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Today: March 26, 2025
Today: March 26, 2025

Former UFC champion Cain Velasquez sentenced to 5 years for 2022 shooting

Cain Velasquez Sentencing
March 25, 2025

LOS ANGELES (AP) โ€” Former UFC champion Cain Velasquez was sentenced to five years in prison Monday for a shooting in 2022 where he chased after the man accused of molesting his son.

Velasquez was sentenced in Santa Clara County after he pled no contest to attempted murder, felony assault, and other related gun charges last August for what the district attorney's office called a โ€œvigilante shooting spree.โ€ He will receive credit for time served.

In February 2022, the two-time UFC heavyweight champion fired a gun multiple times at a truck carrying three people, including 46-year-old Harry Goularte, who is facing felony child molestation charges, according to the district attorney's office.

His defense attorney, Renee Hessling, called the result โ€œbittersweetโ€ as they had hoped to keep Velasquez out of prison.

โ€œThroughout it all, Cain has shown courage and strength of character," Hessling said in a statement. โ€œHe has taken responsibility for his actions and has been held accountable. The sentence handed down today reflects the complexities of the situation and acknowledges the man behind the headlines.โ€

Less than a week prior to the shooting, Goularte was arrested in connection to the sexual assault of a 4-year-old at the daycare owned by his family. He was released without bail a few days later. Officials said he was released under house arrest and was on his way to retrieve an electronic monitoring bracelet when Velasquez attacked.

Velasquez shot at Goularte's truck in a car chase that lasted for 11 miles (17.7 kilometers), the district attorneyโ€™s office said. Goularte was uninjured, but his stepfather, who was driving, was hit twice.

Velasquez has said the sexual assault incident involved his child and is suing Goularte and his familyโ€™s daycare for negligence and sexual battery.

On his former teammate Kyle Kingsbury's podcast, Velasquez said the way he handled the situation was โ€œnot the way to do it.โ€

โ€œWe cannot put the law in our own hands," Velasquez said. "I know what I did, and I know what I did was very dangerous to other people, you know? Not just to people involved, but innocent people. I understand what I did and Iโ€™m willing to do everything I have to, to pay that back.โ€

Velasquez also said it was important to have open and honest with your kids about what kind of behavior is acceptable and listen to what they say.

โ€œOne manโ€™s decision to take the law into his own hands left an innocent man wounded and endangered schoolchildren, teachers, and many others in our community," District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. "If you want to do justice in Santa Clara County, please apply for a badge.โ€

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