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Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Riverside County Sheriff Deputy Arrested for Transporting Over 20 Kilos of Narcotics

 "Socalj" for Borderland Beat



Correctional Sheriff Deputy Jorge Oceguera-Rocha, was arrested on I-10 at County Line Road, in Calimesa, California after a traffic stop. During the traffic stop, it was discovered that Oceguera-Rocha was in possession of over 44 pounds of narcotics and was subsequently booked into the Cois Byrd Detention Center in Murrieta, California

Oceguera-Rocha’s charges include possession of narcotics, transportation of narcotics, and possession of a firearm while in possession of narcotics.


According to Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, no additional details will be released at this time as the case is still under investigation. He was released from custody today after posting a $1 million bond.

Larry D. Smith Correctional Facility

Correctional Deputy Oceguera-Rocha was hired by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office in April 2019 and was assigned to the Larry D. Smith Correctional Facility, located in Banning, California. He has since resigned in lieu of termination.


The drugs discovered in his vehicle weren't identified, and there was no word on whether Rocha was suspected of selling the substances in the correctional system, where multiple drug-related deaths have occurred, leading to a lawsuit earlier this year.

Sources LA Times, KESQ 3KTLA, Riverside County Sheriff

41 comments:

  1. El fue mi novio. Andaba muy movido

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  2. He had good paying job. What a fool.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Just trying to subsidize his income, wants the big boat and fancy car.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Replies
    1. Mencho’s middle or last name que no?

      Semper Fi

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    2. Yo soy Oceguera y nací en Guatemala

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    3. Y yo beltran y naci en el salvador

      Delete
  5. Just because he was a cop they can't elaborate?????? WHYYYYYY. Why are cops more important than everyone else and we can't sulllllllie their """goood"""""name

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Because he's a cop and you're a loser that's why and everyone is innocent until proven guilty didn't you pay attention in school? High school not Criminal college?

      Delete
    2. Cops are here to protect the rich from the poor. Just a well funded gang.

      Delete
  6. He was a worthless corrections officer. How did he post bond? Damn.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How do you know he was a worthless officer? Did you see him when you were locked up?

      Delete
    2. How do you know he was a worthless officer? Did you see him when you were locked up?

      Delete
    3. 1:59
      He is a know it all.
      He thinks he is smarter than the rest of us.

      Delete
  7. I'm sure every turnkey in Riverside can post $1 million bond.

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  8. Hispanic roots n habits go deeper than a simple badge.

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    Replies
    1. 902 that's racist bronie. I'm Hispanic and I follow the law. Just because my family is from Nayarit, does that mean I'm going to push dope despite my government job. Get the fuck outta here tonto.

      Delete
    2. The gueros are mad they’re becoming the minorities don’t know how to take it out on Mexicans.

      Delete
    3. @10:01 you’re absolutely right that they’re mad. But we were never a minority. We’ve been here all this time. it’s just that they can’t hide it anymore . Now they’re starting to fudge the numbers and count some latinos as white.

      Delete
    4. No, i'm no racist, i'm from Española, NM from a proud heritage of Españoles. Our police chief was recently sent to prison. Hispanic. Most if not ALL latin countries are super-corrupt compared to non-latin countries, history over n over again.
      I pull my petty, just-over-the-line bullshit every now and then too. Not proud of it, tho.

      Delete
  9. His azz is grassed.
    Losing a secure job.
    No more overtime.
    No vacation time.
    Apply for a job declined.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure he's already made what that job paid a few times over the cover was nice

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    2. Turn keys are the ones that feed you in jail loser

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  10. Can almost bet he was moving it for a while I know for a fact he put money away from what he was making for this day.

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    Replies
    1. “You know for a fact” lol your just talking out your ass where are your facts

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    2. How do you post 1mio bond when working 9 to 5 and having 2 kids. I think you need at least 10% in cash or assets to walk free

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  11. bianco lends his thugs to patrol the san clemente checkpoint and also some to the rainbow station they have easy access to drugs without reporting them also tax money couriers and drug runners its nothing new!!!

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  12. it was no random stop

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    Replies
    1. Probably made the trip several times but now he got caught the cost of living is high in California

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    2. Probably made the trip several times but now he got caught the cost of living is high in California

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    3. @12:52 hey dumbass ,cops usually give each other courtesy passes ,go back to watching pornhub this sites for adults!!!

      Delete
    4. Las tres letras was watching from behind.

      Delete
  13. I'm a retired law enforcement officer.

    Not sure how many of these links will work.

    A lot can be learned through records searches.

    Here is the booking information for the arrest: https://jimspub.riversidesheriff.org/cgi-bin/iisinfo.acu?bkno=202338941G

    Here are the penal codes listed as the arrest charges:

    H&S 11351: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=HSC&sectionNum=11351

    H&S 11352: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=11352&lawCode=HSC

    H&s 11370.1: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=11370.1&lawCode=HSC

    There are a few interesting facts here.

    The booking info shows that he is currently in custody on $5 million bail. It shows that he was arrested by the Special Investigations Bureau, presumably by Riverside County Sheriff. It also shows he was arrested at his home or near his home in Banning. This is consistent it being a re-arrest with a motion in court to increase bail for fear of fleeing prosecution or being a danger to the public. It is also quite likely there was a motion to show source of bail funds (known as a PC1275.1 Motion), typical in drug/theft/fraud cases.

    On the charges, the most specific one was the last one, H&S 11370.1. Note the references to cocaine, heroin and meth, so it’s highly likely he was caught with one or more of these substances.

    Although the bail for each of these charges is $5 million, when you charge someone with several charges for the same crime, the bail is the highest single amount. You do not add the bail amounts together.

    Given the nature of the charges, I’m very surprised that the initial bail was only $1 million, as that means he only had to come up with $100K to use a bail bondsman. That is not an insurmountable amount for a RSO Deputy, especially if you didn’t need to show source of funds.

    I would have liked to have seen the original booking info to find out who the original arresting agency was. As others have pointed out, it’s *highly* unlikely this was just a chance traffic stop. If you stop someone with a badge, yeah, there’s a level of professional courtesy regarding not only whether they get a citation, but also whether you’re going to ask for a consent search. So either there was something in plain view to develop probable cause (highly unlikely), it was a K9 unit who stopped him (maybe, that close to the border it might have been a K9 looking for drugs but you wouldn’t let the K9 out unless you made contact with the driver and suspected something, the K9 hit would give probable cause to search, again not likely for a driver with a badge), or you already knew there were drugs in the car (by far the most likely scenario).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm the OP above. My mess up....Calimesa is not close to the border. In my head I mixed it up with Calexico. I-10 in that area is *heavily* traveled and relatively close to his home in Banning. I'm about 95% sure they knew there was dope in the car.....maybe even had a search warrant ready.

      Delete
    2. Enjoy your retirement, but please continue to comment, you seem to be spitting out just the facts, and it's like a breath of fresh air in this typically reality-challenged comments section..
      🦎

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    3. I second @440’s comments and compliments. Breath of fresh air INDEED.

      Delete
    4. I try. I have posted many things in the past...considering getting a regular handle. I like facts and I like digging. Occasionally I feed stuff to some of the authors here anonymously. I, too, hate the childish speculative BS that occurs here in the comments. The authors generally do pretty decent investigative work and writing only to be shit on by immature children and adults with their own agendas.

      Delete
    5. 713
      The police are trash too though a lot of crooked ass cops fuck them!

      Semepr Fi

      Delete
    6. @11:06 Good post. That's what we need,good detailed reasoning.

      Delete

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