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Police ID frozen corpse victim
Police want to hear from anyone knowing Thomas Cervantes AKA Thomas Kroger
Frozen man
Police say Thomas Cervantes, otherwise known as Thomas Kroger, is the murder victim whose frozen remains were found in Ceres. - photo by Courtesy of Ceres Police

Ceres police want to hear from anyone who knew Thomas Cervantes, also known as Thomas Kroger.

The 49-year-old victim has been identified as the man whose remains were found on April 14 in a freezer stored inside of an industrial warehouse building on Whitmore Avenue.

Charged in the murder of Kroger is Jacob Medina Cervantes, the 26-year-old Ceres businessman whose abandoned auto shop yielded Kroger's frozen corpse. The suspect entered an innocent plea on April 17 in a Stanislaus County Superior Court.

Police said that Cervantes recently lived in the Modesto and San Francisco area but previously lived in Oklahoma and Texas. Ceres Police Investigators are seeking the help of the public in locating the victim's next of kin or other family members, people who knew him, and potential witnesses. Anyone who is related to or knew Thomas Cervantes aka Kroger, had contact with him, or has any information about him is encouraged to contact Detective Derek Perry at 538-5730, derek.perry@ci.ceres.ca.us. Anonymous tips can also be reported to Stanislaus Area Crime Stoppers, 1 (866) 60-CRIME. Or tips may be texted to 274637 with the TIP704 somewhere in the wording.

A criminal complaint charges that Cervantes killed Kroger between Dec. 1 and April 10. He is being held at the Stanislaus County Jail on $2 million bail. Deputy District Attorney John R. Mayne asked for the higher bail amount out of concern about Cervantes fleeing the country as a free man.

Jacob Cervantes owned and operated The Shop Customs, located at 1828 Whitmore Avenue, Suite A, just west of Highway 99. The shop dealt in custom paint jobs, frame up restoration and mechanical repairs.

The April 14 discovery of the body began as a civil dispute when Ceres Police were called by the landlord of the industrial park at the foot of the Whitmore Avenue Overpass. The landlord had leased a blue warehouse building tucked behind the northernmost row of buildings to the owner of the auto shop and feared the operation was abandoned. The owner of one of the four vehicles found stored inside the building became alarmed because he could not contact Cervantes about the status of his vehicle. One police official described Cervantes as "pretty flaky" with a history of abandoning work sites and leaving vehicles and car parts behind.

Police were present when the shop was entered and it was learned the vehicle in question hadn't been touched. At first police didn't open the chest-type freezer because of items stacked on it. Officers left the scene but were called back at approximately 3 p.m. after the landlord, who was in the process of changing the locks and removing the vehicles and tools, opened the freezer and found the frozen human remains.

Ceres Police Department officials were unable to comment further on the case because it's been turned over to the Stanislaus County District Attorney's office.

Cervantes will be back in court at 8:30 a.m. on May 1 for a pretrial hearing.