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The Verdict: A Killing on a San Francisco Pier

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A large photo of Kathryn Steinle is shown while her dad, James Steinle, testifies during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, July 21, 2015, in Washington, D.C. The committee heard testimony from family members who have had loved ones killed by undocumented immigrants. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

The 2015 death of Kathryn Steinle created a furor over undocumented immigration and sanctuary cities. That's because the man accused of her murder, Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, is an undocumented Mexican National. He had been jailed and deported several times, but was then homeless on the streets of San Francisco -- in part because of the city's sanctuary policies. Then presidential-candidate Donald Trump and right-wing media got involved, using the tragedy to advance a nativist narrative of dangerous immigrants flooding over the border. Now, over two years later a jury has found Garcia Zarate not guilty of Steinle's murder.

In this episode of Q'ed Up we go back over the case, dig into the surprising verdict,  and examine how a death on a downtown pier became a political lightning rod.

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