Washington eventually separated from the Avenue Boys, moved to West Los Angeles and attended Washington High School. He developed a new following, and to distinguish themselves from other street gangs, members wore blue handkerchiefs, blue sweatshirts, Levi's, tennis shoes and baseball caps. Washington reportedly always walked with a cane.
At this time, Black students were being bussed from the inner-city areas of Los Angeles to predominantly white schools in the San Fernando Valley. Williams, Washington and a third youth, Michael Conception, began to victimize students attending neighboring Centennial High School. Within a short period of time, they gained a significant following.
But when Washington, Williams and a small group of followers attacked Silvester Scott and Benson Owens, it set off a significant chain of events. Benson and Scott, who both lived on Piru Street in nearby Compton, refused to be victimized and fought off the attack. Allegedly, at the end of the confrontation, someone said, "Don't mess with anyone from Piru Street, and take that crip nigger with you."
Scott later became the founder of "Piru Street," and Owens started the "Westside Pirus." Both were initially started for protection against Washington's gang, called the Crips. They identified themselves with trademark red clothing and developed into what we now know as the "Blood" street gangs.
The most accepted story of how the Crips got their name is that Washington's use of his cane led to the nickname "Crip," for crippled.