S.F. police shooting victim idolized cops, law enforcement

[ad_1] The Central Valley man who police killed last week — purportedly attempting to arrest him for an alleged hit-and-run in San Francisco — thought very highly of law enforcement, his social media presence shows.  Hodge, whose identity has been reported widely in the media but remains unconfirmed by the Office of the Chief Medical…

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The Central Valley man who police killed last week — purportedly attempting to arrest him for an alleged hit-and-run in San Francisco — thought very highly of law enforcement, his social media presence shows. 

Hodge, whose identity has been reported widely in the media but remains unconfirmed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, ran his own private security firm called Covert Guardian Solutions based in Lodi, in San Joaquin County. 

Hodge and his company are licensed with the state Bureau of Security and Investigative Services. His company website advertises protection for high-profile individuals as well as security and surveillance for businesses. On his social media page, Hodge posted photos of a vehicle, labeled with Covert Guardian Solutions branding, outside both the Dior store and the nearby Louis Vuitton store. 

Police believe that Hodge was working as a security guard outside the Dior store when officers approached him on Friday around 1:35 a.m., to arrest him for allegedly driving onto a sidewalk and running down three people with his car earlier on Thursday evening. Instead, for reasons that police have yet to explain, they ended up shooting him to death. 

Police said they identified the suspect from witness statements and video of the scene.

A representative at Dior on Monday declined to confirm whether Hodge was working for their store, or confirm what security companies it contracts with. 

A Covert Guardian Solutions car is parked at night in front of a Dior store, with illuminated displays in the windows.
Photo from Pete Hodge’s Facebook page.

In addition to working in private security, Hodge wrote on his social media pages that he was a police officer for six years, an army veteran, and also worked as a firefighter, EMT, and in other forms of private security for several years, though these jobs could not be independently confirmed. Hodge also said he received a law degree from the Drivon School of Law at Humphreys University in Stockton, and was an active commenter about police matters on local law enforcement pages. 

Hodge was also a gun ownership advocate, making references on social media to his 2nd Amendment rights and calling the state “Commifornia,” apparently for its gun compliance laws. He also made posts about the state of San Francisco, with one calling the city “San FranFeces” and another calling for the boycott of San Francisco and its sanctuary city laws. 

On Thursday evening, police said Hodge allegedly drove an SUV near Kearny and Sutter streets onto the sidewalk, striking two teenagers in his path and hitting a man on an e-bike. Police believe Hodge was pursuing the man on the e-bike, though it is unclear why. 

A man exits a black SUV parked on grass, accompanied by three people in formal attire.
Pete Hodge exits an SUV, apparently the same one recovered at the scene of the shooting on Dec. 20, 2024. Photo from Covert Guardian Solutions website.

A purported witness posted on Reddit that they were driving a car near an SUV as the driver of the SUV was parallel parking, when an apparent delivery man on an e-bike attempted to weave between the two cars. The SUV driver clipped the cyclist, the witness wrote, and became “super aggressive” demanding the cyclist’s “license and registration.” 

Cynthia Gaffney said in an interview on Monday that she was just crossing Sutter Street on Thursday when an SUV came hurtling around the corner from Kearny Street and onto the Sutter sidewalk. 

“When he careened around the corner, he was totally out of control,” Gaffney said. “It was like he suddenly hit the gas at full speed … [he] might’ve rolled over with just a tiny bit more momentum.” 

Gaffney said the man on the bicycle appeared to be a delivery driver, and that he fled into a Sutter Street parking garage after the collision, leaving behind his bike. The driver, who Gaffney described as tall and white, did not pursue the cyclist, and was gone by the time police arrived at the scene. 

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Source: missionlocal.org


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