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Woman Stabbed on Muni Bus in Mission District, No Arrests Made

A midday stabbing on a Mission District Muni bus left a woman hospitalized Friday; no one is in custody.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Woman Stabbed on Muni Bus in Mission District, No Arrests Made
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Near the corner of Mission and 13th streets, a woman was stabbed aboard a Muni bus on Friday afternoon, sending officers from the San Francisco Police Department's Mission Station to the scene by 1:30 p.m. Police found the victim still on board; paramedics transported her to a local hospital. Authorities have not disclosed the extent of her injuries, and no one has been arrested.

The SFPD described the information as preliminary and said the investigation is open and active. The San Francisco Chronicle reported the stabbing followed an argument that escalated aboard the bus; SFPD has not confirmed that detail in its own public statements. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, which operates Muni, had nothing to add beyond the police department's account.

For anyone who rides this stretch of Mission Street regularly, the intersection sits near one of the most active Muni corridors in the city. If you were on the bus Friday and witnessed the attack, SFPD is asking you to call (415) 575-4444. You can remain anonymous. The details that most help investigators move quickly are the coach number, printed on the exterior and interior of every Muni bus; the specific stop or cross street where the incident occurred; and the time you boarded or observed the assault. Violent crimes require a 911 call; non-emergency complaints can be filed through 311 or SFMTA's online Muni Feedback form.

Muni vehicles carry onboard surveillance cameras, and in serious cases, SFPD and SFMTA typically review that footage alongside recordings from nearby businesses and street cameras. That review is a standard part of the active investigation.

Friday's stabbing follows a string of violent incidents on San Francisco transit. Less than a week before, on March 24, a man was removed from a Muni vehicle, transported to a hospital, and later died, with SFPD leading that inquiry as well. A survey published earlier this year by transit advocacy group Transform found that fewer than half of Muni riders in San Francisco say they feel safe on the system most of the time, a number that has intensified calls for expanded security staffing and stronger coordination between SFMTA and SFPD on high-ridership routes through neighborhoods like the Mission.

SFPD has not released a suspect description.

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