Crime & Safety

Livermore Mayoral Candidate Accused Of Threats: Updated Details

More information is expected to come out next week at Joshua Laine's preliminary hearing, scheduled for Tuesday morning.

Joshua Laine
Joshua Laine (YouTube)

LIVERMORE, CA — More details have been released about a veteran who ran for mayor last year in Livermore and has now been charged with two felonies for allegedly threatening a judge. The Contra Costa County criminal complaint dated July 9 — the day before Joshua Laine's 34th birthday — includes one count each of criminal threats and threatening state officials or judges, specifically Judge Jill Fannin, who presides over a courtroom on the third floor of the Wakefield Taylor Courthouse in Martinez.

More information is expected to come out next week at Laine's preliminary hearing, scheduled for Tuesday morning. Meanwhile, bail has been set at $275,000 and as of Wednesday afternoon, court records indicated Laine remained in custody.

About 7,000 people voted for Laine in November, according to the Alameda County elections office. That's about 22 percent of the votes cast, but he lost by a landslide to incumbent John Marchand, who got the balance of the votes.

Find out what's happening in Livermorefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Laine's biography on his campaign's Facebook page says he's a graduate of Livermore High School and a former U.S. Marine who served multiple "tours of duty" prior to his honorable discharge in 2007. He also describes himself as a "devout supporter of citizen's rights first and
government accountability."

He apparently represented himself in a lawsuit against the city of Livermore over an impounded truck, but a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals memorandum from 2017 found no merit to his claim that vehicle registration requirements are unconstitutional.

Find out what's happening in Livermorefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Likewise, Laine's claims that the city had violated the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act and that the police officer who towed his truck "committed treason" also were found to have no merit.

Laine was featured in a 30-minute interview posted online by YouTube channel Unify Livermore: