San Francisco, CA
Teens Sue San Francisco After Mass Arrest
Police in San Francisco violated their juvenile detention policies with the mass arrest of around 80 under-18s after an unsanctioned skateboarding event in July, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed by four of the teens. According to the class-action lawsuit, riot police “corralled” the teens on a street, along with around 30 other young people 18 or older, and held them for more than three hours without food, water, or access to bathrooms, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The teens describe being “freezing, thirsty, and hungry, needing to pee,” Rachel Lederman, an attorney for the teens, tells ABC7. “There were teenagers that had to pee in their pants because they were not provided bathrooms.” The lawsuit is seeking unspecified damages.
The group, mostly between the ages of 13 and 17, were allegedly handcuffed with zipties, the Washington Post reports. They were detained after police issued a dispersal order at Dolores Park, where skateboarders race down a steep hill in the annual “Hill Bomb” event. Police said they increased their response this year because the event has led to injuries in the past and a death in 2020, as well as violence and property damage. According to the lawsuit, the group of juveniles detained by police included people who were trying to obey the dispersal order and teens who were stopped streets away from the park. They were eventually taken to a police station to be cited and released. Charges of refusing to disperse and inciting a riot were later dropped for all the detained juveniles.
Police said bottles and firecrackers were thrown at them during the event and streetcars were vandalized. Lederman, however, says the arrests were civil rights violations because police “had no reason to believe that any of the young people they actually arrested had done those things.” “Police were supposedly responding to safety concerns about this skateboarding event,” she tells the Post. “But in fact it was police that endangered children by surrounding them on the street and holding them in the cold and darkness.” The lawsuit says the parents of some juveniles were not contacted after the arrests, a violation of department policy. Police policy also states that detained juveniles should have “reasonable” access to toilets and drinking water. (Read more San Francisco stories.)
San Francisco, CA
Warriors dance squad presents special Christmas show
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San Francisco, CA
3 California beaches closed as collapsed pier debris washes ashore
As detritus from the badly damaged Santa Cruz pier washes ashore, California State Parks officials are keeping three beaches closed. “Because of the amount of debris washing up onto the local beaches from the collapsing Santa Cruz municipal wharf,” Twin Lakes State Beach, Seabright State Beach and San Lorenzo Point will be closed until Dec. 30 at 6 a.m., Santa Cruz State Beaches said.
Seacliff State Beach and Rio Del Mar State Beach both reopened on Christmas morning, though visitors should take care: A high-surf warning is in effect along the coast from Thursday morning until Sunday afternoon. The National Weather Service is advising people to stay off piers and jetties.
About 150 feet of the Santa Cruz pier and an entire building housing a restroom broke off into the ocean on Monday amid battering waves. Three people working on the pier plunged into the water, where two needed rescue and a third was able to rescue themselves. Since then, pieces of the wharf have been washing onto local beaches. There is no estimated reopening for the wharf itself. Waves also pulled support piling from the Cayucos Pier about 160 miles south down the Central Coast. The end of the pier was already closed as it incurred damage during stormy conditions in February.
“Please be cautious when near the ocean, as debris from damage north of Capitola is making its way down the coastline,” the Capitola Police Department said. “Several large pilings from the Santa Cruz wharf have found their way to our shores, creating an extreme hazard. Please use caution if you are in the area.”
San Francisco, CA
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