View Full Version : L.A. Gang-Related Killings Plunge


Westsidelife
January 12th, 2008, 02:52 AM
http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2008-01/34675363.jpg
Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa chatting with neighborhood kids after a press
conference announcing the city's crime stats.

L.A. Gang-Related Killings Plunge

Villaraigosa and Bratton credit a counter-offensive launched last year. Experts say a long-term solution requires social programs.

By Joel Rubin and Duke Helfand, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
January 11, 2008

Gang-related killings in Los Angeles declined dramatically in 2007 as the Los Angeles Police Department and other agencies waged an intensive campaign against some of the city's most violent street toughs, officials announced Thursday.

The dip in gang homicides was part of an overall reduction in serious crime in the city.

The LAPD recorded 216 gang-related deaths in 2007. Although that figure accounted for more than half of all homicides citywide, it was a 27% drop from the year before.

The decline was most pronounced in the Valley: Twenty-nine gang-related killings in 2007 represented a 40% drop from the number recorded in 2006.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Police Chief William J. Bratton credited a gang counteroffensive launched in early 2007 after the LAPD recorded an increase in gang crime the year before.

Last February, officials took the unusual -- and controversial -- step of identifying what they called the city's 11 most dangerous gangs and targeted them with teams of police, federal agents, probation officers and prosecutors.

Then in April, Villaraigosa announced that the LAPD and city would step up policing and intervention programs in eight "gang reduction zones" in South L.A., on the Eastside and in the northeast Valley and other areas hit by gang violence.

"One year ago, Chief Bratton and I pledged to stop the bleeding, to stop the rise in gang violence, and we did," Villaraigosa said at a North Hills news conference, where he and Bratton were flanked by about two dozen officials, including City Council members, U.S. Atty. Thomas O'Brien and Salvador Hernandez, the FBI's assistant director in charge of the Los Angeles division.

But criminologists and gang experts cautioned against declaring victory.

Civil rights attorney Connie Rice applauded the decline but said any celebration should be tempered by what she called a continued epidemic of gang violence stretching through whole swaths of the city.

"We have to break the norm of gang culture in hot zones. The ranks keep refilling," said Rice, director of the Advancement Project, which called on the city last year to invest $1 billion in a comprehensive mix of prevention programs. "The mistake is looking through the lens of crime fighting. You cannot arrest your way out of this problem."

Others cautioned against relying too heavily on one year of data, saying gang violence ebbs and flows in cycles.

"Gangs respond to suppression efforts, no doubt about it. But does that solve the problem? Absolutely not," said Wes McBride, executive director of the California Gang Investigators Assn. "Without bringing in social programs behind that, you'll just shift the problem elsewhere or hold it off for a few months."

Villaraigosa and Bratton emphasized the need for gang intervention and education programs but said those efforts can be successful only when combined with a strong police presence.

Along with the drop in homicides, overall gang-related crimes were down nearly 4%.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Los Angeles Times (http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-gangs11jan11,0,6519078.story?coll=la-home-local)

kidA
January 12th, 2008, 03:04 AM
Does anyone knkow the stats for like the early 90s? That would be great to see.

xXFallenXx
January 12th, 2008, 03:06 AM
What's the deal with the early 90's?

Why the hell was it so violent across the US?

VZN
January 12th, 2008, 08:02 PM
This is wonderful news. AV is getting things DONE.

What's the deal with the early 90's?

Why the hell was it so violent across the US?

The 80's crack era. I'm serious.

Westsidelife
January 13th, 2008, 07:27 AM
This is wonderful news. AV is getting things DONE.

Yes, he certainly is. It's why this is my favorite quote from the article...

"One year ago, Chief Bratton and I pledged to stop the bleeding, to stop the rise in gang violence, and we did,"

Taylorhoge
January 13th, 2008, 11:25 PM
I wonder what is the total population of active gang memebers in L.A?

VZN
January 14th, 2008, 02:49 AM
I wonder what is the total population of active gang memebers in L.A?


I don't know about active, but there's supposedly 100,000 identified gang members in L.A. County... I'll go dig up that article.

One year ago, Chief Bratton and I pledged to stop the bleeding, to stop the rise in gang violence, and we did,"

All he needs to work on now is gang members attacking innocent civilians for no reason... violence between gang members is one thing, gang members attacking other people for no reason at all is a another. I'm confident that AV can get something done about that.

jessemh431
January 14th, 2008, 02:56 AM
From Los Angeles Community Policing

Gangs of Los Angeles

Gang-related crime touches every corner of Los Angeles, but the Newton community south of downtown saw the most incidents from January through March.

Number of gang-related crimes by LAPD Division


Devonshire 67
Foothill 83
West Valley 37
Van Nuys 48
North Hollywood 36
Hollywood 24
Wilshire 129
Rampart 146
Northeast 176
Hollenbeck 129
Central 35
Newton 206
Southwest 187
77th Street 142
Southeast 161
Harbor 67
Pacific 34
West LA 20

Gang-related crimes through March 2005


Category YTD 2005 YTD 2004 2004 total

Homicide
76
84
291
Attempt homicide 165 180 717
Felony assault 689 600 2,616
Attacks on police officers 25 19 61
Robbery 498 665 2,308
Shots into a residence 61 46 188
Witness intimidation 141 200 754
Carjacking 35 41 118
Others* 37 31 102
Total 1,727 1,866 7,155

*Includes kidnapping, rape, arson and extortion

Known Los Angeles gangs


Number of gangs Number of members

Hispanic
246
22,309
Crip 113 10,306
Blood 45 4,209
Asian 32 1,106
Stoner** 16 541
White 11 561
Total 463 39,032

** Usually teenagers of various races/ethnicities, who listen to metal or gothic music

According to CAL/GANG, a statewide database maintained by the California Department of Justice, the city of Los Angeles is home to 463 gangs with 39,032 members — about the same number as residents of Encino.

Among those, Latino gangs are the most numerous, with 22,309 members. Predominantly African American are the so-called Crip gangs, with 10,306 members, and Blood-affiliated gangs, with 4,209. The rest are smaller gangs. These numbers are down from 1997, when the database showed 64,000 gang members.

Countywide, CAL/GANG estimates there are 1,108 gangs with 85,298 members. About 53,121 are members of predominantly Latino gangs, while the Crips, with 210 cliques, have 17,542. The numbers include those for the city of Los Angeles.

To be listed in the CAL/GANG system, a person must meet two or more of the following criteria: be an admitted gang member, be named by a reliable informant, wear gang attire, display gang signs or tattoos, frequent gang areas or be arrested with known gang members.

klamedia
January 14th, 2008, 07:46 PM
So the above info is over 10 years old.......I'm sure lots has changed since then.

Barcelona60
January 14th, 2008, 10:56 PM
The gangs have always given the city a black eye. This is what sickens me. Maybe there is a glimmer of hope.:yes:

jessemh431
January 15th, 2008, 02:20 AM
So the above info is over 10 years old.......I'm sure lots has changed since then.

This is the best thing i could find. I would say there's probably more members, but less crimes.

Taylorhoge
January 15th, 2008, 02:32 AM
Honestly the gang culture I think is as much as part of L.A as much as the mob is apart of New York(even though not much of it remains)