A camera crew from the Czech Republic was robbed at gunpoint Sunday outside San Francisco’s City Lights Bookstore, casting an unwelcome light on public safety in the city as it welcomes dignitaries and diplomats for this week’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.
San Francisco, CA
Camera Crew Robbed Outside Iconic San Francisco Bookstore
According to police, officers responded to a report of an armed robbery at Columbus Avenue near Broadway. Officers arrived outside City Lights bookstore within two minutes and found two Czech journalists and several camera crew members, who said three people carrying guns got out of a vehicle that stopped nearby. After all three demanded the crew’s equipment, they handed it over. The suspects fled in the vehicle shortly before officers arrived, police said.
In a statement Monday, police said the department’s robbery unit was investigating, adding that the department was working with other city agencies to help the victims. The San Francisco Chronicle identified two of the Czech reporters as Milan Nosek and Bohumil Vostal, who estimated the value of the lost equipment at $18,000.
A communications director for San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s office expressed empathy and resolve in equal measures, telling The Standard that the mayor met with the Czech journalists to share her concern and offer the city’s support.
“We don’t want anyone in our city to be a victim of any crime, whether they are a visitor or a resident,” spokesman Jeff Cretan said, adding that the city was working to support the camera crew and help with equipment.
“Our police department is actively investigating this case, and we know that when an arrest is made, our district attorney has taken a strong position of aggressively prosecuting crimes like these.”
After referencing the arrest and prosecution of suspects accused of last month’s gunpoint takeover robbery of a Noe Valley doughnut shop, Cretan added that “[p]eople who think they can commit these kinds of crimes in San Francisco should know that they will be arrested and prosecuted for their crimes.”
San Francisco officials have sought to roll out the welcome mat for foreign journalists coming to town for the APEC summit. The hope is that they will see the good sides of the city and transmit those messages back home, reversing some of the negative publicity San Francisco has received recently over issues including crime, homelessness and drug use.
The city is putting on a foreign press party Thursday night at City Hall, for instance, and appointed a press ambassador to help foreign journalists navigate the city during the APEC events.
Other camera crews have been robbed in the city in recent years, including a CNN television crew who had their car broken into outside City Hall in March while filming a segment about crime in San Francisco.
In June, filmmaker Eli Steele took to Twitter to blast San Francisco police and crime after his car was broken into and $30,000 worth of camera equipment was stolen near Lombard and Hyde streets, a wealthy area popular with tourists.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco non-alcoholic bar seeing shift in drinking culture
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Excitement and expectations as preparations are underway for the inauguration of SF Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie
Preparations are underway for the inauguration of San Francisco Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie at Civic Center Plaza and the festivities to follow in Chinatown. Community leaders talk about their support and hope for the future.
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San Francisco, CA
San Francisco supervisor presses city departments to clean up Sixth Street
Over the last few months, San Francisco has been cracking down on open-air drug markets that have taken root on several street corners in the city’s South of Market and Tenderloin neighborhoods.
Some progress has been made, but Supervisor Matt Dorsey, who represents South of Market, is fed up with what’s happening on one particular street in his district: Sixth Street.
On Sixth Street on any given day, one can see some of the city’s issues with drug use, drug dealing and mental health all out in the open.
Dorsey is pressing city departments to take swift action.
“Just on the Sixth Street corridor, if we were to affect 100 arrests per night with an eye toward making those life-saving, medically-appropriate interventions, getting people into detox and drug treatment,” he said.
Dorsey has sent a formal letter of inquiry to all city departments that are responsible for law enforcement, public safety and public health to ask what they would need to make his 100-arrests-per-night proposal a reality.
He acknowledges there has been improvement on drug use and sales on several street corners in SoMa and the neighboring Tenderloin, but not on Sixth Street.
He said the issues on Sixth Street have not just remained the same. He said they’ve gotten worse
“This is not COVID-19 or something that we can expect to get better once we get over the hump,” he said. “The reality is that we are now in the era of synthetic drugs.”
For that reason, he believes mandated treatment after an arrest is needed.
But not everyone agrees, in part, because right now there is a lack of treatment available in the city.
“We have very little treatment for women, for example,” Coalition on Homelessness Executive Director Jennifer Friedenbach said. “We have very little for the Spanish-speaking population. We have literally no free trauma therapy that’s extensive. These are the places that have been identified as what we really need to do to address the crisis. Criminalization isn’t even on the list.”
Freidenbach said the city also needs some kind of detox facility.
She and Dorsey seldom agree on many issues, but they both said they have high hopes for Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie. Dorsey said he’s on the same page as a lot of Lurie’s public safety proposals, and Friedenbach said Lurie has a long history of funding projects aimed as solving the root causes of problems in the city.
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