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		<title>San Francisco man sentenced in case of fleeing nation with underage Redwood Metropolis lady &#124; Native Information</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-man-sentenced-in-case-of-fleeing-nation-with-underage-redwood-metropolis-lady-native-information/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Jun 2022 15:28:13 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Photo on Visualhunt.com A 36-year-old man who attempted to flee to Amsterdam from San Francisco International Airport with a 16-year-old Redwood City girl he planned to marry has been sentenced to four years in prison, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney&#8217;s Office . In June, Dylan Raymos, a San Francisco resident, was arrested &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-man-sentenced-in-case-of-fleeing-nation-with-underage-redwood-metropolis-lady-native-information/">San Francisco man sentenced in case of fleeing nation with underage Redwood Metropolis lady | Native Information</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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<p>A 36-year-old man who attempted to flee to Amsterdam from San Francisco International Airport with a 16-year-old Redwood City girl he planned to marry has been sentenced to four years in prison, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney&#8217;s Office .</p>
<p>In June, Dylan Raymos, a San Francisco resident, was arrested in Redwood City for allegedly having unlawful sex with the girl and was ordered not to have contact with her, prosecutors said.</p>
<p>However, he disobeyed the order, picked up the girl at her home on July 7, and went to the airport.  Prosecutors said that US Customs and Border Protection approached him on the plane and learned he was violating a court order and fleeing the country.  Raymos admitted email contact and said the girl had agreed to travel with him to Portugal through Amsterdam, and he planned to marry her, prosecutors said.</p>
<p>The victim&#8217;s family statements gave in court that persuaded the judge to go beyond the two years initially considered and go with four years, prosecutors said.  He was also ordered not to contact the victim for 10 years.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-man-sentenced-in-case-of-fleeing-nation-with-underage-redwood-metropolis-lady-native-information/">San Francisco man sentenced in case of fleeing nation with underage Redwood Metropolis lady | Native Information</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>A woman fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/a-woman-fled-her-war-torn-homeland-however-discovered-extra-trauma-in-san-francisco/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jun 2022 11:55:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/?p=21958</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The morning began like most in the Saleh family’s tiny studio six floors above Turk and Hyde streets in the Tenderloin. The four children rose from their mats on the floor as their parents emerged from the closet where they shared a small mattress. Abu Bakr Saleh, the father and sole earner in the family &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/a-woman-fled-her-war-torn-homeland-however-discovered-extra-trauma-in-san-francisco/">A woman fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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<p>The morning began like most in the Saleh family’s tiny studio six floors above Turk and Hyde streets in the Tenderloin. The four children rose from their mats on the floor as their parents emerged from the closet where they shared a small mattress.</p>
<p>Abu Bakr Saleh, the father and sole earner in the family of refugees who fled the war in Yemen, rushed to begin a 16-hour double shift at a grocery store and a KFC. His wife, Sumaya Albadani, began an isolating day of cooking, cleaning and waiting for the others to return.</p>
<p>The kids — Ahmed, 16, Asma, 15, Raghad, 12, and 10-year-old Maya — rode a rickety elevator downstairs, down to one of the city’s most distressed blocks, before fanning out to their four schools.</p>
<p>But on Sept. 29, 2021, Raghad didn’t reach hers.</p>
<p><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, poses for a portrait on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>The sixth-grader at Francisco Middle School in North Beach — who had suffered a major trauma the year before, when an immigration fiasco forced her family to leave her with strangers in Egypt — lingered on the 400 block of Larkin Street while Ahmed ran into a shop to do an errand.</p>
<p>Just then, a woman in a wheelchair approached, yelling incoherently and spouting Islamophobic statements about the girl’s hijab, according to the girl and police. Raghad, still learning English, only caught portions of the diatribe, but heard three words very clearly: “Are you scared?”</p>
<p>“After that, she came close to me, and she hit me,” the girl told me a few months later. “She punched me in the head. I felt dizzy after that. I couldn’t believe it.”</p>
<p>Ahmed witnessed the attack and rushed to help. A security guard called 911. Police responded and arrested the woman on suspicion of committing assault, child endangerment and a hate crime. After getting checked out by paramedics, Raghad spent the day at home.</p>
<p>She hasn’t been the same since, her family said. She spends long hours playing games on her phone or watching YouTube videos. She’s listless. She cries more. She’s still fearful, saying she’s seen the suspect several times since the attack despite a protective order to stay away.</p>
<p>The attack was shocking, but only to a degree, in a neighborhood with one of the city’s highest assault rates. And it would ripple outward: In November, the episode would become one focus of a letter that Tenderloin families delivered to Mayor London Breed, pleading for help.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="portrait" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/13/22545090/9/1200x0.jpg" alt="(From left to right): In this undated family photo Asma Saleh and Raghad Saleh pose for a photo in Yemen. Raghad was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year in the Tenderloin on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>(From left to right): In this undated family photo Asma Saleh and Raghad Saleh pose for a photo in Yemen. Raghad was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year in the Tenderloin on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Courtesy Abu Bakr Saleh</span></p>
<p>“We are immigrants and refugees. We are children and mothers and fathers,” began the letter, penned by staff at the Tenderloin Community Benefit District and signed by 400 neighbors. “We are the Tenderloin, and you have failed us.”</p>
<p>The Salehs had one wish: to escape their $2,050-a-month studio for a bigger apartment in a safer neighborhood. More broadly, they sought the American dream in a city that proclaims itself a refuge.</p>
<p>But while San Francisco officials furiously debated what to do about a crisis of homelessness, addiction and mental illness in the Tenderloin, no one talked much about reducing harm to the many families stuck in one of the last semi-affordable stretches of the city.</p>
<p>In many respects, the Saleh family was living a dream life in Yemen. Abu Bakr, now 38, supported his family as an accountant for the finance ministry. Their six-bedroom home in Ibb, a city in western Yemen, was surrounded by lush gardens.</p>
<p>But the country’s war that began in 2014, when Houthi rebels took control of the northern part of Yemen, brought devastation. A military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and backed by the United States entered the fight, and it has dragged on since. The United Nations estimates 377,000 people have been killed, 70% of them young children. Millions more, including the Salehs, have been displaced.</p>
<p>Abu Bakr made it to San Francisco in 2016 to join his parents, who were already living in Mission Bay. He planned to get settled and then send for his wife and four children, who had fled to Egypt. Finally, on March 1, 2020, the family received visas to travel to the United States — all but Raghad. To this day, it’s not clear why.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544903/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh's father, Abu Bakr Saleh, stocks soft drinks during his shift at Saabis Groceries, a corner market in Bayview Hunterspoint, on Wednesday, January 26, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh, who's originally from Yemen, usually works six days a week, sometimes seven, and rarely sees his family. "I'm happy I bring my family here. I'm lucky because I stay with my kids. But I work too hard because (it's) expensive here," Sales said. "It's too expensive here and I can't save money and I stay in a bad location also. I work 85 hours a week. If I want to take a vacation, I can't buy rent. No money. It's too much. I work too hard." Saleh's 11-year-old daughter, Raghad, was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh&#8217;s father, Abu Bakr Saleh, stocks soft drinks during his shift at Saabis Groceries, a corner market in Bayview Hunterspoint, on Wednesday, January 26, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh, who&#8217;s originally from Yemen, usually works six days a week, sometimes seven, and rarely sees his family. &#8220;I&#8217;m happy I bring my family here. I&#8217;m lucky because I stay with my kids. But I work too hard because (it&#8217;s) expensive here,&#8221; Sales said. &#8220;It&#8217;s too expensive here and I can&#8217;t save money and I stay in a bad location also. I work 85 hours a week. If I want to take a vacation, I can&#8217;t buy rent. No money. It&#8217;s too much. I work too hard.&#8221; Saleh&#8217;s 11-year-old daughter, Raghad, was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>As they waited, they faced a deadline — the July 1 expiration date of the visas — and a pandemic obstacle: The Trump administration suspended visa services at all U.S. embassies and consulates in March 2020 and, in June, banned most immigration to the U.S. through the end of the year.</p>
<p>So Sumaya and her other children made the excruciating decision to fly to San Francisco while they still could, depositing Raghad with a Yemeni family in Cairo they barely knew.</p>
<p>“All the time in the airplane,” Sumaya recalled, “I was crying because I left my daughter.”</p>
<p>The Saleh family became one of 23 plaintiffs challenging Trump’s immigration restrictions in court. The Chronicle told their story on July 29, 2020, and the next month, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo granted Raghad — who’d been stranded for six weeks — a visa.</p>
<p>But their new life was far from what they had envisioned.</p>
<p>“Thank you, my God, to bring my family here,” Abu Bakr said. “I’m happy I’m here because it’s too much problem in Yemen. No salary, no power, no water, no food. It’s war. But I work too hard because it’s expensive here, you know? I can’t save money, and I stay in a bad location also.”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544902/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh (center) pulls off her mask and smiles at her family moments after she arrived at San Francisco International from Egypt. Raghad had been separated from the family due to a visa issue."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh (center) pulls off her mask and smiles at her family moments after she arrived at San Francisco International from Egypt. Raghad had been separated from the family due to a visa issue.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle 2020</span></p>
<p>Walking a few blocks with Raghad one day last December, from a Muni stop to her home, I saw what her dad meant. We strolled past a strip club with the sign “Where the Wild Girls Are.” Past people slumped unconscious in bus shelters. Past a woman screaming gibberish. Past a woman doing drugs on the sidewalk, her face bloodied. Past piles of trash and feces.</p>
<p>“This neighborhood is so scary,” Raghad said, moving quickly and nervously adjusting her hijab.</p>
<p>At night, the family doesn’t leave their studio. Still, they have trouble sleeping with the sounds of gunshots, fights and sirens.</p>
<p>“We don’t go to the window in case the gun comes,” said Maya, holding her fingers in the shape of a pistol.</p>
<p>Sumaya, speaking Arabic through an interpreter, said she was shocked when her picture of America didn’t match the reality of her new home. “From the pictures, I thought it would be really clean and now, when I walk up the street, it’s really, really painful to see all these things,” she said.</p>
<p>“If you walk a little bit far away from here,” Sumaya added, “You can say, ‘Yes, this is the United States I know.’”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544901/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, left, crosses the street with close friends Maison, 12, center, and Hager, 12, as they head home after attending classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, left, crosses the street with close friends Maison, 12, center, and Hager, 12, as they head home after attending classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>More than two months after Raghad was attacked, her mother brought her and her brother to a mid-December meeting with Breed in the city’s main library to discuss conditions in the Tenderloin. The mayor barred journalists, but according to an audience member’s recording, she told the families she was frustrated by the neighborhood’s “horrible conditions.”</p>
<p>“You’re dealing with the concern of whether you might get robbed or hit over the head or attacked or spit on,” Breed told them.</p>
<p>People in the audience said the city was looking the other way as drug dealers created misery. And that cops just drove past rather than walking the beat. Several shared stories about their businesses being robbed, strangers attacking them, hate crimes proliferating and being forced to huddle with children at playgrounds as men brandished guns outside the gates.</p>
<p>Breed promised big changes. She would deploy more officers to the Tenderloin like she had in Union Square after the looting of Louis Vuitton and other luxury stores weeks before.</p>
<p>After the meeting, Raghad said she was upset she didn’t get to share her story of being attacked before the mayor abruptly left. “There are a lot of people who are struggling in this area and facing the same problem I did,” she said.</p>
<p>But the family was encouraged. The mayor had promised help.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544899/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, holds the hand of her close friend Maison, 12, left, as they ride the bus following classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, holds the hand of her close friend Maison, 12, left, as they ride the bus following classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>Four days later, Breed assembled the news media at City Hall to announce a state of emergency in the Tenderloin meant to end “all the bulls— that has destroyed our city.” She said residents would see far more police and that they’d crack down on drug dealing, gun violence and the resale of stolen goods.</p>
<p>But that pledge of a Union Square-like police presence in the Tenderloin never materialized. More officers came months later — Breed said the delay owed to understaffing and the omicron virus — and only during the day.</p>
<p>Drug dealing continued unabated, signaling that purveyors of fancy handbags were more important to the city than low-income families like the Salehs who were left to deal with the fallout.</p>
<p>The family occasionally witnessed overdoses from their window. After Maya started talking about seeing “dizzy” people “laying on the floor,” it became clear she meant people passed out on the sidewalks after using drugs.</p>
<p>“Everybody is scared here,” Maya said. “If I walk with myself, my brain says, ‘Maya, don’t be scared.’ Everything will be OK.”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544900/9/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, eats a meal with her mother, Sumaya Saleh, 39, and her sister, Maya Saleh, 10, in their Tenderloin apartment on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, eats a meal with her mother, Sumaya Saleh, 39, and her sister, Maya Saleh, 10, in their Tenderloin apartment on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Though Raghad’s visa crisis was unique, her family’s path from Yemen to the Tenderloin was not.</p>
<p>Jehan Hakim, chair of the Yemeni Alliance Committee, a group calling on the United States to cease military involvement in Yemen, said her father moved her family here in the mid-1970s in pursuit of better education and more opportunities.</p>
<p>Word of mouth brought more families from Yemen, and eventually hundreds settled in two low-income buildings on Turk and Jones streets. Today, there are two mosques in the neighborhood and a community group that provides immigration help, but almost no other services specifically for Yemeni immigrants, Hakim said.</p>
<p>“We don’t have anything with wrap-around social services that’s focusing on supporting Arab people coming from other countries,” she said.</p>
<p>Aseel Fara, a 22-year-old outreach coordinator at the Tenderloin Community Benefit District, said the Saleh family’s story sounded like his own. When his family left Yemen, they packed into a studio apartment on the same block as the Salehs, lured by the cheapest possible rent in the city.</p>
<p>“We’re limited to areas such as the Tenderloin,” Fara said, “which are neglected by the city and neglected by society.”</p>
<p>There’s no good data on how many Yemeni people live in the Tenderloin — Arab people are supposed to mark themselves as white in the U.S. census — but Hakim guesses as many as 2,500 live in the neighborhood now.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544906/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, listens to instructions from her music teacher Flora Wong as she sits by her piano during class at Francisco Middle School on Friday, January 7, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, listens to instructions from her music teacher Flora Wong as she sits by her piano during class at Francisco Middle School on Friday, January 7, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Even the richest families from Yemen are poor in San Francisco, Fara said, because any money they’ve saved buys so little here, and their education and work experience back home counts for next to nothing. Men from Yemen who settle in the Tenderloin often work as janitors or grocery store clerks, he said, and the women often stay home alone during the school day.</p>
<p>Moving from a conservative Muslim country to the anything-goes Tenderloin can be shocking, Fara said. And it can be frightening for women to walk the streets in hijabs, which sometimes draw stares and bigoted remarks.</p>
<p>But despite the hardships, Fara is glad his family moved to San Francisco.</p>
<p>“I don’t want to take away from what America has provided us,” he said. “The opportunities are endless.”</p>
<p>And indeed, the Saleh children have their dreams.</p>
<p>Ahmed, who goes to Galileo High, told me he wants to study computer science and work as a web developer. Asma, in a program at SF International High designed for recent immigrants, hopes to be an interpreter and plans to tackle Spanish after perfecting her English. Maya, a bright-eyed girl who attends Tenderloin Community Elementary, imagines becoming a doctor.</p>
<p>Raghad, rarely as animated as her siblings, said she isn’t sure what her future will bring. She acknowledged she still feels depressed. She went to the counseling office at school once, but said the social worker wasn’t there, and she never tried again.</p>
<p>“Sometimes I dream my house from Yemen is here in the USA,” Raghad said, explaining this would be the best of both worlds.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544904/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh's sister, Maya Saleh, 10, converses with Urban Alchemy ambassador Aaron Trujillo as she returns home from school, at Turk and Hyde, in the Tenderloin on Friday, February 11, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh&#8217;s sister, Maya Saleh, 10, converses with Urban Alchemy ambassador Aaron Trujillo as she returns home from school, at Turk and Hyde, in the Tenderloin on Friday, February 11, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>About six weeks after Breed declared her Tenderloin emergency, the Salehs told me they felt their block was a little safer and cleaner, partly thanks to ambassadors from Urban Alchemy, the nonprofit group hired by San Francisco to calm the city’s troubled core.</p>
<p>The blocks to the north seemed worse, so they often walked south instead — to the fields and playgrounds in Civic Center Plaza.</p>
<p>“Sometimes I feel sad,” Abu Bakr said, sitting on a bench during a rare day off as his daughters played. “I worry too much. I can’t save more. I can’t see my children.”</p>
<p>Ahmed, sitting at his father’s feet, said he’d told one of the mayor’s staff members at the library meeting about Raghad’s attack — and the family’s wish to leave the Tenderloin — but that no help had come through.</p>
<p>After I started asking questions, the Mayor’s Office and District Attorney’s Office pledged housing and mental health assistance for the Salehs. But eight months after the attack, none has materialized.</p>
<p>Finding publicly funded therapists taking new clients has proved difficult due to pandemic-fueled waiting lists, and finding an Arabic-speaking therapist is nearly impossible, explained Kasie Lee, chief of the D.A.’s Victim Services Division. The office was able to locate an Arabic-speaking therapist in private practice and is trying to secure money to pay for sessions, but Raghad still hasn’t talked to a professional about her trauma.</p>
<p>Obtaining a new apartment is also difficult. Lee explained that relocation assistance from the District Attorney’s Office and a state victim’s compensation fund would typically help the family cover a security deposit and first month’s rent. The problem is finding a larger, safer apartment the family can afford, long-term, on its own. The family can apply for affordable housing programs, but the wait lists are notoriously long.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544907/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, hugs her sister Asma Saleh, 14, as they hang out at Civic Center Plaza on Saturday, January 29, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, hugs her sister Asma Saleh, 14, as they hang out at Civic Center Plaza on Saturday, January 29, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Moving out of the city proved daunting since the family had no car and no job lined up elsewhere and couldn’t easily scrape together moving expenses.</p>
<p>Nothing much has happened in the case of Raghad’s alleged attacker. District Attorney Chesa Boudin charged Tinesha Scott, 48, with felony child endangerment and felony assault with a hate crime enhancement.</p>
<p>Boudin’s spokesperson, Rachel Marshall, said the office filed a motion to detain Scott, but a Superior Court judge denied it. The courts issued a criminal protective order, but Raghad said she has seen Scott several times since the encounter — including beneath her studio window. She said she was terrified when Scott waved at her.</p>
<p>“Next time,” Raghad said, “she could be holding a knife.”</p>
<p>Phoenix Streets, a public defender representing Scott, said his client had experienced a mental health crisis that September morning and received care at a hospital. Eight months after the attack, Scott has not received long-term treatment, which Streets blamed on “the underfunding of our mental health care system.”</p>
<p>And so, all these months later, everybody involved remains in pretty much the same position: The Saleh family stuck in a tiny studio on a ragged block. Raghad anxious and scared. Scott’s mental illness unaddressed. The city of San Francisco seemingly no closer to helping the families of the Tenderloin — which is no longer in a state of emergency, at least officially.</p>
<p>But there is one big change: Sumaya is expecting her fifth baby — a boy — in September. He’s one more reason to find a bigger apartment. One more reason to strive for a better life. One more reason to dream.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544905/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="(From left to right): Maya Saleh, 10, Abu Saleh, 37, Asma Saleh, 15, Raghad Saleh, 12, and Ahmed Saleh, 16, pose for a portrait in their small studio Tenderloin apartment on Sunday, April 3, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>(From left to right): Maya Saleh, 10, Abu Saleh, 37, Asma Saleh, 15, Raghad Saleh, 12, and Ahmed Saleh, 16, pose for a portrait in their small studio Tenderloin apartment on Sunday, April 3, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>
Heather Knight is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: hknight@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @hknightsf</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/a-woman-fled-her-war-torn-homeland-however-discovered-extra-trauma-in-san-francisco/">A woman fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>A lady fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jun 2022 11:42:55 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The morning began like most in the Saleh family’s tiny studio six floors above Turk and Hyde streets in the Tenderloin. The four children rose from their mats on the floor as their parents emerged from the closet where they shared a small mattress. Abu Bakr Saleh, the father and sole earner in the family &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/a-lady-fled-her-war-torn-homeland-however-discovered-extra-trauma-in-san-francisco/">A lady fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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<p>The morning began like most in the Saleh family’s tiny studio six floors above Turk and Hyde streets in the Tenderloin. The four children rose from their mats on the floor as their parents emerged from the closet where they shared a small mattress.</p>
<p>Abu Bakr Saleh, the father and sole earner in the family of refugees who fled the war in Yemen, rushed to begin a 16-hour double shift at a grocery store and a KFC. His wife, Sumaya Albadani, began an isolating day of cooking, cleaning and waiting for the others to return.</p>
<p>The kids — Ahmed, 16, Asma, 15, Raghad, 12, and 10-year-old Maya — rode a rickety elevator downstairs, down to one of the city’s most distressed blocks, before fanning out to their four schools.</p>
<p>But on Sept. 29, 2021, Raghad didn’t reach hers.</p>
<p>The sixth-grader at Francisco Middle School in North Beach — who had suffered a major trauma the year before, when an immigration fiasco forced her family to leave her with strangers in Egypt — lingered on the 400 block of Larkin Street while Ahmed ran into a shop to do an errand.</p>
<p>Just then, a woman in a wheelchair approached, yelling incoherently and spouting Islamophobic statements about the girl’s hijab, according to the girl and police. Raghad, still learning English, only caught portions of the diatribe, but heard three words very clearly: “Are you scared?”</p>
<p><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, poses for a portrait on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>“After that, she came close to me, and she hit me,” the girl told me a few months later. “She punched me in the head. I felt dizzy after that. I couldn’t believe it.”</p>
<p>Ahmed witnessed the attack and rushed to help. A security guard called 911. Police responded and arrested the woman on suspicion of committing assault, child endangerment and a hate crime. After getting checked out by paramedics, Raghad spent the day at home.</p>
<p>She hasn’t been the same since, her family said. She spends long hours playing games on her phone or watching YouTube videos. She’s listless. She cries more. She’s still fearful, saying she’s seen the suspect several times since the attack despite a protective order to stay away.</p>
<p>The attack was shocking, but only to a degree, in a neighborhood with one of the city’s highest assault rates. And it would ripple outward: In November, the episode would become one focus of a letter that Tenderloin families delivered to Mayor London Breed, pleading for help.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="portrait" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/13/22545090/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="(From left to right): In this undated family photo Asma Saleh and Raghad Saleh pose for a photo in Yemen. Raghad was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year in the Tenderloin on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>(From left to right): In this undated family photo Asma Saleh and Raghad Saleh pose for a photo in Yemen. Raghad was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year in the Tenderloin on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Photo Courtesy Abu Bakr Saleh/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>“We are immigrants and refugees. We are children and mothers and fathers,” began the letter, penned by staff at the Tenderloin Community Benefit District and signed by 400 neighbors. “We are the Tenderloin, and you have failed us.”</p>
<p>The Salehs had one wish: to escape their $2,050-a-month studio for a bigger apartment in a safer neighborhood. More broadly, they sought the American dream in a city that proclaims itself a refuge.</p>
<p>But while San Francisco officials furiously debated what to do about a crisis of homelessness, addiction and mental illness in the Tenderloin, no one talked much about reducing harm to the many families stuck in one of the last semi-affordable stretches of the city.</p>
<p>In many respects, the Saleh family was living a dream life in Yemen. Abu Bakr, now 38, supported his family as an accountant for the finance ministry. Their six-bedroom home in Ibb, a city in western Yemen, was surrounded by lush gardens.</p>
<p>But the country’s war that began in 2014, when Houthi rebels took control of the northern part of Yemen, brought devastation. A military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and backed by the United States entered the fight, and it has dragged on since. The United Nations estimates 377,000 people have been killed, 70% of them young children. Millions more, including the Salehs, have been displaced.</p>
<p>Abu Bakr made it to San Francisco in 2016 to join his parents, who were already living in Mission Bay. He planned to get settled and then send for his wife and four children, who had fled to Egypt. Finally, on March 1, 2020, the family received visas to travel to the United States — all but Raghad. To this day, it’s not clear why.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544903/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh's father, Abu Bakr Saleh, stocks soft drinks during his shift at Saabis Groceries, a corner market in Bayview Hunterspoint, on Wednesday, January 26, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh, who's originally from Yemen, usually works six days a week, sometimes seven, and rarely sees his family. "I'm happy I bring my family here. I'm lucky because I stay with my kids. But I work too hard because (it's) expensive here," Sales said. "It's too expensive here and I can't save money and I stay in a bad location also. I work 85 hours a week. If I want to take a vacation, I can't buy rent. No money. It's too much. I work too hard." Saleh's 11-year-old daughter, Raghad, was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh&#8217;s father, Abu Bakr Saleh, stocks soft drinks during his shift at Saabis Groceries, a corner market in Bayview Hunterspoint, on Wednesday, January 26, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh, who&#8217;s originally from Yemen, usually works six days a week, sometimes seven, and rarely sees his family. &#8220;I&#8217;m happy I bring my family here. I&#8217;m lucky because I stay with my kids. But I work too hard because (it&#8217;s) expensive here,&#8221; Sales said. &#8220;It&#8217;s too expensive here and I can&#8217;t save money and I stay in a bad location also. I work 85 hours a week. If I want to take a vacation, I can&#8217;t buy rent. No money. It&#8217;s too much. I work too hard.&#8221; Saleh&#8217;s 11-year-old daughter, Raghad, was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>As they waited, they faced a deadline — the July 1 expiration date of the visas — and a pandemic obstacle: The Trump administration suspended visa services at all U.S. embassies and consulates in March 2020 and, in June, banned most immigration to the U.S. through the end of the year.</p>
<p>So Sumaya and her other children made the excruciating decision to fly to San Francisco while they still could, depositing Raghad with a Yemeni family in Cairo they barely knew.</p>
<p>“All the time in the airplane,” Sumaya recalled, “I was crying because I left my daughter.”</p>
<p>The Saleh family became one of 23 plaintiffs challenging Trump’s immigration restrictions in court. The Chronicle told their story on July 29, 2020, and the next month, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo granted Raghad — who’d been stranded for six weeks — a visa.</p>
<p>But their new life was far from what they had envisioned.</p>
<p>“Thank you, my God, to bring my family here,” Abu Bakr said. “I’m happy I’m here because it’s too much problem in Yemen. No salary, no power, no water, no food. It’s war. But I work too hard because it’s expensive here, you know? I can’t save money, and I stay in a bad location also.”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544902/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh (center) pulls off her mask and smiles at her family moments after she arrived at San Francisco International from Egypt. Raghad had been separated from the family due to a visa issue."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh (center) pulls off her mask and smiles at her family moments after she arrived at San Francisco International from Egypt. Raghad had been separated from the family due to a visa issue.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle 2020</span></p>
<p>Walking a few blocks with Raghad one day last December, from a Muni stop to her home, I saw what her dad meant. We strolled past a strip club with the sign “Where the Wild Girls Are.” Past people slumped unconscious in bus shelters. Past a woman screaming gibberish. Past a woman doing drugs on the sidewalk, her face bloodied. Past piles of trash and feces.</p>
<p>“This neighborhood is so scary,” Raghad said, moving quickly and nervously adjusting her hijab.</p>
<p>At night, the family doesn’t leave their studio. Still, they have trouble sleeping with the sounds of gunshots, fights and sirens.</p>
<p>“We don’t go to the window in case the gun comes,” said Maya, holding her fingers in the shape of a pistol.</p>
<p>Sumaya, speaking Arabic through an interpreter, said she was shocked when her picture of America didn’t match the reality of her new home. “From the pictures, I thought it would be really clean and now, when I walk up the street, it’s really, really painful to see all these things,” she said.</p>
<p>“If you walk a little bit far away from here,” Sumaya added, “You can say, ‘Yes, this is the United States I know.’”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544901/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, left, crosses the street with close friends Maison, 12, center, and Hager, 12, as they head home after attending classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, left, crosses the street with close friends Maison, 12, center, and Hager, 12, as they head home after attending classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>More than two months after Raghad was attacked, her mother brought her and her brother to a mid-December meeting with Breed in the city’s main library to discuss conditions in the Tenderloin. The mayor barred journalists, but according to an audience member’s recording, she told the families she was frustrated by the neighborhood’s “horrible conditions.”</p>
<p>“You’re dealing with the concern of whether you might get robbed or hit over the head or attacked or spit on,” Breed told them.</p>
<p>People in the audience said the city was looking the other way as drug dealers created misery. And that cops just drove past rather than walking the beat. Several shared stories about their businesses being robbed, strangers attacking them, hate crimes proliferating and being forced to huddle with children at playgrounds as men brandished guns outside the gates.</p>
<p>Breed promised big changes. She would deploy more officers to the Tenderloin like she had in Union Square after the looting of Louis Vuitton and other luxury stores weeks before.</p>
<p>After the meeting, Raghad said she was upset she didn’t get to share her story of being attacked before the mayor abruptly left. “There are a lot of people who are struggling in this area and facing the same problem I did,” she said.</p>
<p>But the family was encouraged. The mayor had promised help.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544899/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, holds the hand of her close friend Maison, 12, left, as they ride the bus following classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, holds the hand of her close friend Maison, 12, left, as they ride the bus following classes at Francisco Middle School on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle 2021</span></p>
<p>Four days later, Breed assembled the news media at City Hall to announce a state of emergency in the Tenderloin meant to end “all the bulls— that has destroyed our city.” She said residents would see far more police and that they’d crack down on drug dealing, gun violence and the resale of stolen goods.</p>
<p>But that pledge of a Union Square-like police presence in the Tenderloin never materialized. More officers came months later — Breed said the delay owed to understaffing and the omicron virus — and only during the day.</p>
<p>Drug dealing continued unabated, signaling that purveyors of fancy handbags were more important to the city than low-income families like the Salehs who were left to deal with the fallout.</p>
<p>The family occasionally witnessed overdoses from their window. After Maya started talking about seeing “dizzy” people “laying on the floor,” it became clear she meant people passed out on the sidewalks after using drugs.</p>
<p>“Everybody is scared here,” Maya said. “If I walk with myself, my brain says, ‘Maya, don’t be scared.’ Everything will be OK.”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544900/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, eats a meal with her mother, Sumaya Saleh, 39, and her sister, Maya Saleh, 10, in their Tenderloin apartment on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, eats a meal with her mother, Sumaya Saleh, 39, and her sister, Maya Saleh, 10, in their Tenderloin apartment on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M James/</span></p>
<p>Though Raghad’s visa crisis was unique, her family’s path from Yemen to the Tenderloin was not.</p>
<p>Jehan Hakim, chair of the Yemeni Alliance Committee, a group calling on the United States to cease military involvement in Yemen, said her father moved her family here in the mid-1970s in pursuit of better education and more opportunities.</p>
<p>Word of mouth brought more families from Yemen, and eventually hundreds settled in two low-income buildings on Turk and Jones streets. Today, there are two mosques in the neighborhood and a community group that provides immigration help, but almost no other services specifically for Yemeni immigrants, Hakim said.</p>
<p>“We don’t have anything with wrap-around social services that’s focusing on supporting Arab people coming from other countries,” she said.</p>
<p>Aseel Fara, a 22-year-old outreach coordinator at the Tenderloin Community Benefit District, said the Saleh family’s story sounded like his own. When his family left Yemen, they packed into a studio apartment on the same block as the Salehs, lured by the cheapest possible rent in the city.</p>
<p>“We’re limited to areas such as the Tenderloin,” Fara said, “which are neglected by the city and neglected by society.”</p>
<p>There’s no good data on how many Yemeni people live in the Tenderloin — Arab people are supposed to mark themselves as white in the U.S. census — but Hakim guesses as many as 2,500 live in the neighborhood now.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544906/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, listens to instructions from her music teacher Flora Wong as she sits by her piano during class at Francisco Middle School on Friday, January 7, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, listens to instructions from her music teacher Flora Wong as she sits by her piano during class at Francisco Middle School on Friday, January 7, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Even the richest families from Yemen are poor in San Francisco, Fara said, because any money they’ve saved buys so little here, and their education and work experience back home counts for next to nothing. Men from Yemen who settle in the Tenderloin often work as janitors or grocery store clerks, he said, and the women often stay home alone during the school day.</p>
<p>Moving from a conservative Muslim country to the anything-goes Tenderloin can be shocking, Fara said. And it can be frightening for women to walk the streets in hijabs, which sometimes draw stares and bigoted remarks.</p>
<p>But despite the hardships, Fara is glad his family moved to San Francisco.</p>
<p>“I don’t want to take away from what America has provided us,” he said. “The opportunities are endless.”</p>
<p>And indeed, the Saleh children have their dreams.</p>
<p>Ahmed, who goes to Galileo High, told me he wants to study computer science and work as a web developer. Asma, in a program at SF International High designed for recent immigrants, hopes to be an interpreter and plans to tackle Spanish after perfecting her English. Maya, a bright-eyed girl who attends Tenderloin Community Elementary, imagines becoming a doctor.</p>
<p>Raghad, rarely as animated as her siblings, said she isn’t sure what her future will bring. She acknowledged she still feels depressed. She went to the counseling office at school once, but said the social worker wasn’t there, and she never tried again.</p>
<p>“Sometimes I dream my house from Yemen is here in the USA,” Raghad said, explaining this would be the best of both worlds.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544904/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh's sister, Maya Saleh, 10, converses with Urban Alchemy ambassador Aaron Trujillo as she returns home from school, at Turk and Hyde, in the Tenderloin on Friday, February 11, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh&#8217;s sister, Maya Saleh, 10, converses with Urban Alchemy ambassador Aaron Trujillo as she returns home from school, at Turk and Hyde, in the Tenderloin on Friday, February 11, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>About six weeks after Breed declared her Tenderloin emergency, the Salehs told me they felt their block was a little safer and cleaner, partly thanks to ambassadors from Urban Alchemy, the nonprofit group hired by San Francisco to calm the city’s troubled core.</p>
<p>The blocks to the north seemed worse, so they often walked south instead — to the fields and playgrounds in Civic Center Plaza.</p>
<p>“Sometimes I feel sad,” Abu Bakr said, sitting on a bench during a rare day off as his daughters played. “I worry too much. I can’t save more. I can’t see my children.”</p>
<p>Ahmed, sitting at his father’s feet, said he’d told one of the mayor’s staff members at the library meeting about Raghad’s attack — and the family’s wish to leave the Tenderloin — but that no help had come through.</p>
<p>After I started asking questions, the Mayor’s Office and District Attorney’s Office pledged housing and mental health assistance for the Salehs. But eight months after the attack, none has materialized.</p>
<p>Finding publicly funded therapists taking new clients has proved difficult due to pandemic-fueled waiting lists, and finding an Arabic-speaking therapist is nearly impossible, explained Kasie Lee, chief of the D.A.’s Victim Services Division. The office was able to locate an Arabic-speaking therapist in private practice and is trying to secure money to pay for sessions, but Raghad still hasn’t talked to a professional about her trauma.</p>
<p>Obtaining a new apartment is also difficult. Lee explained that relocation assistance from the District Attorney’s Office and a state victim’s compensation fund would typically help the family cover a security deposit and first month’s rent. The problem is finding a larger, safer apartment the family can afford, long-term, on its own. The family can apply for affordable housing programs, but the wait lists are notoriously long.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544907/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="Raghad Saleh, 11, right, hugs her sister Asma Saleh, 14, as they hang out at Civic Center Plaza on Saturday, January 29, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Raghad Saleh, 11, right, hugs her sister Asma Saleh, 14, as they hang out at Civic Center Plaza on Saturday, January 29, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was recently attacked by a stranger several weeks ago on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Moving out of the city proved daunting since the family had no car and no job lined up elsewhere and couldn’t easily scrape together moving expenses.</p>
<p>Nothing much has happened in the case of Raghad’s alleged attacker. District Attorney Chesa Boudin charged Tinesha Scott, 48, with felony child endangerment and felony assault with a hate crime enhancement.</p>
<p>Boudin’s spokesperson, Rachel Marshall, said the office filed a motion to detain Scott, but a Superior Court judge denied it. The courts issued a criminal protective order, but Raghad said she has seen Scott several times since the encounter — including beneath her studio window. She said she was terrified when Scott waved at her.</p>
<p>“Next time,” Raghad said, “she could be holding a knife.”</p>
<p>Phoenix Streets, a public defender representing Scott, said his client had experienced a mental health crisis that September morning and received care at a hospital. Eight months after the attack, Scott has not received long-term treatment, which Streets blamed on “the underfunding of our mental health care system.”</p>
<p>And so, all these months later, everybody involved remains in pretty much the same position: The Saleh family stuck in a tiny studio on a ragged block. Raghad anxious and scared. Scott’s mental illness unaddressed. The city of San Francisco seemingly no closer to helping the families of the Tenderloin — which is no longer in a state of emergency, at least officially.</p>
<p>But there is one big change: Sumaya is expecting her fifth baby — a boy — in September. He’s one more reason to find a bigger apartment. One more reason to strive for a better life. One more reason to dream.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/00/10/22544905/6/1200x0.jpg" alt="(From left to right): Maya Saleh, 10, Abu Saleh, 37, Asma Saleh, 15, Raghad Saleh, 12, and Ahmed Saleh, 16, pose for a portrait in their small studio Tenderloin apartment on Sunday, April 3, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>(From left to right): Maya Saleh, 10, Abu Saleh, 37, Asma Saleh, 15, Raghad Saleh, 12, and Ahmed Saleh, 16, pose for a portrait in their small studio Tenderloin apartment on Sunday, April 3, 2022, in San Francisco, Calif. Raghad Saleh was stuck in Egypt in 2020 when her family moved to San Francisco from Yemen due to Visa problems. She was attacked by a stranger last year on her walk to school.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M. James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>
Heather Knight is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: hknight@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @hknightsf</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/a-lady-fled-her-war-torn-homeland-however-discovered-extra-trauma-in-san-francisco/">A lady fled her war-torn homeland, however discovered extra trauma in San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>San Francisco murder police investigating demise of 16-year-old woman</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-murder-police-investigating-demise-of-16-year-old-woman/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Apr 2022 17:38:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Home services]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[16yearold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/?p=20075</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Looking down the 600 block of Minna in San Francisco. Google Street View The San Francisco Police Department said Sunday it&#8217;s investigating the death of a 16-year-old girl on the 600 block of Minna Street. Paramedics responded to the location Friday at about 6:33 am for a possible overdose. The San Francisco County Medical Examiner &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-murder-police-investigating-demise-of-16-year-old-woman/">San Francisco murder police investigating demise of 16-year-old woman</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>    <span class="caption"></p>
<p>Looking down the 600 block of Minna in San Francisco.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Google Street View</span></p>
<p>The San Francisco Police Department said Sunday it&#8217;s investigating the death of a 16-year-old girl on the 600 block of Minna Street.</p>
<p>Paramedics responded to the location Friday at about 6:33 am for a possible overdose.</p>
<p>The San Francisco County Medical Examiner responded and declared the death suspicious.  Police said the department&#8217;s homicide unit is investigating.</p>
<p>No arrests have been made.  Anyone with information is asked to call the SFPD Tip Line at 415-575-4444 or to text TIP411 and begin the text message with SFPD.  Tipsters may remain anonymous.</p>
<p>Copyright © 2022 Bay City News, Inc. All rights reserved.  Republication, rebroadcast or redistribution without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.  Bay City News is a 24/7 news service covering the greater Bay Area.</p>
<p>Copyright © 2022 by Bay City News, Inc. Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/san-francisco-murder-police-investigating-demise-of-16-year-old-woman/">San Francisco murder police investigating demise of 16-year-old woman</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>[UPDATE 7:30 a.m.] After Battle at Miranda Bridge Between College students From Completely different Colleges, One Boy Despatched to Out of Space Hospital for Eight Hour Surgical procedure, One Lady Despatched to E.R.</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/update-730-a-m-after-battle-at-miranda-bridge-between-college-students-from-completely-different-colleges-one-boy-despatched-to-out-of-space-hospital-for-eight-hour-surgical-procedure-one-lady-d/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Sep 2021 17:19:13 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Chimney Sweep]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/?p=11949</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Still from a video showing a multi-person battle at the Miranda Bridge. Under the Miranda Bridge, about two miles from South Fork High School, a prize pool attracts local youth to the hospital &#8211; one for eight-hour Bay Area surgery for a broken jaw to repair. Amanda Gamble said, according to Amanda Gamble, the mother &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/update-730-a-m-after-battle-at-miranda-bridge-between-college-students-from-completely-different-colleges-one-boy-despatched-to-out-of-space-hospital-for-eight-hour-surgical-procedure-one-lady-d/">[UPDATE 7:30 a.m.] After Battle at Miranda Bridge Between College students From Completely different Colleges, One Boy Despatched to Out of Space Hospital for Eight Hour Surgical procedure, One Lady Despatched to E.R.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p id="caption-attachment-293420" class="wp-caption-text"><strong>Still from a video showing a multi-person battle at the Miranda Bridge.</strong></p>
<p>Under the Miranda Bridge, about two miles from South Fork High School, a prize pool attracts local youth to the hospital &#8211; one for eight-hour Bay Area surgery for a broken jaw to repair.</p>
<p>Amanda Gamble said, according to Amanda Gamble, the mother of the youngster whose jaw was broken, “It was senior digging day for both the children of South Fork and Fortuna [both groups] ended up in the Miranda River Bar. &#8220;</p>
<p>Gamble said, “Most of the time [the two groups being at the beach] went well. &#8220;</p>
<p>But, she said that she was told, &#8220;The Fortuna children have been irritating her all day.&#8221;  (Please note that we did not hear any version of what happened from Fortuna youth.)</p>
<p>When the day got later, many of the students had left the area.  &#8220;There were only a few kids left,&#8221; explained Gamble.  Gamble thought that the physical clashes started around 4:30 or 5:00 p.m. and continued for some time.  She said as the clashes escalated, she believed several emergency calls were being made.</p>
<p>At around 5:30 p.m., the Humboldt County Sheriff&#8217;s Office reported a patrol check in the area.  Samantha Karges, spokeswoman for the Sheriff&#8217;s Department, told us on Friday: “When we arrived at the bridge &#8230; there were no injuries.  The MPs contacted some people who could provide information about the incident, but the MPs did not find any victims. &#8220;</p>
<p>Later, according to Karges, &#8220;around 6:30 pm&#8221; the sheriff&#8217;s office received a call from a parent of one of the young people involved.  According to the parents, the teenager suffered injuries to his jaw and hand after the incident.  The youth had left the scene before the deputy arrived on the bridge.  The youth was taken to a hospital outside the area for treatment for his injuries.</p>
<p>Gamble explained to us that their twin sons were both under the Miranda Bridge in the incident.  She said she was told that some of the Fortuna teens started throwing stones at her son Cody&#8217;s friend.</p>
<p>Gamble said that Cody and his girlfriend went and went to the parking lot and about three of the Fortuna teens were aggressive towards them.  “They threatened to take it [Cody’s girlfriend]“Said Gamble that she was told.  She told us that Cody&#8217;s friend got in the car and tried to unlock it for him.  “Before she could open Cody&#8217;s door, a child sucker hit Cody twice on both sides of his jaw.  Cody swung onto the boy who hit him and then pushed him to the ground.  And then the other two jumped at Cody. &#8220;</p>
<p>At that point, Gamble said that Cody&#8217;s brother John had arrived, pulled the kids off his brother, got him in the car, and told him to leave.  Gamble said John &#8220;went back downstairs to try to end the fighting on the beach&#8221;.  She says there were several clashes at this point.</p>
<p>She said that she was told that some of the students were drinking and that the Fortuna students were banding against individuals.  &#8220;Neither of them fought one against one,&#8221; she said.  “It was all a thrown up fight.  If you&#8217;re too close, they&#8217;ll come after you. &#8220;</p>
<p>She said she heard: &#8220;[The Fortuna students] attacked a girl &#8230; She was small and caught one of the Fortuna children. &#8220;</p>
<p>Gamble says that when Cody got in the car and tried to speak to his girlfriend, &#8220;his jaw fell apart&#8221;.  They went to the emergency room and Gamble said she got a call and said, &#8220;The Fortuna kids jumped on Cody.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;When I heard that, I panicked,&#8221; she told us.  She went to Garberville Hospital where she worked.  &#8220;Cody hadn&#8217;t arrived when I got there,&#8221; she explained.  Her colleagues were very helpful, she told us, and immediately started preparing for him.  &#8220;They were ready and waiting for him when he got there,&#8221; she told us.  &#8220;His jaw was broken in two places &#8211; one on each side of his face.&#8221;</p>
<p>The staff arranged a bed at the San Francisco General Trauma Hospital, Gamble explained.  &#8220;Just as we were leaving, John came in with one of the girls who had been beaten up and dropped her off in the emergency room,&#8221; Gamble said.  &#8220;She had a concussion.&#8221;</p>
<p><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-293419" loading="lazy" class="size-full wp-image-293419" src="https://kymkemp.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Still-of-one-of-the-Fortuna-youth-attacking-one-of-the-South-Fork-girls.png" alt="Still from a Fortuna kid attacking one of the South Fork girls" width="517" height="287" srcset="https://kymkemp.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Still-of-one-of-the-Fortuna-youth-attacking-one-of-the-South-Fork-girls.png 517w, https://kymkemp.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Still-of-one-of-the-Fortuna-youth-attacking-one-of-the-South-Fork-girls-300x167.png 300w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 517px) 100vw, 517px"/></p>
<p id="caption-attachment-293419" class="wp-caption-text"><strong>Still from a video of a Fortuna youth attacking a South Fork girl.</strong></p>
<p>“My husband and I rushed Cody downstairs [to the Bay Area]&#8221;She said.&#8221; The entire facial reconstruction team was on site at the hospital. He was operated on at around 8:00 am. He was in the operation until about 5:00 am. &#8220;</p>
<p>She broke down sharing this part of her story and said, &#8220;It&#8217;s not something a parent or child should go through.&#8221;</p>
<p>The surgical team didn&#8217;t have to press his mouth shut, but they did have to put plates on either side of his jaw, Gamble said.  &#8220;It will take 8 to 12 weeks for him to fully recover.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gamble wanted to repeat: “They weren&#8217;t all Fortuna children.  It was only a select group of tyrants.  Your moral code of ethics is wrong. &#8220;</p>
<p>She added, &#8220;We know the name of the attacker &#8230; and the sheriff&#8217;s department is investigating &#8230; The boy has a history of violent acts and behavior.&#8221;  She said that the assistant assistant “has been very supportive and helpful &#8230; I feel like he&#8217;s really working with us &#8230;[but] There&#8217;s a process we have to go through &#8230; A lot of people want immediate justice, but it won&#8217;t be. &#8220;</p>
<p>HCSO spokesman Karges said: &#8220;The MPs have identified a possible suspect and are investigating the case.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gamble said they had a video of the events that were taking place.  “I sent the deputy all the videos I have,” she told us, but she wanted to clarify with law enforcement agencies that if she shared it with us, it would not affect the attacker’s proceedings.  She provided us with several stills from the video.</p>
<p>Gamble wanted to be sure and &#8220;thank the ambulance and radiology staff at Garberville Hospital.&#8221;  And she said when she choked: &#8220;I want to thank the community for the huge support &#8230; The community came together and gathered around my child.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>UPDATE 7:30 am:</strong> According to Amanda Gamble, she spoke to the deputy sheriff who was handling her case and he told her she could share with us the videos she had collected from the fighting under the Miranda Bridge.</p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="Fight at Miranda Bridge One" width="1220" height="915" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/vLVHekinv2Q?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="Fight at Miranda Bridge Two" width="1220" height="915" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/nklxgKk3XUQ?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="Fight at Miranda Bridge 3" width="1220" height="915" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/YgoDXNDPuvU?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="Fight at Miranda Bridge 4" width="1220" height="915" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/j8UdSIkMXJU?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/update-730-a-m-after-battle-at-miranda-bridge-between-college-students-from-completely-different-colleges-one-boy-despatched-to-out-of-space-hospital-for-eight-hour-surgical-procedure-one-lady-d/">[UPDATE 7:30 a.m.] After Battle at Miranda Bridge Between College students From Completely different Colleges, One Boy Despatched to Out of Space Hospital for Eight Hour Surgical procedure, One Lady Despatched to E.R.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>Man allegedly fleeing nation with underaged lady arrested at San Francisco Worldwide Airport &#124; Native Information</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/man-allegedly-fleeing-nation-with-underaged-lady-arrested-at-san-francisco-worldwide-airport-native-information/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2021 16:56:45 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>A 36-year-old man who allegedly wanted to flee to Amsterdam with a 16-year-old Redwood City girl he allegedly wanted to marry was arrested on a plane at San Francisco International Airport on Wednesday, the San Mateo County District Attorney said . Dylan Raymos, a San Francisco resident, was previously arrested in Redwood City in June &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/man-allegedly-fleeing-nation-with-underaged-lady-arrested-at-san-francisco-worldwide-airport-native-information/">Man allegedly fleeing nation with underaged lady arrested at San Francisco Worldwide Airport | Native Information</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>                                <span class="expand hidden-print" data-toggle="modal" data-target=".modal-ad861112-9e40-11eb-95a9-dfd54d15c5ff"><br />
                       <span class="fas tnt-expand"/><br />
                   </span></p>
<p>A 36-year-old man who allegedly wanted to flee to Amsterdam with a 16-year-old Redwood City girl he allegedly wanted to marry was arrested on a plane at San Francisco International Airport on Wednesday, the San Mateo County District Attorney said .</p>
<p>Dylan Raymos, a San Francisco resident, was previously arrested in Redwood City in June for allegedly having unlawful sex with the same girl and ordered not to have contact with her, prosecutors said.</p>
<p>On Wednesday July 7th, he allegedly picked the girl up at home and they went to SFO, where Raymos bought two tickets to Amsterdam.  US Customs and Border Protection reached out to him on the plane and learned that he was violating a court order and is fleeing the country, prosecutors said.  Raymos admitted email contact, saying the girl had agreed to travel with him to Portugal via Amsterdam and that he was planning to marry her, prosecutors said.  He is currently in jail on $ 5 million bail.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/man-allegedly-fleeing-nation-with-underaged-lady-arrested-at-san-francisco-worldwide-airport-native-information/">Man allegedly fleeing nation with underaged lady arrested at San Francisco Worldwide Airport | Native Information</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>Lacking 14-year-old San Francisco lady discovered protected in Pittsburg</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/lacking-14-year-old-san-francisco-lady-discovered-protected-in-pittsburg/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jun 2021 18:18:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Home services]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[14yearold]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Girl]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[missing]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>UPDATE February 26th 5:03 pm Katlin Gallaread, who has been missing for more than a week, was found safely in Pittsburg, according to a tweet from the Pittsburg Police Department. An attentive city landscaper recognized Gallaread, 14, and her companion Tyler Sexton, 16, according to police. Katlin&#8217;s father, Jason Gallaread, confirmed to KTVU that Pittsburgh &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/lacking-14-year-old-san-francisco-lady-discovered-protected-in-pittsburg/">Lacking 14-year-old San Francisco lady discovered protected in Pittsburg</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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<p><strong>UPDATE February 26th 5:03 pm</strong> Katlin Gallaread, who has been missing for more than a week, was found safely in Pittsburg, according to a tweet from the Pittsburg Police Department.</p>
<p>An attentive city landscaper recognized Gallaread, 14, and her companion Tyler Sexton, 16, according to police.</p>
<p>Katlin&#8217;s father, Jason Gallaread, confirmed to KTVU that Pittsburgh police had found his daughter.</p>
<p><strong>    February 26, 7:45 a.m. </strong>Jason Gallaread, Katlin Gallaread&#8217;s father, told news outlets Thursday that she left a note before her sudden departure.  In the note, she expressed feelings of isolation from the pandemic closing schools, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.  (SFGATE and The Chronicle are both owned by Hearst, but operate independently.)</p>
<p>She&#8217;s a freshman at Wallenberg High, and she said her grades have dropped.  Their escape was motivated by the need to solve their problems, the Chronicle said.</p>
<p><strong>February 25th 9:15 pm</strong> Katlin Gallaread, who has been missing since February 16, could be with another escaped youth, the San Francisco police said on Thursday.</p>
<p>Gallaread, 14, may be traveling with Tyler Sexton, 16, from Monroe, Michigan, police said.  Sexton is described as a white man, 1.70 m tall, weighing 155 pounds.</p>
<p>The last known place for the two teenagers was Sacramento.</p>
<p>Anyone with information about this investigation is encouraged to call SFPD&#8217;s 24-hour tip hotline at 415-575-4444 or send a tip to TIP411 and begin the SMS with SFPD.</p>
<p><strong>February 24, 11:15 a.m.</strong> Bank records could prove to be evidence of the disappearance of a 14-year-old girl from San Francisco.</p>
<p>Katlin Gallaread was last seen on Tuesday February 16.</p>
<p>That was the last dinner with her father Jason Gallaread.  He told KTVU that Katlin went to her room after eating together.</p>
<p>Sometime between that evening and early last Wednesday, Katlin left her home on Western Addition.  A surveillance video from Ring found her at around 9:45 p.m. in front of her house.</p>
<p>The high school freshman hasn&#8217;t contacted her family since then &#8211; and her father said in a KTVU interview that she feared a stranger persuaded her to run away from home.</p>
<p>At the time, police said in a statement that they made frequent visits to Safeway on Webster Street, the target on Geary Blvd.  and Japantown.</p>
<p><span class="caption"></p>
<p>A photo of Katlin Gallaread provided by the San Francisco Police Department.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">San Francisco Police Department</span></p>
<p>While the search for Katlin in San Francisco went on and on, Jason said that her bank records &#8211; withdrawn from her savings &#8211; might contain information about her current whereabouts.</p>
<p>Hours after her disappearance, a payout was made in Chinatown that he said was not a neighborhood she was in.  The next reported withdrawal was days later in West Sacramento, where her entire savings account was withdrawn.</p>
<p>Calls to your phone are sent directly to voicemail.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m very worried about my daughter,&#8221; Jason Gallaread told KTVU.  &#8220;The streets are very tough. There are a lot of sick people out here.&#8221;</p>
<p>Police continue to look for clues related to her disappearance and are working with other jurisdictions, but it remains unclear whether the bank details or her cell phone use will be used as evidence.  You will continue to include all information on the SFPD Tippline.</p>
<p>A San Francisco police spokesman declined to comment, citing an ongoing investigation against SFGATE.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/lacking-14-year-old-san-francisco-lady-discovered-protected-in-pittsburg/">Lacking 14-year-old San Francisco lady discovered protected in Pittsburg</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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		<title>Grand Jury in San Francisco Prices Shasta Couple in 1997 Kidnapping of Teen Lady – CBS San Francisco</title>
		<link>https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/grand-jury-in-san-francisco-prices-shasta-couple-in-1997-kidnapping-of-teen-lady-cbs-san-francisco/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Jun 2021 00:33:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Home services]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Charges]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/?p=6727</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) &#8211; A Northern California couple charged with forced labor for forcing three Guatemalan immigrants to work long hours in their businesses for minimal wages were charged with kidnapping a 13-year-old Las Vegas girl in 1997 . A federal grand jury on Thursday filed a substitute indictment against Nery Martinez Vasquez and his &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/grand-jury-in-san-francisco-prices-shasta-couple-in-1997-kidnapping-of-teen-lady-cbs-san-francisco/">Grand Jury in San Francisco Prices Shasta Couple in 1997 Kidnapping of Teen Lady – CBS San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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<p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) &#8211; A Northern California couple charged with forced labor for forcing three Guatemalan immigrants to work long hours in their businesses for minimal wages were charged with kidnapping a 13-year-old Las Vegas girl in 1997 .</p>
<p>A federal grand jury on Thursday filed a substitute indictment against Nery Martinez Vasquez and his wife Maura Martinez, both 52 and both from Shasta Lake, about 170 miles north of Sacramento, accusing them of conspiracy to commit kidnappings and kidnappings the Federal Prosecutor&#8217;s Office with.</p>
<p><strong style="color: black; float: left; padding-right: 5px;">CONTINUE READING: </strong>Governor Newsom signs order to lift COVID rules and promises consistent mask rules in the workplace</p>
<p>In January 1997, the couple allegedly conspired to kidnap a 13-year-old girl from their Las Vegas home.  They promised the girl&#8217;s parents to bring her back in a week.  They then drove her to her home in Redding, California, and held her against her and her parents&#8217; wishes for nearly two years.  Martinez Vasquez is also said to have sexually molested and raped the girl several times, the prosecutor said.</p>
<p>Mark Reichel, who represents the couple, did not immediately return a message from The Associated Press asking for comment.</p>
<p>In 2019, the couple pleaded not guilty to forcing a Guatemalan woman and her two underage daughters to work long hours in their restaurant and caretaker service for little or no wages.</p>
<p>According to prosecutors, the couple, who are themselves naturalized citizens of Guatemala, brought the woman and their daughters to the United States in 2016 with temporary visitor visas.  They are charged with hosting them after their visa expires and laying a false debt of $ 12,000 to prevent them from returning to Guatemala.</p>
<p><strong style="color: black; float: left; padding-right: 5px;">CONTINUE READING: </strong>Marin firefighters quickly control bushfires along Highway 101 near Sausalito</p>
<p>They are also said to have separated the mother from her daughters, threatened them with arrest and abused them physically, mentally and verbally, including beating the two girls with a stick.</p>
<p>The couple ran a restaurant called Latino&#8217;s and Redding Carpet Cleaning &#038; Janitorial Services, according to the indictment.</p>
<p>The woman and her daughters had to live in &#8220;a dilapidated, unheated caravan without air conditioning and running water&#8221;.  They humiliated her in front of her daughters and forced her to eat leftover food, the authorities said.</p>
<p>The abuse ended in February 2018, according to the indictment, but authorities did not say what happened to the woman and her daughters.  The government also confiscated the property of the two defendants.</p>
<p>The couple faces 20 years to life imprisonment if convicted, officials said.</p>
<p><strong style="color: black; float: left; padding-right: 5px;">MORE NEWS: </strong>Arrested suspicious hours after fatal tenderloin shooting in San Francisco</p>
<p>© Copyright 2021 Associated Press.  All rights reserved.  This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com/grand-jury-in-san-francisco-prices-shasta-couple-in-1997-kidnapping-of-teen-lady-cbs-san-francisco/">Grand Jury in San Francisco Prices Shasta Couple in 1997 Kidnapping of Teen Lady – CBS San Francisco</a> appeared first on <a href="https://losgatosnewsandevents.com">Los Gatos News And Events</a>.</p>
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