The Campbell Reporter

Suspect is called ‘extreme danger’

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SAN JOSE >> A man charged with brutally attacking a preschool’s beloved pet tortoise late last month and, after his arrest, returning to the school, was arraigned on animal abuse and other charges and ordered to stay away from the animal’s home for the foreseeabl­e future.

George Robles, 40, was charged earlier this month and made his first in-person court appearance Feb. 24 following a series of delays that involved him repeatedly refusing transport from the Main Jail to the adjacent Hall of Justice, starting with his initial arraignmen­t date Feb. 3.

Robles was charged with six felonies covering animal abuse, commercial burglary and vandalism. Deputy District Attorney Blake Hannah asked that Robles be remanded without bail, but Judge Vincent Chiarello said he could not grant that because the violence charged against Robles did not involve a human victim.

Chiarello set Robles’ bail at $165,000. The judge also granted the stay-away order barring Robles from the Play ‘N’ Learn Preschool in East San Jose, where the tortoise, named Michaelang­elo, lives.

Chiarello said in court Wednesday “there’s an obvious danger to the staff or anyone else who might have been present” at the preschool and described Robles as an “extreme danger to the public” before issuing the order.

The stay-away order was greeted with relief Wednesday by preschool co-owner Tammy Lariz, who has installed a new security system inside and outside. Still, she said, “I just hope it helps.”

Not only had the intruder broken into the preschool and attacked the tortoise, bludgeonin­g and stabbing him, but he also allegedly came back the next day. The preschool director, who arrived a half hour before the children, apparently scared him away.

By then, however, the tortoise was safe with a veterinari­an, who performed surgery to remove a wooden stake from its back. The vet is keeping him until he recovers and the preschool is ready to take him back.

“They’re taking such good care of him,” Lariz said. “I just want him to be safe and healthy before we worry about getting him back. We just want to make sure he’s safe.”

Deputy Public Defender Jessica Burt-smith asked for the court to conduct a mental health assessment for Robles, which Chiarello scheduled for March 11.

Burt-smith also objected to Chiarello citing statements Robles made to investigat­ors that were written in a police report, including Robles appearing to take credit for, and pride, in attacking the tortoise.

“Mr. Robles was not in his right mind on the day he was being questioned,” Burt-smith said, adding that Robles has expressed willingnes­s to receive mental health services.

Robles first was arrested the morning of Jan. 30 near the preschool after a neighbor saw a man yelling and throwing things in the preschool playground and called police.

Summoned to the school, Lariz discovered Michelange­lo near his miniature log cabin, bleeding after being impaled with 6-inch shards from a wooden garden gate post into the back of the tortoise’s shell. She also found a rake handle shoved between the reptile’s head and leg, which she pulled out, and shattered glass from flood lamps that had been unscrewed and broken on the animal’s back.

Michelange­lo, a decades-old 65-pound African sulcata, was rushed to receive emergency veterinary care from Dr. Tal Solomon, and continues to be on the mend.

According to San Jose police and the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, Robles initially was booked and placed on a 72hour mental health evaluation. He soon was released under the county’s $0 emergency bail schedule for misdemeano­rs and certain lowlevel felonies, aimed at reducing jail crowding during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prosecutor­s say a magistrate judge denied an officer’s request to review Robles’ bail.

A little over a day later, in the early-morning hours of Feb. 1, preschool Director Yvonne Co arrived and said she saw Robles inside the school grounds. He apparently had been holding a brick before fleeing.

A police investigat­ion later determined that Robles broke in through a window and spent the previous night at the school, took two ipads worth about $1,000 and caused $950 in damage to the building.

The tortoise’s blankets had also been yanked from his enclosure, a garden where he was kept after the preschool acquired Michelange­lo from a rescue program four years ago. Much of Robles’ alleged intrusion was captured on security video.

Robles, who in the police report was described as living in a van nearby on Dobern Avenue, was arrested a second time that afternoon by officers with the SJPD mobile crisis response team. But an in-field evaluation found him ineligible for another mental health hold, and he was booked into jail.

After his Feb. 1 arrest, a police investigat­ion linked Robles to a break-in at the preschool three days before the attack on Michelange­lo, in which $1,850 in electronic­s and other items were stolen. Robles reportedly admitted to that earlier break-in during a police interview; police said he claimed he gave the stolen items to other unhoused people.

SAN JOSE >> Nearly 200 affordable homes could sprout on the site of a now-closed Chuck E. Cheese family restaurant in San Jose, according to preliminar­y plans being reviewed by city planners.

Affirmed Housing is planning a 100% affordable residentia­l developmen­t on Kooser Road between Blossom Hill Road and Meridian Avenue, the plans show.

“There is not a lot of affordable housing in this area,” said Rob Wilkins, regional director of Northern California for Affirmed Housing. “It’s a great spot for affordable housing.”

The 1.6-acre site at 1371 Kooser Road is the location of a popular Chuck E. Cheese that closed its doors in 2020 amid the economic ravages unleashed by the deadly coronaviru­s.

“This is a high-resource area, with low poverty, good schools, good amenities nearby,” Wilkins said.

The amenities include restaurant­s and retail. Plus, the Almaden Station light rail stop on Coleman Avenue is within two miles of the proposed developmen­t site.

The property is also suitable because it is on a parcel that’s large enough for a new project.

“It is a vacant site, on an island of its own,” Wilkins said. “There are great place-making opportunit­ies.”

Some retail uses that wouldn’t be part of the developmen­t are adjacent and some shared parking arrangemen­ts are under discussion.

Another shuttered restaurant site in south San Jose is under considerat­ion for affordable developmen­t in the vicinity.

About a mile away at 1007 Blossom Hill Road, a developmen­t of 269 affordable homes is being considered on a 1.9-acre site where Fish Market had operated a popular seafood restaurant until coronaviru­s-linked economic woes forced it to close permanentl­y.

At the Chuck E. Cheese site on Kooser Road, the developers have obtained a contract to buy the property.

The developmen­t would be six stories high and would include on-site amenities such as a community room. The project also might include ground-floor retail.

The project’s developers, however, emphasized that the preliminar­y plans have been fashioned and filed primarily as a trial balloon to obtain early-stage observatio­ns and assessment­s from the community and city planners.

“The plans could change based on community feedback and the city review,” Wilkins said. “We will go out to the community. A lot of what we do and how we operate is we conduct a lot of outreach to the community.”

Contact George Avalos at 408-859-5167.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Michelange­lo the tortoise wanders around at ARCHVET Animal Hospital in San Jose,
Calif., on Jan.
31. Michelange­lo underwent surgery at the animal hospital after he was attacked.
NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES Michelange­lo the tortoise wanders around at ARCHVET Animal Hospital in San Jose, Calif., on Jan. 31. Michelange­lo underwent surgery at the animal hospital after he was attacked.

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