Men plead no contest in fatal Montclair nightclub shooting
RANCHO CUCAMONGA -- Two men pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter this week in connection with a woman's fatal shooting last year at a Montclair nightclub.
Esteban Hernandez, 27, and Armando Hernandez Ledesma, 24, entered their pleas Monday in West Valley Superior Court as part of plea agreements with prosecutors.
Hernandez's agreement carries a 16-year prison sentences, while Ledesma's agreement carries a sentence of 11 years, according to court documents. The men are scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 16.
Both men are accused of participating in the fatal shooting of 31-year-old Rafaela Davila on Jan. 13, 2009 in the parking lot outside El Encanto Night Club, 10555 Mills Ave., which has since been renamed El Capo Night Club.
Hernandez and Ledesma are both members of an Ontario street gang, and the night of the shooting Davila, of Pomona, said she was a member of another gang, according to a document in the men's court file that summarizes the police investigation.



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The problem with the stats? As PolitiFact dieorvsced, the data came from 1999, not 2010. Moreover, a variety of factors account for test score results.While the most recent data on SAT/ACT scores shows outcomes not altogether out of line with the 1999 figures -- with South Carolina scoring 49th on the 2010 SAT and 46th on the 2009 ACT, while Wisconsin ranked third and 13th, respectively -- the point remains that judgment is better withheld on what the scores say in regard to collective bargaining. Here's how PolitiFact put it:A review using current data finds that Wisconsin does perform better on test scores than the non-union states, but not as dramatically as suggested in the Facebook post. And there is at best limited evidence that unionization played a causal role in shaping differences in test scores.