The Deck - Ron Harnish (7 of Clubs, California)

Episode Date: October 1, 2025

Our card this week is Ron Harnish, the 7 of Clubs from California.Twenty-two-year-old Ron Harnish was murdered on the streets of San Diego in December 2006. Almost 19 years later, the police and Ron�...�s own mother believe they know who’s responsible. But proving it has been a challenge, and the people they are after are as violent as it gets. If you have information about the murder of Ron Harnish on December 27th, 2006, in the Golden Hill neighborhood of San Diego, California, please contact Detective Barr directly at 619-531-2239. Or, if you’d like to remain completely anonymous, you can call San Diego Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477. View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/ron-harnishLet us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllcTo support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org.The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AFText Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Our card this week is Ron Harnished, the seven of clubs from California. 22-year-old Ron had survived multiple deployments in the Navy, yet died less than a mile from home on a cool San Diego night in 2006. Now, almost 19 years later, the police and Ron's own mother believe they know who's responsible, but proving it has been a challenge. and the people thereafter are as violent as it gets. I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck. On December 27, 2006, the city of San Diego was in the middle of that post-Christmas glow
Starting point is 00:01:15 when a police officer making a routine traffic stop was flagged down by two men who pulled up in a car behind him. The moment must have been chaotic. I mean, there were bullet holes in the driver's side of the car, and one of the men appeared to have been wounded in his arm. They told the officer that their friend had just been shot a few blocks away. He was still lying in the street and needed help quick. Radioing for more support, police and emergency crews descended near the corner of 30th and C Street, where Ron Harnish was laying, just off the curb with gunshot wounds in his shoulder and head.
Starting point is 00:01:50 I know medics were called to the scene to try to help Ron, and unfortunately they pronounced him deceased. within minutes of arriving. So now it's an official homicide. That's Detective Tracy Barr of the San Diego Police Department, who is the current investigator working this case. She explained that when homicide investigators arrived, they didn't have much to work with.
Starting point is 00:02:13 If you look at the scene, there's just minimal evidence. Really, the only evidence we have are these shell casings. There were a total of six 22-caliber casings found. Other than that, there really wasn't much evidence. But there were witnesses. We're going to call them Paul and Aaron to protect their identity. Those were Ron's two friends who had flagged down police. Paul, the one with the arm injury, had been transferred to the hospital and gave his statement there,
Starting point is 00:02:41 while Aaron remained at the scene to talk to police. All three men had been in the car together before the shooting. They were all buddies who served in the Navy together. They were heading to the store to pick up some food and then go back to Ron's apartment where he lived kind of close by in the area. And as they're driving by, is when they notice there's a Hispanic male standing on the corner, they're at C and 30th. And he's, as they described, they're throwing up gang signs.
Starting point is 00:03:11 In that moment, Ron asked Aaron, the driver, to turn around. When he did, Ron got out of the car and started walking towards the man on the corner. According to Paul, he got out of the car when Ron did because he wasn't sure. like, you know, what was he doing, what's happening? So he just kind of wanted to be on standby in case Ron needed help. So he kind of stood back and was hanging back with their car. And then literally as soon as Ron is approaching this guy, another Hispanic male appears from like the alley kind of behind them
Starting point is 00:03:47 and then immediately start shooting at him. Ron was hit. And more rounds peppered the car, one bullet hitting Paul in the arm. According to Detective Barr, Paul indicated that he knew Ron was dead by the way he fell and hit the ground, and that's when they sped off looking for help. Ron's friends weren't able to give detailed descriptions of the men who shot Ron, just that they were young and appeared Hispanic. They mentioned one was taller than the other one,
Starting point is 00:04:16 and that the shooter was most likely the shorter one of the two individuals. They did describe clothing, but the clothing, I think, is just kind of all over. over the place, so I'm not sure, you know, how accurate that is. Paul and Aaron did give investigators more details on the weapon. They described a firearm that appeared to be some type of sought-off rifle, which detectives took note of. It's very unusual that that would be the type of weapon of choice. Typically what we see are like handguns that are being used.
Starting point is 00:04:48 My guess is like when you have a rifle or shotgun, you want that distance, right? Like you don't want to be close to your victim. them. So that's really the only thing I could see why they would want a rifle over a handgun. Unusual can often be a good thing. The more unique the weapon, the easier it might be to trace to a specific suspect, or in this case, to a particular group. Because investigators at the time almost immediately focused on one theory. So from what I know just kind of going through the case is even that night at that specific time, as they're looking around, they see, essentially like fresh graffiti that's like on the walls, on the electrical box, like
Starting point is 00:05:31 it's just everywhere pretty much. This was a busy street and there were several buildings, apartments and even a liquor store in the area, plus an alley, plenty of places for graffiti. And so that's a real good indication that it's gang activity and we know specifically the gang that kind of controls this particular area is the Lomas gang. At the time, back in 2006, the Lomas gang had roughly 30 members. According to testimony and records from gang experts, Lomas operated in San Diego's Golden Hill area just east of downtown,
Starting point is 00:06:10 the same neighborhood that Ron was shot in, and they advertised their presence through that graffiti and in other ways. Members wore clothing and tattoos with symbols like Lomas, L.M or L.M. 26th Street. Lomas was involved in crimes from robbery and carjackings to assault and murder. It's because of their potential involvement in Ron's case that were using pseudonym for people like Paul and Aaron. Now even though everything was pointing toward gang violence, it didn't totally add up because Ron was an active Navy sailor. He didn't have any gang connections. So was this a random shooting?
Starting point is 00:06:50 Did Ron get mistaken for a rival gang member? I mean, why would Ron, of all people, end up dead? And this is the question in this case. Why did Ron get out of the car? What was his plan? Ron's brother, Gabe Azule, remembers total confusion that day. Not just about why this had happened to Ron, but also what had happened to his older brother.
Starting point is 00:07:16 We're calling the police department. They can't tell us anything. They said something that he got rushed to a hospital. I think at some point, but it wouldn't tell us which one. We're calling everywhere. Nobody's giving us any information. It was a few hours before we really came to the realization. The realization that his older brother, who he looked up to, had died.
Starting point is 00:07:38 For Gabe and his mom, Tracy Wilde, it was shocking. Ron had just been accepted into the Navy SEALs Buds program. He had joined the Navy at 19. I mean, this was post-9-11, a time when many young men were inspired. to join the military. Gabe remembers that for Ron, serving in the U.S. Navy, was more than a job. He was a calling. He wanted to be somebody who made a difference.
Starting point is 00:08:02 And there is no doubt Ron was on his way to doing just that before his life was cut short near the corner of 30th and C Street. And at the scene, police had a difficult mystery to solve, even if they were fairly confident that two Lomas gang members were behind Ron's death. As you can imagine, a canvas of the neighborhood didn't produce much. But police were able to find a couple who caught a glimpse of suspects running from the scene. The couple described hearing shots fired, then seeing two young men through their apartment window cutting across the parking lot of a liquor store.
Starting point is 00:08:37 One of the men was concealing a rifle under his jacket, and they appeared to be laughing. While the general description of the men lined up with what Paul and Aaron had given to police, it didn't provide any new details as to who these guys were. So the next morning, December 28th, the police visited the liquor store hoping to find security footage showing these two men. But it was a dead end. The only cameras they had captured the inside of the store.
Starting point is 00:09:03 The autopsy, which was also done that same morning, didn't offer much more either. It confirmed that Ron was shot twice and showed no drugs or alcohol in his system. As far as any DNA, there wasn't any. There was no indication to police that Ron had any altercation or even direct contact with any of the suspects where DNA could have been left behind. And no DNA or fingerprints were found on those shell casings left at the scene either. Although, those shell casings did reveal one important lead.
Starting point is 00:09:33 Just three days before Ron's shooting, another shooting had taken place. Another shooting with the same gun that killed Ron. At around 8 p.m. on Christmas Eve, another shooting played out about a half block east of where Ron was shot. Two men who were going to call Samuel and John had just parked their car in an alley when a pair of strangers walked up and asked them where they were from. Samuel and John didn't even respond before one of the strangers pulled out a gun and started firing. According to Detective Barr, Samuel and John got very lucky. So they weren't hit. It wasn't a homicide or anything.
Starting point is 00:10:18 They weren't actually struck by the gunfire, but they were shot at. Detective Barr explained that asking someone where they're from is a common gang challenge, and there's no right answer. Now, the description Samuel and John gave police matched the two individuals from wrong shooting. Young Hispanic men. One taller, one shorter, with the shorter of the two men firing the shots. And now, suddenly, investigators. had a possible motive. So knowing who probably these players are and being gang affiliate, who knows, it could have been
Starting point is 00:10:53 a setup for a gang initiation. Think about it. You have the shooting that goes down the alley. Three days later, it's like, okay, we were unsuccessful. So, you know what, I'm going to stand out here. I'm going to get people's attention. I'm going to be throwing these gang signs. And then, oh, look, we got someone.
Starting point is 00:11:09 With the gun being one of the few connections in the case, police focused hard. hard on that. They needed to find it. While Detective Barr couldn't give us exact details, we did learn that investigators dug up at least one gang member's yard after hearing that the gun might be buried there. But that search didn't turn up anything. But in looking for the gun, they also talked to a lot of Lomas gang members. There were, after all, only around 30 of them. But as they made their way through, one by one, they started hearing one name again and again. People just kind of start dropping his name. I think it was a combination of either he said something directly to them
Starting point is 00:11:52 or it's like the hearsay game, right? Like, I heard from so-and-so who knows so-and-so that this is what they heard. So there was a lot of that going on. There's a lot of, we know he's a part of this gang. We know he lives like right there, right on C Street. We're going to call him Rich, since he's never been publicly named as a suspect. Now, he was just 20 years old at the time and a known member of the Lomas gang since at least 2003. He had an assault record and a previous arrest for receiving stolen goods.
Starting point is 00:12:27 On top of Rich's name being dropped by people, his gang moniker was found spray painted on a wall near the scene of Ron's murder. According to Detective Barr, a couple of months into the investigation, police brought brought Rich in for questioning about Ron's shooting. Rich completely denied being involved, and he didn't know who tagged his moniker at the scene but said it wasn't him. However, he did put himself nearby the shooting. In an interview that he did later on with detectives,
Starting point is 00:12:59 he even kind of puts himself close to the scene saying he was visiting like his grandmother on C Street. Well, this happened right off C Street. So it's interesting, but certainly, not going to be the airtight case a prosecutor is looking for. So they had to let him go. Besides, there were other Lomas members to look into. We know there was a second man involved, right?
Starting point is 00:13:22 Detective Barr says that the original investigators were able to narrow down their suspect list to less than a dozen possible people. But gang cases are tricky. I think the disadvantage would be they're tighter, they're quieter, they're going to, you know, protect each other. That's kind of the frustrating part with something like this. It's like, you know your person is in this little group, but it's a matter of who didn't.
Starting point is 00:13:48 This is pretty much where Ron's case went cold. But where investigators failed, Ron's mother was not ready to give up. Tracy had been following the investigation closely the whole time. And though police weren't sharing information with her, she was hearing things for herself, some of the same things, not about rich, but about a small. small local gang, a.k.a. the Lomas gang, and two young members. So with that tiny germ of information, she launched her own investigation. I just went on the computer and kept digging
Starting point is 00:14:24 digging until I found some back in the Myspace days. So then when I came across his picture, I just knew, I just knew it was him. Him was rich. Dresi had never seen his picture before and didn't even know police had narrowed in on him. She just had a feeling. But she knew she wasn't going to get anywhere on a feeling. She needed people to talk. So in 2009, she applied for the governor's award, the $50,000 reward that is given out by California's governor
Starting point is 00:14:54 for tips leading to the arrest and conviction of a person or people involved or responsible for unsolved crimes. Tracy was hoping that a little extra cash might be the thing that pushed someone to reach out to police with a new tip. But her application got rejected. And the reason why goes back to the question we all still have. Why exactly did Ron get out of the car? Ron's eligibility or ineligibility for the governor's reward came down to that question. What were his intentions the night he was shot? Basically, the way it works is that the family needed the police's recommendation to get this
Starting point is 00:15:34 reward, but the police had concerns because Ron had gotten out of the car. They saw this as Ron being antagonistic, but Ron's family saw things differently. Ron's mother, Tracy, is convinced that her son would have tried to be a positive influence on someone he saw doing something wrong. But proving that Ron's intentions were good and that he hadn't started a fight was tricky. So after her application was rejected, Tracy wrote a letter pointing out Ron's service to his country, a country that he was willing to protect. And then I was calling the governor's office once a week, every week, until I got it. In April, then Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a proclamation granting the reward.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Tracy was able to watch as crime stoppers put up a billboard promoting the case and asking for leads in Ron's murder. And for Tracy, this was a step in the right direction. I mean, at the time, it was one of the largest rewards in crime stoppers history. Surely this would help Ron's case. I really thought it would make a difference, and it didn't. I really thought it would. Tracy wasn't alone, though, when it came to pushing Ron's case forward.
Starting point is 00:16:45 At one point, his case was reviewed by a special multi-department cold case task force. There were investigators from the San Diego PD, along with other agencies like NCIS, FBI, DEA, Border Patrol, and even the DA's office. Supervisory Special Agent Kim Tedesco of NCIS took the lead. The task force reached out to previous investigators. They re-examined old statements and talked to witnesses and even collaborated with gang specialists. Tracy would check in for updates, but by 2012, there wasn't much news. The investigation has stalled yet again. This didn't deter Tracy.
Starting point is 00:17:24 She was still laser-focused on getting justice for her son. Specifically, she was still laser-focused. still keeping tabs on Rich. She had learned that police may have had a run-in with him shortly before Ron's murder. Like a day before or a week before, and I'm not really sure, they saw him, they pulled him over, whatever, and talked to him, and they found a rifle or a shotgun or something that he had hidden behind the dumpster. This proved to Tracy that possibly a rifle, like the one that killed her son, was a preferential.
Starting point is 00:17:59 weapon for Rich. And Detective Barr was able to confirm that this happened. It was actually a month before Ron's murder in November, but Rich was arrested for public intoxication and they did find a rifle hidden in the trash can nearby that they were pretty sure he dumped. But because the gun hadn't been in Rich's possession, they couldn't prove it was his. And with that gun confiscated, it definitely wasn't the gun that shot Ron. But for Ron's mom, it was just more smoke around. Rich, and her hope was that the DA's office might see the same thing. In January 2013, Tracy had a call with someone from the DA's office about Ron's case, and, of course, Rich's possible involvement.
Starting point is 00:18:50 The DA's office knew Rich well. He had continued to get in trouble for things like drug possession and domestic abuse. At that point, he was even serving a 16-year sentence. for a 2009 assault where he was convicted of brutally beating a man with a metal scooter in a Lomas gang controlled park. When Tracy asked the DA what they needed to prosecute someone in Ron's case, the rep pointed to all the things investigators had struggled with, the lack of physical evidence, DNA evidence, and not having a murder weapon,
Starting point is 00:19:23 along with the credibility issue. I mean, gang members don't make the best witnesses, even if they could get someone to testify. And this left Tracy frustrated. And as the years have gone by, nothing has really changed. What was true in 2013 still stands to this day. Despite Tracy wishing that the DA's office would take a gamble, that hasn't happened. Though the Lomas gang and guys like Rich do remain in focus. Detective Barr said that as of today, Rich, who was recently released from prison, is still considered a person of interest, but he's never been charged in this case. Surprisingly, he actually hasn't been interviewed by police since 2006, and while Detective
Starting point is 00:20:07 Barr does believe that Rich was likely involved, unlike Ron's mom Tracy, she's not sure he was the one who pulled the trigger. The shooter has always been identified as the shorter of the two men. Detective Barr believes that Rich probably would have been the taller one, which would actually makes sense if it was a gang initiation? Why would a season member like Rich need to prove himself? Detective Barr is actively going through this case now. I mean, just a few weeks before our team talked to her, she interviewed Ron's friend Paul again, and she plans to talk to Aaron again too. And guess what else she's doing? Retesting old evidence. Those shell casings from the scene never produced fingerprints or DNA back in 2006, but today the technology has changed. And Detective
Starting point is 00:20:54 might have one last trick up her sleeve. One of the new technologies is that we can actually revisit shell casings that have been processed in the past, and we can actually extract more fingerprints that are, it's kind of hard to describe, but it's more like they're ingrained into the metal, and somehow we're able to kind of extract that. So it's something new that we're starting to kind of visit, and only a couple local agencies actually have the technology, but it's open to all of us in the county to use. Detective Barr told us that as recently as August, those shell casings were dropped off to
Starting point is 00:21:34 begin this new testing process using something called a recover machine. Along this may take is a little unclear, though. Either way, for Ron's family, they are still left waiting for something, anything, to happen in this case. And hopefully one day they'll find out the truth. Until then, they've been left to wonder if Ron were still here today, what his life might be like. He would have definitely traveled, I think, and I assume he would have probably two or three kids by now and be a pretty active father. Whoever killed Ron took away an entire future and a lifetime of new memories that he'll never get to make with his family.
Starting point is 00:22:15 But one thing that no one can take away from Ron's family are the memories that they already have of him. He wrote me a Mother's Day poem, you know, like a thousand butterflies in the sky and thousand blades of grass, but only one mother, the whole world over, you know, it was just like, oh, he was all hard, that kid. He really was. The hope is because this is years after the fact that maybe some people who were either involved or have knowledge of what happened to Ron, that maybe their lives are different. now and maybe they are willing to come forward and talk or, you know, say, yeah, that wasn't okay and here's what I know.
Starting point is 00:23:02 If you have any information about the murder of Ron Harnish on December 27, 2006, in the Golden Hill neighborhood of San Diego, California, please contact Detective Barr directly at 619-531-2239. Or if you'd like to remain completely anonymous, you can call San Diego Crime Stoppers. at 888-580-8477. And just a reminder, there is still a reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of someone responsible in this case. That reward currently stands at $57,500.
Starting point is 00:23:52 The Deck is an audio-chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis. To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit the Deckpodcast.com. I think Chuck would approve.

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