- A group of 50 to 60 teens leapt over fare gates, stormed the Coliseum BART station, and committed multiple strong-arm robberies Saturday night both on the platform and on an arriving train. No weapons were reported and the teens all dispersed into the surrounding neighborhood. [CBS 5]
- On Friday, the Justice Department sent a warning to multiple sanctuary cities saying federal grants were at risk, even though federal lawyers tried to walk the threat back in federal court just a week earlier in San Francisco. [NPR]
- The Ninth Circuit has officially denied a wider court review of President Trump's travel ban. [The Hill]
- Wired looks inside the nightmare job of the contractors who are tasked with checking YouTube videos for ad-appropriateness. [Wired]
- Here's how SF’s city-owned bank plan would work. [Chronicle]
- Plans to turn the inside of the blighted Alexandria Theater into an aquatic center are gaining steam to the delight of some in the Richmond District. [Examiner]
- A dispute over the euthanizing of a cancer-stricken monkey at the SF Zoo shows some growing tension between employees and management over animal care decisions. [Chronicle]
- The accused shooter in last week's Fresno triple homicide gives his first jailhouse interview. [KRON 4]
- Multiple legends of the 49ers and Giants were honored over the weekend in a naming ceremony to put their names on streets in the upcoming Candlestick Point development. [ABC 7]
- Warriors head coach Steve Kerr’s persistent health problems could end his coaching career, and at the very least he could be out for the rest of the playoffs. [Chronicle]
- Local cabbies are squabbling over how to distribute a $4.7 million fund that was established for them several years ago as the value of taxi medallions crashed. [Chronicle]