Friday, June 10, 2022

NANCY PELOSI AND WAR PROFITEER DIANNE FEINSTEINS' CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO IN TOTAL DEM-CONTROLLED MELTDOWN - On Friday, the Chronicle published an interactive article titled “Downtown S.F. on the brink: It’s worse than it looks.”

THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED TO S.F. DURING THE YEARS FEINSTEIN AND PELOSI WERE CUTTING THEMSELVES DEALS, INSIDE TRADING AND BRIBES SUCKING LIKE TO COMMON POLITICAL WHORES!

Thanks to all these new policies, crime in San Francisco soared.  In addition, homeless encampments and open-air drug use began to smother city streets.  Boudin also turned out to be a poor manager — so much so that, 22 months into the job, a San Francisco Superior Court judge criticized his management for being chaotic and marred by high employee turnover.


ONLY 8% OF S.F. IS BLACK. THEY  PERPETRATE MORE THAN 40% OF THE CRIMES.

 

17,000 CARE BREAK-INS

 

SF Suffers Highest Rate of Car Break-Ins Compared to Atlanta, DC, Dallas, LA

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTLPISB7xig

Chronicle: Downtown San Francisco Near Collapse, ‘Worse than It Looks’

This Thursday, June 27, 2019, photo shows a man holding a bicycle tire outside of a tent along a street in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
AP Photo/Jeff Chiu
3:48

The recall Tuesday of San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin has prompted a flurry of articles by sympathetic, liberal outlets admitting the city is in a terrible state — including the latest from the flagship paper, the San Francisco Chronicle.

On Friday, the Chronicle published an interactive article titled “Downtown S.F. on the brink: It’s worse than it looks.” The article invites readers on a virtual walk through the center of the city highlighting abandoned offices and empty storefronts.

The Chronicle reported: “The downtown area, the city’s primary economic driver, is teetering on the edge, facing challenges greater than previously known, new data shows. The wounds suffered by the economic core are deep, and city officials have yet to come up with a plan to make the fundamental changes that some economists and business leaders argue could make the area thrive again.” Office vacancy is up nearly 300%; convention attendance in the city is down nearly 90%.

That account matches statistics on office vacancy. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that office attendance in San Francisco is down 52% from what it was before the coronavirus pandemic. In April, real estate website SocketSite reported that “the amount of vacant office space in San Francisco has ticked up to a pandemic high of 18.7 million square feet versus under 5 million square feet prior to the pandemic.”

Crime, homelessness, delayed school reopening, and onerous pandemic restrictions resulted in an exodus from the city and a preference among many tech employees to work from home. While many of the tech companies have continued to thrive, the many businesses that exist to serve them and their employees have struggled to stay afloat.

The Chronicle reports that the impact could be severe for the city and those who remain in it: “Over time, multiple tax revenues for City Hall could be at risk: property taxes, from emptied buildings that drop in value; sales taxes, from businesses that are struggling or gone, and others. That could lead to a reduction of public services, [Stanford University economist Nicholas] Bloom said.”

San Francisco boarded up (Eric Risberg / Associated Press)

A large window of the Louis Vuitton store is seen boarded up following a recent robbery at Union Square in San Francisco, Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021. In San Francisco, homeless tents, open drug use, home break-ins and dirty streets have proliferated during the pandemic. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

There are no easy solutions to bring workers and businesses back — especially with high crime, public drug use, and rampant homelessness.

The left-wing Atlantic published a chilling essay this week by San Francisco native Nellie Bowles about how the town became a “failed city,” one in which Good Samaritans cannot even call an ambulance for an injured homeless person without being confronted by “advocates” who urge the patient not to go to the hospital.

“[T]he reality,” Bowles wrote, “is that with the smartest minds and so much money and the very best of intentions, San Francisco became a cruel city. It became so dogmatically progressive that maintaining the purity of the politics required accepting—or at least ignoring—devastating results.”

While voters have awakened to the reality of left-wing governance, the verdict is that it will take more than one recall to solve the city’s problems.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of the recent e-book, Neither Free nor Fair: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. His recent book, RED NOVEMBER, tells the story of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary from a conservative perspective. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

Watters: The Five (CRIME) Families of the Democrat Party

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BBpvvHethg0

WHAT DID NANCY PELOSI DO FOR HER CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT OF MELTDOWN SAN FRANCISCO?   -   NADA!   -  BUT SHE SURE RAKED IN THE MONEY BEING A FAILURE

 

 

https://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2022/03/what-did-nancy-pelosi-do-for-her.html

 

SAN FRANCISCO POPULATION IS ONLY 8% BACK, HOWEVER, BLACKS PERPETRATE 40% OF THE CRIME (these are pre-covid numbers).

San Fran patrol special officer rips Pelosi's inaction over BLACK crime surge: She doesn't care

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SewBXWKj2g

 

Small-business owners have been hit Petty Thieves Plague San Francisco. ‘These Last Two Years Have Been Insane.’

https://www.wsj.com/articles/crime-san-francisco-petty-thieves-small-businesses-11647797642

By Zusha Elinson

SAN FRANCISCO— Terry Asten Bennett’s family has been running Cliff’s Variety Store since 1936. In all that time, they’ve never experienced the amount of burglaries and property damage that they have recently, Ms. Bennett said.

Thieves smashed a display window and broke down a door to steal items as small as spray paint, and people shattered glass doors on two occasions for no apparent reason.

 

“These last two years have been insane,” she said. “It used to be a rare occurrence.”

 

Although violent crime in San Francisco is lower than in many other major U.S. cities, business owners, residents and visitors here are dealing with a rash of thefts, burglaries and car break-ins.

 

Among the 25 largest U.S. cities, San Francisco has had the highest property-crime rate in four of the most recent six years for which data is available, bucking the long-term national decline in such crimes that began in the 1990s. Property crimes declined in San Francisco during the first year of the pandemic, but rose 13% in 2021. Burglaries in the city are at their highest levels since the mid-1990s. There were 20,663 thefts from vehicles last year—almost 57 a day—a 39% increase from the prior year, although still below the record of 31,398 in 2017, according to the police.

 

Smashed storefronts are so common that the city launched a program to fix them with public money. Car owners leave notes declaring there is nothing of value in their vehicles, or leave their windows open to save themselves from broken glass. Videos of shoplifters hauling goods out of drugstores such as Walgreens have gone viral, and a smash-and-grab robbery by 20 to 40 people at a Louis Vuitton store last November made the national news.

 

Owners of small businesses say the costs of security and repairs are eating into profits already diminished by the Covid-19 pandemic. In the Castro, the neighborhood where Cliff’s is located, shops have recorded nearly 100 instances of smashed windows and doors that cost $170,000 to repair since the beginning of 2020, according to the neighborhood’s merchant association.

 

Criminologists say San Francisco’s high density of retail stores and its mix of tourists, commuters and wealthy residents have made it an inviting target for thieves. Locals point to a host of other factors that may be exacerbating the problem, including the tactics of the police and prosecutors, statewide changes intended to reduce the number of people behind bars, and the city’s dual crises of drug use and homelessness. There has been no end of finger-pointing.

 

Despite the city’s long history of progressive politics, some business owners and residents are demanding that political leaders shift to a more law-and-order approach.

 

San Francisco’s mix of retail stores, tourists, commuters and wealthy residents have made it an inviting target. The Union Square retail district, top, and the Chinatown neighborhood.

District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who took office in 2020 as part of the national “progressive prosecutor” movement and has de-emphasized the prosecution of low-level offenses, will face a recall election in June.

 

“Nothing is more important than to make sure that people who live in this city, people who work in the city, people who visit San Francisco, feel safe,” Democratic Mayor London Breed said at a news conference last month. “The fact is, that does require police officers.”

 

Some former police officials and business owners blame Mr. Boudin’s focus on keeping people who commit small-scale crimes out of prison. His office, for example, discourages filing charges in cases where suspects are pulled over for traffic infractions and officers find small amounts of drugs. Others point the finger at the police, who cleared just 6% of the city’s property crimes in 2020, more than 8 percentage points lower than the national average. A case is considered cleared if a suspect is arrested, charged and turned over to a court for prosecution, or is identified with sufficient evidence for a charge but can’t be taken into custody for circumstances beyond police control.

 

Some business owners say the city’s large population of people living on the streets and using drugs such as fentanyl is a big factor in the small-scale thefts. Law-enforcement officials, though, say they suspect organized crews of petty criminals are carrying out a large portion of them.

 

Police Chief Bill Scott has deployed more officers to tourist spots such as Fisherman’s Wharf to stop car break ins, and to retail shopping districts to stop thefts and burglaries. He has beefed up his retail theft investigations unit.

 

Businesses have been affected in every corner of San Francisco, even traditionally low-crime areas such as the Sunset District, where commercial and residential burglaries rose 80% in between 2019 and 2021.

 

Michael Hsu’s Footprint shoe store got broken into for the first time in February 2021. The thief used a blowtorch to crack the glass door without setting off the alarm and took tens of thousands of dollars worth of high-end North Face jackets. More people arrived soon after, taking whatever they could grab before they set off the alarm.

 

Mr. Hsu, who grew up in the Sunset, said he recalled thinking: “Oh, they finally got me.”

 

Michael Hsu's shoe store in the Sunset neighborhood has been burglarized repeatedly.

 

He now keeps some merchandise locked with security cables.

 

He turned to a grant program for small businesses to fix his shattered storefront.

 

Security footage shows a thief using a blowtorch to crack the glass door at Footprint.

 

Michael Hsu

Mr. Hsu was the first recipient in the new grant program for small businesses to fix their storefronts. Three weeks later, his store was hit again, this time by a thief who climbed up scaffolding, broke in through a second-story window and made off with several boxes of shoes.

 

He now equips his employees with pepper spray and a key fob that calls the police directly. He upgraded his security system and is putting money aside for other antitheft measures.

 

The grant program has distributed more than $500,000 to nearly 400 businesses to fix their storefronts.

 

Sharky Laguana, who is president of the city’s small business commission and runs the van-rental company Bandago, said thieves frequently smash his vehicles’ windows and steal his customers’ belongings. “It gives customers a bad experience, it costs them a lot of money and it costs us a lot of money,” he said.

 

Police and prosecutors say the majority of car break-ins are committed by organized crews. Mr. Laguana grew so frustrated he launched a reward program for information that leads to busts of big fencing operations that buy merchandise from such thieves. He thought he would be able to raise tens of thousands of dollars at best; he got $250,000 in pledges from rental-car companies and other businesses.

 

The day after the Louis Vuitton smash-and-grab robbery, San Francisco police deployed a mobile command center that still sits across the street from the luxury-goods store. The department sent more foot patrols to the Union Square retail district, pulling officers from all over the city, said Captain Julian Ng who oversees the area.

 

“It’s a resource drain, but if I had my way, we’d do this forever because it’s such an important area for the city,” said Capt. Ng.

 

 

 

Police Capt. Julian Ng, top, on the street in Chinatown. Shattered auto glass in the parking lot of a popular tourist destination.

Five people were arrested in connection with the Louis Vuitton incident. Captain Ng said there are many reasons for the city’s overall low rate of clearing property-crime cases, including the department’s no-chase policy for misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies, which aims to reduce unnecessary accidents. Car break-in crews can easily zip away in their own vehicles without police cars chasing them, he said.

 

Some former police officials said in interviews that officers don’t feel it is worth making an arrest in low-level cases because they assume the district attorney won’t file charges. They also point to a statewide ballot measure passed in 2014—Proposition 47—that raised the dollar amount at which theft can be prosecuted as a felony from $400 to $950.

 

Mr. Boudin, a former public defender, said his office hasn’t changed the way it prosecutes property crimes from the previous district attorney, George Gascon, who is now district attorney in Los Angeles and facing his own recall campaign. The office’s rate of filing charges against people arrested for burglaries and thefts dipped to 41% in Mr. Boudin’s first year in office, but increased to 58% in 2021, similar to the rate during Mr. Gascon’s tenure.

 

Mr. Boudin has pointed the finger back at the police, arguing that the certainty of arrest is low in San Francisco compared with other cities. More consistent arrests of criminals, he has said, would be a more powerful deterrent than the length of prison sentences.

 

Last November, officers were caught on a surveillance camera sitting in a squad car, watching as burglars made off with stolen product from a cannabis dispensary. The department is investigating the incident.

 

Lt. Scott Ryan, who heads a unit that investigates property crimes, said clearance rates aren’t a good measure because police often nab serial offenders who they believe to be responsible for far more burglaries or thefts than they can prove.

 

He said consequences aren’t severe enough for repeat offenders. Police investigators have a list of 48 people arrested five or more times for burglaries in recent years, he said, and more than half of them are no longer behind bars. “There’s got to be a line in the sand,” he said.

 

In February, Ms. Bennett, the owner of Cliff’s Variety, received an email alert that angered her. The burglar who broke into her store to steal spray paint and gloves was being released from jail, it said.

 

Charles Andrews, who was convicted in the burglary, was getting out of jail after 244 days. It was the second time that Mr. Andrews had been arrested for breaking into Cliff’s, the first coming in 2017.

 

The other burglar, who smashed a $4,500 display window to steal a $200 emergency kit, was never caught.

 

 

 

Terry Asten Bennett, right, in front of her family-owned store, Cliff's Variety Store.

 

She said the store has been burglarized more than once by the same person.

 

Security footage shows a break-in at Cliff's Variety.

 

Terry Asten Bennett

A large TV displays the many security cameras throughout the store.

 

Sylvia Cediel, a public defender who represented Mr. Andrews, said his repeated arrests “reflect the circumstances of his life—primarily extreme poverty.” Mr. Andrews has been homeless since he came to the Bay Area more than a decade ago, she said, and his time in jail has been the only time he has spent off the streets. Ms Cediel said the city needs to do a better job addressing poverty and lack of housing.

 

Ms. Bennett said she believes the worsening drug problem within San Francisco’s homeless population has led to thefts and some of the property damage at Cliff’s. Last year, Mayor Breed declared a state of emergency because of overdoses in the city’s Tenderloin neighborhood.

 

In an effort to deter shoplifters, Ms. Bennett now stations employees at the door to greet customers. She installed a camera system and gave employees walkie-talkies so they could monitor shoplifters and confront them before they leave the store. Shoplifting losses have since dropped from 2% to 1% percent of annual sales, she said.

 

The increase in burglaries, which often involves breaking into closed shops, may be driven in part by emptier streets during the pandemic, police and criminologists say.

 

Ms. Bennett, whose great-great-grandfather Hilario DeBaca started the business, said the increase in crime hasn’t made her consider closing Cliff’s, which she said is woven into the neighborhood. But the break-ins are eating into the store’s bottom line.

 

New metal gates to protect the entrances plus repairs from the two burglaries and shattered door totaled about $22,000, less than half of which was covered by insurance, she said. She is applying to the city grant program to fix the most recently shattered door.

 

“When you’re a small-business owner, you spend more hours at work than at home, so you take it very personally when someone attacks you,” she said. “Whether it’s an attack on you or just your building, it really doesn’t matter. It feels the same.”

 

 

Signs warn visitors to remove valuables from vehicles at the tourist destination of Twin Peaks.

 

REALITY: DEM POLS SPEND TOO MUCH TIME SUCKING OFF BRIBES THEY SIPHON THROUGH FAMILY MEMBERS, SERVICING BANKSTERS AND BILLIONAIRES FOR OPEN BORDERS. THE REST OF US ARE FUCKED BIG TIME. 

 

PHOTO: Grandma Accused in San Francisco $1 Million Looting Spree

https://www.breitbart.com/crime/2021/12/14/photo-grandma-accused-san-francisco-1-million-looting-spree/

 

AMERICAN THE FAILED NATION!

BLACK GHETTOS IN AMERICA

The 10 WORST (MOSTLY BLACK) Neighborhoods in America. It's Shocking and Terrifying.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12vnzZSw9f8&t=77s

 

 

ONLY 8% OF S.F. IS BLACK. THEY  PERPETRATE MORE THAN 40% OF THE CRIMES.

 

17,000 CARE BREAK-INS

 

SF Suffers Highest Rate of Car Break-Ins Compared to Atlanta, DC, Dallas, LA

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTLPISB7xig

 

It's your message, Democrats

By Silvio Canto, Jr.

Yesterday, House speaker Nancy Pelosi said she does not understand where the lawlessness is coming from.  She was talking about all of those attack on shops in San Francisco. 

Maybe Mrs. Pelosi finally noticed when the mob attacked her favorite places!

The mayor of San Francisco noticed the looting, too.  This is the story:

The mayor's plan includes a series of initiatives to implement a 180-degree reversal from blind compassion to "tough love." Outlined in a Medium post, Breed's proposals take aim at illegal drug sales and restore funding for police with targeted resources dedicated to the low-income Tenderloin neighborhood. The mayor calls for:

Executing an Emergency Intervention Plan in the Tenderloin neighborhood

Securing emergency police funding to ensure we have the resources to combat major safety problems over the next several 

Amending our surveillance ordinance so law enforcement can prevent and interrupt crime in real time — something they're effectively barred from doing now — to better protect our homes and businesses

Disrupting the illegal street sales of stolen goods that have become a clear public safety issue and are contributing to retail theft

Well, at least the strategy is changing.  Let's hope it goes beyond talking points.

Why are Democrats suddenly talking about crime?

The answer is twofold:

First, this level of "lawlessness," as the speaker would say, is driving taxpayers away.  My guess is that it keeps a lot of people from driving downtown for dinner on a Saturday.  I was in a city in Maryland last summer and asked about Little Italy, a once-charming neighborhood for eating Italian food.  My friend said it was still there, but many people were afraid of going down in this atmosphere.

Second, the violence must be hurting Democrats with African-Americans and Hispanics, or the people who live in those areas, which may be both.  Check out Chicago and the weekend shootings.  It's hard to blame Trump when everyone running the city is a liberal Democrat.

Memo to Democrats: Let the police do their job, and you will see how quickly the "lawlessness" will disappear.

 

 

San Francisco jeweler closes shop after multiple burglaries




In San Francisco, voters give Chesa Boudin, a Soros DA, the boot

In 2019, Chesa Boudin openly campaigned on a hard-left, soft-on-crime platform — and got elected as San Francisco's chief prosecutor.  On Tuesday, San Francisco voters gave him the boot, having discovered that the reality of hard-left governance is much less appealing than the theory and promises.

Boudin comes by his leftism honestly, being descended from a long line of leftist academics and activists.  His parents, Kathy Boudin and David Gilbert, were members of the Weather Underground, a Marxist terrorist group during the 1960s, and were the getaway drivers of the cars used in the 1981 Brink's robbery in New York that left three men dead (a Brinks guard and two police officers).  When Boudin was a toddler, his parents were arrested and convicted, with his mother getting 20 years to life and his father getting 75 years to life.

His parents handed Chesa over to Obama's mentors, Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn, both of whom had also been members of the Weather Underground, and they became his surrogate parents.  Boudin attended Yale for both his undergraduate and law degrees.  So, again, he was marinated in leftism.

Once he passed the bar, Boudin worked as a public defender.  He then realized that he could reform the criminal justice system better from the inside than the outside, and in 2019, with $620,000 from various George Soros entities, he ran for the San Francisco district attorney's office.

While Mr. Boudin did not receive money directly from one of Mr. Soros' multiple state PACs, a network of left-wing donors connected to the Hungarian-born billionaire helped Mr. Boudin raise more than $620,000.

Boudin was open about his reforming zeal.  He promised to eliminate cash bail, establish a special unit to re-evaluate wrongful convictions, oppose any requests for assistance from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and work on decarceration (that is, getting criminals out of prison, not into it).  In other words, these are the typical pie-in-in-the sky promises that, if the government is nice to criminals, they will stop committing crimes.  A slim majority of 50.8% of the city's voters got him into office.


Image: Chesa Boudin. YouTube screen grab.

The moment he entered office, Boudin began to make good on his promises.  He started by firing seven senior prosecutors, instantly handicapping his office's ability to prosecute anybody and angering both the fired attorneys and the ones who remained behind.  From there, he embarked on what can only be called a campaign of lawlessness as San Francisco's top lawman.

In his first month, Boudin's office immediately refused to prosecute Jamaica Hampton, a man who attacked a police officer with a liquor bottle, alienating the police.

In his second month, Boudin announced that his office would no longer prosecute contraband claims (i.e., drugs and weapons) if his office determined that a police traffic stop finding that contraband was "pretextual."  He also said he would no longer seek enhanced jail sentences for people with criminal histories because doing so was racist.  Oh, and he eliminated cash bail.

In his third month in office, Boudin used the pretext of COVID to reduce San Francisco's jail population by 25%.  By his fourth month, he increased to 40% the total number of people released from jail.

Beginning in his sixth month in office, which coincided with George Floyd's drug death and the resulting riots, Boudin was all over the anti-policing movement.  He made it almost impossible for people who resisted arrest to be prosecuted and put into place a whole raft of policies that emboldened criminals and disheartened police.  He also consistently released repeat offenders.

Thanks to all these new policies, crime in San Francisco soared.  In addition, homeless encampments and open-air drug use began to smother city streets.  Boudin also turned out to be a poor manager — so much so that, 22 months into the job, a San Francisco Superior Court judge criticized his management for being chaotic and marred by high employee turnover.

Even the leftist San Franciscans who put Chesa Boudin into office couldn't tolerate the crime ravaging the city.  Two recall campaigns were born, with one making it onto the ballot.  The campaign, surprisingly, came from the left.  (Well, it couldn't come from the right because there aren't enough conservatives left in San Francisco to put together a soccer team.)

And yesterday, Tuesday, June 7, Chesa finally had to face the music for the damage he's done to the quality of life in San Francisco: 61% of San Francisco voters said "yes" to the recall measure.

Sadly, it's doubtful that any San Franciscans, having literally been mugged by leftist reality, will change their political views.  Rather than seeing the problem as leftism, they'll almost certainly chalk it up solely to Chesa's mismanagement — and place someone very similar in an office that, before Chesa came along, was held by both Kamala Harris and L.A.'s George Gascon.


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