
Crypto billionaire offers $10M gift to revolutionize policing in crime-ridden major city
Chris Larsen, the co-founder of cryptocurrency platform Ripple, has requested San Francisco officials to approve his huge gift to enhance the city's policing.
Larsen's funds would relocate San Francisco's Real-Time Investigations Center, the police's hub for overseeing tech including license plate readers, surveillance cameras and drones, reports the San Francisco Chronicle.
The entrepreneur, who has a net worth over $8 billion, is hoping to move the center from the SoMa Hall of Justice to the Financial District, into a building that he owns.
The potential new HQ, located at his building 315 Montgomery Street, would be sub-leased to the police for free from Ripple, which owns a $2.3 million lease on the property through December 2026 but no longer uses it.
Larsen is known for his funding of public safety initiatives, and beyond the free lease he is offering $7.25 million from his policing charitable organization, the San Francisco Police Community Foundation.
In an interview with the Chronicle, Larsen said the crimewave that upended San Francisco in recent years has started slowing thanks to advancements in police tech that he hopes will continue.
'I think we can clearly see what a force-multiplier this is,' he said.
'The number of tools that they have is quite small, and we know that (expanding them) will have an impact.'
The streets of San Francisco became synonymous with crime, homelessness and open-air drug taking in recent years, fueled by soft-on-crime policies from officials
The streets of San Francisco became synonymous with crime, homelessness and open-air drug taking in recent years, fueled by soft-on-crime policies from officials such as former San Francisco DA Chesa Boudin.
Boudin was recalled in 2022 as residents fumed over a lack of safety in the city, however crime in San Francisco has steadily dropped in recent times as it rebounds from the pandemic.
Officials said investigative work done through the Real-Time Investigations Center helped assist over 500 arrests in 2024 and drove a 40 percent drop in auto thefts over a one-year period.
Evan Sernoffsky, a spokesperson for the police department, said cops in the city are hoping Larsen's proposal is accepted, adding that his multi-million-dollar gift would 'supercharge' the unit.
Commissioners within the San Francisco Police Department are set to discuss Larsen's funding proposal on Wednesday, and if it is accepted the proposal would move to the Board of Supervisors to finalize the deal.
'We cobbled together our current (Real-Time Investigations Center) with everything we basically had lying around,' Sernoffsky continued.
'Little did we know how effective it would become with just the tools at our disposal.'
Larsen's funds would relocate San Francisco's Real-Time Investigations Center, the police's hub for overseeing tech including license plate readers, surveillance cameras and drones
San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, the heir to the Levi Strauss denim fortune, was elected last year on a platform aimed at cleaning up the drug-infested streets.
He defeated London Breed in the election as voters rebelled against her lenient policing policies, and Lurie said in a statement this week that the tech investigations center has become one of the most important assets to his police department.
Lurie said it supports a severely understaffed department, and 'with this new facility, the SFPD will have the tools and the technology it needs to take this work to the next level.'
'I want to thank Chris Larsen for his continued dedication to our police officers and the safety of all San Franciscans,' the mayor said.
Supporters of the proposal also say that the change of venue is desperately needed, with an ordinance proposal cited by the Chronicle noting that 'in its current location, the RTIC has experienced power and internet outages, and plumbing leaks from the ceiling.'
'The RTIC is in a windowless room in a concrete structure, which limits cell phone and emergency radio transmission capabilities,' the document stated.
Larsen has become known in the city for funding such public safety projects, including gifting $1 million to his police charity to help officer wellness and financing surveillance cameras across the city.
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In fact, when she compared one of her pre-boycott credit card bills with her credit card bill during the boycott, she had spent $2,000 less by not shopping at the big-box retailers. She points out the one time her husband, a teacher, paid more than double for workshop supplies that he could have gotten much cheaper at Amazon. Other than that, Renard-Wilson says most products have only been a few bucks more along with the cost of shipping sometimes. 'Thankfully, prayerfully, we're in a financial position to be able to pay a little bit more,' says Renard-Wilson, who acknowledges that her family is currently in a privileged financial position to be able to explore options outside of big-box corporate retail stores. But there are families in smaller rural areas who do not have the retail options of big cities, technology access or the financial means to fully participate in the retail boycott. Karmen Jones' 82-year-old grandmother lives in rural Mississippi. The closest grocery store to her grandmother is a Walmart, Jones says, which is 30 to 40 minutes away from her grandmother's home. There is no Instacart or Uber Eats in her area that's close to the Delta, and her elderly grandmother is not going to go online to purchase items, Jones said. There's also the transportation issue. Jones often has to take her grandmother grocery shopping when she visits. 'It's a privilege to be able to protest,' Jones, 26, said. 'My grandmother does not have the privilege to say no to a Walmart if that's the nearest grocery store that she has.' Jones' family's roots run deep in Mississippi. Her family had to be protected from the Ku Klux Klan, she says, because her great-grandmother owned a successful Black business. Jones recently visited the plantation where her family lived and worked in Mississippi, and witnessed the large wealth gap between Blacks and whites in the rural area. Given her family's history, she doesn't want people to judge her grandmother if she is unable to participate in the boycott. 'I believe the elders deserve to have a break at times. They deserve to have support and to have care. That is where she [my grandmother] is in her chapter in her life. She's in a place where she deserves care,' said Jones, a communications consultant, whose family travels between Washington DC, where she first heard about the retail boycott, and Mississippi for work. She also notes that there's a difference in the robust grocery market in the DMV (Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia) versus the food deserts in Mississippi. 'In the DMV, we quickly noticed that you don't really have to go to Walmart or Target. You can go to Harris Teeter or Trader Joes,' Jones said. In Mississippi, Jones says she's shopped at Kroger or Costco since the boycott. If she goes to a particularly rural area, she has to stop at a corner store or market for goods. 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