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Gilroy
June 1, 2025

Sex Allegations Rock GPD

Members of the Gilroy Police Department are accused of hosting sex parties, exposing themselves at a Christmas party and having inappropriate relations with young Police Explorers in a suit filed by a police dispatcher who was fired in 2015.

Guest Column: Don’t judge your neighbor from the outside

Hi neighbors. In no way do I want this to come across as some narcissistic ploy to talk about myself. However, sometimes I wonder about my neighbors and so I figured I'd share a little bit of my story.

Help Wanted: Need to write fine lines

Santa Clara County is looking for someone who rhymes...or not.

City will cut and plant new trees

Gilroy officials responded to winning a suit against a resident who wanted the city to stop cutting 235 trees until it gets a second assessment of whether they truly need to be cut.

Slide Show: Kids win National Night Out dance contest

DANCE ON This brother and sister won the top honors at the National Night Out Dance Off Tuesday, a contest judged in part by past and current police chiefs Denise Turner and Scot Smithee. Daniela Zepeda, 4, took first place and her brother, Elijah, took second. His shirt gives his opinion of that.

Story behind Gilroy’s biggest housing complex

Gilroyans say the Alexander Station Apartments, a $95 million project on the corner of 10th Street and Alexander, will be filled with residents bused in from Oakland and will lower the quality of the neighborhood. They say there aren’t enough classrooms for the kids and the future students will be bused to far away schools, rather than those they can walk to.

Free rides: area seniors get on board

Seniors living in Morgan Hill, San Martin and Gilroy, have reason to celebrate. As of July, free door-to-door transportation service to local senior centers is available to them, thanks to Sourcewise, an organization that provides support to seniors and individuals with disabilities, in Santa Clara County.

Car chase proves fatal for local woman

A woman with ties to Gilroy and San Benito County died Saturday, July 22, after a short chase with Gilroy police.A recent press release indicated a police officer attempted to stop the woman, identified as 28-year-old Rya Leonard, at 2:25 p.m. near First Street and Wren Avenue.According to Sgt. Jason Smith, Leonard initially appeared to comply with police.“The officer ran the plate, determined the vehicle was stolen and then when he tried to stop the vehicle, the vehicle initially went at a slow speed and pulled into the CVS parking lot,” said Smith. “She slowed down as if she was going to stop and then sped off.”According to the press release, Leonard then sped away southbound on Wren and crashed into a tree at the corner of Wren Avenue and San Miguel Street, where she was trapped inside the vehicle. Leonard was extricated from the vehicle and suffered from major injuries before dying at a nearby hospital, police say.Smith added that Leonard had a couple warrants for her arrest. “She was on probation for possession of a stolen vehicle,” Smith said. “So we can assume that she knew that vehicle was stolen but unfortunately we didn’t get a chance to talk with her about it.”It was later determined that the plate on the 1990s black Honda was altered to make it appear as if it was a different plate, said Smith.The speeds Leonard was reaching on city streets are unknown.“Seconds before the crash the officer estimated he was travelling approx 60 miles an hour,” said Smith. “To determine the exact speed of her vehicle we have the Major Accident Investigation Team (MAIT) conducting the investigation.”Smith noted that the Gilroy Police Department does have a “comprehensive policy” regarding high speed chases.“The primary purpose of the policy is to provide officers with guidance in balancing the safety of the public and themselves against law enforcement’s duty to apprehend violators of the law,” said Smith.“I would say that deciding whether to pursue a motor vehicle is a critical decision that must be made quickly and under difficult and unpredictable circumstances,” Smith added. “The preliminary facts of the case show the officer was within policy and the law. The final determination will be made once the investigation is completed.”Leonard’s mother Carol Leonard of Tennessee who last spoke with her daughter two months ago said, “Rya was an amazing young lady. She had a heart of gold.”According to her mother, Leonard leaves behind a daughter who will be 10 in August. Leonard did not live with the child. “She loved her daughter more than anything in this world of course,” Carol said. “She loved her brother and sister, Robert and Sarah.”Cousin Todd Leonard of Gustine, California said, “She went to school in both Santa Benito and Santa Clara Counties.”“She went between her mom’s and her dad’s [Gilroy and Hollister],” said Todd. “She had been with her dad from the time she was about 13 or 14.”Leonard’s cousin said she was loyal to her family.“I used to think she was a good kid, but good kids don’t usually go out and steal cars and crash them running from the cops, but she was a caring person,” Todd said. “I wish she cared a little bit more about herself. She had a very hard life and unfortunately there weren’t enough people in her life to give her examples of the right way to do things.”“Rya had a lot of friends and they all loved her she cared about others before caring about herself,” Carol said.

Cal Fire contains blaze near Castro Valley Road

Cal Fire responded to a brush fire near Hwy 101 in Gilroy on Sunday afternoon, July 23. The blaze, known as the Castro Fire, burned south of Gavilan College near Castro Valley Road.According to Cal Fire public information officer Mike Martin the fire, now officially mapped at 125 acres, is 100 percent contained, but not 100 percent controlled.“Some of the areas where the aircraft put out the fire, they are constructing a fireline,” Martin said. “We are in the process of mopping it up before calling it controlled.”Martin, a battalion chief in Alameda county, expects the Cal Fire incident to be completely controlled within one to two days.“Cal Fire deployed 100 firefighters from three agencies Cal Fire, Gilroy fire Department and South Santa Clara County Fire District,” said Martin.Gavilan staff and students can breathe a sigh of relief as the fire had no impact on the campus. Public information officer with Gavilan, Jan Bernstein Chargin said the junior college was prepared in the event there would be any threat to the campus.“I believe Castro Valley Road was closed briefly while they were fighting the fire and the road reopened yesterday evening,” says Bernstein Chargin. “There was no impact to the campus.”Martin attributes the successful containment of the fire to “cooperation amongst all the different jurisdictions. For instance this first was not in the city of Gilroy, but Gilroy sent us considerable resources to help Cal Fire put it out.”According to Martin, the cause of the blaze remains under investigation.

Gilroy’s concrete company rarely does business in Gilroy

On another hot Thursday morning, Don Alvarez, Sr., the owner of Noah Concrete, could have been sitting cool in his office on Rossi Lane. Instead, he was out overseeing the concrete pouring work on a large scale Costco project in South San Francisco. The concrete business is hard work.

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