Knife-wielding man takes on officers, K-9
Marisa O’Neil
A man wielding a knife caused police to evacuate a shopping center
and kept officers at bay for 40 minutes Wednesday night, despite
being shot with rubber bullets more than a dozen times.
Police finally arrested 23-year-old Fernando Barrios-Jimenez after
8 p.m. Wednesday inside the yard of a towing company in the 2900
block of Randolph Avenue. But before the standoff was over, police
had used rubber bullets, a stun-gun, pepper spray and a police dog.
They also evacuated a nearby vegan restaurant, a yoga studio, a
scuba school and other businesses in the eclectic anti-mall the Camp.
“All the people from the restaurant were out there,” Native Foods
server Angie Weaver said of the evacuation. “All the people from the
yoga class were out there; all the people in wetsuits were out there;
a girl who just got out of the shower and was in a towel was out
there. And it was cold.”
Officers first got a call at 7:30 p.m. about a shirtless man
waving a knife and running south on Bristol Street near Paularino
Avenue, Costa Mesa police Sgt. Marty Carver said. When police cars
and a helicopter arrived at the scene, the man took off running south
on Bristol, he said.
Barrios-Jimenez ran across Baker Street in front of traffic and
ended up in the parking lot of the Camp, police said.
Police officers entered Native Foods, ordered everyone to the
ground and told employees to lock the doors, Weaver said.
Officers repeatedly ordered Barrios-Jimenez in English and Spanish
to drop the knife, but he wouldn’t comply and continued to wave it
around, Carver said.
Officers then shot the man 11 times with rubber rounds from their
40-millimeter, “less-than-lethal” shotguns.
He still didn’t drop the knife.
Then they tried pepper spray.
He didn’t drop the knife and clambered over a barbed-wire fence
and into an adjacent towing yard.
Matthew Liburdi, who was leading a diving class at his Liburdi’s
Scuba Center, said he heard the shots and saw a shirtless man with
long hair climbing over the fence.
“It was a big ordeal,” Liburdi said of the incident.
Once in the towing yard, Barrios-Jimenez holed up near tanks that
officers believed contained oxygen or some sort of combustible gas,
Carver said.
Officers again ordered him to drop the knife and he again refused,
police said. Instead, he began cutting hoses to the tanks.
Fearing the gas would explode, police evacuated the nearby
businesses, sending a full dining room of customers into the parking
lot and halting the yoga and diving classes.
Police fired more rubber bullets at the man, but he pulled out a
lighter and managed to ignite some of the gas, Carver said.
A sergeant at the scene also used a Taser stun gun, the first time
one has been used by the department in the field, Carver said. The
gun was not fired but was placed against the man’s skin to deliver a
shock.
A police K-9 unit from Santa Ana then arrived, and the man dropped
the knife, police said. The handler sent the dog to subdue
Barrios-Jimenez, who put the dog in a headlock.
Finally, officers managed to arrest the man, Carver said. He was
hospitalized with multiple dog bites and bruises and is being charged
with brandishing a knife, resisting arrest, arson and being under the
influence of a controlled substance.
He is being held in lieu of $50,000 bail.
The dog, Carver said, was not injured.
Weaver, who works in the vegan restaurant, groaned sympathetically
when she heard the suspect had allegedly placed the dog in a
headlock.
“We don’t go for that around here,” she said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.