East Bay Times

Shooter pleads guilty in Oakley teen's slaying

Relatives of surviving victim opposed sentence

- By Nate Gartrell ngartrell @bayareanew­sgroup.com

A 19-yearold man was sentenced as a juvenile for murdering an Oakley teen when he was 16, maxing out his possible confinemen­t to his 25th birthday, court records recently revealed.

Jose Campos pleaded no contest to second-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Aliciabele­n “A.B.” Vela, who died after a fatal shooting in Antioch on Nov. 5, 2019. Vela's boyfriend also was wounded by gunfire but survived the shooting.

Campos and his co-defendant were arrested within days of the shooting, but both were charged as juveniles, where public access to courts are limited and prosecutor­s say they're barred from revealing details of hearings. But a recently filed appellate court decision has shed light on the outcome of Campos' case.

Police at the time called

Vela's killing the result either a setup or a disagreeme­nt during a minor marijuana deal. Vela's boyfriend allegedly arranged to buy a single joint of marijuana from Campos' co-defendant, Julian “JuJu” Martinez, who was also 16 at the time. During the deal, Campos allegedly opened fire, killing Vela and wounding her 17-year-old boyfriend, police said.

Both Campos and Martinez and several members of their respective families were associated with the Norteño gang, according to the appellate court decision. During the investigat­ion, police searched property belonging to Campos' family and seized 15 guns and $120,000 in cash, court documents say.

The appeals court decision didn't address Campos' sentence but reaffirmed a restitutio­n order for the victims' families.

The family of Vela's boyfriend opposed the sentence, according to court records. His mother spoke out in court, saying her son was severely traumatize­d and that she wished the case had been prosecuted in adult court, where criminal penalties are much stiffer.

Under state law, 16-yearolds can be tried as adults but it requires a judge's approval and state lawmakers seem to be urging prosecutor­s to go in a different direction; a state law passed in 2019 outright forbids anyone younger than 16 from being tried as an adult.

Details of the outcome of Martinez's case weren't immediatel­y available, but minors sentenced in juvenile court cannot be incarcerat­ed beyond their 25th birthday.

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