Discussion:
Oakland mayor's critics pursue recall campaign
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You Voted Her In!
2024-02-19 11:28:38 UTC
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You fools voted these incompetent progressive pieces of shit into
office! What's the problem now?
As Sheng Thao starts her second year in office, some of her staunchest
critics say they are pursuing a recall campaign.

Last weekend, a group led by retired Alameda County Superior Court Judge
and former member of the Police Commission Brenda Harbin-Forte,
announced it had mailed the paperwork to officially start the recall
process after collecting 250 signatures for an official notice. In a
note explaining their concerns, the organizers accused Thao of creating
a public safety crisis in Oakland by “systematically dismantling” OPD,
firing former police chief LeRonne Armstrong, and failing to appoint a
new police chief, among other complaints.

“Lives have been lost, property destroyed, businesses have shut down,
and fear and collective trauma are daily occurrences for Oaklanders,”
the recall organizers wrote in their notice.

In response to an interview request from The Oaklandside, Harbin-Forte
said all press statements must go through her media coordinator, Seneca
Scott. After The Oaklandside sent Scott an email requesting an
interview, Scott, without directly responding to us, accused The
Oaklandside on Twitter of trying to discredit recall supporters by
reporting about the campaign.

Thao’s chief of staff, Leigh Hanson, said the recall effort is “led by
losers.”

“I know for a fact that if Mayor Thao had lost the election, she would
have conceded gracefully and found a legitimate job that contributed to
moving our community forward,” Hanson said. “I have faith that
Oaklanders are smarter than this, and will resist the urge to be
distracted by a desperate attempt for relevance.”

Thao said in a statement she has “the best job in the world” because she
gets to fight to make Oakland safer, more affordable, and more
prosperous.

“I ask all Oaklanders to help me achieve that vision with hope and
collaboration and push aside fear and division,” Thao said.

There are many steps supporters of a recall have to undertake before it
is put to voters during a scheduled election. One major step is the
recall organizers must collect signatures from at least 10% of the
population, according to state rules that govern recalls in Oakland.
According to Alameda County data, there are over 240,000 voters in the
city, which means the recall supporters must collect roughly 24,600
signatures.

The recall organizers’ main focus: crime
At the beginning of 2023, a group of people upset with District Attorney
Pamela Price’s new policies around prosecuting crime launched a recall
campaign against her, arguing that her progressive stances on issues
like not charging juveniles as adults and not seeking enhancements and
maximum prison sentences in all cases has contributed to worse crime in
Oakland. The organizers of the Thao recall are making similar claims
about the mayor. They accuse Thao of “systematically dismantling” the
police department, “unjustly” terminating the former police chief, and
failing to uphold her promise to hire a new chief.

Last year was a bad year for crime in Oakland. There were 17,256
burglaries in 2023—a 23% increase over 2022. Commercial burglaries were
up 9% compared to 2022, fueling growing discontent among business
owners, some of whom have dealt with multiple break-ins. Vehicle thefts
were up 45% compared to 2022, and robberies were up 38%.

Many crime trends started worsening before Thao took office as mayor.
For example, in 2019, Oakland ended the year with 75 murders. In 2020,
murders shot up to 102. In 2021, LeRonne Armstrong’s first year as
chief, murders further increased to 123—the highest in 15 years. Murders
appear to have plateaued at higher levels in 2022 and 2023, at 120 each
year, according to OPD’s most recent annual crime report.

The city’s violent crime index—which tracks serious crimes, including
homicide, aggravated assault, rape, and robbery—peaked at 7,984 total
incidents in 2013, according to OPD data for 2009 through 2019. Then,
violent crime dropped for six years. When the pandemic hit, violent
crime shot up again.

The recall organizers have accused Thao of worsening public safety by
tearing down OPD, but the department hasn’t seen any layoffs or major
cuts in recent years, even after city leaders, including Thao, expressed
an interest in diverting funds to police alternatives after the George
Floyd protests in 2020. In June 2023, Thao’s first year as mayor, she
and the Oakland City Council approved a city spending plan that
increased OPD’s budget by roughly $40 million over what it received in
the last cycle, growing it from $683 million to $722 million. Oakland
leaders also funded six police academies.

However, because of rising costs due to inflation and other factors, the
$40 million increase in OPD’s budget hasn’t been enough to maintain
prior levels of police services. And the city’s $360 million shortfall
in its general fund forced Thao and City Council to make cuts across the
board to services. OPD agreed to cut its overtime budget by 15% and
reduce the number of budgeted sworn officers from 726 to 710. The city
also froze hiring for vacant OPD positions that it couldn’t afford to
fill. OPD, like other departments, avoided layoffs. The department is
currently projected to overspend its budget by $32.32 million in fiscal
year 2023-2024.

OPD graduated a new academy class at the end of 2023, which should
increase the number of officers to 725. For perspective, OPD staffing
was at a recent high of 750 in 2019. That number plummeted during the
pandemic, hitting a low of 690 in 2022, before Thao was elected mayor.

The recall organizers have also criticized Thao for firing Police Chief
LeRonne Armstrong, and for not yet hiring a replacement.

In January 2023, Thao placed Armstrong on administrative leave after an
outside investigation faulted him for “systemic failures” in how OPD
handled two misconduct cases for an OPD sergeant. She fired Armstrong
the following month after he went to the press and called OPD’s federal
monitor, Robert Warshaw, corrupt.

The Police Commission opened a search for a new chief, but the mayor
criticized the commission after an internal power struggle spilled into
public, and she promised to declare a state of emergency if the
commission didn’t send her candidates before the end of the year. In
September, a neutral hearing officer opined that Armstrong had not been
negligent in his duties as chief, but stopped short of saying he should
be reinstated. This report was seized on by Armstrong and his
supporters, including members of the Oakland Police Commission, who
advanced him as a finalist for the OPD chief job. Thao said she has lost
trust in Armstrong and rejected him and two other candidates in
December. The commission reopened the search and is expected to send new
candidates to the mayor in March. In the meantime, an interim chief is
running OPD, one of many times in the department’s recent history when
the chief’s role has been filled by a lower-ranking officer or outsider.

Paula Hawthorn, chair of Oakland’s Public Safety and Services Violence
Prevention Oversight Commission, spoke in her personal capacity with The
Oaklandside about the recall. Hawthorn was deeply opposed to the mayor’s
decision to fire Armstrong, calling him the best chief the city has had
for a long time. But she believes the recall is a mistake.

“She was elected honestly,” Hawthorn said. “I regret that she was
because I was very much for Loren Taylor. But that’s democracy, that’s
where we are, that’s what we do. We allow people to serve out their
terms.”

Hawthorn also dismissed the idea that OPD has been dismantled under
Thao. She said that Darren Allison, who has been running the department
since January 2023, is a “perfectly good” interim chief.

“The department is running along as well as it can and trying to figure
out what to do with this horrible crime spell, which nobody understands
why it’s happening or how to fix it, and that’s the bottom line,”
Hawthorn said.

Who are the recall organizers?
Brenda Harbin-Forte served as an Alameda County Superior Court judge
from 1998 until her retirement in 2019. In 2020, Oakland Mayor Libby
Schaaf appointed her for a roughly two-year term to the Police
Commission, an independent board with hiring and firing power over the
city’s police chief.

Harbin-Forte’s term expired in October 2022 but she continued to serve
on the commission and Thao didn’t remove her until June 2023. This
followed infighting on the commission, partly over the commission’s
leadership. At the time of her removal, Harbin-Forte accused the mayor
of trying to ensure that OPD remains under the control of the federal
monitor, Robert Warshaw, who has been overseeing the department’s reform
efforts. Harbin-Forte was an ally of the former commission chair,
Tyfahra Milele, who clashed with Thao over the timeline for the police
chief search. In a recent SFGATE interview, Harbin-Forte said the recall
campaign against Thao isn’t “petty revenge.”

Seneca Scott is a local activist who founded the group Neighbors
Together, which describes its mission as holding elected officials
accountable and checking the interests of special interest groups like
labor unions and nonprofits. He unsuccessfully ran against Thao and nine
other candidates in the 2022 mayoral election. He received 3,740 votes,
coming in seventh place. During the campaign, Scott repeatedly accused
Thao and her supporters of wrongdoing, including by publicizing ethics
complaints made by a former staffer in Thao’s City Council office and by
alleging that another Thao staffer was running a secret Twitter account
while on the job.

Scott has a history of making inflammatory statements, including last
summer when he accused an LGBTQ member of Thao’s staff of being a
pedophile.

After the 2022 election, Scott and the NAACP pushed for a recount in
hopes of overturning Thao’s win. Scott telegraphed his interest in
pursuing recalls against Oakland officials he disagrees with in a June
2022 op-ed about San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, where he
hinted that a similar campaign could happen in Oakland. In an August
2022 Twitter post responding to Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas,
Scott said “The SF recalls were only the beginning.”

https://oaklandside.org/2024/01/09/oakland-mayor-sheng-thao-recall-campai
gn/
California Red !
2024-02-19 11:43:42 UTC
Permalink
Kick her ass out. Don't fuck around, get it done. Vote Trump!
OAKLAND, Calif. (KGO) -- Certain violent crimes in Oakland continue to
rise as the city is nearing a full year without a police chief.

New data analyzed by the ABC7 News I-Team and released in the latest
citywide crime report show robberies are up 38 percent since 2022 but are
down slightly when compared to numbers a decade ago.


Graph not displaying correctly? Click here to open in a new window.

Burglaries are up 23 percent compared to 2022 and motor vehicle thefts are
up 44 percent. Both crime types stand out to be at the highest rate seen
since 2013.

The last large burglary increase in Oakland was in 2019 with nearly 15,000
reported. In 2023, that figure was over 17,000.


Graph not displaying correctly? Click here to open in a new window.

Motor vehicle thefts are steadily rising, from about 8,700 reported in
2020 to about 14,700 reported in 2023.


Graph not displaying correctly? Click here to open in a new window.

As for homicides, there were 92 reported in 2013 and 126 reported in 2023.


Graph not displaying correctly? Click here to open in a new window.

This rise in crime comes as there are renewed calls for the mayor to
declare a state of emergency.

"It's just chaos... and the city just cannot afford the chaos," said
retired Alameda County Judge Brenda Harbin-Forte.

Judge Harbin-Forte says a year without a police chief is unacceptable.

"So you know I have to say that this Mayor has blood on our hands and we
just can't afford to have her in office any longer," she told ABC7.

In September, Mayor Sheng Thao said she would "declare a state of
emergency" if a new police chief isn't selected by the end of the year.
Instead, last week she rejected the three recommendations made by the
police commission delaying the process until at least March.

MORE: Oakland Police Commission to search for new chief candidates after
Mayor Thao rejects all finalists

https://abc7news.com/oakland-crime-police-chief-mayor-sheng-thao-
robberies/14262728/
California Red !
2024-02-19 12:08:50 UTC
Permalink
You voted this on yourselves! Stop voting for these ignorant Democrat
fucks! DEI and woke simply do not work for honest people. They only
work for criminals.
OAKLAND, Calif. (KGO) -- Surveillance video from early Friday morning
shows the popular Colonial Donuts in Oakland getting robbed for a second
time in one week.

"This is the third time that Colonial Donuts has been robbed. Two times
this week alone. Three times in the last six months. This is
unacceptable," said Brenda Ly, a spokesperson for the family that owns
Colonial Donuts.

A coalition of community groups rallied in front of Colonial Donuts on
Friday morning. They blame failed leadership and failed policies for
rising crime. They called out Alameda County District Attorney Pamela
Price, Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao and Council President Nikki Fortunato
Bas.

"We are not safe, and it is because of policy. Not COVID. Not the
economy. Not late-stage capitalism. Policy. Otherwise, these things
would be happening in Berkeley, with the same frequency as they are
happening in Oakland," said Seneca Scott with Neighbors Together
Oakland.

EXCLUSIVE: Popular legacy donut shop in Oakland targeted in 2nd armed
robbery this year

Among the changes they want: bringing in more county and state
resources, hiring a police chief and enough police officers to be
proportionate to the city's population and calling for a state of
emergency.

"Sheng Thao, Nikki Bas, we need a state of emergency. We have got to
stop the (robbing) of the community, of the business community," said
Chris Moore, a candidate running for District 5 on the Alameda County
Board of Supervisors.

Examples of failed leadership include missing a state grant deadline to
tackle retail theft and the mishandling of 911 dispatcher applications,
even though that issue began before Mayor Thao took office.

"The city's Human Resources Management Department missed out on about
1,000 submitted 911 dispatcher applications for an entire year. Is that
acceptable, people?" said Edward Escobar with the Coalition for
Community Engagement.

The crowd responded with a resounding "No."

EXCLUSIVE: Popular 24-hour legacy donut shop in Oakland targeted in
armed robbery

Oakland city leaders counter these claims by saying crime is trending
downwards. The addition of foot patrol officers, having CHP help with
traffic mitigation, and the introduction of the mobile command center in
the Fruitvale District, they argue as evidence of that progress.

In a statement to ABC7 News, Mayor Sheng Thao writes, in part, "Oakland
has more police officers, safety ambassadors, and violence prevention
teams on our streets than any time in the past two years. We've also
increased patrols and undercover operations and provided funding to
business districts to enhance security."

But many at Friday's rally say these are just bandaid solutions to
ongoing issues.

"These are all superficial responses to what's been on going. We need
actual solutions that are sustainable," said Dr. Jennifer Tran,
president of the Oakland Vietnamese Chamber of Commerce.

https://abc7news.com/colonial-donuts-oakland-robbed-again-crime-armed-rob
bery/14216882/
Thank Gavin Newsom
2024-02-19 23:11:30 UTC
Permalink
Nancy Pelosi will be offended. It wasn't a transgender.
A Lyft driver in the San Francisco Bay Area was arrested over the weekend
for allegedly taking an unconscious passenger to his home and sexually
assaulting her, authorities said Sunday.

Tonye Kolokolo, 46, faces charges of rape and false imprisonment, San
Bruno Police Department Lt. Ryan Johansen said in a statement.

Police accused Kolokolo of picking up the 25-year-old woman at a bar in
San Mateo early Saturday morning and then driving nearly 100 miles to his
home in Tracy after she passed out in his back seat.

There, Johansen said, Kolokolo allegedly raped the passenger.

The statement asked other people who may have had similar experiences with
the driver to contact authorities.

In a statement to NBC Bay Area, Lyft called the incident “terrifying” and
said Kolokolo’s access to the ride-share service had been permanently
removed.

The company said it had reached out to the passenger and was working with
the authorities.

Kolokolo, who is being held in San Mateo County Jail, was scheduled to be
arraigned Monday.

Court records didn’t a list a lawyer for him.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/lyft-driver-allegedly-raped-
passenger-after-she-passed-out-back-n1041576

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