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Shocking daylight stabbing in San Francisco’s Chinatown caught on video

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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.

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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.

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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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San Francisco, CA

Driver of bullet-riddled car flees North Bay deputies over Golden Gate Bridge

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Driver of bullet-riddled car flees North Bay deputies over Golden Gate Bridge


SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — A driver in a car riddled with bullets fled a Marin County Sheriff’s Office deputy at high speeds over the Golden Gate Bridge into San Francisco early Tuesday morning, according to authorities. The suspect, identified as Martin Zuniga Jr., 26, was later located in Novato and arrested.

The deputy first observed the suspect driving at approximately 100 mph on Highway 101 near the Richardson Bay Bridge. After pulling over the car, the deputy “noticed approximately 14 fresh bullet holes in the vehicle,” the sheriff’s office wrote. Zuniga allegedly told the deputy that he had just been involved in a road rage incident near Novato, but he refused to get out of the car and give a statement.

(Photo: Marin County Sheriff’s Office)

Zuniga “abruptly put the car into drive and fled the scene,” the sheriff’s office wrote.

The pursuit led to the Golden Gate Bridge, where the deputy disengaged due to unsafe speeds across the span, according to authorities. The car was later found abandoned on the streets of San Francisco.

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At approximately 6 p.m., detectives located Zuniga in downtown Novato and placed him into custody. The sheriff’s office said at the time of the arrest that he was in possession of a loaded .40-caliber pistol with a high-capacity magazine and suspected cocaine.

Zuniga was booked into the Marin County Jail for:

  • Reckless evading
  • Violently resisting law enforcement
  • Felon in possession of a firearm
  • Felon in possession of ammunition
  • Addict in possession of a firearm

Anyone with information regarding a shooting or road rage incident in the evening or early morning hours of June 15 and June 16 is asked to contact the Marin County Sheriff’s Office at 415-479-2311.



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San Francisco, CA

Austrian World Cup fans take over San Francisco restaurant

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Austrian World Cup fans take over San Francisco restaurant


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Proposal aims to address rising grocery prices, closing supermarkets in SF

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Proposal aims to address rising grocery prices, closing supermarkets in SF


A San Francisco supervisor’s proposal aims to address supermarkets closing in the city and the price of groceries climbing.

Supervisor Bilal Mahmoud introduced the Affordable Groceries Act at Tuesday’s San Francisco Board of Supervisors meeting. The proposal borrows an idea from New York’s mayor, but with a local flavor.

“It could be partnering with a food bank to take over one of these vacant lots,” Mahmoud said of his proposal. “Or it could be buying the property and giving it to a grocery, at lower market, which is what Mamdani is doing in New York.”

Inflation has pushed supermarket prices up by about 3% compared to last year.

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Adding to the affordability issues are new rules implemented in April by the Trump administration for SNAP, which is called CalFresh in the Bay Area. Many are expected not to qualify under the new rules.

Meanwhile, a combination of factors have prompted some big name grocers to close their doors in San Francisco.

Safeway in the Fillmore neighborhood closed in February of last year. In November, the Lucky Supermarket in the Bayview neighborhood shuttered.

There are community activists who said the two closures have created a bit of a food desert in those neighborhoods.

Mahmoud’s proposal would address the two problems by incentivizing grocers and pharmacy operators to open new outlets in the city through streamlining the approval process. It would also penalize outlets that close stores by taxing operators that shutter them and still hand on to the leases, which keeps new operators from moving in.

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The proposal would then use those funds to open city-backed grocery stores.

Mahmoud said he has modeled his proposal with local markets that also accept vouchers from EatSF in mind. The whole idea is to provide access to all residents — regardless of income — to healthy food in their neighborhoods.

Tanis Crosby, executive director of the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank, said food insecurity is worse now than during the pandemic.

“The reality is that here in the Bay Area, cost of living is really high,” Crosby said. “So it’s really important that we look towards what are the solutions we can take. Because it’s not about insufficient food that creates insecurity, it’s policy.”

If the proposal is passed by the Board of Supervisors, it would be put on November’s general election ballot.

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Voters would have to approve the streamlining and tax idea, and the fund for city-backed grocers.



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