Crime & Safety

SF Judge Denies Request To Bar Drug Dealers From Tenderloin

A San Francisco judge denied a request that would have barred four alleged drug dealers from the city's Tenderloin area.

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — A San Francisco judge on Friday denied a request for a preliminary injunction from the city that would have barred four people previously arrested for selling drugs from entering the city's Tenderloin and South of Market neighborhoods.

Back in September 2020, City Attorney Dennis Herrera filed civil lawsuits against each of the defendants, seeking to bar them from entering a 50-square-block area in an effort to break the supply chain for addicts who congregate in the Tenderloin.

Herrera had argued that the defendants are not neighborhood residents and instead travel from other Bay Area cities to sell drugs in downtown San Francisco, contributing to the recent rise in overdose deaths.

Find out what's happening in San Franciscofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In his ruling, Judge Ethan Schulman said current state laws "do not authorize issuance of the stay-away orders."

Schulman added, "Further, even if such orders were authorized by the statute, they would violate defendants' constitutional right to interstate travel."
The defendants -- Guadaloupe Aguilar-Benegas, Jarold Sanchez, Victor Zelaya and Christian Noel-Padilla -- were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California.

Find out what's happening in San Franciscofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"The city's request that the court grant preliminary injunctions excluding our clients from a large portion of the city without regard to the impact on them and their family members is unprecedented and unconstitutional," ACLU attorney Annie Decker said earlier this month in a statement.

"The city should spend public money on services that support vulnerable communities with safe and supportive housing, mental health, harm reduction, and other life-affirming services, not further driving people into poverty and desperation."

Copyright 2021 by Bay City News, Inc. — Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.

More from San Francisco