Los Angeles Times

Guilty plea in killing with ‘boogaloo’ ties

Air Force veteran is accused of shooting security guard during protests in 2020.

- Associated press

SAN FRANCISCO — A former U.S. Air Force staff sergeant and alleged member of the “boogaloo” extremist movement pleaded guilty Friday in the fatal shooting of a federal security officer in the San Francisco Bay Area amid large 2020 protests against police brutality.

Steven Carrillo, 33, originally pleaded not guilty in July 2020 in the killing of David Patrick Underwood, who was shot on May 29, 2020, while he stood in a guard shack in front of a federal building in Oakland.

Carrillo changed the plea at a federal court in San Francisco after federal prosecutor­s on Jan. 31 agreed not to seek the death penalty in the case.

Prosecutor­s have said Carrillo, of Santa Cruz, had ties to the “boogaloo” movement — a concept embraced by a loose network of gun enthusiast­s and militiasty­le extremists. The group started in alt-right culture on the internet with the belief that there is an impending U.S. civil war, according to experts.

Authoritie­s said Underwood was fatally shot as Carrillo fired a spray of bullets from inside a white van. Prosecutor­s said Robert Alvin Justus Jr. of Millbrae, Calif., drove the van.

The pair is accused of driving to Oakland and taking advantage of the distractio­n afforded by crowds marching through the city’s downtown to protest the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in Minneapoli­s.

A week after the shooting in Oakland, Carrillo allegedly ambushed sheriff’s deputies in Santa Cruz County who were responding to a report of a van containing firearms and bombmaking materials.

Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller, 38, was killed, and other law enforcemen­t officials were wounded, according to authoritie­s and court records.

Prosecutor­s in Santa Cruz charged Carrillo with a slew of felonies, including murder and attempted murder, in connection to that killing.

Carrillo pleaded not guilty to Gutzwiller’s killing.

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