HAYWARD — A 30-year-old resident has been arrested and charged with attempted murder of an Alameda County sheriff’s deputy in February, authorities said.

Jack Toki, 30, was arrested at 3:45 p.m. Monday in Dublin and booked into Santa Rita Jail on suspicion of attempted murder of a peace officer with a deadly weapon, as well as vandalism, disturbing the peace, prowling and violation of community supervision.

The incident began around 9:40 a.m. Feb. 1, when a sheriff’s motorcycle deputy on speed enforcement duty near Hathaway Avenue saw a dark-colored 2003 GMC Yukon sport-utility vehicle speeding, according to a sheriff’s spokesman statement.

The deputy stopped the vehicle, whose driver slowed, turned onto Arbor Avenue and stopped in the middle of the block.

After the deputy stopped behind the SUV, the vehicle reversed and rammed the deputy’s Harley Davidson motorcycle, which got stuck and trapped underneath the SUV’s bumper.

The deputy was able to jump off the motorcycle, but immediately retreated when the SUV went into drive and tried to run him over.

Fearing for his life, the deputy drew his service revolver and fired several shots at the SUV’s windshield, but the driver sped off and turned right into westbound lanes of West A Street.

Deputies responding to the shooting soon located the empty SUV abandoned blocks away on Royal Avenue. Officers with Hayward police and the California Highway Patrol’s Hayward bureau helped set up a perimeter and searched the area on foot with K-9 officers and drones for more than three hours, but did not locate the driver.

In the following days, detectives were able to follow leads and develop forensic evidence that identified Toki as a suspect.

Toki was in custody Tuesday evening and faces additional arraignment and revocation of probation and parole hearings Wednesday and March 6 at Dublin’s East County Hall of Justice.

Contact George Kelly at 408-859-5180.