Santa Cruz Sentinel

San Francisco officials now let people sue over racist 911 calls

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO >> Fed up with white people calling 911 about people of color selling water bottles, barbecuing or otherwise going about their lives, San Francisco leaders unanimousl­y approved hate crime legislatio­n giving the targets of those calls the ability to sue the caller.

The Board of Supervisor­s voted Tuesday on the Caution Against Racial and Exploitati­ve Non-Emergencie­s Act, also known as the CAREN legislatio­n. It’s a nod to a popular meme using the name “Karen” to describe an entitled white woman whose actions stem from her privilege, such as using police to target people of color.

All 11 supervisor­s signed on to the legislatio­n, guaranteei­ng its passage, despite criticism that the name is sexist and divisive. It comes amid a national reckoning on race sparked by the police killings of Black Americans and instances where white people called for officers to investigat­e people of color.

“We don’t want what happened to Emmett Till in 1955, or the long history of false accusation­s of black men and boys in this country, due to weaponizin­g law enforcemen­t, to threaten, terrorize, and sometimes even kill them, to ever happen again,” said Supervisor Shamann Walton, who introduced the legislatio­n and is Black.

“I really want to emphasize that 911 is not a customer service line for someone’s racist behavior,” he said.

Walton was the only supervisor to speak. Till was a Black teenager beaten to death in 1955 after accusation­s by a white woman who later admitted to lying.

In May, Amy Cooper, a white woman, called 911 from Manhattan’s Central Park, falsely claiming that a Black man — who had politely asked her to leash her dog — was threatenin­g her. She has been charged with

filing a false police report.

In San Francisco, a white couple was criticized on social media after video was widely shared of them questionin­g a Filipino American stenciling “Black Lives Matter” on a retaining wall in front of his home in June. They later called police.

James Juanillo said he chose yellow chalk to match the color of the house. When the couple approached him, they repeatedly demanded to know if it was his home because he was defacing private property.

“They tried to cast it as a criminal scene,” he said. “It was me calmly applying chalk, not spray paint, not in the middle of the night but very deliberate­ly. The only thing that was missing was a pinot grigio.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On June 14, James Juanillo is seen outside of his home in San Francisco.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On June 14, James Juanillo is seen outside of his home in San Francisco.
 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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