San Francisco, CA
Police seek mother alleged to have abducted infant son in San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco police investigators want the general public’s help in finding an kidnapped baby and the suspect.
The kidnapping occurred early Friday night. At roughly 6:54 p.m. Friday, law enforcement officials responded to a residential facility within the 200 block of Ashbury Avenue to research a lacking particular person report.
Officers spoke with an worker of the ability, who mentioned a resident, Chelsea Tamulevich, left the ability together with her baby, Caspian Tamulevich. Primarily based on a legitimate courtroom order, Chelsea has no custody rights over Caspian and was not permitted to go away the ability with the kid.
Police are presently looking for Chelsea and Caspian, final seen leaving the 200 block of Ashbury Avenue roughly 5:30 p.m. Friday
Chelsea Tamulevich is 38, and stands 5’6″ tall, weighing 130 kilos, with blond hair and brown eyes. She was final seen carrying all white clothes. Caspian Tamulevich is described as a 1-year-old toddler Hispanic male, brown hair and brown eyes, and unknown clothes description.
Investigators from the San Francisco District Lawyer’s Workplace Baby Abduction Restoration Unit and the SFPD Particular Victims Unit, are investigating the kidnapping.
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San Francisco, CA
Pregnant woman shot while in San Francisco Bret Harte area; suspect at-large
San Francisco police said a pregnant woman was shot Tuesday afternoon while she was in the Bret Harte area.
The shooting happened around 2:13 p.m. on the 1100 block of Hollister Avenue.
Police said officers arrived at the scene and learned that the woman was shot in the stomach. San Francisco Fire said she was taken to the hospital but was conscious and able to walk.
Police said they searched the area for the shooter but have not found anyone.
Anyone with information is asked to call police at 415-575-4444.
San Francisco, CA
‘Everyone is building’: Why foreign founders are crossing oceans for San Francisco
Saad advises companies from his home office, with its views of the San Francisco Bay and SoMa, itself a neighborhood in recovery.
He coaches entrepreneurs in Europe, Australia, and across the U.S. on how to adopt “Silicon Valley thinking” in scaling their businesses. That means encouraging clients to visit, if not move to, the Bay Area. “If you want to maximize your probabilities,” Saad regularly tells founders, “hang out where all the capital is, where all the builders are, where the future is.”
For some clients, Saad has become a Silicon Valley “Sherpa,” navigating their move across oceans, he said. “They know there is some magic here they need to tap into.”
Martes picked up on that energy as soon as he arrived last month from Colombia. “You come here and see autonomous cars driving around the city, and you think, ‘Am I thinking big enough?’” he said.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco psychologist advocates for ketamine therapy
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