Author Topic: How Did the Illegal Immigrant Who Shot and Killed Kate Steinle Get a Federal Agent’s Gun?  (Read 1268 times)

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rangerrebew

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How Did the Illegal Immigrant Who Shot and Killed Kate Steinle Get a Federal Agent’s Gun?


Melissa Dykes
 The Daily Sheeple
 July 9th, 2015
 
Last week, 45-year-old San Francisco pier shooting suspect Francisco Sanchez shot and killed Kate Steinle while she was out walking with her father. She died in front of him.

Sanchez, here illegally from Mexico, has seven felony convictions and has been deported five times.

So how did he wind up with a federal agent’s gun? Reports say he got it by breaking into the car of a law enforcement officer with the Bureau of Land Management on June 27th.

Perhaps the real question is, why was Sanchez here walking free if he had been deported five times?

Real Clear Politics is reporting that the feds knew Sanchez was in San Francisco and had asked the city to keep him in custody. However, because it is a so-called “sanctuary city,” San Fran officials refused to do so, leading to what can only be considered totally predictable and needless violence.

Fox Reporter Jesse Watters confronted the San Francisco Board of Supervisors over this situation below:



For the record, Sanchez told KGO-TV the shooting was a sleeping pill-fueled accident.
- See more at: http://www.thedailysheeple.com/how-did-the-illegal-immigrant-who-shot-and-killed-kate-steinle-get-a-federal-agents-gun_072015#sthash.yWmL2aZC.dpuf

rangerrebew

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S.F. police didn’t investigate gun theft before pier killing
 
By Vivian Ho
 
Updated 3:06 pm, Friday, July 10, 2015
     
 
 
 Mayor Ed Lee said he doesn't regret signing the sanctuary law during a press conference at Portsmouth Square Wednesday July 8, 2015. San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee spoke about the sanctuary program which allowed Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez to be free on the streets where he allegedly killed Katheryn Steinle recently.

 
San Francisco police did not assign an investigator to look into the theft of a gun from a federal agent’s car — a pistol that is believed to have been used, four days later, to kill a woman walking with her father on Pier 14, authorities said Thursday.

Police Chief Greg Suhr said that the June 27 break-in of a car belonging to a U.S. Bureau of Land Management ranger, which was reported to police, had not been assigned to an inspector by the time 32-year-old Kathryn Steinle was killed along the Embarcadero on July 1. Steinle’s funeral was held Thursday outside her hometown of Pleasanton.

 
Suhr said he could not elaborate on why such a serious case had not been followed up on by an investigator. But Tuesday, the chief issued a department-wide bulletin reminding officers of the process in place for identifying “cases that require an immediate investigation.”

Station and investigations bureau lieutenants, he said, should review each police report and decide whether to refer the case to an inspector, taking into account such factors as whether the crime is serious, whether it is solvable and whether there are witnesses.

“It is the policy of the San Francisco Police Department to diligently investigate crimes in order to arrest and prosecute those responsible,” the Tuesday bulletin said.


Theft is one of the prime ways in which firearms are diverted to criminals on the streets, with 1.4 million guns reported stolen in the U.S. from 2005 to 2010, according to the Department of Justice.

The lack of follow-up in the burglary case, which raises questions about how the police force prioritizes investigations in a city that sees thousands of break-ins a year, is the latest turn in a homicide case that has drawn national attention, largely because of questions about the suspect’s release from San Francisco County Jail.

Report immediately filed


The Police Department has mostly stayed out of the fray as questions swirl over Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez. The county Sheriff’s Department released him in April, even though federal immigration agents had asked that he be turned over for his sixth deportation.

Sgt. Michael Andraychak, a police spokesman, said Thursday that while the burglary case was not assigned to an inspector, officers who responded to the initial report did “conduct a thorough investigation.”

“They determined that there was nothing of evidentiary value at the scene and that calling out CSI was not warranted,” he said. “They searched the area for possible surveillance cameras and/or witnesses and located none. They had a citywide crime alert broadcast on police radio channels and a teletype was issued. All investigative leads were exhausted.”

Andraychak said a senior on-duty inspector had “determined that the officers had done a thorough investigation and that there were no further investigative leads and no potential for a follow-up investigation.”

Andraychak said Suhr’s bulletin was not a response to the gun theft.

The car break-in took place downtown and resulted in the theft of a .40-caliber handgun — the federal ranger’s service weapon, which was in a bag, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Dana Wilson, a Bureau of Land Management spokeswoman, said the ranger was in San Francisco on official government travel and immediately called police.

Four days after the theft, police and prosecutors said, Lopez-Sanchez discharged a gun, striking Steinle — a stranger — in the heart on Pier 14. He was arrested and has pleaded not guilty to murder, with his attorney suggesting the shooting may have been accidental. In a jailhouse interview with television station KGO, Lopez-Sanchez said he found a gun wrapped in a T-shirt under a bench.

Gun recovered in bay

Authorities believe Lopez-Sanchez tossed the gun he used into the bay after the shooting. Soon after, divers retrieved the federal agent’s gun from the waters. The agent’s gun, though, has not yet been definitively linked to Steinle’s death, police said.

According to law enforcement experts, car break-ins are notoriously difficult to solve as they often take place quickly and without any witnesses. Any fingerprints taken from the scene may only prove that a person touched the car at some point.

While not commenting on particulars of the recent break-in, Suhr said that because it involved the theft of a gun, the case should have been pushed higher on the assignment list. He noted that case assignment officers do not work weekends, and the break-in was reported on a Saturday.

San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi, whose office is representing Lopez-Sanchez, said he wanted to know how the theft of a federal agent’s service weapon was not considered a higher priority. His office has long said that the Pier 14 case is more about the proliferation of guns in society than about immigration.

“It confirms what every San Franciscan suspects: that police don’t bother to investigate auto burglaries,” he said. “If a federal agent losing his gun doesn’t warrant an investigator, the rest of us have no hope.”

http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/S-F-police-didn-t-investigate-gun-theft-before-6376393.php
« Last Edit: July 11, 2015, 10:48:20 am by rangerrebew »