Ex-UFC champ Cain Velasquez freed from prison for shooting conviction Today Us News


Cain Velasquez, the former UFC mixed-martial arts champion who fought out of San Jose, was released from prison Sunday after less than a year following his attempted murder conviction for chasing then shooting and wounding the family of a man accused of sexually abusing his son.

Cain Velasquez, the South Bay-trained former UFC champion, who was convicted last year of shooting at a man charged with molesting his young child, arrives for his sentencing at the Hall of Justice on Monday, March 24, 2025, in San Jose, Calif. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Cain Velasquez, the South Bay-trained former UFC champion convicted of shooting at a man charged with molesting his young child, arrives for his sentencing at the Hall of Justice on Monday, March 24, 2025, in San Jose, Calif. Velasquez was released Feb. 15, 2026, after less than a year in prison. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group file photo) 

Velasquez recently wrote in a social-media post about his pending release, which was further confirmed to this news organization by his criminal-defense attorney Renee Hessling.

The 43-year-old Velasquez was remanded to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation on March 27, 2025, three days after his sentencing by now-retired Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Arthur Bocanegra, who was visibly in tears when he handed down a five-year prison term.

That ultimately translated to about a year of incarceration after accounting for Velasquez’s time in county jail following the Feb. 28, 2022 shooting, and later his supervised release on $1 million bail — also issued by Bocanegra — during which Velasquez traveled out of state to participate in wrestling and fighting events under a work exception, including serving as a corner man at a UFC match in Las Vegas.

Velasquez pleaded no contest in August 2024 to attempted murder and nine gun assault crimes in the attack after reaching an agreement with prosecutors that removed premeditation from the allegations, eliminating a mandatory life prison term. Still, Deputy District Attorney Aaron French sought a 30 years-to-life prison term while Hessling sought probation, and Bocanegra ultimately sided far more toward the defense request.

At sentencing, Velasquez said his “actions were reckless and extremely dangerous, and that he was “ashamed and regretful for how I handled myself on the day of my crime.” The judge allowed a recording of the frantic 911 call from Patty Bender, in which she describes in real time being chased and shot at by Velasquez, to be played at the hearing.

Paul Bender, the man who was wounded in the shooting, said at the same hearing that “Cain Velasquez demonstrated that he has no respect for the judicial system, does not care about the rule of law, and has no regard for human life.”

Patty Bender, the mother of Velasquez’s intended shooting target Harry Goularte Jr., criticized what she described as the judge’s deference to the allegations against her son in his sentencing evaluation, emphasizing that they have not been proven in court and strongly asserting his innocence. Goularte’s case is still pending and  court records show a trial setting hearing scheduled for April 15.

On the afternoon of Feb. 28, 2022, Goularte was being driven the Benders when they all drove from Morgan Hill toward San Jose so Goularte could get fitted for an ankle monitor. That was in accordance with his supervised release after being charged with abusing Velasquez’s child at the longtime daycare that Patty Bender operated out of her San Martin home.


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