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Pleasant Hill leaders defend police decision to ‘disengage’ with barricaded ex-detective

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PLEASANT HILL — A retired police detective who shot his wife and sent a series of unstable, threatening social media messages wanted to goad police officers into a fatal firefight, the city’s police chief said Monday, defending his department’s decisions during a pair of standoffs last week.

But what police said they did after the first standoff — “disengaging” and monitoring 40-year-old Chunliam Saechao, a retired Pittsburg police detective who allegedly shot at his wife with a shotgun and was tweeting unstable messages from social media — left some residents feeling uninformed and unsafe. Police left the home on Cleopatra Drive in the city’s Sherman Acres neighborhood early Friday morning, but were back hours later, engaging in a second standoff that included Saechao allegedly firing at officers and eventually surrendering for his arrest early Saturday morning.

On Monday, Pleasant Hill police Chief Scott Vermillion said in an interview with the Bay Area News Group that he stood by his decisions during the multi-day event. Vermillion further laid out more specific details about his department’s response to the danger, saying that he put a number of steps in place to keep the neighborhood safe after the first standoff ended with Saechao still inside his home.

“We did have information at our initial assessment that (Saechao’s) objectives were to get into a shootout with law enforcement, kill law enforcement and be killed by law enforcement,” Vermillion said Monday. “Our assessment from the beginning turned out to be accurate.”

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