A suspect in a white shirt and dark shorts being escorted in handcuffs by police officers after he shot at them during an eviction
Police officers arrest a suspect who allegedly fired at sheriff's deputies while they tried to evict him on Wednesday, July 3, 2024. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan.

San Francisco police officers arrested a man on Wednesday afternoon after he allegedly fired shots at sheriff’s deputies who were serving an eviction at his home. The SWAT team had engaged in an hours-long standoff with the suspect, who had barricaded himself inside the apartment building.

There were no injuries and officers had not fired any weapons, a sheriff’s department captain on site said.

Dozens of police officers flocked to the man’s residence at 30 Roosevelt Way, near Buena Vista Park and Corona Heights Park, blocking off streets to traffic and pedestrians in several directions.

Captain Alejandro Cabebe with the San Francisco Sheriff’s Office said that, at 10:45 a.m., deputies with the civil eviction unit were conducting an eviction when the suspect fired at them.

“The subject of the eviction fired multiple rounds of unknown caliber through the door,” Cabebe said. At 1:45 p.m., Cabebe said, “the subject of the eviction remains barricaded in the area.” He was arrested and walked out at 2:13 p.m., seen handcuffed in a white shirt and dark shorts, escorted by officers.

A city street busy with parked cars and traffic, police officers are stationed by their motorcycles near a crosswalk marked with school crossing signs and speed limit warnings.
SFPD vehicles on 14th Street, near the home at 30 Roosevelt Way where sheriff’s deputies had been fired upon while conducting an eviction on Wednesday, July 3, 2024. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan.

The suspect lived inside a multi-unit building, and other residents had been evacuated, Cabebe said. After the man was arrested, Sheriff Paul Miyamoto said the suspect was the only one in the unit at the time, but that multiple tenants resided in the apartment. Miyamoto said about seven shots had been fired.

Two to three sheriff deputies were conducting the eviction when fired upon, a police source added. The deputies had been trapped inside the building after serving the eviction.

SWAT vehicles on the streets behind yellow caution tape
SFPD vehicles amassing near the home at 30 Roosevelt Way, where deputies were fired upon while serving an eviction on Wednesday, July 3, 2024. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan.

San Francisco Police Department specialist and tactical trucks were on the scene near McKinley Elementary School, as well as at least one fire truck and an ambulance at 1 p.m. Officers in tactical gear were seen walking around the area, and a drone hovered over the house.

“It’s been, like, two or three hours,” said a worker at a Courtney’s Produce at 14th and Castro streets around 1:30 p.m.

Tactical vehicles line Roosevelt Way, where a suspect facing an eviction fired a gun at sheriff’s deputies on July 3, 2024. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan.

“I didn’t hear anything, just saw a bunch of cop cars come here,” the employee said.

Police officers had encouraged community members to stay away from the immediate area. As of 1:30 p.m., children were inside the daycare at McKinley Elementary, but were free to leave if their parents wished.

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7 Comments

  1. Tenant sounds like a nice guy and awesome neighbor. I wonder what the city funded lawyers who likely defended this eviction at taxpayer cost feel about their client.

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    1. Jake, at least now this tenant won’t have to worry about where he is going to live for the next few years. He will have rent-free lodgings.

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      1. Don’t worry: a different set of city funded lawyers will be helping this ex-tenant avoid any consequences for their actions while a city funded program helps this person better integrate into in society by placing them in an apartment nearby. (Don’t ask about success rates.)

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  2. Why does the police provide this private contract-enforcement service to landlords? Is there a fee for this service, or is a donation to the PAL sufficient?

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