San Francisco, CA
San Francisco’s Fentanyl Deportations Show Rare Unity With Trump
Liberal San Francisco is eyeing at least one patch of common ground with President-elect Donald Trump.
Top officials in the city — long a sanctuary for undocumented immigrants — have embraced a Biden-era crackdown on fentanyl dealers that has sent scores of migrants to deportation proceedings since last year. Now the incoming mayor and other local leaders say they’re open to maintaining the program under Trump as they look to tackle the city’s drug markets.
“Believe it or not there may be some things that we agree on here,” Matt Dorsey, a member of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors, said of the incoming administration. “Fentanyl dealing and fentanyl addiction may be an area where there is some agreement.”
The deportations have sparked outrage from immigrant-rights advocates who say local law enforcement is working with federal authorities to circumvent the city’s sanctuary policy. While targeting convicted drug dealers is far more limited than the mass deportations that Trump has proposed — and that San Francisco is likely to resist — the actions show how a resurgent tough-on-crime tone in Democratic strongholds is opening up rare chances for agreement with the GOP president.
A similar recalibration is percolating around the country as cities prepare to navigate Trump’s upcoming second term. In New York, Mayor Eric Adams has said he’s open to deporting immigrants accused of crimes. Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has said that undocumented “violent criminals” should be deported.
It’s unclear if Trump, who is expected to appoint a new US attorney for Northern California, will continue the cooperation with San Francisco’s district attorney’s office. But the president-elect’s campaign focus on tackling fentanyl aligns with the city’s crackdown.
“President Trump will lever every power necessary to secure the border and stop deadly drugs from illegally entering our country,” said Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump-Vance transition team.
That sets up a delicate balancing act for local officials in San Francisco. Driven by fentanyl, overdoses killed 810 people in the city last year, although drug deaths have fallen sharply in recent months.
District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said in a statement that she’s willing to continue working with federal authorities to ensure “dignified, safe neighborhoods that are not held hostage by unrepentant drug traffickers” although she added any cooperation with Trump remains uncertain and would not violate the city’s sanctuary protections.
Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie echoed that sentiment, saying US prosecutors “have that right” to continue the program, which has led to around 120 convictions and dozens of additional charges since its inception.
“They deport them,” he said in an interview. “That has gone on for the last year and they have that right. And if they continue to do that, they have that right.”
Lurie added that he supports the city’s sanctuary policies, which are backed by state ordinances. The measures bar local law enforcement from working with immigration authorities in most cases.
Plenty of drug dealers are US citizens, and San Francisco has been touting its broader efforts to crack down on them, too. But the fentanyl deportations typically involve young Honduran migrants who are arrested by local police and then charged by US prosecutors.
Once in federal court, most defendants accept plea deals under a program called “Fast Track,” which results in one-day prison sentences that lead to the person being handed over to immigration authorities.
Critics argue that the system pressures accused migrants into plea deals and glosses over issues like human trafficking that force some migrants into drug dealing. A coalition of 32 advocacy organizations said in a November letter that the crackdown “singles out and scapegoats the immigrant community” for the fentanyl crisis.
“The District Attorney’s ongoing collusion with the federal government to funnel people into immigration detention and deportation is especially unconscionable in the face of threats of mass deportation and openly racist and xenophobic targeting of immigrants by President-elect Trump,” said Angela Chan, an assistant chief attorney in the San Francisco public defender’s office.
Among the recent cases is a Honduran man who crouched behind a wall with an undercover police officer and sold him $40 in fentanyl, according to a criminal complaint. The 21-year-old came to the US for the first time in recent months and “is not a sophisticated drug dealer,” his public defender said in a court document.
As part of his plea agreement “he will be rendered permanently inadmissible to the US, meaning that he will be barred from reentry for the rest of his life,” the lawyer said.
The federal crackdown also ensnared a 9-months-pregnant woman who faced a surprise arrest in October when she appeared for a local court hearing on drug-sale charges. The woman was held overnight before being released, the public defender’s office said.
In another case, a San Francisco jury in September acquitted a Honduran man accused of drug dealing after finding he had been coerced into selling narcotics.
At the political level, the Board of Supervisors overwhelmingly rejected an effort by Dorsey in 2023 to amend the city’s sanctuary policy to permit the deportation of convicted fentanyl dealers.
While Dorsey has been among the most vocal advocates for deporting the city’s convicted drug dealers, his common ground with Trump is unlikely to extend much further. Dorsey’s boyfriend is a Brazilian immigrant with a pending asylum case, and he’s been clear that most migrants should be shielded from Trump’s broader deportation campaign.
“It’s going to be a tightrope to walk for the new mayor,” said Dorsey. “It’s going to be a tightrope for all of us on the Board of Supervisors.”
With assistance from Marie Monteleone.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
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San Francisco, CA
PHOTOS: 2026 San Francisco Chinese New Year Parade
Sunday, March 8, 2026 12:26AM
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Thousands are flocking to San Francisco on Saturday to join Lunar New Year festivities and watch the Chinese New Year Parade.
WATCH: SF Chinese New Year Parade 2026 on ABC7
The streets will be filled with dancing, floats and so much more.
Here’s a look at some of the most memorable moments through images.
Copyright © 2026 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
San Francisco, CA
Grocery Outlet to close dozens of stores after overexpansion
The Bay Area-based bargain grocer Grocery Outlet is closing 36 stores after it expanded too fast.
The closures are part of an optimization plan that will target financially underperforming locations as well as a distribution center facility that’s no longer in use. The closures will go into effect by the end of this year, the company’s chief executive said in an earnings call Wednesday.
Grocery giants Kroger and Albertsons also closed several locations last year and laid off hundreds of employees as inflationary pressures hit consumers and rising labor costs tightened margins.
Kroger, the parent company of California staples Ralphs and Food 4 Less, has been restructuring since a failed merger with Albertsons in 2024.
Grocery Outlet Chief Executive Jason Potter did not say there would be layoffs associated with the store closures.
“Following a rigorous analysis of the fleet, we identified 36 stores in the network that we concluded did not have a viable path to sustained profitability,” Potter said in the company’s latest earnings call. “It’s clear now that we expanded too quickly, and these closures are a direct correction.”
The company is still planning to open 30 to 33 new stores this year. It reported a net loss of $225 million for fiscal year 2025, compared to a net income of $39 million in 2024. Net sales increased 7.3% from 2024 to 2025.
In the fourth quarter of 2025, the company reported a net loss of $218 million. Shares have fallen more than 43% over the past year.
“We made progress on our strategic priorities in 2025; however, our fourth-quarter results made clear that we have more work to do,” Potter said.
Based in Emeryville, Grocery Outlet and its subsidiaries have more than 560 stores in 16 states, including California and Washington. Among the 36 stores slated for closure, 24 are in the eastern U.S. region.
Grocery Outlet locations are independently operated and geared toward affordability, targeting a value-seeking customer base. The chain has more than 100 locations in California, including several in the Los Angeles area.
The company’s new optimization plan is intended to “strengthen long-term profitability and cash flow generation, improve operational execution, optimize our existing store footprint and align with our disciplined new store growth strategy,” the company’s earnings release said.
The company estimated that its fiscal 2026 gross profit could be negatively impacted by $4 million to $6 million due to product markdowns at stores marked for closure.
San Francisco, CA
Shocking daylight stabbing in San Francisco’s Chinatown caught on video
(WARNING: This story contains graphic video)
SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — Surveillance video obtained by KRON4 captured a shocking daylight stabbing that occurred in San Francisco’s Chinatown district on Thursday afternoon.
In the video, which was captured at the corner of Stockton and Sacramento streets, a man wearing a hooded sweatshirt is seen slowly walking down the sidewalk.
As the man approaches the corner, he suddenly pulls a knife out and with his right hand, thrusts the knife into the back of a man who appears to have been waiting for the crosswalk. The shocking attack appears to have been entirely unprovoked.
The attacker then walks briskly away from the scene, crossing the street, and disappearing from the frame.
The victim can be seen turning around, clutching their lower back and staggering around for a moment before collapsing to the sidewalk. He appears to attempt to get up again before eventually laying down on his stomach.
Several bystanders walk by, but none of them appear to render aid, apart from a man who was standing nearby and appears to pull out his phone to call for help.
The San Francisco Police Department confirmed that officers responded to a stabbing at 1:13 p.m. Thursday at Stockton and Sacramento. Officers arrived at the scene where the victim was suffering from a stab wound.
Paramedics arrived and transported the victim to the hospital to be treated for life-threatening injuries.
During a subsequent investigation, police located a suspect matching the description provided by witnesses near the 600 block of Powell Street. He was detained without incident and arrested.
SFPD has not released the suspect’s name or any pending charges. No information was given on possible motive for the attack.
The stabbing occurred the same day members of Mayor Daniel Lurie’s security detail were involved in an altercation with two people in the Tenderloin district and two days before SF’s Lunar New Year Parade is set to take place in Chinatown.
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