Gang Activity in Los Angeles metropolitan area

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FastLane/S::G

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Sep 17, 2002
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Where the boyz are.(gang activity in Los Angeles metropolitan area)

A lazy urban sociologist hoping to observe the panoply of L.A. gang culture would be wise to visit Universal City Walk: On weekends, members of 30 to 40 gangs can be seen cruising the faux boulevards and shoplifting in the faux boutiques.

Why is City Walk so popular with bangers? Perched on the hill between the Valley and L.A., it's almost equidistant from Pomona (notorious gang territory) and Venice/Palms (notorious gang territory) and an easy freeway drive from most of South-Central. And because so many crews congregate there, no one gang can hope to claim it as home turf. It is, in effect, a gang demilitarized zone.

There are, of course, other reasons behind City Walk's unique appeal: It's free (except for parking), and the proliferation of gangsters makes it a pleasant and convenient place to buy -- or sell -- drugs. They also come for the same things "civilians" do: the concerts, the food, the abundant opportunity to pick up girls. This last attraction, however, is a regular source of friction between bangers, according to one probation officer familiar with the area, and has led to numerous knife fights. A favorite spot for "jumping" rivals is the parking structure, but the privacy this affords denies a combatant the chance to get "credit," to declare publicly -- by either shouts or hand signs -- his gang affiliation. And if you don't get credit for stabbing someone, why bother? That's why gangsters tend to congregate and fight near the theaters, the central fountain and the Hard Rock Cafe.

The weekly migration has not gone unnoticed. On any given night, the LAPD, the sheriffs department (which maintains a substation at City Walk), probation gang suppression units and City Walk's own security force are out patrolling and conducting curfew sweeps. And for the most part, they've managed to keep a lid on things. There have been a few all-out gang-versus-gang knife fights, but an uneasy peace is usually maintained.

In fact, the biggest problem is not killings but petty crimes like shoplifting and loitering. (There is also plenty of "tagging," but City Walk's platoon of maintenance workers scrapes off graffiti before the paint dries.) The restaurant hit hardest by the petty-crime wave is Gladstone's, where gang members like to, literally, eat and run -- skipping out on the check, demonstrating that even gang life has its prosaic side.

Local law-enforcement agencies report that gang membership has soared in the last few years. "No neighborhood is safe anymore," says Sgt. Wes McBride, a nationally recognized gang expert with the L.A. County Sheriffs Department. "No one's truly immune." He says the safest communities are Beverly Hills, San Marino and Brentwood; everyone else is just fooling himself if he thinks he's out of harm's way.

How many "boyz" are there? It's hard to say, since gangs rarely cooperate with the U.S. Census. The sheriffs department estimates that the county is home to 150,000 gangbangers in more than 1,300 gangs. Among ethnic gangs, the breakdown is Hispanic, 667 gangs; black, 386; and Asian, 151. White motorcycle and skinhead gangs (14) have been pushed into rural nether regions such as the Antelope Valley.

While our gangs are flourishing, they're also evolving. Though you're unlikely to spot nascent gangbangers shopping for Day-Runners and fax machines, they're rapidly adopting the free-market capitalist's credo. These days, they're all business, and the old rules -- and feuds -- no longer apply: Bloods and Crips work together, blacks and Hispanics share drug territories. "Business is business," explains one gang member doing commerce with a hated rival.

Today's L.A. gang members defy categorization. While most are in it for the relatively easy money, a few get in just to pick up girls or act tough. Some are strictly shooters, like the designated hitter on a baseball team. There are the bank robbers, the strong-arm robbers and the ones who steal beer from 7-Eleven every weekend on "beer runs."

Against this backdrop of a bull market in gangbanging is the inexplicable drop in homicides. After a steady, decade-long increase that topped out in 1995 with 807 gang-related fatalities, gang homicides dropped by nearly 200 countywide in 1996 and remained low in 1997. Those who work with hard-core gang members to stop the killing say the reduction can be linked to the various peace treaties cobbled together since the L.A. riots. Statisticians have a more sober take: They point out that a decrease in drive-bys correlates with an increase in the number of jobs available in L.A.'s urban areas. So maybe Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty wasn't such a harebrained idea after all.

The following maps are based on information provided by gang experts from parole, probation, police and sheriffs departments and former and current gang members. They are, by necessity, incomplete. Instead of redrawing the entire Thomas Bros. map, we focused on a few hot spots. Nor did we try to catalog every gang -- some do not have clearly defined turf, others are too smart or amorphous to get a fix on.

One final caveat: Don't expect either the LAPD or the sheriff's department to confirm any of the boundaries delineated here. Both agencies refused to share gang intelligence, saying it was secret information handed out on a "need to know" basis -- and the residents of Los Angeles don't need to know. A sergeant in the LAPD media department explains that detailed information about gang turf is "bad for business and bad for tourism."

If you ever take a late-afternoon stroll within a six-block radius of the Civic Center, you may notice that the area is populated by an unusually active bunch of whistlers. They're not happy; they're working. Lookouts for the local gangs' drug dealers use a variety of whistles to signal one another about an unsafe contact, an approaching black-and-white or an undercover officer who's been spotted nearby. And like the opening bell on Wall Street, a whistle can indicate that the "market" is open, that it's safe to start selling again.

Many gangs view downtown as the Grand Central Market for drug sales. One female gang member strolls her beat like a circus barker, saying to strangers, "What do you need? I got what you want." Two safe areas for "civilians": the Civic Center and Olvera Street, which are heavily patrolled by police and private security.

Areas to avoid MacArthur Park, which is claimed by three gangs -- Mara Salvatrucha and 18th Street, both powerhouses, and the smaller, scrappier Crazy Riders. The park is a legendary drug bazaar and is routinely the subject of city council debate and LAPD stings. Sandwiched between the two main gangs, Crazy Riders approached Mara Salvatrucha last summer, asking for a peace treaty in exchange for protection against 18th Street. Mara Salvatrucha agreed, but demanded that Crazy Riders relinquish a large, lucrative portion of MacArthur Park for drug trafficking.

It used to be so simple. Bloods hated crips, crips hated Bloods. Today, however, the huge profits available from trafficking in cocaine and the proliferation of Asian and Hispanic gangs have made such straightforward rivalries obsolete. The Mid City area contains a number of separate Crip gangs, some of whom are at war -- with each other.

Often, the combatants themselves don't even know why they're fighting. No one remembers, for example, why the Marvins and Mansfield, neighboring Crip gangs, are battling. A Mansfield apparently killed a Marvin in January, and the two rivals declared Venice Boulevard their Mason-Dixon line -- if a Marvin is caught walking on the wrong side of the boulevard, it will probably trigger a deadly confrontation.

The infusion of Hispanics into these traditionally black neighborhoods has forced gangs to reshuffle turf boundaries. In a twisted version of detente, this overcrowding has forced some black and Hispanic gangs to align with one another and share turf and lucrative drug-sales locations.
 

FastLane/S::G

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Sep 17, 2002
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#2
One of the most feared Hispanic crews in this area is Mara Salvatrucha. Mara means "large group of juveniles or a gang"; salva is short for Salvadoran; trucha is slang for "slick, smart and streetwise." Rumor has it that the founders of the gang were originally Central American guerrilla fighters, but current members say the true founders were longhaired heavy-metal freaks from San Salvador. Whichever version is true, there's no denying the ease with which the MS obtain high-powered, fully automatic weapons through their Central American ties. This firepower is why the MS are one of the most powerful -- and deadly -- gangs in Los Angeles.

But they may not even be the scariest gang on their block. That distinction could go to the 18th Street crew, which has wreaked such mayhem that the D.A. sought an injunction that basically makes it illegal for more than two 18th Streeters on a growing list to congregate in public. This extraordinary -- and legally suspect -- move has had some effect, however, pushing the 18th Streeters out of their usual digs and forcing them to establish outposts westward. Since real estate in West L.A. is at a premium for gangs, too, this may cause a few sparks.

It is already changing the complexion of the Westside. Driving through the upper-class neighborhoods of Cheviot Hills and Beverlywood, one gangbanger can see the gradual transformation. "It doesn't look like a bad neighborhood, but it is," he says. "It's not raggedy; it's nice. You'd think there ain't no gangs here, but they're in one of those houses, with the Lexus in the driveway."

Despite its reputation as L.A.'s version of Nebraska, the Valley harbors nearly as many hard-core gang members per square mile as South-Central Los Angeles. The primary concentration is in Pacoima. Nearby rivals are next door in San Fernando, which has only a few gangs but many members. Gangs of interest include the Shakin' Cat midgets, who began aficionados of rockabilly music, and to the east, the Vineland Boyz, who have earned a nasty reputation for multiple drive-bys -- a Pacoima gang member estimates they`ve killed 26 and left at least four paralyzed. These killings have, in a twisted way, earned the respect of the other local gangs because the shootings were unprovoked and indiscriminate.

Another gang to watch is Armenian Power. They're getting more powerful and more violent, according to an officer with LAPD CRASH (Community Response Against Street Hoodlums), who says they're moving drugs and weapons and are highly mobile. What most disturbs law enforcement is that Armenian Power is transcending turf and cooperating with other gangs to maximize profits. "I don't want to use a term like supergang, but they're crossing gang lines for different purposes," the CRASH officer reports. "They come together for that purpose, then disband again."

Asian gangs, the masters of home-invasion robberies, don't care about territory and recognize no boundaries. Many school-age Asian gang members still carry 4.0 GPAs, have regular jobs and are upwardly mobile, leaving their parents clueless about their gang involvement. Asian gangs also have connections to gambling clubs and are into extortion, blackmail and prostitution.

The largest and most active gang in the Valley is Asian Boyz, who were stung by mass arrests of alleged members last summer after a two-year multi-law-enforcement investigation. Their power bases are in the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys, but active members may drive in from hundreds of miles away to caper. They capitalize on the Asian cultural quirk of distrusting banks and storing large amounts of cash and jewelry at home. "They're cold and calculated. They rape, rob, torture and kill," says one LAPD detective. "They don't care about territory or names. They just want to rob you in your home, and they'll drive 20 miles to do it." Victims may be relatives or friends.

Adding even more spice to the Valley's volatile gang mix are intrafamily rivalries. The same family may have brothers, cousins, fathers and sons in different gangs. Sisters, aunts and cousins often intermarry among rivals. This can make family picnics a dicey proposition. Says a member of one prominent Pacoima gang, "When my family gets together, you have to watch for shooting."

Areas to avoid Hansen Dam (Blood territory); the stretch of Laurel Canyon Boulevard from Fox to Hubbard streets (weekend party/fight spot for local gangs of all stripes); gas stations at Laurel Canyon Boulevard and Interstate 5 and Terra Bella Avenue (favorite carjacking, robbery and beer-ran spots). Magic Mountain has also been the site of several gang clashes.

Last year, the westside was one of the hottest gang spots in the county, with a bloody feud accounting for at least 11 deaths.

According to a law-enforcement source, the war began when the Culver City Boyz, a Hispanic gang, claimed exclusive control of the Mar Vista Gardens housing project and purged all black gang members back in 1994. Members of the Venice Shoreline Crips prudently retreated to the Oakwood projects in Venice.

On January 1, 1997, a small-time dealer with Venice Shoreline ties exchanged gunfire with a Culver City member. This put both sides "on alert." Two months later, a Venice loyalist who bad been kicked out of his girlfriend's house moved in with his mother, who lived in Mar Vista Gardens. A short time later, he was shot at by the Culver City Boyz. The man's brother, a non-gang member who was an off-duty security guard, returned the fire; no one was killed, but an elderly Hispanic man caught in the crossfire took a bullet in the leg.

The Culver City Boyz retaliated for the shooting of this bystander, reasoning that someone black had to take a bullet because the Venice Shoreline member who had moved into Mar Vista Gardens knew he wasn't supposed to be there. Venice Shoreline responded that their member should have been allowed to visit his mother and, besides he had no other place to go.

Neither argument proved persuasive, and the shooting continued. In all, 11 died and about twice as many were injured. No Guns, an L.A.-based grassroots organization, finally helped broker a cease-fire in April that collapsed in June. By late August, No Guns helped lay the foundation for the current cease-fire, which seems to be holding. No Guns has not been so lucky with its own survival -- the group is on the verge of extinction because of a lack of funding.

A fragile mosaic of truces, converging interests and aggressive policing has brought an uneasy quiet, if not peace, to the area. The LAPD's Pacific Division and the Santa Monica PD are reaping the benefits; slowly, they have managed to cut down on the number of drug-sales spots in the area.

A few drug "superstores" are still doing turn-away business. A prime example is the Oakwood area in Venice, which remains busy, in part because it pulls upscale customers from Pacific Palisades, Marina del Rey, Brentwood and West L.A. According to one law-enforcement officer, the drug of choice is crack, but heroin (for snorting) is a close second. "They've heard that Oakwood's the place to score their dope," the officer says. Buyers come in Range Rovers, Jags and BMWs. Some even arrive by taxi.

Hot spots No surprises here. Venice Beach, the Boardwalk and the Santa Monica Pier host 30 to 40 different gangs on the weekends. The area is still claimed by Venice 13 and the Venice Shoreline Crips, but they now allow other gangs to come and enjoy the beach. They just can't do business there.
 

FastLane/S::G

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Sep 17, 2002
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KEY THE SCARY SCALE GOES FROM 1 TO 10, 1 BEING HOOLIGANS, 10 BEING COLD-BLOODED KILLERS.

Alley Boyz 1 Got thrown out by Mara Salvatrucha in a tiff over drug dealing. Still have a few members, but no turf.

Aztlan Trece 1 Like the Alley Boyz, they have been displaced by Mara Salvatrucha, who offered them a "franchise" opportunity -- take care of a chosen "dope spot" for a fee. Still have a few members.

Big Top Locos (BTLS) 3 An unaffiliated Hispanic gang. They currently have only about nine members and are trying to recruit taggers to fuel an upsurge in membership.

Main revenue source Selling rock cocaine on Court and Union, fake IDs on Alvarado and Temple. Favorite hangout A gas station, a park and an alley near Temple and Beverly.

Burlington Street Locos (BTNLS) 1 An independent Hispanic gang that once challenged the 18th Street gang for preeminence. Their territory is small, but they had a lot of members at one time. Rarely heard from now. Main revenue source They once sold mainly rock cocaine at the Pep Boys on the corner of Washington and Hoover but now sell all kinds of stuff there.

Crazy Riders (CRS) 5 Independent Hispanic gang Main revenue source Selling rock near 8th and Alvarado. They also traffic in take IDs, social-security cards and other documents.

Cuatro Flats (4 Flats) 6 Hispanic, independent Main revenue source Rock cocaine and marijuana, which they sell mostly in their neighborhood's housing projects.

Dogtown 4 A relatively small gang with a tenuous hold on their turf, which is drifting into "neutral" turf. No drugs. Also have a branch in Highland Park.

Drifters (DFS) 6 Hispanic, independent. Don't get along with 18th Street or Mara Salvatrucha. Broke away from 18th in a dispute over a feud with the Playboys. Main revenue source Marijuana and rock. Favorite hangout Dead-end streets off Pico, particularly Elden and Magnolia.

Easy Riders (ERS) 5 Hispanic, independent. Main revenue source Marijuana, which they sell on Western, Vermont and Venice.

Echo Park Trece (EXP) 8 Hispanic, independent. Territory is huge, extending north and encompassing Echo Park. Main revenue source Said to sell the best PCP in L.A.; also sell heroin, rock, acid and marijuana.

18th Street 9 A Hispanic gang, one of the most notorious in the L.A. Basin. Have too many cliques to mention. Most of their territory is off our maps. The target of a novel approach to attacking street gangs -- via court injunctions forbidding named members to congregate or even carry cell phones, pagers or walkie-talkies. Main revenue source They sell nothing but rock cocaine. Favorite dope spots Park View and 11th Street, Hoover and Venice, the area around Jefferson and La Brea, the small streets between La Brea and La Cienega south of the Santa Monica Freeway, 3rd and Kenmore. 8th and Broadway is their downtown hangout.

5th and Hill 3 Named for the approximate street boundaries of their turf, although they don't really feel constrained by boundaries. Main revenue source The prostitutes who work at 4th and Spring, who are apparently so profitable that the gang has no need to get involved in drugs. Gang members don't serve as pimps; they just collect a "tax" for allowing the women to work "their" street corners. Favorite hangout" The arcade on Broadway between 7th and 8th. That may be changing, though; shop owners are starting to call the cops when they see gang members gathering.

Harpies 7 Huge independent Hispanic gang, Started out as more of a motor cycle gang, a la the Hell's Angels -- their jackets even had a cupid on the back. Became more "militant" after early clashes with the emerging Mara Salvatrucha. Main revenue source Rock and heroin. Favorite hangout Always changing, because they get hit by the cops so often.

The Magicians Crew (T.M.C.) 1 Independent Hispanic gang, fairly inactive. Used to sell a lot of heroin and rock cocaine. Were also known as the Mickey Mouse Club.

Mara Salvatrucha (MS) 9 A large and violent Salvadoran gang with many cliques, including the Coronado Little Cycos, the Mid City Tiny Winos and the Witmer Street Locos. Main revenue source Selling marijuana at the park at Normandie and Olympic, Mariposa and 11th, Mariposa and Olympic, San Marino and Mariposa, San Marino and Fedora, 8th and Vermont, 8th and Berendo. Also plenty of speed and powder and rock cocaine. On Elden and San Marino, lots of marijuana and rock. Favorite hangouts Francis and Westmoreland, Leeward and Vermont, 8th and Normandie, Olympic and Normandie, 6th and Rampart, Park View and 9th, Coronado and 7th.

Orphans (OPHS) 5 Started off as a subgroup of 18th Street, but when 18th clashed with Mara Salvatrucha, the Orphans broke away. Now considered allies of MS. Fewer than 20 active members. Main revenue source Rock.

Playboys (PBS) 5 Hispanic, independent. Main revenue source Selling marijuana on Fedora and Normandie and at New Hampshire and Pico, Fedora and Pico. Favorite hangout Dino's at Pico and Berendo. Also gather at Dewey and Pico. Catalina and Pico and at the park on Venice and Normandie

Primera Flats 7 Independent Hispanic gang nestled next to the junction of the 10 and 101 freeways Main revenue source Selling PCP, heroin and rock in the projects.

Temple Street 4 Hispanic, independent. Main revenue source Rock cocaine. Favorite hangout Right off Coronado and Temple

Varrio Vista 7 Hispanic. independent. A fairly recent arrival to this side of L.A. An old gang that had faded from view until a couple of young members revived it several years ago. Main revenue source Rock acid, marijuana and PCP which they sell Echo Park.

Wanderers 6 main revenue source Rock Favorite hangout Park View and 2nd Street, mainly on weekends

Barrio St. Andrews (BSA) 4 Main revenue source Rock cocaine and marijuana. Favorite hangout St. Andrews, as well as 18th and Western.

Black Peace Stones 9 Neither Crip nor Blood, this black crew is an outpost of a huge Chicago gang. They share territory with Rollin' 20s, but their main turf is south of Jefferson. Currently warring with 18th Street and some of their Crip neighbors. Main revenue source Robbery and selling rock, marijuana and speed on August Street. Also work the park near Stevely. Favorite hangout Anywhere south of Jefferson and west of La Brea; area commonly referred to as "the Jungle."

By Yourself Hustler Crips 3 Not particularly active these days. Main revenue source Crack.

Easy Riders (ERS) 5 Hispanic, independent. Main revenue source Marijuana, which they sell on Western, Vermont and Venice.

Geer Gang Crips 6 Not the biggest, not the sleepiest gang, they coexist peacefully with 18th Street and get along with West Boulevard Crips. Main revenue source Marijuana, rock.

Harlem 30s Crips 9 A substantial, well-established gang with turf that extends far below this map's boundaries. Main revenue source Drugs of all kinds Carjacking, some weapons sales.

Harpies 7 Huge, independent Hispanic gang. Started out as essentially a motorcycle gang. Became more "militant" after clashes with the emerging Mara Salvatrucha. Main revenue source Rock and heroin, Favorite hangout Always changing, because they get hit by the cops so often.

Mansfield 7 One of several sets of Crips. High-powered members drive Lexuses. 600-series Mercedes-Benzes. Also have links to some hip-hop and rap artists Small group, but they watch out for each other. Main revenue source Drugs by the kilo. They also traffic in guns.

Marvin Gangster Crips 4 In danger of dying out a few years ago until several members were released from prison. Now in a deadly conflict with the Mansfield gang.

Mid City 4 Two gangs take this name. The Mid City Tiny Winos are a clique of Mara Salvatrucha. The Mid City Stoners are a Hispanic gang that clashes with both 18th and Mara Salvatrucha. Main revenue source Selling heroin and marijuana at Olympic and Ardmore and 11th and Ardmore.

Playboy Gangster Crips 7 Former Crips who have broken away. Some of the younger gangsters are reported to be heavily into smoking pot and PCP Main revenue source Robbery; also crack and marijuana.

Playboys (PBS) 5 Hispanic, independent. Main revenue source Selling marijuana on Fedora and Normandie and at New Hampshire and Pico, Fedora and Pico. Favorite hangout Dino's at Pico and Berendo. Also gather at Dewey and Pico, Catalina and Pico and at the park on Venice and Normandie.

Rollin' 20s Crips 8 Part of the Rollin' family of that have migrated eastward Very active recruiters and drug sellers. Law enforcement is nervous about their alignment with the Black Peace Stones. Main revenue source Drugs, weapons, street robberies.

Schoolyard Crips 6 A gang that deals everything and gets along with almost everyone -- even 18th Street. Main revenue source PCP, crack, marijuana.

Vatos Locos 2 Have only seven or eight members; spun off from an East L.A. gang that died out in the '80s. Main revenue source Rock.

West Boulevard Crips 7 Main revenue source Rock, marijuana. Also dabble in robbery and carjacking.

Witmer Street 2 Hispanic, independent. Pushed off turf by Mara Salvatrucha; now have only 9 or 10 members. Main revenue source Rock, sold only in a one-block area.

Alley Street Locos (ASTL) 4 A small and not very active gang that is forced share territory with both,Mara Salvatrucha and Armenian Power. Main revenue source Drugs, but they don't have the connections, the guns or the money to be major players. Favorite hangout Alcove Avenue and Barbara Ann Street.

Armenian Power (AP) 4 For this gang it`s all about the money. They don't waste time standing in the corner drinking malt liquor; they don`t look for fights with other gangs. They are efficient pragmatic businessmen. And they may dress like gangsters, but they drive lowered cherried-out BMWs and Lexuses. Main revenue source Drugs.
 

FastLane/S::G

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Sep 17, 2002
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Barrio Van Nuys (BVNS) 8 Aligned with Vanowen Street Locos. These two gangs have the largest territory and the largest numbers in this section of Van Nuys -- an estimated 300 to 400 members. Main revenue source Drugs. Favorite hangouts Delano Street and Vesper Avenue, Delano Street and Sylmar Avenue, Delano Street and Tyrone Avenue. The Van Nuys Recreation Center at Tyrone Avenue and Vanowen Street which they share with the Vanowen Street Locos.

Blythe Street (BST) 8 Very friendly with Valerio Street. These two gangs are closely aligned and comprise the second-largest gang in the Van Nuys area, with about 160 members. Main revenue source Cocaine. Says one CRASH officer, "Blythe Street sells rock like McDonald's sells hamburgers." Favorite hangouts and drug-sales spots The little dead-end streets off Brimfield and Blythe, Natick Avenue below Blythe, the corner of Willis Avenue and Chase Street, the corner of Willis Avenue and Rayen Street.

Columbus Street (CST) 8 Main revenue source Rock, with some marijuana. Favorite hangouts Columbus Street and the tiny twigs of side streets between Sunburst Street to the north and Parthenia Street and Parthenia Place to the south, particularly the intersections of Columbus and Rayen, Columbus and Chase, Columbus and Parthenia Street, Parthenia Street and Burnet Avenue.

Crips (Parthenia Park) 3 Even though the Crips are hugely outnumbered by Hispanic gangs, business is business, and the Crips are allowed to sell rock cocaine -- as long as they pay taxes to the Hispanic gangs who control the park,

Haskell Street Locos (HLS) 8 Hispanic. Favorite hangouts Intersection of Saticoy and Gloria: along Saticoy from Densmore to Gaviota.

Langdon Street (LST) 7 Hispanic. Friendly with Blythe Street and Valerio Street, with whom they share drug-sales territories, Main revenue source Rock, some marijuana. Favorite hangouts Langdon and Parthenia Street, Langdon and Cabrito Langdon and Nordhoff, Langdon and Rayen, Orion and Nordhoff, Orion and Rayen, Orion and Parthenia,

Lennox Street (LNX) 8 Hispanic. Aligned with Mexican 13, Valerio Street and Blythe Street Lennox and Langdon used to be friendly, but no more. As of this year, they've been shooting at each other, Main revenue source Rock.

Mexican 13 (Mex 13) 7 Small Hispanic gang friendly with Blythe Street and Valerio Sheet. Main revenue source Cocaine: they work part of the so-called crack corridor that runs parallel to the 405. Favorite hangouts Tobias Avenue and Rayen Street, Parthenia Street and Kester Avenue. Cedros Avenue and Rayen Street.

North Side 18th Street 9 A Hispanic gang, one of the most notorious in the L.A. Basin. Have too many cliques to mention. Most of their territory is off our maps. The target of a novel approach to attacking street gangs -- via court injunctions forbidding named members to congregate. Main revenue source Rock cocaine exclusively.

Valerio Street (VST) 8 Hispanic. The gang's main section of territory, Valerio Sheet, runs through Blythe Street territory, and the two gangs are considered one and the same by many members of outside gangs. This gang also frequents a series of cul-de-sacs near the intersection of Woodman Avenue and Valerio Street. Main revenue source Cocaine. Favorite hangouts Van Nuys Boulevard and Valerio Street, Van Nuys Recreation Center at Vanowen Street and Tyrone Avenue.

Vanowen Street Locos (VSL) 8 Hispanic, They share their turf with Barrio Van Nuys; the two seem to be on the verge of becoming one large gang. Main revenue source Rock Favorite hangouts Vanowen and Gloria, which is also the site of a shrine where a gang member was killed; Tyrone and Vanowen: Gloria Avenue, from Victory to where it dead-ends at Enadia.

Culver City Boyz 9 Hispanic. They tend to play and do their business close to "home" -- the Mar Vista Gardens housing project. A huge area and a huge gang that claims upwards of 800 members. Rivals speak with fear about getting caught in their territory. A major battle may be in the offing between the Boyz and the 18th Street crew, who are moving west. The current dividing line: La Cienega. Main revenue source Crack (to upscale market), marijuana.

Santa Monica Graveyard Crips 1 Black. A Crips set that shares turf with the SM 13; also have a tiny enclave off Pico Boulevard. Dwindling membership. Main revenue source Drugs of all kinds.

Santa Monica 13 (SM 13) 1 Hispanic. Share a postage-stamp-size turf with the Santa Monica Graveyard, a Crips set, and are besieged by the LAPD and by other gangs. "They're quickly moving from being gang members to being professional victims -- of other gangs," says one officer. Main revenue source Crack, marijuana and cheap black-tar heroin.

Venice Shoreline Crips 9 Black. A Crips set that shares the Venice Oakwood projects with Venice 13. Said to be developing "franchises" throughout the Westside; also spreading into the Valley. Main revenue source Crack, marijuana, heroin, PCP

Venice 13 (V13) 8 Hispanic. Share Oakwood projects -- and drug traffic -- with Venice Shoreline Crips. They arid the Shoreline Crips bargained a cease-fire with an array of law-enforcement agencies in exchanged for a new community center in the Oakwood project. Main revenue source Crack, marijuana, heroin, PCP
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#5
Burlington Locos (BTNLS) 1 An independent Hispanic gang that once challenged the 18th Street gang for preeminence. Their territory is small, but they had a lot of members at one time. Rarely heard from now. Main revenue source They once sold mainly rock cocaine at the Pep Boys on the corner of Washington and Hoover but now sell all kinds of stuff there.
HA HA YEAH RIGHT...THE HOOD IS STILL STRONG AND THEM EIGHTEEN STREETERS WILL NEVER TAKE THE HOOD OUT...THE PROJECTS BELONG TO US...SO DOES HALF OF THE PICO UNION DISTRICT..
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#8
Orphans (OPHS) 5 Started off as a subgroup of 18th Street, but when 18th clashed with Mara Salvatrucha, the Orphans broke away. Now considered allies of MS. Fewer than 20 active members. Main revenue source Rock.
NOW, I AINT INTO THE NETBANGING SHIT BUT THESE LAMES AINT ABOUT SHIT...THEY USED TO BE ALL BUDDY BUDDY'S WITH 18 ST,THEY DUMPED ON ME BEFORE ON VENICE & UNION WITH A GAUGE.. THEM FOOLS GOT TAKEN OUT WAYS BACK,THATS WHY THEY ALL UP ON MARA'S NUTS BY MCHARTHUR PARK,THEM LAMES ORIGINALLY STARTED IN PICO UNION NEAR REDSHIELD PARK...DAMN YOU BRINGING BACK SOME MEMORIES
 
Oct 10, 2002
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#13
MARA SALVATRUCHA IS BIG ON THE EAST COAST, ESPECIALLY IN NYC SUFFOLK COUNTY WHERE THEYRE AT WAR WITH NORTENO TRANSPLANTS

SAME NORTE SUR WAR GOIN ON IN MINNEAPOLIS, DES MOINES, CHICAGO, RALEIGH / DURHAM, S/W DETROIT, THE MEXICAN SECTION SPANISH HARLEM
 
May 6, 2002
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#14
What about DC/Va tho? My cousin-in-law is Salvadoean and his whole Family is affiliated with some spanish named gang I think its the same but aint sure I know they got 18st out there but they aint really a factor always gettin beat up by all the other mexicans and shit. And some crazy fucks used to always roll thru the hood late night and tag up "Vatos Locos" they was funny tho cuz nobody ever saw them.
 

LOOTER oF tHE NEW CHURCH

IGNORANT ASSHOLE PIECE OF SHIT
Apr 22, 2002
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www.stevie-wonder.com
#15
From the graffiti on the 101 in downtown LA alone it is quite apparent that BNLS is still active. The way that list hypes up 18 st saying pretty much that ALL or even MOST of the fools and clicks who bang it are rated "9"... shit seems way faulty to me! I thought this list was bullshit the first time I read it off the MCS site and I still think its almost all fuckin backwards.

LocoSide said:
MARA SALVATRUCHA IS BIG ON THE EAST COAST
"BIG"? That's definitely an exaggeration. Present? Probably, but not "big".

LocoSide said:
SAME NORTE SUR WAR GOIN ON IN MINNEAPOLIS, DES MOINES, CHICAGO, RALEIGH / DURHAM, S/W DETROIT, THE MEXICAN SECTION SPANISH HARLEM
hardly the SAME for so many reasons...
 
L

LAzoo

Guest
#16
about Longbeach.......
which is part of the LA county....

snoop & the dpg's are from E/s longbeach, who claim to be from gang sets like rollin 20's , insanes , etc..
and eastside longbeach is made out to be some really bad place, but i dont hear much about it.

does anyone know about the gangs n shit in longbeach??
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#18
Rollin' 20s Crips 8 Part of the Rollin' family of that have migrated eastward Very active recruiters and drug sellers. Law enforcement is nervous about their alignment with the Black Peace Stones. Main revenue source Drugs, weapons, street robberies.

nah see, there's the Rollin 20's who are down with the Black P Stone Bloods(yes bloods) they funk with the Harlem 30's

Rollin 20s crips are in Long Beach, i been there and it seems to be the same exact hood as Insane Crips, but i don't know

and my sister lived in Venice, i been to Oakwood, never seen a project there

and there a deep gang, but i don't think they have too much opposition besides cats from other hoods goin to the boardwalk...

i know the V13's and Culver City Boyz be goin at it like fuck tho...writing on the walls
but i ain't from LA, this is just what is een
 
May 2, 2002
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#19
YOUNGMOE said:

and my sister lived in Venice, i been to Oakwood, never seen a project there
Section 8 housing in LA for the most part looks like cheap apartments so you could have mistaken a project for a regular apartment. The projects in Pacoima look like the projects on the east coast except it's only like 2 stories tall.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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www.mexica-movement.org
#20
Armenian Power (AP) 4 For this gang it`s all about the money. They don't waste time standing in the corner drinking malt liquor; they don`t look for fights with other gangs. They are efficient pragmatic businessmen. And they may dress like gangsters, but they drive lowered cherried-out BMWs and Lexuses. Main revenue source Drugs.
THIS MAY HAVE BEEN TRUE IN THE PAST BUT THESE FOOLS ARE GANGBANGING FULLY NOW...THEY HANG OUT IN THAT POOL HALL ON LOS FELIX BLVD IN ATWATER BY TOONERVILES HOOD RIGHT OFF THE 5 FREEWAY...THEY HAVE SHAVED HEADS AND DRESS LIKE GANGSTERS,THEY LOOK LIKE STRAIGHT CHICANOS,,,...THEYVE BEEN DUMPING ON FOOLS TOO,SHIT CAME OUT ON THE NEWS WHEN THEY STABBED TO DEATH THAY YOUNGSTER IN FRONT OF THE HIGH SCHOOL..THEM FOOLS ARE CLAIMING TO BE SURENOS,THEY CLAIM APX3,WHAT A TRIP