Mexican Man Charged With Killing Cop Gets Mental Health Exam

Mexican Man Charged With Killing Cop Gets Mental Health Exam
Photo provided by the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department shows Gustavo Perez Arriaga. (Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department/AP)
The Associated Press
1/3/2019
Updated:
1/3/2019

MODESTO—A Mexican national accused of living in the United States illegally was charged with murder on Jan. 2, in the shooting death of a California police officer who pulled him over to check if he was driving drunk.

Gustavo Perez Arriaga made his first court appearance in the central California city of Modesto but did not enter a plea in last week’s killing of Cpl. Ronil Singh of the tiny Newman Police Department.

Perez Arriaga’s attorney, Stephen Foley, questioned his client’s mental competency, leading the court to delay the case until the suspect gets a mental health evaluation, The Modesto Bee newspaper reported.

Perez Arriaga told the judge that his real name is Paulo Virgen Mendoza, but authorities were still referring to him as Perez Arriaga. A complaint lists three aliases for him, including Paulo Virgen Mendoza.

Singh’s family and several of the Police Department’s 12 officers attended the hearing. Dozens of people stood outside the courthouse holding signs that read, “Justice for Cpl. Ronil Singh” and “Back the Blue.”

People hold flags and signs on Jan. 2, 2019, outside the Stanislaus County Superior courthouse in Modesto, Calif., where formal charges were filed against Gustavo Perez Arriaga. (Andy Alfaro/The Modesto Bee/AP)
People hold flags and signs on Jan. 2, 2019, outside the Stanislaus County Superior courthouse in Modesto, Calif., where formal charges were filed against Gustavo Perez Arriaga. (Andy Alfaro/The Modesto Bee/AP)

Perez Arriaga is set to return to court Feb. 7, when a court-appointed doctor will provide a report on his mental health, said John Goold, a spokesman for the Stanislaus County District Attorney’s Office.

Perez Arriaga was arrested Friday, Dec. 28, after a dayslong manhunt as he prepared to flee to Mexico, officials said. He has two previous drunken driving arrests, authorities say.

The case has rekindled a debate over California’s sanctuary law that limits cooperation with federal immigration authorities. President Donald Trump seized on the case to call for tougher border security amid a fight with congressional Democrats over funding for a border wall, which has forced a partial government shutdown.

Singh was also an immigrant, coming to the United States legally from his native Fiji to pursue his dream of serving in law enforcement, authorities said. He joined the Newman police force in 2011. The 33-year-old was married and had a 5-month-old son.

Two of Perez Arriaga’s brothers, his girlfriend, and four others were arrested on suspicion of helping him evade authorities.