Inmate dies after California prison attack

This June 29, 2018 booking photo released by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, CDRC, shows inmate Sidney Kang. Kern Valley State Prison (KVSP) officials are investigating the death of Sidney Kang as a homicide after he was attacked by two other incarcerated men in Delano, Calif. On Thursday, May 5, 2022 officers responded when inmates Anthony Ramirez and Michael Caldera allegedly attacked Kang on a maximum-security recreational yard.
This June 29, 2018 booking photo released by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, CDRC, shows inmate Sidney Kang. Kern Valley State Prison (KVSP) officials are investigating the death of Sidney Kang as a homicide after he was attacked by two other incarcerated men in Delano, Calif. On Thursday, May 5, 2022 officers responded when inmates Anthony Ramirez and Michael Caldera allegedly attacked Kang on a maximum-security recreational yard. Photo credit California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via AP

DELANO, Calif. (AP) — An incarcerated man died Thursday after he was attacked by two other men at a state prison in California's Central Valley, officials said.

Sidney Kang, 31, was attacked by two other inmates at about 10 a.m. in a maximum-security recreational yard at Kern Valley State Prison in Delano, prison officials said.

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He was treated for his injuries at the prison but died a short time later, officials said.

Two inmate-made weapons were found and the death was being investigated as a homicide, authorities said.

Kang was sent to prison from Los Angeles County in 2014 to serve 14 years for assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury, prison officials said. He had a previous serious felony conviction and it was his second strike.

Prison officials said it's believed that Kang was attacked by Anthony Ramirez and Michael Caldera.

Ramirez, 40, was admitted to prison in 2008 from Los Angeles County and was serving a life sentence with a chance of parole. Two years ago, he received another 12 years for seriously assaulting someone in the Kern County prison and last year he received another two years for possessing or manufacturing a deadly weapon, officials said.

Caldera, 35, was sent to prison in 2010 from San Bernardino County and was serving 71 years and four months for several second-degree armed robbery convictions, authorities said.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via AP