Not far from where a great-grandmother was brutally attacked in Visitacion Valley and later died, San Francisco city leaders and California Attorney General Rob Bonta gathered.
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"There is no room for hate, not here, not anywhere, not now, not ever," said Bonta.
The roundtable comes the day after "Chinatown Night Out" in Portsmouth Square, an event aimed at better connecting the community with the police department.
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At that event, Mayor Breed said suspects in attacks on Asian Americans have been caught.
"In almost every single incident that occurred, those folks have been arrested, they're awaiting trial, so they're behind bars and we are hopeful that they will be held accountable," said Mayor Breed Wednesday night.
Today, ABC7 asked police and prosecutors about the numbers, just how many people have been arrested for these crimes and how many people are being charged.
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"In 2021 we've had 83 reported hate crimes but that does not tell the whole story," said San Francisco Police Chief William Scott.
Chief Scott says that's because not every hate crime is reported.
Of the 83, he says 59% or 49 of those hate crimes were on people from the AAPI community.
WATCH: Our America: The story behind the stories about rising hate crimes against Asian Americans
Our America: The story behind the stories about rising hate crimes against Asian Americans
"Thirty of those were committed by one person who is now in custody and has been filed on by the district attorney," said Chief Scott.
The San Francisco District Attorney's Office says in 2021, they've filed criminal charges in 70% of these cases.
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Including against Derik Barreto, the individual Chief Scott said was linked to at least 30 hate crimes against the AAPI community.
As for the other hate crimes that make up the total number reported this year:
RELATED: California hate crimes surged 31% in 2020 with Black community remaining most targeted, report shows
"We solve many of them, we don't solve all of them," said Chief Scott.
That's where Chief Scott says residents come in. He encourages people to report all crimes.
"There's no place for this in our city, there's no place for this in our state and we want to hold those accountable who commit those types of acts," said Chief Scott.
Take a look at all of ABC7's Building a Better Bay Area stories and videos here.