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Tag: oakland

  • BART opens 2 of 4 closed Oakland stations after power loss at substation

    BART opens 2 of 4 closed Oakland stations after power loss at substation

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    Crews were able to re-open two of the four closed BART stations on Sunday after power loss at a substation severely affected service in Oakland.

     Fruitvale and Lake Merritt stations were opened, and Blue and Green Line service to Daly City was restored, BART said. 12th St./Oakland and 19th St./Oakland stations remain closed. 

    “Crews are working to make repairs,” said BART spokeswoman Anna Duckworth Sunday morning.

    BART patrons are asked to consider alternative transportation. For transit alternatives, riders should use the BART Trip Planner at www.bart.gov/alternatives or the BART app to find transit alternatives based on the rider’s location by deselecting BART in ‘transit options.’

    BART stopped service to three East Bay stations Saturday after a power problem closed four others.

    A power problem that originated about 5:20 p.m. between 19th Street/Oakland and Fruitvale closed those stations along with 12th Street/Oakland City Center and Lake Merritt.

    About 9:20 p.m., BART announced that it had additionally stopped service between MacArthur, Coliseum and West Oakland stations due to the power loss. There was also also no Green Line service between Berryessa and Daly City, and no Red Line service between Richmond and Millbrae, BART said.

    Oakland firefighters extinguished a blaze in a BART electrical room after large portions of the transit service lost power Saturday night. About 300 passengers were evacuated, the fire department said.

    “A fire was located and extinguished in an electrical room,” Oakland Fire Department spokesman Michael Hunt said.

    The fire department guided about 300 people off trains and platforms, he said. There were no reports of injuries.

    Trains were turning back at Ashby, Rockridge, West Oakland and Coliseum stations, BART said.

    A bus bridge operated by AC Transit was set up between West Oakland and MacArthur and between West Oakland, Fruitvale and Coliseum stations, BART said.

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    CBS San Francisco

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  • Newsom urges Oakland PD to ease restrictions on police chases

    Newsom urges Oakland PD to ease restrictions on police chases

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    Governor Gavin Newsom is urging Oakland leaders to expand their current police pursuit policy.

    In a letter, Governor Newsom pointed out that their limited policy is an outlier among California law enforcement agencies. The Oakland Police Department policy prevents officers from pursuing suspects at a high speed, except in incidents where the suspect is known to have committed a violent crime or if there’s probable cause the person has a gun.

    City councilmember Noel Gallo says that policy resulted in people getting away with thousands of dollars worth of merchandise from the Walgreens on Foothill Boulevard.

    “Sadly enough I was here to witness this robbery at Walgreens as we were cleaning the neighborhood at 7 in the morning,” said Gallo. “They drove in here with a forklift, tore the door down.”

    Gallo immediately called police.

    “Police showed up, 3, 4, 5 cars of them and then all the people ran out, got into their cars here and the police said ‘we can’t chase them.’”

    Gallo says criminals know police can’t pursue, so they take off at a high speed. This type of crime has already resulted in dozens of businesses in his district, which includes the Fruitvale Area, shutting down.

    He supports the Governor’s request for updating the policy, and so does Mayor Sheng Thao.

    “We must be in line with our policies with other jurisdictions so that we can ensure that our community is safe,” said Thao.

    In a statement, the California Highway Patrol agreed with Newsom:
    “Preventing police from pursuing dangerous suspects incentivizes suspects to flee without threat of consequences. The California Highway Patrol (CHP) strongly encourages a policy revision that would permit the Oakland Police Department to pursue suspects in more circumstances, so long as they are conducted with the safety of the suspect, innocent bystanders, and officers in mind.”

    City Councilmember Dan Kalb points out that there is already efforts in place to update the policy, which was put in place a decade ago by a former police chief.

    “Is the balance that we have in our current policy for the last 10 years the right balance? And that’s why exactly why we’ve asked the police commission and police chief to review that and come back with recommendations this year, this calender year, to potentially make changes,” said Kalb.

    Kalb says police can pursue a known suspect of a violent crime, but not for property crime. The current policy is in place to protect bystanders.

    “Nobody wants innocent pedestrians or whoever else is out on the street to get hit by car and die or get seriously injured,” said Kalb. “That has happened throughout the country numerous times.”

    Councilmember Gallo insists that something needs to be done to continue to make the streets safer, and he’s glad the governor is bringing attention to it.

    “We need to follow the rules on the streets that it’s not alright to run red lights, that it’s not alright to go 90 miles per hour and break into the stores and get away with it,” said Gallo. “You can’t do that.”

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    Amanda Hari

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  • Driver fleeing car collision on Bay Bridge jumps off railing, and survives

    Driver fleeing car collision on Bay Bridge jumps off railing, and survives

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    In a scene one might expect to see in a movie, a man trying to escape his involvement in a car wreck on the Bay Bridge between Oakland and San Francisco Thursday climbed onto the railing and jumped, the California Highway Patrol said.

    The man had been involved in a two-car crash on eastbound Interstate 80 around 2 p.m., said CHP spokesperson Mark Andrews.

    The man, described as between 20 and 30 years old, climbed onto the bridge railing and plunged into the water below, where he began backstroking toward the west portion of the bridge, the CHP said.

    The U.S. Coast Guard rescued the man around 2:45 p.m.

    Andrews said it was “definitely unusual” for a driver to jump off a bridge after a collision and he’d never seen it happen before. The driver suffered broken ribs from the impact with the water and was being evaluated at a hospital.

    Authorities did not disclose whether the man was arrested.

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    Summer Lin

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  • Oakland police seize banned tobacco products, psilocybin candy bars from smoke shop

    Oakland police seize banned tobacco products, psilocybin candy bars from smoke shop

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    PIX Now – Morning Edition 7/12/24


    PIX Now – Morning Edition 7/12/24

    12:11

    Oakland police are investigating an unlicensed smoke shop in East Oakland where officers seized several illegal products earlier this week, including cartons of banned tobacco products from out of state and nearly 10 pounds of marijuana bud.

    Police on Wednesday confiscated other items at the shop in the 2500 block of Seminary Avenue that included Psilocybin “magic” mushroom candy bars and close to 20 pounds of suspected THC products.

    Officers with the police department’s Alcohol Beverage Action Team were following up on anonymous complaints about the shop. In addition to seizing illegal items, they detained a store clerk.

    east-oakland-smoke-shop-bust-071224.jpg
    Items that police said were seized from a smoke shop on Seminary Avenue in East Oakland on July 10, 2024.

    Oakland Police Department


    No arrests were made, but the case will be forwarded to the Alameda County District Attorney’s office for further action, including civil charges and potential eviction, police said in a news release on Thursday.

    Suspicious or illegal activities regarding sales of tobacco products and sales to minors in Oakland can be reported to the Oakland police ABAT Complaint Hotline at (510) 777-8677. 

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    CBS San Francisco

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  • Memorial for Oakland firefighter who drowned in San Diego

    Memorial for Oakland firefighter who drowned in San Diego

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    The Oakland Fire Department on Wednesday hosted a memorial service for firefighter-paramedic Caeden Laffan aboard the USS Hornet in Alameda.

    Laeden, 25, died on June 27 while off duty and on vacation in the San Diego area. Authorities there said he drowned in the waters off Pacific Beach.

    Laffan, who had been with the department for five years, was a “rising star” and “very sharp individual,” Oakland fire Chief Damon Covington said after the incident.

    Laffan was a third-generation firefighter, Covington said. His father, Sean Laffan, was an assistant fire chief who collapsed and died on the job in 2020 while Caeden was a probationary firefighter. Sean was 42.

    Caeden’s brother, Cooper, is currently in Oakland fire’s recruit academy, and their mother is a peer support outreach specialist for the department.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • Plot thickens in Oakland as grand jury investigates influential family, Mayor Thao, her partner

    Plot thickens in Oakland as grand jury investigates influential family, Mayor Thao, her partner

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    Federal investigators are ordering the city of Oakland to hand over documents involving a prominent, influential local family who hold a waste management contract with the city, as well as Mayor Sheng Thao and her partner, according to documents reviewed by The Times.

    The federal subpoena, issued five days after federal agents raided Thao’s home on June 20, confirms there is a current federal grand jury investigation that appears centered around Cal Waste Solutions Inc.; its owners, members of the Duong family; and their dealings with Oakland city officials, particularly its mayor.

    Dated June 25, the eight-page subpoena asks the city to turn over all documents and communications regarding Cal Waste Solutions, all of its employees and representatives, and any documents involving appointments to prominent city posts.

    The deadline is Thursday.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to questions regarding the subpoena.

    Federal investigators are also requesting documents related to the 2022 Oakland mayoral election, when Thao was elected as the first Hmong mayor of a major U.S. city.

    The subpoena further reveals the possible involvement of Thao’s partner, Andre Jones, in the inquiry. Investigators requested the city turn over calendar entries and records involving meetings for Thao and Jones from June 1 to the present.

    Attorneys for Thao declined to comment on the subpoena but said the investigation involving Thao did not involve criminal charges or allegations.

    Thao has denied any wrongdoing.

    “I can tell you with confidence that this investigation is not about me,” the mayor said in a news conference three days after FBI agents raided her home.

    Exactly what the focus of the federal investigation is remains unclear, but the June 25 subpoena offered a slightly wider glimpse into the scope of the federal investigation, the latest scandal to plague the Bay Area city that has recently faced a mayoral recall effort, a growing budget deficit, and concerns about crime that have driven out major businesses.

    Shortly after city officials received the subpoena, Oakland’s city attorney directed staff in an email to preserve all records involving Thao, Jones, and the Duong family, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

    A spokesperson for the Oakland city attorney’s office confirmed the existence of the memo to staff but in an email declined to provide a copy of it or answer questions about it, referring to the memo as “confidential attorney-client communication between the Oakland City Attorney and the other city of Oakland staff members.”

    The federal subpoena, issued by the U.S. attorney’s Northern District of California, requests multiple documents involving the Duong family, including David, Andy, Kristina, Victor and Michael Duong.

    For at least five years, the family has been at the center of an investigation involving the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission and the Oakland Public Ethics Commission. The family is accused of using “straw donors” to circumvent legal donation limits and fill the campaign coffers of elected public officials while the family’s companies sought contracts with cities.

    The family’s company, Cal Waste Solutions, currently provides recycling services to Oakland.

    After the warrants were executed, Cal Waste Solutions officials issued a statement saying they were surprised by the searches and had cooperated with investigators.

    “We believe that we have not engaged in or committed any illegal activities and are awaiting the decision of the law enforcement agency,” the company statement read.

    A spokesperson for the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

    But the state and local inquiry into the family’s dealings with city officials in the area paint a troubling picture.

    Court records reveal the Fair Political Practices Commission has been probing political donations made by the family since 2019. The agency alleges that Andy Duong and former business associates used friends and business connections to make political contributions, then reimbursed them with cash to hide the true origin of the money.

    “CWS was the true source of at least 93 contributions to multiple local campaign committees,” the court record reads, with the goal being “to curry favor with candidates and provide more access to candidates.”

    The agency tracked questionable donations made in Oakland, as well as San Jose and other parts of Santa Clara County, where the family was looking to do business.

    The investigation found there had been multiple contributions made to Thao’s campaign in 2018 for City Council, including “seven of which were admitted reimbursements by or on behalf of [Andy] Duong.”

    One former associate told investigators, according to court records, he saw Andy Duong pull cash from a drawer in his office at Cal Waste Solutions to reimburse people for donations.

    FPPC officials confirmed their inquiry is still ongoing.

    Federal officials are also requesting documents involving the city’s declaration of a local emergency on homelessness, and any communication regarding the former Oakland Army Base, a site that had been considered as possible housing for unhoused individuals.

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    Salvador Hernandez

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  • Police investigate vandalism incidents at Oakland’s Chabad Center as possible hate crimes

    Police investigate vandalism incidents at Oakland’s Chabad Center as possible hate crimes

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    Oakland police are investigating instances of vandalism at a local Jewish center as possible hate crimes, the department said Monday.

    On June 21 and then last Saturday, an unknown suspect or suspects were seen throwing a large object through the window of the Chabad Jewish Center of Oakland in the 3000 block of Lakeshore Avenue, Rabbi Dovid Labkowski said.

    Officers have been in contact with Labkowski and are actively investigating the crimes, police said.

    According to a page on the center’s website addressing the recent instances of vandalism, the center aims to raise $20,000 to replace its bullet-resistant glass windows. The page also attached photos of two cement blocks and cracks in the center’s windows.

    Oakland police have asked those who may have any information about the vandalism to contact the Criminal Investigations Division at (510) 238-3951. Police also said those with any videos or photos that could assist with the investigation should send them to cidvideos@oaklandca.gov.

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    Bay City News

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  • Shocking video shows dozens ransacking Oakland convenience store

    Shocking video shows dozens ransacking Oakland convenience store

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    OAKLAND — One Oakland business owner is demanding accountability from the city after dozens of people ransacked his convenience store Friday.

    Owner Sam Mardaie said a large mob of people spent about 30 to 40 minutes cleaning out his 76 gas station store at the corner of Hegenberger Road and Edgewater Drive. He said two workers called 911 but he claimed Oakland police showed up nine hours later.

    “Everything is destroyed. This is what I feed my family,” he said. 

    Mardaie said the thieves came in waves.  He estimates a total of 80 to 100 people took part in the theft. Aside from merchandise, he said they took his cash register and his ATM machine with roughly $22,000 inside.

    “Whatever they couldn’t take, they destroyed,” he said.

    It happened around Friday around 4:30 a.m. Mardaie said there was a large sideshow in front of his gas station on Hegenberger. The 24-hour store only offered window service at that time.  He says some of the sideshow participants and spectators broke the glass front door to get in and took over the store. He said the two employees ran out for safety.

    “It was heartbroken to me.  I walked in here and I was lost for words,” Mardaie said.

    He was upset with police for not responding right away after he said his workers called 911.

    But Oakland police disputed the timeline, saying they received the 911 call after the thieves had left so it was no longer a priority since officers were handling other active scenes.

    “Whatever excuse you give me, it’s not enough for me.  I won’t accept it,” Mardaie said. 

    Mardaie took ownership of the gas station last August and, he says, has dealt with a lot of robberies and burglaries. Many businesses along the Hegenberger corridor have shut down, including the popular In-N-Out restaurant.

    Mardaie is not ready to give up yet.  He said city leaders have to do better.

    Councilwoman Treva Reid represents his district. In a statement, she wrote in part:

    This is another devastating attack on and blow to this business and the city at this regional gateway to our city. Due to the impact of crime and violence, our Hegenberger/airport corridor businesses and residents have faced countless challenges and too many closures. I continue to advocate and work to secure increased public safety resources and response, urging the mayor to prioritize our district’s demands.

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    Da Lin

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  • Oakland home invasion robbers posing as police officers

    Oakland home invasion robbers posing as police officers

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    PIX Now – Morning Edition 7/4/24


    PIX Now – Morning Edition 7/4/24

    15:20

    Oakland police warned the public on Wednesday against robbers posing as police officers before entering residences.

     
    According to the Oakland Police Department, there were two recent residential robberies in East Oakland where suspects dressed in plain clothes verbally identified themselves as police officers.

    “In several recent cases, one to four unknown suspects have broken into residences, searched, and demanded items from the victims. When confronted or questioned about their identity, the suspects announce ‘OPD,’ and another incident announces ‘police’ as they enter the residence,” the police department said.

    Investigators are looking into this trend while additional officers have been deployed to areas around the city, according to police.

    The following are tips from the Oakland Police Department:

    • OPD officers will knock and announce their presence.
    • OPD officers will be in clothing that identifies them as law enforcement officers.
    • OPD plainclothes officers do not force entry into residences.
    • Don’t resist.
    • Trust your instincts. If in doubt, call 911.

    Anyone who has been victimized similarly or has information regarding any of these cases is asked to call Oakland police at (510) 238-3326.

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    CBS San Francisco

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  • Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao dismisses claims about partner’s role in administration

    Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao dismisses claims about partner’s role in administration

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    Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao on Wednesday dismissed the claims of her partner’s role in her administration as “rumors and innuendo” when CBS News Bay Area interviewed her for the first time since the FBI raid on her home June 20. 

    During the seven-minute interview with CBS News Bay Area anchor and reporter Ryan Yamamoto, Thao largely reiterated what she has said in previous public comments since the raid, declaring her innocence and referring any questions about the investigation to federal authorities.

    When asked if the FBI has told her she is not under investigation, Thao replied, “First and foremost, I cannot comment on matters related to an ongoing investigation, but what I can share is that I am not the subject of investigation and I have done nothing wrong. And I expect that there will be an opportunity for us to say more, but not at this time.”

    The mayor also reiterated that she is “fully cooperating with the investigation” and added, “If you have other questions about the investigation, I implore you to ask the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office.”

    When Yamamoto asked about Thao’s partner Andre Jones and his involvement in the investigation, the mayor replied, “Look, Andre’s my partner and has been for ten years. We love and support one another as many couples do. The question you’re asking relates to what’s being reported and is connected to the investigation, so I can’t comment on that and, again, if you’d like to know more about what is going on in the investigation, you would have to ask the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office.”

    Yamamoto continued by asking the mayor if she had spoken with Andre and how he was doing, Thao laughed and said, “Again…you know, that is a personal question, and I will not answer a personal question.”

    Yamamoto then shifted his line of questioning to whether Jones has a role in her administration and if he was on the payroll as an advisor, Thao was adamant in her response.

    “I think that’s a really funny question. I think I heard that question for the first time yesterday, and absolutely not. I’ve been on the city council. He’s never been on any payroll,” she said. “That’s really easy to confirm. He’s hardly even been in my office. There’s no truth to that at all. It’s just rumors.”

    When Yamamoto pressed Thao on the issue, saying that people CBS News Bay Area had spoken with said Jones was a regular presence at city hall and even sat in on some safety meeting, When he asked if that was appropriate, she replied with a laugh. 

    “Again, I’m not going to address innuendos and rumors,” said Thao. “And that’s exactly what it is: rumors, gossip, innuendos.”

    Yamamoto then asked Thao about the claims her former chief of staff Renia Webb has made about Jones and his alleged involvement in “pay-to-play” schemes at Oakland City Hall.

    When he said he would like to give Thao and opportunity to respond to those serious allegations, she replied, “They are very serious allegations. Again, not responding to rumors, innuendo, all of that. This is a person telling you a story. So, again, not addressing rumors.”

    When asked about her relationship to the Duong family, who also had a home and a business location searched in connection with the FBI raid, Thao said, “Well, as mayor, I meet with a lot of community members and business owners. I take pictures with them and I explore ways they can help the city. That’s what mayors do. Elected officials, we all do that.”

    She then referred any specific questions about the FBI raid on the Duong family home and business to federal authorities. When asked if, in light of the investigation, she would consider returning any of the campaign money donated by the Duong family, Thao replied, “You know, at the end of the day, what I’ve been reading in the papers is that they donated to many, many people. What I can tell you is I follow the campaign’s rules, and the campaign rule states that we cannot accept money from people that we are in contract with. And I can tell you, in my campaign in this office, we follow the rule to a T.”

    The mayor went on to say that she would “absolutely not” consider resigning in light of the controversy surrounding the raid and the ongoing efforts to recall her, noting that organizers have refused to comply with a subpoena demanding that the recall campaign be transparent about their top donors. 

    In closing, when she was asked who was paying her legal fees after the changeover in her representation last week, Thao said she that she planned to open a legal defense fund, but also said she was like “anybody else who has to pay for their attorney.”

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    Ryan Yamamoto

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  • Oakland residents pack city hall meeting to voice concerns about budget cuts

    Oakland residents pack city hall meeting to voice concerns about budget cuts

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    A historic budget deficit in Oakland has many people worried about severe cuts to city services. 

    Oakland is facing an estimated $177 million shortfall in the next fiscal year, which starts on July 1st.

    About 30 minutes before the Friday afternoon budget meeting at city hall, a long line of Oaklanders waited to get into the council chamber.

    “We matter. Do not close our [senior] centers, don’t throw us under the bus,” said one woman while waiting to get inside

    The city opened two overflow rooms for the budget meeting since the chamber was packed with people. One of the people who couldn’t make it to the meeting and was following the issue closely was Oakland business owner Tina Sullivan.

    “I would definitely say do not cut the police force. That’s what we need the most,” said Sullivan.

    Sullivan runs Phoenix Optical by herself. Her dog named Bandit is her security guard.  She said she always has a dog in the store with her.

    “He’s keeping me company and making me feel safe. I work here alone,” said Sullivan. 

    But she was not alone in that many people who attended the budget meeting wanted to avoid cuts that would impact the police and fire departments.

    The city council said they have to cut from public safety because that takes up more than half of the budget.

    The budget crisis comes as Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao is occupied with a personal crisis in the form of the FBI investigation that came to her home last week.

    Oakland Police Chief Floyd Mitchell said, that as of Friday, the department had 709 police officers. That number is almost certain to decrease.

    One option presented to the council was to cut the force down to 678 officers if the city can get a one-time influx of cash from selling the city’s share of the Oakland Coliseum complex. If they can’t get the money from the land sale in time, the other option would cut the police force down to 610 officers.

    The police chief said with 84 officers currently on leave, that would essentially bring the force down to just over 500 officers. He said that would hurt his ability to cover patrol shifts and provide basic services.

    Many people said that would be dangerous.

    “The response from the police department…It’s not responding quick enough and fast enough to sideshows and other things that go on,” said Oakland resident Larry Sosa.  

    The city was also proposing the closure of a handful of fire stations and the reduction of operating hours for public libraries and senior centers.

    Some people argue the city needs to save youth programs and recreation centers.

    “You have to cut carefully from the police in that you would not have any sworn officers at the desk,” said Oakland resident Pamela Drake.

    The councilmembers admitted all the options are bad, but tough decisions will have to be made.

    “Is there an alternative? I said, “Yeah, fairy dust. You got any?’ Can we go to Disneyland and ask for some fairy dust?” asked Drake. 

    Sullivan said there will be no miracle; just a hard reality.

    “I hate to see it so chaotic,” said Sullivan.

    Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas said more than 100 people signed up to speak during public comment. She noted the sheer volume of people speaking might delay the vote to Tuesday, July 2.

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    Da Lin

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  • Tony Brass withdraws from representing Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao

    Tony Brass withdraws from representing Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao

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    Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao denies wrongdoing in first public comments since FBI raid


    Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao denies wrongdoing in first public comments since FBI raid

    08:49

    OAKLAND — Attorney Tony Brass, who signed on to represent Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao following an FBI raid at her home last week, announced on Monday that he is no longer representing the mayor.

    Brass confirmed to CBS News Bay Area that he has withdrawn representation, hours after Thao delivered a defiant statement at City Hall denouncing the raid and the recall campaign against her.

    Minutes after making the decision, Brass told reporter Juliette Goodrich why he decided to no longer represent Thao.

    “Because our paths diverted in terms of our approach to the case,” he said.

    The attorney also said that he did not know Thao was going to speak to the media on Monday. He said he would have advised her not to.

    On Friday, Brass said in an interview that neither he nor Thao know any details of the federal investigation but said Thao is “ready, willing and able to cooperate with authorities.” 

    He added that Thao never received a request for documents or information but she would have provided them if asked.    

    Brass will go in depth about his decision in an interview on at CBS News Bay Area airing Monday at 6 p.m.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Oakland leaders react to FBI raid on mayor’s home

    Oakland leaders react to FBI raid on mayor’s home

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    Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao hasn’t issued a statement since FBI agents raided her home Thursday morning, but some local leaders are expressing shock while others are calling for the embattled mayor to step down.

    The city was already reeling from a shooting the night before that injured more than a dozen people during a Juneteenth celebration near Lake Merritt. Then federal agents showed up at Thao’s home in Oakland’s Lincoln Highlands neighborhood Thursday morning and left with multiple boxes.

    “As for this morning’s FBI raids, I share the shock felt my many, and I call on all of us to remain focused on the important work of realizing a safe, connected and thriving town,” Oakland City Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas said Thursday evening on X.

    Velena Jones and Christie Smith provides the latest on an FBI investigation that includes searching Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao’s home.

    The city has “a cloud hanging over it today,” according to Cynthia Adams, president of the Oakland branch of the NAACP.

    “While the public should refrain from a rush to judgment, the leadership of the NAACP and its members are calling on Mayor Sheng Thao to resign immediately and spare the city the cost of a recall,” Adams said in a statement Thursday night.

    “Oaklanders deserve a mayor who is not distracted, fully committed, and able to lead the city. Clearly, Mayor Thao cannot focus on the needs of the residents of Oakland while she addresses the major challenges posed by the FBI raid and investigation,” Adams said.

    The NAACP has been critical of the mayor in the past, attributing a surge in local crime to Thao’s firing of former police chief LeRonne Armstrong in February 2023.

    Earlier Thursday, a spokesperson for Thao referred questions to the FBI, while a representative for California Waste Solutions, the company whose executive officers David and Andy Duong were also the subject of FBI activity, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Two homes associated with the Duongs, along with an office building in Oakland, were all also raided, FBI officials confirmed.

    While the FBI didn’t reveal the nature of the investigation, this isn’t the first time that Thao’s name has been associated with the Duongs.

    According to an Oakland Public Ethics Commission official, Andy Duong and Cal Waste Solutions are the subjects of an ongoing investigation into alleged illegal campaign contributions.

    Those contributions were allegedly laundered through third parties and given to multiple candidates, including Thao, and an investigation was launched in 2019, said Simon Russell, chief of enforcement for the Ethics Commission.

    Russell said he can’t comment on whether the ethics commission referred its investigation to the FBI.

    The FBI raid was the second blow in as many days for the mayor. On Wednesday, organizers of an effort to recall Thao said they had enough valid signatures to place her ouster on the November ballot.

    Oakland United to Recall Sheng Thao leaders said they received a notice from the city Tuesday that a sampling of the 40,595 signatures they turned in shows enough are valid to place the recall on a ballot.

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    Bay City News

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  • SF Chronicle report: FBI officials raid home of Oakland mayor

    SF Chronicle report: FBI officials raid home of Oakland mayor

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    FBI agents raided the home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao on Thursday, according to a report from The San Francisco Chronicle, a Hearst affiliate.An FBI spokesperson told the Chronicle that they could not provide more information outside of the agency “conducting court authorized law enforcement activity on Maiden Lane.”The Chronicle reports that property records link the home on 80 Maiden Lane to Thao.Video from affiliate KTVU shows no marked vehicles outside the home as of 9:35 a.m. Earlier, agents came and went from a white van with tinted windows.Thao has not returned calls for comment that the Chronicle made earlier. Oakland’s website describes 38-year-old Thao, the city’s 51st mayor, as the first Hmong-American mayor of a major city in the country. She was elected in 2022 and is from Stockton.This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 as we work to gather details.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    FBI agents raided the home of Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao on Thursday, according to a report from The San Francisco Chronicle, a Hearst affiliate.

    An FBI spokesperson told the Chronicle that they could not provide more information outside of the agency “conducting court authorized law enforcement activity on Maiden Lane.”

    The Chronicle reports that property records link the home on 80 Maiden Lane to Thao.

    Video from affiliate KTVU shows no marked vehicles outside the home as of 9:35 a.m. Earlier, agents came and went from a white van with tinted windows.

    Thao has not returned calls for comment that the Chronicle made earlier.

    Oakland’s website describes 38-year-old Thao, the city’s 51st mayor, as the first Hmong-American mayor of a major city in the country. She was elected in 2022 and is from Stockton.

    This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 as we work to gather details.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

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  • FBI searches Oakland mayor’s house; no public safety threat

    FBI searches Oakland mayor’s house; no public safety threat

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    The FBI searched Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao’s home on Thursday morning for an unknown reason, but there was no public safety threat, according to a source from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    The mayor’s office said it is aware of reports that the FBI is at the mayor’s home but it was referring all questions to the FBI.

    Law enforcement sources told NBC Bay Area it is one of four search warrant executions in Oakland as part of a larger operation that involves Thao.

    Agencies involved in the warrant operation included the FBI, IRS, and United States Postal Service inspectors, a source told NBC News.

    No other details were immediately available.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • Effort to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao has enough signatures to move forward

    Effort to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao has enough signatures to move forward

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    PIX Now – Morning Edition 6/18/24


    PIX Now – Morning Edition 6/18/24

    10:29

    OAKLAND — The move to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao took another step forward on Tuesday.

    Organizers of the effort turned in the petition weeks ahead of the July 22 deadline. On Tuesday, the Alameda County Registrar of Voters said there were enough signatures.

    According to recall organizers, they needed 24,644 valid signatures, but they turned in a petition with more than 40,000 signatures.

    The lead recall petitioner is retired Alameda County Superior Court Judge Brenda Harbin-Forte. She is also a former member of the Oakland Police Commission, which Thao removed her from in 2023.

    Recall supporters have said the recall is justified for several reasons, including crime, the city’s financial struggles, the way Thao fired former police chief LeRonne Armstrong and her administration’s mishandling of a state crime grant application that cost the city $15 million in lost funding.

    Oakland police have released crime stats that show crime is trending downward, but recall proponents dispute the numbers.

    They argue that it doesn’t reflect reality because some people are reluctant to report crime.

    Meanwhile, Thao supporters say the recall is a waste of time and taxpayers’ money.

    “It disheartening when I see folks trying to recall a mayor who’s only been in office for a year,” said Saabir Lockett, the founder and executive director of Pathways to Peace, in a February interview.

    He credits the mayor for hiring more 911 dispatchers and working with the state to install license plate readers to fight crime and asked voters to give Thao more time.

    In a statement, the city of Oakland said the next steps in the recall will be decided at an upcoming City Council Rules Committee Meeting.

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    Jose Fabian

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  • Juneteenth Hack brings Black artists together with augmented-reality tech

    Juneteenth Hack brings Black artists together with augmented-reality tech

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    A group of tech-driven artists from Oakland kicked off their inaugural Juneteenth hackathon this week, a tech event aimed at changing the way art is discovered and seen in their communities through a 21st century lens.

    One local muralist is finding a new path to present his work.

    It’s dusk after a long day at work. Timothy B is in a space where a spray of paint is adding another stroke of creativity to his mural.  

    “When you’re on the wall, nothing behind me, nothing around me matters as much as what I’m doing in front of me,” the artist explained. 

    The Oakland muralist says his trees are a reminder of damage done in the past, and a call to fix what’s broken. 

    “Let me go and bring these trees to life more than you know what we know it to be,” said Timothy B. 

    His latest work will become a canvas for technologists converging in Oakland for the Juneteenth Hack

    Using augmented reality tools and apps, the Oakland native’s mural at Oakland International High School, will take on a new shape during the event.  

    “I want people to be fully immersed with the piece, even if it’s through their phone. What would that look like, right?” asked Timothy B. 

    The Juneteenth Hackathon is using augmented reality to transform how art is accessed.

    Damien McDuffie is the founder of Black Terminus, an app he designed to blend tech and art.  He collaborated with Timothy B in 2020 to present their first augmented reality mural of the founding fathers of the Black Panthers. 

    “You can look around our city and you won’t see any representation of them,” said McDuffie. 

    Huey Newton and Bobby Seale can be seen across the street from the Oakland Police Department.

    McDuffie has added historical context with speeches and audio that can be accessed by pointing a phone while passing by. 

    “You’ve known how to do this for a while. Now let’s bring that over here and introduce it in another way,” said McDuffie. 

    Newton and Seale suddenly “come to life.” It’s one example of introducing a community of artists to a platform where strokes of digital creativity can be added. 

    “We want more people to be able to take on this and tell their stories from their perspective and create new ways of how we tell stories in AR,” said McDuffie. 

    It’s one step in bringing more black entrepreneurs, visionaries, and artists closer to the future of augmented reality, artificial intelligence and tech.

    “When you open up tech through art, you also open up the opportunity for diversity in the space,” said McDuffie.

    Timothy B will be one of the artists attending the Juneteenth Hackathon, expanding possibilities to bring more life and eyes to see his message through his work, amplified by technology. 

    “Sometimes it’s freestyle. It comes from within,” said Timothy B. 

    Working with galleries and museums, McDuffie says adding digital elements to physical art increases its value and likelihood of it selling.

    Before tinkering with augmented reality art, his best work sold for $250. But after adding elements of AR to his pieces, McDuffie says some pieces have sold for ten times that amount. 

    The hackathon runs through Sunday. More information on how to participate is available on the Juneteenth Hack website

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  • Oakland police arrest 5 people in connection with Sunday sideshows

    Oakland police arrest 5 people in connection with Sunday sideshows

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    Police in Oakland on Tuesday confirmed the arrest of five individuals after traffic stops in connection with weekend sideshow activity that happened on both sides of the bay.

    In the press release issued by the Oakland Police Department, officials said there were numerous reports of illegal sideshow activity starting Saturday night


    Watch: Raw video of sideshow activity in Oakland

    03:02

    At around midnight, officers responded to the area of Grand Avenue and Lake Park Avenue after reports of a large sideshow. Police observed approximately 300 vehicles and 200 spectators engaged in illegal activity, with cars doing donuts and executing stunts in front of the Grand Lake Theater. 

    As additional officers arrived on scene, the crowd moved to the area of 5th Street and Adeline Street. Fireworks were set off by spectators at both locations. Afterwards, the crowd dispersed to other parts of Oakland before heading to nearby cities. More sideshow activity was later reported in San Francisco along the Embarcadero and in the Mission District.

    Police said officers in OPD’s ARGUS helicopter were able to follow the crowd throughout the city. Working with officers on the ground, police conducted seven traffic stops. Those stops led to the arrest of five individuals, the recovery of three firearms, and the impounding and towing of three vehicles.

    The release and social media posts about the incident included photos of firearms that were seized and one of the vehicles towed.

    The release said Oakland police are following up to identify additional vehicles that took part in the sideshows. Once vehicles are identified, investigators may go to the homes where the vehicles are registered and tow those vehicles.

    While Oakland did not go public with the arrests in connection with the sideshows until Tuesday, the department had greater success with their enforcement than San Francisco police. On Monday, SFPD Chief William Scott said officers were “working to hold people accountable” in a social media video released by the department. 

    While he said the investigations “are far from over,” as of Monday police had made no arrests in the incidents.

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    Dave Pehling

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  • Oakland community buys out ice cream cart following attack on vendor

    Oakland community buys out ice cream cart following attack on vendor

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    An East Bay community rallied around an ice cream vendor attacked and robbed at gunpoint in Oakland last month.

    Video shows 50-year-old Felipe Ramos pushing his ice cream cart in a crosswalk. That’s when three men surround him, push him to the ground and rob him. 

    Police are still searching for those men but on Sunday, people lined up to buy out his ice cream cart. 

    The event also featured other vendors who donated their profits to Ramos. 

    One organizer said it’s important to help neighbors in need. 

    “We wanted to let the community know that he’s not alone. And we’re here to help him out. So, thankfully he sold out all of his ice cream. So, I’m really happy for him,” Christian Fregoso said. 

    Organizers say some people even traveled from Los Angeles and Fresno to support Ramos.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • Vehicle catches fire during SF sideshow, sideshows also reported in Oakland, Mission District

    Vehicle catches fire during SF sideshow, sideshows also reported in Oakland, Mission District

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    Several sideshows were reported in San Francisco and Oakland overnight Sunday.

    One sideshow happened at the intersection of Grand and Lake Park Avenue in Oakland. The group moved throughout Oakland and people were also setting off several fireworks.

    At one point, two cars doing donuts in the middle crashed into each other. No word if any arrests were made in the Oakland incidents.

    There were also two sideshows that took place in San Francisco early Sunday morning, one of them happened near the Ferry Building and the other in the Mission District, police said.

    Officers responded to the area of Embarcadero and Washington streets around 2:10 a.m. on a report of what police described as “an active exhibition of stunt driving.” Accounts of the event also appeared on various social media accounts.

    One video showed a car was caught on fire in front of Pier 1 in San Francisco.

    The officers found multiple vehicles engaged in stunt driving, and also saw spectators near the intersection, according to police.

    When additional officers arrived on scene, the vehicles and spectators fled, police said.

    Later, around 3:02 a.m., officers responded to the area of Valencia and Cesar Chavez streets in the Mission District on another report of an active exhibition of stunt driving.

    When the officers arrived, they found multiple vehicles engaged in stunt driving and spectators near the intersection, police said.

    The officers also observed vandalism to a building in the vicinity but were unable to locate a suspect. With the help of additional officers, the vehicles and spectators began fleeing from the scene, according to police.

    No arrests have been made, San Francisco police said.

    Anyone with information is asked to contact the San Francisco Police Department at (415) 575-4444 or text a tip to TIP411 and begin the message with SFPD. Tipsters may remain anonymous.

    Bay City News contributed to the report.

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    NBC Bay Area staff and Bay City News

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