Former UC San Diego grad student who shot CHP officer on I-8 draws long sentence

Yuhao Du, a graduate student who was studying physics at UC San Diego, crashed his vehicle in April 2022, and later shot CHP Officer Antonio "Tony" Pacheco in the leg during a fight for his service weapon

A photo of Yuhao Du in court over a photo of patrol vehicles at the scene of an investigation into a shooting of a CHP officer on I-8 on April 27, 2022.
NBC 7

Yuhao Du, 25, faces charges of attempted murder of a peace officer, taking a firearm from an officer and causing great bodily injury at an arraignment hearing. Du pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity during Tuesday’s arraignment hearing.

A man who tried to grab a California Highway Patrol officer's gun during an altercation on Interstate 8 in Mission Valley in 2022, leaving the lawman with a gunshot to a leg, was sentenced Tuesday to nearly 23 years in state prison.

Yuhao Du, 27, pleaded guilty earlier this year to charges of attempted murder and attempting to take a firearm from a peace officer performing his duties. Du lunged for CHP Officer Antonio "Tony" Pacheco's service weapon on April 27, 2022. It caused the gun to discharge as the two men grappled over the pistol.

Du previously pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity but withdrew that plea in February. As part of a plea deal, Du agreed to a sentence of 22 years and eight months.

At a preliminary hearing held in late 2022, a CHP investigator who interviewed Du testified that the defendant stated he was suffering from mental health issues that left him hospitalized on numerous occasions leading up to the shooting, and that voices in his head commanded him to crash his car into the center median of the freeway.

Du, a graduate student who was studying physics at UC San Diego, crashed his vehicle at about 6:15 p.m. on eastbound I-8 near the I-805 overpass, according to the CHP.

A short time later, Pacheco pulled over alongside the freeway at the crash site and spoke with Du, who was standing outside his car near the center median.

Pacheco testified that Du was not responsive to questions and with a "thousand-yard stare," the defendant "appeared as if he was staring right through me."

The officer said that after some time, Du stated, "I want to kill myself" then asked, "Can you kill me?"

Suspecting that Du might be under the influence, Pacheco said he reached for his radio to summon an ambulance when Du lunged at him and grabbed for his service weapon.

Pacheco testified that both of Du's hands were clamped on his holstered pistol. In order to get him to loosen his grip, Pacheco punched Du four times "as hard as I could," to no avail.

"I was convinced he was going to use that gun on me," Pacheco testified.

The gun discharged while still holstered in Pacheco's belt and the bullet passed through his right thigh. In addition to the gunshot wound, Pacheco tore a tendon in his hand while punching Du and had to be hospitalized multiple times for blood clots in his lungs and leg, he testified.

After the shooting, passing motorists stopped at the scene and restrained Du until other officers arrived and arrested him.

Copyright CNS - City News Service
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