fernando Corona on a warrant charging him with Murder. Detectives report that on April 26, 2010, Corona murdered his wife, Maria Corona with a chainsaw. He dismembered her body while she was still alive and then decapitated her inside their home. He then dragged her headless body into the street just minutes before a mailman arrived to deliver mail and found her body. Maria was the mother of their six children ranging in ages from 7 years old to 20 years old. Corona fled the scene in a 2005 gold Toyota Sequoia with Texas license plate 247-DVH and it was later found abandoned in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Bedford, Texas. He then took a 1991 gold two-door Ford Ranger with Texas license plate AA24004 from a Dallas used car dealership and never returned it. Investigators believe that Corona may have fled into Mexico on April 27, 2010 at Laredo, Texas. Corona has extended family members in Euless, Grapevine, Mineola, Austin, and Houston, Texas as well as in Oklahoma, Washington and Mexico. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] apr- 13 fw 4 13-78 unknown assault / asalto San Francisco police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect in two seemingly random assaults. Police released a sketch of a man who attacked a female victim on Feb. 2 on Bartlett Street between 22nd and 23rd streets around 1 a.m. The victim was walking south on Bartlett, and as she passed the suspect walking in the opposite direction, he punched her multiple times, police said. The victim covered her face with her hands to try to protect herself, and the suspect fled the area. Police said robbery or sexual assault do not appear to be the motives for the attack at this time. Investigators believe the same suspect may have been involved in a similar attack that occurred on Jan. 6. In that attack, a victim walking in the area 23rd and Church streets around 2:40 a.m. was attacked by a man walking in the opposite direction as they passed, police said. The suspect lunged at the victim and threw her to the ground, straddled her and slammed her head into the ground. He then fled the area when the victim screamed for help, police said. 13-96 Michael “chad” Boysen Murder / asesinato The King County Sheriff’s Department is currently seeking Michael “Chad” Boysen on a warrant charging him with allegedly killing his grandparents in Renton, Washington. Sgt. Cindi West reports that Boysen had just been released from prison after serving nine months on a burglary conviction. According to Sgt. Cindi West, Boysen went to spend that night with his grandparents. The bodies of the 82-year-old man and 80-year-old woman were later found in their home and their car, a red 2001 Chrysler 300, is missing. The sheriff’s office says he’s considered “an extreme danger to the public and police.” Investigators believe he may be looking for firearms because he searched for gun shows on the Internet. www.fugitive.com FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] apr- 13 fw 5 13-116 Ricardo Puentes Jr. Murder / asesinato The FBI and Santa Rosa police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect in a 2005 murder. Ricardo Puentes Jr., 35, is suspected of fatally shooting 27-year-old Semere Haile Girmai at an apartment in Santa Rosa on Jan. 15, 2005. Santa Rosa police allege that Puentes and two other men went to the apartment at 4019 Hoen Ave., where Puentes allegedly shot Girmai five times and shot a Fresno man in the arm. Police said the slaying was drug-related. The FBI describes him as 5 feet 8 inches tall and 190 pounds. He has black hair, brown eyes and several moles on his face. He has ties to Meridian, Miss., And Everett, Wash., FBI officials said. fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 6 . fugitive watch® news Investigación Federal Sobre Homicidio El teniente del Centro Metropolitano de Detención (MDC) Osvaldo Albarati, asesinado anoche por varios pistoleros al culminar su jornada de trabajo en la cárcel, había recibido varias amenazas de parte de confinados y actualmente las autoridades federales se centralizan en el ángulo de que la muerte se trató de una venganza. Varias fuentes de El Nuevo Día indicaron que los federales sospechan de cuatro narcotraficantes actualmente presos en MDC, entre ellos un individuo de Fajardo que por el momento no se puede revelar su nombre debido a unas entrevistas que realizan las autoridades. El otro sospechoso fue arrestado después de estar más de diez años fugitivo por un doble asesinato. apr - 13 fw Según las fuentes de este diario el teniente Albarati confiscó ocho celulares por los que el hombre arrestado después de estar más de diez años fugitivo y el narcotraficante de Fajardo, preso desde el año pasado, pagaron cerca de $40,000. “El de Fajardo le dijo al teniente, después de la confiscación, que le iba a dar una lección”, dijo una fuente de El Nuevo Día con conocimiento de la pesquisa. El hombre que estuvo fugitivo diez años también había amenazado anteriormente a Albarati. Asimismo las fuentes de este diario señalaron que los posibles gatilleros contratados para asesinar a Albarati se sospecha que son de la zona este. de Teniente Apunta a Venganza 7 . fugitive watch® news Open Letter The following letter was composed by immigration attorney Richard Hobbs, former director of the Catholic Charities Immigration Program of Santa Clara County. The letter could be revised, sent as is, or communicated to The Honorable John Boehner at: Office of the Speaker, H-232 The Capitol, Washington, DC 20515, Phone: (202) 225-0600, Fax: (202) 225-5117. Congressman Boehner will decide whether a comprehensive immigration bill will be introduced in the House of Representatives. Dear Congresswoman Boehner: I am pleased that Congress is finally addressing the need to fix our broken immigration system. I am very concerned fw apr - 13 Speaker of The House John Boehner of Comprehensive Immigration Reform to Mandatory E-Verify will create a about what is being proposed for a new immigration law in the United States. Please permanent exploited underclass for those individuals who cannot obtain a take these concerns into account. work permit in the future, which will be Earned legalization should be afford- millions of people. They will only be able to work under the table or as day laborers able, confidential, and generous like in intolerable conditions. Please oppose the 1986 legalization program. The mandatory E-Verify. back of the line approach proposed by Families should be able to remain President Obama and the Senate could whole. We ask for more visas in the famrequire undocumented immigrants to wait ily preference system, the right of bina25 years before they become US citizens tional same-sex couples to immigrate, no unless visa numbers are added to family preference system. Many undocumented 3 and 10-year bars that prevent nuclear immigrants have waited much longer (over family members from gaining legal status, and the right of lawful permanent resi30 years!) than anyone in the preference dents to live with their spouses and minor system. Back of the line is back of the children immediately, without a wait. bus. This is an intolerable delay. Please Restore rehabilitation and human include deferred action for youth and longterm TPS recipients from Central America values to immigration law. Restore criminal and extreme hardship waivers to in any earned legalization program. those who can show rehabilitation or extreme hardship instead of being deported. in 8 . Support Enforcement programs are already the most successful in the history of the United States; we don’t need more. Net migration from Mexico is less than zero. The 1.6 million deportations during President Obama’s first 4 years are excessive, separating families due to minor or no criminal activity. Secure Communities should be eliminated or radically overhauled to focus on violent and serious criminals only. Please do not condition earned legalization on more border enforcement. fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 9 . fugitive watch® news How Do We Stop By Police Sgt. Damian Bortolotti As I stood in day shift briefing recently, I could not help but think long and hard about the predicament the City of San Jose has gotten itself into. For so long this city had at its disposal one of the greatest police departments in the country. It was staffed by highly motivated, efficient, well trained, and committed police officers and communications personnel. Now they are leaving in droves causing dangerously low staffing levels, which have negatively impacted emergency response times and contributed to the rise in crime. I stood there and watched as yet another 20-year veteran police officer attended her last briefing as she had recently resigned. It is a hard pill to swallow every time an officer I know resigns, but I know that they all do it because it is best decision for them and their families. I can- apr - 13 fw the Exodus not not help but think of how it seems that for every officer who leaves, the crime rate in San Jose increases proportionately. I work as a patrol sergeant in the Almaden area, and I have seen some pretty heinous crimes occur recently. Last month, there was a robbery at the Almaden Expressway/Camden Avenue Safeway where three suspects assaulted a girl scout and took the cookies that she was selling. Just recently a young man was stabbed to death in an Almaden area park, an elderly man was carjacked and left lying in the street and a married couple were tied up and robbed in their very own home. Sadly, burglaries are up over 23%, auto thefts are up over 71%, and home invasion robberies are up nearly 65% citywide compared to 2011 (Source: San Jose Police Department). Yet, as the weeks go by, more San Jose police officers resign or retire early. As of of 10 . San Jose Police Officers? April 3rd, the San Jose Police Department now has 923 ready officers compared to over 1,300 just three years ago. All of these officers were lost to resignations and early retirements. Why are all of these officers leaving? The answer is very simple: Security and Trust. The security of knowing what their pay will be in the future and trust that those in charge of this city will keep their word. In both instances, San Jose has failed. Without these very important principles, officers will continue the exodus caused by looming pay cuts that will result from the implementation of Measure B. Mayor Reed has recently said that public safety and restoring capacity at the police department must be the City’s top priority. I’m glad to hear him say that, but this statement confuses me because while he has been working hard to reopen four libraries, way too many San Jose police officers have been resigning and taking early retirements. Public safety must truly be the number one priority if we are to bring our city back from the brink. Other city programs or departments may have to suffer. That is our reality. Reed constantly says we need to have pension reform in order hire more police officers; pension reform that would be achieved by enacting Measure B. The irony here is that the pension reform that Reed says is the fix, is actually the cause of the exodus. What many citizens in San Jose don’t realize is that Measure B doesn’t change what current employees receive when they retire. The “reform” is that it forces these employees to pay much more for that retirement while they are still working: 16% more for their retirement and up to 8% more for retiree medical. continued on page 12 all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. apr - 13 fw 11 13-121 unknown Burglary / robo The Petaluma Police Department is asking for the public’s help in identifying the man in these photos. Lt. Tim Lyons reports that March 31, 2013, at about 8:30 a.m. this suspect allegedly walked out of a K-Mart store carrying a large flat screen television without paying for it. According to police, this suspect allegedly went into a back storage area, grabbed a 32-inch Seiki high-definition flat-screen television and walked back out the main door. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 or send a confidential email tip, if you know the name of this man or have any information that can help solve this crime. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted tiene alguna información que pueda ayudar a resolver este crimen. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT • FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] EMAIL: [email protected] 13-110 Juan Ramirez Murder / asesinato The San Jose Police Department is currently Juan Ramirez on warrant charging him with the alleged murder Sandra Cruzes Gonsalez. Detectives report that on March 22, 2013 at approximately 2:37 P.M., police received a report of a person stabbed in the 900 block of N. First Street in San Jose. Upon arrival, officers located Sandra Cruzes Gonsalez, down in the parking lot of her apartment complex suffering from multiple stab wounds. Gonsalez was taken to the hospital where she was pronounced deceased. Detectives also report that Ramirez, confronted Gonsalez in the parking lot and allegedly stabbed the victim multiple times then fled the scene on foot. Officers searched the neighborhood for several hours but did not locate the suspect. Homicide detectives believe the suspect may be attempting to flee to Mexico and is possibly driving a dark green, 1996 Toyota T-100 pick-up truck. Detectives believe the crime was domestic violence related. The victim and suspect had a previous dating relationship that ended approximately two years ago. The victim had an active restraining order against the suspect at the time of the homicide. This is San Jose’s 10th homicide of 2013. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know his whereabouts. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] EMAIL: [email protected] apr 13 fw 12 continued from page 10 City employees are already struggling with a 10% pay giveback that occurred in 2011, and San Jose police officers are paying a little over 19% of their salary into their retirement and retiree medical. That percentage will increase to over 21% this June. When you add up all of those percentages, that means San Jose police officers are looking at having their take home pay reduced by 55 percent! If this happens, these police officers will not be able to survive on what they take home. The very real threat of these pay cuts is what is driving current officers away. Not to mention the belief that Measure B is illegal, and that the City violated state law when it put Measure B on the ballot. What about police dispatchers and call takers? They are also leaving in droves. Currently SJPD communications is down to a full duty staff of only 122. They are authorized to have 162. Things are so bad they are working mandatory overtime to make up for the staffing shortfalls. These dedicated men and women are leaving San Jose for many of the same reasons as the police officers. They are also difficult to recruit and take a long time to train. Also like officers, dispatchers who work at other police agencies will not come here to work. So San Jose can hire only raw recruits. This takes away the ability of the city to take an experienced officer or dispatcher and put them to work very quickly. So, San Jose has a big problem: fewer and fewer police officers and more and more crime. To fix this situation we need to start by doing something that actually will retain the officers and dispatchers we currently have. If Mayor Reed and members of the city council are serious about doing this, I respectfully have a sugges- tion that I’m confident would work. I have talked to many officers and communications personnel who are actively applying to other agencies. They have all said that my idea would make a huge difference in their financial security and they would most likely stay. I also believe that this would give the morale of the department a huge boost: SOLUTION • At a minimum, restore police department salaries to what they were before the 10% pay-giveback. • Publicly state that you will not institute any of the Measure B provisions that will reduce take home pay until the courts decide if they are actually legal. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT This would halt the mass exodus and allow SJPD to start rebuilding. Unless the resignations and early retirements stop, the officers who are hired in the future will not be able to keep pace with those that are running for the door. Damain Bortolotti is a San Jose Police Sergeant and is also a member of the San Jose Police Officers’ Association Board of Directors all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] EMAIL: [email protected] apr 13 fw 13 D 13-119 TE S David Dean E Johnson R AR 13-120 Scott Wayne Baily robbery / robo Two East Bay residents are wanted in connection with the theft of more than $1.25 million worth of gold items stolen from the Siskiyou County Courthouse more than a year ago, sheriff’s officials said. Gold, jewelry and other artifacts were taken from a display case at the courthouse at 311 Fourth St. in Yreka on Jan. 31, 2012. Arrest warrants have been issued for David Dean Johnson, 49, of El Cerrito, and Scott Wayne Baily, 51, of El Sobrante, who are the primary suspects in the heist, sheriff’s officials said. ED T S E R AR Last Thursday, Siskiyou County sheriff’s detectives were in the Bay Area trying to locate the two men. They were not found, but evidence was seized, sheriff’s officials said. On Jan. 15 of this year, deputies served search warrants at homes in Shasta County and in El Cerrito and El Sobrante, sheriff’s officials said. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know their whereabouts. 13-119 David Dean Johnson 13-120 Scott Wayne Baily Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT Fugitive Watch Factoids Many experts consider bull sharks to be the most dangerous sharks in the world. Bull Sharks have been known to travel thousands of miles up fresh water rivers One out of every three people will be involved in an alcohol-related crash in their lifetime. High Tech Companies That Offer Free Meals at Lunch for Employees: Google Facebook Twitter Zynga High Tech Companies That DO NOT Offer Free Meals at Lunch for Employees: Apple There are 450 organized street gangs in Los Angeles with about 45,000 members. The average wait for US veterans to receive disability claim assistance is 273 days. A recent survey reports that the average couple spend $28, 000 for their wedding. A California court has ruled that using a GPS map on your phone is illegal and you can receive a traffic ticket. In 2012, there were 450,000 traffic tickets issued in California for texting while driving. San Francisco wedding average is $35, 000. A texting driver is 23 more times likely to get into a crash than a non texting drive. On average deer cause 50 car accidents a day in Connectticut. You are 72 times more likely to be kill from falling off an animal or animal drawn cart then to win the lotto. The largest lotto prize so far was $587 million dollars. The US government currently has a backlog of 900,000 disability claims by veterans. In 2011 Taliban and Al Queda insurgents set 15,000 Improvised Explosive Devices that killed more American military than any other weapon. Two million Americans suffer from Pseudo Bulbar Affect a medical condition that causes sudden uncontrollable laughing or crying. Santa Barbara wedding average is $42, 000. Manhattan, New York wedding average is $77, 000 Julia Ward Howe was paid $5 for the poem that would become “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” The United States spends more money on its military than the next 12 nations combined. in memoriam fugitive watch® news apr - 13 fw On March 19, 2013, Manokotak Village, Alaska Public Safety Officer Thomas Madole was shot and killed as he was responding to a domestic disturbance call. Buffalo, New York Police Officer Patty Parete died from gunshot wounds she sustained on December 5th, 2006, when she and her partner confronted an armed subject. They responded to a 911 call about a fight at a convenience store. Police Officer Patricia A. Parete Buffalo Police Department New York End of Watch February 2, 2013 As they were searching the subject, he suddenly pulled out a handgun and opened fire, striking both officers in the face. Officer Parete suffered a spinal injury as a result of the shooting that left her paralyzed from the neck down. On February 2nd, 2013, she died as a result of complications from the gunshot wounds. The attacker was convicted of charges in connection with the shooting of both officers and sentenced to 30 years in prison. 14 . Officer Madole had radioed Alaska State Troopers at approximately 4:00 pm to report that he was going to speak with a subject regarding an earlier altercation the man had been involved in. Approximately one hour later a citizen called the state troopers to report a shooting. Public Safety Officer Thomas Madole Manokotak Village Public Safety Alaska End of Watch March 19, 2013 Because of the remote location of the village, four state troopers had to fly to the village. They discovered Officer Madole’s body outside of the subject’s home. The man was later arrested and has allegedly confessed to murdering Officer Madole. Officer Madole had served as a Village Public Safety Officer in the village for 1-1/2 years. He is survived by his wife, son, and daughter. Scan These Barcodes to Watch Fugitive Watch Podcasts Use i-nigma application on your Smartphone, iPhone or mobile device to watch 10 minute Fugitive Watch Television Podcasts 13-108 Jesse Warren Parsons Escape The Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office is currently seeking Jesse Warren Parsons on a warrant charging him with escaping from jail. According to deputies, Parsons posed as another man due for release from jail and was set free. Parsons was arrested by Santa Cruz police on March 20 for several outstanding warrants. His criminal history includes trespassing, petty theft, substance abuse, resisting arrest and domestic violence. He was last seen walking away from the jail facility at 259 Water St. toward the San Lorenzo River area. He is known to frequent campsites on the west side of Santa Cruz. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know his whereabouts. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] apr- 13 fw 15 13-105 unknown Auto Burglary / robo de auto On March 15, 2013, at approximately 8:41 am, Morgan Hill police officers were dispatched to an auto burglary on the 19000 block of Dougherty Avenue. An unknown suspect entered the victim’s vehicle and took a purse containing the victim’s credit cards and driver’s license. Fraudulent charges were allegedly made against the victim’s credit card by the suspect pictured above. A store employee witnessed the suspect leave the parking lot in an older black Toyota Rav-4 or similar truck. The suspect was described as a balding Caucasian male adult, approximately 50-years-old. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know his whereabouts. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. 13-106 unknown Attempted Kidnapping secuestro Vallejo police today released a sketch of a man suspected of assaulting and trying to abduct a woman at Hanns Park on Sunday. The young adult woman was walking on Hanns Park Trail that parallels Redwood Parkway from Skyline Drive to Oakwood Avenue around 3:30 p.m., Sgt. Kevin Coelho said. The man grabbed the woman from behind, choked her and tried to move her to an adjacent creek bed, Coelho said. The woman fought the suspect and escaped. The suspect then chased the woman to the parking lot of Hanns Park at Skyline Drive and Redwood Parkway, but the woman ran to others in the park. The suspect then fled in a vehicle that had been parked in the parking lot, Coelho said. The vehicle is a 1995 to 2000 silver or gray 2-door Acura Integra with gray primer on the rear bumper and fender area. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 or send a confidential email tip, if you know the name of this man or have any information that can help solve this crime. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted tiene alguna información que pueda ayudar a resolver este crimen. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] apr- 13 fw 16 13-104 unknown Bank Robbery robo de banco The FBI and police in Rohnert Park and Santa Rosa are asking for the public’s help in identifying the “Hoodie Bandit,” who allegedly robbed three bank branches inside North Bay supermarkets in February. Agents report that the suspect got his nickname by wearing a hooded sweatshirt during the robberies. They report he allegedly robbed banks in Santa Rosa and Rohnert Park. In one robbery the suspect was seen getting into a 1990s Jeep Wrangler with faded red paint and a black top. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 or send a confidential email tip, if you know the name of this man or have any information that can help solve this crime. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted tiene alguna información que pueda ayudar a resolver este crimen. fugitive watch® news Interceptó DEA 2 Esa cantidad “incluye cerca de 750 millones de dólares en efectivo”, dijo la jefa de la agencia Michele Leonhart ante una comisión presupuestaria de la Cámara de Representantes. Washington. La Administración Antidrogas de Estados Unidos (DEA) interceptó, mediante incautaciones de droga y de dinero, un total de 2 mil 800 millones de dólares de las organizaciones narcotraficantes y de redes de lavado de dinero, entre octubre de 2011 y octubre de 2012 (año fiscal estadunidense), declaró este viernes la jefa de la agencia, Michele Leonhart. Esa cantidad “incluye cerca de 750 millones de dólares en efectivo”, explicó Leonhart en su testimonio ante una comisión presupuestaria de la Cámara de Representantes. apr - 13 fw mil 800 Entre los años fiscales de 2005 a 2012 la DEA ha conseguido interceptar más de 21 mil 500 millones de dólares de los cárteles de la droga, 5 mil 800 millones de mdd del Narco en 17 . 2012 los cuales en efectivo, añadió la jefa de la principal agencia antidrogas. En pleno debate presupuestario en el Congreso para el año fiscal 2014, la DEA pidió poco más de 2 mil 400 millones de dólares a los legisladores. El año fiscal 2012 fue exitoso para la DEA en términos de captura de líderes de organizaciones narcotraficantes, con la extradición a Estados Unidos de cuatro grandes capos extranjeros, aseguró Leonhart. Más de 3 mil 120 organizaciones y bandas fueron desmanteladas total o parcialmente, de las cuales 524 estaban relacionadas con los grandes cárteles internacionales de la droga, añadió. 13-111 Angel Wilfredo Castro Posing as law enforcement officer / fraude A man cited last month for allegedly posing as a law enforcement officer in San Francisco is now being sought by authorities after not showing up to his arraignment in court today, prosecutors said. Angel Wilfredo Castro, 47, faces three misdemeanors and four infractions for the Feb. 11 incident in the city’s Mission District. Castro is charged with unlawful use of a badge to impersonate law enforcement, reckless driving, unlawful carrying of a loaded firearm, impersonating a federal agent, and operating an unregistered vehicle that had an unlawfully equipped light bar and siren. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know his whereabouts. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. FUGITIVE WATCH 1-800-9CAUGHT all persons depicted in this publication are presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. do not attempt under any circumstance to apprehend any persons depicted in this publication. all persons may be considered armed and dangerous by law enforcement. please call the fugitive hotline number (se habla español) or 9-1-1 for an immediate sighting. HOTLINE: 1-800-9CAUGHT EMAIL: [email protected] apr- 13 fw 18 13-101 Jonathan Rios Robbery / robo The San Jose Police Department is currently seeking Jonathan Rios on a warrant charging him with Assault and Robbery. According to detectives, on February 6th, 2013, Jonathan Rios and his sister Jozette Rios were riding on a VTA train with the victim. The victim got off at the Race Street Station and the suspects followed the victim onto a sidewalk. Jozette then allegedly started to punch and kick the woman until she fell to the ground. Then together they allegedly ripped the purse away from the woman’s grasp and then got onto bicycles and rode way. Jozette was later identified and booked into the Santa Clara County Jail for robbery. Jonathan Rios is described as being 5 feet 8 inches tall, around 165 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. Police believe he is homeless and probably in the downtown San Jose or Alviso areas. He was last seen riding a 10-speed bicycle with curved handlebars. Please call the Fugitive Watch hot line at 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) or text us at 408-355-0999 to send a confidential email tip, if you know his whereabouts. Por favor llame la línea de Los Fugitivos en 1-800-9-CAUGHT (1-800-922-8448) o texto en 408-355-0999 o envia un email a [email protected], si usted sabe su paradero. fugitive watch® news Some Habits Are Hard to Break An off-duty police officer went on a date with a lady he met recently. Later, he told his buddy, They had a great date, that is until I opened the car door for her, and out of habit, I pushed down on her head as she got into the car. Won’t Listen: The Judge said to the defendant. “I thought I told you I never wanted to see you in here again.” “Your Honor,” the criminal said, “that’s what I tried to tell the police, but they wouldn’t listen.” apr - 13 fw Wino: The drunken wino was stumbling down the street with one foot on the curb and one foot in the gutter. A cop pulled up and said, “I’ve got to take you in, sir. You’re obviously drunk” The wasted wino asked, “Ociffer, are ya absolutely sure I’m drunk?” “Yeah, buddy, I’m sure,” said the copper. “Let’s go.” Obviously relieved, the wino said “That’s a relief - I thought I was a cripple.” New Car: An old con was talking to a new inmate in prison. “What are ya in for kid.” “I tried to make a new kind of car.” He replied. “I took the engine from a Ford, the transmission from an Oldsmobile, the tires from a Cadillac, and the exhaust system from a Plymouth.” “Really? What did you get?” “Fifteen years for theft.” Police Test: A young man was taking a verbal test to join the local police force. The question asked, “If you were driving a police car, alone on a lonely road at night, and were being chased by a gang of criminals driving sixty miles an hour, what would you do?” The young man answered without a second’s thought: “Seventy!” Can’t Swim: A cop walks down the Santa Monica pier. He suddenly hears a man screaming: “HELP! HELP ME! I CAN’T SWIM! I CAN’T SWIM.” The officer looks down the pier and sees the man struggling in the water... “Well that’s a good thing sir, cause you’re not allowed to swim here.” The $100 Bill: Four dudes-the Easter Bunny, Santa, A policeman and the tooth fairy are walking side-by-side down the 19 . road. They see a $100 dollar bill in the middle of the road. They all grab for it, at once. Who gets it? The cop - all the other ones are fictitious characters. The Judge: A man arrested for speeding went before the judge. The judge said “You look very familiar to me, where you ever up before me?” “I don’t know your honor, what time do you get up?” The judge said, “The court fines you 30 days or $30, which do you want?” The man replied, “I’ll take the money your honor.” Hold My Hand: A Murderer, sitting in the electric chair, was about to be executed. “Have you any last requests?” asked the Chaplain. “Yes,” replied the condemned man. “I’m scared, will you hold my hand?” fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 20 . fugitive watch® news Victim of a apr - 13 fw Strange San Jose Crime Defied By Scott Herhold It was one of the strangest crimes of a strange era in San Jose. In August 1982, a man dressed as a woman pulled a gun on a 26-year-old father and his 2-yearold son, forcing them into their own van in what police believe was an attempted sexual assault. The young father, Frank Montanez Jr., fought back, grabbing his abductor’s .22-caliber handgun and fatally shooting him in the knee and abdomen. Before he died, the assailant stabbed Montanez to death and sliced the throat of his toddler, Frankie. Propped against his father’s shoulder, Frankie somehow survived. Aside from his gaping throat wound, his neck had been broken in a way that left him a virtual quadriplegic, deprived of movement except for a floppy right arm. His doctors thought at first that Frankie wouldn’t survive beyond 3. Then it was 7, and then 10. At 16, with a catheter permanently installed, he was in and out of the hospital. He still managed to graduate from high school, a young man with an outgoing personality. Frankie died in Grass Valley on March 16 at age 32, a victim of complications from a kidney infection. The coda in his short and tumultuous life was written last Friday, when he was buried before 130 relatives and friends at Oak Hill Memorial Park in San Jose. His family had contacted the Mercury News because money is tight and they sought contributions for his burial. If you’re interested in helping, you can reach Frankie’s mother, Molly Pau-Uribe, at 13397 McCarter Way, Grass Valley, CA 95949. A double life What sets the case apart is the crime: The assailant, Wayne Zacher, was a co-owner of a Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in Pittsburg. Operating under the name of John Sharkey, he had a secret life that led him to wear a blond wig and intersect the path of a father and son in an Alpha Beta grocery store parking lot at Quimby and White roads. What gives the story resonance, however, is Frankie’s survival against the odds. The toddler grew up to be a young man with a taste for loud music and good food. “He tried to be as normal as possible,’’ said his uncle, Richard Pau. “He didn’t want to be handicapped.’’ That wish defied physics. Because of the attack, Frankie had a permanent hole in his throat. His body couldn’t control its temperature. He had to wear a “turtle vest’’ that kept him upright. His torso was big. His legs were tiny. Conquering physics Yet he manipulated the knuckle on his right hand to type at a credible speed. He used his tongue to send text messages to friends. His friends say he took every ride at Great America but Vortex. “It was just amazing what he did,’’ Pau said. “With that flopping motion, he fed himself. He would put food on a fork and then flop it toward his mouth quickly.’’ Frankie had a big personality. Maybe he needed one to survive the down moments that haunted him now and then. At his burial, his family played one of his favorite songs, “Forever Young,’’ the Odds for “Forever young, I want to be forever young,’’ the lyrics went. —Do you really want to live forever, forever forever?’’ Contact Scott Herhold at 408-275-0917 or sherhold@ mercurynews.com. Follow him at Twitter.com/scottherhold. Originally printed in the Mercury Newspaper 3/25/13 Three Decades 21 . fugitive watch® news fw Movie Critics Corner: Tarnation Throughout the chaotic moments of his life, Jonathan Caouette archived his experiences on film from an early age. Using a compilation of home videos, photographs, and telephone conversations, Caoutte ties them all together in a visual autobiographical collage arching from his early childhood in Texas to his contemporary life in New York. His relationship with his mother is the film’s primary focus, using text over provocative visual imagery to narrate his life story. Jonathan was raised by a mentally unstable single mother in turbulent environment; he finds enjoyment out of theater and film and uses his own camera at home for a creative outlet. Tarnation is perhaps the most sincere film I have ever experienced. It contains no actors, sets, production, or any real preparation. Jonathan simply turned on his camera and documented his life. I find it is very reminiscent as a work of unscripted neo-expressionism, possibly cathartic in its creation as we see Jonathan grow as a person onscreen in a matter of about an hour and a half. A budget was practically nonexistent as Caouette originally compiled his own footage on a personal computer where it eventually found its way to the Sundance Film Festival where it received critical acclaim. Tarnation is a very personal experience about the identity and origins of its director and is an admirable creation unlike anything else from recent memory. apr - 13 22 . fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 23 . Become a Fugitive Watch Sponsor For the last 20 years, Fugitive Watch has been credited with capturing over 2,000 fugitives, solving crimes and intercepting plots to murder police officers and citizens like you and your families. Capturing these dangerous criminals before they hurt or kill any more police officers or citizens is our primary purpose. The rising crime rate and shortage of police officers is straining our police departments and endangering our communities. Over 1,000 cars a month are being stolen in San Jose, the robbery and burglary rates are rising. The police have disbanded their detective bureaus. The demand and need for our free services to police here at Fugitive Watch is outpacing our current budget. Fugitive Watch is not supported by taxpayer money. It is only supported by private and corporate sponsorship. If you are interested in becoming a corporate or private sponsor, please contact us by phone 408.729.7737 or email at [email protected] for more information. Fugitive Watch has been endorsed by all the bay area chiefs of police and sheriff’s, state and federal law enforcement and has been recognized worldwide and feature in all major newspapers, television newscast. A recent NBC news story about our 20th anniversary can be watch on our website at www.fugitive. com. fugitive watch® news fw apr - 13 24 .