Marin Independent Journal

Judge denies bail again for fighter charged in shooting

- By Robert Salonga

SAN JOSE >> Former UFC champion Cain Velasquez's second attempt at securing bail and supervised release was denied by a judge Monday morning, meaning the San Jose-trained mixed martial arts fighter will remain in jail while he defends himself against attempted murder charges alleging he shot at a man suspected of molesting his child relative and ended up wounding the man's stepfather.

In a San Jose courtroom, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Shelyna Brown stood by her decision to remand Velasquez to jail without bail, saying circumstan­ces haven't changed since her initial March 7 ruling. Brown had previously stated the allegation­s against Velasquez — that he methodical­ly chased then opened fire on Harry Goularte and his parents on Feb. 28 — showed him to be a continuing public danger.

Goularte's stepfather who was wounded, Paul Bender, appeared at Monday's hearing via video call and told the court his belief that Velasquez “will finish what he started” if he were to be released.

Velasquez's attorney, Mark Geragos, had proposed to the court that Velasquez be released on $1 million bail with electronic monitoring. He also said that if released, Velasquez would relocate to a treatment facility in Texas, in part to assuage the safety concerns of the judge and Bender and his family.

Geragos said after the hearing he respectful­ly disagreed with the judge's decision to keep Velasquez in jail.

“We had proposed what I believe is a re-fashioned bail package and conditions that well exceed 99.9% of all cases involving a non-murder in the state of California,” Geragos said. “For him to be held on no bail under these circumstan­ces is outrageous.”

Deputy District Attorney Aaron French said after the hearing that the proposal from Velasquez's defense team did not satisfy safety fears that stemmed from the alleged acts, which fueled charges of attempted murder and other assault and weapons crimes.

“If you look at the facts of the case, he set out that day — and it's not really much of a question — to kill Harry, was willing to do what he did, in the open and in public. It was on the street, he doesn't have concern about who gets hit by his car, who gets hit by a stray bullet,” French said. “The only thing that has changed is the passage of time. I don't think an ankle monitor or moving out of state will protect the public.”

The events leading to the alleged shooting by Velasquez unfolded in late February, after Goularte was charged with one felony count of a lewd and lascivious act with a child under the age of 14, specifical­ly a 4-year-old. According to Santa Clara County sheriff's investigat­ors and prosecutor­s, the reported victim, a close relative of Velasquez, told their parents in February about being molested by Goularte at a home daycare in San Martin operated by Goularte's mother.

The Bay Area News Group is withholdin­g the child's name and exact relationsh­ip to Velasquez because the child is a minor and reported sexual abuse victim.

Goularte was arraigned Feb. 25, and a judge granted him supervised release, over objections from the district attorney's office. Three days later, investigat­ors say Bender and Goularte's mother drove from San Martin to Morgan Hill to pick Goularte up and take him to San Jose to get outfitted for an ankle monitor. Court documents allege that Velasquez followed the parents in his pickup truck and that once they picked up Goularte, he drove up to their vehicle and fired a handgun at Goularte, then followed them as they drove away.

The pursuit ended near Monterey Highway and Bailey Road on the southern edges of San Jose, where Velasquez reportedly fired several shots at the truck, wounding Bender. Velasquez was arrested a short distance away by San Jose police.

 ?? ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Cain Velasquez consults with attorney Mark Geragos during a court hearing in San Jose in March.
ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Cain Velasquez consults with attorney Mark Geragos during a court hearing in San Jose in March.

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