Mountain View

Man Pleads Not Guilty in Alleged Shooting of San Diego Police Officer in Mountain View

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Prosecutors said Garcia was lying in wait behind a building before shooting the officer, NBC 7’s Artie Ojeda reports.

A man who allegedly shot and wounded a San Diego police officer following a car chase in a stolen vehicle pleaded not guilty Wednesday to charges that include attempted murder of a peace officer.

Andrew Garcia, 21, was taken into custody on Monday morning after a nine-hour standoff at a vacant Mountain View town home.

After allegedly leading police on a high-speed, hour-long pursuit that started in Barrio Logan, police say, Garcia abandoned the car in the Mountain View neighborhood and ran.

Officers chased after Garcia, who allegedly waited around the corner of an apartment building for the pursuing officers to appear.

When Officer Javier Hernandez rounded the corner, Garcia allegedly shot him once in the chest and twice in the arm with an unserialized "ghost gun."

Deputy District Attorney Clay Biddle said in court that the officer is recovering and "his prognosis looks good, but the longterm prognosis is unknown at this time." The round that struck the lawman in the chest hit his bulletproof vest.

Garcia then holed up in a building on South 44th Street, SDPD Lt. Steve Shebloski said. Officers surrounded the residence and called in a SWAT team.

In the late morning, officers conducting surveillance on the townhouse saw that the suspect was lying on the floor inside it, Shebloski said. Several SWAT officers went into the home with a police dog, finding the suspect unconscious, according to the lieutenant.

Biddle alleged that during the standoff, Garcia "ingested a lot of narcotics, possibly in an attempt to overdose." He was given Narcan and revived, police said.

Garcia has been hospitalized since Monday and was arraigned remotely Wednesday afternoon from a hospital bed.

The prosecutor alleged that during his hospitalization, Garcia "told an officer who he was upset with, 'I wish you were the one that turned that corner."'

Along with the attempted murder count, Garcia is charged with assault on a peace officer with a semi-automatic firearm, shooting at an inhabited dwelling, reckless evading, vehicle theft and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

He faces 43 years to life in state prison if convicted of all counts and will be held in custody without bail when he is able to be moved out of the hospital.

The prosecutor said that at the time of Monday's events, Garcia was on probation for an East County case in which he fled from officers.

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