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Woman Bit By Dog Owner In Trail Attack Suffering Mental, Physical Trauma

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OAKLAND (KPIX 5) –  The woman who was bitten by a dog owner after an altercation in on Oakland regional park trail earlier this month talked on Friday about the physical and mental trauma she suffered in the attack.

The two women have given very different accounts of exactly what happened between them earlier this month at Oakland’s Anthony Chabot Regional Park.

The jogger, Cyndi Stainner, claims she was bitten by the other woman after she tried to protect herself from a dog.

All sides agree about one fact: the dog owner bit the jogger. But the two parties disagree on what led to the attack.

(East Bay Regional Parks Police)

(East Bay Regional Parks Police)

In an exclusive interview with KPIX 5, Stainner said she is the innocent victim and survivor. She wants the Alameda County District Attorney to charge the dog owner.

During the interview, she detailed the pain she has suffered since the attack.

“I have a concussion, I have PTSD, I have all kinds of bruises and abrasions,” explained Stainner.

Stainner says it’s not just the physical injuries. She’s also suffering from emotional trauma after dog owner Alma Cadwalader bit her during the confrontation.

“I don’t sleep. I’m having trouble concentrating,” said Stainner.

She was jogging on the trail in the Oakland hills and came across two dogs and Cadwalader, their owner.

“I asked her to call the dogs because they were rushing and circling me. She didn’t,” remembered Stainner.

She says when Cadwalader’s shepherd-husky mix nipped at her shorts, she pepper sprayed the dog.

“Ms. Cadwalader screamed obscenities at me. ‘What did you do to my dog? What did you do to my dog?'” she said.

Stainner says she kept jogging away, hoping to de-escalate the situation.

She said minutes later, on her way back to the car, the 19-year-old dog owner hit her in the head, pushed her to the ground with her face on the dirt and tried to take the pepper spray from her.

She said when she wouldn’t let go, the teen bit her. Stainner said the bite lasted for about 10-15 seconds.

“She was literally latched to my arm. Latched to my arm,” said Stainner.

The dog owner tells a different story.

Her attorney Emily Dahm told KPIX 5 Stainner was the aggressor who attacked Cadwalader.  She says Cadwalader bit Stainner in self defense.

“As she has my client’s hair firmly in her grip, my client bites her to get her to release,” said Dahm.

Stainner insists that is a lie.

“I’m a nurse. We don’t hurt people; we help people,” said Stainner.

Police arrested the dog owner. The district attorney is reviewing the case. So far, they have not filed charges against the teenager.

Stainner’s attorney says if the DA drops the case, they may file a civil lawsuit against the teen.


Trump Tweets Attack on Pelosi, ‘Wine Country’ Donors

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WASHINGTON (CBS/AP) — President Trump is stepping up his feud with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-S.F.)

Referring to the San Francisco congresswoman’s multi-million-dollar California vineyard, the president tweeted:

“Also, could somebody please explain to Nancy & her “big donors” in wine country that people working on farms (grapes) will have easy access in!”

KPIX looked at individual contributions to Pelosi’s campaign committee in the last election cycle and found that donors with ties to Wine Country only represented about $34,000 out of a total $1.5 million in individual contributions.

In a video posted on his Twitter feed Friday evening, Trump said both sides should “take the politics out of it” and “get to work” to “make a deal.” But he also repeated his warnings, saying: “We have to secure our southern border. If we don’t do that, we’re a very, very sad and foolish lot.”

Trump’s Friday evening tweeted announcement came after Pelosi, on Friday, canceled her plans to travel by commercial plane to visit U.S. troops in Afghanistan, saying Trump had caused a security risk by talking about the trip. The White House said there was no such leak.

It was the latest turn — and potentially the most dangerous — in the high-stakes brinkmanship between Trump and Pelosi that has been playing out against the stalled negotiations over how to end the partial government shutdown.

© 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report

4 Reno Area Killings May Be Linked; FBI Joins Investigation

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RENO (CBS/AP) — The FBI has joined an investigation into four killings in northern Nevada that may be linked, including the former president of the Reno Rodeo and his wife who authorities said were shot to death in their home earlier this week.

Gerald "Jerry" David

(CBS)

Washoe County Sheriff Darin Balaam on Friday identified the latest victims as Gerald David, 81, and Sharon David, 80. Their bodies were discovered at about 4 p.m. Wednesday on the south edge of town.

Balaam said the fact they were killed with a firearm is “an additional similarity” to a pair of Douglas County homicides within the past 10 days in Gardnerville, south of Carson City. He said earlier that all four victims were elderly and items were taken from their homes.

“However, we are still unable to confirm an absolute connection,” he said Friday.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to the families of the victims. As these cases develop, law enforcement will continue with our regional collaborative effort aimed at increasing the safety of the public while we work toward bringing those responsible for these crimes to justice,” the sheriff told CBS Reno affiliate KTVN.

Gerald David was the president of the Reno Rodeo in 2006 and Sharon David, who went by Sherri, was an active member of the Rodeo Association, according to the Reno Gazette Journal .

Balaam said Thursday that the Douglas County and Carson City sheriff’s offices, along with Reno and Sparks police, were working to determine “what, if any connection, there may be” in the four homicides. At that time the official cause of death of the Reno victims had not been determined.

Authorities are offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

In Gardnerville, Connie Koontz, 56, was murdered Jan. 9 or 10 in her home, authorities said. Sophia Renken, 74, was found dead in her home about a mile away on Jan. 13.

“This is an active investigation in the very early stages,” Balaam said Thursday. “As we work to learn more, we want to address the very real and legitimate concerns of our communities. … This case is our top priority.”

The sheriff urged residents to turn on outside lights, secure their homes and refuse to open the door for anyone they don’t know.

“Stay alert for any suspicious activity and report it immediately to law enforcement,” he said.

© 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report

Bay Area Viet Gang Sweep Nets Drugs, Guns, 16 Arrests

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FREMONT – (CBS/BCN) – Sixteen people were arrested, about a ton of marijuana seized and a dozen guns confiscated in a series of raids carried out all over the Bay Area Tuesday morning, authorities said.

The sweep, “Operation Dragon,” targeted the “Insane Viet Thugs” gang, suspected of selling marijuana and Ecstasy in Alameda, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Contra Costa and Solano counties.

KCBS’ Mike Colgan Reports:

The raids were the culmination of an eight-month investigation and were carried out at 22 locations in Fremont, Union City, Hayward, San Jose, Oakland, Vallejo and San Leandro. Five of the sites targeted were grow houses, authorities said.

Authorities seized $100,000 in cash and have frozen several bank accounts.

The 6 a.m. raids were spearheaded by the state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement with help from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

A slew of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies participated.

Among those arrested was suspected gang leader Luc Tien Tran, 21, of San Leandro, who goes by the nickname “Piggy,” said Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement Special Agent in Charge Bob Cooke.

Cooke said the Insane Viet Thugs are a relatively new gang, a splinter group that broke off from the “Union City Viets” gang and drew attention to themselves through several drive-by shootings and burglaries.

“They really came onto our radar a couple of years ago,” Cooke said.

He said the gang was involved in a high-profile midday shooting near the Fremont Hall of Justice on Sept. 21. No one was injured in the shooting.

Four people were quickly arrested in that case, which Cooke said was made possible by a wiretap operation.

“We were able to monitor telephone calls immediately following the shooting…They were able to do a take-down and arrest four of the gang members for attempted murder,” Cooke said.

Fremont police Capt. Richard Lucero said his department has been familiar with the Insane Viet Thugs for a while.

“They’ve been present in southern Alameda County for quite some time, but recently they’ve been a particular threat,” he said. “Over the last two months or so they’ve been associated with five separate shootings.”

One of those was the Sept. 21 shooting, he said.

“They’re concerning in part because they’ve taken place in public places and residential neighborhoods,” Lucero said.

Cooke said the gang is local, does not have international ties, and consists of mostly Vietnamese-Americans with some black and Mexican members.

Investigators were able to identify about 30 members, he said.

Unlike some other gangs, Cooke said, the Insane Viet Thugs operate all over the region rather than in a specific neighborhood.

Tran, or “Piggy,” was the key shot-caller, Cooke said.

At his home, authorities confiscated a TEC-9 and a .45-caliber semi-automatic handgun, Cooke said.

“He had two guns in his room,” Cooke said.

His roommate, Duc Ha, who goes by “Penny,” had an assault rifle under his bed, according to Cooke.

Despite the potential for confrontation during the arrests, Cooke said this morning’s operation went smoothly, with “not so much as a broken fingernail.”

Cooke said it was difficult for investigators to close in on this particular gang.

“They were constantly aware of who was around them, who was following them, doing counter-surveillance tactics at all times,” he said. “These guys were practically impossible to follow.

The 16 people arrested are being booked into Santa Clara County Jail on a variety of charges, including cultivation and distribution of marijuana, possession of Ecstasy for sale and possession of assault weapons.

They will be charged in Santa Clara County Superior Court and will likely be arraigned on Friday, Deputy District Attorney Johnny Gogo said.

Those in custody include Linh Nhat Tran, or “Aryan,” 27; My Thuc Ha, or “Jay,” 26; Kennedy John Nguyen, or “Ken,” 25; Morgan Ashley Tonsend, 21; Quyen Ho Ho, or “TQ,” 22; To Xuan Nguyen, 18; and Thong Xuan Nguyen, or “Lil’ Thong,” 22.

The others are Phap Paul Ha, 21; Peter Huu Nguyen, 18; Billy Nguyen, 19; Johnny Le, 18; Phi Thanh Pham, or “Dub,” 20; Thien Thanh Pham, 23; and Matthew Pacheco, 20.

“I’m glad to see this case progress,” Lucero said. “This group is a significant hazard.”

Participating agencies included the federal Department of Justice, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the FBI.

Local agencies included the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, the California Highway Patrol, and police from Fremont, San Leandro, Vallejo, Hayward and Oakland.

(© 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News contributed to this report.)

Legendary San Francisco FBI Agent Shares Advice For People Seeking A Career In Law Enforcement

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Bay Area resident Terry Turchie has had a long and distinguished career with the FBI. In 1998, Mr. Turchie led the Unabomb Task Force that finally captured and convicted Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber, in one of the most famous criminal investigations of the 20th century.

(Photo Courtesy of Terry Turchie)

(Photo Courtesy of Terry Turchie)

After more than three decades of public service with the FBI and later at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Mr. Turchie is now a partner with TK Associates, LLC and co-author of the forthcoming book “Unabomber: How the FBI Broke Its Own Rules to Capture the Terrorist Ted Kaczynski.”

A leading expert in law enforcement, Mr. Turchie has graciously offered words of advice to people interested in entering a career with the FBI.

What academic preparation was necessary for you to enter a career with the FBI?

“After graduating from De Anza High School in Richmond, California, in 1968, I pursued a Bachelor of Science Degree in Criminal Justice at California State University in Sacramento. In 1972, I went to work for the FBI in Washington, D.C. as a clerical support employee. While in D.C., I entered an off-campus program of Southern Illinois University and earned a Master’s Degree in Government and Political Science. In February of 1976, I was appointed an FBI Special Agent. For a 26-year-old, it seemed like a pretty cool thing at the time.”

What was it like to lead two of the most important investigations in the history of the FBI?

“Leading the Unabomb Task Force from 1994 until February of 1998 and the fugitive search for Olympic bomber and police killer Eric Robert Rudolph in the mountains of North Carolina from March of 1998 until March of 1999 were certainly the highlights of my FBI career. Having the opportunity to get to know the courageous victims of these violent crimes and their families, and working with such dedicated law enforcement professionals, left an impression that will never go away. At one point during the search for Eric Rudolph, our fugitive task force grew to well over 250 investigators, forensic experts, behavioral scientists and tactical team members, representing 27 federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.”

What career advice can you share for individuals interested in a career in law enforcement or the FBI?

“A deep dedication to public service and the willingness to work long days are of paramount importance to anyone considering a career in law enforcement or the FBI. Patience, the ability to effectively manage stress and an understanding that careers in law enforcement can sometimes expose an individual to the unpleasant side of our society are attributes that anyone desiring such a career should possess, or work to nurture and develop. Even before college, becoming friends with and having potential ‘mentors’ who are already working in law enforcement can be helpful in understanding what the future can look like. As demanding as a law enforcement career can be, the rewards are unmatched. Solving crimes of all sorts, taking on corruption in politics, protecting America’s national security and identifying and arresting violent criminals while working alongside great colleagues and on behalf of the American people make the years go by way too fast. For information about the variety of careers available in the FBI, I would recommend taking a look at the FBI website.”

Randy Yagi is a freelance writer covering all things San Francisco. In 2012, he was awarded a Media Fellowship from Stanford University. His work can be found on Examiner.com Examiner.com.

Vacaville Man Wanted In Stabbings, Arson Dies After Being Shot By Police

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VACAVILLE (CBS SF) – A man who was a suspect in a double stabbing and home arson on Monday evening, and was shot by a Fairfield police officer later Monday night, has died from his injuries, according to Vacaville police.

Police said the suspect, Nathaniel Holland, 38, of Vacaville, was found hiding in a heavily wooded creek area in the 1000 block of Mason Street around 10:45 p.m. by a Fairfield police K-9 unit.

The suspect then attacked the dog with a knife and was shot by an officer, Vacaville police said. Holland died despite life saving efforts of police.

Police didn’t say if Holland died at the scene or at a local hospital.

Vacaville Stabbing Fire Suspect Nathaniel Holland (Vacaville Police)

The first call came in at 6:40 p.m. Monday. Officers responded to a home in the 1200 block of Alderwood Way for a report of a stabbing as well as a house fire.

Police said officers found out that Holland was seen running from the scene, and later investigation determined an argument with a 43-year-old woman believed to be his girlfriend and the mother to the other two female victims led to the stabbing and fire.

Vacaville police told KPIX 5 Holland stabbed the mother of his children and their 16-year-old daughter, who tried to intervene. Then, authorities believe he poured gasoline in the house and lit it on fire with the couple’s four-year-old daughter and two teenage boys still inside.

“It’s obviously very traumatic what they are going through right now. They are lucky they are all going to survive,” said Vacaville Police Lt. Chris Poland.

Police said the woman and a few of the kids were initially trapped inside as flames blocked the front of the home, but then climbed out a back window to escape.

Neighbor Ginger Sisk said husband heard the family screaming from the front yard and ran to help a third child — an unharmed brother — rescue the four-year-old girl.

“It was fully engulfed. It was bad,” said Sisk. “He kicked the fence down, went back there and kicked the sliding glass window down. And actually, the brother went in and pulled her out.”

One neighbor, who didn’t want to appear on camera, witnessed the children fleeing the fire.

“I seen a couple people run across. And then I heard a loud BOOM! I get out of my car and there is children running from the house screaming,” the neighbor said. “I approached the house and its on fire. And the kids are saying, ‘He stabbed my mom in the neck! He stabbed my mom in the neck!'”

The girl who was injured in the fire was transported to a Sacramento hospital for treatment of burn injuries.

The Fairfield Police K-9 was airlifted to UC Davis for medical treatment after being stabbed by the suspect.

“The CHP helicopter was used to lifeflight the canine to UC Davis Veterinary Center. And to have a K-9 stabbed is pretty traumatic for everybody,” said Poland.

Luckily, the K-9 is expected to survive.

Vacaville and Fairfield police, along with the Solano County District Attorney’s Office, will investigate the officer-involved shooting and the officer who shot Holland has been placed on administrative leave, police said.

Police noted that they have responded to calls for service at the house many times. Holland was well known to law enforcement and served jail time several years ago for assaulting an officer.

The fire was so hot the home was still burning well after noon today. As of early Tuesday evening, it is finally out.

Anyone with information about the incident is being asked to contact Vacaville police Det. Yetter at (707) 469-4846.

© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Bay City News Service. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

San Jose Police Seek Help In Identifying Liquor Store Killing Suspects

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SAN JOSE (CBS SF) — Police on Tuesday released surveillance images of two suspects connected to a shooting last month at a San Jose liquor store that killed a 43-year-old man.

The Dec. 14 shooting at El Rancho Liquors, located at the corner of West Alma and Almaden avenues, killed Nathan Johnson-Harper of Fresno. Police have released little details about the fatal shooting and said that a motive is under investigation.

The first suspect is described as a possibly Hispanic man in his 20’s with a medium build, curly medium length hair, a mustache and goatee. He was last seen wearing a black jacket, a black T-shirt and light blue jeans.

The second suspect is described as a possibly black man in his 20s with a slender build. He was last seen wearing a knit cap, a black hoodie and white gym pants, according to police.

Surveillance photos of the two suspects. (SJPD)

Anyone with information about the suspects is asked contact Det. Sgt. Bert Milliken or Det. John Figone at (408) 277-5283. Callers wishing to remain anonymous can call the Crime Stopper Tip Line at (408) 947-7867.

Callers who provide information leading to an arrest and conviction may be eligible for a cash reward, police said.

© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Bay City News Service. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Vigil Held For 2 Teen Girls Killed In Antioch Crash

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ANTIOCH (KPIX 5) — Hundreds of people braved wet weather Tuesday night and gathered near the scene of a deadly crash to remember two teenage girls who lost their lives.

Leana Rubin, 17, and Jaia Lightner, 13, died in a car accident near the intersection of Lone Tree Way and Indian Hill Drive in Antioch on Friday.

Mourners lit candles and prayed at a vigil across the street from the crash scene.

“This is a parent’s worst nightmare and a grandparent’s worst nightmare,” said Annette Castro, who is Leana’s grandmother. Castro said her granddaughter had only had her driver’s license for a couple of months when the crash happened.

“She got it around Thanksgiving,” she said.

Rubin was behind the wheel, leaving a high school basketball game with five other young people in the car with her, including Castro’s other granddaughter, Kiara, and Jaia. Kiara and three other people in the car were hospitalized with injuries.

RELATEDEast Bay Community Mourns Teen Girls Killed In Fatal Antioch Crash

Jay Lightner, a friend of Jaia’s father, said he did not attend the vigil because it was too painful for him. Other friends said Jay and Jaia had a special relationship.

“She was a daddy’s girl,” said Janice James, a family friend.

Castro said she hopes the girls’ deaths were not in vain. “This unnecessary accident has to be a witness to other teenage drivers,” she said.

“You have to obey the law,” added James.

Police said speed and wet road conditions were both factors in the crash.


Fremont Driver, 2 Passengers Killed In Horrific Highway 50 Crash

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CAMINO HEIGHTS, El Dorado County (CBS SF) — A Fremont man and two others in his car were killed Tuesday evening in a horrific crash in a heavily rainstorm on Highway 50 in the Sierra foothills, authorities said.

The California Highway Patrol said the crash took place around 6:30 p.m. near unincorporated Camino Heights in El Dorado County as a rainstorm was passing through the area.

“It was raining heavily at the time,” the CHP said in a Facebook post. “Due to the heavy rain and the speed of the Volvo, it is believed the driver lost control and the Volvo spun out and into the eastbound lanes of traffic. The Volvo then entered the path of the Subaru. The driver of the Subaru had no time to react and the front of the Subaru collided with the right side of the Volvo.”

A 51-year-old Fremont man was driving the Volvo. He and a one-year-old passenger were ejected by the force of the crash and killed in the crash. Also killed was a female passenger in the Volvo.

The identities of the three victims have not been released.

A 39-year-old Pollock Pines man was driving a 2017 Subaru Impreza and suffered major injuries.

All involved were wearing seatbelts and drugs/alcohol are not suspected to be a factor in this collision. The crash remained under investigation.

5 Injured In Early Morning San Francisco Fire

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SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — Five people were injured early Wednesday when a two-alarm fire damaged two homes in a San Francisco neighborhood, authorities said.

According to San Francisco Fire Department Lt. Jonathan Baxter the blaze in the 70 block of Liebig Street was reported at 12:18 a.m. The fire was first reported around 12:18 a.m. at 70 Liebig St. and then spread to the home next door at 72 Liebig St. Both were detached, 2-story, single-family homes.

Firefighters arrived on scene and found fire extending from the building and people requesting rescues from the second-floor and other locations of the homes.

They forced their way into 70 Liebig St. and found an injured resident near the front door. Firefighters also discovered that the home was piled high with belongings.

“There were a lot contents in the building,” said San Francisco Deputy Fire Chief Mark Gonzales. “It was very hard to get around.”

Five people were transported to hospitals including one child who suffered minor injuries. Two adults are currently in critical condition and two others suffered serious-to-moderate injuries.

“One occupant they found behind the front door,” Gonzales said. “The engine operator did a great job and threw a ladder to the second floor and got the second person out.”

A San Francisco firefighter also suffered an injury to their face and was treated at the scene.

The fire was placed under control around 1:45 a.m. A total of 23 fire apparatuses and 72 firefighters battled the blaze. The American Red Cross was on the scene to assist 17 people who were displaced.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.

Arcing Electrical Wires Lead To Tragic Marin Death

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MILL VALLEY (CBS SF) — A Mill Valley man who went to investigate a downed power line in his neighborhood Wednesday night was struck and killed after he heard a tree crack and ran into the path of a neighbor’s van, authorities said.

The tragedy unfolded just before 8:30 p.m. near the intersection of Laverne Avenue and North Ferndale Avenue in unincorporated Mill Valley.

Gusty winds had toppled a power line. A group of neighbors including 52-year-old Darren Malvin gathered in the street to take a look. Malvin then called 911 to report the downed wire.

• ALSO READ: Deadly Storm Claims Lives, Topples Trees, Triggers Mudslides And Power Outages

“As they were waiting for emergency crews to arrive, two more neighbors arrived, one on foot and one driving a van,” CHP officer Andrew Barclay said in an email. “As the group was conversing, a strong gust of wind caused the tree above them to crack.”

Fearing for their safety, the group attempted to flee. Unfortunately, Malvin bolted in front of a van and was struck and killed by a neighbor.

“There were arcing wires,” said Mill Valley Battalion Fire Chief Scott Barnes. “It was extremely windy — 20 to 40 mph winds. A lot of rain coming down…They heard some cracking noises and thought the tree was coming down.”

Paramedics provided first aid and took Malvin to Marin General Hospital where he succumbed to his injuries.

Malvin was the CEO of American Solar Corp., a Sausalito-based company.

Malvin was renting a place next to the downed tree as he was in the process of building a dream home down the street, which would have been completed in the next few months.

 

Alleged Gang Members Arrested In Millbrae Pancake House Robbery

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(CBS SF) — The San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office has arrested four people in connection with a 2018 armed robbery at the Millbrae Pancake House.

Taisia Fauolo, 21, of Vallejo, Miani Pon, 18, of San Francisco, Deviante Jackson, 20, of San Francisco, and Michael Pon, 21, of Daly City were arrested on suspicion of various crimes including robbery, conspiracy, possession of a firearm and a gang enhancement, according to the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office.

On Feb. 2, 2018 deputies responded to a report of an armed robbery at the Millbrae Pancake House.

Deputies said two suspects dressed in black, one armed with a handgun, robbed a couple walking to their car in the parking lot.

During a yearlong investigation, deputies, working with the San Francisco Police Department Gang Task Force, learned several members of the TRE-4 street gang were involved in the robbery.

Deputies said a group of gang members were inside the restaurant, saw the victims and called two other members from the gang to commit the robbery.

Fauolo and Miani Pon were arrested Jan. 7 at the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office Maguire Correctional Facility where Pon was visiting Fauolo, who is in custody for attempted murder.

Jackson and Michael Pon were arrested by the San Francisco Police Department on Jan. 8.

Deputies are also looking for Reno Goldie Fiapoto, 18, of South San Francisco.

Fiapoto was recently released from custody with an ankle monitor for a pending case of burglary in San Francisco. He cut off his monitor, and his whereabouts are not known at this time.

 

© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Bay City News Service. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

BART Extension To South Bay Back on Track After Delays

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SAN JOSE (CBS SF) – The much-delayed South Bay BART extension may finally be getting back on track. The extension is now scheduled to open in the fall of this year.

“The staff, they felt almost ashamed that this happened on their watch. They tried to make sure that they lost as little time as possible,” said San Jose City Councilman Johnny Khamis. “I commend them for their efforts to get this thing turned around as fast as they did.”

KPIX 5 News was the first to uncover serious construction-related issues that threatened to delay the opening of the new rail line by almost a year. According to the Valley Transportation Authority, a subcontractor installed more than 1,000 pieces of used equipment on the communications and security backbone of the brand-new transit system.

A spokesperson for VTA said all of the used equipment was removed, replaced and tested ahead of schedule by the end of December.

The VTA is planning to start initial testing Monday on the final leg of the extension that will carry BART into the heart of downtown San Jose and ultimately to Santa Clara.

“We’re excited about it. If that construction brings us more customers and more customers to downtown San Jose that would be great for me and for our business,” said business owner Kenny Quiterio.

Because the BART stations in downtown San Jose will be underground, construction crews are planning to drill 150 feet below the street to collect soil samples. That information will help them design and build the underground rail line.

VTA says they plan to complete construction and testing of the Milpitas and Berryessa BART station by the end of March. At that point,
BART will take control of the system and conduct an additional six months of testing.

Completion of the BART extension to Downtown San Jose is not expected until at least 2026.

Meanwhile, the first phase of the extension stretching from the Warm Springs station in Fremont to the Berryessa station in East San Jose is expected to open sometime in 2019, according to the VTA.

Suspected Shoplifter Flees Petaluma Target Store After Punching Employee

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PETALUMA (CBS SF) — A Target staffer was punched Friday evening after confronting a suspected shoplifter, police said.

Petaluma Target Shoplifter

A suspected shoplifter at the Target store in Petaluma. (Surveillance Photo via Petaluma Police)

About 6:45 p.m., the suspect entered the store at 401 Kenilworth Drive. The man concealed some items in his pants and tried to leave the store, according to police.

When a staffer tried to detain him, the suspect dropped the merchandise and punched the employee, causing a minor injury, officials said.

After that, the suspect fled. No information was released about what the suspect was trying to steal.

Police released surveillance photos of the suspect and urges anyone who recognizes him to contact Officer Robert Sutherland at the Petaluma police department at (707) 778-4372.

© 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. and Bay City News Service. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

South Bay Vietnamese Fear Deportations From Tougher Trump Policy

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SAN JOSE (KPIX) — Santa Clara County Supervisor Dave Cortese joined dozens of members and leaders of the Vietnamese community Saturday who say they are concerned by what they perceive as the Trump Administration’s attack on immigrants.

A new White House policy could leave thousands of members of the Vietnamese community vulnerable to deportation for crimes committed years or even decades ago.

“Some of these convictions occurred in the 90s or the 80s. You did your time and I think you paid your debt to society,” immigration attorney Tuan Le explained. “But now, it’s 30 years later and you’re getting the harshest punishment.”

“It really feels like no immigrant is safe. And here in Santa Clara County, 40 percent of our population is foreign-born,” Cortese said.

South Bay Vietnamese Community

Members of the Vietnamese community dine a the Chua Di Lac Buddhist Temple in San Jose. (CBS)

Currently, the U.S. government has an agreement with Vietnam to accept the deportation of immigrants who’ve committed certain crimes if they arrived here in 1995 or after.

The Trump Administration is reportedly trying to strike a deal that would allow the deportation of Vietnamese immigrants who arrived prior to that — often as refugees who fled their war-torn homeland.

“They’re trying to change the law so they can get rid of whoever comes before 1995,” said Thich Phap Luu, spokesperson for Chua Di Lac Buddhist Temple in San Jose.

“We have pro bono legal help at the county for people with immigration issues and there’s a reason for that: We want people to feel like they don’t have to flee, they don’t have to hide,” Supervisor Cortese said.

According to Supervisor Cortese, the Vietnamese community here makes up 10 percent of Santa Clara County’s population.


SFPD Arrest Suspect in Brutal Attack on Elderly Woman in Visitacion Valley

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SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — An 18-year-old man has been arrested in connection with a brutal assault earlier this month in San Francisco that left an 89-year-old woman with life-threatening injuries, police said.

Police arrested Keonte Gathron in San Francisco on Saturday evening after he allegedly committed another robbery.

(Courtesy SFPD)

Gathron is suspected in the Jan. 8 assault in the 1000 block of Visitacion Avenue. Around 6:45 a.m., a witness reported seeing a male suspect exit a residence from an interior staircase and walk eastbound on Visitacion Avenue.

Shortly thereafter, the victim, Yik Oi Huang, was found unconscious at the Visitacion Valley Playground across the street from the residence.

Huang was taken to Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, where she continues to be treated for life-threatening injuries.

“They are saying swelling has gone down. They’re seeing signs that she is reacting, somewhat to visitors, but it’s ever so slight,” said Cynthia Choi, the Huang family spokesperson.

“My dad found her lying unconscious with her head covered in blood and her arm bruised,” Sasanna Yee, the victim’s granddaughter, told KPIX.

Yee said that the park where her grandmother was attacked was where she frequently did her morning exercise routine. “She was doing her morning exercises when she was attacked,” said Yee.

Yik Oi Huang (Sasanna Yee/Facebook)

Police say their investigation led to evidence linking the person leaving the residence to the assault.

“This is an ongoing investigation, and we will have further details to follow later in the week,” San Francisco police Chief William Scott said in a written statement. “But we want to express our gratitude to neighbors and leaders in the Visitacion Valley community who worked closely with our investigators to address this senseless act of violence.”

San Francisco supervisor Shamann Walton, who represents District 10 and Visitacion Valley, released a statement praising police efforts in the case.

“Today, we have learned that the SFPD has apprehended a suspect connected to the attack on Ms. Huang. I want to thank SFPD for your diligence in investigating this case. Our community still has a lot of work to do to heal,” Walton said in the statement.

Walton said he held a community meeting on Saturday to talk with neighbors about their safety concerns. He said there is a lot of fear, but he hopes to bring in city resources to install security cameras, build a police substation, and create neighborhood watch groups.

“We’re going to fight to make sure that things like this don’t happen again,” said Walton.

The San Francisco Police Officer’s Association is also involved in the case. Last week, the organization offered a $10,000 reward for information in the case. Representatives of the SFPOA also say they’ve suggested putting a Mobile Command Center in the neighborhood and staffing it with officers 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

“I think it would really go a long way in terms of making the community feel safe and not feel in fear,” says Matt Lobre, the secretary for the San Francisco Police Officers Association.

SFPD investigators are not releasing many details about what evidence lead them to Gathron. They also have not released a photo of Gathron, saying there are pending identification matters. Investigators said in a press release Sunday that they “will have further details to follow later in the week.”

Anyone with further information related to this case is asked to call the San Francisco Police Department at (415) 575-4444 or Text a Tip to TIP411, beginning the text message with SFPD. Those sharing information may remain anonymous.

© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News Service contributed to this report.

Struggling Single Mom Of 2 Rents San Mateo Garage For $1,000 A Month

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SAN MATEO (CBS SF) — One mother in San Mateo says rent is so expensive in her city all she can afford is a garage.

Nicole Jones was pregnant with her now 18-month-old daughter when she lost her job and her apartment.

Jones, who gave birth to her second child three weeks ago, now pays $1,000 a month to live in the 250-square-foot space, which includes a bathroom with a stand-up shower.

“This is pretty much all I could get,” she told CNN. Before the converted garage, she was living in a homeless shelter.

“I didn’t know much about homelessness before,” Jones said.

“Honestly, I always thought homeless people were panhandlers or people on the street that were hungry and cold and drug addicts and alcoholics — who didn’t want to do anything for themselves. I work and make decent money when I’m working. I think part of the reason why I became homeless is because finding work and daycare and transportation and everything just combined made it impossible for me to keep a roof over our head.”

In an interview with KPIX 5, Jones said she has received plenty of attention and nasty emails about her way of dealing with the lack of affordable housing after the CNN story aired.

“I like it here. For people that don’t like it, count yourselves lucky that you’re not in this garage with me. I think that it’s a home,” Jones told KPIX 5.

Nicole Jones of San Mateo cares for her two young children in this converted garage. (CBS)

Nicole Jones of San Mateo cares for her two young children in this converted garage. (CBS)

The bartender said she makes good money, but not enough for a bigger place in a market with a lot of competition.

“I had done a lot of searching, probably spent over $750 doing application fees trying to get into an apartment. Nobody wanted to rent to me, so this was a last resort, but a good resort,” Jones said.

She said the rent money is also keeping a roof over the homeowner’s head, by keeping the mortgage paid.

“I don’t expect a handout. I don’t expect a pity party. I’m proud of my situation. It’s not ideal, but it’s not something I’m ashamed of,” Jones said.

Jones said the real credit in this situation goes to the women’s shelter that kept her and her daughter off the streets until they found that garage.

Rents in San Mateo have skyrocketed like the rest of the Bay Area. The median rent price is $2,900 a month.

 

San Francisco Sex Workers Battle For Rights, Legitimacy

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SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — “Did you f*** her first or did you pay her first?” a man nonchalantly asked his friend outside a cluster of massage parlors on Kearny Street in downtown San Francisco on a Friday night in late 2016. 

In San Francisco and across the country prostitution remains illegal, with the exception of some rural Nevada counties. But that doesn’t stop it from happening.

The Polaris Project, an anti-human trafficking organization, found that as many as a third of all massage businesses in San Francisco are advertising erotic services online.

Read also: Third Of San Francisco Massage Parlors Advertise Erotic Services

Sex workers – those who choose to have sex in exchange for money and who are not forced to do so – and their advocates say the time is long overdue for legislators to consider new policies that legitimize the industry and prioritize the rights of those working within it.

One of the massage businesses that the men were standing outside of in late 2016 was Queens Health Center. Months earlier, the business had received a citation from San Francisco’s Department of Public Health for conducting lewd acts with clients, but it remained open.

Then, on Valentine’s Day of 2017, San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera sued the owner of Queens Health Center, claiming the massage business was a front for a brothel and that the business had violated city code.

In 2016, the San Francisco Department of Public Health cited almost a dozen massage businesses in the city for lewd conduct following unannounced health inspections.

Queens Health Center is just one of hundreds of massage businesses statewide suspected of offering clients everything from happy endings to full-on sex.

Protecting Sex Workers
Carol Leigh is a San Francisco-based sex worker and filmmaker, and a strong advocate for the legitimization and legalization of sex work. Leigh argues that criminalization of sex work makes the job more dangerous; assailants know that they can get away with violence when they enter an illegal, underground establishment.

Sex workers across the country maintain that the criminalization of sex work emboldens assailants and silences victims, and say this needs to change.

If her work had been legal, Leigh argues that she wouldn’t have been raped while working at a massage parlor on San Francisco’s O’Farrell Street in the 1970s. She said she never reported the incident to police, largely because she feared the business she was working at would be shut down and she would lose her job.

Bay Area Sex Scandal
The world of sex work – and its interaction with the law – is largely invisible. It’s taken dozens of Bay Area law enforcement officials to be accused of having sex with an underage girl to bring this underground scene to light.

Jasmine Abuslin, who used the alias Celeste Guap while working as a prostitute, claims to have had sexual relations with as many as 30 officers from six Bay Area law enforcement agencies, including San Francisco and Oakland.

In 2016, the sexual misconduct allegations came to light and Abuslin, now 19, described being exploited by law enforcement officers for years, beginning when she was a minor. The City of Oakland has recently agreed to pay Abuslin a nearly $1 million settlement and some officers have been criminally charged following her allegations.

A report by a court-appointed California investigator blames Oakland’s mayor and the city’s former police chief with downplaying this sexual misconduct scandal and carrying out a criminal and internal affairs investigation that was “seriously deficient.”

The investigator noted that the Oakland Police Department failed to thoroughly investigate the exploitation of Abuslin “in part because of an implicit but evident bias against the victim, based on the type of victim she was.” This had much to do with the fact that she was involved in prostitution.

In exchange for sex, law enforcement officers allegedly provided Abuslin with protection, and gave her a heads up to prostitution sweeps along Oakland’s International Boulevard and elsewhere.

Abuslin’s arrangements with police officers is hardly unique.

Former Oakland prostitute Rory Keller received a $350,000 settlement from the city of Oakland 16 years ago, after being sexually exploited by officers. More recently, police officers in St. Louis, Missouri have been accused of similar allegations and an internal affairs investigation has been launched into that alleged misconduct.

Rachel West, with the US PROStitutes Collective, claims that sex workers tend to distrust and fear law enforcement officials. Her group hopes to change the law and ensure that sex workers can report police misconduct without negative repercussions.

According to research conducted by University of California at San Francisco and St. James Infirmary, of 247 female sex workers interviewed in San Francisco, 21 percent reported having police officers as paying customers while 14 percent reported being threatened with arrest unless they have sex with a police officer. Five percent reported being arrested for not having sex with a police officer while eight percent reported being arrested after having sex with a police officer.

“That’s just the tip of the iceberg,” said West, who believes those numbers could be much higher.

Creating an environment where sex workers in peril can turn to law enforcement will likely become more important as websites such as Sugar Daddie and SeekingArrangements continue to increase in popularity. Neither site markets itself as escort businesses, but Seeking Arrangements charges a fee to introduce “generous men & attractive women” while Sugar Daddie states on its site, “we pride ourselves on helping you find the ultimate generous Sugar Daddy. Bills paid, gifts galore, and top-shelf fun.”

West and her organization claim sex workers don’t typically report sexual and physical assault. More often than not, she said, law enforcement officials do not sufficiently respond to reports of assault made by sex workers and allow perpetrators to remain free.

Changing Landscape
Sex workers in San Francisco are not new to advocating for their rights.

On January 25, 1917, a couple of hundred sex workers marched and rallied outside a church in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district, protesting an impending crackdown on the city’s brothels.

The sex workers of 1917 argued that it was their body and their choice, and that lawmakers and those who looked down on sex work should instead focus their energies on improving the economic and societal situations that lead women into the profession.

On January 25, 2017, a full century later, a group once again marched and rallied in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood to mark 100 years of struggle for sex workers’ rights in the city. A liquor store now dominates the intersection.

Banner at the Tenderloin Museum on January 25, 2017. (Photo: Hannah Albarazi)

As much as the neighborhood has changed drastically in 100 years, so have many aspects of the sex work industry.

Today, some sex workers tout their services online. They work in hotels and massage parlors rather than the brothels of yore. Others work under pimps and still take to the streets.

Despite the changes in scenery and marketing, the fact remains that there are few, if any, rights for sex workers, even 100 years after that historic march.

Many sex workers believe that the decriminalization of sex work would lead to a better relationship with law enforcement.

Sex workers attending the 2017 rally in the city’s Tenderloin neighborhood repeatedly said their clients are not exploiting them. Instead, they carried signs that read, “We Demand Rights, Not Rescue” and “Criminalizing Undermines Safety.”

Some sex workers told CBS San Francisco that they love their jobs and consider the sex and companionship they offer as a form of healing and therapy for their clients. Some are happily married and see themselves as erotic therapists.

Leigh said criminalization means sex workers have a tough time planning for retirement. She said while it is not impossible, it is very difficult to pay into Social Security when you work at an underground establishment.

Sex workers demand law enforcement focus their efforts on sex crimes and human trafficking.

Sex Trafficking v. Sex Work
At the rally, as if on cue, a car full of men approached the intersection, rolled down the car window and asked the group what their cause was.

“Sex workers’ rights,” they said.

The driver honked to show his support, but then stopped, adding, “But not children, right?” The protesters assured the driver that nobody present wanted children to be exploited. One sex work advocate rolled her eyes and said it is a common response from people who confuse sex work with sex trafficking.

Sex workers say lawmakers and the public do not always differentiate between sex trafficking (which is forced) and sex work (which is chosen). That’s a big PR problem for their industry.

In San Francisco, illicit massage businesses are considered a hotbed for sex trafficking.

But in the last two years, no sex trafficking victims were identified during inspections by police and health inspectors at massage businesses in San Francisco, according to the city’s 2016 human trafficking report, the first of its kind.

The Mayor’s Task Force on Anti-Human Trafficking has been considering implementing an immunity rule, the Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy, in the city for sex workers reporting violence. The task force states that the policy would be groundbreaking and they hope to finalize it soon.

“The overall goal is cultural change: violently targeting sex workers is not acceptable. This policy would also protect sex workers who are trafficked,” according to the task force’s 2014 meeting minutes.

In 2017, no such policy yet exists.

Shrouded In Taboo
Almost a decade ago, a San Francisco initiative to decriminalize sex work failed at the ballot. Kamala Harris – then the San Francisco District Attorney and now a U.S. Senator – opposed the initiative in 2008. Harris argued that it “conceals the inhumane nature of prostitution” and that it could put trafficked victims at greater risk by placing them “outside the protection of the city’s law enforcement system.”

Since then, few legislators have advocated for any change to the existing law.

But sex workers who choose to work in the industry say criminalization is inhumane.

“Current lawmakers won’t come out publicly and say they support decriminalization,” Rachel West with US PROStitutes Collective told CBS San Francisco.

California legislators are indeed reluctant to express their policy views surrounding sex work. In fact, given weeks to respond, no members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors were willing to comment on the issue.

However, the San Francisco’s Department on the Status of Women did weigh in. Director Emily Murase and Women’s Policy Director Minouche Kandal explained that their department does not see all forms of sex work as sex trafficking. They’ve created the Sex Work and Trafficking Policy Impact Committee, which includes sex workers, and focuses on identifying ways the city can address violence against sex workers.

“Sex workers are disproportionately victimized,” said Kandal, adding that city policy needs to ensure that anyone reporting violence is able to do so without fear of retribution.

Murase said the Bay Area law enforcement sex scandal “shows why it would be important to have a policy like this in place.” She said city policy must reflect that everyone, regardless of their profession, is entitled to protection from violence.

Her department continues to work with the San Francisco Police Department to craft the language of the policy to prioritize sex workers’ safety.

“We’re looking forward to seeing it in writing,” said Kandal.

San Francisco police spokesman Sgt. Michael Andraychak told CBS San Francisco the police department is reviewing the Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy to ensure that it conforms with department’s policies.

Andraychak said that while sex in exchange for money is a crime in San Francisco, the department believes the policy will stress the referral of all victims of crimes, including sex workers, to victim advocates and community organizations.

“Big picture is that this policy will serve to educate and remind both Department members and sex workers alike that this Department will investigate any case involving the victimization of a sex worker,” Andraychak said.

Andraychak said the police department and the district attorney’s office plan to “work collaboratively on a training program in sex work and crimes against sex workers to ensure the policy is implemented in a manner that furthers the goals of reporting of crimes and building trust and rapport with the community. The policy emphasizes the elimination of violence regardless of one’s occupation.”

But a group of sex work advocates helping to get the policy passed claim San Francisco police Chief William Scott “refuses to include a clause which would also prevent law enforcement from committing violence and other abuses against sex workers.”

They say under Chief Scott, who was appointed in January 2017, the San Francisco Police Department wants this section of the policy omitted:

“Violence, harassment, coercion or retaliation committed by any law enforcement officer against sex workers is not tolerated and will be investigated, which may result in disciplinary or criminal action. During the course of an investigation or potential arrest, law enforcement may not engage in any type of sexual act with a sex worker.”

Sex work advocates say the SFPD will not agree to the policy unless that section is removed.

The policy discussion has come to a standstill.

While sex workers in San Francisco wait for an amnesty policy to be established, in other countries and in other states legislators have charted a path forward.

Nevada allows prostitution in government-regulated brothels in sparsely-populated counties; in Hawaii a bill to decriminalize prostitution was introduced earlier this year.

New Zealand decriminalized sex work back in 2003 and requires members of the sex work industry be part of the oversight committee that creates and amends the laws governing their profession.

Some European countries have fully decriminalized the industry while other European countries have implemented the Nordic model, in which selling sex is decriminalized but buying sex remains criminalized.

The results, like the policies, are varied.

A new study found that rape has decreased in Dutch cities where it is legal to sell sex. Another recent study found that, on average, countries where prostitution is legal have an expanded prostitution market and thus an increase in reported human trafficking.

Amnesty International, the World Health Organization and Human Rights Watch are among a host of international groups advocating for full decriminalization, arguing that it prioritizes sex workers’ human rights.

On the other hand, celebrated feminist writers including Gloria Steinem and Lena Dunham are among the most vocal critics of Amnesty International’s call for global decriminalization of sex work.

Sex workers in the Bay Area and across the country are trying to get their legislators to comprehend the high demand for prostitution and recognize it as the result of a society with an enduring desire to pay for sex.

Sex workers say legislators need to grant rights to those who choose to be in the sex work industry, while creating better safeguards for women who don’t want to be in it.

Safety First
A century ago, the American Medical Association supported full criminalization of sex work as a way to mitigate the spread of venereal diseases. Today, the association appears to be rethinking its stance.

Essays published in the January 2017 edition of the American Medical Association’s Journal of Ethics show the association’s changing outlook with essays titled “Should US Physicians Support the Decriminalization of Commercial Sex?” and Decreasing Human Trafficking through Sex Work Decriminalization.”

The essays dive deep into the ethical debate in the 21st century, arguing that victims of exploitation or abuse must be able to turn to law enforcement without fear of retribution or arrest.

But in San Francisco, the Department of Public Health continues to do inspections of massage businesses in hopes of finding sex trafficking victims. But they haven’t been finding trafficked victims there, just people having sex in exchange for money, according to city departments.

Sex workers and their advocates argue that decriminalization would encourage sex trafficked victims to come forward and report bad actors, similar to the way San Francisco’s controversial sanctuary city policies encourage undocumented immigrants to report crime without fear of deportation.

It remains to be seen whether the City Attorney’s Office plans to sue the dozens of massage businesses that operate as brothels in the city and whether that’s the best use of taxpayer money and city resources.

Many of the citations issued for lewd acts have resulted in San Francisco massage businesses being given suspensions and then reopening under a new name, in the same location.

Perfect Health Center Practitioner in the city’s Marina District, for example, received a lewd act citation in 2015, but despite an inspector’s eyewitness report, a violation hearing found that no lewd acts had occurred. The business was fined $250 for improper attire.

Allen Pera, the DPH environmental health inspector said at the hearing, that during that massage business inspection he saw an Asian woman who was “completely nude without undergarments — jumping from crouching down to cover herself behind the door, and a Caucasian male rolling off the massage table, falling on the floor, grabbing a pillow to cover his genitals.”

That massage business is now operating as Perfect Asian Massage and both on its website and on Backpage.com it continues to advertise sensual massages. You can visit it at the same address.

Editor’s Note: If you or someone you know is a victim of trafficking, California counties — including San Francisco — offer various services, which can be found here. Those wishing to report trafficking can contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline.

By Hannah Albarazi – Follow her on Twitter: @hannahalbarazi.

Scammers Target Real Estate Buyers Through Email Schemes

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(KPIX 5) — The San Francisco Bay Area, one of the hottest real estate markets in the country, is also turning out to be a prime target for cyber-criminals who are hacking realtors’ email accounts and sending home buyers false instructions to wire money.

It happened to East Bay realtor Kristina Solovieva. Last year, criminals hacked her Gmail account, and waited for just the right time to strike. “The timing was impeccable, actually,” Solovieva said. Just when it was time for one of Solovieva’s clients to send the remainder of their down payment to close escrow, the scammers sent the buyers an email from Solovieva’s account.

The email, seemingly from Solovieva, instructed the buyers to wire hundreds of thousands of dollars to an account. Luckily, the amount was off by $30 – enough to make the clients suspicious. “They were very savvy, and they did the math, and it didn’t add up,” said Solovieva.

But some do fall for it. San Francisco attorney Matthew Borden is representing a buyer who wired over $500,000 to a scammer after allegedly receiving a false email from her realtor’s account. “She was crushed,” Borden said. “This was her life savings.” In this case, Borden blamed the realty company, Zephyr, for not protecting its accounts from intrusion. “First of all, they should have maintained good security themselves,” said Borden.

Zephyr denied it is responsible. In an email to KPIX 5, company president Randall Kostick called it an “unfortunate case,” and said “no one at our company gave instructions concerning the wiring of her deposit funds (that was the scam artist who did that.)” It also said the FBI is investigating and it’s possible that the hack took place “in the title company’s system” or perhaps, the buyer’s email account. Kostick did acknowledge the email the victim received “did appear to originate from our agent.”

Zephyr also said the problem is “much more prevalent than most people are aware of.” The National Association of Realtors and the FBI have recently issued warnings about sophisticated email scams targeting the real estate industry. The NAR’s warning advises “Start from the assumption that any email in your in-box could be a targeted attack from a criminal.”

Matt Fuller, President of the San Francisco Association of Realtors, said realtors aren’t the only ones being hacked. “It can be the agent’s email, it can be the title company, it can be a lender, It can be a transaction coordinator,” he said.

But the crime is always the same: impersonating someone involved in the transaction by sending emails from their account and provide instructions to wire money, at precisely the moment the client is expecting to make a payment. The Bay Area is particularly vulnerable because it’s a hot market and buyers are doing deals quickly, according to Fuller. “There is this urgency associated with transactions.”

Solovieva believes the scammers were “watching us all along and reading all our correspondence … It’s creepy.”

The California Association of Realtors is now advising real estate agents to include a “Wire Fraud Advisory,” in the mountain of paperwork presented to buyers. It says “While wiring funds is a welcome convenience, buyers and sellers need to exercise extreme caution.”

Solovieva, who has since added layers of security to her email account, shares her hacking experience with clients, hoping to make sure the message hits home. “It’s not being discussed a lot, but it’s out there.”

 

6 More Bodies Discovered In Paradise, Raising Camp Fire Toll To 48

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PARADISE (CBS/AP) — Authorities continued their efforts to identify and locate those people reported missing in the Camp Fire Tuesday, confirming that six additional bodies were found during the day to bring the total number of deaths from the fire to 48.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea made the announcement during the nightly press conference to keep media and residents updated regarding progress being made battling the Camp Fire. He said all six of the human remains were found inside homes in Paradise.

“As I’ve said again and again, one of the hardest parts of this job is to provide you with an update with where we are at in the recovery of human remains,” Honea said.

On Monday, the death toll from the fire rose to 42 people confirmed dead, making the Camp Fire the deadliest in state history.

Cal Fire crews managed to make some significant progress on the Camp Fire as of Tuesday evening. According to Cal Fire personnel, the fire has consumed 130,000 acres total and is now 35 percent contained.

The number of single-family homes damaged by the fire rose to 7,600 with 75 such dwellings damaged. A total of 95 multiple-resident buildings have been destroyed with an additional 11 buildings damaged.

At total of 260 non-residential commercial buildings have been destroyed by the fire with 32 such buildings sustaining damage. A total of 8,817 buildings have been confirmed destroyed by Cal Fire personnel.

Meanwhile, coroner search teams, many accompanied by a chaplain, fanned out across Paradise Tuesday, visiting dozens of addresses that belong to people reported missing since last week’s explosive blaze leveled this town of 27,000.

The searchers use a grim calculus at each scene: No cars in the driveway is good, one car a little more ominous and multiple burned-out vehicles equals a call for extra vigilance.

When a body is found, a call goes out, yellow police tape goes up — and the blue body bag arrives. In many cases, there is almost nothing left. The long bag looks almost empty as it’s carefully carried out of the ruins and placed in a black hearse.

CAMP FIRE FULL COVERAGE:

Sometimes there are no answers.

Barbara Hall has been searching for a woman she considers her aunt, Arlene Bickel. Arlene Bickel and her husband, Paul Bickel, are in their 80s and 90s and have not been heard from since the fire. It appears they made it out of their home in a retirement community because the house is still standing and they are not home — but Hall has had no luck finding them.

“Did they make it in their car? Did they get away? Did their car go over the edge of a mountain somewhere? I just don’t know,” said Hall, who is 66 and making calls with her daughter’s cellphone from nearby Redding, where her daughter lives.

A coroner’s search team visited the address — one of dozens they had — on Monday and found the Bickels’ unit still standing. No one answered the door, and it was dark inside.

“It doesn’t help my worries because they’re still missing,” she said.

Hall planned to come to Chico, the nearest town not in the evacuation zone, on Tuesday to be closer.

Authorities were bringing more resources in to find the dead – two mobile morgue units and dozens of additional search and rescue personnel.

Some relatives have received answers, but not the ones they wanted.

Mike Carlson began looking for his mother, Barbara Carlson, her sister Shirley Haley and their dog named Strawberry after learning about the wildfire Thursday night.

He and his daughter Annika drove more than 100 miles from their home in the Central Valley to the fire zone to look for them. They made numerous calls, posted flyers and sought help on social media by creating a special hashtag.

“We checked with the Red Cross, hospitals, police, filed missing person reports, and we’ve got nothing,” Carlson said in a telephone interview Sunday as he headed to Chico to visit makeshift shelters in the area.

He said he requested a welfare check with the sheriff’s department, but was deflated when told he was 400th on the request list. He also felt discouraged when he saw his mother’s address on a map of the burned area, but he held out hope.

His niece was the last person to talk to his mother by phone as flames bore down on the house.

She said she wasn’t leaving, because God would save her, Carlson recalled.

But on Sunday night, two deputies came to Carlson’s door with the news he didn’t want to hear.

A fire engine crew doing a check of homes had found two bodies at his mother’s address on Heavenly Place.

© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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