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SAN FRANCISCO -- A driver captured video of a brazen robbery while driving through traffic in San Francisco on Friday afternoon.
The driver, Alex, says he was about to get on an onramp, heading east on I-80 around 4:30 p.m. There, he witnessed someone jump out of a Honda Accord and smash a window of a Prius in front of him.
The thief grabbed a bag and drove off.
The news comes as crime rates continue to run red hot in San Francisco, Democrat Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-CA) district.
SAN FRANCISCO -- A driver captured video of a brazen robbery while driving through traffic in San Francisco on Friday afternoon.
SAN FRANCISCO -- A driver captured video of a brazen robbery while driving through traffic in San Francisco on Friday afternoon.
Home Depot stores in the Bay Area have started to lock items behind cages due to rampant theft.
Workers told The Standard that the stores locked high-value items such as power tools behind the cages starting around January, but since then, even laundry detergent has been locked up.
"It used to be big-ticket items, but now even the detergent is locked up," said one worker at the Emeryville Home Depot store, who spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to speak to the press.
Items behind lock, key and cage vary, from expensive power tools, spools of copper wire and lawn mowers to more mundane items like phone chargers, work gloves and shower drain covers.
READ MORE: Downtown San Francisco Target Plagued by Thefts, Workers Say
The workers said the cages are an effective deterrent for most thieves, but more savvy criminals can work around the cages, especially to access more lucrative scores, like items in the power tools section.
"A month ago, I saw these two guys just muscle off one of the cages, bare hands," the worker said. ...
Home Depot tells its staff not to confront suspected shoplifters but does employ trained asset-protection guards to challenge thieves. In April, a Home Depot employee was fatally shot in a Pleasanton store after confronting shoplifters. ...
A Homeland Security Investigations report published in June 2022 said the average U.S. family will have to pay more than $500 a year extra for goods due to the impact of organized retail theft.
California Senate passes bill to stop employees from confronting shoplifters...
“This bill goes way too far, number one, where I think it will open the doors even wider for people to come in and steal from our stores,” said Rachel Michelin, CRA president and CEO, in a report by Fox KTVU.com.
The California Chamber of Commerce also expressed reservations about the bill.
Was talking to a cop here about CA. He told me he pulled a guy over that was wanted for a murder in CA. CA did want to extradite him so they had to let him go.
Was talking to a cop here about CA. He told me he pulled a guy over that was wanted for a murder in CA. CA did want to extradite him so they had to let him go.
I'm old enough to remember p.net members ranting agaist "the war on drugs". Now it seems like the mood has flipped 180.
Eric Holder says
I'm old enough to remember p.net members ranting agaist "the war on drugs". Now it seems like the mood has flipped 180.
So, are you on the side of legalized fentanyl?
What part of my little historic observation made you come to this conclusion?
Westfield giving downtown San Francisco mall back to lender
By Ted Andersen and Alex Barreira
San Francisco Business Times
Jun 12, 2023
Westfield San Francisco Centre — the city's biggest shopping center — is headed back to its lender after the mall owners ceased making payments on a $558 million loan, the latest economic and symbolic blow for a downtown struggling to regain its footing after the pandemic.
The 1.2 million-square-foot mall at 865 Market St. near Union Square is owned jointly by the parent company of Westfield Corp., French conglomerate Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, and Brookfield Properties, which acquired its stake through its acquisition of Forest City.
“For more than 20 years, Westfield has proudly and successfully operated San Francisco Centre, investing significantly over that time in the vitality of the property,” the company said in a statement. “Given the challenging operating conditions in downtown San Francisco, which have led to declines in sales, occupancy and foot traffic, we have made the difficult decision to begin the process to transfer management of the shopping center to our lender to allow them to appoint a receiver to operate the property going forward.”
I'm old enough to remember p.net members ranting agaist "the war on drugs". Now it seems like the mood has flipped 180.
So, are you on the side of legalized fentanyl? Allow it to be manufactured domestically and sold cheap over the counter, so that those who deliberately inject themselves with it need not support murderous cartels? At worst these clowns will just die from fentanyl and be out of everyone's way.
richwicks
What you say rings true. But no matter who the criminal is that supplies fentanyl, be it a China/cartel alliance or a China/CIA cooperative, the criminals would be powerless without the end user that buys that poison and deliberately puts it into his veins. Since the fentanyl junkie has no concern for the evil he is financing, I could not care less if he dies from an overdose.
the criminals would be powerless without the end user that buys that poison and deliberately puts it into his veins.
Since the fentanyl junkie has no concern for the evil he is financing, I could not care less if he dies from an overdose.
Eric Holder says
I'm old enough to remember p.net members ranting agaist "the war on drugs". Now it seems like the mood has flipped 180.
"Eric Holder" - The war on drugs is just a war on the CIA's competition. There is no war on drug use or distribution PROVIDED the government is doing it. It's a war on independent drug dealers.
All crazy talk aside (no, I'm not buying the "CIA is selling drugs to toddlers" thing)
the fact that there is active anti-drug enforcement (which there is) does create a significant friction and raises the barrier to entry.
As a result availablity suffers and prices go up, which is the effect we want.
Another week, another business shutting down in San Francisco.
Cinemark is shutting down their San Francisco location, effective immediately. The company cited ‘local business conditions’ as the reason for the closure, and we all know what that means, don’t we?
The city is on its way to becoming a retail desert. People are trying to avoid crime, homeless drug addicts and filth in the streets.
Shelby Steele and his son Eli were filming a documentary in San Francisco based on Steele’s book, White Guilt, when their car window was smashed and all of their camera equipment stolen. There is a Go Fund Me to help recover some of the costs but as of yet, they’ve only raised a small amount compared to how much they need. Here is their full post:
Today June 14 in San Francisco, while shooting their documentary WHITE GUILT, based on Shelby Steele's book of the same name, Eli and Shelby Steele's and fellow Oakland filmmaker Terrell Allen's film equipment was stolen out of a rental car in the middle of the day on Lombard Street.
The entire brazen act was captured on film. The Steeles called 911 but police did not respond to calls. Both 911 calls were hung up on. Eventually, they filed a police report. There is no hope of recovering their equipment.
Ironically the film explores how defunding the police has hurt society. Now, the filmmakers, themselves, have become victims of the very thing the film is about.
At publishing time, state officials in Texas were willing to discuss accepting San Francisco as a new city with the condition that it stop being super gay.
I think the straw ban was the straw that broke the camel's back.
EXCLUSIVE: Abandoned stores, streets overtaken by the homeless and drug-addled, theft so rampant that CANDY is locked away: Welcome to San Francisco's ghost town downtown
San Francisco tourism is down by 16% from pre-pandemic levels, workers have abandoned their offices to work from home and stores are empty
In their place, some 7,000 homeless have descended on downtown areas and tourist traps
Now hotels and stores are closing and the whole future of the Bay City – one of the most popular destinations in the United States – is under a cloud
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