The Reporter (Vacaville)

In prelim hearing, video shows defendant near victim

- By Richard Bammer rbammer@thereporte­r.com Contact reporter Richard Bammer at (707) 453-8164.

Videos screened during the second day of a Solano County Superior Court preliminar­y hearing for a 22-year-old Vallejo rapper charged with a 2019 gunshot slaying in a Fairfield home showed the wounded victim entering the kitchen, hunched over in pain, and the alleged shooter briefly entering the kitchen, screaming while looking at him.

Questioned on the witness stand in Department 9 by Deputy District Attorney Bill Ainsworth, Fairfield Police Sgt. Robert Piro on Wednesday morning described what was happening in several clips retrieved from cameras in or near the Venetian Drive residence.

In the first, as Piro narrated, a Ring.com camera on the five-bedroom home’s front porch captured the defendant, George Harris, aka Lul G, dressed in all white, walking toward the front door, the handle of a semi-automatic handgun visible as he walked into the home after two other men in the early evening hours of July 24.

In the second clip, the victim, Rashied Flowers, 26, of Vallejo, can be seen entering the kitchen, wounded, then walking to a chair and sitting down just before the defendant enters the kitchen from the garage, where the shooting reportedly occurred.

And the third, video captured from a camera at a nearby residence, showed people loading Flowers into a white Range Rover parked on the street in front of the Venetian Drive home.

Piro, a member of the department’s investigat­ions unit at the time of the shooting, testified that Harris and others had gathered at the home to possibly record a rap video.

But Flowers wanted to play an unspecifie­d “dice game” and the others, including Harris, joined in the gambling, which occurred in the garage.

As Harris lost money to Flowers, then allegedly snorted cocaine “off his hand,” said Piro, an altercatio­n between the two ensued with Harris, added Piro, calling Flowers “a bitch.”

As passions rose, people in the garage believed Harris and Flowers were going to start a fight, he said. At some point, Harris is believed to have fired a single shot, striking Flowers in the abdomen.

Once inside the kitchen, others placed Flowers in a wheelchair. But as he was being shuttled out toward the garage, the wheelchair hit a door jamb and Flowers fell onto the garage floor, said Piro.

As Ainsworth continued with his direct questionin­g, Harris’ defense attorney, Claire J. White, frequently objected, calling some of Airnsworth’s questions “leading” and his statements based on “hearsay.”

Judge Carlos R. Gutierrez often sustained White’s objections, forcing Ainsworth to modify his line of questionin­g each time.

Piro testified that Harris, who reportedly had been drinking alcohol on the day of the shooting, was “screaming and crying” after the shooting and said that he was sorry.

Some weeks passed before Piro heard that Harris had been arrested in Las Vegas on Sept. 10, and was in the Clark County Detention Facility. He flew there the same day and Harris was later extradited to Solano County.

Piro said that Harris, before his arrest, had been tracked, based on cellphone pings, to a Holiday Inn Express in Las Vegas, where FBI Task Force investigat­ors spotted the defendant outside the motel.

As the clock struck noon, Gutierrez recessed the hearing and scheduled a third day for 1:30 p.m. July

26 in Department 9 in the Justice Center in Fairfield.

On the first day of the hearing, a witness, Latoya Gilmore, testified that she did not see the shooting but found Flowers “on the ground (in the garage) with people standing around crying.”

Gilmore testified that she called 911 but decided to drive Flowers to NorthBay Medical Center in Fairfield.

Ainsworth asked Gilmore if she believed Harris was intoxicate­d.

She was unsure, but added, “I know they were drinking; there was alcohol there.”

“Was George behaving differentl­y than anyone else?” Ainsworth asked.

“He was probably the most upset,” replied Gilmore.

Shortly afterward, Gutierrez recessed the proceeding­s because she became deeply distressed and ceased responding to Ainsworth.

Returning to the courtroom, White, in her crossexami­nation, got Gilmore to concede that she had never seen her client be violent with anyone and observed “no fight or physical altercatio­n” when she pulled up to the residence in her vehicle. And Gilmore testified she had never seen Harris under the influence of any drugs other than alcohol.

Gilmore said Flowers and Harris had been friends and had never seen either one angry toward the other.

Afterward, Ainsworth called Dr. Arnold Josselson, the longtime Fairfield pathologis­t who performs autopsies, to the witness stand.

Upon examining the body two days after the shooting, Josselson said a “single gunshot wound” to Flowers’ body was fatal, with the “medium-caliber” bullet passing through parts of the small intestine and ending up in his right hip area. The bullet also pierced one of Flowers’ two iliac arteries, the arteries that split off from the aorta, the human body’s main artery, with the victim dying from loss of blood.

On June 26 last year, White informed Gutierrez that her client may not be able to understand the proceeding­s against him or help in his defense. She petitioned the judge for a mental competency report.

On July 1, Gutierrez suspended criminal proceeding­s against Harris, ordered a mental competency examinatio­n, and appointed a psychologi­st or psychiatri­st to examine him.

Court records indicate Gutierrez reviewed another doctor’s report in late August, which apparently deemed Harris competent, and Gutierrez reinstated criminal proceeding­s on Aug. 28 by scheduling the preliminar­y hearing.

After Harris was arrested in Nevada, he was extradited to Solano County.

Harris is being held without bail at the Stanton Correction­al Facility in Fairfield.

Harris pleaded not guilty at his jail arraignmen­t on Sept. 23, 2019. Gutierrez denied a request from White to reduce her client’s bail on Dec. 18, according to court records.

The Solano County District Attorney’s Office filed its complaint against Harris, who has a prior felony conviction, on Aug. 29.

Harris gained fame as a member of Vallejo rap group SOB x RBE and was part of the group when it had a breakout spot with “Paramedic!” on the “Black Panther” film soundtrack in 2018, curated by Pulitzer Prize-winning rapper Kendrick Lamar.

Harris left SOB x RBE in 2018, later signing a deal with Def Jam records.

Rolling Stone magazine reported that Harris allegedly had been on probation since age 17 for armed robbery and gun charges, but the DA’s complaint only referred to a prior unspecifie­d conviction.

If found guilty at trial of first-degree murder, Harris could receive a prison term of 25 years to life, and likely more time for using a firearm.

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