It's on and craccin in L.A. County!

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Nov 1, 2005
8,178
820
0
South Los Angeles Residents Urged to Aid Probe of Triple Homicide
Black leaders seek community action and plan a summit with their Latino counterparts.
By Ashley Surdin, Times Staff Writer
July 8, 2006

Community leaders urged residents of a shaken South Los Angeles neighborhood Friday to help police find two gunmen responsible for the slayings of three people, including a 10-year-old boy.

"The homicide of our children has to be the No. 1 priority, and if the adults of the community won't step forward and get it under control, it's not going to change," said Lita "Sister" Herron, spokeswoman for Mothers on the March. "We have to be unified. These are our children dying at the hands of our children. It's a disgrace, a hurtful, shameful disgrace."


Herron was joined by other black leaders during a news conference at the East 49th Street home where Larry Marcial, 22; his nephew David Marcial, 10; and a neighbor, Luis Cervantes, 17, were killed. David's brother, Sergio Marcial Jr., 12, was wounded in the June 30 shooting.

Police said two gunmen, armed with automatic weapons, got out of a car and shot the victims point-blank on the sidewalk before fleeing. No arrests have been made, and investigators have not established a motive. A $105,000 reward has been offered by the city and county for information about the gunmen.

Activists, concerned that the violence might be race-related, announced plans for an emergency summit of black and Latino leaders to address long-standing tensions between the two communities. The event is scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesday at the Lucy Florence Coffeehouse in Leimert Park Village.

"We're not saying it's racially motivated," said Earl Ofari Hutchinson of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable about the attack. But "we're calling for a summit to reduce tensions."

Also Friday, several dozen area residents were expected to join the candlelight "Black & Brown Unity Walk" beginning at 46th Street and South Central Avenue to honor the shooting victims, said Najee Ali, executive director of Project Islamic HOPE. He organized the walk with the National Action Network and the Latino & African American Leadership Alliance.

"The shooting was a tragedy that we hope will not be repeated in retaliatory shootings or violence," he said. "The walk gives a visible display of community unity to show that the majority of African Americans and Latinos do live side by side peacefully" and gives residents "an outlet to voice their rage in a constructive … manner."

Los Angeles Councilwoman Jan Perry, who represents the area, said the community's first priority should be helping police find the killers.

"Anything that opens doors and builds bridges in an ongoing relationship is a good thing, but first and foremost, come together to find the people who did this," she said.

Miguel Marcial, 39, a cousin of David Marcial's father, said the unity walk and summit would help bring peace to the community. He said he believes the shootings were neither gang-related nor racially motivated, but rather a case of mistaken identity.

"We have a lot of friends who are African Americans," Marcial said. "We've lived here for 25 years, and our families have never experienced anything like this."

The gatherings are "good, because we need peace here," he added. "We're neighbors. We have to live together."
 
D

DaSlimReaper

Guest
FleaJ K said:
Lol @ i never said... muthafuca i dont give a fuc wut u said first of all u fucin geek, with a name like Josh we know u's a gottdam nerd from tha oakland hills, doin all these crime statistic researches n shit rofl, it dont matter about those stats, LA is a big ass city it got good parts and bad, they taking the good parts of LA into account along with tha bad, take the crime statistics for south central LA and its shittin all over oakland or any other of tha gay ass cities u named, Compton had tha most homicides in tha nation last year, yeah that says a lot about it fallin off huh? oakland never has the top homicides ever , sorry fag, try again u stay losin

Neither has L.A.. You ain't from Compton, you just live close by there, like how I live by East Palo Alto(Who had the homidice rate in 1992) and by Richmond(Which was the most dangerous city in Cali for 2004).. Quit perpin Patrick. And since you wanna nit pick over good and bad parts, be my guest. Oakland has it's good parts too. South Central is the segregated part of the city, of course more crime tends to shift there. South L.A is 13 % of L.A right? OK, that's roughly 500,000 people. 43% of 487 homicides is only 209 murders. Per capita that is around 41 per 100,000(not that high for a ghetto).. Now let's take East Oakland.. East Oakland, being the biggest part of Oakland, then the hills. East Oakland has a population of 82,943 people. Oakland has a population of about 400,000 in all. 2005 recorded 94 homicides, exactly 70 of them occuring in East Oakland! Do the math cuzzo. That's 77 homicides for every 100,000 residents, which is waaay higher than South Central L.A's and about the same as Compton's(where you're not from) and it has only gotten worse(through out the whole city) this year while Compton and L.A's is steady going down. You shouldn't of even tried to break it down like that. I thought L.A was mostly hoods? What happened to East L.A, and West L.A(didn't they start the crips?). Guess they all ain't shit now.. Chicago doesn't seem to have that problem, being that they used to be the murder capital and they're almost as big as L.A and their homicide rate is still higher than L.A's. And what about Long Beach? Long Beach is bigger than Oakland and always has way less murders, they average 10 per 100,000. Thought they were hard. Like I said, all the hoods down there are turning pussy.

P.S, and if you check Oakland's 30 year crime trend and the history of Morgan Quinto rankings you'd see that Oakland has been in the top 25 a lot more than Compton, just about every year while Compton is in and out. By no means am I saying that Oakland is the hardest, just that L.A is soft..
 

SLICC RICC

Encapuchado
Jan 4, 2005
5,694
78
0
45
DaSlimReaper said:
L.A is soft..
DONT YOU GET TIRED OF GETTIN CLOWNED JOSHUA??? DONT YOU GET TIRED OF PUTTIN YOUR IDIOTIC COMMENTS WHERE ALL CAN SEE??? I WISH YOU WERE ON THE CORNER OF VINEYARD N 17TH THE OTHER NIGHT, DOWN THE STREET FROM MY HOUSE, JUSS TO SEE HOW THAT FOO WAS FACE DOWN... IT WAS A SAD AND MESSY SITUATION... L.A IS FAR FROM SOFT, LIL BOY... BUT A CHUMP THAT SPENDS ALL HIS TIME RESEARCHING CRIME ON THE NET INSTEAD OF COMMITING IT OR PREVENTING IT WOULDNT KNOW THAT... BEEEYATCH...
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
39,741
12,147
113
46
Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
saying LA is soft is ridiculous as fuck.

you got more to worry about than just black people in LA, which isnt the case w/ oakland

having walked through the bad areas of both la and oakland like i live there or some shit, ill say i felt more at ease in oakland amongst black people then having to worry about 19th streeters runnin up on me on some "where you from" shit every block.
 
D

DaSlimReaper

Guest
SLICC RICC said:
DONT YOU GET TIRED OF GETTIN CLOWNED JOSHUA??? DONT YOU GET TIRED OF PUTTIN YOUR IDIOTIC COMMENTS WHERE ALL CAN SEE??? I WISH YOU WERE ON THE CORNER OF VINEYARD N 17TH THE OTHER NIGHT, DOWN THE STREET FROM MY HOUSE, JUSS TO SEE HOW THAT FOO WAS FACE DOWN... IT WAS A SAD AND MESSY SITUATION... L.A IS FAR FROM SOFT, LIL BOY... BUT A CHUMP THAT SPENDS ALL HIS TIME RESEARCHING CRIME ON THE NET INSTEAD OF COMMITING IT OR PREVENTING IT WOULDNT KNOW THAT... BEEEYATCH...
Why does this Beaner keep fucking with me? And stop sucking Patrick's dick, calling me Joshua and shit, you must like black dick huh Jose? Fuckin fag.. And you from West L.A anyways, why am I talking to you, you ain't even from the hood, you from Hollywood and shit.

And to the other Gas One dude who's been in Oakland and L.A and is more scared of L.A because of the beaners, you're a fuckin coward, that's why you don't feel safe. I feel safe every where, especially L.A, L.A is a nice place to visit. Oakland isn't exactly a tourist attraction.
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
39,741
12,147
113
46
Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
DaSlimReaper said:
And to the other Gas One dude who's been in Oakland and L.A and is more scared of L.A because of the beaners, you're a fuckin coward, that's why you don't feel safe. I feel safe every where, especially L.A, L.A is a nice place to visit. Oakland isn't exactly a tourist attraction.
you may be the stupidest nigga on siccness.

im not "more scared" of any place. LA is worse than oakland, regardless of your little murder rate statistic. and thats based on me bieng in both places. YOU aint gettin killed (cuz you dont do shit, not because youre a super gangster) , so dont worry bout statistics.

thats enough of tryna sound hard on the net. saying "LA is soft" shows how stupid you are.

niggas with census reports to validify they hood kill me.
 
D

DaSlimReaper

Guest
Gas One said:
you may be the stupiedest nigga on siccness.

im not "more scared" of any place. LA is worse than oakland, regardless of your little murder rate statistic. and thats based on me bieng in both places. YOU aint gettin killed, so dont worry bout statistics.

thats enough of tryna sound hard on the net.
You ain't grew up in either place so all you can go by is stats. You ain't in either city and you haven't been able to experience just how they both get down fully. A 2 or 3 day trip to either place won't cut it, all you can go by is stats, and stats don't lie. You live in Chula Vista anyways, even Glendale had more murders than ya'll, why are you even a part of the conversation? Why am I arguing with a bunch of geeks from the suburbs? I was talking to Wattsup, who I consider a formidable foe just for the simple fact that he's dumb as fuck, but he makes it seem as if he knows what he's talking about. It's obvious that you suburbian geeks (Gas One, SLicc Ricc) don't know shit about any inner urban community (Not gay ass West L.A or Chula Vista) so I'm gonna ignore ya'll, especially some geek that gets easily scared by a neighborhood full of skraps, hahahaha!..

Edit: funny how you edited your comment to try and sound more witty by adding on extra, but you still look stupid, hahaha! Ya'll try too hard on here with the geek shit, I swear.
 
Jun 5, 2006
186
0
0
49
Neither has L.A.. You ain't from Compton, you just live close by there, like how I live by East Palo Alto(Who had the homidice rate in 1992) and by Richmond(Which was the most dangerous city in Cali for 2004).. Quit perpin Patrick. And since you wanna nit pick over good and bad parts, be my guest. Oakland has it's good parts too. South Central is the segregated part of the city, of course more crime tends to shift there. South L.A is 13 % of L.A right? OK, that's roughly 500,000 people. 43% of 487 homicides is only 209 murders. Per capita that is around 41 per 100,000(not that high for a ghetto).. Now let's take East Oakland.. East Oakland, being the biggest part of Oakland, then the hills. East Oakland has a population of 82,943 people. Oakland has a population of about 400,000 in all. 2005 recorded 94 homicides, exactly 70 of them occuring in East Oakland! Do the math cuzzo. That's 77 homicides for every 100,000 residents, which is waaay higher than South Central L.A's and about the same as Compton's(where you're not from) and it has only gotten worse(through out the whole city) this year while Compton and L.A's is steady going down. You shouldn't of even tried to break it down like that. I thought L.A was mostly hoods? What happened to East L.A, and West L.A(didn't they start the crips?). Guess they all ain't shit now.. Chicago doesn't seem to have that problem, being that they used to be the murder capital and they're almost as big as L.A and their homicide rate is still higher than L.A's. And what about Long Beach? Long Beach is bigger than Oakland and always has way less murders, they average 10 per 100,000. Thought they were hard. Like I said, all the hoods down there are turning pussy.

P.S, and if you check Oakland's 30 year crime trend and the history of Morgan Quinto rankings you'd see that Oakland has been in the top 25 a lot more than Compton, just about every year while Compton is in and out. By no means am I saying that Oakland is the hardest, just that L.A is soft..
south l.a. is just like oakland in that certain areas of south LA have higher murders u dumbfuc, LA is tha hardest city in amerikkka period, no other city burned they whole city down rioted and killed 52 people in 3 days, sorry u will never win, Watts is even more violent then Compton, certain areas of South Central is more violent than Compton u dumbass, nobody down here give a fuc about compton, theres places in LA harder then Compton, long beach? who said long beach wuz hard beside snoop? long beach as always been the "vallejo" of LA, shit aint considered hard at all

lol @ west LA started crips wut tha fuc u talkin bout? this shit just shows u know nothin bout LA or tha streets, Crips started on tha eastside of South Central
give up tha patric shit, that shits gettin old Josh (which is yo real name lol)

gay area is soft, white people make up the majority of oakland now, lol face it u capichino drinkin yoga practicin fag, ,u went from kansas to tha gay area and u still gay joshua give it up
 
Jun 5, 2006
186
0
0
49
u wont see big cities like Los Angeles, New York , San Francisco on tha top of those dangerous city list for the simple fact that they have good areas outnumbering the bad obviously.......

thats why u see Compton and not LA

alot of latinos have moved into the south l.a. area, the blac areas have tha highest murder rates, just like in east oakland tha highest murder rates is in deep east, not tha fruitvale and tha 30s and 40s (latino populated areas) u fucin dumbass, so actually LA got more homicides, ha ha u lose again u fucin geek
 
Jun 5, 2006
186
0
0
49
Los Angeles: Los Angeles Police Department officers were assaulted with guns in three separate incidents in Watts, Sunday evening. Officers fired at suspects in two of the incidents, hitting one gunman.

�The situation was very chaotic,� said LAPD spokesman Lieutenant Paul Vernon. �Within a span of 90 minutes, our officers were shot at two times and had a gun pointed at them in a third incident. It shows the dangers that confront officers on a daily basis.�

The first incident occurred around 5 PM while officers from the Southeast Police Station were monitoring a gathering of 200 gang members at the Rosecrans Recreation Park, in the 800 block of West 149th Street. Local residents had reported the gathering to police.

Three officers, who were assigned to the gang unit, noticed one Black male holding his waistband and running from the officers. Two of the officers chased the man through a gymnasium, amid a crowd of people. When the suspect turned and pointed a .357 magnum revolver at police, Officer Jeffrey Bright, 34, fired several rounds.

The gunman, a 16 year-old juvenile, was wounded and taken to a local hospital in serious condition. He was identified as a 16-year-old juvenile. Police recovered the revolver at the scene. The juvenile will face charges of attempted murder of a police officer.

While tending to the juvenile, officers came under fire from another location in the park. They did not return fire, and no one was injured. Two other men were later arrested on parole charges and a juvenile warrant, but neither were directly linked to the shots fired at the officers.

Within ninety minutes of the first shooting, in a separate incident, two patrol officers heard shots fired near 103rd Street and Grape Street, then saw a silver GMC Envoy speeding toward them. The officers followed the SUV to an alley near Croesus Avenue, where the SUV slowed and two passengers ran out in separate directions.

Officer Jon Aufdemberg, 38, chased one of the men into the alley, where the suspect tried to scale a fence. The suspect followed the officer's orders to stop and climb down from the fence, but the suspect pointed a handgun at Officer Aufdemberg, who fired. The suspect did not fire, but ran north, over a fence, toward Lou Dillon Avenue.

Meanwhile, the SUV drove away, and officers lost sight of the second passenger who had run from the SUV. Despite a perimeter and exhaustive search with police dogs, neither suspect nor gun was found.

The SUV was found a short time later in the Imperial Courts Housing Development, 11500 block of Mona Avenue. The rental vehicle had been stolen at gunpoint earlier in the evening while its driver was stopped at a stop sign at 105th Street and Wilmington Avenue. Two robbers had been armed with military-style rifles, and they drove away from the carjacking with two more accomplices.

Detectives found expended casings to a 7.62 mm assault weapon in the street at 102nd Street and Grape Street, the vicinity where the officers had heard gunfire prior to seeing the SUV.

Force Investigation Division is conducting the investigation into the two, unrelated officer-involved shootings.

The South Los Angeles Bureau of the LAPD was placed on tactical alert for several hours as additional personnel were needed from multiple divisions to address the incidents, and handle other calls for service.


thats a 7.62 mm , thats wut i'ma put in yah azz joshua in yah azz!


7.62mm assualt rifles


7.62mm niggaz out here is fucin with some futuristic video game shit

ya'll gay area niggaz need to step ya'll weapons up nigga fucin with them wac ass afghan AKz, my niggaz out here is fucin wit russians n shit

in Watts tha pigs get dumped on daily, Watts is tha most notorious ghetto in tha U.S.

6 Gilbert's counsel's inflammatory comments did not end there. She continued: "Mr. Gilbert cannot and will not be a snitch. He -- a snitch in Jordan Downs will be killed, plain and simple. It's chilling and frightening, but that is the truth. In this case, the silence is screaming the truth at you."
http://cl.bna.com/cl/9850100.htm


Moving aggressively to break up what authorities described as a massive criminal empire being run by veterans of a powerful Watts street gang, FBI agents and police officers in four states arrested dozens of suspects and seized large amounts of cash and drugs Wednesday.

By early Wednesday morning, 11 suspects were in custody in Los Angeles, and scores more were being arrested in Oklahoma City, Minneapolis and Jackson, Miss. All told, federal prosecutors announced the indictments of 49 people, most charged with crack cocaine trafficking and all linked to Los Angeles street gangs.

Nora Manella, the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, said that 28 of the people arrested are from Southern California and that all the indictments grew out of investigations into Los Angeles street gangs. Although Manella did not identify the gangs, sources close to the case said that many of the suspects--including one who is still at large--are affiliated with the Grape Street Crips, a major Los Angeles gang that has long dominated criminal activity in the Jordan Downs housing project.

Indictments and complaints unsealed in all four cities--and comments by top law enforcement officials--painted a portrait of a multimillion-dollar crime syndicate using stash houses, storage lockers and couriers for its illegal operations. Cocaine smuggled into the United States from Mexico was routed to Los Angeles, where it was then shipped to cities across the country, said Charlie J. Parsons, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Los Angeles office.

The organization trafficked in millions of dollars worth of drugs, sending cocaine and crack to cities in the Midwest and South and then shipping back huge sums of cash to Los Angeles, where it was used to buy more drugs from Mexican suppliers, officials said.

"What we're dealing with here is not a bunch of teenage gangbangers," Parsons said. "These are entrepreneurs. They're out to make money."

All of the officials stressed that street crime and drug trafficking are national problems, but that their roots are particularly deep in Los Angeles.

"These charges demonstrate that criminal activities of Los Angeles-based street gangs are a national problem," Manella said. "Narcotics traffickers who cut their teeth on the streets of L.A. are branching out to the South, the Midwest and the Northeast."
 
D

DaSlimReaper

Guest
Ok dawg, I can't keep going back and fourth with you, especially when you post all that shit, I can't respond to all that shit. How about this? I admit that L.A County used to be hard, Compton and South L.A held it down in the early 90's, but ya'll slowly started falling off, now ya'll finally hit ground zero and it ain't no get back. Ain't no way that you can deny that Bay crime is rising while L.A crime is falling, look at 2006 stats so far! Yea, it seems geeky that I'm lookin this shit up(as are you, so shut that shit up, lookin up pictures of guns n shit, LMAO!) but this is the Net. It ain't like I can quote some real OG's for you who knows, or we can't visit each other's blocks(Even though I know you ain't from Watts, you from Vallejo Patrick, but I wouldn't waiste the time anyways, you're just a funny cat on the net). This is the only way thru a computer for me to prove my point, and I feel that I have, so I'm done. You just posted some long ass shit that's irrelevant to what I was sayin. In the triple O's L.A is soft, and that is a fact. You can't even lean to Compton anymore(which is the hardest town out there) coz this year, their crime rate dropped more than the city of L.A's, hahaha. And nigga how you gonna dig up pictures of somebody elses guns, you don't own no shit like that, hahahaha! Watts is the most dangerous ghetto in the U.S? Ha! Shit ain't even the most dangerous ghetto in Cali nigga you watch too much Waist Deep you fruity ass "grape" st. nigga. You need to just go ahead and shoot yourself, lol!.
 
Jun 5, 2006
186
0
0
49
i aint even seen waist deep yet, but obviously u bac to gettin shit from movies and shit again, if Watts wuz a seperate city it would be #1 every year on tha most dangerous citys, heres wutz wrong with yo lil calculation

South Central is the segregated part of the city, of course more crime tends to shift there. South L.A is 13 % of L.A right? OK, that's roughly 500,000 people. 43% of 487 homicides is only 209 murders. Per capita that is around 41 per 100,000(not that high for a ghetto).. Now let's take East Oakland.. East Oakland, being the biggest part of Oakland, then the hills. East Oakland has a population of 82,943 people. Oakland has a population of about 400,000 in all. 2005 recorded 94 homicides, exactly 70 of them occuring in East Oakland! Do the math cuzzo. That's 77 homicides for every 100,000 residents, which is waaay higher than South Central L.A's and about the same as Compton's(where you're not from) and it has only gotten worse(through out the whole city) this year while Compton and L.A's is steady going down
first of all u can't put up the population of the whole south central 500,000 against just east oakland 80,000, if u wanted to measure the WHOLE south central u would have to measure it against East Oakland, West Oakland, and North Oakland combined, now lets take out 100,000 for the Oakland Hills that leaves u with 300,000 (i doubt oakland hills has 100 thou population but i'll give that to u also) , lets say ALL 94 homicides occured in tha flat lands, i'll give u the benefit of the doubt, thats 94 homicides for 300,000 people that aint shit compared to South LA's 209 for 500,000 do the math u nerd ha ha ha, yeah u right LA aint nothin wut it used to be, niggaz have moved outta town and set up shop in other spots, LA is tha gangsta capital always will be, u lose u gay area faggot (even tho ure from kansas), Compton aint tha hardest town out here anyway, tha eastside of south central and Watts is way more grimey then tha cpt. Watts is historically the most notorious ghetto westside of mississippi thats a fact, Watts is tha poorest area west of chicago that is another fact, northeastern Watts (grape st.) area wuz on tha top 10 poorest area's in tha country, no other area from Cali made the list, the rest of the areas on the list were mostly chicago.
time to pac yo bags up josh, and take yo gay lover pat with u bac to kansas just clic yo heel 3 times and say there aint no place like home
 
Nov 1, 2005
8,178
820
0
looks like its crakin in county....1,600 Brawl at L.A. County Jail Sites
By Stuart Silverstein, Times Staff Writer
July 14, 2006

Racially charged fights involving more than 1,600 black and Latino inmates flared briefly Thursday afternoon at Pitchess Detention Center facilities in Castaic.

Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies said 16 inmates suffered minor injuries and were taken to hospitals for treatment.


Details on the fights remained sketchy late Thursday, and authorities said they knew of no specific event that triggered the brawls aside from long-simmering racial tensions.

The center's east and north facilities were affected. The first fight started at 1:45 p.m. in four dormitories of the North Facility, and was broken up by deputies after 12 minutes of inmates punching, shoving and throwing mattresses at each other.

The second fight began at 3:30 p.m. in 11 dormitories of the East Facility and continued for 20 minutes.

In both brawls, deputies fired rubber bullets and pepper balls at inmates to suppress the melees.

About 1,900 maximum-security prisoners are housed at the East Facility, and roughly 1,800 medium-security inmates live in the North Facility.

Thursday's brawls came two days after the Sheriff's Department and budget officials unveiled six proposals for building and funding more jail facilities to reduce crowding and to eliminate the early release of thousands of inmates.

The county's facilities, officials say, are outdated and ill-equipped to handle security for the number of dangerous inmates they house. In addition, a federal judge has ordered the county to relieve overcrowding at the downtown Men's Central Jail.

Earlier this year, fighting swept from one county lockup to another and involved thousands of inmates. Two prisoners were killed and more than 100 were injured.
 
Nov 1, 2005
8,178
820
0
Deputies Redeployed to Calm Compton
Sheriff Lee Baca acts after a weekend of 20 gang-related shootings and four deaths.
July 26, 2006

Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca redeployed deputies to Compton on Tuesday in response to a bloody weekend that left four dead and numerous people wounded, including two young girls.

The move restores the additional staff Baca ordered into the gang-plagued city earlier this year after homicide levels in 2005 reached near-record rates. In recent weeks, sheriff's officials said, staffing had dwindled as some task force members were promoted or transferred.

"Clearly, the past week has shown that the community is not stable enough to sustain a reduction in staff," Baca said Tuesday. "We have moved personnel back into Compton and we will keep them there … until we have a clear indication that the community is stable."

The violent weekend — which saw 20 gang-related shootings — capped several weeks of escalating gang activity in a city that had seen a dramatic drop in shootings and homicides since the task force was created in January.

Through early July, sheriff's officials said, there were 13 gang-related killings in Compton, compared to 38 for the same period the year before. Shootings were down by more than 50%.

As of Sunday, there had been 21 homicides in the city and another three killings within blocks of the city boundaries in unincorporated areas also patrolled by sheriff's deputies. Nearly all of the killings are thought to be gang-related. A year earlier, the total at this point in the year was 40 in the city and four nearby.

Baca said some of the recent violence appears to have been racially motivated — with black gang members attacking Latinos and Latino gang members attacking blacks.

He said the racial overtones have reinforced his belief that it would be "morally wrong" not to assist Compton despite the city's inability to pay for more deputies.

"There's no question about it that the additional personnel have had a huge impact in blocking off opportunity and access to victims," he said, calling some of the attacks "callously random."

"It's: 'We're going to hit someone who is an innocent person, but that doesn't concern us at all.' There are no rules of engagement with these gang members," he said. "They are reckless, wild and need to be stopped."

Among the recent victims: two girls, ages 2 and 3, who were wounded in a drive-by shooting Friday night while playing in their family's frontyard.

The renewed level of violence stunned elected officials and residents who had hoped the downturn in crime would last.

At a City Council meeting Tuesday, Councilwoman Yvonne Arceneaux's voice cracked with emotion when she described the scene of a weekend shooting that killed a 19-year-old man on the street where she lives.

"There were people standing outside, devastated by this," she said. "One 15-year-old was outside and he was pacing the sidewalk and refused to come inside, he was so upset."

Arceneaux said she wanted "some reassurance from the sheriff that this mayhem" would be stopped, adding that "gang members had sent the word out" that more attacks were planned.

Lt. Joe Gooden, who has worked out of the Compton station for about 18 months, told council members that the redeployment would be "ongoing and dedicated here" and specifically targeted to gang activity.

For his part, Baca said he thought the success earlier this year in Compton validates his decision to move resources from elsewhere in the county — a move he said he thinks has so far been supported by the local community and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, which oversees his budget.

Compton, which has about 96,000 residents in 10 square miles, contracts with the Sheriff's Department for 78 patrol deputies at a cost of about $14 million a year.

As in all other cities under contract, those services are augmented by divisions that work countywide, such as homicide and gang-suppression teams.
 
Nov 1, 2005
8,178
820
0
Police cite race in rash of shootings
Black-Latino attacks rise
By Mary Frances Gurton Staff Writer

PASADENA - Twenty-year-old Acevedo Fortino was shot to death in late August while trying to stop a racially motivated attack on East Orange Grove Boulevard in Pasadena, according to police.

Eight days later, Erica Hindman, 21, was the unintended victim of a bullet fired by a Pasadena police officer investigating a similar racially motivated shooting incident in the 1800 block of North Marengo Avenue.

City leaders say the two deaths may well be the culmination of a slew of about 60 attacks, known as S.O.M. or "Sock on Mexican" by their perpetrators, which have been reported this year, according to police Chief Bernard Melekian.

It's an acronym and a string of words with which the chief admits to being extremely uncomfortable.

"I have, until tonight, avoided using this phrase in public, but I think the events of the last few nights mandate that I do so," the chief told the city's Human Relations Commission last week. "We have deployed every section of the Police Department in order combat this trend."

Police said the attacks have been undertaken primarily by African-American gang members, targeting older Latino men, usually walking alone at night, generally leaving work at local restaurants, Melekian said.

"In the last eight days, three homicides, two of which are related to the events I am about to discuss, make this all the more urgent in terms of the commission's actions," he said.

Officials initially became aware of the attacks in early 2005, the chief said, but they noticed an eventual decrease due to the department's efforts.

However, in January 2006, the activity re-emerged.

And although about 60 attacks are known, officials believe that number reflects significant underreporting of the crimes because the victims tend to be undocumented immigrants who avoid contact with authorities.

Fortino, who was a victim of what was believed to be a previous race-based assault in June, was shot just before 4 a.m. Aug.27. He died the following morning at an area hospital.

According to Melekian, Fortino was "hanging out" on a nearby porch with a group of Latino males - who were not gang members - when he witnessed a male Latino being approached by a group of black men.

"Emerging as a leader, he took a group of males across the street intending to stop the assault," Melekian said. "A fist fight ensued between the two groups and ultimately, one of the original \ attackers produced a handgun and shot and killed \."

Around 1 a.m. Sept. 3, an officer-involved shooting that lead to the death of Hindman, 21, began when suspect Walter Villanueva, a known gang member, was purportedly attacked by such a group.

"He tells us that he was fired upon by a group of African Americans at which time he armed himself," the chief said.

"On two separate occasions, he opened fire on a group of African-American young people. Fortunately, he did not, however, hit anybody. Unfortunately, the tragic outcome of all that was the shooting death of Ms. Hindman."

Hindman was a passenger in a car driven by Villanueva.

Villanueva was subsequently arrested and a later autopsy revealed it was an officer's bullet that killed Hindman. However, police caution that a detailed understanding of the events leading to her death will take time.

In order to stop the attacks, the department has deployed a variety of task forces, Melekian said.

"The special enforcement section \ has in effect been redeployed or merged to identify the people responsible for this," he said. "The bike team has been deployed almost exclusively in neighborhoods where these incidents have occurred."

The detective section has been specifically directed to pursue hate-crime prosecutions wherever possible, he added.

Melekian stressed that although the Police Department offered full cooperation, solutions for what he called a "significant human-relations crisis" should be rooted in the community.

"There have been some suggestions that the Police Department should facilitate or take the lead in this," he said, "but I believe that that's not our role to play. The leadership on an issue of this nature needs to come from the community itself."

The commission offered comments and questions, but various black community activist offered suggestions and explanations.

"African Americans feel supplanted by Hispanics as the minority," activist John Wright said. "There is a perception that everything is stacked against them."

William Greer, another community activist, said that the Police Department's special enforcement unit was made up primarily of Latino officers, adding to that perception.

"The lid is going to blow," he said members of various gangs have told him. "They are armed and they feel that they have taken enough beatings and that the police target them while passing on Mexican gang members."

Melekian said there was no validity to that perception.

Fliers written in English and Spanish alerting citizens to the possibility and danger of the attacks had been distributed at designated locations around the city, Melekian said.