Marin Independent Journal

Mass shooting suspect arraigned

- By Jakob Rodgers

The man accused of gunning down seven people last year at two Half Moon Bay mushroom farms once again pleaded not guilty Thursday on seven murder charges in the largest mass shooting in San Mateo County's history.

Chunli Zhao, 67, spoke little during the brief hearing, which came a month after a San Mateo County grand jury indicted him in the January 2023 workplace massacre. He also faces a charge of attempted murder.

The indictment — which superceded charges filed just days after the shooting spree — was sought as a way to “move the case along” after delays affected the timing of a key evidentiar­y hearing, according to San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe.

As a result of the indictment, no such preliminar­y hearing is needed and the case is now bound for trial.

“The victims' families deserve to have this move along,” said Wagstaffe, shortly after the indictment last month.

Zhao had pleaded not guilty to the original charges and has been in custody since surrenderi­ng to authoritie­s hours after the mass shooting.

He remains held without bail.

Prosecutor­s say Zhao killed four workers and severely wounded a fifth at California Terra Garden, a mushroom farm in Half Moon Bay where he lived and worked for seven years, most recently as a forklift driver.

The violence appeared to stem from a workplace grudge, according to authoritie­s — one triggered by a $100 equipment bill from his boss for damage to heavy constructi­on equipment.

Moments before opening fire, Zhao vented his frustratio­ns at the supervisor and a co-worker whom Zhao blamed for a collision between his forklift and a bulldozer, prosecutor­s allege.

After the confrontat­ion, he allegedly shot the supervisor and the coworker, along with the co-worker's wife and two others at the farm.

Prosecutor­s allege that Zhao then continued his shooting spree at Concord Farms, another mushroom farm across town.

There, investigat­ors say he killed a former assistant manager whom he felt wronged by, as well as another couple.

The shooting illuminate­d deep concerns about living conditions among migrant workers living on farms across San Mateo County. County and state officials have described the workers' dwellings at California Terra Garden as “deplorable,” with families living in shacks with leaky roofs and no running water or kitchens.

A subsequent Bay Area News Group investigat­ion found that laws meant to ensure livable farmworker housing often went unenforced in San Mateo County, allowing farm owners to neglect their struggling workforce, including the shooter and his victims.

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