San Francisco, CA
Stand with Israel rally in SF
SAN FRANCISCO – Sunday afternoon a group assembled at Civic Center plaza to show unity with Israel and denounce the violence that continues to take lives along the Israeli-Gaza border.
Men, women, and students brought large signs and Israeli flags to show unity within the community, and with those abroad.
Dozens of supporters of Israel turned out to rally for peace and denounce the violence and the war that has the death toll ticking up on a daily basis.
It was last weekend when 24-year-old student Shanie Roth was flying back to Tel Aviv to finish her last year at college. Her plane got diverted for 7 hours, before heading back to the U.S.
“I was one of the only people on the plane with Wi-Fi and my phone ended up being the news source for most of the plane because nobody knew what was happening. The war started ten minutes after our plane took off from San Francisco,” said Roth.
She came to Civic Center with family and friends to stand up against antisemitism and the atrocities of war she’d heard about.
“We’re here for peace, we’re here for Gaza civilians, we’re here for Israeli civilians, we’re here for our soldiers and the future of the Jewish people because Israel is necessary for the survival of the Jewish people, as demonstrated over and over again,” she said.
She was passionate in her stance, saying, “We will not let another holocaust happen when we have people who can defend us.”
ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR:
Rotem Skurnik Pool was born and raised in Israel and has lived in the Bay Area for 25 years. She said she’s been watching media all week and has been horrified at the senseless violence and worries about people who share her faith.
“As Jews this week, I think we feel vulnerable in every single place in the world,” said Pool.
As a mom of two, one a teenager, she is devastated by the violence she’s seen in the media, and what she’s heard from family and friends who have witnessed it firsthand.
“Israel has gone more right-wing in its politics, and it’s because of events like this, and that’s because there isn’t a belief that there’s a partner on the other side for peace,” she said.
Pool admits she knows there are no easy answers, sharing “It can’t be us or them-you’re never going to find middle ground. If it’s us or them, we’re all going to end up with these endless wars – and it’s just horrific.”
Like many, she wants peace for all. And she believes it needs to start with leadership, not terrorism.
“The root problem is leadership for Palestinians–that sees a vision for the Palestinian people as people who have a state not based on terrorism, and Hamas is not it.”
Alice Wertz is a freelance reporter for KTVU Fox 2 News. She can be reached at Alice.Wertz@Fox.com X/Twitter: AlicesTake Instagram/Threads: WayIseesIt
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco’s Fentanyl Deportations Show Rare Unity With Trump
Liberal San Francisco is eyeing at least one patch of common ground with President-elect Donald Trump.
Top officials in the city — long a sanctuary for undocumented immigrants — have embraced a Biden-era crackdown on fentanyl dealers that has sent scores of migrants to deportation proceedings since last year. Now the incoming mayor and other local leaders say they’re open to maintaining the program under Trump as they look to tackle the city’s drug markets.
“Believe it or not there may be some things that we agree on here,” Matt Dorsey, a member of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors, said of the incoming administration. “Fentanyl dealing and fentanyl addiction may be an area where there is some agreement.”
The deportations have sparked outrage from immigrant-rights advocates who say local law enforcement is working with federal authorities to circumvent the city’s sanctuary policy. While targeting convicted drug dealers is far more limited than the mass deportations that Trump has proposed — and that San Francisco is likely to resist — the actions show how a resurgent tough-on-crime tone in Democratic strongholds is opening up rare chances for agreement with the GOP president.
A similar recalibration is percolating around the country as cities prepare to navigate Trump’s upcoming second term. In New York, Mayor Eric Adams has said he’s open to deporting immigrants accused of crimes. Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has said that undocumented “violent criminals” should be deported.
It’s unclear if Trump, who is expected to appoint a new US attorney for Northern California, will continue the cooperation with San Francisco’s district attorney’s office. But the president-elect’s campaign focus on tackling fentanyl aligns with the city’s crackdown.
“President Trump will lever every power necessary to secure the border and stop deadly drugs from illegally entering our country,” said Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump-Vance transition team.
That sets up a delicate balancing act for local officials in San Francisco. Driven by fentanyl, overdoses killed 810 people in the city last year, although drug deaths have fallen sharply in recent months.
District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said in a statement that she’s willing to continue working with federal authorities to ensure “dignified, safe neighborhoods that are not held hostage by unrepentant drug traffickers” although she added any cooperation with Trump remains uncertain and would not violate the city’s sanctuary protections.
Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie echoed that sentiment, saying US prosecutors “have that right” to continue the program, which has led to around 120 convictions and dozens of additional charges since its inception.
“They deport them,” he said in an interview. “That has gone on for the last year and they have that right. And if they continue to do that, they have that right.”
Lurie added that he supports the city’s sanctuary policies, which are backed by state ordinances. The measures bar local law enforcement from working with immigration authorities in most cases.
Plenty of drug dealers are US citizens, and San Francisco has been touting its broader efforts to crack down on them, too. But the fentanyl deportations typically involve young Honduran migrants who are arrested by local police and then charged by US prosecutors.
Once in federal court, most defendants accept plea deals under a program called “Fast Track,” which results in one-day prison sentences that lead to the person being handed over to immigration authorities.
Critics argue that the system pressures accused migrants into plea deals and glosses over issues like human trafficking that force some migrants into drug dealing. A coalition of 32 advocacy organizations said in a November letter that the crackdown “singles out and scapegoats the immigrant community” for the fentanyl crisis.
“The District Attorney’s ongoing collusion with the federal government to funnel people into immigration detention and deportation is especially unconscionable in the face of threats of mass deportation and openly racist and xenophobic targeting of immigrants by President-elect Trump,” said Angela Chan, an assistant chief attorney in the San Francisco public defender’s office.
Among the recent cases is a Honduran man who crouched behind a wall with an undercover police officer and sold him $40 in fentanyl, according to a criminal complaint. The 21-year-old came to the US for the first time in recent months and “is not a sophisticated drug dealer,” his public defender said in a court document.
As part of his plea agreement “he will be rendered permanently inadmissible to the US, meaning that he will be barred from reentry for the rest of his life,” the lawyer said.
The federal crackdown also ensnared a 9-months-pregnant woman who faced a surprise arrest in October when she appeared for a local court hearing on drug-sale charges. The woman was held overnight before being released, the public defender’s office said.
In another case, a San Francisco jury in September acquitted a Honduran man accused of drug dealing after finding he had been coerced into selling narcotics.
At the political level, the Board of Supervisors overwhelmingly rejected an effort by Dorsey in 2023 to amend the city’s sanctuary policy to permit the deportation of convicted fentanyl dealers.
While Dorsey has been among the most vocal advocates for deporting the city’s convicted drug dealers, his common ground with Trump is unlikely to extend much further. Dorsey’s boyfriend is a Brazilian immigrant with a pending asylum case, and he’s been clear that most migrants should be shielded from Trump’s broader deportation campaign.
“It’s going to be a tightrope to walk for the new mayor,” said Dorsey. “It’s going to be a tightrope for all of us on the Board of Supervisors.”
With assistance from Marie Monteleone.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
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San Francisco, CA
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San Francisco, CA
Dolphins keep playoff hopes alive with 29-17 win over 49ers, who were eliminated Sunday afternoon
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — – Tua Tagovailoa threw for 215 yards and a touchdown, Jason Sanders nailed five field goals, and the Miami Dolphins kept their playoff chances alive by beating the San Francisco 49ers 29-17 on Sunday.
The 49ers were eliminated from the playoffs before the game because of wins by the Los Angeles Rams and Washington Commanders earlier Sunday. The loss ensured that last year’s NFC champions will have a losing season for the first time since 2020.
The Dolphins (7-8) helped their chances of making the playoffs for a third straight season, but will need to win their final two games and get help from losses by the Broncos, Chargers and Colts for that to happen.
Trailing by nine early in the fourth, San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy found tight end Eric Saubert for a 2-yard score that cut the lead to 19-17, but the Niners couldn’t get past self-inflicted wounds.
After punting the ball back to Miami with 6:45 left, San Francisco was hit with consecutive penalties for illegal substitution, unnecessary roughness and offsides to give Miami 25 yards, helping set up Sanders’ 48-yard field goal that stretched the Dolphins’ lead to five.
The 49ers were penalized 11 times for 90 yards.
Cornerback Kader Kohou then intercepted Purdy on the next drive, after the quarterback was pressured by defensive tackle Calais Campbell. Dolphins running back De’Von Achane sealed it with a 50-yard touchdown run.
Tagovailoa finished 22 of 34. Purdy was 26 of 40 for 313 yards and two touchdowns.
Tyreek Hill’s inconsistent season continued. He caught just 3 of 7 targets for 29 yards and a touchdown, with drops on the first two drives of the game and another on a potential touchdown in the third.
Jonnu Smith caught six passes for 62 yards to set the Dolphins’ single-season franchise record for receptions (76) and receiving yards (802) by a tight end.
Sanders was 5 of 5, including a 54-yarder, which made him 11 of 13 on field goals of 50-plus yards this year. San Francisco’s Jake Moody missed a 41-yarder in the third.
Deebo Samuel caught his first touchdown since Week 6 on a 16-yard score in which he muscled through several defenders on his way into the end zone.
Miami moved into 49ers territory three times in the first half but settled for field goals before Hill’s 3-yard touchdown catch from Tagovailoa that put the Dolphins ahead with 3:20 left in the second.
Purdy then drove San Francisco 67 yards down the field to set up Moody’s 21-yard field goal to cut Miami’s lead to 13-10 at halftime.
Injuries
49ers: LB Dre Greenlaw (right calf), LG Aaron banks (knee) and LT Jaylon Moore (quad) left with injuries. … DE Leonard Floyd played through a shoulder injury suffered in the first quarter.
Dolphins: WR Jaylen Waddle did not play because of a knee injury suffered last week. … CB Kendall Fuller (knee) and LB Jordyn Brookes (quad/knee) left in the second half.
Up next
49ers: Host Detroit on Monday Dec. 30.
Dolphins: At Cleveland next Sunday.
——
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nflbr/]
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