Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Nov. 21, 2013

Incident Date:
Thursday, November 21st, 2013


The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

1:56am                                  700 Blk.  Cayuga                              Burglary

An early morning call of a “burglary in progress” sent Ingleside officers Dilag, Lok, Hauscarriague, Chew, Holland, Lockett, Hermosa, and Zahn to a home on the 700 block of Cayuga. The home owner told dispatch that the suspect was in the garage. Upon arriving at the location, officers Hauscarriague, Holland, Dilag, and Lok slowly and carefully entered the garage while the other officers secured the surrounding neighborhood. A search of the garage failed to turn up the suspect but officer Chew, who had gained access to a neighbor’s yard, saw the suspect climbing a backyard fence. Officer Chew radioed his description and officers Dilag and Lok ran out of the garage and, along with Officers Hauscarriague and Lockett found the suspect standing on the back deck of a home on San Juan Avenue where he quietly surrendered. Before booking the suspect, the officers recovered several purses burglarized from the garage along with a hunting knife, a stolen ATM card, and some methamphetamine. Report number: 130985621





Serious Incidents:

No Incidents to Report.


Vehicle and Other Incidents:

  7:00am          Alemany/Farragut                    Traffic Collision
12:15pm          900 Blk Moscow                    Recovered Vehicle
12:55pm          Mission/Rolph                         Restraining Order Violation
  3:27pm          Castro/30TH                           Recovered Vehicle
  4:34pm          3300 Blk Mission                   Passing Counterfeit Notes
  4:55pm          Unit Blk Crescent                   False Personation
  7:00pm          Bennington/Cortland               Theft from Vehicle


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report



Nov. 23, 2013

Incident Date:
Saturday, November 23rd, 2013
                                                                                                                            

The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

5:19pm                                  100 Blk. Pope                  Assault Weapon/Narcotics

Ingleside officers Seavey and Barajas, along with Sgt. Alvarez, were undercover in the area when they spotted a vehicle, containing three men, double-park in front of a home where several search warrants had been served in the past. The officers approached the car and Sgt. Alvarez noticed the back seat passenger squirming. After he opened the door, the passenger quickly jumped out of the car and started running away with officers Barajas and Seavey in pursuit. During the pursuit, the suspect threw away a red duffle bag. After a short chase, officer Barajas was able to detain the suspect and place him in handcuffs as several other Ingleside units arrive to assist with the investigation. A search of the discarded duffle bag turned up almost 500 grams of marijuana. A search of the driver turned up brass knuckles, a glass pipe used to inhale narcotics, and a wallet containing his driver’s license and several identification cards not belonging to him. A search of the car and the other suspects yielded a quantities of methamphetamine and marijuana, items typically used to commit fraud, and a rifle. The three suspects were booked at Ingleside Station on several charges. Report number: 130994393

5:40pm                            Burlwood/Los Palmos                           Assault

Ingleside officers Thompson, Hornstein, and Chicas investigated a case of road rage involving a bicyclist and a motorist. The bicyclist told the officers he was riding westbound on Bella Vista when a man driving a car started honking at him from behind. Because the street is so narrow, the bicyclist was unable to pull far enough to the right to let the car pass so he kept riding. Soon, the victim said, the motorist found enough room to pull up next to him and began swearing at him. The bicyclist swore back and kept riding and the car soon drove ahead. A short time later the motorist suddenly stopped, blocking the road, and forcing the bicyclist to crash into a curb wrecking the bicycle and slight injuring the rider. The motorist then drove away but not before the bicyclist wrote down his license plate number. A records check revealed that the motorist lived a short distance away and Officer Thompson went to the address where the driver spontaneous said, “Yeah, a bicyclist wouldn’t move out of my way so I ran him off the road”.  He was taken to Ingleside Station and booked for aggravated assault. Report number: 130994434


Serious Incidents:

No Incidents to Report.

Vehicle and Other Incidents:

12:40am          Mission/Cortland           Traffic Collision
5:00am            1400 Blk Alemany        Auto Boost
7:15am            900 Blk Paris                Recovered Vehicle
8:00am            300 Blk Vienna             Stolen Vehicle
8:29am            1500 Blk Sunnydale      Warrant
12:00pm          Alemany/Norton           Stolen Vehicle
1:01pm            29th/Church                 Traffic Collision
1:35pm            29th/Church                 Traffic Collision
1:40pm            Putnam/Alemany          Traffic Collision
3:00pm            4900 Blk Mission         Shoplifting
3:00pm            300 Blk Amber            Fraud
4:05pm            100 Blk Red Rock       Recovered Vehicle
5:22pm            200 Blk Day                Recovered Vehicle
6:00pm            Persia/Lisbon               Vandalism
8:52pm            700 Blk Rolph             Recovered Vehicle
11:35pm          Brunswick/Allison        H&R

 


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report.




Nov. 25, 2013

Incident Date:
Monday, November 25th, 2013
                                                                                                                            

The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

No Incidents to Report. 

Serious Incidents:

6:05am                                     100 Blk. Bemis                      Burglary

A woman waking up in the morning noticed the light in her garage was on. She was confident the light was off when she retired the night before so she went to investigate.  She told Ingleside officer Chang, that when she entered her garage she discovered a man, wearing a dark colored jacket, trying to unlock and remove a bike that was chained in the garage. The homeowner said when she yelled “Hey” it startled the burglar and he took off with the victim in pursuit. She chased the suspect around the corner onto Addison street where he quickly entered a silver colored SUV that sped away. Accompanied by officer Chang, the victim inspected the garage and found nothing missing. She promised to change the code on the electronic garage door pad to hopefully prevent future burglary attempts. Report number: 130998185



Vehicle and Other Incidents:

7:00am             100 Blk Prague           Stolen Vehicle
7:22am             Unit Blk La Grande     Recovered Vehicle
7:35am             Unit Blk Theresa         Recovered Vehicle
9:30am             1100 Blk Ocean         Stolen Vehicle
12:05pm          Unit Blk Maynard        Recovered Motorcycle
12:31pm          300 Blk Ney                Recovered License Plate
12:31pm          300 Blk Ney                Recovered Motorcycle
1:00pm            300 Blk 30th                Burglary
2:00pm            100 Blk Cambridge      Fraud
4:30pm            100 Blk Highland         Auto Boost
6:00pm            2000 Blk Sunnydale     Theft from Building


 


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report.




Nov. 24, 2013

Incident Date:
Sunday, November 24th, 2013
                                                                                                                            

The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

5:44pm                         Unit Blk. Tiffany                              Narcotics

A report of a suspicious man ringing doorbells in the neighborhood prompted Ingleside officer Shugars and Wang to drive to a home on the unit block of Tiffany St. When Shugars and Wang arrived, they found Ingleside Officer Kabanuck had already detained the door ringer. While checking his identification, the officers discovered the suspect was wanted for an outstanding arrest warrant. A search revealed a quantity of methamphetamine in one of his pockets. He was taken to Ingleside Station and booked for possession of narcotics and the outstanding warrant. Report number: 130997256



Serious Incidents:
No Incidents to Report.


Vehicle and Other Incidents:

0:21am             3400 Blk Mission                    Battery
1:15am             Avalon/Madrid                        Traffic Collision
7:15am             4100 Blk Mission                    Recovered Vehicle
10:00am           John Shelley/Mansell               Auto Boost
3:00pm            600 Blk Lisbon                        Stolen Vehicle
5:15pm            Tompkins/Nevada                   Traffic Collision
9:00pm            28th/Mission                            H&R
11:35pm          500 Blk Peru                           Vandalism

 


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report.




Nov. 22, 2013

Incident Date:
Friday, November 22nd, 2013
                                                                                                                            

The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

1:30pm                                      4900 Blk. Mission                    Shoplifting

A young man with a hunger for high quality steaks tried to steal his meal. The grocery store’s security officer told Ingleside officer Fulgado that he watched the young man enter the store, go to the meat display, remove two high priced steaks, slip them into his sweatshirt, and then quickly walk out of the store without paying. Once outside, the security officer detained the suspect and called police. The security officer signed a citizen’s arrest form and officer Fulgado cited the juvenile for theft and then returned him to a San Mateo group home where he was earlier reported missing. Report number: 130990238

11:18pm                                  Schwerin/Kelloch                    Unlicensed Driver

A vehicle traveling with a broken brake light caught the attention of Ingleside officers Lozano and McCall. The officers decided to stop the vehicle and advise the driver to replace the non-working light. After the vehicle stopped for the officers in a restaurant parking lot, the driver quickly exited the car and started walking away. Officer Lozano told the driver to stop and asked him to get back in the car. The driver refused and kept walking forcing officer Lozano to stop him and place the suspect in handcuffs. When asked for his driver’s license the suspect admitted he didn’t have one. The officers also discovered the suspect had a previous arrest for driving without a license and that the car was uninsured. The suspect was also wanted on a misdemeanor warrant from Daly City. He was taken to Ingleside Station for booking. Report number: 130992096



Serious Incidents:

 No Incidents to Report.

Vehicle and Other Incidents:

1:00am             300 Blk Madrid           Vandalism
8:00am             200 Blk 27th                Burglary
8:00am             Hearst/Baden               Traffic Collision
10:30am          4400 Blk Mission          Battery
1:16pm            800 Blk London            Recovered Vehicle
3:00pm            Unit Blk Virginia            Recovered Vehicle
3:49pm            Unit Blk Chancery         Graffiti
4:00pm            900 Blk Paris                Stolen Truck
4:15pm            Unit Blk Tiffany             Trespassing
5:00pm            Appleton/Holly Park      Threats
5:50pm            Mission/Silver                Battery
7:00pm            200 Blk Richland           Stolen Vehicle
7:00pm            1200 Blk Goettingen      Stolen Vehicle
8:15pm            600 Blk Chenery           Auto Boost
8:30pm            Unit Blk Red Rock        Stolen Vehicle
9:00pm            Santa Ynez/Delano        Stolen Truck
9:00pm            Persia/Dublin                 Auto Boost

 


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report.




Nov. 20, 2013



Incident Date:
Wednesday, November 20th, 2013


The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on December 17, 2013.  Thank you.


Outstanding Police Work:  Members of the Ingleside Police Station have been hard at work, while putting their lives on the line, and recovered a total of five guns between a five day period, beginning Oct 31, 2013 to Nov 5, 2013. Among the weapons recovered were three handguns, one shotgun and one Tech-9 sub-machine gun all stemming from four separate incidents. Of the five subjects taken into custody, two were on probation and had extensive police records. We strongly believe that these great arrests may have prevented some serious crimes from taking place. Thanks to these great officers, the streets are a little saferJ.


The San Francisco Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) is free training from the San Francisco Fire Department in how to help yourself and your neighbors prepare for and respond to a disaster by working together. The 20-hour training, taught by First Responders, includes personal preparedness, light search and rescue, disaster medicine, shutting off your utilities, and how to participate as a member of a neighborhood response team.  NERT also offers continuing training for graduates and activities that support building robust neighborhood teams.  For more information, visit the NERT website at http://sfgov.org//sffdnert, or contact Lt. Erica Arteseros at (415)970-2022 or sffdnert@sfgov.org



Are you someone who is interested in disaster preparedness and wants to help out your community while working hand in hand with law enforcement? Then the ALERT program is for you!                                     
                                            What is the A.L.E.R.T. Program?

The San Francisco Police Department has developed a volunteer citizen disaster preparedness program. The Auxiliary Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) is modeled after and works in partnership with the San Francisco Fire Department's Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT). The ALERT program will train members of the public to assist law enforcement in essential tasks after a major disaster. Such tasks may include: traffic control, foot patrol of business and residential areas, and reporting criminal activity. Volunteers must be at least 16 years of age and live, work, or attend high school in San Francisco.

Three steps to becoming an
A.L.E.R.T. volunteer:
1. Complete NERT training and receive certification. To register for NERT training courses please visit www.sfgov.org/sfnert
2. Once NERT certified, forward a copy of your NERT ID card to the ALERT program. sfpdalert@sfov.org
3. After clearing a basic background check the individual is eligible to register for ALERT training.

An informational meeting will be held on Dec. 5th at 7:00pm. The meeting will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy in the parking lot bungalow. This is not a mandatory meeting for interested volunteers. Come have your questions answered! 

The next ALERT training class has been scheduled for Jan. 18th, 2014, from 8:00am-5:00pm. This class will be held at the San Francisco Police Academy, in the parking lot bungalow.


Scam Alert:  Here is how it works: the suspect will call the victim and identify himself as a PG&E employee.  The suspect will ask for the victim by name and ask if he/she is the owner of a particular business or property.  Once the victim replies yes, the suspect tells the victim that his/her bill is delinquent in a specific amount.  The suspect then tells the victim that he/she needs to pay the delinquent bill by a certain time or their service will be terminated.  The suspect instructs the victim to buy MoneyPak cards in a specific amount.  The suspect then instructs the victim to read the card's code numbers to him over the phone.  Once that is done, the money is gone and the scam is complete.

The suspect will give the victim a call-back number that goes to a voicemail that identifies itself via recording as PG&E.

If you receive a call like this, please call the customer service number on your billing statement to confirm the call is legitimate.  If that call turns out to be a scam, please have a police report made


Arrests:

No Incidents to Report.


Serious Incidents:

No Incidents to Report.


Vehicle and Other Incidents:

12:00am          Unit Blk Brazil                         Burglary
  3:09am          100 Blk Brookdale                  Warrant Arrest
  6:13am          5300 Blk Mission                    Recovered Vehicle
  7:30am          200 Blk Randall                       Burglary
  8:10am          1900 Blk Ocean                      Battery
  9:26am          600 Blk 28TH                          Fraud
10:00am          Mateo/Laidley                         Stolen Vehicle
10:44am          4900 Blk Mission                    Warrant Arrest
12:36pm          200 Blk Rey                           Warrant Arrest
  1:40pm          200 Blk Italy                          Stolen Vehicle
  2:10pm          3300 Blk Mission                   Shoplifting
  4:15pm          1500 Blk Sunnydale               Threats
  6:00pm          300 Blk Capistrano                Stolen Vehicle
  6:10pm          Amazon/Mission                     Hit and Run
  6:25pm          100 Blk Judson                      Theft from Building
  6:40pm          Unit Blk Lippard                    Burglary
  6:50pm          500 Blk Precita                      Battery
11:00pm          500 Blk Silver                        Stolen Vehicle


Burglaries with suspect description:

No Incidents to Report.