Opinion Hawkish tech critics have labeled San Francisco 'lawless' following the stabbing death of Cash App creator Bob Lee. The city's crime rate tells a diff - Don’t believe your lying eyes

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Hawkish tech critics have labeled San Francisco 'lawless' following the stabbing death of Cash App creator Bob Lee. The city's crime rate tells a different tale.​

The home of U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) on October 28, 2022 in San Francisco, California.Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesMore
  • The stabbing death of Cash App creator Bob Lee spurred fresh criticism of San Francisco crime.
  • While critics call the progressive city "lawless" with "horrific" crime, violent offenses are down.
  • Compared with cities of similar size, San Francisco has far fewer homicides per year.
Following the tragic stabbing death of Cash App creator Bob Lee on Tuesday, critics of the city's progressive policies were quick to label San Francisco a "lawless" place to live, with "horrific" crime — but rates of violent offenses in the city tell a different story.

Lee was fatally stabbed in San Francisco early Tuesday, according to an NBC Bay Area report, with security footage revealing his frantic search for help after the attack, spurring condemnation toward city leadership from his friends.

Matt Ocko, a venture capitalist from Palo Alto and friend of Lee's, criticized the city's former District Attorney on Twitter: "Chesa Boudin, & the criminal-loving city council that enabled him & a lawless SF for years," saying the city's leadership "have Bob's literal blood on their hands."

Boudin was recalled from office last year following similar critiques of his reform-minded approach to crime and agenda aimed at reducing incarceration rates.

"Violent crime in SF is horrific," Elon Musk, chief executive of Twitter and Tesla, added on Twitter, saying that "even if attackers are caught, they are often released immediately."

Under Boudin, San Francisco ended its cash bailpolicy, allowing pre-trial detention only if a defendant poses an "unreasonable risk" to victim or public safety — or if they have "repeated failures" to appear in court or adhere to alternative punishments.

A California Policy Lab report found the San Francisco jail population remained relatively stable through 2021 following an earlier 2018 change in bail policy that mandated that judges consider a person's ability to pay when setting bail amounts and that detention only be used when no other less restrictive option will ensure follow-up appearance at court and guarantee the public's safety.

Michael Arrington, the founder of the industry blog TechCrunch, agreed, posting "I hate what San Francisco has become."

While comprehensive statistics for 2023 are not yet available to see any recent surge in violent crime — defined as rape, murder, robbery, and aggravated assault — the city's crime rate has remained relatively steady or decreased over the last decade, except for a brief uptick in 2019, according to California Department of Justice data.

In both 2021 and 2022, San Francisco recorded 56 homicides, well below that of other cities of a similar size (under 1,000,000 people), data from the Major Cities Police Chiefs Association shows. In comparison, there were 271 homicides in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 2021 and 226 in 2022. In Columbus, Ohio, 204 homicides took place in 2021 and 140 in 2022.

However, property crimes, such as retail theft and car break-ins, are notably up in the city, CNNreported, as San Francisco saw a 23% increase in crimes like burglary and larceny between 2020 and 2022.

A Public Policy Institute of California study from 2018 found "some evidence" that California's Proposition 47, which reclassified felony theft offenses as misdemeanors if the value of stolen goods is less than $950, may have been linked to the increase in larceny theft across the state after it passed in 2014.

"A small minority has tried to weaponize this tragedy to advance a narrative about a crime wave that just isn't borne out by the data in San Francisco," Kevin Benedicto, a police commissioner and lawyer, said on Thursday, The New York Times reported.

Benedicto added: "There are real problems about crime that need to be addressed in San Francisco, but you're seeing people from tech, from certain political circles, who are trying to draw explicit connections to certain policies and elected officials when we don't even yet know the facts of the case."

Representatives for the San Francisco Police Department, as well as Ocko, Musk, Arrington, and Benedicto, did not immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment.
 
Following the tragic comedic stabbing death of Cash App creator Bob Lee on Tuesday, critics of the city's progressive policies were quick to label San Francisco a "lawless" place to live, with "horrific" crime — but rates of violent offenses in the city tell a different story.
What the article isn't telling you is that there was a Bystander who didn't do anything to help Boblee.

Maybe he would still be alive if he paid the bystander some cash.
 
would be nice to know what cities were in this comparison. baltimore, chicago, detroit?
Frisco is small. 800k or so which puts it in the running with lots of smaller well white cities. It’s one of the sleight of hands they do regularly to obscure the issues.

The Frisco metro area is 9m.

The other thing is who gets murdered. A massive city where all the victims are niggers - nobody gives a shit.

Some victims are rich liberals? Real shit.

And the real complaints are about how the city is an open sewer now covered in homeless, even if the homeless don’t get stabby or pipey that often.

I say we just start airdropping tens of thousands of glocks until it solves itself. Drone cams and livestream it!
 
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I don't know how the damn bankers and tech magnates can be so, frankly, racist and facistic.

If there was a crime problem in San Francisco, there would be far more arrests, indictments and prosecutions. The data is all right there, it's (social) science, people.
I support the bankers and tech magnates experiencing more diversity interactions to help quell their fascism.
 
Google image search "San Francisco homeless poop", IDC how few murders you have in comparison to Indy or Columbus, they're not known around the world for having fucking human shit on every conceivable surface.
shit cannon.jpeg

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JFC They have shit graffiti LMFAO
WTF.jpeg
 
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The numbers just do not matter. What matters is familiarity - you could make an index but it doesn’t really work.

If you’re white in a city that is 10% white but nobody you know has been accosted or killed, it’s perfectly safe. Once you know someone, it’s in the dangerous but handleable. Once you yourself experience diversification it is get the fuck out now time.
 
You disbelieve the people will do it. Then you warn them they are sleepwalking into the spinning blade death trap whirring in front of them. Then you yell at them. They start walking faster. You scream. They preen as they move even faster.

Ultimately, what's to be done? Nothing. They've decided to suffer and maybe die, and there's nothing anyone else can do to stop that. Man such cases.
 
Getting got by a stick up kid is a pretty violent occurrence.
I think I just had a narrow view of what “violence” is for this topic.
It's hard to accurately track crime stats when you make a bunch of crimes basically legal and you stop arresting all the criminals.
And they make it illegal to post mugshots and announce the races of said criminals. New York is doing the same thing.
 
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