Monterey Herald

SF sues 28 alleged dealers to stop flow of drugs

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

SAN FRANCISCO >> San Francisco sued 28 alleged drug dealers who frequent a downtown neighborho­od where broad daylight drug dealing and drug use is common, in an effort to clean up the area that has seen the city’s largest number of overdose deaths, authoritie­s announced Thursday.

San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera said the lawsuits, if approved in California Superior Court, would prevent the alleged dealers from entering a 50-block area in the Tenderloin and part of the neighborin­g South of Market neighborho­od. Those who violate the court order would face arrest on misdemeano­r charges, a $6,000 fine and the seizure of drugs and money.

“These lawsuits won’t solve the problems themselves but they are a step worth taking,” Herrera said.

The move comes after a 70% spike in overdose deaths in 2019, when 441 people died, more than half of them from fentanyl overdoses.

The Tenderloin neighborho­od, which includes City Hall and several federal buildings, has a large homeless population and is just blocks from touristhea­vy Union Square. The neighborho­od has long been a public safety problem with people shooting

up or snorting powder on the sidewalks at all times of the day.

It has lots of single- occupancy hotels but is also home to many low-income families. The Tenderloin has the highest concentrat­ion of children in the city — about 2,260.

“You see people who are pushing strollers, mothers who have to go out onto the streets and go around the drug dealing, and the drug using,” said Mayor London Breed. “San Francisco has become the place to go to sell drugs, it

is known widely, and that has got to stop.”

Herrera said more drug treatment options, expanded mental health help and a concerted focus on major narcotics suppliers are also needed. “But these injunction­s will give law enforcemen­t one more tool to help keep Tenderloin residents safe,” he said

Of the 28 alleged drug dealers named, 27 live outside of San Francisco and come to the Tenderloin from Oakland, Hayward, San Jose, Suisun City and

elsewhere, officials said. The injunction­s target drug dealers who continuous­ly pray on the Tenderloin and who have multiple arrests for sales or possession for sale of cocaine, methamphet­amine, heroin and fentanyl, Herrera said.

Herrera’s effort follows a yearlong crackdown in the neighborho­od by federal officials who in August 2019 announced the arrest of 32 people, mostly Honduran nationals tied to two internatio­nal drug cartels that poured heroin and cocaine into the community.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Feb. 15, 2011, a view looking up Taylor Street of the Tenderloin neighborho­od in San Francisco is seen.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Feb. 15, 2011, a view looking up Taylor Street of the Tenderloin neighborho­od in San Francisco is seen.

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