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staysblazed_xo

♥ ⁴²⁰ queen ♥
"Two sergeants patrolling the area of Diamond and Bosworth streets arrested Peter Rocha, a 53-year-old San Francisco resident who matched a suspect description from the scene of the assault, according to San Francisco police.

Officers responded around 8:15 a.m. Monday to a reported assault on the unit block of Elk Street, where they found the 94-year-old man suffering from a head injury. He was taken to a hospital where he later died.

The name of the man killed was not immediately released.

Rocha was taken into custody later Monday and booked on suspicion of homicide, assault with a deadly weapon and elder abuse, police said."

L I N K !!

DRD1h.webp
 
@Crazy Cat Lady

This one is crazy - I think California is just one cesspool of inner hatred. If this is the case why let the man out
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A mentally ill homeless man who frequents Glen Park and spent a year in jail and a year in a locked psychiatric ward after an elderly resident died subsequent to an altercation with him, is back in the neighborhood.

On June 10, Peter Rocha was acquitted of murder in the May 2020 death of Leo Hainzl in Glen Canyon Park. Rocha, who often slept outside of St. John School on Chenery Street, had been a fixture in the neighborhood for several years prior to Hainzl’s death and was known to menace residents, particularly those with dogs.

Rocha was arrested and jailed after the incident. In September 2020 he was deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial and was ordered to be detained in a locked psychiatric facility for up to two years. Due to a shortage of available beds, compounded by COVID-19, Rocha remained in San Francisco county jail until he was transferred to a hospital in December 2020.

He was subsequently put on trial, acquitted, and released back into the community on June 11 without any resources to help him with his ongoing mental illness and homelessness. It should be noted that Rocha has declined services in the past.

For further background read a Glen Park News story about Hainzl published several days after he died, a column by the Chronicle’s Heather Knight, and a post by Glen Park News editor Elizabeth Weise.

According to District 8 Public Safety Liaison Dave Burke, since his release Rocha has been spotted in Glen Canyon Park by a few neighbors, one of whom said he yelled at her from a distance about her dog. Since he’s been acquitted, there’s nothing the police and legal system can do. However, Burke and Supervisor Mandelman said they are going to lean hard on the Department of Public Health to get Rocha some kind of mental health services and hopefully find him shelter away from our neighborhood.

At the monthly Ingleside Station Community Meeting on June 21, it was stated that there is no way to require Rocha to leave Glen Park because he is currently doing nothing illegal. SFPD and Supervisor Mandelman have been doing aggressive outreach to get mental health services to Rocha. SFPD Sgt. Christina O’Bannon and Dave Burke have both been to Glen Park looking for him.

Rocha has been seen by park employees who are familiar with him from two years ago. According to Glen Canyon Park recreation center staff, Rocha sleeps in the park, spends lots of time in the bathroom in the morning, and hangs out in the park the rest of the day. Sgt. O’Bannon, Captain Lew, and Burke are contacting the Veterans Administration (Rocha is a former Marine.), the SFPD Crisis Intervention Team and the Department of Public Health to get him help.

Apparently, he looks much the same as he did before, according to park employees.
Residents are advised to steer clear of Rocha if they see him. If he (or anyone else for that matter) acts in a violent or threatening manner, call 911.

A San Francisco jury found Peter Rocha not guilty of murder and all felony charges in the accidental death of an elderly Glen Park resident, Leo Hainzl. The jury convicted Mr. Rocha on one count of misdemeanor assault for swinging his crutch toward Mr. Hainzl as the two men engaged in a brief confrontation near the entrance of Glen Canyon Park where Mr. Hainzl was walking his dog. Deputy Public Defender Will Helvestine argued, and medical evidence and witness testimony showed, that Mr. Hainzl suffered a mortal fall when he tripped on a curb and hit his head on the steep hill of Elk Street after he had walked more than 30 feet away from Mr. Rocha.


“While Mr. Hainzl’s death was a tragedy, it was a tragic accident. The jury did the right thing in avoiding another tragedy by finding Mr. Rocha not guilty of a murder he did not commit,” said Public Defender Mr. Helvestine.


Mr. Rocha is a military veteran and former martial arts teacher whose life drastically changed in the early 2000s when he began suffering from mental illness. For several years, he has mostly lived outside in the Glen Park area and many neighbors recognize him as a vulnerable member of the community.


On March 25, 2020, Mr. Rocha was sitting on a bench in Glen Canyon Park when Mr. Hainzl came walking down the path with his large dog. Separate witnesses heard a brief commotion of barking and voices, and then saw Mr. Rocha swing his crutch in the air. The witness who was closer to the incident testified that the crutch did not make physical contact with Mr Hainzl. Both witnesses saw the men separate uninjured. The second witness called 911 only after she saw Mr. Hainzl trip and fall on his head as he was looking back up the hill for his dog. This was after Mr. Hainzl had walked at least 30 feet away from where he’d encountered Mr. Rocha. Mr. Hainzl died at the hospital several hours later.


Mr. Rocha’s arrest made headlines, and he was later charged with murder and detained without bail despite early evidence that this had been an accidental death. Initially, a judge found him incompetent to stand trial, but he remained in jail for over a year due to the lack of space at the state psychiatric hospital. He was later hospitalized for three months before being found competent to stand trial, but his trial was delayed due to the growing backlog of cases in San Francisco Superior Court. He will now be released from jail and plans to seek medical help at the Veterans Administration.


“We live in a state where mental healthcare is so severely underfunded, that many of our most vulnerable community members end up unnecessarily incarcerated, and even the courts can’t guarantee access to the care they may need when there is a supply deficit of beds and services,” said Doug Welch, a Felony Manager at the Public Defender’s Office. “I commend Mr. Helvestine and his team, who were able to reveal the truth to the jury and have worked hard over the past two years to support Mr. Rocha throughout his incarceration in this devastating case.”
 
@Crazy Cat Lady

This one is crazy - I think California is just one cesspool of inner hatred. If this is the case why let the man out
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@Sugar Cookie, although Rocha has been diagnosed as mentally ill, he won’t help himself. He’s resisted all the help he was offered and declined services. And he seems to have a real hatred of dogs. I really think he should be institutionalized.



 
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