The Campbell Reporter

2 hijacked drivers honored for courage

VTA bus and UPS drivers recognized for their bravery while preventing injuries to others during events in S.J.

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga @bayareanew­sgroup.com

Carlos Zarate was starting his earlymorni­ng route driving a Santa Clara Valley Transporta­tion Authority bus two years ago when an agitated man got on and insisted on sitting on a front railing, unusually close to the driver's controls.

The man didn't pay any fare, but he did have an even more unusual demand: He wanted to be taken to Daly City.

The VTA has no route that extends that far into the Peninsula; it's primarily a South Bay transit service. That did not appear to dissuade Zarate's surprise free rider, who within a couple of minutes pulled out a 26inch machete he had concealed in his pants.

Zarate, 30, kept his cool. He stayed on his San Josebased route to avoid drawing the ire of the man who effectivel­y had him at knifepoint. At one point he made a stop and saw an elderly woman try to board; he recognized her as one of his regular passengers and told her in Spanish to stay off the bus.

Growing suspicious, the machete-carrying man warned him not to make any more stops, telling him that unless he was taken directly to Daly City, he would “do a shooting,” then directly threatened Zarate: “You are playing with your life.”

What the assailant didn't know was that Zarate already had activated a silent alarm that alerted Santa Clara County sheriff's

deputies.

The bus had reached Stevens Creek Boulevard near Santana Row when a deputy pulled up alongside and asked Zarate if he was OK. The driver said nothing while doing his best to signal that he was in trouble; the deputy conducted a traffic stop.

Zarate now had to put on the most important acting performanc­e of his life. When the machetecar­rying man demanded to know why police were there, he told him he had gotten pulled over for making an illegal turn. And as Zarate stepped off the bus, explaining that he was going to resolve things with the deputy, he kept the armed man on board by reassuring him that he was going to take him to Daly City.

Moments later, deputies moved in and arrested the man, who Zarate had worked to ensure was the lone passenger on the harrowing ride.

This May 23, 2022, ordeal was never widely known to the public until Feb. 29 when Zarate was recognized for his bravery by the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office, which presented him its perennial Courage Award, named after former prosecutor Karyn Sinunu-towery.

“If we picture ourselves on that bus that day, we'd like to think that we'd remain as calm, strong, clearthink­ing, and brave as Mr. Zarate in the face of that fear,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said at his office's annual staff awards ceremony. “Mr. Zarate does not have to imagine what he would do; he's already done it. He is an inspiratio­n.”

In an interview, Zarate said the main goal in his mind was to reunite with his 8-month-old daughter.

“It was just about surviving, and trying to keep calm, and get home to my family,” he said.

But he also says the experience lingers with him.

“I went through all the what-ifs and it really messed me up. So I'm happy about (how it ended), but it's bitterswee­t,” he said.

It hasn't stopped him from driving a bus, which he has done for six years. But it has made him more vigilant.

“I pay attention to my passengers and take care of my regulars,” he said.

Another driver who was recognized with the same award was Mitch Ellerd, who famously kept his composure after he and his UPS truck were hijacked on Valentine's Day 2019. The shotgun-toting couple who took him and the vehicle had moments earlier gotten into a frenetic chase that included shooting at trailing police officers near a South San Jose VTA lightrail station and on Highway 87.

Ellerd was making deliveries on Communicat­ions Hill when he was confronted by Mark Morasky and Joanna Mae Macyrodger­s. At gunpoint, they made Ellerd drive them away, but the driver kept the truck moving at a modest speed to allow law enforcemen­t to stay close. After he unsuccessf­ully tried to jump out of the truck, he told the pair that the vehicle had a speed-governing device installed that prevented it from going any faster.

Then, as the truck reached North First Street and Trimble Road, he purposeful­ly drove into a set of tire spikes that had been laid down by police to disable his truck. From then, a standoff ensued for several hours, during which Macyrodger­s exited and surrendere­d.

That left Ellerd and Morasky in the truck. Morasky reportedly told police that he was not going back to prison following previous conviction­s for carjacking and robbery, and told Ellerd, “We're dying today.” But Morasky apparently had a change of heart after the two shared photos of their daughters and allowed Ellerd to leave.

Morasky was shot and killed a few minutes later after he ran from the truck, holding the shotgun and headed toward a group of people who had been cordoned off from the standoff site.

Ellerd has been recognized in the media and by law enforcemen­t, for his actions while in distress. He was not present for the ceremony Feb. 29, but in a videotaped message, he appeared to be humbled by the honor.

“I don't see what I did as being heroic. I look at it as, I was there, I just reacted to what was in front of me,” he said in the video, adding that he was “beyond grateful” to be considered a hero by some.

Macy-rodgers pleaded guilty last fall to charges of attempted murder of a peace officer, carjacking and false imprisonme­nt. She faces a potential lifetime prison term when she is sentenced March 26.

For the two courage awardees, Rosen noted that Ellerd testified in the preliminar­y hearing for Macyrodger­s and that Zarate later testified in San Francisco in another hijacking case involving his captor.

“These two men showed bravery that amazes, that inspires, that saved lives,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? VTA bus driver Carlos Zarate, of San Jose, shakes hands with Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen during a District Attorney's Office award ceremony in San Jose on Feb. 29.
PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER VTA bus driver Carlos Zarate, of San Jose, shakes hands with Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen during a District Attorney's Office award ceremony in San Jose on Feb. 29.
 ?? ?? VTA bus driver Carlos Zarate, of San Jose, who in 2022was hijacked by a machete-wielding man and peacefully resolved the encounter, was recognized for his courage with a plaque.
VTA bus driver Carlos Zarate, of San Jose, who in 2022was hijacked by a machete-wielding man and peacefully resolved the encounter, was recognized for his courage with a plaque.

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