A federal court on Thursday granted class-action status to a lawsuit filed by teenagers who say they were unlawfully arrested during the chaotic 2023 hill bomb at Dolores Park, paving the way for more than 100 others to potentially join the case against the city and county.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco holds 'sister demonstration' for Gaza
This demonstration comes days after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a resolution calling for a ceasefire.
San Francisco holds a “sister demonstration” after Washington’s March for Gaza the previous day. [Brooke Anderson/TNA]
Following the massive March on Washington for Gaza on Saturday, San Francisco held a “sister demonstration” on the west coast on Sunday to call for a ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza.
With this weekend marking the hundred-day milestone of the war, demonstrations around the world were held as Gaza’s death toll approaches 24,000.
The crowd, which the Palestinian Youth Movement estimated at around 25,000, gathered in front of City Hall and then headed downtown, blocking afternoon traffic as they marched down the city’s main thoroughfare of Market Street.
As the march began, a truck parked nearby with Palestinian flags played music while another truck carrying demonstrators with megaphones led the march.
The crowd was diverse, with a strong showing of Arabs from different parts of the San Francisco Bay Area and allies from different backgrounds.
In addition to the frequently-seen signs reading “Ceasefire Now”, “Let Gaza Live”, and “Free Gaza”, many held signs (sometimes in different languages) to show their own community’s support, such as Latinos for the Liberation of Palestine or the Black Community Stands with Palestine. Healthcare workers and journalists also noted their affiliations, holding signs reading: Stop killing our colleagues.
Elliot Morado, a resident of the East Bay, told The New Arab that he was moved to attend the march after following months of news reports on Israel’s bombing of Gaza. He said he came out “to stand on the side of what’s right.”
As the march passed downtown, a group of street musicians gave a rap performance with the repeated line, “Free Palestine”.
This demonstration comes days after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a resolution calling for a ceasefire, making it the largest US city to make such a move.
San Francisco, CA
Election: Early voting for Prop 50 continues in Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — On Tuesday, voters up and down California will head to the polls to answer one question.
That question, the so-called Proposition 50, will have them decide whether to give the state legislature authority to redraw congressional districts.
“For me, it’s kind of important that I’m able to do something,” said voter Zoey Dingman.
At San Francisco City Hall, there was a steady stream of voters Sunday afternoon.
CA Election: Everything you need to know about Prop 50
Some, like Robert Mintz and Maxine Bauer, told us they were keen to get their votes in early.
“I think people are waking up and they need to not be so passive and fight back,” said Mintz.
Mintz believes Prop. 50 is a way to push back against the mid-decade redistricting efforts in Republican-led states like Texas.
“I think it’s important to have fair elections and right now one side, it seems they’re trying to fix the future elections in 2026 and 2028,” said Mintz.
MORE: New polls show Californians overwhelmingly support Prop 50 ahead of Election Day
But that mindset can lead to a dangerous game of tit-for-tat, says the chair of the San Francisco Republican Party Bill Jackson.
Jackson says he opposes Texas’ efforts to redraw its congressional maps but thinks Prop. 50 is not the appropriate answer.
“We should be holding our line and trying to get more states to have independent districting commissions, rather than just allowing politicians or whoever’s in power to rig the system for their own benefit,” said Jackson.
Jackson worries that, if passed, Prop. 50 will disenfranchise voters in more rural parts of the state.
MORE: Prop 50: In a California GOP stronghold, voters are not happy with Newsom’s plan to help Democrats
He also has concerns that it won’t end in 2030 as it’s intended to currently.
“I think it’s a real risk. If we just keep with the increased polarization, why wouldn’t the California legislature put another initiative on the ballot in 2028 or 2030 to say well you know it works for us,” said Jackson.
Nearly 23 million ballots were sent out to voters around the state for this election.
As of Friday, about 5.9 million or 26% of them have been returned.
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San Francisco, CA
Will New York Giants S Jevon Holland play vs. San Francisco 49ers?
The New York Giants will host the San Francisco 49ers at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on Sunday afternoon in Week 9, where they will look to pick up an upset and get back on the winning track. But they will be without several players, including, potentially, safety Jevon Holland.
Holland, who was inactive in Week 8 due to a neck injury, was limited in practice on Wednesday through Friday with a knee injury.
New York will enter the game banged up, with several players already on injured reserve (IR) and several more ruled out or doubtful: Cornerback Paulson Adebo (knee, out), defensive lineman Chauncey Golston (neck, out), and cornerback Cor’Dale Flott (concussion, out), among others.
Jevon Holland injury update
Holland missed three straight practices with a neck injury last week and was inactive against the Philadelphia Eagles after being listed as doubtful. He proceeded to be a limited participant in all three practices this week, albeit with a knee injury.
“Holland will do stuff today,” head coach Brian Daboll said on Wednesday.
Daboll did not address Holland’s status again the rest of the week. Defensive coordinator Shane Bowen also failed to address the veteran safety.
Holland was officially listed as “questionable” on the final injury report.
Will Jevon Holland play vs. 49ers?
Holland was not made available to reporters this week and doesn’t appear to have conducted any one-on-one interviews. That has prompted questions about his health and how he sustained a knee injury after not playing in Week 8.
The Giants elevated a wide receiver and a linebacker from their practice squad, which would normally be an encouraging sign, but Dan Duggan of The Athletic reports that Holland’s availability in Week 9 is very much in doubt.
Who would replace Jevon Holland in the lineup?
The Giants are thin in the secondary, and Holland was signed this offseason to be one of their anchors. In seven games this season, he has played moderately well, excelling against the run but struggling a bit in coverage.
If Holland is inactive on Sunday, the Giants will be without three of their starters in the secondary, joining cornerbacks Paulson Adebo and Cor’Dale Flott. That is obviously less than ideal for Bowen’s defense.
In Holland’s place would be safety Dane Belton, who would line up alongside Tyler Nubin.
Belton has appeared in eight games (one start) this season, recording 44 tackles (21 solo), four passes defensed, and one forced fumble.
San Francisco, CA
Ruling advances lawsuit against S.F. over arrests during 2023 Dolores Park hill bomb
Skateboarders ride down Church Street at the annual hill bomb event at Dolores Park in San Francisco on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
The ruling allows approximately 113 people — including 81 minors — who were arrested on 17th Street on July 8, 2023, to join the lawsuit first filed by four teenagers in December 2023. The mass arrests concluded a night of general mayhem, marked by fireworks that sparked fires, vandalization of Muni vehicles and confiscation of several firearms around Dolores Park, according to police.
Within the chaos, innocent teenagers were swept up in detentions, the lawsuit argues. Rachel Lederman, lead counsel for the plaintiffs, called the mass arrest of children and youth an “outrageous round-up” where police arrested young adults without probable cause.
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“Then, the police held the children and youth outdoors and in vehicles for many hours as darkness fell and the night turned cold and windy,” she said in a statement. “SFPD did not provide them access to a bathroom for up to seven hours forcing desperate children to use a bucket in the street handed out by a neighbor.”
Jen Kwart, spokesperson for the city attorney, defended police, saying Friday that officers exercised appropriate crowd control to protect public safety. The city is looking forward to presenting its case in the coming months, she said.
The ruling was first reported by Mission Local.
Over at least the past decade, the informal competition has often sparked conflict with police. The hill bomb has gained notoriety in recent years after the event led to a death, a traumatic head injury and multiple skirmishes with the police. After 2023’s confrontations and arrests, the hill bomb was relatively calm in 2024 as police barricaded Dolores Street but skateboarders bombed down a different one.
This year, the event did not take place, and was instead replaced by a more formal, structured hill bomb at Twin Peaks, a largely peaceful affair.
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Two Muni trains were vandalized during the Dolores Hill Bomb in 2023.
Police were made aware of the 2023 hill bomb three weeks before the event took place, according to the lawsuit. The city sent additional officers to the area and erected barricades on the steepest part of the hill on Dolores Street. The crowd grew to approximately 200 people that night.
Police said that around 7 p.m., a 16-year-old man spat in a sergeant’s face. Police said the officer was assaulted while trying to detain the teenager and suffered lacerations to his face. Police said that during the arrest, the crowd began to throw ignited fireworks, smoke bombs, glass bottles, and metal cans at officers.
Two Muni light-rail vehicles were vandalized with graffiti, and the crowds refused to disperse and began removing barricades police had placed in the area, police said.
Around 8 p.m., after declaring the crowds an unlawful assembly, officers began making mass arrests. Plaintiffs argue they were trying to leave the area when police began corralling them for detention.
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One 15-year-old said in the lawsuit that she was trying to ride a scooter to a friend’s house and was still detained after telling officers she had nothing to do with the hill bomb.
The lawsuit alleges officers gave little information to parents who arrived to pick up their kids. Parents waited on the street for hours, and the last child was released from the Mission Police Station at 4:15 a.m., the lawsuit alleges.
The teens were cited and released for inciting a riot, remaining present at an unlawful assembly and conspiracy, police said.
Police said one minor was sent to the hospital to be treated for intoxication but “there was no other report of injury from the arrests.”
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“This dangerous and unlawful behavior put members of the public and our officers at risk of serious injury or worse,” then-police chief Bill Scott said in a statement at the time. “This behavior will not be tolerated in our city.”
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