The farmworker accused of fatally shooting seven people at two Northern California mushroom farms faced arraignment Wednesday on seven counts of murder, one count of attempted murder and related charges.
Chunli Zhao, 66, of Half Moon Bay is accused of killing five men and two women.
San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said Wednesday that Zhao also faces a special circumstance allegation of multiple murder, as well as sentencing enhancements on each count for the use of a firearm. Zhao could face life in prison without the possibility of parole – or even the death penalty, although Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a moratorium on executions in 2019.
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Former roommate said Zhao threatened and tried to suffocate him
Monday’s deadly attacks at two sites were not the first violent incidents linked to Zhao that were known to law enforcement, though the previous episode did not lead to a loss of life.
In March 2013, his roommate and former coworker Yingjiu Wang applied for a temporary restraining order after accusing Zhao of threatening to “use a kitchen knife to split my head” and trying to suffocate him with a pillow, according to court records acquired by the San Francisco Chronicle.
The pillow attack in Wang’s room evolved into a wrestling match on his bed during which, “while I couldn’t breathe, I used all my might within the few seconds to push him away with my blanket,” Wang wrote in the application, according to the Chronicle.
The restraining order was granted and later extended but expired in July of that year, the Chronicle reported. Wang, whom the newspaper could not reach for comment, said in the request that Zhao was threatening to kill him unless Wang got him his restaurant job back. Zhao also demanded that Wang get his paycheck, although it’s not clear Wang was his supervisor, the Chronicle reported.
Zhao lived on property where first killings took place
Zhao lived at the property where four of the victims were killed, a company spokesman said Wednesday. David Oates told CNN the site, known as Mountain Mushroom Farm before it was acquired by California Terra Garden last year, has three mobile homes and six trailers where some employees live. Zhao was working at the farm, which has about 35 employees, when it was bought, Oates said.
“Everyone had background checks, and there was nothing to indicate anything like this was even a possibility,” Oates said.
Most victims’ names released
The identities of six of the seven victims were released Wednesday by the San Mateo County Coroner’s Office, which said the seventh killed in Monday’s attacks has been tentatively identified. His or her name won’t be released until positive confirmation and notification to relatives.
The six known victims are: Aixiang Zhang, 74, and Zhishen Liu, 73, of San Francisco; Qizhong Cheng, 66, and Jingzhi Lu, 64, of Half Moon Bay; Marciano Martinez Jimenez, 50, of Moss Beach; and Yetao Bing, 43, whose residence is not known. They were all farmworkers.
Could a better mental health system have prevented the violence?
The Half Moon Bay tragedy came two days after a rampage in Monterey Park, almost 400 miles southeast, left 11 people dead. The Half Moon Bay victims were identified as Latino and Asian American farmworkers.
On Twitter, Rep. Grace Meng, D-New York, wondered whether a better mental health services system could have prevented the violence.
“We don’t know motives yet, but I wonder how things could’ve been different had there been a strong mental health and social service network,” Meng wrote. “Yes it’s about gun safety laws, yes it’s about stopping Asian hate, but also a generation of (Asian American Pacific Islander) elders with a life of unaddressed trauma.”
What was grown on the farm where Zhao lived?
The farm primarily grows mushrooms for retail and wholesale customers, Oates said, along with herbs such as basil and oregano. The owners of the farm are bringing in grief counselors for all the employees, Oates said.
“Their goal right now is to try to bring everybody together to start a long healing process,” Oates said. “They look at team members more like family.”
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How did the shooting take place?
The attacks began Monday at a mushroom farm where Zhao was employed, authorities said. Police called to the scene shortly after 2 p.m. found four workers dead of gunshot wounds and another worker seriously injured. The suspect then proceeded to Concord Farms, a short drive down the road, where three more people were killed, authorities said.
Some workers lived on the premises and children may have witnessed the shooting, authorities said. The suspect was arrested in his vehicle, parked outside a sheriff’s substation, at about 4:40 pm. Video of the arrest has been widely circulated on social media.
“All of the evidence we have points to this being the instance of workplace violence,” the sheriff said.
Contributing: The Associated Press