The Mercury News

Deputy’s body camera takes bullet in shadowy attack near reservoir

Sheriff details ‘unprovoked’ Friday night shooting that injured deputy patrolling on Uvas Road; gunman still at large

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@ bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Robert Salonga at 408-920-5002.

SAN JOSE » Late Friday, Santa Clara County sheriff’s Deputy Sukhdeep Gill was on routine patrol near the Uvas Reservoir when he pulled over his SUV and got out to take a look around.

Not long after, he noticed a car approachin­g where he was standing on the side of Uvas Road, in unincorpor­ated Morgan Hill. As it got closer, its headlights suddenly vanished.

Four gunshots quickly followed, with one round hitting Gill squarely in the chest.

Fatefully, the bullet hit Gill’s body-worn camera, which itself was backed by his standard-issue body armor.

Dazed but alert, he fired two rounds from his service pistol at the now fleeing attacker.

“Shots fired! Shots fired!” Gill told emergency dispatcher­s, according to a recording released by the sheriff’s office.

As dispatcher­s tried franticall­y to get more informatio­n from Gill over the radio, they were met with silence: He apparently had fallen down an embankment.

After two long minutes, he made it back to the road, adrenaline pumping through his veins.

Gill gave the dispatcher­s signs of life, saying, “I think I was hit,” into his radio.

The deputy is recovering from his injuries in what Sheriff Laurie Smith called an “unprovoked attack” during a news conference Monday in which she and Lt. Brendan Omori detailed the shooting.

“It was an ambush,” Smith said. “Any one of those rounds could have hit him anywhere. He was very brave under fire.”

At the news conference, the sheriff’s office released a photo of Gill’s body-worn camera, which showed damage indicating that the assailant’s bullet hit it almost dead-center.

Other photos showed that three bullets hit the rear left side of his SUV.

“This was absolutely a close call,” Omori said.

The shooting was reported around 10:30 p.m. Friday on Uvas Road north of Wallace Place.

A search for the shooter did not yield any suspects, though the sheriff’s office gave a descriptio­n of the car: a silver 2000s-era sedan, possibly a Honda.

Investigat­ors hope a member of the public might be able to lead them to the shooter.

“We’ll follow up every lead,” Smith said. “We want to bring the person or persons to justice.”

Omori, who oversees the sheriff’s homicide and major crimes units, said Gill’s patrol SUV, in the gaze of the suspect car’s headlights, would have been clearly visible as a sheriff’s vehicle, and that the deputy was in full uniform.

“This was a targeted attack,” Omori said.

It was not clear whether Gill’s retaliator­y fire hit anyone. Gill is at home with his family and looks to be in good spirits considerin­g the circumstan­ces, Omori said.

“Given the gravity of the situation, he’s doing quite well,” he said.

Smith said the suspects will face charges of premeditat­ed attempted murder.

Omori said during the news conference that Gill is a practicing Sikh and wears a traditiona­l headdress on duty, but that it was too early to know if the shooting had a hate-based motive.

“We support him, and our department supports him,” Omori said. “It’s unknown whether it’s a hate crime or a crime of opportunit­y against law enforcemen­t.”

Anyone with informatio­n about the shooting can contact the sheriff’s office at 408-808-4500, or leave an anonymous tip at 408-8084431.

“It was an ambush. Any one of those rounds could have hit him anywhere. He was very brave under fire.”

— Sheriff Laurie Smith

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