FBI: Gangs Responsible For 80% Of U.S. Crime

January 30th, 2009 (8) Posted By .

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USA Today:

Criminal gangs in the USA have swelled to an estimated 1 million members responsible for up to 80% of crimes in communities across the nation, according to a gang threat assessment compiled by federal officials.

The major findings in a report by the Justice Department’s National Gang Intelligence Center, which has not been publicly released, conclude gangs are the “primary retail-level distributors of most illicit drugs” and several are “capable” of competing with major U.S.-based Mexican drug-trafficking organizations.

“A rising number of U.S.-based gangs are seemingly intent on developing working relationships” with U.S. and foreign drug-trafficking organizations and other criminal groups to “gain direct access to foreign sources of illicit drugs,” the report concludes.

The gang population estimate is up 200,000 since 2005.

Bruce Ferrell, chairman of the Midwest Gang Investigators Association, whose group monitors gang activity in 10 states, says the number of gang members may be even higher than the report’s estimate.

“We’ve seen an expansion for the last 10 years,” says Ferrell, who has reviewed the report. “Each year, the numbers are moving forward.”

‘Growing threat’ on the move

The report says about 900,000 gang members live “within local communities across the country,” and about 147,000 are in U.S. prisons or jails.

“Most regions in the United States will experience increased gang membership … and increased gang-related criminal activity,” the report concludes, citing a recent rise in gangs on the campuses of suburban and rural schools.

Among the report’s other findings:

•Last year, 58% of state and local law enforcement agencies reported that criminal gangs were active in their jurisdictions, up from 45% in 2004.

•More gangs use the Internet, including encrypted e-mail, to recruit and to communicate with associates throughout the U.S. and other countries.

•Gangs, including outlaw motorcycle groups, “pose a growing threat” to law enforcement authorities along the U.S.-Canadian border. The U.S. groups are cooperating with Canadian gangs in various criminal enterprises, including drug smuggling.

Assistant FBI Director Kenneth Kaiser, the bureau’s criminal division chief, says gangs have largely followed the migration paths of immigrant laborers.

He says the groups are moving to avoid the scrutiny of larger metropolitan police agencies in places such as Los Angeles. “These groups were hit hard in L.A.” by law enforcement crackdowns, “but they are learning from it,” Kaiser says.

MS-13 far-flung from L.A. incubator

One group that continues to spread despite law enforcement efforts is the violent Salvadoran gang known as MS-13.

Michael Sullivan, the departing director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, says the gang’s dependence on shocking violence to advance extortion, prostitution and other criminal enterprises has frustrated attempts to infiltrate and disrupt the insular group’s activities.

“MS-13′s foothold in the U.S. is expanding,” Sullivan says.

Kaiser says the street gang is in 42 states, up from 33 in 2005. “Enforcement efforts have been effective to a certain extent, but they (gang members) keep moving,” he says.

MS-13 is the abbreviation for the gang also known as Mara Salvatrucha. The group gained national prominence in the 1980s in Los Angeles, where members were linked to incidents involving unusual brutality.

Since then, it has formed cells or “cliques” across the U.S., says Aaron Escorza, chief of the FBI’s MS-13 National Gang Task Force.

The task force was launched in 2004 amid concerns about the gang’s rapid spread. Gang members were targeted in broad investigations similar to those used to bust organized crime groups from Russia and Italy.

Among law enforcement efforts:

•Omaha: The last of 24 MS-13 members swept up on federal firearms charges and conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine were sentenced last year in the largest bust since the group emerged there in 2004.

The gang’s strength dimmed as a result, but the nine-month probe did not eradicate the group, says Ferrell, who assisted in the investigation.

•Nashville: During the last two years, 14 MS-13 members pleaded guilty on charges ranging from murder to obstruction of justice.

Davidson County, Tenn., Sheriff Daron Hall, whose jurisdiction includes Nashville, says MS-13 started growing there about five years ago, corresponding with an influx of immigrant labor.

Last April, county officials began checking the immigration status of all arrestees. “We know we have removed about 100 gang members, including MS-13,” to U.S. authorities for deportation, Hall says.

•Maryland: Earlier this month, federal authorities said they had convicted 42 MS-13 members since 2005. More than half were charged in a “racketeering conspiracy” in which members participated in robberies and beatings and arranged the murders of other gang members, according to Justice Department documents.

In one case, Maryland gang members allegedly discussed killing rivals with an MS-13 leader calling on a cellphone from a Salvadoran jail, the documents say.

Escorza says a “revolving door” on the border has kept the gang’s numbers steady — about 10,000 in the U.S. — even as many illegal immigrant members are deported.

The FBI, which has two agents in El Salvador to help identify and track members in Central America and the United States, plans to dispatch four more agents to Guatemala and Honduras, Escorza says.

“They evolve and adapt,” he says. “They know what law enforcement is doing. Word of mouth spreads quickly.”

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  • Hardball1911(Revolutionary Constitutionalist)

    Start executing them in plain view of their friends. No trial. If you claim gang membership, you die. If you are found to be a gang member after having lied and stated you were not, your family is then removed from the planet with you. All of your belongings will be auctioned off to raise money for your victims and their families.

    Gangs or not, the thug mentality is what drives this. It’s called greed. Until you take the profit from their enterprises, they will not stop. Threats of death or not.

  • American Woman (bitter clinger to my guns and religion)

    No shit? :roll:

    The problem is that MTV/Rap/Music industry glorifies this culture.

  • http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/10/Texas_Flag_Come_and_Take_It.svg/800px-Texas_Flag_Come_and_Take_It.svg.png Allen TX (Come and Take It)

    (voice of the new castrate) “Waaaah, the gangs are dangerous and they are selling drugs on the street. We should pass gun bans to keep the violence off our streets.”

    I recommend a heavy dosage of Westerns to see the proper response to gang related violence, and eternal sodomy in the pits of hell for those in the hip-hop “entertainment” industry who have profited on the glorification of criminal behavior.

  • dadeo

    And who makes up 100% of the gangs?

  • just posting

    Rap music is not the cause for this. It definitely has an impact, but money, greed, power run the show.

  • Kirk

    This gang problem, is going to bite everybody sooner or later, as one of the problems with this gang in particular, the Mara Salvatrucha aka MS-13, which is usually referred to as a Salvadoran gang, from El Salvador, but in reality, draws members from throughout Central America, with Guatemala and Honduras being saturated with this gang. Also, this gang is not alone, but has rivals and enemies such as “dieciocho calle”, (18th Street gang). There is one particular characteristic of the people that make up these groups, they have neither respect, nor fear, of law enforcement. They are accustomed to operating with impunity. It is common to find their victims, (and sometimes themselves), wrapped in plastic, or naked, (usually with signs of having been tortured and or decapitated), off to the side of the road, or in a park, or field. Sometimes their victims, which are frequently small business owners, that have been mercilessly extorted, and get together and deal with these gang members in a “personal” way, as the law enforcement in Central America is, shall we say, “ineffective.” When the USA deports these people, they return, but if the USA were to give illegal alien gang members, that have simply come here to commit their horrendous crimes on the citizens of the USA, a sentence of death by hanging, no deportation, this would sure put a kink in their plans of returning to commit more mayhem. They commit crime as a way of life, as a group, collectively, and they show no mercy, it’s pay or die. Killing, is what they do, and they will kill children, the elderly, anybody, it doesn’t matter to them, they kill without remorse. So, why give them a free, air-conditioned, ride home, only to have them here again in a week, when they could finish their crime spree at the end of a rope? How many Americans must suffer at the hands of these ruthless groups, before America wakes up to this reality, and like the small business owners in Central America, gives these people what they really deserve? If the law is not changed to deal with these people the same way across the board, they will not be deterred, and that will breed vigilantism as in Central America. America must be unified in the fight against these enemies that have invaded our country, with their systematic destruction of our way of life.

  • http://www.myspace.com/frankensubie brotherscoobs

    I do have to admit…vigilantism does have it’s appeal !!
    our court sytsems will never allow the right thing to be done…stupid libs will be feeling sorry for the poor misunderstood boys and trying to figure out what we did wrong to make this happen ….( sob) :oops: those poor poor boys…so vigilantism sounds more gooder to me :twisted: :gun:

  • http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/10/Texas_Flag_Come_and_Take_It.svg/800px-Texas_Flag_Come_and_Take_It.svg.png Allen TX (Come and Take It)

    :arrow: Just Posting
    I didn’t say rap, I said hip-hop. Hip-hop is a broader genre than most people understand, and if you look at the lyrics and artwork on the CDs you see the devaluation of life. They’ve been sold a lie that doesn’t work: as long as I get mine, it doesn’t matter what happens to everyone else. If everyone truly thought this way there would be no reason for laws, there would be no trading (buying/selling), it would only be power that dictates what you get and what you’re allowed to keep.