Home Antioch Antioch: Two Shot in Hudson Ct. Parking Lot Wednesday Morning

Antioch: Two Shot in Hudson Ct. Parking Lot Wednesday Morning

by ECT

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At 3:04 am Wednesday morning, the Antioch Police Department responded to a report of a shooting that occurred in the parking lot at the 3400 Block of Hudson Ct. in Antioch.

Upon arrival, officers located two victims, both of which sustained non-life threatening gunshot wounds. One subject sustained a wound to the face and the other sustained wounds to his legs.

One of the victims was a 46-year-old male who is an Antioch resident and the other victim was a 23-year-old male who is a Pittsburg resident.

Officers and medical personnel rendered medical aid to the victims. One victim refused further medical attention and the other was transported to a local hospital. The responsible was not located. The names of the involved subjects are not being released at this time as the investigation is ongoing.

No further information was provided.

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10 comments

Julio Jun 4, 2014 - 8:08 am

Typical of Hudson Townhouse Manor or what ever they call the public housing now. Been kind of quiet for a while or at least not made the paper.

Recall the whole City coucil Jun 4, 2014 - 8:27 am

Is this 7 shootings less then 3 weeks now? I thought Hudson Ct was already had one shooting 2 weeks ago?

Conrad Diaz Sr. Jun 4, 2014 - 9:35 am

Time to recall the Mayor! And keep recalling until the violence in Antioch is drastically reduced NOW!

recall is the power of the voters, to remove elected officials from office before their term expires as provided in Article 2 of the State Constitution.

Recall Process
Any elected officer, including a person who has been appointed in lieu of an election or to fill a vacancy, can be recalled. (Election Code 11006)

The Recall Process is started by registered voters of the jurisdiction and eligible to vote on the office of the incumbent they seek to recall. They are the proponents and have control over the circulation of and obtaining petition signatures. (EC 11005)

The Registrar of Voters Office is the Elections Official in the case of the recall of local elected officers of:
•County
•School District
•County Board of Education
•Community College District
•Special District
•Judges of Superior Court

Contact the City Clerk in the case of the recall of elective officers of a city. (EC 11002)

Recall Procedures

Preparing the Notice of Intention
•It is the initial step for the proponent interested in the recall of an elected officeholder. The Notice of Intention consists of the following:
◦The name and title of the officer to be recalled.
◦A statement of no more than 200 words expressing the reason for the recall.
◦The printed name, signature and residence address of each of the proponents. The minimum number of proponents shall be ten, or equal to the number of signatures required to have been filed on the nomination paper of the officer to be recalled, whichever is higher.
◦The language contained in Election Code 11023 informing the incumbent of his or her right to file an answer. (Election Code 11020)
◦If more than one officer is being recall, one Notice of Intention for each incumbent is needed. (Election Code 11006)

Serve the Officer Being Recalled
•A copy of the Notice of Intention must be served on the incumbent to be recalled by personal delivery or by certified mail. (Election Code 11021)

File the Notice of Intention and Proof of Service with the Elections Official.
•File the original Notice of Intention with the Elections Official within seven (7) days of the incumbent having been served, along with an affidavit of time and manner of service.
•At the time the Notice of Intention is filed, the Elections Official will verify the word count and that the proponents are registered voters within the district.
•A separate Notice of Intention must be filed for each officer being recalled.

Publish the Notice of Intention at the proponents’ expense.
The proponent is also required to publish, at their expense, the Notice of Intention at least once in a newspaper of general circulation serving the jurisdiction of the incumbent who is being recalled. •If such publication is not possible, the notice shall be posted in at least three (3) public places within the jurisdiction of the officer being recalled. Posting is allowed only if there is no newspaper of general circulation able to provide timely publication in the jurisdiction of the officer being recalled.
•The proponent must file proof of publication or an affidavit of posting the Notice of Intention at the same time that they file two (2) blank copies of the petition with the appropriate Elections Official. Proof of publication can be obtained from the newspaper publisher after the Notice of Intention appears in print.(Election Code 11022)

Answer of incumbent.
•The incumbent has the right to give a response to the grounds for the proposed recall contained in the proponent’s Notice of Intention.
Within seven (7) days after the filing of the Notice of Intention, the officer being recalled may file an answer of not more than 200 words with the Elections Official, and must also serve a copy by personal delivery or certified mail, on one of the proponents named in the Notice of Intention.
•The answer shall be signed and accompanied by the printed name, signature, and business or residence address of the officer being recalled.
•Once all the necessary documents have been filed with the Elections Official, the proponent may begin creating the petition.(Election Code 11023)

Recall Petition – Format and Circulation
Format
•The language, design, and format are provided by the Secretary of State or County Elections Official
•The language, design, and format provided is mandatory and must be used. (Election Codes 100, 100.5, 11040, 11041, 11043, 11043.5 and 11046)
•Before proceeding with circulation of any recall petition, proponents are required to submit their petition form to the Elections Official office for its review and agreement as to whether the petition conforms to the requirements of the Election Code.(EC 11042)
•The petition must be designed so that each signer can affix the required information.
•Each section of the petition must have attached to it a declaration signed by the circulator.
•Within 10 days after the Notice of Intention is filed the proponent shall file two blank copies of the proposed petition with the Elections Official.
•No signatures may be obtained until the form of the petition has been approved by the Elections Official.
Circulation
•The recall petition can be circulated by registered voters in the jurisdiction who are qualified to vote on the office of the incumbent being recalled.
•The recall petition can only be signed by registered voters who are qualified to vote on the office held by the incumbent being recalled.
•The number of valid signatures on a recall petition is based on a percentage of the number of registered voters in the jurisdiction of the incumbent subject to recall. ◦Under 1,000 registered voters – 30% of total registered voters signatures are needed and must be filed with the Election Official within 40 days.
◦1,000 to 9,999 registered voters – 25 % of total registered voters signatures are needed and must be filed with the Election Official within 60 days.
◦10,000 to 49,999 registered voters – 20% of total registered voters signatures are needed and must be filed with the Election Official within 90 days.
◦50,000 to 99,999 registered voters – 15% of total registered voters signatures are needed and must be filed with the Election Official within 120 days.
◦100,000 and above registered voters – 10% of total registered voters signatures are needed and must be filed with the Election Official within 160 days.

Marty Fernandez Jun 4, 2014 - 5:39 pm

Mr Diaz: We don’t recall elected officials unless they do something illegal. Get a grip. There are a lot of other ways to voice your opinion such as GOING TO COUNCIL MEETINGS AND SPEAK TO THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL MEMBERS YOURSELF. That would be a lot more productive.

Deborah Jun 4, 2014 - 3:18 pm

If a person wants to harm another person, this has nothing to do with the mayor. Crimanls do not say “I’m going to commit a crime because I don’t like the mayor.” Crime in a city requires everyone in that community to say enough is enough! People in the community need to be more vigilant, and report suspicious activity to the police before situations escalate. We need to work with the mayor, police, and other city officals to work towards implementing a plan to fight crime in our communities. Recalling the mayor is not the answer. Working with him, the police department, and other city officals is the answer.

Lost hope in Antioch Jun 4, 2014 - 8:46 pm

You know nothing about the inner working of politics. How did we all of a sudden get hit with Low in come housing allowed in newer neighborhoods? Why do you think we don’t have a cap on Low income housing? If you followed all this from the beginning you would know what happened because a small amount of it was in the news papers. Other cities do programs like this too. Take people from the ghettos, dump them in nicer areas to see if it helps them become better citizens. City councils have to agree to it. City needs money, deals are made. Welcome to reality

c Jun 4, 2014 - 5:17 pm

Will you all shut the hell up MOVE! THAN! Shit

RICHARD A. Jun 5, 2014 - 2:27 pm

WAS HERE LONG BEFORE THE BULL CRAP

Reginald Jamal Brown Jun 5, 2014 - 3:05 pm

@C

I think you need to shut up and go back to school. That way you will know the difference between the word then and than.

Typical ghetto.

RICHARD A. Jun 5, 2014 - 2:25 pm

YOU WONDER WHY MORE PEOPLE ARE CARRYING GUNS. I LIVE ( NOT BY CHOICE) IN A BAD NIEGHBORHOOD, BAD APT. COMPLEX, I DONT FEEL SAFE UNLESS I CARRY A GUN. I’M 56, DISABLED AND FORE THE FIRST TIME IN MY LIFE I’M SCARED OF WALKING DOWN THE STREET, GOING TO THE STORE, WALKING AROUND MY COMPLEX ! I CALLED P.D. ONE TIME AND 1 1/2 HOURS LATER THEY CALLED ME BACK AND ASK IF I STILL NEEDED THE POLICE, REALLY ? THERE WHERE GUN SHOTS FIRED !

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