Saturday, April 15, 2023

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An adorable Chihuahua is up for adoption at a senior dog rescue facility in San Francisco, California. 

Platinum is a 14-year-old Chihuahua who is seeking adoption and a forever home. 

Platinum is currently at the Muttville Senior Dog Rescue in Northern California — where she has been up for adoption more than once.

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In 2019, Platinum was found as a stray dog in a nearby county.

She was brought to Solano County Animal Services before making her way to Muttville. 

She was successfully adopted into a loving home, where she spent the last four years. 

DOG IN CALIFORNIA SEEKS FOREVER HOME: ‘ALL-AMERICAN' PUP IS ‘ALWAYS SMILING’

Recently, however, her guardian’s health failed — and Platinum was surrendered back to Muttville. 

Upon arrival, the small pup was nervous and lost, says the shelter.

She settled into her new foster home quickly, however, and within a day or two was once again ready to take on life's challenges.

In Platinum's current foster home, there are other adoptable senior dogs for her to play with — something she loves, the shelter also notes.

TWO CHUBBY SAN FRANCISCO DOGS ON WEIGHT-LOSS JOURNEY ARE SEEKING A NEW HOME

Platinum also loves to take a nap on a lap. 

She would be looking for a home, ideally, in which she can lay on her owner’s lap whenever possible. 

Platinum is described as "brave" due to all the changes she's endured throughout her life — and is now looking for her forever home. 

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Muttville Senior Dog Rescue is a nonprofit organization, which works to help dogs over the age of seven find a loving home. 

The organization works with various shelters, individuals and other animal organizations to care for seniors who have been given up. 

For more information about Platinum and other animals up for adoption at Muttville, visit muttville.org. 

Want to read about other pets up for adoption? Check out this recent article from Fox News Digital: Dog in California seeks loving home: ‘All-American’ pup is ‘always smiling'



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As the Boston Celtics prepared for the 2022-23 NBA season, all signs pointed to a return to the NBA Finals. 

After losing to the Golden State Warriors in six games, the Celtics returned all five starters from a team that won 26 of their final 32 regular season games during the 2021-22 regular season en route to their NBA Finals appearance. 

The offseason additions of Malcolm Brogdon and Danilo Gallinari coupled with head coach Ime Udoka returning for his second season had everyone thinking about adding an 18th championship to the organization's name. 

And then it all went sideways. 

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Gallinari was lost for the season with a torn ACL, Udoka was suspended for the entirety of the year for "violations of team policies," and center Robert Williams underwent arthroscopic surgery on his knee, missing the first month of the season.

The season looked to be off the rails before it even got started as Joe Mazzulla took over as head coach on an interim basis. 

And then the Celtics started the year 21-5 as Jayson Tatum put himself in the conversation for league MVP. 

Boston now finds itself as the two-seed in the East after winning 57 games during the regular season, one of three teams favored to represent the Eastern Conference in the NBA Finals.

While it’s a chance to return to the Finals, Celtics guard Marcus Smart knows championship opportunities are not to be taken for granted.

BULLS STORM BACK FROM 19-POINT DEFICIT IN PLAY-IN TOURNAMENT, ELIMINATE RAPTORS FROM PLAYOFF CONTENTION

"We have an opportunity to do something great and do something special that doesn’t come around a lot. And may not ever come around again," Smart told Fox News Digital. "So, understanding and being very thankful for the moment we have, and understanding that we only get one shot at this. And this may be our only shot. So, let's not take this for granted and leave everything we have on the court."

After a turbulent offseason, Boston could have collapsed while under the microscope as their leader’s future with the organization was up in the air. 

But the Celtics preached togetherness, spending time with each other off the court as they attempted to defend their Eastern Conference championship. 

"We really just decided and really wanted to hone togetherness," Smart told Fox News Digital when asked what the team did to stay together following the Udoka suspension. "As much time as we could spend together, we could. Even it was just going out to eat, or after practice, guys were just trying to spend more time with each other."

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Mazzulla proved to be more than a capable replacement, selected as the Eastern Conference Coach of the Month for October and November and officially named the head coach in February. 

"Surprisingly not really," Smart said when asked if there was anything he needed to adapt to with Mazzulla as head coach. "Ime and Joe are both guys who are very tough. They're very tough-minded guys who have played basketball. 

"[Udoka and Mazzulla] Understand the game really well and isn’t going to take anything from anybody. So, we had that spirit with Ime, and with Joe it’s just intensified."

Smart – the reigning Defensive Player of the Year – and the Celtics will now be tasked with stopping Trae Young and the Atlanta Hawks in the first round of the NBA Playoffs, an assignment that comes with its own set of problems. 

"Trae’s a great player. Trae’s gonna make some tough shots," Smart said when asked about the defensive approach to guarding Young. "You just have to continue to make everything tough for him. Just like any other great scorer or great player in the league, you have to make it as tough as possible. You’re not going to take away everything, but you take away what you can, and you make it as tough as possible."

It’s a defensive assignment that aligns perfectly with Smart’s latest partnership, teaming up with Pronamel to launch their new Active Shield toothpaste. 

"Me being a defensive player, and the Defensive Player of the Year, it’s perfect," Smart said of the partnership. "I want a toothpaste, an oral care, that is just as tenacious at protecting my enamel as I am at protecting the basket on the court. So, Pronamel is perfect." 

"Just imagine your teeth having a bunch of little me’s around them," he continued. "And every day, and throughout the day, me just defending, blocking, stealing everything that everyday life takes away from the enamel on your teeth."

A turbulent year for the Celtics organization has resulted in Boston winding up right where they expected to be – with a chance to return to the NBA Finals and add an 18th banner above the floor at TD Garden arena. 

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For Smart, a career-long member of the organization, it’s a chance to etch his name in Celtics lore. 

"To be able to play for one of the most prestigious franchises in the league, and then to not only play for them, you spend your entire career there? You don’t see that very often. You don’t see it a lot. It’s very rare," Smart said when discussing playing his entire career in Boston.

"To be able to do that, it speaks volume about you as a player [and] as a person. And it also speaks about you as part of that culture of being a champion. Of being a part of this franchise. 

"So, to be able to spend the rest of my career here would be amazing," he continued. "And to be up there with those guys [past Celtics' champions] saying ‘Boston all the way’ would be an amazing feeling."

The Celtics and the Hawks play game one of their round one NBA Playoffs series Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET.



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As a top-rated sitcom, "Bewitched" was flying high, but the spell suddenly broke in 1972.

"We weren’t canceled," Erin Murphy, a former child star who played Tabitha Stephens in the ‘60s series, told Fox New Digital. "We’d been picked up for two more seasons. So we went on our hiatus thinking we were going to come back a month or two [later], and we never did. … They sent a letter to our house [stating] that they decided not to continue. So, I went to Girl Scout camp.

"I was happy to be able to do some of the after-school things, things I couldn’t do while I was on the show," the actress explained. "There are some restrictions when you’re a kid actor. I couldn’t play sports … and ended up with a black eye. So, I was kind of happy in some ways that the show ended. I missed the day-to-day on the set because I loved it, and I loved the people that I worked with. And it was a fun experience. But I was also a kid. I was happy that I could do more things with my friends."

"Bewitched" told the tale of a nose-twitching suburban sorceress (Elizabeth Montgomery) who was married to a wary mortal. The series, which premiered in 1964, was an instant hit, ranking second only to "Bonanza" in its first season.

Montgomery, who charmed audiences by solving comedic problems with magic, died in 1995. She would have turned 90 April 15.

The late star is now the subject of a new documentary premiering on Reelz, "Elizabeth Montgomery: A Bewitched Life." It features new interviews with those who knew and worked with the actress over the years, including her son Bill Asher and actor Richard Dreyfuss, among others. Murphy, 58, narrates the special.

‘BEWITCHED’ STAR ERIN MURPHY SAYS SHE'S 'OPEN TO THE IDEA' OF A SERIES REBOOT

Murphy joined the series alongside her twin sister Diane when she was just 2 years old. After 18 episodes, Murphy played the role on her own. The star was 8 when she found herself out of a job and was eager to give showbiz a break. The mother of six returned to acting in the early 2010s.

"I think my secret is that I am eternally optimistic," she gushed. "I don’t know where it came from, but I knew from a very young age that this is my life and I want to do everything I can. So I wake up each day thinking, ‘What can I do today?’ … I think it’s all about balance. I know that this is it. This is my life, and I want it to be great. I’m constantly trying to learn [new] things. I take college classes. I’m involved with the Television Academy and a lot of charities, and my children."

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"I tell my kids and even my friends that you can’t let one facet of your life be your whole life," she continued. "You’ll be a happier person if you have interests, if you find things that you love to do. … I hate to see people who get so stuck in one thing that they’re sad when any day, you can change. … It’s all about navigating life and having fun with it."

Still, Murphy has no regrets about her child star years. She described Montgomery as a doting figure on set. She became friends with Montgomery’s children, who were around her age.

"She was like my mom on set," Murphy recalled. "We talked a lot about horse racing, which I loved since I was an animal lover. … You see such a short amount of it watching the show, but it takes a week to make one episode. So we spent a lot of time together.

"During my teenage years, we communicated through my parents. And as an adult, we became friends again. ... It’s funny. She was like the mom of my friends. I could call looking for my friend Billy and talk to Liz.

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"She was just a cool lady," Murphy continued. "She was hardworking. She was … a boss babe. She didn’t just show up for the job. She was heavily involved with the production of the show. She also wasn’t afraid to change her image. I think, a lot of times, actors especially get stuck in the role that they’re famous for, and people can’t see them for anything else outside of that. But she easily shifted to darker movies. She did the switch so seamlessly. I think it’s inspiring."

Murphy also developed a close bond with her TV dads. For five years, Dick York played Darrin Stephens, the stressed-out husband of Montgomery’s Samantha. He was replaced on the show by Dick Sargent in 1969 when problems stemming from an old back injury, including a dependence on painkillers, forced him to leave.

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"As a kid, I knew that he was in pain because it was talked about," said Murphy. "Kids hear everything. When you’re working on a set, people talk openly in front of the children. So, I knew that he was in pain. I knew they had a special board that he would lean against in between scenes because his back was hurting so much. And he also talked to me about it as a kid and as an adult.

"[He] told me that he had hurt himself," Murphy continued. "He was in pain. And when we reconnected when I was a grownup, he talked about that I was one of the things that led him [to] stay on the show for an extra season or two … He said he didn’t want me to worry about it. I kind of distracted him. He’s a father figure. I was a child, and he wanted me to be comfortable. So, he would read to me and spend time with me. And he said it would take his mind off the pain. So that … warms my heart to hear."

As for Sargent, Murphy said they also reconnected as adults. There were even "serious" talks of a "Bewitched" reboot, but the idea never came to fruition.

"They were both completely different people, but both wonderful in their own way," she said.

York, who suffered from emphysema, died in 1992 at age 63. Sargent, 64, died in 1994 after a battle with prostate cancer. As for Montgomery, she was making big plans for her future when her life suddenly came to an end.

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"She was in talks to come out with a line of dressings, like sauces, when she passed away," said Murphy. "I don’t think most people know that. … I really think that might have happened because they were to the point where they already had labels and everything – it was a thing.

"One of the things that she loved was cooking," Murphy shared. "I kind of share her love of cooking. Her favorite dessert is still my favorite dessert, and it’s coffee ice cream with honey on top."

Murphy said her TV mom’s death was "shocking" and unexpected. According to reports, Montgomery was diagnosed with cancer about six weeks before she died at age 62.

While filming "Deadline for Murder: From the Files of Edna Buchanan" in 1995, Montgomery started feeling weak and tired on set. She also suffered abdominal pains. Montgomery ignored the symptoms as she immersed herself in the film.

Montgomery became so sick while working that she later had to be hospitalized. Tests showed she had colon cancer. But by the time Montgomery was diagnosed, the cancer was so advanced that it had spread to her liver. She spent her final days at home surrounded by family.

"It was so quick when she passed away," Murphy admitted. "All my television parents from ‘Bewitched’ passed away within a five-year period. So, within a five-year period, Liz, Dick Sargent, Dick York and my actual dad all passed away. It was kind of a surreal time.

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"I’m also one who’ll say, ‘Oh, something hurts, but it’ll be better in a couple of days,’" she reflected. "I think it’s important that if you’re feeling anything — if you’re feeling pain, if something’s not right — people need to go to the doctor. I don’t always do it myself, but things can happen very quickly."

Today, Murphy wants Montgomery to be remembered for more than just being a charming Hollywood leading lady.

"She loved [‘Bewitched’]," said Murphy. "It’s a part she was proud of. She had a lot of fun doing it. … She did a great job, and then she went on and did other things. It was just a small, but very memorable part of a long career.

"I would want her to be remembered as a multifaceted, talented, smart, wonderful … human, mother, friend," she noted. "She was a complicated, amazing woman. I think it’s one of the joys of being on a television show that people love. She will always be remembered."



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New Hampshire Republican Gov. Chris Sununu criticized divisions within the GOP during a speech in Indianapolis Friday at the National Rifle Association’s annual conference.

Sununu said Republicans need to focus on an inspirational message and expand their base across the political spectrum if they hope to win in the 2024 election, and that the party must move past complaining about the results of previous elections.

"When we are always yelling at each other, we are not going to get it done," he said at the conference. "Just to talk about the politics, I get nervous about 2024. If we don’t have those independents, if we don’t have those folks back on the team, those disenfranchised voters, it ain’t gonna happen for us."

The governor, who is mulling a potential presidential run, has previously predicted that former President Trump would lose to President Biden again if he were the GOP nominee.

JIM JORDAN DECLARES HE IS ‘100% FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP’ IN 2024 AMID ONGOING LEGAL ISSUES

"We can yell and scream all we want, but we want winners. We want winners for tomorrow," Sununu said in Indianapolis on Friday. 

"No one gets inspired by getting yelled at, I try to remind them. Look like you’re enjoying your job," he continued.

Sununu has not yet announced whether he will run for president in 2024. The Republicans to have already announced their candidacies for president include Trump, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, businessman Perry Johnson and former Arkansas Gov. Hutchinson. 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Vice President Mike Pence are considering runs for president.

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The New Hampshire governor in February formed a political action committee called "Live Free or Die," which is also his state’s motto.

"Think big. Think excited. Think positive. How do you grow? How do you inspire?" Sununu asked Friday. 

Sununu said the Republican Party has the best chance of winning elections when it presents a positive, forward-looking message.



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Bud Light posted a photo of a beer can on Friday with the caption,"TGIF," leading to criticism in the replies as the company finds itself in the middle of controversy over its partnership with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney. 

The beer company has faced intense criticism in recent days after the announcement it was partnering with Mulvaney, whose picture appeared on a newly-unveiled Bud Light can.

As of Saturday morning, Bud Light's "TGIF" post had more than 11,600 replies and nearly 1,000 quote tweets but only around 250 retweets and 2,600 likes.

"No thank you. It’s Miller Time!" former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, R, replied along with a GIF of a Miller Lite can.

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"Does "TGIF" stand for "That Guy Is Female" for your marketing geniuses @budlight?" wrote GOP Oklahoma state senator Nathan Dahm.

Blaze TV host Sara Gonzalez said, "I don’t drink transbeer."

"Trans Gender Is Fiscally irresponsible?" Daily Wire reporter Luke Rosiak wrote.

Stephen Miller, a former adviser to former President Donald Trump, told Bud Light to "Stop promoting transgender ideology."

Friday's post was Bud Light's first since April 1.

The tweet comes on the same day Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth published a statement addressing the recent criticism over Bud Light's partnership with Mulvaney.

"As the CEO of a company founded in America's heartland more than 165 years ago, I am responsible for ensuring every consumer feels proud of the beer we brew," Whitworth wrote. "We have thousands of partners, millions of fans and a proud history supporting our communities, military, first responders, sports fans and hard-working Americans everywhere."

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"We never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people. We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer," he continued. "My time serving this country taught me the importance of accountability and the values upon which America was founded: freedom, hard work and respect for one another. As CEO of Anheuser-Busch, I am focused on building and protecting our remarkable history and heritage."

Whitworth added, "Moving forward, I will continue to work tirelessly to bring great beers to consumers across our nation."

Mulvaney, who has more than 10 million followers on TikTok and 1.8 million on Instagram, has received several endorsements, including from Nike, KitchenAid, Tampax and Kate Spade.

The criticism of Bud Light only intensified after a recent video from company Vice President Alissa Heinerscheid saying Bud Light needs to update its "fratty" and "out-of-touch" culture and that the advertising strategy needs to be more "inclusive."

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The video was followed by photos surfacing online of Heinerscheid on her since-deleted Facebook page drinking beers and blowing up condoms like balloons during a 2006 "boozefest."

Anheuser-Busch's market value has dipped more than $5 billion after the controversy surrounding Bud Light's partnership with Mulvaney began.



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An Indiana music theory teacher's religious discrimination lawsuit against his former employer that allegedly ousted him for refusing to adhere to a transgender name and pronoun policy could get a second look if the conditions are right, his attorney says. 

The glimmer of hope for former teacher John Kluge comes after last Friday's blow dealt by the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which upheld a lower court's decision stating the school had not violated his rights.

Depending on the Supreme Court's course of action with Groff v. DeJoy, a case scheduled for argument later this month, Kluge's case could get a second look.

Rory Gray, senior counsel on legal nonprofit Alliance Defending Freedom's Appellate Advocacy Team, represented Kluge in his case against the district. He maintains that his client "went out of his way" to accommodate students according to their wishes.

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Gray joined Fox News Digital on Wednesday to discuss the ruling, how the Groff case could have significant impact and what legal options his client has going forward.

"This is not the end of the road," Gray said. "Mr. Kluge has a few options, which we're exploring. He can even go to the full seventh Circuit, which is called an on bond petition, or he could file a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court, so he's exploring his options."

Kluge's legal team maintained that the school district's actions violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits workplace discrimination based on religion and requires employers to provide reasonable accommodation to workers based on those beliefs unless such accommodation would create an undue hardship.

The Groff case headed for the Supreme Court similarly homes in on employment accommodations and undue hardship, asking the court to examine an incident involving a postal worker who refused to deliver mail on Sundays because it violated his religious beliefs urging against working on the Sabbath day.

Groff's employer, the postal service, initially agreed to accommodate him by asking him to cover other shifts throughout the week to make up for the missed Sundays. 

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USPS later argued that finding coverage for Groff's Sunday shifts created an undue hardship, requiring other postal workers to carry more mail than they would typically have to carry and began punishing him for failing to appear on Sundays.

Groff resigned in January 2019. 

In a statement emailed to Fox News Digital earlier this week, Gray noted that Groff's case will give the Supreme Court the opportunity to "fix the standard for accommodating religious employees under Title VII" and could thereby have an impact on the future of Kluge's case. 

"One of the questions in [Groff's case] is actually what the standard should be for religious accommodation under Title VII. What is undue hardship? And so we are hopeful that the Supreme Court will fix that and mean that undue hardship actually stands for something. It isn't just a tiny little inconvenience, it's an actual hardship that's undue," he said of the case Wednesday.

"If they do that, if they change the standard, Mr. Kluge's case will have to be reexamined," Gray added. 

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"It's important to remember here that public schools really can't force teachers to abandon their religious beliefs, and that's what Mr. Kluge's case is all about," he concluded.

Kluge, citing his personal religious convictions, requested that he be allowed to address transgender students by their last names instead of their preferred first names or pronouns shortly after the Brownsburg Community School Corporation enacted the policy in 2017. The district initially agreed to his request, but later rescinded the allowance and Kluge resigned shortly after.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Brownsburg Community School Corporation earlier this week, but the district said it does not comment on pending litigation.



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Friday, April 14, 2023

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Bob Lee, the 43-year-old tech titan who founded Cash App and died in an ill-fated Silicon Valley business trip last week, will be laid to rest in his native St. Louis, according to a San Francisco funeral parlor.

Lee, who had lived in San Francisco for about two decades before relocating to Miami, which he described as like "Silicon Valley in the early 2000s," died last week in a shocking late-night stabbing.

Additional details were not immediately available. The Green Street Mortuary in Chinatown said it had been instructed not to go into specifics.

Lee was a father of two and an executive at Square and MobileCoin.

SAN FRANCISCO SURVEILLANCE VIDEO ILLUSTRATES AGONY OF CITY CRIME IN BOB LEE'S FINAL MOMENTS

His final moments were captured on harrowing surveillance video outside the Portside, a high-rise condo complex near San Francisco's Bay Bridge where a two-bedroom apartment will sell for more than $1 million.

A visibly injured man in a black shirt and jeans flags down a driver, appearing to ask for help, before the vehicle continues on. He tries a locked lobby door, collapses and staggers out of view.

Police arrested a 38-year-old Bay Area man named Nima Momeni on Thursday in connection with the attack, San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott announced during a news briefing.

He said the two knew each other and that police served multiple warrants in both San Francisco and nearby Emeryville in connection with the arrest but released few other details.

SAN FRANCISCO POLICE ARREST MAN IN CASH APP FOUNDER BOB LEE STABBING DEATH

Images obtained by Fox News Digital show a series of apparent blood drops trailing up the sidewalk in the area where Lee was found last week. Crews were later photographed hosing down the concrete.

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City police found Lee with stab wounds in the Rincon Hill neighborhood after 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, April 4, after he called 911 and pleaded for help. 

In an earlier statement, Chief Scott said the department would not be commenting on evidence in the case due to the active investigation. However, he said investigators had been working "tirelessly" to find the killer. 

"We followed the evidence, and there was a lot of evidence," Scott said, but he declined to go into specifics, citing the ongoing investigation.

WHO IS NIMA MOMENI? SUSPECT IN BOB LEE STABBING IN SAN FRANCISCO

Lee left San Francisco for Miami in October and had voiced concerns about public safety in his former home.

A friend, mixed martial artist Jake Shields, told Fox News Digital that Lee's concerns about rising crime were part of the reason he made the move. The other was that he believed San Francisco had lost its luster and that Miami had an "energy" akin to the tech boom in Silicon Valley at the start of the century.

City crime statistics show that most major crimes have fallen so far in 2023, compared to the same period last year. However, violent crimes as a whole have risen slightly, driven by an 18% increase in robberies and a 33% rise in homicides.

Felony assaults have remained flat as misdemeanor assaults have climbed by 13%, according to the statistics.

Anyone with information on Lee's death is asked to call San Francisco's tip line at 1-415-575-4444.



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