East Bay Times

4th man accused of murder in cop's death

Officer was shot Dec. 29 responding to a burglary call

- By Jakob Rodgers jrodgers @bayareanew­sgroup.com

Alameda County prosecutor­s charged a fourth man with murder in the fatal shooting of Oakland police officer Tuan Le, just as he appeared willing to plead guilty to lesser burglary charges tied to the late-December killing.

The decision to add Sebron Russell, 30, to the list of men facing murder charges in Le's death marked an about-face for the Alameda County District Attorney's Office, which had previously only charged the Richmond man with three counts of second-degree commercial burglary, along with numerous sentencing enhancemen­ts.

In a court filing, Russell's attorney, David Knutsen, blasted the District

Attorney's Office for trying to “circumvent” the normal process for filing new charges. He added that Russell had signed paperwork Feb. 15 pleading guilty to the lesser charges, a day before learning he would be charged with murder.

“The district attorney is attempting to thwart Mr. Russell's rights with this proposed amended complaint,” Knutsen wrote.

In a separate court filing seeking to justify the move, prosecutor Nick Homer stressed that “a defendant may not simply plead guilty prior to an amendment being offered to avoid additional criminal charges.” The murder charge was filed by Elgin Lowe, a prosecutor who is assigned to lead the case amid a staff shake-up earlier this month involving several high-level attorneys at the DA's Office.

Russell was arrested in San Francisco just days after Le's death on Dec. 29, which happened as the undercover officer responded to a predawn burglary call at a marijuana grow house along the city's waterfront. Le was shot in the head just minutes after arriving with his partner in an unmarked pickup truck, while working as plaincloth­es officers.

The burglary call was the third break-in that morning at the business on the 400 block of Embarcader­o, near Fifth Avenue.

Prosecutor­s previously charged three other men — Mark Demetrious Sanders, Allen Starr Brown and Marquise Cooper — with murder in the killing. Authoritie­s suspect Sanders fired the fatal bullet and that Brown drove the getaway car. Cooper's exact alleged role remains unclear.

Until recently, Russell had been the only man charged in connection with Le's death to be granted bail. He was released from the Santa Rita Jail in midJanuary on $200,000 bail and made at least one court appearance while out of custody.

Court records show a judge signed off on his arrest Feb. 12 in connection with the new murder charge. He was taken into custody four days later by Oakland police, according to a filing by the District Attorney's Office justifying the move. He was being held Wednesday morning in the Santa Rita Jail.

Prosecutor­s also appear to have resurrecte­d a separate 2019 case against Russell that had been dismissed in November, about a month before Le's death.

Lowe also charged Russell this month with kidnapping to commit robbery, a felony, stemming from a July 2019 robbery at a marijuana business on the 400 block of 23rd Avenue in Oakland's Jingletown neighborho­od.

Russell previously had faced a slew of felony charges in the holdup, including home invasion robbery and first-degree burglary. But the charges were dismissed late last year, due to a lack of evidence, court records show.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States