Saturday, August 2, 2008
Los Angeles One man got stabbed. Another got shot in the chest. A 6-year-old boy was temporarily blinded when he was spray-painted in the face.
And they were the lucky ones among those who have had run-ins with graffiti “crews,” or gangs.
Over the past 2 1/2 years in Southern California, three people have been killed after trying to stop graffiti vandals in the act. A fourth died after being shot while watching a confrontation between crews in a park.
“We have seen a marked increase in these graffiti-tagging gangs taking to weapons and fighting to protect their walls, their territory, their name,” said Los Angeles County sheriff’s Lt. Robert Rifkin.
Los Angeles County has battled graffiti for decades, spending $30 million a year to paint over or clean up the emblems, names and other images spray-painted on stores, concrete-lined riverbeds, rail lines, phone booths, buses, even police cars. On Wednesday, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a law requiring convicted graffiti vandals to remove their scrawl.
For some taggers, protecting their work is akin to defending their names and their honor.
“If we see someone calling the police, then we target them,” said Mario Garcia, 20, who describes himself as a former tagger trying to become a professional artist. “You are trying to stop me from what I live, what I believe in and what I breathe? We are not going to let no one get in the way.”
Workers who remove the graffiti say they take caution if they find a crew at work. They wait until the taggers leave before cleaning up.
“We won’t say anything to them,” said Rogelio Flores, whose company Graffiti Busters contracts with Los Angeles to blast away the markings with high-pressure hoses. “We don’t know what kind of weapons they have.”
Police tell residents to resist the urge to confront graffiti crews.
“It’s not worth the risk,” Rifkin said. “Take a deep breath, back off and call law enforcement.”
Some of the violence has been between rival crews, which are increasingly acting like street gangs. And some of the bloodshed has involved real street gangs that mark their turf with their names or emblems. But some of the victims have been innocents.
In an attack last month, two youths spray-painted the face and body of the 6-year-old boy who spotted them scribbling gang signs on a wall near Compton. The boy recovered from chemical burns to his eyes.
Comments
Anonymous bearded_gnome says...
so, the Google ads on this one:
women's personals ads, and an internet filter!
how do ya' get to those from this article???
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this isn't new, isn't news. has been going on for years/decades. taggers, gangbangers, illegal alien gangbangers, getting violent? wow, soon you'll be telling us that there's "backtalk going on at lawrence high school FGS!"
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solution:
mandate high school classes in *art appreciation!*
I will note in passing that some of this problem cited in the article is dramatically worsened by LA's "sanctuary city" policy. when they catch a criminal who is an illegal alien, they don't let Immigration know to ship the d---bag outa this country! another reason a good double fence will save us money!
Posted 2 August 2008, 8:32 a.m. Suggest removal
Anonymous madmike says...
So, what is the news here? Gang-Bangers, punks and lunatics galore there! Nothing is new about this in Los Angeles.
Posted 2 August 2008, 2:45 p.m. Suggest removal
Anonymous bearded_gnome says...
yeah,
madmike when I see an article like this, old old old news reported like its *breaking news!* when I see that, I wonder, what's the motive for this, on the wire, and in the award-winning pro-illegal-immigration ljworld?
Posted 2 August 2008, 10:14 p.m. Suggest removal
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