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6/24/2025, 4:14:22 PM
>>149136653
>“If you weren’t a fence, my husband wasn’t a threat to you,” he said. “But if you were a fence, you were probably going to get torn down — one way or another.”
>Police labeled many of the 911 calls about Joss as “disturbances.” But neighbors said many of his actions were more dangerous than that term suggests.
>One neighbor — Gilbert Arias, a home remodel contractor — told the Express-News that he called the police on Joss four times from 2021 to 2024. He said Joss threw trash into his yard, threw wine on his house, drove his Hummer into his mailbox, and damaged his fence and front gate.
>Arias said the most violent incident occurred in 2021 when his employees were building his house on Dorsey Street. He said Joss threw gasoline at the workers and threatened to set them on fire. He then set the fence on fire and yelled vulgarities, threatening to call immigration authorities to deport them, Arias said, adding that he called police.
‘Just an act’
>There were also incidents involving guns, crossbows and knives, according to police reports provided by the San Antonio Police Department. The department released eight such reports.
>Late in the evening of May 24, 2024, officers were twice dispatched to Joss’ home after reports of gunfire. Police arrived to hear shots and music blasting from behind the property, but were unable to make contact with Joss.
>On June 8, 2024, about one year before Alvarez allegedly shot and killed Joss, the two men had an altercation. About 6:40 p.m., officers were called to Dorsey Street to investigate a disturbance allegedly involving a knife-wielding Joss. But officers on the scene didn't find a knife on Joss, according to the report.
>Later that night, Alvarez reported to police that Joss was harassing him, walking outside his home with a crossbow and using racial slurs, according to an incident report.
>“If you weren’t a fence, my husband wasn’t a threat to you,” he said. “But if you were a fence, you were probably going to get torn down — one way or another.”
>Police labeled many of the 911 calls about Joss as “disturbances.” But neighbors said many of his actions were more dangerous than that term suggests.
>One neighbor — Gilbert Arias, a home remodel contractor — told the Express-News that he called the police on Joss four times from 2021 to 2024. He said Joss threw trash into his yard, threw wine on his house, drove his Hummer into his mailbox, and damaged his fence and front gate.
>Arias said the most violent incident occurred in 2021 when his employees were building his house on Dorsey Street. He said Joss threw gasoline at the workers and threatened to set them on fire. He then set the fence on fire and yelled vulgarities, threatening to call immigration authorities to deport them, Arias said, adding that he called police.
‘Just an act’
>There were also incidents involving guns, crossbows and knives, according to police reports provided by the San Antonio Police Department. The department released eight such reports.
>Late in the evening of May 24, 2024, officers were twice dispatched to Joss’ home after reports of gunfire. Police arrived to hear shots and music blasting from behind the property, but were unable to make contact with Joss.
>On June 8, 2024, about one year before Alvarez allegedly shot and killed Joss, the two men had an altercation. About 6:40 p.m., officers were called to Dorsey Street to investigate a disturbance allegedly involving a knife-wielding Joss. But officers on the scene didn't find a knife on Joss, according to the report.
>Later that night, Alvarez reported to police that Joss was harassing him, walking outside his home with a crossbow and using racial slurs, according to an incident report.
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