Thursday, April 27, 2023

An ex-fire commissioner is accused of spraying bear mace on homeless people minding their own business on San Francisco's streets Business Insider MATTHEW LOH Updated April 27, 2023 at 5:57 AM

 

An ex-fire commissioner is accused of spraying bear mace on homeless people minding their own business on San Francisco's streets

Updated 
Footage shows an unidentified man — who defense lawyers say is Don Carmignani — bear spraying a sleeping homeless person.
Footage shows an unidentified man — who defense lawyers say is Don Carmignani — spraying bear mace in a sleeping homeless person's face.San Francisco Public Defender's Office
  • A former fire commissioner is accused of approaching homeless people and spraying them with bear mace.

  • Don Carmignani initially said he was attacked by a homeless man, Garrett Doty, with a lead pipe.

  • Doty's lawyers now point to evidence they say links Carmignani to the spate of unprovoked attacks.

A former San Francisco fire commissioner who says a homeless man attacked him is now accused of spraying bear mace on at least eight homeless people who were minding their own business.

Don Carmignani, 53, initially said he was assaulted by Garret Doty, 24, on April 5 outside his mother's home.

Footage of the attack appears to show Carmignani on the street being repeatedly struck by a man wielding a lead pipe. Doty was arrested in connection with the attack, and faces assault and battery charges brought by the San Francisco district attorney's office.

But Doty's defense lawyers are now highlighting police reports and videos that they say link Carmignani to at least eight unprovoked attacks on homeless people in recent years.

The lawyers said in a Wednesday press statement that it was Carmignani who instigated the confrontation with Doty and that the latter had acted in self-defense.

Videos show shocking bear spray attacks

One video dated April 5 shows a man dressed in a black coat attacking Doty with bear spray on the street.

Doty's lawyers argued that the man in black was Carmignani, adding that a third-party witness told police she heard him threaten to stab and kill Doty.

Another video from November 2021 shows an unidentified person spraying bear mace at a homeless person sleeping on the street. When the victim turns away, the assailant leans forward to continue spraying their face.

Police reports describe eight other attacks

Eight police reports also documented an unnamed person using bear spray to attack homeless people in the area, Doty's lawyers said. The reports were made between November 2022 and January 2023.

While Carmignani was not named in any of these reports, Doty's lawyers said they contained physical descriptions that matched the former fire commissioner's appearance.

Kleigh Hathaway, a public defender for Doty, said the most recent attack involved the assailant stealing a phone, earrings, and a wallet from a homeless woman and throwing her dog on the ground, according to The San Francisco Standard.

The unnamed attacker told the woman and another homeless man to "get the fuck out of my town" and that they didn't "belong" there, Hathaway told the outlet.

Carmignani says he wasn't the attacker

According to Doty's defense team, the police reports and videos were turned over by the San Francisco district attorney's office. Hathaway's team says prosecutors "indicated" that the unnamed assailant might be Carmignani.

"These eight separate acts of violence were perpetrated against people who are homeless. The district attorney and the police gave us, the defense, yesterday, these police reports because they believe these acts are related to Mr. Carmignani," Hathaway told reporters on Wednesday.

Carmignani's lawyer, Nick Colla, told The Standard that his client wasn't the unnamed assailant.

"Our client vehemently denies that he is the alleged individual who is committing these acts against homeless people," Colla said, per The Standard.

The former fire commissioner told CBS himself that he wasn't looking for a fight when Doty attacked him.

"I didn't go out there to fight anyone. I'm trying to get them down the road, go to the park," Carmignani told the outlet, saying doctors told him he would have died had been struck one more time on April 5.

Confusion ensued on Wednesday when Hathaway's team said they were told by prosecutors that charges against Doty would be dropped.

But District Attorney Brooke Jenkins later told reporters that her office still intends to proceed with the case, though a preliminary hearing has been delayed until Thursday, The Standard reported.

Doty must be released from jail if the Thursday hearing doesn't happen, Jenkins told the outlet.

Colla, the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, and the San Francisco district attorney's office did not immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment sent outside regular business hours.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Originally published 

McDonald’s customers are starting to balk at higher Big Mac prices Yahoo Finance BRIAN SOZZI Updated April 26, 2023 at 4:30 PM

 

McDonald’s customers are starting to balk at higher Big Mac prices

Updated 
 
Pandemic changed ‘not what you want to eat, it’s when and how’: Dine Brands CEO
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McDonald's (MCD) had a juicy first quarter, but fat sales and profits aren't guaranteed this year as consumers begin to push back on higher prices for things like Big Macs and fries.

"We are seeing in some places resistance to pricing, more resistance than we saw at the outset," McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski warned on the company's Tuesday earnings call.

McDonald's said it's seeing "pressure" on its key units per transaction measure. That means the typical cost-conscious McDonald's customer is balking at higher menu prices.

As a result, they may be buying a hamburger — but not getting a side of fries. Or those with a little more cash in their pockets could be buying more premium McDonald's dinner items — but leaving out a dessert.

In this Jan. 20, 2012 photo, the McDonald's logo and a Happy Meal box with french fries and a drink are posed at McDonald's, in Springfield, Ill.  McDonald’s Corp. saw net income jump by 11 percent in the fourth quarter, as the fast-food giant continued to attract budget-conscious customers with low prices.  (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)
Consumers are buying fewer items at McDonald's because of inflation. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

Earlier in the call Kempczinski reiterated his expectation for a "mild recession" in the US this year.

"I think all of those things are reflective of again, a more challenging macro environment," Kempczinski said. "But again, McDonald's, we perform well in good times and in bad, and so that's what gives us the optimism as we go through the rest of this year."

How much McDonald's customers are buying per visit will be important for investors to monitor as the stock trades near a record high after a series of solid quarters.

That momentum stretched into the first quarter.

McDonald's first quarter same-store sales rose 12.6% both in the US and internationally. Wall Street analysts modeled for same-store sales rising 7.5% in the US and 8.2% globally.

"Investors are getting so used to McDonald's increasing same-store sales by double-digits that a 12.6% same-store sales growth does not even move the stock, even when lapping 11.8% in 1Q22," Bernstein analyst Danilo Gargiulo wrote in a client note.

But any disappointment in sales and, by extension, profits this year may lead to a sharp pullback in a stock Wall Street has fallen in love with again. About 71% of analysts that cover McDonald's rate the stock a Buy, according to Bloomberg data.

This is a McDonald's restaurant in Pittsburgh on Saturday, April 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
This is a McDonald's restaurant in Pittsburgh on Saturday, April 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Shares of the McNugget maker are up 10.6% year to date, outperforming the Dow's 1.1% gain.

"The compressed margins achieved this quarter are a worrying sign of greater price resistance among consumers," Gargiulo cautioned. "That may compromise McDonald's ability to reach 45% operating margins in 2023."

Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn. Tips on deals, mergers, activist situations or anything else? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com

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