Reporter robbed at gunpoint while investigating robberies in San Francisco



A TV news reporter was robbed at gunpoint by a gang of thieves while he was coincidentally investigating a rash of robberies in San Francisco.

KPIX-TV reporter Don Ford was covering a flurry of smash-and-grab car thefts in San Francisco's Twin Peaks neighborhood. He was interviewing residents in the area about the rise in crime. While preparing for a TV segment about the robberies on Wednesday, he became a victim himself of a robbery.

A white sedan pulled up to where Ford was getting ready to film, three men exited the vehicle and held Ford at gunpoint. The bandits, one armed with a Glock handgun, stole the news channel's camera in less than a minute.

"The car came up here while we were about to do an interview, three guys jumped out," Ford said. "One had a gun and put in my face and said, 'We're taking the camera.'"

"My whole thought at the moment was be calm. Let's not get this guy excited. He's got the gun. I don't. So you take you the camera. It's yours buddy," Ford explained.

The homeowner that Ford was preparing to interview was motionless as the armed robbery took place right in front of him. He said, "I just looked and I said, 'I'm not going to get shot today.'"

"I was worried that this is what's gonna happen, because as thieves get more and more brazen, they do more and more brazenly things. I'm not making that up. We just had that experience today," the man who didn't want to be identified told KPIX.

"I'm not sure my adrenaline has settled down yet," Ford said.

KPIX 5 Reporter Robbed At Gunpoint While Looking Into Auto Thefts At San Francisco Twin Peaks www.youtube.com

No one was injured, but everyone was shaken.

Joel Engardio, a San Francisco news columnist, shared what he claims to be surveillance video of the robbery.

The San Francisco Police Department released a statement saying the camera, which had a tracking chip inside, had been recovered on Wednesday. The police did not provide any further details on the robbery, and were asking the public for information.

The camera was recovered. This incident remains an active and ongoing investigation. Anyone with information is ask… https://t.co/4L3qlJPvzP
— SFPD Park Station (@SFPD Park Station) 1614822415.0

Residents say that robberies have spiked ever since the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency closed the access road to the popular vista point at the beginning of the pandemic.

"You want to have that for open space? We want that, too. But protect us. We shouldn't pay the penalty for that action that SFMTA caused upon us," a local homeowner said.

On Tuesday night, the SFMTA board voted to reopen one Twin Peaks access road, but voted to keep another closed. The SFMTA also released a statement, "We are saddened to hear about what happened to reporter, Don Ford, while covering the story today."

Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, who represents the city's District 8 that includes Twin Peaks, said the armed stick-up was "ridiculous and unacceptable but not entirely unexpected."

"We need to adequately resource public safety agencies, adopt better strategies to stop repeat offenders and make clear that San Francisco is not a place that you can commit crimes and put people's lives at risk with impunity," he wrote on Twitter.

but not entirely unexpected in San Francisco in 2021. We need to adequately resource public safety agencies, adopt… https://t.co/v7VUaZ4N9U
— Rafael Mandelman (@Rafael Mandelman) 1614814682.0

A mid-February report found that robberies in 2021 were up 370% in the Richmond neighborhood of San Francisco.

Latest batch of Arizona votes cuts further into Joe Biden's lead​



The latest batch of reported Arizona vote totals has cut further into Democratic nominee Joe Biden's lead in the state, netting President Donald Trump an additional 31,768 votes, compared to 28,285 for Biden. Biden's lead now stands at just under 44,000 votes, with an expected 200,000 remaining to be counted.

Although the numbers were encouraging for the Trump team, they may not have been enough. As of Thursday night, Trump needed to win approximately 58% of the remaining ballots in order to take the lead in Arizona, and instead he only won about 51% of this batch (compared to 46% for Biden). So, although Trump narrowed the gap with this batch, he did not narrow it as much as his campaign would have hoped.

Arizona continues to count votes, and election officials hope that the Arizona count will be substantially completed by the night. However, there are a fairly large number of provisional ballots in Arizona that may not be counted until the weekend, or even next week.

NEW from #Tucson: Pima County says they will finish counting their remaining 9K early ballots this afternoon, and w… https://t.co/8Lykmjq77s
— Rafael Carranza (@Rafael Carranza)1604679300.0

Arizona is one of four states — along with Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Nevada — that will likely determine the outcome of the presidential race between Trump and Biden. The race was "called" by Fox News late on election night and then a few hours later by the Associated Press, but most media outlets have not officially called the race. The Trump campaign has repeatedly insisted that they expect to win Arizona by around 30,000 votes.

If Trump does not win Arizona, his path back to the White House becomes extremely complicated and would require him to win Nevada (which looks like an increasing longshot) or win legal challenges to the current tabulated totals in one of the states that has currently been called for Biden. Winning Arizona remains the Trump campaign's clearest and by far easiest path to victory.

Medical student expelled for refusing to change his personal beliefs

It is in totalitarian regimes, in which every aspect of life, including your private thoughts, is considered political, that they demand your very soul. And that is what has happened here.