The Mercury News

Security guard credited with subduing suspect after deadly store shooting

- By Robert Salonga and George Kelly Staff writers Contact Robert Salonga at 408-920-5002 and George Kelly at 510-208-6488.

SAN JOSE » Police say a man with anger issues and a previous mental health hold shot and killed a stranger after a brief encounter at an East San Jose supermarke­t Sunday and was arrested thanks to a security guard who chased down and subdued him.

The motive behind the slaying at the Chavez Supermarke­t on McKee Road remains unclear, and San Jose police Chief Eddie Garcia said there is no evidence showing that the suspect, 19-year-old San Jose resident Antonio Llabres, and the victim knew each other.

“While we don’t have an exact motive for this brutal homicide,” Garcia said, “it was a combinatio­n of mental illness coupled with anger issues, and supercharg­ed with illegally possessing a handgun.”

Officers were called to the supermarke­t near McKee Road and Jackson Avenue at 3:53 p.m. Sunday for a report of a possible shooting and found a 33-year-old man lying on the ground, suffering from gunshot injuries.

He was rushed to a hospital — Regional Medical Center is just over a block away — where he was pronounced dead. His name was not released pending his formal identifica­tion and notificati­on of his next of kin.

In the aftermath of the shooting, a security guard ran after the suspect, brought him to the ground and detained him for arriving officers.

“He got him in custody while (the suspect) was still armed,” Garcia said. “The security guard showed amazing heroism.”

Llabres was arrested on suspicion of murder. The shooting marked San Jose’s eighth homicide of the year.

An initial investigat­ion determined that Llabres entered the market, walked to the meat counter and had at most a brief interactio­n with the victim before the shooting occurred. Garcia said a witness reported that a comment was said aloud about some physical marks on the suspect’s neck, and it quickly escalated.

Llabres had no arrest history but was the subject of a past involuntar­y mental health hold, Garcia said. Under California law, that would bar him from lawfully possessing or having access to a firearm for five years.

The chief said investigat­ors had no informatio­n suggesting that the statewide stay-at-home order, to suppress the spread of the coronaviru­s, factored into the shooting.

“There is no evidence it has to do with that. Six days of shelter in place, with the numerous exceptions to it, should not make one homicidal,” Garcia said. “This was a brutal homicide that could have occurred last March.”

Anyone with informatio­n about the shooting can call San Jose police Detective Sgt. Anthony Kilmer or Detective Ted Reckas at 408277-5283, or leave a tip with Silicon Valley Crime Stoppers at 408-947-7867 or at svcrimesto­ppers.org. Tipsters may be eligible for a cash reward.

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