• Kids are selling drugs and stolen goods in the Tenderloin. It's an open

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 14 22:40:51 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    Carrying a 12-pack of toilet paper under his arm, an adolescent boy yelled
    as he hopped through a crowd of people smoking fentanyl and selling stolen goods after dark near the corner of Seventh and Market streets in the Tenderloin.

    “It’s popping out here,” he exclaimed in a squeaky voice, plopping the
    rolls of toilet paper on the sidewalk for sale. Though the boy stood no
    more than 5 feet tall, nobody in the crowd seemed to question what a middle-school-age child was doing alone at night in San Francisco’s most troubled neighborhood.

    This corner of Market Street, opposite United Nations Plaza, has long been
    the epicenter of San Francisco’s drug and homelessness crises. Hundreds of people have overdosed within a few block radius of this spot over the past
    five years, more than anywhere else in the city. Since last June, police
    have made over 2,300 drug-related arrests in the surrounding neighborhood.

    But little has been said about the existence of children as young as 13
    years old among the dealers and street vendors. Their presence in the
    plaza is an open secret among city officials, nonprofit workers and
    inhabitants of the area, according to The Standard’s own on-the-ground reporting.

    Some kids are brought to the Tenderloin after dark by their parents, who
    are buying or selling stolen goods. Others are going at it alone—hawking everything from makeup to toilet paper, which is often stolen—or even
    dealing drugs.

    Data from the San Francisco Juvenile Probation Department shows police
    arrested 57 youths between the ages of 13 and 17 on suspicion of dealing
    drugs between August 2023 and Feb. 8. The department said that 55 of the
    57 teens came from outside of the city.

    The department declined to provide further data on these children’s cities
    of origin, their ages, demographic backgrounds or the locations of their arrests. Court records about cases involving juveniles are not normally available to the public, and requests to view redacted copies were denied.

    But anecdotally, nonprofit workers and city employees said they’ve seen an uptick in young people dealing drugs and stolen goods in the Tenderloin
    since the pandemic began in 2020.

    “Sometimes you see groups of kids,” said Cheryl Thornton, an urban health worker who mentors youth in the Bayview and Potrero Hill neighborhoods. “I
    see them all around the Tenderloin.”

    The Public Defender’s Office said many juveniles arrested in the city are victims of human trafficking, extreme poverty, abandonment and violence.

    San Francisco’s chief juvenile probation officer, Katy Miller, said most
    youth accused of selling drugs are immigrants from Central America who
    arrived in the U.S. without their parents.

    “They’re just young Black kids and young Hispanic kids,” Thornton said.
    “So nobody really cares.”

    ‘In Frisco, you gotta make it somehow’
    One 17-year-old, who was selling stolen jars of honey in U.N. Plaza last
    month, said he moved to the city from Fresno. He refused to give his name
    but said he started hustling on the streets after he met a group of other
    teens who frequented the plaza.

    “It’s poverty,” he said, explaining why he works at the illegal market.
    “It’s classism. The mother of all isms.”

    “In Frisco, you gotta make it somehow,” said an 18-year-old vendor, who
    also spoke on condition of anonymity and said he had been selling stolen
    goods in the plaza for roughly two years.

    “I told myself I would stop when I turned 18,” he said, explaining he
    became involved in the market because it was something his friends did. He
    said he thought he could land a legitimate job when he came of age, but
    said he’s only managed to find casual shifts as a roofer.

    A few blocks away, a 16-year-old boy from Honduras was selling fentanyl
    and methamphetamine on Eddy Street. He told The Standard he arrived in the
    city alone two years ago but refused to give many details about what led
    him to deal drugs.

    A woman who identified herself only as Star, who said she is paid to keep dealers company and help them sell drugs, told The Standard that teens
    like the Honduran boy would rather not be on the corner.

    “They’d rather be back home with their parents,” she said. “They don’t
    want to be out here.”

    The boy later said he didn’t like selling drugs but believed his options
    were limited. He said he came from a small ranch town in the middle of
    Honduras two years ago but didn’t disclose what prompted his move to the
    Bay Area.

    “I’m just out here so I can make a living,” he said. “The streets are
    tough for people like us.”

    The boy and other dealers were eating baleadas—a Honduran dish consisting
    of a flour tortilla filled with refried beans and egg—when a man
    approached with an offer of Nike sneakers on sale for $50. The group took
    a look at the merchandise and decided to pass.

    "They're too big," the boy said of the size 10.5 shoes. "These could fit a giant's foot."

    Children arrested in San Francisco
    At the end of December, a total of 418 youth were under the supervision of
    the Juvenile Probation Department—the most since October 2020. Sixty
    youths had active warrants for their arrest on Dec. 31, while another 24
    were in custody.

    Young people from outside of San Francisco accounted for 36% of all
    juveniles arrested in the city, and Bayview-Hunters Point was the
    neighborhood of origin for 15% of the department’s total cases as of Dec.
    31.

    Forty-eight of the department’s cases are under the age of 15, according
    to data from December.

    Although the juvenile probation department said many of the youths
    arrested for selling drugs in the city were born outside the United
    States, vendors said many children and teens selling stolen items in U.N.
    Plaza grew up in the Bay Area or elsewhere in California.

    However, data on this group is scant because the Department of Public
    Works, which enforces rules against illegal street vending, usually
    doesn’t track the ages of people it cites.

    City Hall staffers have offered little detail on the issue of juveniles
    and illegal vending and drug dealing. The Standard attempted to interview
    an outreach worker with intimate knowledge about the children and teens
    working illicit jobs in and around U.N. Plaza, but the interview request
    was denied by the Department of Public Health. The department did not
    provide a reason for declining the request.

    Joi Jackson-Morgan, executive director of the 3rd Street Youth Center &
    Clinic and a native of the Bayview neighborhood, said kids from her neighborhood have historically gathered in the city’s downtown. But she
    said because entry-level retail jobs have all but disappeared, more youth
    are turning to alternative, sometimes illegal, sources of income.

    “It’s definitely gone from a space where you hang out during the summer,
    and you saw a lot of people who were working downtown,” Jackson-Morgan
    said. “Now, it’s definitely changed. … A lot of them are involved in risky behaviors.”

    Jackson-Morgan said she worries more kids could fall down this path when
    school lets out for the summer. She urged the city to fund more summer
    camps, internships and other activities to keep children busy.

    “This summer … we need to figure it out. What are we going to do?” she
    said. “We need to bring back the trades. … We need to start younger.”

    In a statement, Mayor London Breed’s office said it was aware of the issue
    and pointed to programs she’s implemented, such as the Street Violence Intervention Program, the School Crisis Support effort, Opportunities for
    All and the Student Success Fund.

    ‘Scared shitless’
    Some drug users in the Tenderloin told The Standard they refuse to do
    business with the children. Michael Bohlke, a 27-year-old homeless man who
    said he was first arrested for dealing meth and heroin at the age of 13 in Idaho, said he tries to “set them straight.”

    “I know what it’s like to sit there, scared shitless,” Bohlke said. “I was shaking at my knees the first time I sold.”

    Bohlke said he never had a chance to pursue a normal life because both of
    his parents were dealers.

    “I didn’t go to school; I went to work,” Bohlke said. “I thought it was
    normal. It was how I was brought up.”

    Bohlke started using stimulants to keep up with the demands of his job, he said, eventually ending up in prison and then homeless and addicted to
    drugs.

    The Standard witnessed one teenager at the plaza’s night market beat an
    elderly man on Feb. 15. The teen narrowly missed a kick to the man’s head
    as he lay on the ground before a bystander broke up the assault. It’s
    unclear what prompted the altercation. Police said they have no record of
    the incident.

    Sheryl Davis, head of the city’s Human Rights Commission, said she’s heard
    from some nonprofit partners that children as young as 8 are selling drugs
    or stolen goods on the street. However, youth under the age of 12 aren’t arrested and are often placed in foster programs or enrolled with other services.

    “Kids are growing up a lot faster,” Davis said. “When they don’t want to
    be in school or they don’t want to be home, where do they go?”

    She said the city needs to step up its efforts to engage youths in career opportunities at a younger age before they get themselves into more
    serious, less reparable trouble.

    “We have young people that are trying to make money,” Davis said. “We have
    to think about how we’re going to help them do that in ways that are legal
    and safe.”

    https://sfstandard.com/2024/03/07/san-francisco-kids-selling-drugs-stolen- goods/

    --
    We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
    stupid people won't be offended.

    Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

    No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
    Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.

    Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
    fiasco, President Trump.

    Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
    The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
    queer liberal democrat donors.

    President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From pothead@21:1/5 to Leroy N. Soetoro on Thu Mar 14 23:37:13 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    On 2024-03-14, Leroy N. Soetoro <democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov> wrote:
    Carrying a 12-pack of toilet paper under his arm, an adolescent boy yelled
    as he hopped through a crowd of people smoking fentanyl and selling stolen goods after dark near the corner of Seventh and Market streets in the Tenderloin.

    “It’s popping out here,” he exclaimed in a squeaky voice, plopping the rolls of toilet paper on the sidewalk for sale. Though the boy stood no
    more than 5 feet tall, nobody in the crowd seemed to question what a middle-school-age child was doing alone at night in San FranciscoÂ’s most troubled neighborhood.

    This corner of Market Street, opposite United Nations Plaza, has long been the epicenter of San FranciscoÂ’s drug and homelessness crises. Hundreds of people have overdosed within a few block radius of this spot over the past five years, more than anywhere else in the city. Since last June, police
    have made over 2,300 drug-related arrests in the surrounding neighborhood.

    But little has been said about the existence of children as young as 13
    years old among the dealers and street vendors. Their presence in the
    plaza is an open secret among city officials, nonprofit workers and inhabitants of the area, according to The StandardÂ’s own on-the-ground reporting.

    Some kids are brought to the Tenderloin after dark by their parents, who
    are buying or selling stolen goods. Others are going at it alone—hawking everything from makeup to toilet paper, which is often stolen—or even dealing drugs.

    Data from the San Francisco Juvenile Probation Department shows police arrested 57 youths between the ages of 13 and 17 on suspicion of dealing drugs between August 2023 and Feb. 8. The department said that 55 of the
    57 teens came from outside of the city.

    The department declined to provide further data on these childrenÂ’s cities of origin, their ages, demographic backgrounds or the locations of their arrests. Court records about cases involving juveniles are not normally available to the public, and requests to view redacted copies were denied.

    But anecdotally, nonprofit workers and city employees said theyÂ’ve seen an uptick in young people dealing drugs and stolen goods in the Tenderloin
    since the pandemic began in 2020.

    “Sometimes you see groups of kids,” said Cheryl Thornton, an urban health worker who mentors youth in the Bayview and Potrero Hill neighborhoods. “I see them all around the Tenderloin.”

    https://sfstandard.com/2024/03/07/san-francisco-kids-selling-drugs-stolen- goods/

    In NYC MS-13 is partnering with the newly arrived Venezuelan gangs to sell fake ID's and paperwork
    to the illegal migrants.

    This is just the start of the nightmare.

    Thank you Joe Biden.


    --
    pothead
    Tommy Chong For President 2024.
    Crazy Joe Biden Is A Demented Imbecile.
    Impeach Joe Biden 2022.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From slothe@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 15 03:21:24 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    On 14 Mar 2024, pothead <pothead@snakebite.com> posted some news:ut01n9$1t7kl$2@dont-email.me:

    On 2024-03-14, Leroy N. Soetoro <democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov>
    wrote:
    Carrying a 12-pack of toilet paper under his arm, an adolescent boy
    yelled as he hopped through a crowd of people smoking fentanyl and
    selling stolen goods after dark near the corner of Seventh and Market
    streets in the Tenderloin.

    “It’s popping out here,” he exclaimed in a squeaky voice, plopping
    the rolls of toilet paper on the sidewalk for sale. Though the boy
    stood no more than 5 feet tall, nobody in the crowd seemed to
    question what a middle-school-age child was doing alone at night in
    San FranciscoÂ’s most troubled neighborhood.

    This corner of Market Street, opposite United Nations Plaza, has long
    been the epicenter of San FranciscoÂ’s drug and homelessness crises.
    Hundreds of people have overdosed within a few block radius of this
    spot over the past five years, more than anywhere else in the city.
    Since last June, police have made over 2,300 drug-related arrests in
    the surrounding neighborhood.

    But little has been said about the existence of children as young as
    13 years old among the dealers and street vendors. Their presence in
    the plaza is an open secret among city officials, nonprofit workers
    and inhabitants of the area, according to The StandardÂ’s own
    on-the-ground reporting.

    Some kids are brought to the Tenderloin after dark by their parents,
    who are buying or selling stolen goods. Others are going at it
    alone—hawking everything from makeup to toilet paper, which is often
    stolen—or even dealing drugs.

    Data from the San Francisco Juvenile Probation Department shows
    police arrested 57 youths between the ages of 13 and 17 on suspicion
    of dealing drugs between August 2023 and Feb. 8. The department said
    that 55 of the 57 teens came from outside of the city.

    The department declined to provide further data on these childrenÂ’s
    cities of origin, their ages, demographic backgrounds or the
    locations of their arrests. Court records about cases involving
    juveniles are not normally available to the public, and requests to
    view redacted copies were denied.

    But anecdotally, nonprofit workers and city employees said theyÂ’ve
    seen an uptick in young people dealing drugs and stolen goods in the
    Tenderloin since the pandemic began in 2020.

    “Sometimes you see groups of kids,” said Cheryl Thornton, an urban
    health worker who mentors youth in the Bayview and Potrero Hill
    neighborhoods. “I see them all around the Tenderloin.”

    https://sfstandard.com/2024/03/07/san-francisco-kids-selling-drugs-sto
    len- goods/

    In NYC MS-13 is partnering with the newly arrived Venezuelan gangs to
    sell fake ID's and paperwork to the illegal migrants.

    This is just the start of the nightmare.

    Thank you Joe Biden.

    This was starting when Newsom was there and he ignored it. When you get
    an influx of high-earning technology types in an area, all kinds of
    markets suddenly appear. Local government closed their eyes because of
    all the money that was flowing. Now that the money is gone, they are
    left pointing fingers and blame.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 14 21:51:06 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    On 3/14/24 15:40, Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:

    Who or what is Leroy N. Soetoro? I found lots
    of Sotero's listed and pictured but no sign of him.

    From his post he thinks the Tenderloin is the roughest
    part of town. It is the roughest part close to City Center. Other
    parts claim the title from time to time. Where little old apparently
    Chinese ladies are struck down and handbags stolen happen in more
    or less respectable venues. Old gentlemen have been struck down as
    the walked about respectable neighborhoods.

    The highly paid are now since Covid frequently working from
    home far from the high prices of the downtown area. That is one
    of the unforseen consequences of the on-going Covid-19 Pandemic.
    Another is the high vacancy rate of Financial District office
    space. This lead to a loss of legitimate jobs formerly supporting
    the office workers.

    But to return to my question Leroy N. Soetero is either
    jealous of cousin Obama's sucess or alternatively just a mouthpiece
    for the Kremlin.

    bliss- Dell Precision 7730- PCLOS 2024.03- Linux 6.6.21- Plasma 5.27.10

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David Hartung@21:1/5 to Bobbie Sellers on Fri Mar 15 00:13:39 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    On 3/14/2024 9:51 PM, Bobbie Sellers wrote:
    On 3/14/24 15:40, Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:

        Who or what is Leroy N. Soetoro?

    It's a racist shitbag Nazi who wants to pretend there is some significance to the fact that Barack Obama's mother was briefly married to a man named Lolo Soetero. Referring to Barack Obama as "Leroy" is still more proof, as if any more were needed, of the poster's KKK affiliation.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to David Hartung on Fri Mar 15 08:15:59 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.business
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    On 3/15/24 00:13, David Hartung wrote:
    On 3/14/2024 9:51 PM, Bobbie Sellers wrote:
    On 3/14/24 15:40, Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:

         Who or what is Leroy N. Soetoro?

    It's a racist shitbag Nazi who wants to pretend there is some
    significance to the fact that Barack Obama's mother was briefly married
    to a man named Lolo Soetero. Referring to Barack Obama as "Leroy" is
    still more proof, as if any more were needed, of the poster's KKK affiliation.


    Oh he calls Barack Obama "Barry Soetero".
    I still think he drinks the "Kremlin koolaide", sour grapes
    flavor. But your explanation is just fine.


    bliss- Dell Precision 7730- PCLOS 2024.03- Linux 6.6.21- Plasma 5.27.10

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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