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Man arrested after Utah ‘No Kings' rally shooting is released as investigation continues

Man arrested after Utah ‘No Kings' rally shooting is released as investigation continues

Los Angeles Times12 hours ago

A man accused of brandishing a rifle at a 'No Kings Day' rally in Utah — prompting an armed safety volunteer to open fire and accidentally kill a protester — has been released from jail while the investigation continues.
Salt Lake County Dist. Atty. Sim Gill's office said Friday that it was unable to make a decision on charges against Arturo Gamboa, who had been jailed on suspicion of murder after the June 14 shooting.
Salt Lake City police had said Gamboa brought an assault-style rifle to the rally and was moving toward the crowd with the weapon raised when a safety volunteer for the event fired three shots, wounding Gamboa and killing a nearby demonstrator, Arthur Folasa Ah Loo.
Gamboa did not fire his rifle and it is unclear what he intended to do with it. His father, Albert Gamboa, told the Associated Press this week that his son was 'an innocent guy' who was 'in the wrong place at the wrong time.'
Utah is an open-carry state, meaning people who can legally own a firearm are generally allowed to carry it on a public street. The volunteer has not been publicly identified as investigators have worked to determine who was at fault.
Judge James Blanch said in the release order that Gamboa must live with his father and is forbidden from possessing firearms. The conditions terminate after two months or if criminal charges against him are pursued, Blanch wrote.
Gamboa's attorney, Greg Skordas, did not immediately respond to a telephone message left for him seeking comment.
Police said the day after the shooting that witnesses reported seeing Gamboa lift the rifle when he was ordered to drop it and that instead he began running toward the crowd. He fled but was arrested nearby, accused of creating the dangerous situation that led to Ah Loo's death.
Salt Lake City police said in a statement the next day that Gamboa 'knowingly engaged in conduct ... that ultimately caused the death of an innocent community member.'
But three days after Gamboa was booked into jail, with no formal charges filed, police acknowledged that the circumstances surrounding the shooting remained uncertain. They issued a public appeal for any video footage related to the shooting or Gamboa, and said detectives were still trying 'to piece together exactly what happened.'
The volunteer who confronted Gamboa was described by event organizers as a military veteran whose role as a safety volunteer was to maintain order.
Experts say it's extremely rare for such individuals, often called safety marshals, to be armed. They typically rely on calm demeanor, communication and relationships with police and protesters to help keep order, said Edward Maguire, an Arizona State University criminology and criminal justice professor.
Police said the permit for the protest did not specify that there would be armed security.
Protest organizers have not said whether or how the safety volunteer who shot Ah Loo was trained or explained why he was armed. All attendees, including those in safety roles, were asked not to bring weapons, according to Sarah Parker, a national coordinator for the 50501 Movement. Parker's organization on Thursday said it was disassociating from a local chapter of the group that helped organize the Utah protest.
The demonstration involving some 18,000 people was otherwise peaceful. It was one of hundreds nationwide involving millions of demonstrators against President Trump's policies — which they likened to the dictatorial actions of a monarch — and his military parade in Washington, which marked the Army's 250th anniversary and coincided with Trump's birthday.
Brown writes for the Associated Press.

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Utah ‘No Kings' protest: What we know about the fatal shooting
Utah ‘No Kings' protest: What we know about the fatal shooting

Yahoo

timean hour ago

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Utah ‘No Kings' protest: What we know about the fatal shooting

Newly released video appears to show the man arrested on suspicion of murder for the death of an innocent bystander at a 'No Kings' protest in Salt Lake City walking away with his rifle pointing down moments before the deadly gunfire, CNN affiliate KSTU reported – challenging initial claims made by witnesses. Arturo Gamboa was arrested on suspicion of murder after witnesses told police he pointed an AR-15-style rifle at the crowd. Gamboa's actions led a 'peacekeeper' at the event to open fire in Gamboa's direction – striking innocent bystander Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, police said. Ah Loo was among 18,000 protesters who packed downtown Salt Lake City for the 'No Kings' protest – one of 2,000 such events nationwide denouncing the Trump administration. Now, days after the father and beloved fashion designer was killed, it's still not clear whether the 'peacekeeper' who shot him will face any charges. And Gamboa, the man arrested on suspicion of murder, was released Friday with conditions, as authorities continue to investigate and determine whether to charge him, the district attorney's office said. Here's what we know and what to expect in the investigation: Two 'peacekeepers' volunteering with event organizer Utah 50501's safety team told police they noticed Gamboa behaving suspiciously and 'pull out an AR-15-style rifle from a backpack and begin manipulating it,' the Salt Lake City Police Department said. Under Utah law, adults 21 and older may openly carry or conceal a firearm without a permit. The 'peacekeepers,' who were armed with handguns and wearing neon green vests, told police they 'ordered Gamboa to drop the weapon' before one of them opened fire, police said Sunday. Witnesses reported Gamboa holding the rifle in a firing position and running toward the protesters after being confronted by the 'peacekeepers,' police said. A police sergeant heard gunfire just before 8 p.m. local time. 'As panic spread throughout the area, hundreds of people ran for safety, hiding in parking garages, behind barriers, and going into nearby businesses,' police said. The 'peacekeeper' fired three rounds – fatally wounding Ah Loo and striking Gamboa, who was taken to a hospital before he was booked into the Salt Lake County Metro Jail on suspicion of murder, authorities said. Salt Lake City police explained why they thought a murder charge against Gamboa would be appropriate, even though he did not shoot Ah Loo. 'Detectives have developed probable cause that Gamboa acted under circumstances that showed a depraved indifference to human life, knowingly engaged in conduct that created a grave risk of death and ultimately caused the death of an innocent community member,' police said Sunday. Initial footage from the scene shows bystanders flagging police to a man wearing a black shirt, black jeans and black boots. 'That's a rifle right here,' one man is heard saying. 'I just grabbed it from this guy right here,' gesturing to the man in black, later identified as Gamboa. The video shows officers rushing Gamboa and taking him into custody. But the new video obtained by KSTU shows a different angle of the shooting, potentially challenging the original narrative reported. Police first said witnesses reported Gamboa pointed his rifle and ran at demonstrators after the 'peacekeepers' told him to drop his weapon. But the newly released video appears to show Gamboa's rifle pointing toward the ground, and he doesn't start running until after the 'peacekeeper' fires his gun. The video also shows Gamboa jogging along the protest route and then ducking behind a fence – a move the 'peacekeeper' told detectives he found suspicious. Gamboa can be seen on the video through the slats in the fence and it appears he bends down. Police have said he removed the rifle from his backpack. The rifle cannot be seen in this video. CNN has not independently obtained or verified the newly released video. In a statement Thursday, police said it would be 'inappropriate and premature' to comment on any specific evidence. 'Our focus is on conducting a thorough, impartial, and fact-driven investigation to ensure the integrity and fairness of any future legal proceedings,' the statement said. No murder charge has been finalized against Gamboa, the Salt Lake County District Attorney's Office told CNN this week. A district court judge signed an order to release Gamboa with conditions on Friday, according to the court order obtained by KSTU. 'And upon that review, the state has determined that it will be unable to make an informed decision as to whether charges against Mr. Gamboa will be filed or declined before his scheduled release date of (Monday),' according to the order. 'The state is continuing its review of evidence as it becomes available while Mr. Gamboa is released with stipulated conditions agreed to through his attorney, Greg Skordas.' Gamboa's lawyer, Skordas, raised concerns about how many days his client was in custody without charges and not having the opportunity to see a judge, he said in an email to CNN on Saturday. 'That's when I decided I had to do something so I filed the motion for his release,' he said. Under the release conditions, Gamboa has to maintain residence with his father, not possess any firearms and forfeit his passport to his attorney, according to the court order. He was released Friday while he waits to see if any formal charges will be filed. This comes after the court granted a motion from the DA's office to extend his detention. Without the extension, authorities would have had to formally bring charges against Gamboa or release him within 72 hours of his arrest, per state law. 'A three-day extension was requested because the Salt Lake County District Attorney's Office has not yet received a formal screening of the evidence associated with the charge of murder, for which Mr. Gamboa was booked,' the DA's office said in a statement. 'Detectives continue to interview witnesses and involved parties, as well as review voluminous amounts of surveillance and amateur footage of the incident.' Authorities have not identified the 'peacekeeper' who shot Ah Loo and declined to comment on whether he will be charged in connection with the shooting. 'Detectives are still actively investigating this case,' including the actions of the peacekeepers, police said. A longtime friend told CNN Thursday Gamboa would never hurt anyone. 'Arturo is not violent, he's never been violent,' Konrad Keele said. 'Anyone that knows Arturo loves Arturo. He's always been kind and very gentle.' Keele said he's known Gamboa for nine years after meeting him through Salt Lake City's independent punk rock scene. 'I would say the chances of him even thinking about doing a mass shooting are zero,' Keele said. Gamboa's family is 'broken-hearted and very confused,' Keele said. Utah 50501, the group that organized the protest, told The Salt Lake Tribune that the 'peacekeepers' are 'safety volunteers' who were responding to a perceived threat against the demonstrators. 'Our team of safety volunteers, who have been selected because of their military, first responder, and other relevant de-escalation experience, believed that there was an imminent threat to the protestors and took action,' the group said. 'The safety volunteer who responded to the individual and who was questioned by police is a military veteran.' But the national 50501 group – which stands for 50 states, 50 protests and 1 movement 'against the authoritarian actions of the Trump Administration' – has severed ties with the 50501 branch in Salt Lake City. 'Due to SLC 50501's disregard for our nonnegotiable values, we are no longer affiliated with them,' the national group posted on Facebook. 'Every action organized under the 50501 name is expected to uphold a strict no-weapons policy, without exception.' The Salt Lake City Police Department is seeking video footage from before, after and during the shooting as they work 'to piece together exactly what happened,' the department said. The 'peacekeepers' were not 'overseen, sanctioned, or trained' by the department, and neither of the two men is a current or former law enforcement officer, police said. 'From the department's standpoint, these persons are considered members of the public, subject to the same rights and responsibilities as any other person in Utah,' police said in a statement. Ah Loo, who went by the name Afa, was a husband, a father and a renowned fashion designer, according to a GoFundMe page established to help his widow Laura and their two children. The 39-year-old Utah resident was also a co-founder of the nonprofit Creative Pacific and appeared on the fashion design reality TV show 'Project Runway.' 'Afa was a proud Samoan, deeply connected to his culture and community…he shared his heritage with passion and creativity,' the GoFundMe page said. Ah Loo's legacy will have a lasting impact, Utah 50501 told The Salt Lake Tribune. 'Afa's name, courage, and commitment to his people will never be forgotten,' the group said. This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's Natalie Barr contributed to this report.

Minnesota lobbyist arrested after allegedly sending threatening texts
Minnesota lobbyist arrested after allegedly sending threatening texts

Yahoo

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Minnesota lobbyist arrested after allegedly sending threatening texts

A longtime Minnesota lobbyist was charged Friday after allegedly making violent threats 'with the purpose to terrorize another' person, according to court documents. Jonathan M. Bohn, 41, is accused of committing 'threats of violence — reckless disregard' after he allegedly sent a series of threatening text messages. The charge, a felony, carries a penalty of up to five years in prison, a $10,000 fine, or both. While the court document, filed in the 1st Judicial District of Carver County, does not include the name of the person to whom Bohn, a lobbyist for 20 years, allegedly sent the texts, it does include samples of several texts threatening in nature. In one message, Bohn allegedly wrote in part, 'Today I bought 500 bullets. I can't wait to shoot one of you motherf-----s in the face.' In another message, he allegedly wrote, 'Excited to have my gun at the Capitol and blow somebody's f-----g face off.' On Friday, a judge in Chaska, Minnesota, set Bohn's bail at $1 million and ordered that he have no contact with the person he allegedly made the threatening comments to. The judge also ordered that Bohn must stay at least a half-mile away from the Capitol complex. Bohn allegedly sent the flurry of threatening texts on Wednesday. Court documents suggest he was allegedly spurred on after seeing a friend post an image of President Donald Trump as a king. It appears the friend changed the image ahead of the June 14 'No Kings Day' march, a protest against Trump, according to NBC affiliate KARE of Minneapolis. Earlier on June 14, state Rep. Melissa Hortman, the former state House speaker, and her husband, Mark Hortman, were shot and killed in their homes. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, were also shot in their homes. John Hoffman, who was shot nine times, is in critical but stable condition. Despite Bohn's alleged series of erratic text messages, the person who received them did not respond to Bohn, according to court documents. During a search of Bohn's home, police say they found a gun but no ammunition. As he sat in court on Friday, Bohn wept through the proceedings, according to KARE. He later released a statement from jail. 'Earlier this week, I was grieving the horrific acts of violence committed against my friends and colleagues,' he said. 'In the midst of this immense grief, I sent a series of heated and emotional texts to a friend of nearly thirteen years — someone with whom I've shared countless candid and passionate political conversations. In that moment of anguish, I used language that I deeply regret. The words were spoken from pain, not from intent. I am a hurting person, not a violent one.' He went on to say that he is not a violent person. 'I am profoundly sorry that my words have created a distraction during this time of collective mourning. This moment demands unity, compassion, and reflection — and I am committed to being part of that healing.' As his case moves through the court system, Bohn is on administrative leave from the Inter Faculty Organization (IFO), which represents the needs of seven Minnesota state universities. 'We are monitoring developments closely, cooperating as needed with law enforcement and will continue to keep our members informed,' said IFO President Jenna Chernega in a statement to KARE. Bohn's next court date is Aug. 27. This article was originally published on

How the LAPD's protest response once again triggered outrage, injuries and lawsuits
How the LAPD's protest response once again triggered outrage, injuries and lawsuits

Miami Herald

time6 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

How the LAPD's protest response once again triggered outrage, injuries and lawsuits

LOS ANGELES - Bridgette Covelli arrived near Los Angeles City Hall for the June 14 "No Kings Day" festivities to find what she described as a peaceful scene: people chanting, dancing, holding signs. No one was arguing with the police, as far as she could tell. Enforcement of the city's curfew wouldn't begin for hours. But seemingly out of nowhere, Covelli said, officers began to fire rubber bullets and launch smoke bombs into a nearby crowd, which had gathered to protest the Trump administration's aggressive immigration enforcement campaign. Covelli, 23, grabbed an electric bike and turned up 3rd Street, where another line of police blocked parts of the roadway. Deciding to head home, she turned to leave and had made it about two blocks when she felt a shock of pain in her arm as she fell from the bike and crashed to the sidewalk. In a daze, she realized she was bleeding after being struck by a hard-foam projectile shot by an unidentified LAPD officer. They kept firing even as she lay on the ground, she said. "No dispersal order. Nothing at all," she said. "We were doing everything right. There was no aggression toward them." The young tattoo artist was hospitalized with injuries that included a fractured forearm, which has left her unable to work. "I haven't been able to draw. I can't even brush my teeth correctly," she said. She is among the demonstrators and journalists injured this month by LAPD officers with foam projectiles, tear gas, flash-bang grenades and paintball-like weapons that waft pepper spray into the air. Despite years of costly lawsuits, oversight measures and promises by leaders to rein in indiscriminate use of force during protests, the LAPD once again faces sharp criticism and litigation over tactics used during the past two weeks. In a news conference at police headquarters last week, LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell promised "a comprehensive review when this is all done," while also defending officers he said were dealing with "a very chaotic, dynamic situation." Police officials said force was used only after a group of agitators began pelting officers with bottles, fireworks and other objects. At least a dozen police injuries occurred during confrontations, including one instance in which a protester drove a motorcycle into a line of officers. L.A. County prosecutors have charged several defendants with assault for attacks on law enforcement. Behind the scenes, according to communications reviewed by The Times and multiple sources who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, tensions sometimes ran high between LAPD commanders and City Hall officials, who pushed for restraint in the early hours of the protests downtown. On June 6 - the Friday that the demonstrations began - communication records show Mayor Karen Bass made calls to LAPD Capt. Raul Jovel, the incident commander, and to McDonnell. In the days that followed, sources said Bass or members of her senior staff were a constant presence at a command post in Elysian Park, where local and federal officials were monitoring the on-the-ground developments. Some LAPD officials have privately grumbled about not being allowed to make arrests sooner, before protesters poured into downtown. Although mostly peaceful, a handful of those who flooded the streets vandalized shops, vehicles and other property. LAPD leaders have also pointed out improvements from past years, including restrictions on the use of bean-bag shotguns for crowd control and efforts to more quickly release people who were arrested. But among longtime LAPD observers, the latest protest response is widely seen as another step backward. After paying out millions over the last decade for protest-related lawsuits, the city now stares down another series of expensive court battles. "City leaders like Mayor Bass [are] conveniently saying, 'Oh this is Trump's fault, this is the Feds' fault.' No, take a look at your own force," said longtime civil rights attorney James DeSimone, who filed several excessiv force government claims against the city and the county in recent days. Bass said in a statement that she "heard a number of accusations about the LAPD." "[Y]ou can be sure that we will do an evaluation of all of it, because one thing about our city, like a lot of other cities, just about everything is videotaped, including law enforcement and including people who are protesting," the statement said. McDonnell - a member of the LAPD command staff during an aggressive police crackdown on immigrant rights demonstrators on May Day in 2007 - found himself on the defensive during an appearance before the City Council last week, when he faced questions about readiness and whether more could have been done to prevent property damage. "We'll look and see, are there training issues, are there tactics [issues], are there less-lethal issues that need to be addressed," McDonnell told reporters a few days later. One of the most potentially embarrassing incidents occurred during the "No Kings Day" rally Saturday, when LAPD officers could be heard on a public radio channel saying they were taking friendly fire from L.A. County sheriff's deputies shooting so-called less-lethal rounds. Three LAPD sources not authorized to speak publicly confirmed the incident occurred. A spokesperson for the Sheriff's Department said in a statement that the agency "has not received reports of any 'friendly fire' incidents." Some protesters allege LAPD officers deliberately targeted individuals who posed no threat. Shakeer Rahman, a civil rights attorney and community organizer with the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, said he was monitoring a demonstration snaking past LAPD headquarters on June 8 when he witnessed two colleagues who were demanding to know an officer's badge number get shot with a 40mm so-called less-lethal launcher at close range. In a recording he shared of the incident, Rahman can be heard confronting the officer, who threatens to fire as he paces back and forth on an elevated platform. "I'm gonna pop you right now, because you're taking away my focus," the officer is heard saying before raising his weapon over the glass partition that separated them and firing two foam rounds at Rahman, nearly striking him in his groin. "It's an officer who doesn't want to be questioned and knows he can get away with firing these shots," said Rahman, who noted a 2021 court injunction bans the use of 40mm launchers in most crowd-control situations. Later on June 8, as clashes between officers and protesters intensified in other parts of downtown, department leaders authorized the use of tear gas against a crowd - a common practice among other agencies, but one that the LAPD hasn't used in decades. "There was a need under these circumstances to deploy it when officers started taking being assaulted by commercial fireworks, some of those with shrapnel in them," McDonnell said to The Times. "It's a different day, and we use the tools we are able to access." City and state leaders arguing against Trump's deployment of soldiers to L.A. have made the case that the LAPD is better positioned to handle demonstrations than federal forces. They say local cops train regularly on tactics beneficial to crowd control, including de-escalation, and know the downtown terrain where most demonstrations occur. But numerous protesters who spoke with The Times said they felt the LAPD officers were quicker to use violence than they have been at any point in recent years. Raphael Mimoun, 36, followed the June 8 march from City Hall to the federal Metropolitan Detention Center on Alameda Street. Mimoun, who works in digital security, said his group eventually merged with other demonstrators and wound up bottlenecked by LAPD near the intersection of Temple and Alameda streets, where a stalemate with LAPD officers ensued. After roughly an hour, he said, chaos erupted without warning. "I don't know if they made any announcement, any dispersal order, but basically you had like a line of mounted police coming behind the line of cops that were on foot and then they just started charging, moving forward super fast, pushing people, screaming at people, shooting rubber bullets," he said. Mimoun's complaints echoed those of other demonstrators and observations of Times reporters at multiple protest scenes throughout the week. LAPD dispersal orders were sometimes only audible when delivered from an overhead helicopter. Toward the end of Saturday's hours-long "No Kings" protests, many demonstrators contended officers used force against crowds that had been relatively peaceful all day. The LAPD's use of horses has also raised widespread concern, with some protesters saying the department's mounted unit caused injuries and confusion rather than bringing anything resembling order. One video captured on June 8 by independent journalist Tina-Desiree Berg shows a line of officers on horseback advance into a crowd while other officers fire less-lethal rounds at protesters shielding themselves with chairs and road signs. A protester can be seen falling to the ground, seemingly injured. The mounted units continue marching forward even as the person desperately tries to roll out of the way. Several horses trample over the person's prone body before officers arrest them. At other scenes, mounted officers were weaving through traffic and running up alongside vehicles that were not involved with the demonstrations. In one incident on June 10, a Times reporter saw a mounted officer smashing the roof of a car repeatedly with a wooden stick. "It just seems like they are doing whatever the hell they want to get protesters, and injure protesters," Mimoun said. Audrey Knox, 32, a screenwriter and teacher, was also marching with the City Hall group on June 8. She stopped to watch a tense skirmish near the Grand Park Metro stop when officers began firing projectiles into the crowd. Some protesters said officers fired so-called less-lethal rounds into groups of people in response to being hit with flying objects. Although she said she was well off to the side, she was still struck in the head by one of the hard-foam rounds. Other demonstrators helped her get to a hospital, where Knox said she received five staples to close her head wound. In a follow-up later in the week, a doctor said she had post-concussion symptoms. The incident has made her hesitant to demonstrate again, despite her utter disgust for the Trump administration's actions in Los Angeles. "It just doesn't seem smart to go back out because even when you think you're in a low-risk situation, that apparently is not the case," she said. "I feel like my freedom of speech was directly attacked, intentionally." --- (Times staff writers Julia Wick, Connor Sheets and Richard Winton contributed to this report.) Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

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