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6/24/2025, 4:04:35 PM
>>149136600
>Joss lived for years on Dorsey Street, which is in a working-class neighborhood near the Mission Flea Market.
>Several of his neighbors say that while they rooted for Joss to succeed in his television and movie career, they also endured years of his threats and bizarre behavior.
>Pride Center San Antonio built a memorial and held a vigil and Community Call for Justice for actor Jonathan Joss at Crockett Park on June 8. Pride Center San Antonio built a memorial and held a vigil and Community Call for Justice for actor Jonathan Joss at Crockett Park on June 8.
>“People think he’s a hero because he’s an actor,” said Alejandro Ceja, who lives on Dorsey Street and is a relative of the man accused of killing Joss. “They believe the shooting was a hate crime, but they don’t know what we went through. They didn’t live here. We were afraid — all the time.”
>Ceja insists his family isn’t homophobic, saying they have gay relatives whom they love and support.
>Anthony, another longtime neighbor who asked that his last name not be used because he fears retaliation, said he didn’t witness any homophobic behavior toward Joss. He said Joss openly struggled with drug and alcohol addiction and mental health problems.
>Joss often kept his neighbors up late at night with loud chanting, banging pots around bonfires and shouting threats, he said.
>“He’d run around the neighborhood in his Speedos, jogging and yelling across the street, sometimes cheerful, sometimes angry,” Anthony said. “One day, he’d wave and say, ‘Hey neighbor!’ And the next, he’d be cussing people out or screaming, ‘Call the mayor! Call the police!’ at passing cars.”
>Joss lived for years on Dorsey Street, which is in a working-class neighborhood near the Mission Flea Market.
>Several of his neighbors say that while they rooted for Joss to succeed in his television and movie career, they also endured years of his threats and bizarre behavior.
>Pride Center San Antonio built a memorial and held a vigil and Community Call for Justice for actor Jonathan Joss at Crockett Park on June 8. Pride Center San Antonio built a memorial and held a vigil and Community Call for Justice for actor Jonathan Joss at Crockett Park on June 8.
>“People think he’s a hero because he’s an actor,” said Alejandro Ceja, who lives on Dorsey Street and is a relative of the man accused of killing Joss. “They believe the shooting was a hate crime, but they don’t know what we went through. They didn’t live here. We were afraid — all the time.”
>Ceja insists his family isn’t homophobic, saying they have gay relatives whom they love and support.
>Anthony, another longtime neighbor who asked that his last name not be used because he fears retaliation, said he didn’t witness any homophobic behavior toward Joss. He said Joss openly struggled with drug and alcohol addiction and mental health problems.
>Joss often kept his neighbors up late at night with loud chanting, banging pots around bonfires and shouting threats, he said.
>“He’d run around the neighborhood in his Speedos, jogging and yelling across the street, sometimes cheerful, sometimes angry,” Anthony said. “One day, he’d wave and say, ‘Hey neighbor!’ And the next, he’d be cussing people out or screaming, ‘Call the mayor! Call the police!’ at passing cars.”
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