CA Judge Allegedly Bypassed DA to Offer Pro-Hamas | Political News
More info has turn into out there about what led to Loay Alnaji’s shock guilty plea on Tuesday morning and a potential sentence, but that info leads to further questions we’re still operating down solutions for.
Alnaji, readers will recall, is the pro-Hamas agitator and group faculty professor who killed a Jewish man, Paul Kessler, when the 2 had been attending dueling protests on November 5, 2023. Alnaji crossed two eight-lane streets to confront Kessler, who was waving an Israeli flag on the nook of Thousand Oaks Boulevard and Westlake Boulevard in Ventura County, CA. During that confrontation, Alnaji bashed Kessler’s head with a bullhorn, inflicting Kessler to fall backward, placing his head on the concrete. Kessler’s cranium was fractured in the autumn, and he died roughly seven hours later.
REDSTATE EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE:
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Alnaji’s attorney, Ron Bamieh, told the Ventura County Star that on Tuesday morning, Ventura County Superior Court Judge Derek Malan provided Alnaji probation if he pled guilty and that the sentence can be one yr in jail adopted by three years on probation. However, according to the DA’s workplace, “the court has indicated it’s seemingly to place him on formal probation with up to 12 months in jail at the sentencing listening to on June 25.
Bamieh additional told the VC Star that Malan made the offer after “several meetings” with him and that, in his recollection, Malan said he’d decided that Kessler’s death occurred when “two old guys had a dispute and an accident happened.”
Bamieh added, “In mild of the potential penalties of coming into a trial and what may occur, we determined that the best course of motion is to settle for a probation offer and plead guilty today.” His logic doesn’t make sense, though, if what he said about Judge Malan’s indicated sentence is true. Meaning, if Malan told Bamieh his take on the events in question and the sentence he’d be inclined to give, why would it matter if Alnaji pled guilty before trial or was found guilty of every single count by a jury? And at trial, it’s possible the jury wouldn’t find all of the enhancements or even find him guilty of both charges.
It’s unclear when those meetings took place and whether or not the District Attorney’s office was involved; there are no docket entries reflecting any meetings. Both prosecutors and Kessler’s family object to the proposed deal; Ventura County District Attorney Erik Nasarenko said after Tuesday’s proceedings:
“Alnaji must be sentenced to prison for his violent habits, and our workplace strongly objects to any lesser sentence. While no quantity of punishment will ever absolutely account for the Kessler household loss, a prison dedication underscores the severity of this crime and will deter others from committing related acts of violence.”
It’s also unclear when that offer was allegedly prolonged by Judge Malan. Malan only began handling the case on March 18, and Alnaji wasn’t scheduled to be in court on Tuesday, but the docket entry in Alnaji’s case for May 5 says, “Case calendared to 05/05/26 at 09:45 AM in Courtroom 48 for Miscellaneous Disposition.” So, Alnaji was there to enter a plea, but the offer wasn’t made until that time? That would not make sense.
By reviewing the procedural historical past of the case, it is clear that Malan did not need any members of the press in the courtroom on Tuesday morning, making it not possible for the public to know precisely what occurred in a well timed method; journalists will now have to pay the official court reporter for a verbatim transcript since there was no discover given to the public – or even to one eyewitness, who only discovered that the plea had been entered when we contacted him for remark.

So, what is that procedural historical past?
Judge Ryan Wright presided over the case from the start until his death (at age 53) in September, 2025. At the time of his death, the case was set for trial on October 20, 2025. In January 2026, the events appeared before Judge Anthony Sabo, the Supervising Criminal Judge, and a new trial date of February 18 was set. On that date, both events requested a continuance to March 17, 2026. On March 17, Judge Sabo continued the proceedings to March 18, and that’s when Malan first seems. The events then mentioned scheduling on the file, and a trial date of April 9 was set. On April 9, the trial was continued to May 14.
Before every listening to and trial date, the docket displays requests from news organizations to “photograph, record, or broadcast” the proceedings, but since Tuesday’s proceedings weren’t calendared, the press wasn’t there. Alnaji’s been out on bond and getting paid, and was already scheduled to seem in court in 9 days. There wasn’t any cause for him to enter a guilty plea on May 5, unless they did not need cameras or journalists there.
Loay Alnaji felony case docket as of May 5, 2026 by Jennifer Van Laar
We also do not know what evidence Malan relied on when allegedly figuring out that Kessler’s death was just an accident when two previous dudes had a spat. Malan wasn’t the decide during the two-day preliminary listening to, though he nearly actually had read the transcript, and he hadn’t heard a substantive movement in the case before allegedly making an end-run around the DA’s workplace and the sufferer to offer a probationary sentence for a violent assault ensuing in death. While coming into a guilty plea, Alnaji admitted the existence of three aggravating elements, but there are no mitigating elements alleged in the out there information.
We are working to receive the transcript from Tuesday morning’s listening to, the new info that was filed by prosecutors, and the Felony Plea Agreement Form, and we have reached out to all events concerned with questions and a request for remark; we’ll report that info as we obtain and analyze it.
At the June 25 sentencing listening to, Judge Malan will hear sufferer influence statements and review a sentencing report on Alnaji, ready by the probation division, before formal sentencing happens. We anticipate that the courtroom can be full and that prosecutors and eyewitnesses will carry ahead all potential evidence displaying Alnaji is just not just a mild-mannered pc science professor.
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