Incident Date:
Monday, December 30th, 2013
The next community meeting at Ingleside Station will be held on January 21, 2014. 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.
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:
5:35pm Mission/Persia Public Intoxication/Resisting
Dispatch sent out an alert about a young drunk woman who was throwing garbage cans onto the sidewalk on the 500 block of Mission. Ingleside Officers Morse and Garon-Fermo responded and found the area quiet, but a witness said the suspect had boarded a Muni bus going south on Mission street. The officers drove to catch up to the bus but before reaching the vehicle they spotted the suspect and her boyfriend on the sidewalk yelling at each other. The officers stopped and quickly handcuffed the suspect who had slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, and was sweating profusely. The officers attempted to put the suspect in the patrol car, but she resisted kicking and screaming and telling Morse and Garon-Fermo that “they were going to pay for this”. Finally, with the help of other units, she was subdued, placed in a patrol wagon, and taken to Ingleside Station where she was booked for public intoxication and resisting arrest. Report number: 131096037
Serious Incidents:
No Incidents to Report.
Vehicle and Other Incidents:
10:30am Unit Blk Leland Warrant Arrest
11:50am 4900 Blk Mission Shoplifting
12:15pm 100 Blk Capistrano Fraud
3:45pm 4600 Blk Mission Threats
4:50pm 300 Blk Munich Stolen Vehicle
5:05pm Unit Blk Bernal Heights Theft from Vehicle
9:19pm 400 Blk Edinburgh Harassing Phone Calls
Burglaries with suspect description:
No Incidents to Report.