mr. mullen to go ahead and do his presentation. my questions are just for clarification. >> chair peskin: okay. andy mullen, the floor is yours. >> thank you, chair peskin, and supervisors mandelman and chan for having me here today. i have a short presentation, and then, i'm happy to answer any questions that you have. i want to start this presentation by talking about the need. the need is very acute. approximately 20,000 times per quarter, a san francisco resident is the victim of a crime according to police department data, and as high as that is, it's probably an undercount. the estimate by social sciences is that 40% of crimes are reported to law enforcement, and only about 3,000 of the reported incidents result in an arrest, and charges are filed in about 1,000 cases. the victims of crime in san francisco are primary women and people of color. in 2020, people of color were victimed in 73% of aggravated assaults, 73% of battery cases, 83% of robberies, 63% of burglaries, 88% of homicides, and 66% of sexual assaults. in partic