Alameda County

Alameda officers charged in death of Mario Gonzalez face key hearing

NBC Universal, Inc. Three Alameda police officers charged in connection with the death of an unarmed man appeared in court Friday, attempting to get their case dismissed. Bob Redell reports.

Three Alameda police officers charged in connection with the death of an unarmed man appeared in court Friday, attempting to get their case dismissed.

The three officers, who are not in custody, are charged with the involuntary manslaughter of Mario Gonzalez, who died when they allegedly pinned him to the ground during a scuffle back in 2021.

Both sides agreed with the judge that three years is the statute of limitations for filing charges in a case like this, and that when the complaint was filed this past April, it was one day prior to the expiration of the limitations.

But the defense argues the case should be thrown out because prosecutors never secured an arrest warrant within that three-year time frame.

The judge did ask why the prosecution waited until the last minute to file charges. The assistant district attorney said they were waiting on a final report from an expert who reviewed the case, adding the last-minute filing was not due to any sort of mishandling of the case.

Outside court before the hearing, Gonzalez’s mom joined about 30 activists calling for an end to what they call police brutality and to demand justice for her son.

She said she is trying to stay positive and praying the judge doesn’t dismiss the case against the officers.

Back in 2021, the Alameda County district attorney at the time declined to charge the officers, but current District Attorney Pamela Price revived the case shortly after taking office in 2023.

Defense attorneys believe the charges may have been rushed because Price is facing a November recall election.

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