Los Angeles Times

‘We love him and we are waiting’

Relatives mobilize to find contractor, 35, last seen July 27 in Thousand Oaks.

- By Soudi Jiménez

It has been more than a month since José Antonio “Toñito” Velásquez was last seen. Family and friends have mobilized in Ventura County to obtain informatio­n on his whereabout­s, so far to little avail.

“If anyone has seen him, let them know. I feel I can’t take it anymore,” said his mother, Rita Maldonado, who traveled from her home in Virginia at the beginning of August to join the search in California.

Velásquez, 35, a native of Tegucigalp­a, the capital of Honduras, settled in 2016 in Simi Valley, where he worked as a plumber.

In October 2021, he obtained his general contractor’s license, which opened up new job offers and allowed him to move into his own apartment in Camarillo at the end of July.

“Mommy, I’m happy with my job, I’m happy, I’m doing well. This has been my dream, I found it, ” Maldonado said her son told her when they spoke by phone around 1 p.m. July 27, two days after he moved to Camarillo. “I’ve had a lot of work. At any time I can buy a flight to come see you.”

In a notice from the Ventura County Sheriff ’s Office, Velásquez is described as a 5-foot-9 Latino with brown eyes and black hair weighing 170 pounds. He was last seen near the Janss Marketplac­e outdoor shopping mall in Thousand Oaks on July 27.

“We have no new informatio­n,” said Natalie Hernandez, a sheriff’s spokespers­on. “He is missing and we are still looking for him.”

According to Maldonado, because her son had been swamped with work, they spoke on the phone only twice a week.

But a friend in California and a cousin in Honduras communicat­ed with “Toñito” more frequently. They realized that Velásquez wasn’t answering his cellphone and alerted his imme

diate family. On July 30, the family filed a notice with the authoritie­s and began their search.

Through various sources, family members say they have been able to confirm that on the night of July 27, Velásquez met with some friends and drank a beer at a bar near the mall. Afterward, Velásquez and the others got in their vehicles and left.

On Aug. 1, authoritie­s found Velásquez’s work vehicle, a white van, in the 1600 block of Rancho Conejo Boulevard, about four miles from the mall.

“An attempted robbery can be ruled out, because his tools and the vehicle were there,” said his aunt Gloria Velásquez.

When her nephew arrived in California, she said, they lived close and he visited twice a week.

“He likes to go to the gym, play soccer and hang out with his family. The little bit of time that he had free he was always sharing with the cousins,” said the aunt, who in October 2020 moved from Simi Valley to Long Beach but said she still kept in touch with her nephew.

Velásquez left Honduras when he was 15, a circumstan­ce that allowed him to benefit from the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Although he initially settled in Virginia, he later moved to Ventura County for a few months. He returned to Virginia before settling in Simi Valley.

“He had told me that he was going to save to buy his little house in Virginia, because here houses are very expensive,” Maldonado said.

Since his disappeara­nce, friends and family have held vigils, said prayers and posted fliers.

“He is super affectiona­te, loving, he cares about me; he knows that I am suffering for him,” his mother said. “I ask that you help me find him, please. To the friends, if anyone knows something, communicat­e as soon as possible. We love him and we are waiting for him.”

Anyone with informatio­n is asked to contact Ventura County Sheriff’s Det. Jeff Jacobs at (805) 384-4729.

 ?? GLORIA VELÁSQUEZ ?? JOSÉ ANTONIO Velásquez, known as “Toñito,” was last seen July 27.
GLORIA VELÁSQUEZ JOSÉ ANTONIO Velásquez, known as “Toñito,” was last seen July 27.

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