Questions Raised About Yolo County Juries Stem From Galvan, Other Cases
Last week the Vanguard reported on the second mistrial in the case of brothers Ernesto and Fermin Galvan. This was a clear case of excessive force on the part of West Sacramento Police. The Vanguard will continue to analyze the case itself, however, at this time the concern arises about the jury and their handling of this matter.
There were critical questions that had to be determined in this matter, it involved a portion of the law that requires keen judgment a discernment of facts.
For the second consecutive year, Yolo County is having to cut 20 million dollars from its general fund budget. This is going to take a huge toll as we will discuss later on the vital county services. It will also result in cutbacks to law enforcement.
After nearly five years, the trial opens for Fermin Galvan-Magana and his brother Ernesto who face counts of resisting arrest and battery on police officers for an incident that occurred back in 2005.
A Davis resident and mother of a teenage son was stunned to learn that her son would be facing 10 felonies including 5 gang enhancements for his role in a fistfight in front of her Davis home. As the Vanguard soon learned, her son would not be alone. Is this part of a new rising gang threat in Davis or simply a matter of the Davis Police Department and the Yolo County District Attorney’s Office overreacting to relatively minor offenses by tacking on gang enhancements?
On Thursday, Jonathan Raven from the Yolo County District Attorney’s office announced that the Yolo County DA’s Office had declined to file charges against James Marchbanks, a graduate assistant who had allegedly made a bomb threat to his students on the last day of class back in December.


It was a fact first mentioned in the December Sacramento Bee article on District Attorney Jeff Reisig that the number of felony trials in Yolo County has risen from 30 or 40 a year to 120 a year since Reisig took over. The result of that is that Monroe Detention center is no longer heavily backed up and the process has been streamlined.
A pretty good article earlier this week in the Davis Enterprise on the rape case of three men who had been accused of rape, sodomy, kidnapping and charged with 63 counts. Sound familiar? Except this time the accused facing near certain life times, were found innocent by a court of law that issued the verdict on Tuesday.
This past weekend, the Woodland Daily Democrat printed an op-ed of mine on the issue of the District Attorney’s Office report on the shooting of Luis Gutierrez. I did not replicate the article here due to the fact that I have said everything on these pages that I did in the op-ed and more so.
The parents of Ricardo Abrahams have settled a portion of their law suit, the portion that sued the city of Woodland and four police officers for the tasering incident on May 28, 2008 where Mr. Abrahams eventually died not from the Taser strikes but rather from positional asphyxia–being improperly handcuffed in a prone position. The coroner concluded that the weight of the victim contributed to his death.