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How a 15-year-old kid started one of America’s most violent gangs.
May 09, 2007
No matter where you heard it, Stanley “Tookie” Williams was not the co-founder of the Crip street gang in Los Angeles.
Many of the leaders of the first Crip gangs knew each other at Washington, Fremont, or Locke High Schools. But more often they were fellow inmates at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall, Youth Authority, and Fred Shaw or Bob Simmon’s Home for Boys.
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author: Richard Valdemar | posted @ Wednesday, May 09, 2007 11:58 AM |
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May 09, 2007
Throughout history gangs have developed, multiplied, and mutated into many forms. Today one of law enforcement’s biggest problems is the inability of law enforcement intelligence to accurately estimate the number of gangs and gang members. There are several reasons for this, but the key one is that we have no universally accepted definition of a gang.
The traditional gangs are those that are territorial or claim turf. This would include your Hispanic “Cholos,” the African-American Bloods and Crips, and Asian Gangs like the Tiny Rascal Gangsters.
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author: Richard Valdemar | posted @ Wednesday, May 09, 2007 11:50 AM |
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