Got a warrant? Take advantage of ‘Operation Second Chance’
Santa Clara County residents with warrants for their arrest will have the opportunity to spend the holidays with their families instead of in jail as local law enforcement agencies offer certain offenders a “second chance.”From Dec. 1 to Dec. 31, individuals with non-violent misdemeanor criminal and traffic warrants can receive a citation with a new court date instead of being booked into the County Jail, according to a press release from the Sheriff’s Office.The sheriff’s office as well as Morgan Hill and Gilroy police departments are participating in the warrant program, known as Operation Second Chance. Individuals can go to any law enforcement agency in the county to receive their warrant citation, which will require a “promise to appear” court date, authorities said.Operation Second Chance is directed toward most misdemeanor warrants, regardless of the bail amount, according to the press release. This includes warrants stamped “no cite and release” and “no bail.”The following warrants do not qualify for the program, according to the sheriff’s office:—Felony warrants—Any warrant involving violence (including all domestic violence warrants)—Any warrant involving a firearm—Any warrant involving resisting arrest—Any warrant involving giving false information to an officer.Individuals with these types of warrants are nonetheless encouraged to take this opportunity to turn themselves in so they can take care of their matter, authorities said.Over the past 10 years, more than 2,800 people have taken advantage of Operation Second Chance by self-surrendering, according to authorities.Anyone with questions about Operation Second Chance can contact the sheriff’s office at (408) 808-4717.Individuals eligible for Operation Second Chance can turn themselves in at the following South County locations, or any police or sheriff’s office throughout the county:—Sheriff’s Office South County Substation, 80 W. Highland Ave., San Martin—Gilroy Police Department, 7301 Hanna Street, Gilroy—Morgan Hill Police Department, 16200 Vineyard Blvd., Morgan Hill.
$36,000 award for Jewish teen leaders
Know a socially-minded teen with a passion for repairing the world? The Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Awards is seeking nominations of Jewish teens with exceptional community service/social change projects that embody the value of tikkun olam, repairing the world. Nominations for the awards present an opportunity for educators, civic leaders and teen mentors to acknowledge Jewish teens whose thoughtful approach to making a difference is creating meaningful change, whether locally, nationally or globally. The Helen Diller Family Foundation will recognize up to 15 recipients for its 2015 Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Awards with $36,000 each.
Holiday Weekend July 4th
During this long 4th of July weekend, please keep your cats indoors-only, and keep your dogs indoors as much as possible, too. If you take your dog out, please keep him on a leash. Firecrackers (the “safe and sane” legal version, or the illegal varieties) make a lot of noise, and most dogs and cats are very stressed by the noise. So please keep them indoors, so they don’t panic, run away and become lost.
An action-packed Fourth
With Fourth of July weekend celebrations blasting off today, we want to help you whoop it up. Whether you find yourself in South County or if you’re spending the weekend in Hollister, you’ll find everything you need to know about holiday weekend events right here.
Police cracking down on 4th of July drunk driving
Motorists heading onto the roadway under the influence of alcohol or drugs should think twice before getting behind the wheel.
Court orders unsealing of documents in Sierra LaMar case
A Santa Clara County Superior Court judge ruled that the grand jury transcript in the indictment of Antolin Garcia Torres shall be unsealed at a June 27 hearing at the Hall of Justice in San Jose. The decision, if upheld following a possible appeal, will for the first time allow the disclosure of the details of at least some of the evidence that investigators say links Garcia Torres, 22 of Morgan Hill, to the kidnapping and murder of Sierra LaMar. The judge’s ruling was stayed until July 11 in order to give Garcia Torres and his defense team a chance to appeal and keep the records sealed, according to Santa Clara County Deputy District Attorney David Boyd. Garcia Torres has been held without bail Santa Clara County Jail for more than two years awaiting trial on charges that he kidnapped and murdered Sierra, who disappeared from her north Morgan Hill home when she was 15 years old March 16, 2012. The criminal grand jury indicted Garcia Torres on the charges in February, and he pleaded not guilty in a superior court hearing a few days later. In May, the D.A.’s office announced prosecutors will seek the death penalty for the suspect. The motion to unseal the nearly 2,000-page transcript was filed by the San Joe Mercury News shortly after the grand jury indicted Garcia Torres. The newspaper enlisted retired political science professor Edward J. Bronson of San Jose State University to conduct an analysis of past publicity of the case since the day Sierra disappeared. The purpose of this analysis was to demonstrate that releasing information from the grand jury files would not negatively impact the defendant’s right to a fair trial, as Garcia Torres’ attorneys have argued. A previous court ruling in the case has upheld the defendant’s desire to keep the grand jury files secret until now. Boyd declined to comment further on the June 27 ruling, and he did not argue against or in support of unsealing the grand jury documents. Garcia Torres’ attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether or not they plan to appeal the decision. So far, Santa Clara County Sheriff’s investigators have released little information about the evidence they have which allegedly connects Garcia Torres to Sierra and her disappearance. Investigators have said in the initial days of the search, they found Sierra’s cell phone and bag containing some of her belongings in different areas on the side of the roads near her home. Sheriff Laurie Smith also told reporters after Garcia Torres’ arrest that they found the suspect’s DNA on Sierra’s belongings, and Sierra’s DNA in Garcia Torres’ red Volkswagen. Investigators have not specified what kind of DNA they found. Authorities think Sierra, a sophomore at Sobrato High School at the time, disappeared while walking to her school bus stop near the intersection of Palm and Dougherty avenues March 16, 2012. Although neither her remains nor any evidence of her whereabouts have been located, investigators think she is dead. Volunteers continue to search for Sierra every Saturday morning. The volunteer searchers meet at 9 a.m. Saturdays at the former site of Central High School, at 17960 Monterey Road.
She’s Painting the Town
Judy Goularte, owner of Hollister Paint Company Inc., was a single mother with a 4-year-old son, Lance, and 10-year-old daughter, Ali, when she began to work for her family’s business in the early 1980s.










