Saturday, March 27, 2010

Racketeering Charges Against SFPD - ABC

I checked Injustice Everywhere's news feed about police
corruption yesterday at the Makawao Postal Shop. Breaking
news about racketeering crimes by "rogue" investigators
with SFPD and their Alcohol Commission in San Francisco
night clubs, like the DNA Lounge and Slims, were listed.

Racketeering Influenced Corrupt Organizations laws targetd
organized crime in government and the private sector. It
is no secret that organized criminal influences are found
in most corrupt government sectors. The Bay Area attorney,
Mark Webb, is targeting "gangster-like- behavior by those
investigators.

During the almost 20 years that I lived and worked in the
SF Bay Area, I had only a few incidents that required law
enforcement until my complaint to the Hate Crimes Division
in 2004 about harassment in neighborhoods where I lived.

One incident worth mentioning that could be considered a
potential hate crime happened at a well-used bus stop near
Mt. Zion of UCSF where I had worked as a per diem ICU
RN many years.

While waiting with other bus users, a white middle-aged
white male wearing non-descript casual clothing approached
me and said, "You Chinese are so ugly". Being Japanese
American, I turned to him and asked, "Are you talking to
me?" He then took out a disposable camera from a white
plastic grocery-type bag and snapped my photograph.

He continued walking rapidly down the block, turned the
corner around the Thai restaurant and disappeared. I
followed him to the corner watched him walk rapidly down
the street, then went into the restaurant to use their
phone to make a 911 call.

I waited almost a half-hour, went back to call 911 again
from the same phone. They reported some incident that
required urgent action in another neighborhood. A police
patrol showed up almost 40 minutes later at this site.
The officer stayed in his car when I identified myself.

He asked the same questions as the 911 dispatch about
what had occurred, asking again for a description of this
male person. I asked why I needed to say the same thing
again when I had said this twice over the phone. He said
that they did not have a connection between their car
screen and 911 dispatch.

He then walked out of his patrol car to my side and
asked if the person was about his height and weight.
I continued to complain about waiting for 40 minutes
while this perpetrator was around the corner.

He offered me a ride around the block to see if I
could identify him saying that while no crime took
place, my experience could be described as a potential
hate crime. He said he could write a formal complaint
with a reference number, and if I ever saw him again
in San Francisco, I could call 911 with this referral #
and a police would arrive to peruse the site without
having to speak with me.

He then drove me back to my apartment. During this
drive he suggested that if I knew any artists, I could
have a sketch done to be disseminated to small merchants
in the area where this took place since it was a regular
bus route for me and others.

He shared that being Mexican American, he was some-
times identified as Arab American and targeted with
hate crimes himself.

This is a positive response on the streets of San
Francisco in an imperfect system. Hate crimes that
target an individual for race, sex, sexual orienta-
tion or religion are felony offenses and taken very
seriously by San Francisco City and County.

My hate crimes complaint in 2004 included neighbor-
hoods with a high pedestrian flow, including Richmond
area or "little Chinatown", Haight-Ashbury and the
Mission district. One complaint I made while living
in Richmond was a frequent flow of vehicles in front
of our rental apartment building with only a few
vehicles that were there regularly.

Sometimes, the vehicles changed every 10-15 minutes,
with young white males and Chinese or Taiwanese look-
ing immigrants driving, parking, driving parking.
A male from the second floor apartment, a few home
down from where I lived once called out to me as I
walked past his window, "hey, your window is wide
open." I didn't speak with him, but noticed that he
and another white male walking on my street once
or twice.

Half a block away, Angelina's Deli, a cafe where all
upper middle-class patron frequented is a site where
"men in black coats" arrived one day. My housemate,
a federal police officer, said they were from the
Secret Service because of the way they dressed and
asked questions.

I started taking pictures of the cars in front of
my apartment with disposable cameras. Some cars were
vintage, brightly-colored cars, some were ordinary
vans and sedans.

I had maybe 5-6 cameras. I left them at 1970 Liko
Street in safe in my former corrupt/criminal housemate,
here-to-forth-known as State Whore Katherine Keith.

At the time, my housemates were heavy drinkers, but
no one used illegal drugs. Since this SF neighborhood
is well-groomed with a school yard nearby, there was no
active threat despite these suspicious car activities.

This site was named in my Hate Crimes complaint because
it was the site where I lived after making my original
complaint to the FBI and other City officials.

Many don't understand what is entailed with RICO,
Racketeering Influenced Corrupt Organizations laws.
The public in San Francisco should be aggressive in
rooting out any type of influence that allows abuses
by vigilante law enforcement agents.

I wrote a preliminary script, "The Pimps of Angelina's
Deli" while living in another home in the Richmond
in 2004. This script, about the perversity of traffick-
ing privacy from an erotica workshop for permanently
disabled male veterans by an underground system at a
Veteran's Hospital for clandestine night clubs, was
stolen from my HP lap top in 2004.

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