Tag Archives: domestic violence

Video of Paul Pelosi Attack Shows Intruder Striking Former House Speaker’s Husband With a Hammer

Video and audio evidence from the attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband was released Friday, showing for the first time the sequence of events that ended with 82 year-old

Paul Pelosi

being knocked unconscious with a hammer as police officers tackled his assailant.

Some of the evidence was previously shown in court proceedings in the case against David DePape, who is being held without bond on charges of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and elder abuse in the Oct. 28 attack on Mr. Pelosi. Mr. DePape has pleaded not guilty.

The evidence released Friday, which includes police body-camera footage, is the first opportunity for the public to see and hear in detail the events leading up to and including a predawn assault, which focused attention on violence aimed at politicians in the U.S.

Its release came after a coalition of news organizations filed a motion earlier this month requesting to see the evidence, which prosecutors had previously withheld. Judge Stephen Murphy of San Francisco Superior Court granted the motion Wednesday.

Adam Lipson, a San Francisco deputy public defender representing Mr. DePape, said it was, “a terrible mistake to release this evidence, and in particular the video. Releasing this footage is disrespectful to Mr. Pelosi, and serves no purpose except to feed the public desire for spectacle and violence.” 

He also said the release would make it hard for his client to get a fair trial.

Mrs. Pelosi, who was speaker of the House of Representatives until earlier this month, said Friday that she had no intention of watching the newly released evidence and thanked people for their prayers.

The video begins with footage from a Capitol Police camera trained on the Pelosi home in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood; it shows Mr. DePape—wearing shorts and a jacket—walking up to a rear entrance at 3:04 a.m., taking out a claw hammer from a bag and putting on gloves.

After looking around several times, he initially pushed the head of the hammer against the glass in a set of french doors. When it wouldn’t open, he swung with full force 16 times until the glass shattered and then pushed his way through, shoulder first.

The next evidence released is audio of Mr. Pelosi’s call to 911 a few minutes later, in which he tried to convey to a dispatcher that he needed help. 

Mr. Pelosi told Mr. DePape he had to use the bathroom and called 911 from a phone charging there, a person with knowledge of the incident previously said.

“I guess I called by mistake,” Mr. Pelosi said at first to the operator. After she asked if he needed help, he told her, “There’s a gentleman here just waiting for my wife to come back,

Nancy Pelosi.

She’s not going to be here for days, so I guess we’ll have to wait.”

When asked by the 911 operator if he knew the man, Mr. Pelosi said he didn’t. Mr. DePape can then be heard saying, “My name is David. I’m a friend of theirs.” 

Mr. Pelosi then hung up after saying, “He wants me to get the hell off the phone.”

Body camera footage of two San Francisco police officers dispatched to the home subsequently show them knocking on the front door. Mr. Pelosi opened the door, looking disheveled and not wearing pants, with his hand on a hammer that Mr. DePape is holding. After an officer asks, “What’s going on, man?”, Mr. DePape answered “Everything’s good.” 

An officer then ordered him to “drop the hammer,” after which the suspect answered “Um, nope” and began struggling with the smaller Mr. Pelosi for control. He quickly pinned the older man’s right arm to free the hammer and then raised it over his head to strike Mr. Pelosi. 

A door obscures Mr. Pelosi at this point, but the footage then shows the officers tackling Mr. DePape and handcuffing him as he lies on the floor, partially atop Mr. Pelosi, who appears to be unconscious.

Mr. Pelosi was treated at a local trauma center and later released home, where his wife said he faced a long recovery. Mrs. Pelosi said Friday that her husband is making progress on his recovery, but it will take more time.

Write to Jim Carlton at Jim.Carlton@wsj.com

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Justin Roiland dropped from “Rick and Morty” by Adult Swim following domestic violence charges

Adult Swim has cut ties with Justin Roiland, the co-creator of the popular animated series “Rick and Morty,” after he was charged with domestic violence earlier this month.

Adult Swim has “ended its association” with Roiland, according to a statement shared on the show’s official Twitter account and retweeted by the network.

 “‘Rick and Morty’ will continue,” the statement added. “The talented and dedicated crew are hard at work on Season 7.”

In addition to being the show’s co-creator, the 42-year-old Roiland also served as a writer and executive producer and voiced the show’s two title characters, along with several other minor characters throughout the show’s first six seasons.

Roiland is awaiting trial on charges of felony domestic violence against a former girlfriend.

FILE — Justin Roiland attends The Game Awards at Microsoft Theater on Dec. 7, 2017, in Los Angeles, California.

Greg Doherty/Getty Images


A criminal complaint obtained by The Associated Press earlier this month from prosecutors in Orange County, California, charged Roiland with corporal injury and false imprisonment by menace, fraud, violence or deceit against the woman, who he was living with at the time. The woman was not identified in court documents.

Roiland has pleaded not guilty.

The incident occurred in January of 2020 and Roiland was charged in May of that year. A pre-trial hearing was held Jan. 12.

Roiland is set to return to court in April. A trial date has not been set.

Roiland created the animated sci-fi sitcom with Dan Harmon. It has aired since 2013. The series won the Emmy Award for outstanding animated program in 2018 and again in 2020. 




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Brian Walshe: Husband charged with murdering his wife Ana Walshe is expected to appear in court today



CNN
 — 

Brian Walshe is expected to be arraigned in court Wednesday after being charged with murdering his wife Ana Walshe, a Massachusetts mother and corporate real estate manager who had been missing since the new year.

Brian Walshe, 47, has been in jail since January 8 when he was arrested and charged with misleading investigators, to which he has pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors have accused Walshe of intentionally delaying investigators in order to cover up evidence, alleging he lied about some of his actions in the days following his wife’s disappearance.

Evidence supporting the murder charge against Walshe is likely to be presented in court Wednesday, Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey said. He declined to share further details.

The husband, who is being held in a Norfolk County corrections facility, will be brought to Quincy District Court for the arraignment, which could begin as early as 9 a.m., the district attorney’s office said.

An attorney for Brian Walshe declined to comment Tuesday.

Since Ana Walshe’s employer reported her missing on January 4, authorities have scoured the couple’s home, performed a sweeping search of the town of Cohasset, and poured through dumpsters looking for any sign of what happened to the 39-year-old mother of three.

The searches have uncovered several pieces of potential evidence, including a hacksaw and apparent bloodstains at a trash collection site and searches in Brian Walshe’s internet records for how to dismember and dispose of a body, law enforcement sources have previously told CNN.

And while prosecutors say police have found blood stains and a bloody, broken knife in the couple’s basement, authorities have yet to announce the discovery of Ana Walshe’s body.

Ana Walshe’s friend and former colleague Pamela Bardhi told CNN she felt rage and relief upon hearing investigators believe her friend was murdered.

“I just had this horrible gut feeling and I prayed I was wrong,” she said Tuesday. “I prayed that it wasn’t the case. And here we are now finding out a few hours ago there’s a murder charge … That’s a heavy, heavy thing,”

Though Bardhi is terrified to learn the details in the case, she said she hopes the truth will emerge.

“I think that the truth is a real double-edged sword. It’s painful to know, but it’s necessary,” she said. “I think that those kids deserve to know what happened to their mother, no matter what, and her family and her friends.”

The couple’s three children, all between the ages of 2 and 6, are in the custody of the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families, a spokesperson said.

So far, several pieces of possible evidence have emerged in Ana Walshe’s disappearance, including her husband’s allegedly false statements to police and multiple items found in and around the small coastal town of Cohasset.

Brian Walshe told police he last saw his wife the morning of January 1 when she left for a work trip to Washington, DC, according to a police affidavit. The husband said he spent the rest of the day running errands for his mother and spent January 2 spending time with his kids.

However, prosecutors say there is no evidence Ana Walshe took her usual rideshare or taxi to the airport, or that she took a flight or arrived in DC. Her phone also pinged near the couple’s home overnight on January 1 into January 2.

Additionally, investigators allege Brian Walshe never ran errands for his mother on New Year’s Day and say he took an undisclosed trip to Home Depot on January 2, where prosecutors say he spent about $450 on cleaning supplies, including mops, a bucket and tarps.

On January 4, Ana Walshe’s employer, real estate company Tishman Speyer, called police to report her missing, according to investigators. A Cohasset police log obtained by CNN says, “Company has contacted the husband. He has not filed a police report.” Brian Walshe’s defense attorney Tracy Miner has said he called his wife’s workplace before they reported her missing to say he hadn’t heard from his wife.

A number of items were collected when investigators conducted searches north of Boston and were sent to be tested as potential evidence, the Norfolk district attorney has said, declining to provide details.

Law enforcement sources have told CNN that investigators found a hacksaw, torn cloth and apparent bloodstains at a Boston-area trash collection site.

A bloody knife and blood stains were also found in the couple’s basement, prosecutor Lynn Beland said. Additionally, the husband’s internet records show searches for “how to dispose of a 115-pound woman’s body” and how to dismember a body, according to two law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation.

The charges against Brian Walshe in his wife’s disappearance are the latest in a string of legal troubles for the husband.

In 2021, he pleaded guilty to three federal fraud charges related to a scheme to sell fake Andy Warhol art online. He was placed under house arrest as he awaits sentencing and was required to get approval to leave his house for specific activities at specific times.

Investigators allege Brian Walshe took several unapproved trips the week after his wife disappeared that could be violations of the terms of his house arrest, a police affidavit says.

Additionally, a police report obtained by CNN shows Ana Walshe reported someone threatened to “kill (her) and her friend” in 2014. Brian Walshe was the person involved in the report, a spokesperson for the Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department confirmed.

The case was closed because the victim refused to cooperate with the prosecution, police said.

In 2019, a relative and family friends also painted Walshe as a violent and untrustworthy person during a legal battle over his father’s estate. In affidavits filed in the case, two friends of Brian Walshe’s father accused Walshe of financial misconduct and said he is “a sociopath.”

CNN has reached out to current and previous attorneys for Brian Walshe but has not heard back.

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Los Angeles Dodgers officially cut ties with pitcher Trevor Bauer who served suspension for violating MLB policies



CNN
 — 

The Los Angeles Dodgers have officially cut ties with pitcher Trevor Bauer, the team announced Friday.

The former Cy Young award winner was previously suspended by Major League Baseball for violating the league’s joint domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse policy, but was reinstated last month when an arbitrator reduced his suspension from 324 games to 194, effective immediately.

Bauer has not played since June 2021, after a San Diego woman claimed he had sexually assaulted her. The pitcher, whom a prosecutor in Los Angeles declined to charge with a crime, has denied the sexual assault allegations and maintained his encounters with the woman were consensual.

“The Dodgers organization believes that allegations of sexual assault or domestic violence should be thoroughly investigated, with due process given to the accused,” the team said in a statement Friday. “From the beginning, we have fully cooperated with Major League Baseball’s investigation and strictly followed the process stipulated under MLB’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy.

The team said “two extensive reviews of all the available evidence in the case,” performed by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred and another by a neutral arbitrator, “concluded that Mr. Bauer’s actions warranted the longest ever active player suspension in our sport for violations of this policy. Now that this process has been completed, and after careful consideration, we have decided that he will no longer be part of our organization.”

Bauer said on Twitter on Friday that he talked to “Dodgers leadership” in Arizona on Thursday and he was told they wanted him to pitch there next season.

“While I am disappointed by the organization’s decision today, I appreciate the wealth of support I’ve received from the Dodgers clubhouse,” he wrote. “I wish the players all the best and look forward to competing elsewhere.”

CNN Sports has reached out to the Dodgers for further comment

Bauer was placed on administrative leave by the league in July 2021 and in April he was suspended for 324 games. But on December 22 an arbitrator reduced the suspension, making him eligible to play next season.

At the time his attorneys – Jon Fetterolf, Shawn Holley, and Rachel Luba, – said: “While we are pleased that Mr. Bauer has been reinstated immediately, we disagree that any discipline should have been imposed. That said, Mr. Bauer looks forward to his return to the field, where his goal remains to help his team win a World Series.”

According to league rules, the Dodgers had 14 days from reinstatement – until Friday – to decide whether to put Bauer back on the team’s 40-man roster.

According to the team website, Bauer was designated for assignment, which means a player can be traded or released within seven days. If Bauer was released, any of the other 29 teams can sign him.



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Gregg Berhalter gives first interview amid US Soccer scandal

Gregg Berhalter is ‘sad’ and his ‘heart aches for his wife’ as he gives first interview since bombshell revelation he KICKED her in 1991 row and Claudio Reyna and his wife disclosed story to US Soccer… as he admits he’d like to carry on as USMNT coach

  • Gregg Berhalter spoke Thursday for the first time since the Reyna allegations
  • He said his family – who has known the Reynas for decades – were ‘saddened’
  • Berhalter also said he’d like to continue as the USA’s head coach moving forward
  • He’s currently out of contract after his previous deal expired at the end of 2022
  • Click here for all your latest international Sports news from DailyMail.com

Gregg Berhalter said Thursday he feels ‘sadness’ regarding the alleged blackmail plot by the Reyna family that led to him revealing a domestic violence incident from 31 years ago.

Berhalter said in a statement earlier this week that he was targeted by a third party who aimed to ‘take him down’ as he admitted to kicking his now wife Rosalind when he was 18 years old.

Danielle Reyna, the mother of USA player Gio Reyna, admitted Wednesday to sharing information of the incident with US officials on December 11 after Berhalter detailed at a leadership conference how an unnamed player (later confirmed as Reyna) was nearly sent home from Qatar due to not ‘meeting expectations.’

Ex-USA captain Claudio Reyna also threatened to share details of Berhalter’s past during the tournament, according to ESPN.

And the coach spoke publicly for the first time since the story emerged on Thursday. 

‘I think its sadness. Our entire family is saddened by these events. It’s something we wanna move forward from,’ Berhalter, who played youth and high school soccer with Claudio Reyna, told Harvard Business Review on Thursday.

‘The worst part of it for me is my heart aches for my wife. It was her story to tell.’

Berhalter also mentioned during the 30-minute chat that he would like to continue on as USA coach after the team was ousted by Holland in the round of 16 in Qatar.

‘It’s a fantastic group of players, super high potential in this group… it would be an amazing challenge for this team [competing in the 2026 World Cup in the US, Mexico and Canada].’

Berhalter went public about kicking his wife Rosalind (left) during an argument in 1991

Claudio and Danielle Reyna (pictured in 2018) released statements after telling US Soccer about Berhalter’s domestic violence incident in 1991

Berhalter’s US soccer contract expired at the end of 2022, with assistant Anthony Hudson tapped to coach the team’s January friendlies. 

At the HOW Institute for Society’s Summit on Moral Leadership in December, Berhalter called the situation regarding Reyna in Qatar ‘extreme,’ as the player later acknowledged his poor behavior after being told he would play a ‘very limited’ role at the tournament.

The Athletic cited sources who described a ‘pronounced’ lack of effort from the player during the World Cup.

Asked Thursday if he had any regrets with how he handled the Reyna situation, Berhalter said, ‘We’re always looking to improve… if I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t have told that story.’

He added at another point, ‘Trust is something that takes a long time to build but can go away really quickly. 

Danielle Reyna was unhappy at the treatment of her son Gio by Berhalter at the World Cup 

‘You have to be consistent in who you are, and you have to have clear values. And if you are they can see that.’

‘My bond with the players is very strong and its about maintaining that bond. And I think the players and the staff know who I am and what I stand for.’

Reyna, a winger for German Champions League club Borussia Dortmund, is regarded as one of the national team’s top talents and was expected to play a significant role in Qatar.

Instead, he played just 52 minutes and didn’t make a single start. ‘

‘It’s about looking those difficult conversations in the face and going through with it,’ Berhalter said Thursday.

Claudio Reyna (No. 10) and Berhalter (No. 3) played for the USA between 1994 and 2006

‘If a player is not starting a game, the last thing a coach should do is avoid telling them why.’

The coach wrapped up the interview by answering how he’s been coping with the recent situation.

‘I have a strong family. I have a very supportive family. To me its about my wife, it about feeling for her. 

‘It’s her story, I feel tremendously bad that my profession had to bring this to the public light. We’ve received a lot of support a lot of great messages from people who have known our family through the years.’

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Nancy Pelosi reveals how she first heard her husband had been attacked

Editor’s Note: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s interview will air on “Anderson Cooper 360” at 8 p.m. ET.



CNN
 — 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi revealed how she got the news that her husband, Paul, had been attacked, telling CNN’s Anderson Cooper that she was “very scared” when there was a knock on the door from Capitol Police.

Pelosi said in her first sit-down interview since the attack that she had been asleep in Washington, DC, after getting in the night before from San Francisco when her doorbell rang early in the morning. “I look up, I see it’s 5 [a.m. ET], they must be at the wrong apartment,” she told Cooper after he asked where she was when she got the news.

Pelosi went on to say that the doorbell rang again and then she heard “bang, bang, bang, bang, bang on the door.”

“So I run to the door, and I’m very scared,” Pelosi said, describing what unfolded. “I see the Capitol Police and they say, ‘We have to come in to talk to you.’”

Pelosi described how her thoughts went immediately to her children and her grandchildren.

“And I’m thinking my children, my grandchildren. I never thought it would be Paul because, you know, I knew he wouldn’t be out and about, shall we say. And so they came in. At that time, we didn’t even know where he was,” she said.

The violent attack on Paul Pelosi has raised fresh concerns over threats of political violence driven by partisan animosity and increasingly hostile political rhetoric – and highlighted the potential vulnerability of lawmakers and their families in the current political climate.

Paul Pelosi was attacked with a hammer at the couple’s home in San Francisco by a male assailant at the end of last month, authorities have said. The assailant who attacked him was searching for the speaker of the House, according to court documents.

David DePape is charged with six counts relating to the attack, including attempted murder, burglary, assault, false imprisonment and threatening the family member of a public official. He has pleaded not guilty to all state charges.

Following the attack, Paul Pelosi had surgery “to repair a skull fracture and serious injuries to his right arm and hands,” Drew Hammill, a spokesman for Nancy Pelosi, said in an earlier statement. He was released from the hospital last week.

Nancy Pelosi also indicated that the attack on her husband will factor into her decision about her own political future after the midterm elections.

Pelosi, one of the most powerful figures in national Democratic politics, has earned a reputation as a formidable leader to House Democrats who exerts significant influence on her caucus. But speculation is intensifying in Washington over what Pelosi’s next move will be, and whether she would decide to retire, if Republicans win back the majority.

During Monday’s interview, Cooper asked Pelosi if she would confirm that she has made a decision, one way or another, about what she would do, noting that there has “been a lot of discussion about whether you’d retire if Democrats lose the House.”

The speaker said the “decision will be affected about what happened the last week or two,” prompting Cooper to ask, “Will your decision be impacted by the attack in any way?”

“Yes,” Pelosi said.

“It will?” Cooper asked.

“Yes,” Pelosi said again.

This story has been updated with additional developments Monday.

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Hesperia shootout: 15-year-old girl shot at deputies before she was killed in 15 Freeway gun battle, sheriff says

HESPERIA, Calif. (KABC) — A 15-year-old girl shot at deputies before she was killed in a highway shootout between her father – a fugitive wanted in the death of the teen’s mother – and law enforcement, the San Bernardino County sheriff said Wednesday.

Anthony John Graziano and his daughter, Savannah Graziano, were killed Tuesday in a shootout with deputies on the 15 Freeway in Hesperia after a 45-mile chase. Shots were fired at the officers from the pickup truck as it was being chased.

Once it came to a stop, the girl, wearing a tactical helmet and vest, got out and ran toward deputies amid a hail of gunfire, police said. Authorities are investigating whether she was shot by deputies or her father, or both.

Police have said the only weapon retrieved at the scene was a rifle in the truck, where Anthony Graziano died. There is police video of the shootout that authorities are reviewing.

In a 39-second video posted on social media Wednesday, San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said that evidence suggested the 15-year-old girl was “a participant in shooting at our deputies.” Dicus did not provide further specific details in the video.

RELATED: 15-year-old girl killed in Hesperia shootout had been staying with father before mother’s slaying

On Tuesday, Dicus said during a news conference that it was possible that the teenager had fired at deputies amid the chaos, but investigators were still trying to determine if that was the case.

The California Department of Justice announced Wednesday that it is investigating the shooting. A state law that took effect last year requires the department to review any officer-involved shooting resulting in the death of an unarmed civilian.

More details that shed light into what led to the highway gun battle were released Wednesday.

Police in Fontana – where Graziano’s wife, Tracy Martinez, was killed Monday near an elementary school – offered some details about the family’s life before the bloodshed.

Anthony Graziano had moved out of the family’s home a month or two before the killing, as the couple went through a divorce, Fontana Sgt. Christian Surgent told The Associated Press. Savannah Graziano left with her father, while her younger brother stayed with their mother.

Police issued an Amber Alert after Martinez’s killing, saying Savannah Graziano had been abducted by her father. Detectives are trying to determine whether or not she was forced into leaving Fontana.

A public information officer with the Fontana Police Department told Eyewitness News Savannah was in the vehicle when Anthony Graziano shot and killed his wife.

Fontana police had not received any reports of domestic violence at the home before this week, Surgent said, and child services had not been involved with the family. Neither parent was on probation or parole at the time and investigators believe Savannah was being home-schooled while she lived with her father, who police said liked to camp out in the desert and mountains in his pickup truck.

A 911 caller Tuesday reported seeing the suspect’s Nissan Frontier around Barstow.

Law enforcement located the pickup truck and chased it on the highway to Hesperia. Throughout the pursuit, Graziano was “constantly shooting back at the deputies” with a rifle through the truck’s rear window, San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said Tuesday during a news conference.

Dicus said there were “some indications” Savannah was shooting at deputies during the chase but didn’t provide any details.

A firefight in Hesperia ensued when the truck went off-road and somehow became disabled, with dozens of bullets flying. Savannah ran toward deputies – who did not realize it was her – in the chaos and went down amid the gunfire. She was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead shortly before noon.

Her father was found in the driver’s seat and pronounced dead at the scene.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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15-year-old Savannah Graziano, killed in Hesperia shootout, had been staying with father before mother’s slaying in Fontana

HESPERIA, Calif. (KABC) — A man who was accused of killing his estranged wife in Fontana and abducting their 15-year-old daughter had been living with the teenager out of his pickup truck and hotels for weeks before the violence, authorities said Wednesday.

Anthony John Graziano and his daughter, Savannah Graziano, were killed Tuesday in a shootout with law enforcement on a highway in the high desert after a 45-mile chase. The girl, wearing a tactical helmet and military-style vest that can hold armored plates, ran toward deputies amid a hail of gunfire. Authorities are investigating whether she was shot by deputies or her father, or both. San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said Wednesday that evidence suggested the teenager was “a participant in shooting at our deputies.”

While many questions remain regarding Tuesday’s gun battle, police in Fontana – where Graziano’s wife, 45-year-old Tracy Martinez, was killed Monday – offered some details about the family’s life before the bloodshed erupted this week.

Graziano, 45, had moved out of the family’s home a month or two before the mother’s killing, as the couple went through a divorce, Fontana police Sgt. Christian Surgent told The Associated Press and confirmed to ABC7. Savannah Graziano left with her father, while her younger brother stayed with their mother.

Police issued an Amber Alert after Martinez’s killing, saying Savannah Graziano had been abducted by her father. Detectives are trying to determine whether or not she was coerced into leaving Fontana.

“Did she go willingly?” Surgent said. “Or was she actually abducted? We haven’t been able to prove that just yet.”

Fontana police had not received any reports of domestic violence at the home before the slaying, Surgent said, and child services had not been involved with the family. Neither parent was on probation or parole at the time and investigators believe Savannah was being home-schooled while she lived with her father, whom police said liked to camp out in the desert and mountains in his pickup truck.

On Monday, witnesses saw Martinez walking in Fontana when Graziano picked her up in his truck. Surgent said it was not clear whether she was forced into the vehicle or got in on her own.

“And immediately that’s when they started arguing and yelling and domestic violence was occurring,” he said.

Martinez got out of the truck – potentially to escape – and Graziano opened fire on her with a handgun, striking her multiple times, Surgent said. The shooting on the street near an elementary school during morning drop-off forced students and parents to duck for cover.

“The man just came down the street shooting. He started shooting in that direction,” neighborhood resident Andy Davis told ABC7. “Hit those trees, houses across the street. They say the bullets were skipping off the street, and the woman was trying to run for her life, and unfortunately she was hit. Once she was hit I guess he shot at her a few more times.”

Graziano fled the scene and drove to get Savannah, who had been somewhere else at the time – likely wherever they had been staying that day, Surgent said. The son was at the family’s home at the time and was not involved.

The next day, a 911 caller reported seeing the suspect’s Nissan Frontier around Barstow.

Deputies located the pickup truck and chased it on the highway for around 45 miles to Hesperia. Throughout the pursuit, Graziano – and possibly his daughter as well – was “constantly shooting back at the deputies” with a rifle through the truck’s rear window, San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said Tuesday during a news conference.

The pickup truck became disabled on the shoulder of a highway in Hesperia, and a firefight ensued, with dozens of bullets flying. Savannah ran toward deputies – who did not realize it was her – in the chaos and went down amid the gunfire. She was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead shortly before noon.

Her father was found in the driver’s seat and pronounced dead at the scene.

Although the only weapon found — a rifle — was in the truck with Graziano, detectives said it was possible that his daughter was also firing.

But on Wednesday, Dicus said in a 39-second video posted on social media that evidence suggested that the 15-year-old girl was “a participant in shooting at our deputies.” Dicus did not provide further details into when she allegedly fired at deputies.

One deputy was injured by shrapnel during the firefight, Dicus said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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Connecticut mom Sonia Loja’s murder-suicide leaves Danbury community shocked

A mom who sent her kids to the Connecticut daycare of a woman accused of killing her own children before taking her own life said Thursday that she was shocked by the triple murder-suicide.

The woman attended a vigil for the slain family outside their Danbury home Thursday night and refused to believe Sonia Loja, 36, would strangle her three children.

“I can’t believe Sonia did this. I don’t believe what’s happened,” Nube Sucuzhanay, 33, told The Post. 

“Sonia was a good person. She loved and looked after her kids and was good with the kids she looked after.”

Sucuzhanay said Loja came to the US from Ecuador about 15 years ago. Sucuzhanay trusted Loja with her own two children and enrolled them in her daycare for seven years.

“I was very comfortable leaving my children with Sonia,” she said. “[She was] just so good with children and so very nice.”

Loja ran an illegal daycare out of her house and told the parents of roughly 10 kids that she couldn’t watch them Wednesday — the same day police believe she killed her own kids 12-year-old Junior Panjon, 10-year-old Joselyn Panjon and 5-year-old Jonael Panjon. Loja then took her own life.

A woman can be seen crying in front of Sonia Loja’s residence in Danbury, Connecticut on July 28, 2022.
Stephen Yang
Community members gather at the home of Sonia Loja on July 28, 2022 in Danbury.
Stephen Yang

Loja reportedly strangled each child one by one before she hanged herself inside a shed in the backyard of her home, police said. Her husband and father of the children, Pedro Panjon, found the bodies when he returned home and fainted at the grisly discovery.

Sucuzhanay was one of about 50 mourners who gathered outside the home Thursday night for a vigil organized by the area’s large Ecuadorian community. The mourners sang hymns, recited prayers and lit candles for more than an hour.

They created a makeshift memorial for the slain children by placing prayer candles, flowers, white balloons and a teddy bear on the home’s front steps.

Toys and other belongings are shown on Sonia Loja’s porch on July 28, 2022 in Danbury.
Stephen Yang
Police believe Sonia Loja killed her children 12-year-old Junior Panjon, 10-year-old Joselyn Panjon and 5-year-old Jonael Panjon.
Pedro Panjon/Facebook

A young attendee who went to Saint Peter School with Joselyn from kindergarten to third grade said her late classmate was fiercely intelligent and kind.

“Joselyn was a very smart, creative and helpful person,” Katelyn Jimenez, 11, said. “Joselyn was always there when you needed her. She would comfort anyone going through a tough time.”

Katelyn said Joselyn excelled in math and helped her when she was struggling with math equations.

“To me, it seemed like she lived a good life,” Katelyn said. “She was very positive. She was great at art and music, but she was also very smart at math.”

“I’m feeling sad,” she added. “She was a good classmate and friend.”

Tomas Vega, 31, was among the many mourners who felt compelled to join the vigil in support of the family, despite not knowing Loja or her children personally.

Vega, a father of two, couldn’t comprehend Loja’s violent last act.

“What would make you kill yourself and take the lives of your three kids?” Vega asked in disbelief. “Imagine seeing your first kid dead, then the next one, then the third one. Something really bad must have happened.”

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 1-800-273-8255 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

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‘Shahs of Sunset’ star Mike Shouhed charged with domestic violence

“Shahs of Sunset” star Mike Shouhed was slapped with 14 criminal charges including domestic violence.

Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer charged Shouhed with various misdemeanors such as battery and unlawfully attempting to dissuade a witness from making a report, legal documents obtained by Page Six show.

The reality star is also facing weapons charges, including criminal storage of a loaded firearm and possession of an assault weapon.

The charges stem from his March 27 arrest for “intimate partner violence with injury,” Page Six exclusively reported at the time.

It was unclear if the victim was Shouhed’s fiancée, Paulina Ben-Cohen, though the documents state that the victim was a 31-year-old female.

Ben-Cohen turned 32 in June.

The Bravolebrity was booked around 1:05 a.m. local time on March 28, Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department court records showed.

Shouhed, 43, was charged with corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant, which is a felony, per the sheriff’s department.

It’s unclear if Shouhed’s fiancée, Paulina Ben-Cohen, was the victim.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

About a week after Shouhed’s legal troubles began, Bravo canceled “Shahs of Sunset” after nine seasons, with sources telling us that it became “too expensive to make,” while a Ryan Seacrest Productions source claimed the show simply “ran its course.”

Without a reality series to air their drama on, Ben-Cohen addressed her fiancé’s domestic violence arrest through her attorney.

The couple are still together.
bencohenpaulina/Instagram

“We are working with the authorities to seek a just and fair outcome to this sad situation,” attorney Josh Ritter told us in April. “The family appreciates your space and respect for their privacy during this time.”

The pair, who have been an item since 2019, are still together and even took a trip to Mexico after Shouhed’s altercation. They stayed at the Garza Blanca Resort & Spa, but sources at the hotel told TMZ at the time that Shouhed and Ben-Cohen barely spoke and did not engage in much PDA.

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