Richard Tillman pleads guilty to firebombing San Jose post office Today Us News


SAN JOSE — Richard Tillman, the brother of a late war hero and San Jose-raised NFL star, pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to using his car to firebomb a South San Jose post office last summer.

Tillman, 44, entered his plea — reached through an agreement with federal prosecutors — in the San Jose courtroom of U.S. District Court Judge Edward Davila, and faces a minimum of five years in prison.

His exact sentence will not be decided or issued until a sentencing hearing set for April 27. The charge for which Tillman admitted culpability — malicious destruction of government property by fire — carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison.

In court, Tillman was upbeat and talkative with his federal public defender, Varell Fuller, prior to making his guilty plea.

Richard Tillman, youngest brother of the late San Jose-raised NFL star and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, looks on as he enters the court room at the Hall of Justice in San Jose, Calif., Wednesday, July 23, 2025. (Thien-An Truong for Bay Area News Group)
Richard Tillman, youngest brother of the late San Jose-raised NFL star and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, appears for his Superior Court arraignment at the Hall of Justice in San Jose, Calif., Wednesday, July 23, 2025. Richard Tillman pleaded guilty Monday to using his car to firebomb a South San Jose post office on July 20, 2025. (Thien-An Truong for Bay Area News Group) 

 

 

Clad in a dark green jumpsuit from the Elmwood medium-security county men’s jail in Milpitas, he maintained an upbeat tone while answering Davila’s questions verifying that Tillman was willfully pleading guilty.

He responded, “Guilty, sir” when Davila asked him to confirm his plea.

Tillman was originally expected to enter his guilty plea Jan. 12, but at the last minute, he was appointed another attorney as advisory counsel, and the court hearing was pushed back. He was initially charged in Santa Clara County Superior Court a few days after the July 20 fire attack on the Almaden Valley post office on Crown Boulevard, but on Aug. 7, federal prosecutors secured a parallel indictment for the same crime.

On Aug. 25, with the local case halted for competency examinations for Tillman, county prosecutors requested the dismissal of their charges and cleared the way for the federal case.

The federal complaint against Tillman, authored by U.S. Postal Inspector Shannon Roark, largely retraced the initial San Jose police and fire investigation, with Roark writing that Tillman purchased “insta-logs” and lighter fluid from a nearby supermarket and, while livestreaming on YouTube, backed his car into the post office. He then ignited the logs, which had been doused with lighter fluid and scattered throughout the vehicle.

He also allegedly spray-painted “VIVA LA ME” on the exterior of the post office, “but did not finish what he wanted to write because the heat from the fire was too intense,” according to the complaint.

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

In outlining Tillman’s plea, Davila indicated that the post office sustained about $2.67 million in damage; federal prosecutor Michael Pitman later added that the lobby, where the car went through and which was fire’s origin point, was completely destroyed.

Tillman was assertive in affirming to Davila that he understood the consequences of his plea; during his earlier Superior Court arraignment, he balked at the suggestion that his mental fitness was in doubt.


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