San Francisco, CA
San Francisco man missing from Seaside motel under suspicious circumstances
A missing person case out of Seaside involving a San Francisco man is now being considered suspicious.“His disappearance is extremely unusual. He’s never done this before,” said Seaside Police Chief Nick Borges.Thirty-four-year-old Dewayne Williams of San Francisco has been missing since early Monday morning, when he left and never returned.“He’s healthy. He doesn’t suffer from any type of mental condition. There have been no reports of any substance abuse and no reports of him being suicidal,” Borges said.Williams and his wife were in town last weekend to visit the Monterey Bay Aquarium. It was their first time in the area, and now the husband is missing. Williams was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, black jeans and orange Nikes. His wife spoke to KSBW by phone from San Francisco.“If anyone has seen him, please just give me a call or let me know something. We just want to know if he’s OK. His mom, his uncles, his son — everyone is worried. We have a lot of people out looking for him, even in San Francisco,” said Patrice Williams, the missing man’s wife.His wife told detectives her husband went to the beach early Monday morning while it was still dark, then returned around 3:30 a.m., saying he was going to a bus stop where he had left his jacket. Surveillance video shows him walking north on Fremont Boulevard near Playa Avenue, close to the Gateway Lodge, where the couple was staying. Police said Williams does not own a cellphone.“If that’s all true, that makes this extremely suspicious that a grown adult wanders off in the middle of the night and does not return home or to his hotel. It’s concerning,” Borges said.Anyone with information about the whereabouts of Dewayne Williams is asked to call 911 or Seaside police.
A missing person case out of Seaside involving a San Francisco man is now being considered suspicious.
“His disappearance is extremely unusual. He’s never done this before,” said Seaside Police Chief Nick Borges.
Thirty-four-year-old Dewayne Williams of San Francisco has been missing since early Monday morning, when he left and never returned.
“He’s healthy. He doesn’t suffer from any type of mental condition. There have been no reports of any substance abuse and no reports of him being suicidal,” Borges said.
Williams and his wife were in town last weekend to visit the Monterey Bay Aquarium. It was their first time in the area, and now the husband is missing. Williams was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, black jeans and orange Nikes. His wife spoke to KSBW by phone from San Francisco.
“If anyone has seen him, please just give me a call or let me know something. We just want to know if he’s OK. His mom, his uncles, his son — everyone is worried. We have a lot of people out looking for him, even in San Francisco,” said Patrice Williams, the missing man’s wife.
His wife told detectives her husband went to the beach early Monday morning while it was still dark, then returned around 3:30 a.m., saying he was going to a bus stop where he had left his jacket. Surveillance video shows him walking north on Fremont Boulevard near Playa Avenue, close to the Gateway Lodge, where the couple was staying. Police said Williams does not own a cellphone.
“If that’s all true, that makes this extremely suspicious that a grown adult wanders off in the middle of the night and does not return home or to his hotel. It’s concerning,” Borges said.
Anyone with information about the whereabouts of Dewayne Williams is asked to call 911 or Seaside police.
San Francisco, CA
20 women sue SF sheriff after alleged mass strip search ‘for training’
Numerous women who were detained in the San Francisco County Jail have accused the department of violating their rights after being subjected to a mass strip search that prosecutors said were used “for training” purposes.
Nearly 20 women have accused the San Francisco sheriff’s office of forcing them to strip naked in the county jail on May 22, 2025, and times before and after that date, while male deputies watched and cracked jokes.
The federal class action lawsuit was filed Friday in the United States District Court for Northern District of California. The suit was filed against the city and county of San Francisco, the SF County Sheriff’s Department, SF County Sheriff and several members of the department, per the complaint obtained by The Post.
The women alleged that while they were detained in the county jail, they were subjected to strip searches in front of male deputies who allegedly taunted and filmed them. Prosecutors claimed that this was not by accident and “it was deliberate,” per the complaint.
The plaintiffs include women who were strip-searched before May 22, women who were strip-searched during the mass operation on May 22, and women who were subjected to “suspicionless post-movement strip searches in the months that followed,” the complaint read.
The women claimed they were not only forced to strip naked in front of other women but that this also allegedly occurred while deputies wore body-worn cameras and recorded the searches.
“Multiple plaintiffs heard Sergeant Ibarra, the supervising officer, explicitly instruct Deputy Dockery not to deactivate her body-worn camera during the searches,” per the complaint.
“When Dockery asked whether she should turn her camera off, Ibarra said no. Ibarra later told detainees the footage might be ‘used for training purposes.’”
The complaint goes on to allege that Ibarra “told women the footage was similar to what they ‘see on YouTube’ and was ‘just like ‘Cops’” the TV show.
The San Francisco Sheriff’s Office (SFSO) states that strip searches must be conducted outside the view of anyone not involved and that no male staff are present when women are searched.
The suit also claimed that when various women either complained or filed grievances about the strip searches they were allegedly retaliated against.
“After plaintiffs LaSonya Wells and Alexcis Herrera organized other women to file tort claims, both were placed in segregation within a week,” the complaint read.
“Sergeant Ibarra directly threatened continued strip searches in November 2025 unless women ceased what he called ‘disrespecting deputies.’”
The suit was filed by attorney’s: Elizabeth Bertolino, Molly Ryan, Anthony Label, and Michael Christian.
Speaking to Mission Local in November, one of the women allegedly subjected to the strip searches talked about the trauma she still feels from it.
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“I’m still having nightmares about it,” one of the women told the outlet.
In November, the SFSO issued a statement that “appropriate personnel action was taken” following the numerous allegations.
“The conduct described is deeply concerning and does not reflect the policies, procedures, or professional standards we require of our staff,” the department told KTVU.
“We want to acknowledge the women who came forward. Every complaint raised within our facilities is taken seriously, and we remain committed to ensuring that all individuals in our care are treated with dignity, respect, and in full accordance with our policies and procedures.”
The women are seeking “compensatory damages for all constitutional and statutory violations” from things such as alleged emotional distress, trauma, physical injuries, loss of work assignments, etc, per the complaint.
The Post reached out to the San Francisco County Sheriff’s Office for further comment.
San Francisco, CA
Headlines, May 22 – Streetsblog San Francisco
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San Francisco, CA
San Francisco soccer league Girls Got Goals ready for World Cup in Bay Area
With the World Cup coming to the Bay Area, local youth players say they’ve been waiting for this moment their whole lives.
For 13-year-old Aaliyah Prieto, soccer is more than just a game. It’s a feeling. Watch her play and you just might feel it too.
“I love soccer. It’s such a good sport. It’s the ball, when you’re running, when you’re kicking – almost like a rush,” she said.
When she plays, Prieto is all business. Just minutes into practice she scored a rather impressive goal. Prieto is part of a free after-school league in San Francisco’s Mission District, aptly named Girls Got Goals, where many come from lower-income families.
But right now, it’s not the championship that has her all fired up. It’s something bigger.
“I’m pretty excited about the World Cup,” Prieto said. “Me and my dad love watching it. If we could go in person, we would. It’s really expensive though.”
Soccer fever is sweeping the country. And nowhere more than in the Bay Area, host to six World Cup games.
If history is any indicator, this summer could give the sport just the kick it needs. The last time the World Cup came to the United States in 1994, it literally helped create Major League Soccer. The league started with ten teams. Today there are thirty.
In the Mission District, where soccer has always been more religion than recreation, the buzz is at a whole other level.
Ariel Esqueda, who’s run Girls Got Goals for nearly two decades, said for these players, many from families who came here from Latin America where soccer is everything, the World Cup landing in their backyard gives them something they don’t always get: a leg up.
“Statistically, girls who plays youth sports they perform better academically. Their confidence skyrockets,” she said. “It’s definitely a catalyst. They knwo there’s potential out there, whether it’s scholarships, whether it’s being able to have access or connections,” she said.
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