Title: Hispanic Gangs
1Hispanic Gangs
- Understanding the Marginal Man or woman
2The Beginnings of Hispanic Gangs
- We can say that in some ways the end of the War
with Mexico is the beginning of Hispanic street
gangs in the US.
- The resentments and general attitudes of Anglos
after the War caused resentment to grow and
fester among Mexican Americans who felt they had
been cheated by the Americans out of their
heritage.
3Hispanic Gangs
- In the early 1900's, Los Angeles experienced the
birth of the first Hispanic street gangs.Â
Mexican-Americans who lived in the "pueblo" of
Los Angeles still felt displaced, even as
naturalized citizens. Many of these new
Americans were treated like second-class citizens
by white Angelenos, and were told to go back to
their home, Mexico. In the minds of Hispanics in
Los Angeles, they were already home, but their
home was now part of the United States because of
the annexation.Â
4The Mexican immigrants also tended to
live in the same areas, with family or other
Mexicans who migrated from the same geographical
areas of Mexico. These neighborhoods were often
some of the poorest areas in rapidly growing Los
Angeles. These conditions aided in the
development of rivalries between various
immigrant groups. A modern class distinction was
also developing. Mexican street gangs formed in
part due to economic conditions, prejudice and
racism
5By the 1920s, El Paso, Texas had
become a center for many immigrant Mexicans, much
like Los Angeles. In fact, an underground travel
route developed between the two cities. This
route allowed El Paso trends to directly
influence the L.A. street gangs. In El Paso,
Texas, many of the Mexicans who went to prison
were incarcerated in Huntsville. While in the
Huntsville prison, they formed a prison gang
called the El Paso Tip. El Paso Tip took it's
name from the area of Texas where the prison was
located. Fellow gang members would greet each
other by saying "are you tipped up?" or "are you
tipped?"Â
6The growth of the aircraft industry
in the 40s in California brought many immigrants
to California including Mexicans.
7Zoot Suits and the Pachucos
- Mickey Garcia, a young boy from Pachuca, Hidalgo,
Mexico migrated north and relocated in El Paso,
Texas
- He immediately joined a local Mexican street gang
called the Secundo Barrio. Garcia also brought
with him a unique style of dress, initially
thought to have originated in Mexico. Garcia's
dress style became an instant hit with all the
young people, especially the local gang members.Â
8Zoot Suits
- His fashion included a felt hat with a long
feather in it, called a tapa or tanda. The
pants were pleated and baggy, and referred to asÂ
tramas. The shirt was creased and called aÂ
lisa. A carlango, a long, loose-fitting coat,
was worn over the ensemble. The shoes, calledÂ
calcos, were French-toe style or Stacy Adams
brand and were always shined. To complete the
style, one had to have a long chain attached to
the belt loop that hung past the knee, and into
the side pocket of the pants. This outfit became
known as the zoot suit, and was later referred
to as the pachuco look.Â
9The Beginnings of Strife
- The Maravilla gangs started to form during the
mid-to-late 1940s, and continued to grow well
into the 1950s. The concept of protecting turf
was expanded within the housing projects known as
Maravilla, where the Maravilla gangs got their
start. Competition for jobs, women and turf
became issues for the youth that lived in this
area.
101942 and the 18th Street Gang
- After a man was killed at a swimming hole,
suspects were rounded up and subsequently sent to
prison. They handled it well and became
folk-heros in the Mexican-American community and
the manner of dress they adopted a gang pride.
11Zoot Suit Riot
- Resentments on part of Anglos
- Resentment on part of Mexican-Americans
- Conflicts with military personnel
- Resulted in ongoing assaults on men wearing Zoot
Suits by military personnel
12The Mexican Mafia
- Between 156-57 several Eslos were doing time at
Duel Vocational Institute and formed La Eme
- San Quentin 1968
- A day-long battle between Mex-mafia and Nortenos.
13Opposition to La Eme
- the murder solidified the rivalry between
northern and southern Hispanics, both in the
prison system and on the street. The Hispanics
from northern California formed Nuestra Familia
(NF), another prison gang, in response to the
conflict. NF was formed to protect the northern
Californians from La Eme, whose membership was
made up primarily of southern Californians.
14Street and prison gang members from
northern California began to use the number 14
as an identifier. It represented the 14th letter
of the alphabet, the letter "N."Â The letter
stood for Norteno, the Spanish word for
northerner. The term norte was used to show
that a person was from the north. Individuals
from southern California were automatically
considered rivals, both inside the prison system
and on the streets.
15 Inmates in the state prison system were
given bandannas in a railroad print, and could
select from two colors red or blue. Hispanic
street and prison gangs from northern California
claimed the color red to identify themselves.Â
They used this color because most of the southern
California Hispanics in state prison had chosen
to wear a blue-colored railroad handkerchief.Â
The Crips and Bloods were not the first gangs to
use red or blue to identify.
16Code of Conduct Evolved
- Do not cooperate with the police
- Take care of business yourself (handle your own
problems).
- Never snitch or inform on gang activity (be aÂ
rata/rat).
- No insult, no matter how small, goes unanswered.
17The New Hispanic Gang
- By the 1970s the firearm had become the weapon of
choice
- New immigrants became a source of prey
- They formed gangs for self-protection
- Gang violence became the rule
- No rules, only the strong survive.
18Drugs and Hispanic Gangs
- By the late 1980s, Hispanic gangs such as 18th
Street, 38th Street, and Big Hazard began to sell
drugs for profit.Â
- Los Angeles the Gang capital of the US
- Respect was no longer based on age or experience,
but on fear.
19Latin King and Queen Nation
- Largest of Hispanic gangs in Chicago and perhaps
in the US.
- Rooted in the Puerto Rican experience in the US.
20Mara Salavatrucha (MS 13)
- In the early 1980s, a violent civil war began in
El Salvador which would last more than 12 years.Â
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.
21MS 13
- Most of the refugees settled in Hispanic
neighborhoods, but were not readily accepted.
- The result was MS 13 formed in the late 1980s for
protection.
- Known for being extremely violent with the
machete being the weapon of choice.
22MS 13
- Involved in a variety of crimes from drugs to
theft and murder for hire.
- Originally only El Salvadorans could be in MS 13,
but gradually they expanded to allow other
central Americans and a few black Americans.
23MS 13
- Gang members identify themselves with the number
13, usually with SUR or MS included.
- They also identify themselves as southerners
thus Surenos.
- They often attack 18th Street gang members on
sight.
- Show no fear of Law Enforcement
24MS 13
- Two primary methods for dealing with MS 13
- Arrest
- May involve prison time
- Deportation
- If sent back to El Salvadore gang members fear
they will be targeted by Sombra Negra
2518th Street Gang
- One of the largest and best known of street gangs
in the nation.
- Expanded to many states and Indian country
- L/E estimates that member ship is at least 30,000.
2618th Street Gang
- Formed in the 60s
- Result of racial discrimination by the Clanton
Street Hispanic gang who restricted membership to
American citizens of pure Hispanic origin.
- First gang to cross the racial barrier and this
allowed a rapid and unchecked growth.
2718th Street Gang
- Criminal Activity
- Drugs
- Heroin, coke, rock cocain, meth, Marijuana
- tax collection
2818th Street Gang
- Characteristics
- Tattoos
- 18, 666, XVIII
- Clothing
- Black trousers, white T-shirts, sports teams
2918th Street Gang
- Recruit from elementary age children
- A big arsenal of weapons
- Assault rifles, tech 9, Mac 10s and 11s, 357,
9mm, .44s and so on
- Estimates are that the 18th Street gang will
continue to grow.