US News

Richard Tillman pleads guilty to bombing the San Jose post office

SAN JOSE – Richard Tillman, the brother of a late war hero and San Jose NFL star, pleaded guilty in court Monday to using his car to detonate a bomb at a South San Jose post office last summer.

Tillman, 44, entered his plea — reached in a plea deal with federal prosecutors — in the San Jose courtroom of US District Court Judge Edward Davila. He faces up to five years in prison.

His exact sentence will not be determined or issued until a sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 27. The charge Tillman pleaded guilty to – arson – carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

In court, Tillman was happy and talking to his public defender, Varell Fuller, before pleading guilty.

Richard Tillman, the younger brother of the late San Jose-raised NFL star and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, appears at his arraignment in Superior Court at the Hall of Justice in San Jose, Calif., Wednesday, July 23, 2025. Richard Tillman pleaded guilty Monday to using his car to detonate a bomb at a South San Jose post office on July 25n Area

Dressed in a dark green jumpsuit from the Elmwood County Men’s Prison in Milpitas, he was upbeat as he answered Davila’s questions confirming Tillman’s guilty plea.

He replied, “guilty, sir” when Davila asked him to confirm his request.

Tillman was originally expected to plead guilty on January 12, but at the last minute, another attorney was appointed as counsel, and the hearing was postponed. He was initially indicted in Santa Clara County Superior Court a few days after the July 20 arson attack at the Almaden Valley post office on Crown Boulevard, but on Aug. 7, federal prosecutors received a similar indictment for the same crime.

On August 25, with the local case suspended for Tillman’s competency hearing, county prosecutors asked for their charges to be dismissed and cleared the way for a federal trial.

The federal complaint against Tillman, written by US Postal Inspector Shannon Roark, recalled the initial investigation by the San Jose police and fire department, in which Roark wrote that Tillman bought “insta-logs” and lighter fluid at a nearby supermarket and, while live-streaming on YouTube, drove his car into the post office. He then set fire to the logs that were doused with light water and scattered throughout the car.

It is said that he also sprayed paint saying “VIVA LA ME” outside the post, “but he did not finish what he wanted to write because the heat of the fire was intense,” said the complaint.

Tillman was still streaming the video shortly before he was arrested on site by a San Jose police officer.

In explaining Tillman’s claim, Davila stated that the post office suffered an estimated $2.67 million in damages; State prosecutor Michael Pitman later added that the lobby, where the car had passed and which was the fire station, was completely destroyed.

Tillman insisted on assuring Davila that he understood the consequences of his request; during his trial in the Supreme Court, he contested the suggestion that his mental health was questionable.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button