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/
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.
On 3/14/24 15:40, Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:
    Who or what is Leroy N. Soetoro?
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.
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