
Vallejo police make arrest in deadly triple shooting at homeless encampment
With the help of U.S. Marshals, police arrested 45-year-old Eddie Charles Sample during an operation Wednesday at a location on Cravath Street on Treasure Island. Sample was taken into custody without incident.
Police said Sample is connected to a shooting that took place at an encampment near Sacramento Street and Daniels Avenue on May 26. According to officers, three adult males were found with gunshot wounds around 5:30 p.m.
Officers rendered medical aid to the victims until medical personnel arrived. Two of the victims were pronounced dead at the scene, while the third victim was taken to a hospital with a life-threatening injury.
Police did not release the identities of the victims.
Following the shooting, investigators identified Sample as the suspect. On May 30, detectives obtained an arrest warrant and requested assistance from the U.S. Marshals Service in locating him, citing public safety concerns.
"The Vallejo Police Department will continue to direct every available resource toward holding violent offenders accountable and protecting our community. I want to thank the U.S. Marshals Service and our officers for their coordinated efforts and swift action in safely apprehending the suspect responsible for this senseless act of violence," Chief Jason Ta said in a statement Thursday morning.
Sample was booked into the Solano County Jail on suspicion of murder. Jail records show he is being held without bail, with a court appearance scheduled for Friday afternoon.
Anyone with additional information about the case is asked to contact Detective William Carpenter or Detective Wesley Pittman over email or by calling 707-651-7146 for Carpenter or 707-334-1274 for Pittman. Tips can be given anonymously by calling 1-800-488-9383.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sha'Carri Richardson addresses domestic violence arrest and apologizes to Christian Coleman
Sprinter Sha'Carri Richardson addressed her recent domestic violence arrest in a video on social media and issued an apology to her boyfriend Christian Coleman. Richardson posted a video on her Instagram account Monday night in which she said she put herself in a 'compromised situation.' She issued a written apology to Coleman on Tuesday morning. 'I love him & to him I can't apologize enough," the reigning 100-meter world champion wrote in all capital letters on Instagram, adding that her apology 'should be just as loud' as her 'actions.' 'To Christian I love you & I am so sorry," she wrote. Richardson was arrested July 27 on a fourth-degree domestic violence offense for allegedly assaulting Coleman at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. She was booked into South Correctional Entity in Des Moines, Washington, for more than 18 hours. Her arrest was days before she ran the 100 meters at the U.S. championships in Eugene, Oregon. In the video, Richardson said she's practicing 'self-reflection' and refuses 'to run away but face everything that comes to me head on.' According to the police report, an officer at the airport was notified by a Transportation Security Administration supervisor of a disturbance between Richardson and her boyfriend, Coleman, the 2019 world 100-meter champion. The officer reviewed camera footage and observed Richardson reach out with her left arm and grab Coleman's backpack and yank it away. Richardson then appeared to get in Coleman's way with Coleman trying to step around her. Coleman was shoved into a wall. Later in the report, it said Richardson appeared to throw an item at Coleman, with the TSA indicating it may have been headphones. The officer said in the report: "I was told Coleman did not want to participate any further in the investigation and declined to be a victim.' A message was left with Coleman from The Associated Press. Richardson wrote that Coleman 'came into my life & gave me more than a relationship but a greater understanding of unconditional love from what I've experienced in my past.' She won the 100 at the 2023 world championships in Budapest and finished with the silver at the Paris Games last summer. She also helped the 4x100 relay to an Olympic gold. She didn't compete during the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 following a positive marijuana test at the U.S. Olympic trials. ___ AP Summer Olympics:

Condé Nast Traveler
16 minutes ago
- Condé Nast Traveler
How Boston's Revolutionary Spirit Is Writing Its Next Chapter
Where the past ends and the present begins can be hard to decipher in Boston. That park bench, that lamppost, that row house—it's safe to assume that each played a role in some pivotal moment in American history. But there are no plaques and statues on Marlon Solomon's itinerary. 'You're about to go on a tour of places that don't exist anymore,' he tells me on a late-spring morning as we set off from Nubian Square in Roxbury, a historically Black neighborhood just south of downtown Boston. I've been on plenty of walking tours, trolley tours, and duck tours in the city. But Solomon, the founder of the Afrimerican Academy, a local nonprofit supporting underserved multicultural communities, has taken a different approach. Drawing on oral histories and archival images, he has created an experience that asks guests to imagine bygone Black cultural landmarks that were erased in the 1960s mania for urban renewal that transformed so many American cities. Instead of the familiar stops of Boston's Freedom Trail, we go to an athletic field at Northeastern University that was once a vibrant community playground; a vacant grassy plot where an elite Black school once stood; and a dull apartment complex on the site of the church where Martin Luther King Jr. ministered when he met Coretta Scott. Their union is commemorated in a nearby mural by the street artist Rob 'ProBlak' Gibbs. 'We sell history in Boston,' Solomon says. 'That's what we do.' But in redlined Black areas like Roxbury, 'there are no historical sites for us to show. We have to find ways to convert this history into revenue.' The Chinatown Gate entrance to Boston's centrally located Chinatown Christian Harder State Representative Christopher Worrell outside Dorchester's Strand Theatre Christian Harder Lydia Lowe, executive director of the Chinatown Community Land Trust, which works to preserve and grow the neighborhood, is on a similar mission. Her new Immigrant History Trail of the Chinatown neighborhood displays a series of interactive placards focusing not only on the area's Chinese community, but also on the vibrant Little Syria that thrived here a century ago. 'To only talk about the Chinese would not be doing justice to the rich history of the neighborhood,' she says as I study a black-and-white portrait of a Syrian family on a stoop with a hookah. With Boston gearing up to celebrate the country's semiquincentennial in 2026, Lowe is part of the Commemoration Commission, assembled by the city council to spotlight layers of Boston's history beyond its Revolutionary War credentials. Just as Boston's history is deeply intertwined with America's, my own past is everywhere here. Even two decades since I moved away, the opening bars of the Dropkick Murphys' Celtic-punk anthem 'I'm Shipping Up to Boston' are still a Proustian trigger, lurching me back to my days riding the T from my apartment near Fenway Park to work in the Back Bay. At that age I couldn't wait to get out: Boston felt too small, too clean, too dull, too homogeneous. A place where the invisible boundaries that partition communities felt difficult to transcend. I've spent the past few decades continent-hopping, from New York City to Cape Town, Mumbai to Dubai, all cities I found more cosmopolitan and exciting than Boston. But my Hyderabadi parents still live in the suburbs and so I've kept finding my way back, wondering when Boston will catch up with the world. Pistachio butter toast and Turkish-style eggs at Jadu, in Boston's Jamaica Plain neighborhood Christian Harder Yng-Ru Chen at Praise Shadows, her art gallery in Brookline Christian Harder I'm starting to think the moment has come. From Fort Point to Southie, Dorchester to the South End, weathered-brick buildings are being revitalized with new restaurants and galleries, shifting the city's center of gravity away from well-trammeled districts like Back Bay and the North End. Changing demographics (Boston has for years been a majority-minority city) have played a role in this metamorphosis, but there are other forces at play. 'I really give Mayor Wu credit,' says Lowe. Since 2021, when she became the first woman and first person of color elected mayor of Boston, Michelle Wu has often enacted policies to support minority communities. 'Her vision,' Lowe adds, 'is to say, 'When we celebrate the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, we want to celebrate all the voices that are here and that haven't been heard yet.' '


New York Times
17 minutes ago
- New York Times
Mexico and Brazil Rebut Trump's Claims About Violence in Their Cities
The leaders of two of Latin America's biggest capitals on Tuesday responded with indignation to President Trump's assertions that their cities were plagued by violent crime, disputing his remarks as he announced a federal takeover of the local police in Washington, D.C. As he addressed the takeover and a deployment of the National Guard, Mr. Trump compared crime in Washington to the levels of violence in cities that he called 'some of the places that you hear about as being the worst places on earth.' (Violent crime in Washington hit a 30-year low last year.) Mr. Trump later said that Washington's rate of violent crime was higher than in capitals of Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Panama, Peru and Iraq. 'Do you want to live in places like that?' he asked reporters. 'I don't think so.' Early on Tuesday, leaders in Mexico and Brazil defended their cities, calling Mr. Trump misinformed — and, in the case of Mexico's president, agreeing that her capital had a lower murder rate than Washington's. 'That is true,' President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico, a former Mexico City mayor, told reporters. 'What we don't agree with is when he said it was the most insecure city in Latin America, because it's not.' The city's current mayor, Clara Brugada, went further, saying that Mr. Trump's notion of Mexico City was all wrong. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.