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Judge Orders City to Stop Homeless Raids
Clay and her husband became homeless early this year when their apartment rent got too high. They couldn't afford the downpayment on a cheaper place, so they set up in the encampment, where they could still be together, she said. After the raid, they moved their tent under a freeway, but then that site was raided, too, she said.
"Wherever I go as a homeless person in the city of Fresno, the city of Fresno workers, accompanied by the Fresno Police Department, will come to take and destroy my personal possessions," Clay said.
![]() A homeless woman sleeps with her belongings Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006 at Rockefeller Center in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) (Mark Lennihan - AP)
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Estimates of the number of homeless living on Fresno's streets vary, with advocates saying the numbers top 8,000. According to the plaintiffs, three primary homeless shelters in Fresno have room for about 225 people.
Wanger's order blocks the city from raiding tent towns and destroying homeless people's belongings until the case is resolved.
On a recent afternoon at an encampment near the Fresno Rescue Mission, a drop-in center for the homeless, several people talked about the city raids, saying they that even when they tried to claim their prized belongings, they were taken.
Pamela Kincaid, 51, another of the homeless plaintiffs, said Wednesday she lost all her possessions in a raid but felt vindicated by Wanger's decision.
"It feels good," she said. "I already knew what was right and had hope."
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Associated Press Writer Garance Burke contributed to this report.


