• Felicity Huffman officially pleaded guilty Monday in the college admissions scandal. Accompanied by her brother Moore Huffman Jr., Huffman appeared in federal court and may face up to 10 months in prison. She said in a statement, "I am in full acceptance of my guilt, and with deep regret and shame over what I have done." [Associated Press]
  • A man was fatally stabbed in the Bayview Sunday night. A 41-year-old suspect was arrested, and the victim's name has not been released. [CBS SF]
  • A motorcyclist who died Saturday night in a Polk Street collision has been identified only as a 47-year-old Oakland man. The collision with a BMW happened just after 10 p.m. at Polk and Pine streets. [Bay City News]
  • A 23-year-old Oakland-based Uber driver has been arrested in connection with two cases of false imprisonment and propositioning female passengers for sex. An Uber spokesman calls the May 2 incidents "deeply troubling," and these follow a recent similar-sounding Uber kidnapping case in Pittsburgh, PA. [Berkeleyside]
  • The SFPD showed up at the house of the freelance reporter who was peddling the death report of late Public Defender Jeff Adachi. The widely condemned raid on Bryan Carmody's home was seeking information about who in the department leaked the report. [Washington Post]
  • Bob Mule, a surviving resident of the Ghost Ship warehouse, broke down in tears on the witness stand Monday. Mule tried to save fellow resident Peter Wadsworth, whom he found collapsed on the ground, but was not able to. [Bay City News]
  • A Board of Supervisors committee looks like they will be killing new legislation meant to impose new rules around conservatorship — i.e. involuntarily committing the mentally ill. [SF Weekly]
  • The City of Oakland and its bike share partner Lyft have just launched a program for disabled people featuring adaptive bicycles. [Streetsblog]
  • A minor Caltrain derailment this morning at Diridon Station in San Jose caused residual delays that may extend into to the evening commute. [ABC 7 / BCN]