ELDERLY MAN CHARGED WITH MURDER IN DEADLY SHOOTING OF WOMAN IN FREMONT

ELDERLY MAN CHARGED WITH MURDER IN DEADLY SHOOTING OF WOMAN IN FREMONT

 

 

January 5, 2026

 

Oakland, CA — Today, District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson announced that the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office has filed a murder charge against Richard Hocking (93) for the deadly shooting of his 86-year-old wife in Fremont.

 

Mr. Hocking has been charged with murder. The charge also includes a sentencing enhancement for the intentional use of a firearm.

 

The complaint alleges that on January 3, 2026, Mr. Hocking did unlawfully, with malice aforethought, murder the victim, his wife. It is further alleged that Mr. Hocking used a firearm during the commission of this crime.

 

Richard Hocking will be arraigned at 9 AM on Tuesday, January 6, 2026, in Department 702 at the East County Hall of Justice in Dublin.

 

 

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Contact: damedia@acgov.org 

DA URSULA JONES DICKSON ANNOUNCES LAWSUIT AGAINST UBER TECHNOLOGIES, INC., AND UBER USA, LLC

DA URSULA JONES DICKSON ANNOUNCES LAWSUIT AGAINST UBER TECHNOLOGIES, INC., AND UBER USA, LLC

 Lawsuit Alleges that Uber Used Deceptive Enrollment, Billing, and Cancellation Practices in Offering Its Subscription Service, Uber One

December 17, 2025

Oakland, CA —District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson announced that the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office is part of a coalition of law enforcement agencies representing 21 states and the District of Columbia that joined a lawsuit previously filed by the Federal Trade Commission against Uber Technologies, LLC and Uber USA, LLC, the operators of the popular rideshare and delivery company. The lawsuit is pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, with a trial currently scheduled for February 2027.

The lawsuit alleges that Uber used a variety of deceptive and unfair practices in offering and selling Uber One subscription services, which Uber promotes as saving money on rides and deliveries. Among other things, the lawsuit alleges that Uber improperly used negative option marketing tactics when it offered free trial subscriptions – a practice that automatically charges consumers if they do not cancel a free trial. The lawsuit alleges Uber misled consumers about the amounts they could save when subscribing to Uber One and that the company made it extraordinarily difficult to cancel Uber One once enrolled. The complaint also alleges that Uber charged consumers before their billing date, including users whose free trial had not yet ended.

“Consumers deserve honesty and transparency in the marketplace,” said DA Jones Dickson. “We take these allegations seriously and will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to protect consumers from misleading and unlawful conduct.”

For information on filing a consumer complaint, contact the Alameda County Consumer Environmental Worker Protection Division:

Mailing address: 7677 Oakport Street, Suite 650
Oakland, CA 94621

Phone: (510) 383-8600
Fax: (510) 383-8615
Email: askcepd-da@acgov.org

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Contact: damedia@acgov.org 

DISTRICT ATTORNEY URSULA JONES DICKSON ANNOUNCES INDICTMENT OF ALAMEDA COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES RELATED TO THE DEATH OF MAURICE MONK

December 16, 2025 

Oakland, CA — Today, Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dixon announced that a criminal grand jury has indicted three Alameda County deputy sheriffs for the in-custody death of Maurice Monk.  

The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office sought grand jury indictments for deputies Robinderpal Singh Hayer, Thomas Mower, and Donall Rowe.  All three men were indicted and arraigned on charges of Dependent Elder Abuse, a violation of Penal Code section 368(b)(1) at the Rene C. Davidson courthouse.  In addition, Robinderpal Singh Hayer was indicted and arraigned on an additional felony, Falsification of an Official Document, a violation of Government Code section 6200.  

All three defendants remain out of custody, having posted bail set by the court.  

 

 

Contact: damedia@acgov.org 

  

Official Statement from Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson

Statement from District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson:

December 12, 2025

This moment is one of the most solemn and difficult in my career, and I know it is infinitely more so for the family and loved ones of Steven Taylor. I have met with Steven’s family multiple times, most recently this week.  Their pain is not abstract; it is palpable.  Their unwavering cry for justice for Steven is not just heard by this office—it is understood, and it resonates deep within the heart of this institution.

The greatest honor of my job is offering solace and helping victims and their families navigate the crushing challenges of loss.  Conversely, the deepest agony is when I cannot deliver the resolution and certainty they so desperately deserve.  After the most extensive and deliberate evaluation, I must share a profoundly difficult decision.  As your District Attorney, I swore an oath to be fair and impartial, to follow prosecutorial ethics, and to uphold the law—and I will never play politics with justice.  As tempting as it may be to seek any outcome that might ease the grief of a family, I will not put my finger on the scales of justice to engineer an unjust result.

The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office has filed a motion to dismiss the case People v. Fletcher, docket 20-CR-011755.  This request, filed on December 9, 2025, to be heard today, December 12, 2025, is a conclusion founded purely on a meticulous, objective evaluation of the evidence and the applicable law.

My mission is to rebuild an office that truly embodies the spirit of Marsy’s Law—one that fiercely protects the rights of victims.  But that commitment must be balanced by the ethical and legal mandates that all prosecutors swear to uphold.

This case was inherited by my administration, initially charged with manslaughter on September 2, 2020.  Even the judge who heard the preliminary examination in July 2021, while finding the legal standard of probable cause was met, explicitly commented on the weakness of the evidence, stating that he did not believe a jury would find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the required standard for trial.

The unfortunate procedural history of this case cannot be ignored. On March 22, 2024, the Price Administration was recused from this prosecution because the previous District Attorney was operating outside the appropriate legal function, effectively treating this case as a political matter.  These actions made it fundamentally impossible to ensure Mr. Fletcher would receive a fair trial.

Following the recall and my subsequent appointment as District Attorney, the recusal was reviewed.  On September 12,2025, the recusal was withdrawn and the prosecution returned to this office.

It is an absolute truth that the loss of Steven Taylor’s life is a tragedy.  However, this office cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime was committed.  Our comprehensive review of the evidence brought to light a deeply troubling and fundamental ethical violation:  exculpatory evidence was withheld from the defense by prosecutors operating under the immediate previous administration.  Prosecutorial ethics and established discovery laws demand that we provide all evidence that tends to show a defendant did not commit a crime.  This obligation is non-negotiable.  We discovered that prior prosecutors consulted with at least three separate expert witnesses.

  • Two of these experts asserted that former Officer Fletcher committed a justified homicide due to the threat of imminent harm;
  • The third expert, while more nuanced, also concluded that Fletcher acted reasonably when provided with all the facts.

The expert statements and reports are profoundly exculpatory and were withheld from the defense.  Furthermore, the defense’s own expert reached the same conclusion: justified homicide.

The existence of this evidence cannot be disregarded.  The prior prosecutors under the Price administration responsible for this ethical breach no longer work here.  In a recent hearing, which was prompted by the defense’s motion to dismiss, when questioned about the handling of this exculpatory evidence, they invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to insulate themselves from the possibility of criminal prosecution.

The people of Alameda County deserve and expect a justice system that follows the law in every case, without exception.  I understand the history.  This case was charged and compromised before I arrived.  But it is my solemn obligation to evaluate the facts before us now.  And those facts, including the statements from civilian witnesses, expert opinions, and the ethical failures that tainted this case, are simply not sufficient to prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt.   We will not prosecute persons where the evidence is insufficient.  Criminal prosecution must never be used for political expediency or personal bias.

This decision is not a reflection of a lack of compassion; it is a profound declaration of our commitment to the Rule of Law.  I hope that all parties involved in this devastating matter may find a path toward healing.

 

Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson 

 

 

Contact: damedia@acgov.org