Tulare County District Attorney's Office

Tulare County District Attorney's Office Welcome to the official page of the Office of the Tulare County District Attorney, Tim Ward Social Media Disclaimer - https://tinyurl.com/2n4w2x9w

Here’s another scam received by TCDA staff, this time through multiple voicemails left only minutes apart from different...
06/12/2026

Here’s another scam received by TCDA staff, this time through multiple voicemails left only minutes apart from different phone numbers.

This one has it all – compromised accounts, large expenditures, name brands, generic connection between the account and you, and a time sensitive call to action. Just enough random information to think it might be legitimate.

Think it might be real? Check your accounts personally or call the business directly and NEVER give out your banking information.

PAROLE DENIED IN 2005 SPOUSAL MURDERTCDA prosecutors have secured a three-year denial of parole for Mark Hicks, age 63, ...
06/09/2026

PAROLE DENIED IN 2005 SPOUSAL MURDER

TCDA prosecutors have secured a three-year denial of parole for Mark Hicks, age 63, for the 2005 murder of his wife. He is currently serving a life sentence at the Correctional Training Facility in . The hearing was heard in front of commissioners via video conference on June 5, 2026, with members of the victim’s family present.

On December 11, 2005, at their residence in , Hicks discovered evidence of alleged infidelity in the marriage. With his 10 and 11-year-old children present in the home, Hicks shot his wife to death with a shotgun. Hicks then called 911 and stated that he committed the crime.

In March of 2007, a Tulare County jury convicted Hicks of second-degree murder with the special allegations that he used a firearm and that he intentionally discharged a firearm causing death. He was sentenced to 40 years to life in prison.

This is Hicks’ first parole hearing under California’s elder parole statutes made into law by AB 3234, which grants a parole hearing when an inmate reaches 50 years old and has served at least 20 continuous years of incarceration.

PAROLE DENIED IN 2006 TULARE GANG SHOOTINGOn June 3, 2026, a California parole board issued a three-year denial of parol...
06/05/2026

PAROLE DENIED IN 2006 TULARE GANG SHOOTING

On June 3, 2026, a California parole board issued a three-year denial of parole for Manuel Garza, age 38. Garza has been incarcerated since 2007 for the shooting of a man in . He is currently serving his sentence at Pleasant Valley State Prison in .

At about 8 pm on April 30, 2006, Tulare Police Department officers were dispatched to reports of a shooting in front of a residence. There they found the victim, and adult male, suffering from a gunshot to the eye.

Through investigation and witness accounts, officers learned that the victim and Garza, a gang member, encountered each other at Cypress Park. The encounter left Garza feeling “disrespected.” Later, Garza was driven to the victim’s home where the two continued to argue. It was then that Garza drew a handgun and shot at the victim three times, striking him in the eye before fleeing. The victim survived. Garza was apprehended on May 9.

In early 2007, Garza pleaded no contest to felony mayhem with the special allegations of personal use of a firearm and street terrorism. The court sentenced him to 38 years in prison.

Garza has been eligible for parole since 2020. While in prison, Garza has demonstrated a lack of self-control when provoked, including battery on another inmate, and was reprimanded for substance abuse.

LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IN GOLDEN WEST TRIPLE MURDERToday in Department 6 of the Tulare County Superior Court, Visalia Divis...
06/04/2026

LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IN GOLDEN WEST TRIPLE MURDER

Today in Department 6 of the Tulare County Superior Court, Visalia Division, Judge Melinda Reed sentenced Cesar Lopez and Mark Aceves, both age 24, to three terms of life in prison without the possibility of parole for the 2020 slayings of three young men during a nighttime drug robbery in .

Before midnight on May 5, 2020, in the parking lot of Golden West High School, three young men were shot and killed. After a significant investigation by local and state law enforcement, Lopez, Aceves, and Abraham Molina, age 24, were arrested for the crime in early 2022. It is alleged that Molina carried out the shootings.

In a two-week court trial ending on May 12, 2026, Judge Reed found Lopez and Aceves guilty of three counts of murder with special allegations that the crime involved a firearm, that there were multiple murders, and the crime was committed during a robbery.

The court found that both Aceves and Lopez acted as major participants in an attempted robbery by conspiring to commit a robbery knowing that a firearm would be used, selecting a dark and secluded location without witnesses to commit the robbery, planning for the use of a getaway vehicle, attempting to solicit a getaway driver (who declined to participate), not attempting to stop the use of the firearm or render aid to the victims following the attempted robbery, and later conspiring to cover up the crime by destroying evidence.

Molina was severed from the case in early 2026. He is scheduled for his own trial in January 2027.

VIOLENT OFFENDER DENIED PAROLE FOR 1998 ATTEMPTED MURDEROn May 28, 2026, a California parole board issued a three-year d...
06/02/2026

VIOLENT OFFENDER DENIED PAROLE FOR 1998 ATTEMPTED MURDER

On May 28, 2026, a California parole board issued a three-year denial of parole for Thonvanh Phutseevong, age 67. Phutseevong has been incarcerated since 1998 for the attempted murder of a man in . He is currently serving a life sentence at the California Health Care Facility in .

Around 7:40 pm on March 8, 1998, Porterville police were dispatched to reports of a gunshot victim lying face down on a sidewalk in front of a residence. The victim had been shot in the lower back area. As he was being attended to, the victim said he had been shot by “Thonvanh,” an acquaintance. According to witness accounts, the victim was in his living room when Phutseevong knocked on the door. When opened, Phutseevong shot at the victim twice with a shotgun, missing both times. The victim then ran out the front door followed by Phutseevong, who fired a third time striking the victim. Phutseevong fled the scene but was arrested a short time later and was identified by witnesses as the shooter.

At his 1998 trial, a jury convicted Phutseevong of attempted murder, burglary, and assault with a firearm along with special allegations of use of a firearm and causing great bodily injury. The court sentenced him to 25 years to life in prison.

While in prison, Phutseevong continued his propensity for violence and incurred numerous rules infractions including the assault of a correctional officer. While incarcerated at the California Training Facility (Soledad) in 2006, Phutseevong killed his cellmate during a fight and was convicted of manslaughter.

This was Phutseevong’s second parole hearing. Phutseevong is currently eligible for parole due to California’s elder parole provisions.

TORCHBEARERSToday members of the TCDA Bureau of Investigations joined with Tulare County law enforcement agencies in sup...
05/26/2026

TORCHBEARERS

Today members of the TCDA Bureau of Investigations joined with Tulare County law enforcement agencies in support of the Special Olympics Law Enforcement torch run through . Great work TCDA BOI on supporting a great cause! 🏆 See less

The solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom. A. Lincoln, 1864
05/25/2026

The solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom.

A. Lincoln, 1864

LIFE IN PRISON WITHOUT PAROLE FOR 2020 MURDER OF TODDLERToday in Department 6 of the Tulare County Superior Court, the c...
05/20/2026

LIFE IN PRISON WITHOUT PAROLE FOR 2020 MURDER OF TODDLER

Today in Department 6 of the Tulare County Superior Court, the court sentenced Ezequiel Carlos Ramirez, age 28, to life in prison without the possibility of parole plus 35 years after pleading guilty to the torture and murder of his 23-month-old son, Joziah, and other crimes.

“There is no closure in a case like this only resolution, closure indicates a neat ending, a finished chapter where pain is packed away. Resolution acknowledges that grief remains, but it changes shape, it becomes something you learn to carry, integrate, and live around rather than something you move past,” Joziah’s family told prosecutors.

*This post contains graphic information*

Ramirez impregnated Joziah’s mother when she was aged 15. At the time of the murder, Ramirez was on parole for robbery and statutory r**e and was in contact with Joziah and the child’s mother despite a parole term prohibiting him from contacting them. Furthermore, Ramirez was engaged in pimping out Joziah’s mother, who had since turned 18, and at least one other woman in Tulare and Fresno counties.

Joziah was almost potty trained and was described as smart and active.

The abuse that culminated in Joziah’s death had been ongoing. Joziah’s mother described maltreatment by Ramirez that ranged from verbal abuse to lifting the child up off the ground by his hair.

On June 5, 2020, the family had relocated from a hotel in to a motel in to continue Ramirez’ pimping and pandering criminal enterprise. While Joziah’s mother was away from the motel room, Ramirez severely abused Joziah. Ramirez did not attempt to aid his son and merely messaged Joziah’s mother to come back. When she returned to the motel, she found Joziah unresponsive and breathing irregularly. There was blood on the bedding and elsewhere in the room. Ramirez told her he had only kicked Joziah in the stomach and forbade her from calling an ambulance. Instead, he called a family friend and told her Joziah fell down some stairs. After deleting data from the phone belonging to Joziah’s mother, Ramirez was recorded on motel surveillance fleeing on foot. Later that night he sent messages to the child’s mother, including “I’m gone,” “I’ll never see u again,” and “I’m so sorry.”

Emergency services and law enforcement were contacted shortly before 11 pm and arrived minutes after Ramirez fled from the motel. Joziah was rushed to Kaweah Health Medical Center and later airlifted to Valley Children’s Hospital where he was pronounced braindead. He passed away on June 9. The number and nature of Joziah’s injuries proved they were the result of inflicted, non-accidental trauma. He had fractures to both sides of his skull, brain swelling and bleeding, fractures to both sides of his ribcage, and bruises, burns, and abrasions to his extremities, limbs, torso, and ge****ls. The injuries, both internal and external, were consistent with being struck, shaken, thrown, kicked, and burned. An autopsy showed the cause of death to be blunt force trauma to the head.

In the early morning hours after the incident, Ramirez called a friend in Fresno to pick him up, claiming he had been in a car accident and needed a ride. On the way back to Fresno, Ramirez was emotional and repeated “I didn’t have to do it” several times. He stayed the night with the friend but departed the next morning leaving behind a duffel bag of clothing spotted with blood.

Ramirez avoided capture for approximately four days. During this time, he continued trying to recruit women for his prostitution operation. Visalia Police Department officers located Ramirez in Fresno with the help of a state fugitive apprehension team and took him into custody on June 9. During a suspect interview, Ramirez initially claimed he had no knowledge of what occurred and denied even being around his child. Confronted with evidence and witness accounts, Ramirez then admitted to being present, but insisted he did not hurt his son “that bad” and “didn’t cause that much damage.”

On day three of jury selection for his March 2026 trial, Ramirez pleaded guilty to first-degree murder with the special circumstance of torture, and seven felony counts of pimping, pandering, and soliciting for prostitution.

“The brutality and callousness of the defendant stand in stark contrast to the innocence and vulnerability of this toddler whose body was bloodied, burned, bruised, and broken by the very person who should have been his protector and caregiver,” said Tulare County District Attorney Tim Ward. “This office is grateful to all those who worked tirelessly for little Joziah. This case has made a profound impact not only on the entire prosecution team but also left a lasting impression on each of those who tended to Joziah in his final hours.”

Joziah’s mother was charged as a codefendant for failing to protect her son from Ramirez. In 2021, she pleaded to felony child endangerment and is scheduled to be sentenced on June 17, 2026, where she faces a maximum sentence of 6 years.

TCDA staff received a new scam text this weekend, this time impersonating the California court system. Like in other phi...
05/18/2026

TCDA staff received a new scam text this weekend, this time impersonating the California court system.

Like in other phishing scams, scammers pose as a government agency and attempt to make the message seem official using the names of alleged court employees and case numbers. As is often the case, the scammer attempts to use authority to issue several threats, and the link provided to transfer funds is convoluted and nonsensical.

Don’t fall victim to these scammers. When in doubt, call the agency or company directly.

TIPTON MAN CONVICTED OF CRIMES AGAINST CHILDRENToday in Department 23 of the Tulare County Superior Court, South County ...
05/15/2026

TIPTON MAN CONVICTED OF CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN

Today in Department 23 of the Tulare County Superior Court, South County Justice Center, TCDA prosecutors secured a guilty verdict against Cristian Alejandro Garcia, age 32, for crimes against children.

At trial, a jury convicted Garcia of nine counts of child molestation with special allegations that there were multiple victims and the conduct was substantial. The crimes were committed against two minor victims under the age of 10 from July 2022 to March 2024 in .

Sentencing is scheduled for July 7, 2026, in Superior Court where Garcia faces life in prison.

Address

Visalia, CA

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Tulare County District Attorney's Office posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Tulare County District Attorney's Office:

Share