Lodi News-Sentinel

Suspect charged with murder of Newman police officer

- By Brittny Mejia

Prosecutor­s have charged a man with murder in connection with the fatal shooting of a Central Valley police officer.

Gustavo Perez Arriaga, a Mexican national living in the country illegally, was charged Wednesday, according to John Goold, spokesman for the Stanislaus County district attorney’s office. At an arraignmen­t that afternoon, Arriaga’s attorney declared his client incompeten­t to stand trial.

“Criminal proceeding­s were suspended as required by law and a doctor was appointed to examine the defendant and provide a report on whether or not he is legally competent to stand trial,” Goold said in an email.

In court, Arriaga told the judge his true name is Paulo Virgen Mendoza, according to local news outlets. A criminal complaint includes several aliases.

His next court date is set for Feb. 7.

Authoritie­s arrested Arriaga last week in the death of Newman Police Cpl. Ronil Singh on Dec. 26. The 33-yearold officer stopped Arriaga on suspicion of a probable DUI, authoritie­s said.

Arriaga, who had two previous arrests for suspected drunken driving, tried to flee to his native Mexico after the fatal shooting, Stanislaus County Sheriff Adam Christians­on said.

After Singh’s death, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t issued a statement expressing concern “that California’s sanctuary laws continue to undermine public safety and cause preventabl­e crimes by restrictin­g law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n and allowing public safety threats back into the community to reoffend.”

ICE had had no previous encounters with Arriaga.

There have been several arrests in connection with Singh’s death, including Arriaga’s two brothers, his girlfriend and a co-worker, who are facing charges of being accessorie­s after the fact.

Last week, President Donald Trump tweeted about the case: “Time to get tough on Border Security. Build the Wall!”

Local news outlets reported that dozens of demonstrat­ors showed up outside the courthouse for Arriaga’s arraignmen­t, holding signs that read “Blue Lives Matter” and “Make California Safe Again Amend SB-54.”

“I’m not here to talk about the president of the United States, but I will repeat what I said before,” Christians­on said in a news conference last week. “Border security goes hand in hand with national security, goes hand in hand with public safety, goes hand in hand with the safety of our community.”

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