East Bay Times

Suspect convicted of '20 shootings

Ramello Randle, who during trial stabbed lawyer and threatened jury, killed ex-girlfriend and wounded man

- By Nate Gartrell ngartrell@bayareanew­sgroup.com

During his murder trial, Ramello Randle stabbed his own lawyer with a pen, attacked the prosecutor, and told the jury members he'd slaughter them all if they convicted them.

Unfortunat­ely for the 28-yearold Oakland man, this novel legal strategy failed. On Friday morning, after little more than a full day of deliberati­ng, jurors convicted him of a 2020 shooting that killed his ex-girlfriend and wounded a man.

The verdict, along with a true finding on an enhancemen­t for lying in wait, virtually guarantees that Randle will die in prison — unless his appeal is successful. He faces a sentence of life without the possibilit­y of parole.

The guilty verdict did not come easy. Along the way, Randle cursed out one judge, took a swing at his first attorney, stabbed his second lawyer with a pen, attacked the prosecutor and capped things off with threatenin­g to murder the entire jury on the same day his trial ended. His courtroom antics caused one mistrial in 2022, and nearly a second one this year when three of 17 jurors said they were too upset to continue, and had to be excused.

Randle was convicted of fatally shooting 24-year-old Jonaye Lahkel Bridges and wounding her friend during a 2020 shooting outside a 7-Eleven in Antioch. Prosecutor say he put a tracking device on Bridges' car and followed her to the store, then walked up and riddled the vehicle with bullets, using a pistol equipped with an extended magazine.

An accomplice, Christophe­r Slaughter, accepted a plea deal and 15-year prison term. At his first trial in 2022, Randle said in court that Slaughter was the real killer and police were “f—ing framing me.” That trial ended in a mistrial after he wished death upon Deputy District Attorney Kevin Bell, the prosecutor, and told Judge Charles “Ben” Burch, “I'm not your b—-” when Burch told him to stop.

After losing his status to act

as his own attorney, Randle took a swing and spat on his court-appointed attorney, then was assigned Matthew Fregi, another lawyer from the county's panel of attorneys for people who can't use a public defender. On Monday, as the trial was wrapping up, Randle wrote “sorry” on a sheet of paper, then used a pen to stab Fregi in the back of the head and jaw, according to authoritie­s, before charging at Bell.

With his constituti­onal right to be present for his trial still intact, Randle returned to court Wednesday — as Fregi and Bell were giving closing arguments — and told jurors he would have them all murdered if they returned guilty verdicts. He topped off the threat by saying “pop, pop, pop,” mimicking gunshots, according to multiple sources who witnessed the event.

Then Randle requested to be returned to his cell. He remained there Friday morning as the jury foreman repeated the words “guilty” and “true” to every charge and enhancemen­t.

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