From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the early 1980s, a violent civil war began in El Salvador which would last more than 12 years. Approximately 100,000 people were killed in the war, and more than one million people fled from El Salvador to the U.S. The Salvadorian refugees and immigrants initially settled primarily in southern California and Washington, D.C.
Some of the refugees and immigrants had ties with 'La Mara', a violent street gang from El Salvador. Others had been members of paramilitary groups like the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMNL) during the civil war. FMNL was made up of Salvadorian peasants who were trained as guerilla fighters. Many were adept at using explosives, firearms, and booby traps.
Most of the Salvadorian refugees settled in the established Hispanic neighborhoods of the "Rampart" area of Los Angeles. However, Salvadorians were not readily accepted into the Los Angeles Hispanic community, and were frequently targeted by local Hispanic gangs. As a result, in the late 1980s, some refugees and refugee members of La Mara and FMNL formed what is now known as the Mara Salvatrucha (MS) street gang in Los Angeles. Like many other street gangs, MS initially formed for protection, but quickly developed a reputation for being organized and extremely violent. MS membership continues to be fed by refugees from groups like FMNL.
Since its inception in California and Washington, DC, Mara Salvatrucha has expanded into Oregon, Alaska, Texas, Nevada, Utah, Oklahoma, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, Florida, Canada, and Mexico. MS is unique in that, unlike traditional U.S. street gangs, it maintains active ties with MS members and factions in El Salvador. Mara Salvatrucha is literally an international gang.
Mara Salvatrucha gang members maintain contact between groups in the United States and El Salvador for several specific reasons. In El Salvador, a hand grenade sells for $1.00-$2.00 U.S. currency and an M-16 rifle will sell for approximately $200.00-$220.00 U.S. dollars. This communication and alliance provides a mechanism for MS gang members to access military-style munitions and also establishes a network to traffic illegal firearms into the United States.
Although military weapons seem to be readily available to this gang, street intelligence indicates they often have difficulty obtaining handguns, which are not readily available in El Salvador. This creates a demand for small arms by MS members in the U.S. and El Salvador. This demand is so high that MS members will often take handguns as payment for drug transactions. The guns are then sent back to El Salvador, or used in the United States.
MS is also involved in exporting stolen U.S. cars to South America. The cars are often traded for drugs when dealing with cartels. It is estimated that 80% of the cars driven in El Salvador were stolen in the United States. Car theft is a lucrative business for MS.
The Mara Salvatrucha gang is involved in a variety of criminal enterprises. As with members of other gangs, MS members seem willing to commit almost any crime, but MS gang members tend to have a higher level of criminal involvement than other gang members. MS members have been involved in burglaries, auto thefts, narcotic sales, home invasion robberies, weapons smuggling, car jacking, extortion, murder, rape, witness intimidation, illegal firearm sales, car theft and aggravated assaults. In terms of drug trafficking activities, common drugs sold by MS members include cocaine, marijuana, heroin, and methamphetamine. Mara Salvatrucha gang members have even placed a tax on prostitutes and non-gang member drug dealers who are working in MS "turf." Failure to pay up will most likely result in violence.
Originally, only Salvadorians could become members of Mara Salvatrucha. However, MS now includes members from Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. Mara Salvatrucha also has a few African-American members. MS has broken the race barrier for membership, but most new members are still selected because of their ethnic (Central American) background. The majority of MS gang members are between the ages of 11 and 40 years old.
Mara Salvatrucha members identify themselves with tattoos such as the number 13," or trece in Spanish. MS gang members will also use the Spanish word sureño, meaning "southerner" to identify themselves. Sometimes sureño is abbreviated to SUR. These terms make reference to the fact that MS gang members like to claim they are from southern California as opposed to northern California, and are rivals with northern California gangs. Often, this rivalry is taken outside the state of California. Additionally, Mara Salvatrucha gang members have several ongoing rivalries with large southern California gangs, including the 18th Street gang, and in California, commonly attack 18th Street gang members on sight. There are many Hispanic gangs, including MS, which use the number 13," and the terms sureno and SUR as identifiers, including street/prison gangs outside of California. Thus, it is important to identify specific tattoos used by the Mara Salvatrucha gang, which include M or MS, in addition to the 13 or SUR identification. Another common tattoo seen is Salvadorian Pride. There is also a good chance that the member will also have the name of his particular clique tattooed on his/her body. Other tattoos encountered with MS members have included pentagrams and other occult symbols. These can be confusing when found in conjunction with gang tattoos and can cause misconceptions of Satanic involvement by the gang. The most common hand sign used by MS members is the letter M formed by using three fingers and pointing the hand downward. This handsign can resemble the pitchfork sign used by Folk/People Nation gangs from the Midwest, and can be made with the fingers pointing up or down. The symbols used as tattoos are also used in graffiti and personal writings.
In general, Mara Salvatrucha members show no fear of law enforcement. They are not easily intimidated and frequently act defiantly. Mara Salvaltrucha gang members have been responsible for the execution of three federal agents and numerous shootings of law enforcement officers across the country. MS gang members have been known to booby-trap their drug stash houses using antipersonnel grenades on the assumption that these structures will be searched by law enforcement. MS members at one time often bragged of assaulting law enforcement officers as a means of showing their loyalty and commitment to the gang. However, these claims have never been confirmed. Today, assaults on law enforcement officers are not required for membership, but are always an option. Thus, officers dealing with MS members (or any street gang members, for that matter) should always use extreme caution.
Law enforcement and the courts have used two primary methods to deal with criminal activity by MS: arrest/incarceration and deportation. Between April 1994 and August 1995, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) arrested and deported more than 100 MS gang members to El Salvador. Many Mara Salvatrucha gang members are currently in the United States illegally and are concerned about deportation. If a gang member is deported to El Salvador, there is a chance they will be targeted by the Sombra Negra (Black Shadow) death squad. Sombra Negra and similar groups are legendary in Central America. Gangsters and citizens alike believe that the Sombra Negra is made up of rogue cops and military personnel who target unwanted criminals and gang members for vigilante "justice." While the presence of these death squads is officially denied by the governments of Central American countries, many MS members in the U.S. believe these groups exist, and fear that they will be targeted after being deported. Honduran MS gang members have the same fear. Sombra Negra has claimed responsibility for the deaths of several MS gang members in El Salvador. The existence or belief in the existence of these death squads could also be a chief motivation for hardcore MS gang members to come to the United States.
From the title I thought it was about the State Department.
ah...can't we all get along? (/s)
Davey Crockett and Nw_arizona_granny found this excellent article on WHAT is coming over our borders. Pretty scary stuff.
capture them, send them to army recruiting, and then post them in the middle east.
sorta new french legion. they sent their riff-raff to africa.
"The senseless violence of MS-13 has shocked the local citizens of Nassau County, so the Nassau County Executive appointed a gang czar to deal with the increasing gang problem."
Okay, yeah, you can call yourself a gang czar. Just make sure you shoot to kill.
Someone is just not getting it.
Brutal, vicious, but not senseless. It has a definite purpose. To initmidate, eliminate, and establish the gang as top dog on that turf. It establishes every wearer of the tattoo as someone 'not to be messed with'.
So don't mess with them.
Find the tat, shoot the rat.
nassau county appoints a gang czar problem solved
in reality the cops in nassau county have let this and other gangs free run on their turf
they know who and where they are and nothing is done about it
it is a big problem in middle and high schools and it is not confined to just to the less affluent school districts
Diversity is our strength, what difference does technical documentation status make?
Besides, the MS-13 are only coming to do the rapes and murders Americans are too lazy to do.



http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1314357/posts
Eastie gang linked to al-Qaeda
Boston Herald ^ | January 5, 2005 | Michele McPhee
Posted on 01/05/2005 7:01:55 AM EST by Straight Vermonter
A burgeoning East Boston-based street gang made up of alleged rapists and machete-wielding robbers has been linked to the al-Qaeda terrorist network, prompting Boston police to ``turn up the heat'' on its members, the Herald has learned.
MS-13, which stands for La Mara Salvatrucha, is an extremely violent organization with roots in El Salvador, and boasts more than 100 ``hardcore members'' in East Boston who are suspected of brutal machete attacks, rapes and home invasions. There are hundreds more MS-13 gangsters in towns along the North Shore, said Boston police Sgt. Detective Joseph Fiandaca, who has investigated the gang since it began tagging buildings in Maverick Square in 1995.
In recent months, intelligence officials in Washington have warned national law enforcement agencies that al-Qaeda terrorists have been spotted with members of MS-13 in El Salvador, prompting concerns the gang may be smuggling Islamic fundamentalist terrorists into the country. Law enforcement officials have long believed that MS-13 controls alien smuggling routes along Mexico. The warning is being taken seriously in East Boston, where Raed Hijazi, an al-Qaeda operative charged with training the suicide bombers in the attack on the USS Cole, lived and worked, prosecutors have charged.
Also, the commercial jets that hurtled into the World Trade Center towers in New York City were hijacked from Logan International Airport.
``The terrorist aspect, especially when you think in terms of 9/11 and how intent these terrorists are, will turn the heat up on our efforts with MS-13,'' Fiandaca said. MS-13 members congregate near the Maverick Square train station sporting white and blue bandannas, their skin inked with spider webs and ``laugh now, cry later'' clown faces.
``MS-13 is the most dangerous gang in the area,'' Fiandaca said. ``They are big. They are mobile. Now they have a terrorist connection.''
The theory that Salvadoran criminals manage to smuggle people over the border was bolstered this month when two Boston men described as MS-13 leaders were spotted on the North Shore days before Christmas - a year after they were deported by Boston Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigators for gang-related crimes.
One of the two men, Elmer ``Tiger'' Tejada, 24, who had been deported after being convicted of a slew of crimes, including attempted murder charges for hurling a machete at Chelsea cops, was busted in Lynn on New Year's Day. Tejada is described as ``an original MS-13 member'' from East Boston, sources said.
A manhunt has been launched for the second fugitive, who is in the country illegally, Boston police said.
The growing number of MS-13 members, and the degree of violence the gang engages in, prompted investigators from 14 local and national agencies to form the North Shore Gang Intelligence task force in 2000, Fiandaca said.
Among the most notorious local crimes attributed to MS-13 was the gang rape of two deaf girls, one 14, the other 17, in a Somerville park in 2002. Three MS-13 gang members were charged in the brutal rapes, during which one victim was knocked from her wheelchair before the assault.
The ultra-conservative Maldon Institute is known for doomsday predictions when it comes to the U.S.-Mexico border. But there can be no denial that MS-13 is very active in smuggling people, drugs, and guns across the border. And independent reports indicate that many illegal immigrants have been assaulted, robbed, and even raped by MS-13 members.
Mexico is now taking steps to fight back against MS-13. In December, Mexican authorities arrested 224 gang members in response to what they called a threat to national security. Among the arrests were members of MS-13 who were charged with trafficking in drugs and firearms across Mexico and Central America.
While MS 13 is certainly a fearful bunch. IMO, the most dangerous gang in America are the democrats.
This is a fine kettle of fish our politicians are turning our country into through their greed and negligence.
If gangs like this aren't stopped by the police, Americans will eventually resort to their own system of justice and forget about the ineffective police and the flaccid courts. Don't forget, this is an armed country - a state of affairs which frightens Liberals and many politicians - but which is the last line of defense by ordinary citizens against this sort of ongoing outrage.
'Vigilante' is a word overused today by our hysterical politicians and their buddies in the media. But, there is a genuine meaning behind this word which has not yet been employed. There is a awful threat lurking out there because of our hopeless immigration policies and this article shows one of the hydra-heads involved in it. The end results of years of political neglect of our laws and people will ultimately be on the heads of our feckless ruling class who prefer to ignore this gathering storm.
If they don't get their hands around these problems and do it quickly, there will be nothing but deadly problems ahead for us all.
<SARCASM>Gosh if they would just legalize robbery, auto theft, shooting, cuttings and homicides then gang activity would virtually go away. </SARCASM>
.

.
...and the new Los Angeles Hispanic Mayor-Elect is on the side of the El Salvadorean Gangs in his city vs. the LAPD.
NUTS
.
Isn't diversity grand?
Arpaio to head up task force to eliminate ms13?
I wonder how quickly we could enlarge Gitmo?
Just tents you understand....
==Some of the refugees and immigrants had ties with 'La Mara', a violent street gang from El Salvador. Others had been members of paramilitary groups like the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMNL) during the civil war. FMNL was made up of Salvadorian peasants who were trained as guerilla fighters. Many were adept at using explosives, firearms, and booby traps.
Ah-ha!!! So the Communist FMLN has linked up with MS-13. This means MS-13 is evolving into a terrorist organization that will soon (if not already) pursue political goals. Here is a little background on these Commie-Terrorists:
Time to lock down the border.
This gang's training is a direct result of the support of El Salvador rebels during the Iran-Contra affair. They received weapons and military training.
What makes this gang most dangerous is their military-type planning. One of their specialties is home invasion or a "raid" in military circles. They are well-rehearsed and quite surgical in their execution. These guys will come into your home and purposely kill you. Long forgotten is the idea of the "sneaky burglar" with these people. With you dead, they have the time to take all they want.
It's no wonder they are rapidly expanding. Regular gangs just can't match the organization and lethality of this band of mercenaries.
Would you care to guess where their training came from? Good old Uncle Sam and the Iran-Contra scandal.
Keep your gun within reach and a guard at the door LOL.
I beg to differ: The most dangerous gang in America is Congress!
I just got in the mail today a charter school flyer. Their #1, repeat #1, goal is a Spanish language program.
That would deprive the MS13 of income from smuggling illegal laborers.
Free border guards from time spent chasing and processing illegal laborers
Make room in holding facilities to incarcerate MS13s,
Remove incentives for employers to hire illegals.
Give us control over who is in this country and where they are,
Allow laborers to frequently return home to be with their families instead of having to bring them here,
And end tax evasion.
bumping
Wake up, America.
Gangs. Not just for Aztlan anymore.
An excellent report on the MS-13 gang and other reports added.
Ping.
You see what they fear?
Sombra Negra.
The gang has been allowed by our officials to become well established in the D.C. area and has been spreading to small communities in Virginia.

| To my dear Democratic, Republican and Conservative colleagues: After a not inconsiderable amount of soul searching regarding the calls for my resignation by both parties, I have decided on the following recourse. Sincerely, Howard Dean - Chairman DNC |
They are the product of the liberal obsession with diversity and multi-culturalism.
Mark
Our problem from the get-go....it is someone else's problem. Eventually it will be everyone's problem, even touching the congress critters up on capitol hill, who presently, don't seem to have a clue.
ping
They're all over New Jersey.
Most of these gangs are composed of Catholics, I wish the Church in all countries affected get more involved.
MICH NEWS.com: "LATIN KINGS GANG LEADER, LIEUTENANTS NABBED IN BROOKLYN" by Jim Kouri, CPP
"Eleven members of the dangerous and brutal Latin Kings Gang were nabbed by cops and charged with drug trafficking, robbery conspiracy, and credit card fraud. The highest-ranking member of the Latin Kings in New York State, Isaac Almanzar is among those charged including several of his lieutenants -- Pedro Medina, Jose Cruz, Benjamin Fugueroa and others. FBI agents and New York City Police officers executed search warrants at four locations in Brooklyn controlled or used by the defendants - 179 Starr Street, 81 Central Avenue, 179 Jefferson Street, and 180 Jefferson Street - and seized over twenty thousand dollars in U.S. currency, two firearms, multiple fraudulent credit cards, and quantities of crack cocaine and marijuana packaged for resale. (September 1, 2005)
Read More: http://www.michnews.com/artman/publish/article_9309.shtml
http://www.manhattan-institute.org/cfml/printable.cfm?id=1646
City Journal Home. City Journal
The Immigrant Gang Plague
Heather Mac Donald
Summer 2004
Before immigration optimists issue another rosy prognosis for Americas multicultural future, they might visit Belmont High School in Los Angeless overwhelmingly Hispanic, gang-ridden Rampart district. Upward and onward is not a phrase that comes to mind when speaking to the first- and second-generation immigrant teens milling around the school this January.
Most of the people I used to hang out with when I first came to the school have dropped out, observes Jackie, a vivacious illegal alien from Guatemala. Others got kicked out or got into drugs. Five graduated, and four home girls got pregnant.
Certainly, none of the older teens I met outside Belmont was on track to graduate. Jackie herself flunked ninth grade (I used to ditch a lot, she explains) and never caught up. She is now pursuing a General Equivalency Diplomaa watered-down certificate for dropouts or expelled studentsin the schools adult division. Vanessa, who sports a tiny horseshoe protruding from her nostrils, is applying to the adult division, too, having been kicked out of Belmont at age 18. I didnt come to school very often, says this American-born child of illegal aliens from El Salvador. Her boyfriend, Albert, a dashing 19-year-old with long, slicked-back hair, got expelled for truancy but has talked his way back into the regular high school. I have good manipulative skills, he smiles. After a robbery conviction, Albert was put on probation but broke every rule in the book: Curfews, grades, attendance, missed court days, he boasts. But they still let me off the hook.
These Belmont teens are no aberration. Hispanic youths, whether recent arrivals or birthright American citizens, are developing an underclass culture. (By Hispanic here, I mean the population originating in Latin Americaabove all, in Mexicoas distinct from Americas much smaller Puerto Rican and Dominican communities of Caribbean descent, which have themselves long shown elevated crime and welfare rates.) Hispanic school dropout rates and teen birthrates are now the highest in the nation. Gang crime is exploding nationallyrising 50 percent from 1999 to 2002driven by the march of Hispanic immigration east and north across the country. Most worrisome, underclass indicators like crime and single parenthood do not improve over successive generations of Hispanicsthey worsen.
Debate has recently heated up over whether Mexican immigrationunique in its scale and in other important wayswill defeat the American tradition of assimilation. The rise of underclass behavior among the progeny of Mexicans and other Central Americans must be part of that debate. There may be assimilation going on, but a significant portion of it is assimilation downward to the worst elements of American life. To be sure, most Hispanics are hardworking, law-abiding residents; they have reclaimed squalid neighborhoods in South Central Los Angeles and elsewhere. Among the dozens of Hispanic youths I interviewed, several expressed gratitude for the United States, a sentiment that would be hard to find among the ordinary run of teenagers. But given the magnitude of present immigration levels, if only a portion of those from south of the border goes bad, the costs to society will be enormous.
The Soledad Enrichment Action Charter School in South Central Los Angeles is at the vortex of L.A.s gang culture. Next door to a rose-colored, angel-bedecked church, the boxy school glowers behind barred gates like those that surround prisons. Soledads students, about half blacks and half Hispanics, have been kicked out of other schools. They have brought violence with them. In early March, a gunman opened fire on 20 students entering the school at 7:30 am, wounding two. Tensions were high again as school let out one day this April. A boy had been sent home earlier for fighting; the question now was, would he return to retaliate? The schools probation officer radioed the LAPDs 77th Division to plead for some officers to keep watch, without success. As the students, dressed in plain white T-shirts, filed out to the sidewalk, two burly security guards and a gang counselor warily eyed the street.
Asked about gangs, the teens proudly reel off their affiliations: SOK (Still Out Killing); HTO (Hispanics Taking Over); JMC (Just Mobbing Crazy). A cocky American-born child of Salvadoran parents says that most of his peers from the eighth grade are locked up or dead. Four are deadthree were shot, one was run over. Were you just lucky? I ask. They were gangbanging more than me, says the 17-year-old, who wont give his name. I try to control myself, respect my parents. That respect only goes so far. Asked if hes been in jail, he swaggers: Yup, for GTAgrand theft auto. And he has no intention of leaving his gang: Theyre the homeys, part of the family.
Eighteen-year-old Eric, born here to an illegal Mexican and Guatemalan, is one of the few students I talked to who doesnt gangbang, though he is on probation for second-degree robbery, his second conviction. Half his friends from elementary school are involved in crime, he says. Of course, gang problems in Los Angeles schools are hardly confined to academies for delinquents like Soledad. Gang fights in some of L.A.s regular high schools draw such crowds that youthful pickpockets have a field day working the spectators and participants. People would steal your pagers and cell phones, reports one student who has bounced through several schools.
David OConnell, pastor of the church next door to Soledad, has been fighting L.A.s gang culture for over a decade. He rues the ferocious stuff that is currently coming out of Central America, sounding weary and pessimistic. But whats more frightening, he says, is the disengagement from adults. Hispanic children feel that they have to deal with problems themselves, apart from their parents, according to OConnell, and they do so in violent ways. The adults, for their part, start to fear young people, including their own children.
The pull to a culture of violence among Hispanic children begins earlier and earlier, OConnell says. Researchers and youth workers across the country confirm his observation. In Chicago, gangs start recruiting kids at age nine, according to criminologists studying policing and social trends in the Windy City. The Chicago Community Policing Evaluation Consortium concluded that gangs have become fully integrated into Hispanic youth culture; even children not in gangs emulate their attitudes, dress, and self-presentation. The result is a community in thrall. Non-affiliated children fear traveling into unknown neighborhoods and sometimes drop out of school for lack of protection. Adults are just as scared. They may know who has been spray-painting their garage, for example, but wont tell the police for fear that their car will be torched in retaliation. Its like were in our own little jails that we cant leave, said a resident. There isnt an uninfested place nearby.
Washington, D.C., reports the same ever-younger phenomenon. Recruitment is starting early in middle school, says Lori Kaplan, head of D.C.s Latin American Youth Center. With early recruitment comes a high school dropout rate of 50 percent. Gang culture is gaining more recruits than our ability to get kids out, Kaplan laments. We can get this kid out, but two or three will take his place. In May, an 18-year-old member of the Salvadoran Mara Salvatrucha gang used a machete to chop off four left fingers and nearly sever the right hand of a 16-year-old South Side Locos rival in the Washington suburbs.
Ernesto Vega, a 19-year-old Mexican illegal who grew up in New York City, estimates that most 12- to 14-year-old Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in New York are in gangs for protection. If youre Mexican, you cant go to parties by yourself, he says. People will ask, Who you down with? Que barrio? They be checkin you out. But if its 20 of you, and 20 of them, then its OK.
For some children, the choice is: get beat up once a week, or get beat up once to enter the gang. Others join for the prestige and sense of belonging. Mario Flores was one of them; he joined Santa Ana, Californias, Westside Compadres. When I was 13, I was like, Wow. I wanted them to jump me, he says in the soft near-whisper of the cool. Theyre like, You want to get down? They got to jumping at you, they go to call you, Trips from Westside Compsyou feel good.
Flores (or Trips) is a depressing specimen of gang culture: uneducated and barely articulate. Hes sitting on the other side of a Plexiglas window in the Santa Ana Central Jail, talking to me over a phone. In and out of jail with dazzling regularity over the last three years, he most recently left prison on April 14; on April 21, he was arrested again on a rape charge. Born in Portland, Oregon, but raised in Mexico, Flores went to live with cousins in San Bernardino, California, at age 13 and has been traveling the Southern California gang circuitRiverside County, Santa Ana, East L.A.ever since. Now 20, he is slender and finely chiseled. Gang hand gestures accompany his speech like hieroglyphics. When I saw gang members, he says, pointing first to his eyes, then outward, theyre like, Are you down with my shit? Im down! I ask if he speaks English or Spanish with his gang. You speak Chicano, he says. Hey, homey! You mostly talk English, youve got some good words. But the way you talk, you dont talk good. You dont talk like other people.
Flores expresses the fierce attachment to territory that is the sine qua non of gang identity. I was like, I love my neighborhood. If you dont love my neighborhood, Im going to fuck you up. Charles Beck, captain of the LAPDs Rampart Division, marvels at this emotion. They all come from identical neighborhoods, identical families, and go to identical schools, and yet they hate each other with a passion. The territorial instincts can only be compared to the Balkans, says Corporal Kevin Ruiz, a Santa Ana gang investigator. Theres people who all they do is patrol gang boundaries. Theyre like me, in a way: Im looking for bad guys; they look for rivals.
Trips showed his love for Santa Anas Westside Compadres by doing missionsrobbing bars, stealing wallets and cell phones, selling drugsto raise money for the gang. If a big homey told me to fuck someone up, I had to, he explains. The gang reciprocated by giving him a place to staywhen he was bringing in cash. Otherwise he lived in cars or on the street, sometimes in a hotel.
The chance that Flores will ever become a productive member of society is slight. Routinely kicked out of high school for fighting, he lacks rudimentary skills. Like many prisoners, he claims to be reading the Bible and thanking Jesus, but such prison conversions rarely last. His personal life is troubled: My lady, she mad at menot surprisingly, given his most recent rape chargeand Flores is not certain she will be waiting for him when he gets out of jail. Most likely, Flores will continue contributing to the Hispanicization of prisons in California: in 1970, Hispanics were 12 percent of the states population and 16 percent of new prison admits; by 1998, they were 30 percent of the California population, and 42 percent of new admits.
Even as it reaches down to ever-younger recruits, gang culture is growing more lethal. In April, 16-year-old Valentino Arenas drove up to a courthouse in Pomona, California, and shot to death a randomly chosen California Highway Patrol officer, in the hope of gaining entry to Pomonas 12th Street Gang. The assassination wouldnt surprise Dennis Farrell, a Nassau County, New York, homicide detective. Were amazed at the openness of shootings, he says. When we do cases with Hispanic gangs, we often get full statements of admission, almost like they dont see whats the big deal.
The unwritten code that moderated gang violence three or four decades ago has now fallen away. When I grew up, says Santa Ana native and gang investigator Kevin Ruiz, there were rules of engagement: no shooting at churches or at home. Now, no one is immune. One of Ruizs colleagues on the Santa Ana police force, Mona Ruiz (no relation), spent her adolescence in Santa Ana gangs; now she tries to get kids out. Back then, she says, if someone got jumped, you responded with fistfights, not guns. Guns started in the 1980s. Earlier gangbangers even showed a certain fastidiousness of dress: Guys used to iron their jeans for two hours, Mona Ruiz recalls. Then they wouldnt sit down to avoid marring the crease. All that changed when heroin hit, she says.
The constant invasion of illegal aliens is worsening gang violence as well. In Phoenix, Arizona, and surrounding Maricopa County, illegal alien gangs, such as Brown Pride and Wetback Power, are growing more volatile and dangerous, according to Tom Bearup, a former sheriffs department official and current candidate for sheriff. Even in prison, where they clash with American Hispanics, they are creating a more vicious environment.
Upward mobility to the suburbs doesnt necessarily break the allure of gang culture. An immigration agent reports that in the middle-class suburbs of southwest Miami, second- and third-generation Hispanic youths are perpetrating home invasions, robberies, battery, drug sales, and rape. Kevin Ruiz knows students at the University of California, Irvine who retain their gang connections. Prosecutors in formerly crime-free Ventura County, California, sought an injunction this May against the Colonia Chiques gang after homicides rocketed up; an affidavit supporting the injunction details how Chiques members terrorize the local hospital whenever one of the gang arrives with a gunshot wound. Federal law enforcement officials in Virginia are tracking with alarm the spread of gang violence from Northern Virginia west into the Shenandoah Valley and south toward Charlottesville, a trend so disturbing that they secured federal funds this May to stanch the mayhem. This is beyond a regional problem. It is, in fact, a national problem, said FBI assistant director Michael Mason, head of the bureaus Washington field office.
Open-borders apologists dismiss the Hispanic crime threat by observing that black crime rates are even higher. True, but irrelevant: the black population is not growing, whereas Hispanic immigration is reaching virtually every part of the country, sometimes radically changing local demographics. With a felony arrest rate up to triple that of whites, Hispanics can dramatically raise community crime levels.
Many cops and youth workers blame the increase in gang appeal on the disintegration of the Hispanic family. The trends are worsening, especially for U.S.-born Hispanics. In California, 67 percent of children of U.S.-born Hispanic parents lived in an intact family in 1990; by 1999, that number had dropped to 56 percent. The percentage of Hispanic children living with a single mother in California rose from 18 percent in 1990 to 29 percent in 1999. Nationally, single-parent households constituted 25 percent of all Hispanic households with minor children in 1980; by 2000, the proportion had jumped to 34 percent.
The trends in teen parenthoodthe marker of underclass behaviorwill almost certainly affect the crime and gang rate. Hispanics now outrank blacks for teen births; Mexican teens have higher birthrates than Puerto Ricans, previously the most ghettoized Hispanic subgroup in terms of welfare use and out-of-wedlock child-rearing. In 2002, there were 83.4 births per 1,000 Hispanic females between ages 15 and 19, compared with 66.6 among blacks, 28.5 among non-Hispanic whites, and 18.3 among Asians. Perhaps these young Hispanic mothers are giving birth as wives? Unlikely. In California, where Latina teens have the highest birthrate of teens in any state, 79 percent of teen births to U.S.-born Latinas in 1999 were to unmarried girls.
According to the many young Hispanics I spoke to, more and more girls are getting pregnant. This year was the worst for pregnancies, says Liliana, an American-born senior at Manual Arts High School near downtown Los Angeles. A lot of girls get abortions; some drop out. Are girls ashamed when they get pregnant? I wonder. Not at all, Liliana responds. Among Hispanic teens, at least, if not among their parents, the stigma of single parenthood has vanished. I asked Jackie, the Guatemalan GED student at L.A.s Belmont High, if her pregnant friends subsequently got married. She guffawed. George, an 18-year-old of Salvadoran background who was kicked out of Manual Arts six months ago for a vicious fight, estimates that most girls at the school are having sex by age 16.
Mexican and Central American immigration to New York City is of much more recent vintage than in California, but young Mexicans in New York have quickly assimilated to underclass sexual behavior. Nineteen-year-old Ernesto Vega reports that his oldest sister dropped out of school at 17 and got pregnant the next year. I heard her boyfriend came from Mexico to work, but he wasnt working. He was on the street. Ernesto says. Then the boyfriend got arrested, probably on drug charges. He says he was arrested for doing nothing, but they dont arrest you for doing nothing.
Ernesto knows three or four Mexican-American girls with babies, including a 16-year-old with two daughters. Another just got pregnant this year, he says. Shes 15. None is married. None has a GED or will go to college. As for the fathers of their children? The boys be leaving the girls alone, Vega says. The boy goes away.
Some Hispanic parents valiantly try to impose old-fashioned consequences on teen pregnancies, but they are losing the battle. Vegas father, a building superintendent and hardware store clerk, angrily told his pregnant daughter, according to Vega: You gotta go live with [the boyfriend]. I now want nothing to do with you! The boyfriend offered to take the girl into the apartment he was sharing with a female acquaintance, but she wanted her own place. Eventually, she persuaded her father to take her back, but only on the condition that she work. She now sells Yankee paraphernalia on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx.
Traditional and contemporary family values continued to clash throughout the pregnancy. Although the boyfriend vanished until the birth, he showed up at Vegas house with his whole family when the girl returned from the hospital with her newborn. He took his three sisters and his mother; one sister took the nephews. Vega recalls. The boyfriends demand: you have to decide where to live. The girl told him to take a hike. The family delegation, Vega judges, already adapting to American individualist norms, was inappropriate. The problem was not with the families, he says, but between him and her.
In one respect, Central American immigrants break the mold of traditional American underclass behavior: they work. Even so, Mexican welfare receipt is twice as high as that of natives, in large part because Mexican-American incomes are so low, and remain low over successive generations. Disturbingly, welfare use actually rises between the second and third generationto 31 percent of all third-generation Mexican-American households. Illegal Hispanics make liberal use of welfare, too, by putting their American-born children on public assistance: in Orange County, California, nearly twice as many Hispanic welfare cases are for children of illegal aliens as for legal families.
More troublingly, some Hispanics combine work with gangbanging. Gang detectives in Long Islands Suffolk County know when members of the violent Salvadoran MS-13 gang get off work from their lawn-maintenance or pizzeria jobs, and can follow them to their gang meetings. Mexican gang members in rural Pennsylvania, which saw two gang homicides in late April, also often work in landscaping and construction.
On the final component of underclass behaviorschool failureHispanics are in a class by themselves. No other group drops out in greater numbers. In Los Angeles, only 48 percent of Hispanic ninth-graders graduate, compared with a 56 percent citywide graduation rate and a 70 percent nationwide rate. In 2000, nearly 30 percent of Hispanics between the ages of 16 and 24 were high school dropouts nationwide, compared with about 13 percent of blacks and about 7 percent of whites.
The constant inflow of barely literate recent Mexican arrivals unquestionably brings down Hispanic education levels. But later American-born generations dont brighten the picture much. While Mexican-Americans make significant education gains between the first and second generation, adding 3.5 years of schooling, progress stalls in the next generation, economists Jeffrey Grogger and Stephen Trejo have found. Third-generation Mexican-Americans remain three times as likely to drop out of high school than whites and one and a half times as likely to drop out as blacks. They complete college at one-third the rate of whites. Mexican-Americans are assimilating not to the national schooling average, observed the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas this June, but to the dramatically lower Hispanic average. In educational outcomes, concluded the bank, Ethnicity matters.
No one knows why this is so. Every parent I spoke to said that she wanted her children to do well in school and go to college. Yet the message is often not getting across. Hispanic parents are the kind of parents that leave it to others, explains an unwed Salvadoran welfare mother in Santa Ana. We dont get that involved. A news director of a Southern California Spanish radio station expresses frustration at the passivity toward education and upward mobility he sees in his own family. I tried to knock the Spanglish accent out of my niece and get rid of that crap, he says. But the mother was completely nihilistic about her child. Its going to take direct action from Americans to Americanize Hispanics.
Perhaps the answer to the disconnect between stated parental goals and educational outcomes lies in Hispanic cultures traditional suspicion of education. Santa Ana police officer Mona Ruiz recounts a joke told by comedian George Lopez: When a white person graduates, people say, You did good. When a Mexican graduates, people say, You think youre better than us. The lure of an immediate income often proves more compelling than a four- to eight-year investment in self-improvement. New Yorker Ernesto Vega says he knows Mexicans with papers who drop out of high school. They young. They say, Im going to start working, I dont need school. But Vega has no illusions about the consequences: Even with papers, youre only making $300 a week as a delivery boy in restaurants, because you dont know anything else.
Proponents of unregulated immigration simply ignore the growing underclass problem among later generations of Hispanics, with its attendant gang involvement and teen pregnancy. When pressed, open-borders advocates dismiss worries about the Hispanic future with their favorite comparison between Mexicans and Italians. Popularized by political analyst Michael Barone in The New Americans, the analogy goes like this: a century ago, Italian immigrants anticipated the Mexican influx, above all in their disregard for education. They dropped out of school in high numbersyet they eventually prospered and joined the mainstream. Therefore, argue Barone and others, Mexicans will, too.
But the analogy is flawed. To begin with, the magnitude of Mexican immigration renders all historical comparisons irrelevant, as Harvard historian Samuel Huntington argues in his latest book, Who Are We?. In 2000, Mexicans constituted nearly 30 percent of the foreign-born population in the U.S.; the next two largest groups were the Chinese (5 percent) and Filipinos (4 percent). By contrast, at the turn of the twentieth century, the largest immigrant group, Germans, made up only 15 percent of the foreign-born population. In 1910, Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, and Italy, in that order, sent the most migrants to the U.S.; Italians made up only 17 percent of the combined total. English-speakers made up over half the new arrivals; there was no chance that Italian would become the dominant language in any part of the country. By contrast, half of todays immigrants speak Spanish.
Equally important, the flow of newcomers came to an abrupt halt after World War I and did not resume until 1965. This long pause allowed the country ample opportunity to Americanize the foreign-born and their children. Today, no end is in sight to the migration from Mexico and its neighbors, which continually reinforces Mexican culture in American Hispanic communities and seems likely to do so for decades into the future.
Contemporary Hispanic immigration also differs from the classic Ellis Island model in that the ease of cross-border travel and communication allows Mexican and Central American immigrants to keep at least one foot planted in their native land. Meanwhile, the Mexican government does everything it can to bind Mexican migrants psychologically to the home country, in order to safeguard the annual $12 billion flow of remittances. It encourages dual nationality, and Mexicans in the U.S. can now run for office in Mexico. A Yolo County, California, tomato farmer has already been elected mayor of Jerez. Not surprisingly, Mexicans and other Central Americans have the lowest rates of naturalization of all immigrantsless than 30 percent in 1990, compared with two-thirds of qualified immigrants from major European sending countries, the Philippines, and Hong Kong.
Even Mexicos former foreign minister, Jorge Castaneda, acknowledges the unprecedented character of Hispanic immigration. Mexican immigration, he wrote recently, does have distinctive traits that do make [assimilation] difficult, if not impossible. This is . . . a matter of history. That history holds that the U.S. robbed Mexico of its natural territory in the nineteenth century, as some Mexican immigrants never seem to forget. Its kind of scary, says Santa Ana gang intervention officer Mona Ruiz. I hear, I was here first; this used to be Mexico. You stole it from us. Mexican-American Ruiz is herself called a traitor for becoming Americanized.
While proponents of the reconquista of Alta California (as Mexican nationalists call the lost territory) are a small minority of Hispanic immigrants, a much larger proportion hold on to their Hispanic identities. Few of the American-born students I spoke to in Southern California identified themselves as American. Many said they were Mexican, Latino, or Mexican-Americanusages encouraged by the multicultural dogma in the schools, a far cry from the Americanization efforts of classrooms a century ago.
Michael Barones Italian-Mexican comparison also ignores the differences between the U.S. economies of 1904 and 2004. While Italian dropouts in 1904 could make their way into the middle class by working in the booming manufacturing sector or plying their existing craftsman skills, that is far more difficult today, given the decline of factory jobs and the rise of the knowledge-based economy. As the limited education of Mexican-Americans depresses their wages, their sense of being stuck in an economic backwater breeds resentment. The second generation becomes angry with America, as they see their fathers faltering, observes Cesar Barrios, an outreach worker for the Tepeyac Association, a social services agency for Mexicans in New York City. This resentment only increases the lure of underclass culture, with its rebellious rejection of conventional norms, according to Barrios. For this reason, he says, many young Mexicans prefer to imitate blacks than white people.
The Spanish-language media, which reaches two-thirds of all Hispanics, reinforces the sense of grievance. Stories about Americas cruelties to immigrants and the countrys shocking failure to legalize illegal aliens dominate news coverage. A billboard for Los Angeless Spanish newspaper La Opinión conveys the usual tone: Justice, Abuse, Deportation, and other hot-button topics blare out in massive lettering.
Chicago provides a cautionary tale about high levels of Hispanic immigration combined with an ever more powerful underclass ethic. During the 1990s, the Hispanic population in Chicago grew 38 percent, to 754,000, and became increasingly concentrated in the citys barrios. Education levels and fluency in English dropped lower and lower, while serious crime, social disorder, and physical decay grew in direct proportion to the number of Spanish-speaking Latinos. After a neighborhood became more than 60 percent Latino, physical decayincluding graffiti, trash-filled vacant lots, and abandoned carsjumped disproportionately. By 2001, social pathology among Spanish-speaking Latinos was higher than for any other racial or ethnic group.
There are many counterexamples that show a salutary effect of Hispanic immigration. Santa Ana, California, at 76 percent Latino the most heavily Spanish-speaking city of its size in the country, has cleaned up the seedy bars from its downtown area and replaced them with palm trees and benches, in large part thanks to a newly created business improvement district. Many homes in Santa Anas wealthier Mexican neighborhoods sport exuberant roses and bougainvillea in their front yards, and students I spoke to there wanted to become lawyers, architects, and medical technicians. In predominantly Mexican East Los Angeles, housing prices are soaring along with the rest of the Southern California housing market: a 1928 two-bedroom, one-bath bungalow with a lawn gone to seed was listed at $265,000 this April. And in increasingly Hispanic South Central L.A., tiny bodegas selling milk, diapers, and piñatas are replacing liquor stores.
Yet a seemingly innocuous block in Santa Ana can host five to eight households dedicated to gangbanging or drug sales. A front yard may be relatively trash-free; inside the house, a different matter entirely, says Santa Ana cop Kevin Ruiz. Ive been to three houses just this week where they made a mountain of trash in the backyard or changed their babys diaper by throwing it over the couch. They dont use the indoor plumbing, while letting their dogs go to the bathroom on the carpet. Ruiz drives by the modest tract home where his Mexican father, who worked in Orange Countys farming industry, raised him in the 1950s. A car with a shattered windshield, a trailer, and minivan sit in the backyard, surrounded by piles of junk and a mattress leaning on the garage door. My mom taught us that even if youre poor, you should be neat, he says, shaking his head. Fifty-year-old men are still dressing like chollos (Chicano gangsters), Ruiz says, and fathers are ordering barbers to shave their young sons bald in good gang tradition.
Without prompting, Ruiz brings up the million-dollar question: I dont see assimilation, he says. They want to hold on [to Hispanic culture]. Ruiz thinks that todays Mexican immigrant is a totally different kind of person from the past. Some come with a chip on their shoulder toward the United States, he says, which they blame for the political and economic failure of their home countries. Rather than aggressively seizing the opportunities available to them, especially in education, they have learned to play the victim card, he thinks. Ruiz advocates a much more aggressive approach. We need to explain, Well help you assimilate up to a certain point, but then you have to take advantage of whats here.
Ruizs observations will strike anyone who has hired eager Mexican and Central American workers as incredible. I pressed him repeatedly, insisting that Americans see Mexican immigrants as cheerful and hardworking, but he was adamant. Were creating an underclass, he maintained.
Immigration optimists, ever ready to trumpet the benefits of todays immigration wave, have refused to acknowledge its costs. Foremost among them are skyrocketing gang crime and an expanding underclass. Until the country figures out how to reduce these costs, maintaining the current open-borders regime is folly. We should enforce our immigration laws and select immigrants on skills and likely upward mobility, not success in sneaking across the border.
http://www.uic.edu/orgs/kbc/Rooms/chiroomnew.html
CHICAGO GANGS

I was there in 81.
'Dirty Bomb' Suspect Padilla Indicted - UPDATE AP on Yahoo ^ | 11/22/05 | Mark Sherman - ap
Posted on 11/22/2005 10:40:36 AM EST by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON - "Dirty Bomb" suspect Jose Padilla, held by the U.S. as an enemy combatant for more than three years, has been indicted on federal charges in Miami, according to an indictment unsealed Tuesday.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales was expected to discuss the indictment at a news conference in Washington.
Padilla, a Brooklyn-born Muslim convert, has been held as an "enemy combatant" in Defense Department custody for more than three years. The Bush administration had resisted calls to charge and try him in civilian courts.
The indictment avoids a Supreme Court showdown. Padilla's lawyers had asked justices to review his case last month, and the Bush administration was facing a deadline next Monday for filing its legal arguments.
"They're avoiding what the Supreme Court would say about American citizens. That's an issue the administration did not want to face," said Scott Silliman, a Duke University law professor who specializes in national security. "There's no way that the Supreme Court would have ducked this issue."
The Bush administration has said Padilla, a former Chicago gang member, sought to blow up hotels and apartment buildings in the United States and planned an attack with a "dirty bomb" radiological device.
Padilla was arrested at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport in 2002 after returning from Pakistan. The federal government has said he was trained in weapons and explosives by members of al-Qaida.
Although the Justice Department has said that Padilla was readying attacks in the United States, the charges against him and four others allege they were part of a conspiracy to murder, kidnap and maim persons in a foreign country and provide material support to terrorists abroad.
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1347306/posts
America's Most Dangerous Gang - MS13 - Violent, Vicious, and Spreading Fast.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1670644/posts
'MS-13' is one of nation's most dangerous gangs
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Congress is much more dangerous than this bunch of low-IQ, south-of-the-border, half-wits. MS is dangerous because our ineffective political leadership has allowed them to become so because it suits their agenda.
If it ever gets to the point where it's open season on them they won't last very long.
When it comes to diversity and multiculturalism, liberals are willing to accept the good with the bad.