West
California murder suspect stabs attorney with pen before charging prosecutor
An Oakland, California murder suspect faces additional charges after freeing himself from restraints in a courtroom on Monday morning and stabbing his attorney in the face and head with a pen before turning his angst toward the prosecutor.
The Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that 28-year-old Ramello Randle was attending his homicide trial at the A.F. Bray Courthouse in Martinez, California at about 10:55 a.m. on Monday when he attacked his attorney with a pen. He then went to attack the district attorney, who the sheriff’s office said was able to push him off.
The East Bay Times reported that the incident was witnessed by a Contra Costa jury, which is tasked with determining whether Randle is guilty of murdering his ex-girlfriend in July 2020, as well as attempting to murder a man as a child custody dispute was underway.
The publication said Randle cut or broke through restraints keeping him attached to a courtroom chair. He then grabbed defense lawyer Matthew Fregi’s pen and stabbed him in the face and head before charging Deputy District Attorney Kevin Bell, who suffered a scratch on the hand.
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Ramello Randle is accused of stabbing his attorney with a pen in a Martinez, California courtroom on March 18, 2024. (Antioch Police Department)
Officials reportedly found a note written by Randle before the attack that read, “sorry.”
Randle, Bell and Fregi are expected back in court on Tuesday to continue the trial, the publication reported.
Randle was in court because he and Christopher Slaughter allegedly worked together to kill the mother of Randle’s child, 24-year-old Jonaye Lahkel Bridges.
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A man on trial for murder freed himself from restraints at the A.F. Bray Courthouse in Martinez, California before grabbing his attorney’s pen, stabbing him in the head and charging after the prosecutor on Monday, March 18, 2024. (Google Maps)
The plot allegedly involved tracking Bridges’ vehicle with a tracking device, following her to a store in Antioch, and shooting her and a man who was with her.
Bridges was killed in the attack, the publication reported, while the man was wounded but survived.
The case had gone to trial previously, but it was declared a mistrial in November 2022 after Randle shouted expletives at Bell during cross-examination. Randle also told Judge Charles “Ben” Burch to shut up, adding he was not his “b – – – h,” when the judge tried to control the situation.
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Inside a courtroom with gavel in view. (iStock)
The judge ultimately declared a mistrial and the judge told him he could not represent himself.
In September 2023, Fregi became Randle’s attorney after he allegedly swung at another attorney, tripped and was handcuffed and taken to jail.
Now, Judge John Kennedy is presiding over the case and is tasked with looking at how courts have handled other situations when courtroom violence occurs before jurors.
After the situation on Monday, the courtroom was cleared and the fire department assessed both attorneys, who refused medical attention.
Randle was transported back to jail and now faces additional charges of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and battery.
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West
Burglars caught spying on homes with hidden camouflaged cameras before striking neighborhoods
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California authorities are warning residents to stay on high alert after burglars were caught using hidden, camouflaged surveillance cameras to secretly monitor homes—a chilling tactic police say is being used to scope out targets before striking.
The warning comes after the San José Police Department on Thursday responded to a neighborhood on the east side of the city.
Officers learned burglars hid a camouflaged camera in the bushes outside a home before fleeing the scene.
The homeowner later discovered the camera, and it was collected by police.
Police shared a photo of a camouflaged camera. (San Jose Police Department)
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Authorities said the camera was attached to a power bank and positioned facing the house, presumably to monitor the residents in preparation for a burglary or other criminal activity.
SJPD Burglary Unit detectives opened an investigation, later finding a second camouflaged device near the area of where the first camera was located.
The second device is believed to be a Wi-Fi powered device, according to officials.
Police shared a photo of a camouflaged Wi-Fi device that can be used by burglars to spy on victims. (San Jose Police Department)
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Following the shocking discovery, the department told residents it had received “several” reports of deceptive tactics used to case unoccupied homes, signifying a trend.
Suspects are known to plant hidden surveillance devices, or pose as delivery service providers or landscapers to determine when homes are unoccupied before committing burglaries.
San Jose authorities said surveillance trends have been identified in the city. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“As a reminder, remaining vigilant and reporting suspicious activity helps keep our neighborhoods safe,” the agency wrote in a statement.
Authorities also said to watch out for people ringing doorbells to see if anyone answers, packages left at doors to test whether a home is vacant, and unfamiliar vehicles or people repeatedly passing by a house.
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If a homeowner finds a suspicious device, the department said not to touch it and call law enforcement.
No arrests have been made in the recent San José case, according to the department.
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San Francisco, CA
Unionized teachers in San Francisco approve strike by a vote of 97.6%
The union representing more than 6,000 San Francisco public school employees voted Saturday to authorize a strike to win improvements in compensation and working conditions.
The United Educators of San Francisco voted 97.6% to give its negotiators the power to call the first strike by the city’s teachers in 47 years, the union said. The 1979 strike lasted seven weeks.
The San Francisco Unified School District has been negotiating for almost a year with the UESF, which includes teachers, substitutes, paraeducators, counselors, social workers and nurses.
The two sides are still apart on union demands for higher pay and fully funded family health care benefits, the district said.
The union is also asking to include the district’s existing policies on immigrant rights and homeless families in the contract, the school district said.
The two sides jointly declared an impasse and requested arbitration Jan. 23. A neutral fact-finding committee is expected to recommend an offer on Wednesday If the union rejects the deal, that is when a strike could be declared.
The district’s latest offer included a 6% raise over three years, spread out at 2% a year and fully paid family health benefits.
The schools argue that there is no surplus of funds to pay for raises beyond this without making cuts elsewhere.
“SFUSD continues to experience a structural deficit, meaning the district repeatedly plans to spend more money than it brings in,” the district said.
The California Department of Education can overrule any financial decision that could put the district at risk, including salary increases, SFUSD said.
Denver, CO
No. 11 Pioneers Win 1-0 in OT to Sweep No. 7 Minnesota Duluth – University of Denver Athletics
DENVER – Forward Rieger Lorenz scored 2:17 into overtime to lead the No. 11 Denver Pioneers hockey team to a 1-0 victory against the No. 7 Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs on Saturday night at Magness Arena.
Neither the Pioneers (16-11-2, 12-6-0 NCHC) nor Bulldogs (17-11-0, 8-10-0 NCHC) could get their first 49 shots into the back of the net before Lorenz’s tap-in tally during 3-on-3 play. Denver won 4-3 on Friday to earn its first weekend sweep of 2026 and fourth overall this season.
“I thought again we played well,” said Richard and Kitzia Goodman Hockey Head Coach David Carle. “We played pretty disciplined, didn’t give them a ton. Really liked our first period, second period I thought was a little slow for us, but I really liked our third.
“We did not give them a ton throughout the night, only 19 shots. Inside the power plays we gave them early, and they didn’t have a lot of shots, the first three were on the power plays. So we did a nice job. We held their top line for zero points on the weekend—I’m not sure that’s been done yet this year. A great accomplishment, and Johnny Hicks was excellent.”
Freshman goaltender Johnny Hicks started his second game for the Pioneers and earned his first career shutout, denying all 19 shots that Duluth shot his way. Hicks made 29 saves on Friday night before leaving in the third period with a lower-body injury, and he now owns a 3-0-0 record, 0.55 goals-against average and .980 save percentage in two starts and seven games this season.
Lorenz registered his first goal in overtime and his third game-winner of his career. Junior defenseman Eric Pohlkamp stood at the faceoff dot and sent a tape-to-tape pass to the far-side of the crease for the senior alternate captain. Junior forward Kieran Cebrian also had an assist on the goal and was strong in the circle by winning 60 percent of his faceoffs (12-of-20).
DU outshot UMD 31-19, including by a 14-4 margin in third period and overtime. Bulldogs netminder Adam Gajan finished by stopping 30 shots. The Pioneers outshot the Bulldogs 13-6 in the first period but UMD finished the edge in the second at 9-4.
Minnesota Duluth’s top-ranked power play didn’t convert on its two chances in the contest, while Denver didn’t capitalize on its lone man advantage as well.
UP NEXT: The Pioneers stay in-state next weekend as they take on the Colorado College Tigers in a home-and-home series. DU plays at Ed Robson Arena on Friday before hosting CC at Magness Arena on Saturday. Both games begin at 7 p.m. MT and will be broadcast on NCHC.tv.
POSTGAME NOTES
- The Pios improved to 7-1-0 in their last eight games against UMD and 11-2-0 in the past 13 matchups. Denver is also now 83-40-5 on home ice in the all-time series vs. Duluth.
- DU wrapped up their four-game homestand by going 3-1-0. DU’s homestay was tied for the longest of the season, and the squad closed out January having played eight-of-10 contests at Magness Arena.
- The Pioneers have won three straight contests on home ice, a season-best streak.
- Denver posted its sixth shutout of the season.
- The Pioneers won their second overtime game of the season (Oct. 31 vs. Alaska Anchorage) and is now 2-3-2 in OT this season.
- Rieger Lorenz scored his first career overtime goal, and his second game-winner of the season (Dec. 5 vs. Mimai).
- Johnny Hicks became the third Denver goaltender to post a shutout this year.
- Denver and Minnesota Duluth were facing off for the first time with both teams ranked since the then-No.3 ranked Pios beat the No. 6 Bulldogs in the 2022 NCAA West Regional Final in Loveland, Colorado.
- Duluth was visiting Magness Arena for the first time since March 15-16, 2024 in the NCHC Playoffs when Denver swept the best-of-three quarterfinal series.
- Cale Ashcroft (1g/2a) and Kyle Chyzowski (2g/1a) both had their three-game point streaks come to an end.
- Eric Pohlkamp leads all NCAA players in shots on goal and surpassed 400 career shots this weekend.
- The teams’ six combined penalty minutes tied a season-low in a game for the Pioneers.
GOAL SUMMARY
1st Period
No Scoring
2nd Period
No Scoring
3rd Period
No Scoring
Overtime
2:17 DU (1-0) – Rieger Lorenz tapped in Eric Pohlkamp’s pass from the right faceoff circle while stationed at the far-side of the crease.
QUOTABLES
Senior forward Rieger Lorenz
On game: “We’ve had a hard time closing out weekends here in the second half, so it was nice to see growth from our group. Obviously a good game yesterday. I thought our start was really good; [we] had a little bit of lapse in our mental game in the second and early third, but I thought we obviously pulled it out. It’s a big win for our group at this time in the season.”
On his overtime goal: “Obviously going against that Plante line you want to have the puck when you’re going against them. So, we got some speed, kicked out to Ceebs (Kieran Cebrian), he kicked it out to PK (Eric Pohlkamp). And I think everyone in the building thought he was going to shoot that, including me—but luckily enough he found me.”
On the excitement in building: “It’s unreal. The last few weekends have been tough for us at home, so it’s nice to give the fans something to cheer about, and hopefully they keep supporting us like they have been all season.”
On facing Colorado College next weekend: “Like I said, we’ve had a hard time stringing weekends together, so I think this will be a big weekend for us to show the strides we’ve taken so far. And the downs we’ve had this season, hopefully we’ve learned from them and can prove that to ourselves this upcoming weekend with the big rivalry.”
Junior Defenseman Eric Pohlkamp
On the game-winning goal he assisted on: “Yeah, I thought myself that I was going to shoot the puck, but I saw him (Rieger Lorenz) kind of get positioned on that guy and move backwards, and we made a hyper-play to tap that in. Really happy for him, and he’s been all over the puck in this game, and I know he had a lot of chances. So nice for him to get that one for sure.”
On this win being a boost: “Yeah, I think so. I don’t know what to say about boost, but I think we just need to be more consistent. We have CC as a big rival coming next weekend, so we are home-and-home, and those are some fun games. We played them early in the year, so I know we’re going to be eager to play them and looking forward to it.”
On changes in defense: “Yeah, we kind of talked about it in there, just punting the ball, like just playing football. You know, we don’t want them to regroup and attack us. I really liked our commitment, and we made plays and offense against a tough line (of UMD), me and Jamo (Eric Jamieson). It was a lot of fun playing against those guys, but obviously really good players and it was an excellent job this weekend.”
TICKETS: Tickets for the remaining games of DU hockey’s 2025-26 campaign are available. Click here for more information.
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