A 46-year-old man was shot and killed while hanging out in the
Aloha Club, near the edge of downtown Gilroy Tuesday night.
A 46-year-old man was shot and killed while hanging out in the Aloha Club, near the edge of downtown Gilroy Tuesday night.

About 8:36 p.m., police received a call from an employee at the club that a man had been shot, Gilroy police Sgt. Jim Gillio said. Police arrived at the bar three minutes later to find the victim dead in the bar, which is at 7287 Monterey St., near its corner with Seventh Street. Police would not confirm that the man was shot in the head at close range.

Police did not have a clear description of the shooter, who fled before police arrived, but they expected to have a sketch of the man by the end of today or Thursday, Gillio said.

“The (46-year-old) was drinking a bottle of water and playing pool five minutes before,” said Steven Hernandez – who is the son of the club’s owner and who was outside the bar during the shooting. “He’s not even a drinker”

The man, whose name Hernandez did not know, had been going to the bar “for a while.”

As for the shooter, “they weren’t drinking here, they’re not customers here,” Hernandez said.

The shooter entered the bar, which had about a “half-dozen people” in it, walked up to the 46-year-old and without a word shot him at close range, Hernandez said. The man then fled out the back of the bar, Gillio said.

It was unclear as of early Wednesday morning motive the shooter had for the killing, though police believe it was not gang-related, Gillio said.

“Somebody had a personal vendetta against this guy,” Hernandez said. “It’s not even bar-related. It could’ve happened at Wal-Mart, it could’ve happened here,” he said, pointing at the concrete outside a juice shop adjacent to the club.

Hernandez’ mother, Doris Ortiz, who owns the club, stopped by the bar to drop off some supplies about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, she said.

“It was quiet last night,” Ortiz said this morning. “It’s a pretty regular clientele.”

The dead man has already been identified, but Gillio did not know whether his family had been notified of his death. The Santa Clara County Coroner’s Office planned to perform an autopsy this morning.

The bar – long and narrow, with a worn wooden bar with stools running along the left side – attracts a mostly male crowd that plays pool, sits or picks songs on the jukebox in the larger back area illuminated by a couple of sky lights. Perched above the end of the bar is an old television, which often shows soccer matches in Spanish.

The area around the club was quiet Wednesday morning, with nearby A1 Cuts, Garcia’s Club and Restaurant, and Baha Burgers closed. Employees and customers at the juice stand and grocery store, both on the same side of the same block, and people waiting at the CalTrain station across Monterey Street had not heard about the shooting.

Lillian Crocker was in her home on Seventh Street next door to Baha Burgers Tuesday night during the shooting, but the elderly woman who enjoys crosswords and has lived here her whole life said she was either watching basketball on television or talking on the phone during the incident.

“Jiminy Cricket … Jiminy Cricket,” she repeated with wide eyes and her hand held over her mouth Wednesday morning when she heard the news. “My gosh, what’s wrong with people these days? My gosh.”

Further downtown, business employees and customers were similarly unaware of the previous night’s events. Some had heard sirens, but did not know any details. Activity continued at its typical moderate pace and Councilman Bob Dillon believed that the incident, provided police do not find that it was gang-related, will not change that.

“These things are going to happen and thankfully it’s seldom enough,” he said.

The shooting death is the first slaying of 2009. Last year, there were three deaths – two by shooting and one by stabbing – and the previous year there was one gruesome stabbing death in the downtown.

“I think it’s too few to call a trend,” Dillon said. “It makes our stats look bad but it’s too few.”

Dillon did not expect any change in police policy following the incident.

“I don’t know how any active policing can stop that kind of thing,” he said.

Staff writers Sara Suddes and Chris Bone contributed reporting to this story.

Killings in Gilroy in the past two years

Osiris Quintero Munoz is about to go on trial murder in the stabbing death of 26-year-old Juan DeDios Arvizu Cabrera, who died outside the Rio Nilo bar and nightclub in downtown the morning of March 16, 2008. He will next appear in court 9 a.m. May 7.

In the afternoon of Sept. 29, 2008, Francisco Rodriguez Lopez, 19, was shot and killed while driving around north Gilroy. Someone in a separate car – carrying an unknown number of suspects – fired a pistol into the vehicle Lopez was traveling in. Lopez was hit before the unknown driver of the car he was in took him to a nearby hospital, where he died shortly thereafter.

In the final killing of 2008, 18-year-old Larry Martinez was shot and killed just a block from the Gilroy Police Department in what appeared to be a gang strike in early November. The three men who approached Martinez before the shooting have not yet been identified by police.

In 2007, the only slaying was the gruesome stabbing death of a middle age Gilroyan namedJuan Lugo. Lugo was found in the alley behind La Colonia Latina, 7261 Monterey St., his wallet and bike left with his body.

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