Criminals in San Francisco are able to steal people's property and sell it within minutes at an open air market in the Mission District with police and City Hall doing nothing to stop them.
This video from local ABC affiliate KGO watches like a comedy.
From KGO, "Fencing operation video shows what happens after car break-ins": We're getting a firsthand, overhead look at a fencing operation for stolen goods, showing what happens after all those car break-ins we've been highlighting at ABC7 as part of our campaign to build a better Bay Area. One very frustrated San Francisco resident brought his complaints and his video to the I-Team's Dan Noyes. [...]
Week after week, month after month, he has watched stolen goods being bought and sold right outside his window. He reported it to police more than seven months ago but heard nothing [...]
[Captain Gavin McEachern of the San Francisco Police Department] also told us about one obstacle to catching those who break into cars - the SFPD does not allow high speed pursuits for property crimes, and the criminals know that. They often just speed off, free to break into more cars at another time and place.