With over a dozen arrests, the violent repeat offender recently struck a 93-year-old woman in the head.
by Susan Dyer Reynolds
On May 24, 2026, at 8:30 a.m., a
93-year-old woman was walking her little dog, Princess, on Cayuga Avenue
in San Francisco’s Mission Terrace neighborhood when she felt something
hit her incredibly hard on the back of the head. Her fall was broken by
a parked car, but when she looked up, she saw a large Black man walking
away. The woman’s daughter, Janet Avila, says had her mother not fallen
on the car, her head would have hit the concrete pavement. “A neighbor
called 911 and an ambulance took her to San Francisco General Hospital,”
Avila says. “She has a fractured clavicle, stitches on her knee, and a
bump on her head. If that car didn’t break her fall, it would have been
much worse.”
Avila, who works for the City and County
of San Francisco’s behavioral health department, thought it was a random
attack, and that she may never know who harmed her elderly mother. Then
one day Avila’s cousin was watching her mom and saw a man walking by
who fit the description both her mother and a neighbor had described.
Avila’s cousin took a video and sent it to the neighbor, who confirmed
it was the same man. Another neighbor also recognized the man as someone
who lived nearby at 252 Tingley Street. Avila sent the video and the
address to the police sergeant on the case. “He said, ‘O.K., but we
can’t go in the house. If you see him on the street, call us.’ So, I
waited three hours in my car until he came out of the house. I called
911, gave them the case number, and said I was following him. The
dispatcher told me to put my emergency flashers on, and the police came
and picked him up.”
On May 28, the attacker, 32-year-old
Zavein Blue Wright, was arrested and charged with battery with serious
bodily injury, elder abuse, and grand theft. Avila’s mother received a
subpoena in the mail for a court hearing on June 10, but when Avila
called her mother’s victim advocate, Clara Nowinski, at the San
Francisco District Attorney’s Office, she was told there was no need for
her mother to come to court because they would be “determining Wright’s
competency.” Avila found all of this unsettling. “Is he going to be
released near my mom again?” she asked rhetorically. “I know he’s not
going to do hard time. I work in mental health here and this is never
going to change.”
When she searched the Internet for the unusual name of her mother’s attacker, Avila was even more alarmed. “Your article in the Voice of San Francisco came up, and I couldn’t believe what I read.”
Wright out on mental health diversion for another elder attack
On Oct. 5, 2023, at approximately 7:45
a.m., 80-year-old Ken Majer was walking his little dog, Daisy, at the
corner of Baker and Bay streets across from the Palace of Fine Arts in
San Francisco’s Marina District when he was confronted by a large black
male. Ken, who is the husband of my longtime editor for the Marina Times
and now for The Voice of San Francisco, Lynette Majer, told me that he
didn’t know the person and only saw his face briefly before the man
forcefully knocked him to the ground and his head hit the sidewalk.
Officers from the San Francisco Police Department and an ambulance soon
arrived, and Ken was taken to the emergency room at Saint Francis
Hospital. He received a CAT scan to determine his injuries, and he
required 17 staples to close the wound in his head.
The San Francisco District Attorney’s
Office filed charges against Wright of elder abuse, battery with serious
injury, criminal threats, and assault with bodily injury. At an
arraignment held Nov. 6, 2023, Wright pleaded not guilty to three of the
counts. The fourth count, criminal threats, was dropped. Wright was
ordered held without bail at County Jail No. 3 in San Bruno. At a court
appearance in December, there was a plea of mental incompetency.
On June 26, 2024, I attended a hearing for
Wright at 850 Bryant in Department 15, which is San Francisco’s
Behavioral Health Court. According to their website, the Court’s mission
is to “enhance public safety and reduce recidivism of criminal
defendants who suffer from serious mental illness by connecting these
defendants with community treatment services, and to find appropriate
dispositions to the criminal charges by considering the defendant’s
mental illness and the seriousness of the offense.” The presiding judge,
Charles Crompton, is known among critics for his leniency. Like the
majority of defendants in Behavioral Health Court, Wright’s appearance
was waived. After a brief conversation and a glance at a May 2024
report, Wright was judged incompetent to stand trial. The public
defender wanted him released. The district attorney did not. The judge
pointed out that he was admitted to the Department of State Hospitals on
April 4, 2024. “He is already placed and he’s doing fine where he is,”
Crompton said, and closed the file. “Next case …”
In January 2025, Oscar Gonzalez, a victim
advocate for elder abuse in the Victim Services Division of the District
Attorney’s Office, updated Ken on the latest decision by Judge
Crompton, and it wasn’t good news: “There is no disposition in this
case, rather a Mental Health Ruling. Criminal proceedings have been
suspended, not terminated,” Gonzalez wrote in an email. “As for the
residential treatment program, I will continue to monitor the case. Next
court date is scheduled for 2/19/25 for status of placement. I will
update you after the hearing.”
Judge Harry Jacobs was sitting in for
Crompton at the Feb. 19 hearing. Wright was in the courtroom and Ken
appeared on Zoom. When asked if he wanted to make a statement, Ken
pointed to Wright’s long, violent record, making him a clear danger to
the community. The public defender recommended 90 days at Baker Street House,
a residential treatment facility “dedicated to providing comprehensive
mental health and substance use disorder treatment services.”
Ticking time bomb with a long, violent history
Public records list an address for Wright
in Bakersfield, Calif., from Oct. 6, 2020, to Jan 31, 2024, but he was a
fixture in the Marina for most of that time, where he was well known by
residents for his erratic and threatening behavior and for following
young females. One person described seeing Wright trap two young girls
in the doorway of a building, refusing to let them go until she shouted
at him and called police. Between 2019 and 2023, Wright was arrested in
San Francisco 11 times for crimes including kidnapping, peeking and
prowling while loitering on private property, attempted burglary, grand
theft, vandalism over $5,000, assault, trespassing, contempt of court,
disorderly conduct, false imprisonment by violence, unauthorized entry
of a dwelling, and threats of violence. Wright was also arrested for
assault with any means of force likely to produce great bodily injury on
May 23, 2018, in Marin County, and four times for that same offense in
San Francisco on Oct. 14, 2020, Nov. 8, 2020, Oct. 23, 2022, and Aug. 9,
2023. He was also arrested four times in San Francisco for false
imprisonment by violence, on Oct. 14, 2020, Nov. 8, 2020, Sept. 9, 2020,
and Oct. 23, 2022.
When I informed Lynette that Ken’s
attacker had assaulted another elder in a nearly identical manner, she
was shocked. She also said the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office
had not notified Ken about the latest case. Ken remains fearful of
Wright, a ticking time bomb who clearly has more rights than the people
he has injured both physically and psychologically.
When I asked Avila how her mother was
doing, she said she is healing physically but she hasn’t come out of the
house. “The PTSD is my worry — walking is her thing and she walks two
to three hours a day. I fear she won’t do that again. It takes away her
independence, and she is fiercely independent. When I first started
taking Princess on her walks, she was barking when we went by the area,
which I’ve never seen her do, so she’s traumatized as well.”
Wright is being held in San Francisco County Jail 3. No bail has been set at this time.
Full Article & Source:
Zavein Blue Wright, free on mental health diversion for violent assault of elder, has attacked another elder