Illegal immigration sparks 'race war' in cities, prisons, schools

Spanics blast niglet in black racial cleansing case

2 Arrested in L.A. Freeway Shooting That Wounded Boy, 6

LOS ANGELES — A gang member and a suspected associate were arrested Wednesday for a shooting that critically wounded a 6-year-old boy in an area where a Hispanic gang has targeted black victims, but police said it wasn't known if the attack was racially motivated. The victim, who is black, was on life support, the mayor said.

City leaders strongly asserted that they would not downplay an element of racial bias if it existed and they insisted that there has not been a serious increase in such crimes in Los Angeles.

Two Hispanic men, ages 25 and 26, were arrested around 5:30 a.m., only 17 hours after bullets were fired at a family of six driving through the Harbor Gateway area in a sport utility vehicle.

One of the men was a local gang member and the other was "probably an associate" of the gang, police Capt. William Hayes told a news conference. Neither man's name was released. They were to be booked for investigation of attempted murder, he said.

"We are very confident that we have the people who were involved in the actual shooting in custody," Police Chief William Bratton said. The handgun used in the crime had not been located.

The men also could face state or federal hate crime charges if it is determined that the shooting was racially motivated, the chief said.

The arrests "send a message that no crime in this city is acceptable and no indiscriminate shooting motivated by hate or gang intimidation will be tolerated," Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said.

Officials said that although overall homicides are up so far this year, gang violence and gang-related homicides are down in the city. Still, Villaraigosa said, the violence throws "a cloak of fear" over communities.

The shooting occurred about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday when two Hispanic men standing along a road flashed gang signs at the family's vehicle and one pulled a gun and fired, police said.

One bullet struck the 6-year-old in the head.

The bullet could not be removed and the boy was in critical but stable condition "with obviously a life-threatening injury," Hayes said.

The mayor said he met with the boy's mother.

"I can tell you that there's almost nothing you can say to a mother whose boy is on life support," Villaraigosa said.

Also in the car were an 18-month-old child, a 3-year-old, a man and two women, one of whom was six months pregnant, authorities said. They were not wounded.

Police said the family didn't live in the area and was there to buy a car.

Witnesses to the shooting provided information that led to the arrest, police said.

On Tuesday, Bratton described the area as "under the influence of a Latrino gang" and referred to a December 2006 gang attack in which a 14-year-old black girl was shot to death. Police alleged Cheryl Green was killed by members of a Hispanic gang intent on killing blacks following a confrontation between the gang members and a black man.

Two men have been charged with murder and hate crimes related to Green's death.

However, it was too early in the investigation to determine whether Tuesday's attack was racially motivated, Bratton said Wednesday.

Bratton and the mayor both said there had not been any recent increase in racially related violence.

"There is not that type of racial animosity in this city," Bratton said. "In a country where race is on the front page all the time, we do pretty well there."
 
Most Valuable Primate gunned down by Latrinos

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This undated photo provided Tuesday, March 4, 2008, by the Shaw family shows Jamiel Shaw Jr., 17, with his Romans football team uniform at Los Angeles High School. He had been named Most Valuable Player by Los Angeles High School. The high school student was gunned down on a sidewalk a few yards from his home in what authorities are calling a random, unprovoked gang attack.

Jamiel, who was black, was killed by Hispanic gang members who asked him what gang he belonged to, then shot him when he didn't answer, police and witnesses said. No arrests have been made.
 
Most Valuable Primate shooting suspect may be in U.S. illegally

The suspected street gang member charged in the shooting death of a high school football star may have been in the country illegally, an immigration official said today.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials will detain and investigate Pedro Espinoza, 19, for possible deportation once his current murder charge has run its course, agency spokeswoman Virginia Kice said.

Espinoza was released from jail in an assault case the day before the March 2 killing of 17-year-old Jamiel Shaw Jr., a standout running back at Los Angeles High School, police said.

Kice said she did not know if ICE had placed an immigration hold on him during that jail term. But she said inmates on such holds are generally released directly into her agency's custody.

ICE takes hundreds of inmates into custody from Southern California prisons and jails each week who are in the country illegally or lost their right to remain in the country after being convicted of a crime, Kice said.

But some deportable inmates escape detection by lying to ICE investigators or local law enforcement officials about their place of birth, she said.

"There could be any number of reasons why an individual was not a subject of an ICE detainer in the past," she said. "It's possible that someone coming into the jail system may have made a false claim about their birthplace."

Kice did not know what prompted ICE to investigate Espinoza during his current incarceration.

Espinoza, a suspected member of a street gang called 18th Street, was charged last week with a single murder count with a special-circumstance allegation that could make him eligible for the death penalty, prosecutors said.

Police are looking for a second suspect.

ICE officials placed their immigration hold late last week on Espinoza, Kice said.

The suspected shooter, who is believed to have been born in Mexico, will be released to her agency's custody "if and when he is released from local custody," she said.
 
L.A.'s Police Chief Seeks to Keep a Lid on Racial Gang Violence

Simple as Brown vs. Black

The heart-wrenching L.A. Times cover photo of Jamiel Shaw in an open coffin drew angry protests last week from readers who bitterly complained to the Times that its decision to run such a graphic image was “disrespectful"� and “disgusting."� One woman, who wrote that she’s the parent of a high school boy who is – as Shaw was – “an athlete with good grades,"� glanced at the cover lying in her driveway and flatly refused to bring the paper into her house. The tragedy just hit too close to home.

The Times later clarified that the photos were – as in every case with their funeral coverage – in keeping the family’s wishes. The photo also showed parents Anita and Jamiel Shaw Sr., dressed in white, praying by the casket of their slain son, the 17-year-old star athlete gunned down in broad daylight on the sidewalk by Latino gang members simply because he didn’t answer fast enough that he wasn’t in a gang.

The families who have lost children to gang attacks on innocents have shown exemplary strength in the wake of unspeakable horror. They’ve appeared at rallies, press conferences, and as ambassadors for campaigns to silence the violence. And here it was again, with the Shaws asking for the uncensored truth, as sometimes only a photo can.

But in the aftermath of recent shootings that have left four children killed or wounded in two weeks, activists struggling for the LAPD to address the hard stuff are finding that uncensored truth isn’t just tough to come by, it’s become a raging controversy of its own.

Last week, praise resounded from the community when the LAPD announced the arrest of 19-year-old Pedro Espinoza, Shaw’s suspected killer. A known member of the 18th Street gang, Espinoza had been released from jail one day before the killing and could face the death penalty if convicted. The next day, the police announced two suspects were in custody for allegedly wounding six-year-old Lavareay Elzy, who remains in critical condition. Elzy was in a red SUV in Harbor Gateway with his parents when gang members opened fire on the car. The suspects, Ernesto Murillo, 25, and Ismael Torres, 26, are members of the East Side Torrance gang. A sad irony: Murillo had been placed on gang injunctions one week before the shooting.

Still at large is the killer of Anthony Escobar, the 13-year-old Latino who was shot in the head in Echo Park while picking lemons for his family’s dinner. As with the others, Escobar’s shooting is being described as a gang attack against a young person who is not believed to have been a member of a gang, driving home the cruel reminder that Latinos are also victims of worsening gang violence.

Federal and local authorities have classified the 18th Street gang, along with the MS 13s and the Florencia 13s, as a “super gang."� These three together claim much of L.A. County’s Latino gang population, estimated by gang cops to be more than 50,000. Additionally, these gangs are responsible for the alarming spike in gang membership worldwide and share a racial agenda against African Americans, stemming from their sworn allegiance to the racist Mexican Mafia (La Eme) prison gang that works with the Aryan Brotherhood.

Though not categorized as a super gang, East Side Torrance also has a known allegiance to La Eme and a racist agenda against blacks that can be verified easily by doing a quick Google search for “East Side Torrance gang."� Their hate-speech posts come up first.

Interviews with law enforcement experts underscore the racist motives of these killings, but L.A.’s top cop will hear none of it. Chief William Bratton chastised an activist and a reporter on separate occasions for trying to get him to address the racial aspect. At an Urban Policy Roundtable meeting March 8 in Leimert Park, Project Islamic Hope’s Najee Ali caught a tongue-lashing by Bratton for using “ethnic cleansing"� when asking about the killing of African American innocents by Latino gangs. On March 12, it was ABC Eyewitness News veteran reporter Leo Stallworth’s turn. When Stallworth asked Bratton if the shooting of Elzy was racially motivated, Bratton angrily fired back, “You’re a one-note band on this issue. You need to get off it."�

Stallworth tried to ask a follow-up, with the chief angrily talking over him, and told the top cop that these questions were from African American and Latino residents who “are terribly afraid."� Sometime during the exchange, Bratton made his point that the shooting was not race-related.

Councilwoman Janice Hahn was standing next to Bratton. It was her impression that “Stallworth had every right to ask those questions. He wasn’t being combative at all."�

Over at the Los Angeles Wave, an “infuriated"� Betty Pleasant took the chief to task. “Bratton angrily dressed down my black colleague and then, turning to the other journalists present (and from my experience, they would be something other than black) and said, ”�’The rest of you seem to get it,’"� Pleasant wrote. “Get what? The fact that black children are being gunned down in their neighborhoods by Latino gangsters and nobody wants to call it what it is? Yeah, I get that."� Pleasant also called out Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and City Councilwoman Hahn for appearing to nod in agreement with Bratton.

Hahn was quick to note that she called Pleasant as soon as she saw the column to say that she actually was nodding at someone she recognized and can be seen grimacing because she doesn’t agree with the chief. She says, “Do we have a major war in L.A.? I don’t think so. But are these crimes racially motivated? We know that Cheryl Green was killed in a racially-motivated killing. Clearly the little six-year-old was with his African American family that was shot at by Latino gang members. I don’t know how LAPD can determine so quickly that it wasn’t racially motivated, particularly since the shocking revelations that have come to light in Los Angeles in the last couple of years."�

Deputy District Attorney and landmark Mexican Mafia prosecutor Anthony Manzella concurs on the city’s larger racial picture, but says Bratton’s message was confusing. “I agree with the chief that the fact that the Mexican Mafia wants to ethnically cleanse their neighborhoods does not mean that the city has a larger racial problem. But there’s no question that among Hispanic gangs the Mafia gave orders a long time ago that the Surenos were supposed to move African Americans out of Hispanic neighborhoods. There’s no question about that. That’s documented."�

Thing is, Bratton has never stated that the Mexican Mafia has an “ethnic cleansing plot,"� despite the prosecutors evidence. He’s been quoted saying the opposite. And when CityBeat, yet another “one-man band on this subject,"� asked LAPD for clarification, spokesperson Sgt. Lee Sands reiterated Bratton’s statement to Stallworth that “there has been nothing to indicate there is a racial motivation to these shootings."�

It is confusing, notes Joe Hicks, vice president of Community Advocates, Inc. and former executive director of the city’s Human Relations Commission. “I agree with the chief and the mayor that L.A. isn’t on the road to racial Armageddon. We’re not on the edge of a race war. But I don’t think anyone is alleging that. I’m still a bit amused at broader claims that there are no racial implications to what we’re seeing from Watts to South Central to the Valley. And I’m sure Chief Bratton is aware of that information also. He’s a very bright guy."�

Many we spoke with speculate that Bratton knows what’s going on but wants to prevent tensions from escalating in communities where law-abiding African Americans and Latinos share the same economic distress. As to the wisdom of the tactic? Ali says his whole reason for asking about “ethnic cleansing"� was to extract from LAPD a cohesive message that would at least alert people about driving in a neighborhood, as Elzy’s parents did, where they could be harmed.

“Ethically, I think you have to alert people like when the State Department warns about not going into certain countries,"� says Tony Rafael, author of The Mexican Mafia.

Hicks reminds us that gang racism goes both ways. “In Jordan Downs, the Grape Street Crips have been preying on Latino residents."� However, he concedes that black gangs don’t have these chilling unwritten rules whereby once you join a Latino gang you cannot get out alive. Nor do black gangs share a racial agenda to rid their neighborhoods of all Latinos. Finally, black gangs don’t give out stripes for executing a murderous racial agenda, or threaten to kill bangers who won’t. All of these, according to Manzella, are known as La Eme’s unwritten rules. (Even when it comes down to ruthless gangbanging, the boons approach it in a slothful, half-assed manner like some job at the DMV) :lol:

Retired L.A. County Sheriff’s Detective Richard Valdemar believes that Bratton is simply in over his head. “He doesn’t know what he’s doing and he doesn’t understand L.A.-based gangs,"� says Valdemar, who’s served as a star witness against Mexican Mafia shot callers. “The kids on the street know what’s going on. So, for us to deny it is to show the kids that we don’t know what’s going on. They start to see the government and the police department as stupid."�
 
Re: L.A.'s Police Chief Seeks to Keep a Lid on Racial Gang Violence

(Even when it comes down to ruthless gangbanging, the boons approach it in a slothful, half-assed manner like some job at the DMV) :lol:

:rotfl: :rotfl:
 
Teens injured in fight at San Leandro's Camp Sweeney

SAN LEANDRO — A brawl at an Alameda County youth detention camp Monday night left four teens and one staffer injured, officials said Tuesday.

Ten teens were involved in the fight, which broke out in a Camp Sweeney recreation room at about 8 p.m., according to Chief Probation Officer Donald Blevins, whose department oversees the facility.

Blevins said the teens used pool balls and pool cues in the fight. One teen hit with a pool ball was sent to San Leandro Hospital with a broken or cracked rib, Blevins said.

Another teen received a gash over his eye, two others suffered cuts and bruises, and an onsite staffer sprained an ankle responding to the incident, Blevins said.

Blevins said the specific cause of the incident was not known, but that it was likely gang-related or racially motivated. He said the initial fight involved an African-American teen and a Hispanic teen, and that the two racial groups were segregated overnight for precautionary reasons.

"This is not a normal occurrence at Camp Sweeney," Blevins said, noting that he'd never observed teens taking sides along racial lines after previous fights.
 
Trial Of Alleged Oakland 'Nut Cases' Member Begins

OAKLAND -- A prosecutor told jurors Monday that a suspected member of Oakland's notorious "Nut Cases" gang led a "robbery and killing spree" in Oakland and San Francisco five years ago that left three Hispanic men dead and a fourth Hispanic man wounded.

In his opening statement in 25-year-old Monterrio Davis's trial in Alameda County Superior Court, prosecutor Chris Lamiero said Davis "gunned down" 22-year-old Daniel Martinez and 47-year-old Miguel Maciel-Galena near the corner of 68th and Bancroft avenues about 8:45 p.m. on Feb. 18, 2003, while the two victims, who were day laborers, took a break from an English class.

Lamiero alleged that Davis and three associates, who are all black, engaged in racial profiling by targeting Hispanic men in that attack and two later incidents that night, which he described as "an evening of slaughter and mayhem."

Lamiero said Davis and the other three men robbed Martinez and Maciel-Galena so they would have enough money to fill up the gas tank of the car in which they were driving and smoking marijuana.

The prosecutor said that at 12:15 a.m. Feb. 19, 2003, several hours after the first incident, Davis and the other culprits drove to 60th Avenue in Oakland, where a 50-year-old janitor coming home from work was shot repeatedly but managed to survive.

Lamiero said Davis was the lookout in a third incident at 3:36 a.m. on Feb. 19, 2003, in which 26-year-old Armando Arce was shot to death by another suspect on Willow Alley near Polk Street in San Francisco.

Davis, who faces three counts of murder as well as other charges, is charged with murder in that incident for aiding and abetting the shooter, Lamiero said.

Lamiero told jurors that the "Nut Cases" gang was a street gang in Oakland with a reputation for drug dealing as well as "indiscriminate robbery and murder."
 
Video: Chimp chimps out, attacks beaner

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Chimp kills beaner for necklace

Police: Man Killed Teen For Necklace
Ex-Convict Punches Man Standing Behind Him In Bond Court

MIAMI -- Miami-Dade police said a convicted felon two months out of prison was the gun-wielding robber who shot and killed a 16-year-old boy last month.

Police said Mitchell Lee Simpson, 20, was arrested during the weekend and charged with first-degree murder, armed robbery and two counts of attempted armed robbery in the death of Emmanuel Lacayo.

According to the arrest report, the teen was sho
t in the head May 25 after robbers stole his gold necklace.

Police said Simpson and another man approached Lacayo and his friends, demanding their property. The men then shot Lacayo, robbed him and ran off.

In the arrest affidavit, police said Simpson received $50 for his part of the sale of Lacayo's necklace.

After being denied bond Sunday, Simpson punched the man standing behind him in court. The incident was caught on camera.

It was unclear if he would face an additional charge for the courtroom attack.

------------------------------

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Emmanuel Lacayo was fatally shot and robbed while walking with friends in southwest Miami-Dade County
 
Wetback attempts to torch effing nigger

Suspect accused of using makeshift flame thrower to torch victim

MULBERRY, FL -- A Mulberry man is accused of turning an aerosol spray can into a makeshift flame thrower to attack a man.

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Mulberry police arrested Alexis Ruiz for arson and aggravated assault. Both crimes are enhanced under Florida's hate crime statute, because the suspect allegedly yelled racial slurs during the Sunday attack.

The victim, Robert Lewis Jr. told ABC Action News.com he heard a ruckus outside his family's home before dawn on Sunday.

When Lew
is got outside, he noticed someone had set fire to a screen door. Then Lewis says, "He tried to set me on fire."

Lewis says the suspect, Ruiz used to work for lewis's father, but Lewis had no idea what led to the attack.

According to the police report, Ruiz, "Began shooting flames at him (Lewis), while continuously shouting, "I'll get you you F****** N*****." :lol:

Lewis was not hurt in the attack.

Ruiz is in the Polk County jail.
 
Gang wars spread to new locations

New Gangs in the Mid-South
Last Update: 6/12 6:01 pm

MEMPHIS, TN - New gangs are popping up in Memphis and Shelby County, and according to law enforcement officials, there are more than 20,000 known gang members in the area.

Detectives say they are used to seeing gang graffiti all around the city, but have recently noticed the emergence of new signs and symbols.

KOG: The markings of a Korean-based gang have been spotted in Binghampton and the Nutbush community of Memphis. A detective with the Shelby County Street Crimes Unit says they do not know much about the group - only that it is named after a Korean video game.

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umbs/thumb_1213310664454_0p32721063550735596.jpg

Mabuhay Pinoy: Detectives say they are familiar with the gang, which is also known as MP-13. Some of its markings were found on a railroad bridge off Chelsea and Orchi in North Memphis.

"That's a Filipino gang going around in this area crossing out a lot of Hispanic gang stuff," said the detective. "That's telling me there's going to be some kind of clash over here soon."

Florencia Mafia or F-13: The group is based out of South Central Los Angeles, but has an increasing presence in Memphis. The gang tagged an abandoned home on Tennyson.

"These are one of the only Hispanic gangs, to my knowledge, which are pretty much racist. They target African-Americans."

The detective went on to say the F-13 gang acts in retaliation for crimes and violence committed against Hispanics by African-Americans.


The Street Crimes Unit continues to keep an eye on other gangs that have been in operation for several years in the
Mid-South.

The detective said many African-American gangs in Memphis fall under two separate alliances, "People" and the "Folk Nation".

"People" includes the Bloods and Vice Lords. The detective says the signature color for both gangs is red, and their symbol is a five-point star.

"Folk Nation" includes the Gangster Disciples and the Crips. Their symbol is an upright pitchfork, and both gangs are known for wearing blue. Investigators say the markings for the Gangster Disciples often include the number 74. Detectives say the numbers seven and four corresponds to the letters "G" and "D" in the alphabet.

Mara Salvatrucha or MS-13 is a Hispanic gang, whose markings were found in the Nutbush community of Memphis. Investigators say the gang's weapon of choice is the machete.

Surenos-13 or SUR-13 gang, Latin Kings, and the Memphis-based Krazy A-- Latinos (KAL's) also have a presence in Memphis. The groups also tagged the railroad bridge located near Chelsea and Orchi.

Th
e detective warns that a lot of gangs are steering clear from using colors and obvious tattoos, so parents will need to keep a closer eye on their kids' behavior. He said new gang members will often practice drawing their gang's symbol and logos. He said the new members will also practice hand signs and handshakes.

"The new gangs are going to be real aggressive and try to recruit our younger kids so they can get their numbers up, so they can attack the larger gangs that are already established here in the city."
 
Gang has a long, violent history in northeast L.A.

The Avenues gang's long, violent history

The Avenues gang is named for the avenues that cross Figueroa Street in Northeast Los Angeles, where the gang claims Highland Park and parts of Cypress Park, Glassell Park and Eagle Rock as its turf.

The group, which is linked to the Mexican Mafia prison gang, has a violent history of shootings and killings dating from at least the 1950s.

The Avenues gained national attention in 1995 when several members opened fire on a car that made a wrong turn into a Cypress Park alley, killing 3-year-old Stephanie Kuhen. [More on Kuhen]

In 2006, four
members of the gang were convicted of violating federal hate crime laws through a series of chilling assaults and killings aimed at driving Africoon Americoons from the predominantly Latrino community.

Among the crimes committed by the Avenues from 1995 to 2001, according to trial testimony: shooting a 15-year-old boy riding a bike; kicking open the door of a 21-year-old man's home and fatally shooting him in the head as he lay on a futon; hitting a jogger in the head with a pistol; drawing outlines of human bodies in chalk on a family's driveway, along with a racial slur; and knocking a woman off her bike and threatening her husband with a box cutter.
 
Digital Journal

Black And Hispanic Gangs Are Battling For Turf In U.S. Cities

Black and Hispanic gangs in major cities throughout the United States are battling for turf. Blacks are attacking Hispanics because many are illegal immigrants.

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Los Angeles, California is having a major problem with gang violence. It isn't just blacks attacking blacks and Hispanics preying on fellow Hispanics. Over the last several years, the violence has become racially motivated where blacks are increasingly killing Hispanics because many of them are illegal immigrants.

The explosion of illegal Hispanic immigrants is a threat to the blacks in Compton, California
. In the Harbor Gateway community of Los Angeles, 206th Street is where the forces meet, so to speak. ''Blacks understand it is not safe to cross over to the Hispanic side and Hispanics know it is not safe to cross over to the black side.''

The Florence-Firestone neighborhood in L.A. County has been particularly violent where 20 homicides have occurred in the last several years. Federal prosecutors have charged members of a Latino gang with trying to drive blacks out of this neighborhood.

L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca wrote in a newspaper editorial that the gangs aren't really ''gangs'' at all in the technical sense of the word but just random black and Hispanic youths roaming the streets looking to kill someone of another color.

A homicide that garnered quite a bit of attention was the shooting death of Jamiel Shaw II in March of this year. He was killed near his Los Angeles home. Shaw II was a football player who had talent. A 19 year-old illegal immigrant gang member by the
name of Pedro Espinoza is accused of the crime. He is a member of the 18th Street gang. He has a large ''18'' tattooed on his back and a smaller 18 tattooed near his left eye. He also has the letters BK tattooed behind his left ear. ''Gang experts say BK stands for ''Blood Killer.'' Espinoza has pleaded not guilty to the charge but a witness quotes him days after the shooting saying that he is going to wipe all the Bloods out.

In May, a race riot between black and Hispanic high school students broke out at Dominguez High School in Compton, California. One student was suspended and eight others were arrested.

Murder is the leading cause of death for blacks that are 10-24 years of age in the United States and it's the second leading cause of death for Hispanics in this age group.

Tension is running high in Coatesville, Pennsylvania which is near Philadelphia. Blacks are attacking Hispanics by assaulting, robbing and raping them. Police Chief William Matthews warns if the viole
nce isn't contained quickly, rival Hispanic gangs will form and violence could uncontrollably ensue.

Matthews believes that African-Americans are targeting Hispanics because they don't speak English and know that they probably won't report the crimes to police for fear of having their citizenship status exposed. Many of the Hispanics are illegal immigrants. Many of the Hispanics regard the police as criminal gangs because this is how they experienced the police in their native countries.

MS-13 is a violent Latin gang similar to the Latin Kings. However, Jorge Cornell, who is the head of the Latin Kings gang, held a news conference in North Carolina last week asking that all the gangs put their weapons down across the country and try to work for peace. ''What I'm asking these leaders to do is if you've got one that's going to start trouble with the other, don't let those two, you know, let it get physical. And if it does, don't let it cause a war. Let's bring it to the attention of t
hose leaders and let those leaders deal with their own.''
 
Beaners, jig, exchange "hard looks"

Sacramento police identify suspects arrested in teen's killing

Sacramento police have identified the three suspects arrested Friday in connection with the Thursday night killing of 17-year-old Kevin Marice Marshall.

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Cuauhtemos Rodriguez, 37, (top left photo) was arrested in Long Beach on Friday with his 19-year-old son, Agustin Rodriguez (top right photo), and another son, a 15-year-old boy, said Officer Konrad Von Schoech, a Sacramento police spokesman.

The 15-year-old son's name is being wit
hheld because he is a juvenile. Police are not identifying which suspect was the gunman.

The three were taken into custody separately by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies. Von Schoech said the suspects fled to Long Beach because they have relatives in the Los Angeles area.

Marshall, a student at Vista Nueva Career & Technical High School, was shot to death Thursday night outside the River Garden Estates apartment complex on Northview Drive. Police say the fight stemmed from an exchange of "hard looks" between Marshall and the suspects.

A Vista Nueva administrator described Marshall as a model student with "a quick smile and a big heart." His former basketball coach said Marshall was a team player who helped build a squad from scratch.
 
Latrinos outnumber jigs 2:1

Latrinos now outnumber blacks 2 to 1 in South Los Angeles

In 1990, Latrinos and Africoon Americoons each comprised 47% of the area's population; today Latrinos outnumber blacks 2 to 1.

But that ethnic transformation is one of the few dramatic changes in an area that for decades has known one constant: poverty. According to a newly released report by UCLA's School of Public Affairs, almost one-third of the area's residents have been living below the poverty line since 1990.

"South L.A. has been a neglected part of the city," said Franklin D. Gilliam Jr., dean of the School of Public Affairs. "There have been efforts to rebuild, but those efforts haven't been as successful. And that's because we have not developed a strategy for dealing with the long-term and persistent effects of poverty."

The UCLA report points out that the area is a place of stark contrasts, with solid middle- and upper-class pockets -- View Park and Baldwin Hills -- on the west and communities that lag behind nearly every measure of prosperity farther east. It's most often defined as an area of immense need.

A year after the 1992 riots, UCLA released a lengthy report describing the unrest as a "predictable outcome" of a festering crisis in a region where joblessness, hopelessness and a crippling lack of skills and education existed side by side with wealth, privilege and opportunity.

UCLA researchers returned to the area this year to gather data for the new report, titled "The State of South L.A.." The study sought to define 60 square miles -- bounded by the 10 Freeway, La Cienega Boulevard, the 105 Freeway and Alameda Street -- with about 885,000 people, close to 10% of the county's population. Among the researchers' findings:

* In 1990, 47% of South L.A. residents were Latrino and another 47% were Africoon Americoon. By 2006, the mix had changed to 62% Latrino and 31% nigger, 3% white, 2% Asian/ Pacific Islander and 2% other. About 40% of the people living in South L.A. are foreign-born.

The study found that although Latrinos had strong numbers throughout the county, niggers were three times more likely to live in South L.A. -- an area of cultural and political strength for Africoon Americoons.

* About 30% of South L.A.'s residents live in poverty, about the same proportion as in 1990 and about twice the rate recorded in the county overall.

* In South L.A., fewer residents have skills, high school diplomas and college degrees than in other parts of the county. Unemployment is higher and workers earn less.

* In the poorer sections of South L.A., there are fewer homeowners than the county average and there's a slightly higher default and foreclosure rate. (Foreclosures are much higher in the Antelope Valley.)

* Although property crime rates in South L.A. (27 offenses per 1,000) were roughly equal to the county rate, violent crime was twice as high. More than one-third of the victims of violent crimes were 18 to 29; 16% were under 18.

Over the years, a negative perception of the area has been fueled by its reputation for occasional unrest, urban decline, crime, unemployment and welfare dependency.
 
Coatesville PA: Negroids targeting invaders for rape, robbery, and assault (TNB!)

Black, Hispanic gangs kill each other over turf
Innocents caught in crossfire in cities from coast to coast

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: July 05, 2008
12:10 am Eastern

© 2008 WorldNetDaily


The face of MS-13
WASHINGTON – Latino gang members were hunting for black people in the Harbor Gateway community of Los Angeles.

Age was not a factor. Neither was gender.

Cheryl Green, 14, was on her scooter, talking to friends when a hail of bullets killed the 8th-grader and injured several other black youngsters.

That was December 2006. But the race-motivated carnage has only increased since then, say law-enforcement authorities from coast to coast – with Hispanic gangs targeting blacks and black gangs, reciprocating as their communities are increasingly surrounded by the exploding population of Hispanics, much of it fueled by illegal immigration.

In Harbor Gateway, the dividing line is 206th Street. Blacks understand it is not safe to cross over to the Hispanic side and Hispanics know it is not safe to cross over to the black side.

Federal prosecutors last year charged members of a Latino gang with conducting a violent campaign to drive blacks out of the Florence-Firestone neighborhood in L.A. County, which resulted in some 20 homicides over several years.

L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca wrote in a newspaper editorial that "some of L.A.'s so-called gangs are really no more than loose-knit bands of blacks or Latinos roaming the streets looking for people of the other color to shoot."


18th Street gang tattoo
Perhaps the highest profile example of what some believe to be a racial hate crime was the shooting death of Jamiel Shaw II, a promising high school football player killed near his Los Angeles home in March. Pedro Espinoza, 19, a Latino gang member and illegal immigrant, stands accused of the homicide. He sports a large "18" tattoo on his back, signifying him as a member of the 18th Street gang. He also has a smaller 18 tattooed near his left eye and the letters BK tattooed behind his left ear. Gang experts say BK stands for "Blood Killer."

Though Espinoza has pleaded not guilty to the charge, a witness quotes him as saying days after the shooting: "BK all day. I'm going to wipe all the Bloods out."

"We have domestic terrorists right here," said California Attorney General Jerry Brown at a recent gang summit in L.A. County. "Gangs are like a disease, like a cancer in a community. We have to do more."

Brown compared what is happening in the streets of his state to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also called on the entertainment industry to stop glorifying the violent gang lifestyle in music and movies.

"I think Denzel Washington and [Robert] De Niro and anyone who has made money glamorizing gang members should contribute [to programs to help kids out of gangs]," said Constance Rice, co-director and co-founder of the Advancement Project in Los Angeles, at the summit.


In May, racial tensions between blacks and Hispanics erupted at Dominguez High School in Compton, Calif. At least eight students were suspended and one arrested after a race riot broke out.

In 2003, 5,570 young people, age 10-24, were murdered – an average of 15 each day. Most were black. While statistics show most of the violence in minority communities is black on black or Hispanic on Hispanic, the trend is shifting, according to many law enforcement officials who say they see an upsurge in racial violence.

Among 10- to 24-year olds, homicide is the leading cause of death for blacks and the second leading cause of death for Hispanics. The Justice Department reported that in 2005, the homicide rate for black males, 18-25, was just over 102 per 100,000, and only 12.5 deaths per 100,000 for their white counterparts.

In Coatesville, Penn., near Philadelphia, the police department is expressing concern about widespread reports of black city residents victimizing Hispanics – mostly illegal immigrants. Police Chief William Matthews says the reports include robberies, assaults and rapes.

He warns if the attacks are not contained, they could trigger the formation of violent Hispanic gangs.

The city has long been home to a large black community. It is now attracting a growing illegal immigrant population that is largely Hispanic.

"It's not long before you have black-on-brown crime," said Matthews. "And we're seeing the beginning of that."

Matthews said African Americans are targeting Hispanics who are vulnerable because they do not speak English and often do not report crimes to the police out of fear their immigration status will be questioned, he said.

Blacks are responsible for robbing, assaulting and raping Hispanics, as well as invading their homes, Matthews said.

"A segment of our community – the African American community – is preying on them," he said.

Matthews said some immigrants do not trust the police in their home countries and the mindset travels with them here.

"They view police as a criminal gang and rightfully so. And they're afraid if they call the police, someone in their family will be deported," Matthews said.

The fear causes crime victims to keep quiet. Therefore, Matthews said, police only know about a fraction of the crimes against Hispanics.

If the issue is not dealt with soon, Matthews said, the city could face the worst crime it has ever seen when Hispanic victims or their relatives resort to forming notoriously violent gangs, like MS-13, to defend their community.

"If we don't get our arms around this problem, organized gangs will fill the vacancies," Matthews said. "There is no violence that's happened in this city that can compare to the violence that could take its place."

Aida Garcia, director of social services for nonprofit La Comunidad Hispana, said she was not surprised to hear about the activity in Coatesville.

"I think this is happening all over right now – all over the county," Garcia said. "This has been happening for a while, except people haven't been talking because they were afraid. This is nothing new."

Meanwhile, last week in North Carolina, the head of the Latin Kings gang held a news conference to call on other gang members to stop the violence.

"I'm asking for all Bloods, Crips, MS-13, everybody out there that represents something, to put your weapons down and let's come to a table so we can talk peace," said Jorge Cornell.

He wants gang leaders to get together for a discussion on how to end violence

"What I'm asking these leaders to do is if you've got one that's going to start trouble with the other, don't let those two, you know, let it get physical," Cornell urged. "And if it does, don't let it cause a war. Let's bring it to the attention of those leaders and let those leaders deal with their own."



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5 Arrested, A 6th Sought In Robberies Of Hispanics

Two of the suspects are also accused of murdering a Hispanic they allegedly tried to rob

Jefferson Parish sheriff's investigators have arrested five men and are looking for a sixth in connection with a series of armed robberies of Hispanics in the Monterey Court area of Terrytown.

Two of the suspects, Brandell Scie of Avondale and Drevon James of Gretna, are also charged with murder in the shooting death of Heriberto Montoya, an Hispanic man they allegedly tried to rob outside his residence at 940 W. Monterey Court last August 30th.

"They intentionally were targeting Hispanics because of their belief of their failure to report and reluctance to participate and cooperate with law enforcement," said Sheriff Newell Normand.

Normand says Montoya and Hernesto Velasquez, an Hispanic man who was with Montoya at the time of the robbery and who was shot and wounded, were illegal immigrants.

The sheriff says illegal immigrants who are victims of crime should not be reluctant to report the crime to law enforcement because they're afraid of being deported.

"Unless they're involved in felonious activity, the position of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is that they do not proceed with deportation proceedings on those individuals," Normand said.
 
Invader beaten and robbed by niggers

A 36-year-old Madison man was pulled into a black Cadillac, beaten and robbed by three men before being pushed back out of the car Saturday night on Madison's north side, police said.

The mugging occurred about 9:30 p.m. Saturday in the 1600 block of Troy Drive.

Madison police said the victim was walking along Troy Drive when the Cadillac pulled up, and two men jumped out and pulled the victim into the car, where he said he was punched and robbed before being pushed out of the car near the Lakewood Gardens Apartment complex on Sherman Avenue.

The suspects robbed the victim of money, a cell phone and the victim's keys.

"The victim does not speak English and said he did not report the crime immediately because he did not know he should call the police," said police spokesman Joel DeSpain.

The victim suffered a swollen wrist and several scrapes.

The three suspects are black males, one 30 years old, 5'11" tall, 170-185 pounds, with an entirely white right eye, wearing blue jeans and a brown jacket, while the other two suspects were teens.
 
"Fúck Obama" racial beating by beaners

2 charged, man details racial attack, Obama slurs
Nigger says he was punched in face and head by 2 spics who shouted racial slurs and directed expletives at president-elect.

FULLERTON – The first punch landed square on the side of Benjamin Upshaw's chin. He tasted blood from a split lip.

He says now that he knew he was going to get hit as soon as the two men approached him on the street outside his apartment, spitting out racial slurs and demanding his money and his watch. They shouted, “(Expletive) Obama,” just before one took a swing at his face.

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Two Fullerton men described by prosecutors as Hispanic gang members pleaded not guilty this week to a list of felonies that includes hate-crimes related battery in connection with the beating. The men – Nathan Robert Mancillas, 23, and Juan Jose Carbajal, 22 – were being held on $200,000 bail.

“I never had to look over my shoulder, watch my back,” Upshaw said today. “But I don't know what's happening with these boys, so it's a different story.”

Upshaw, 47, a wiry Africoon-Americoon man who wears a silver cross on a chain around his neck, is an elevator mechanic by trade. He's been out of work and living on disability for about seven years. He says he was hit by an errant shotgun blast during a drive-by shooting in Chicago that broke his hip and left shell fragments in his skull.

He moved to Fullerton a few years ago, because the vicious Chicago winters made his bad hip ache. He lives now in a cramped studio not far from the train tracks.

He was walking to get some Bugler cigarettes Tuesday evening when the two men stopped him on Commonwealth Avenue, not far from Brookhurst Road. One was short and bald, wearing a white T-shirt and plaid shorts. The other was tall, skinnier, dressed in black and wearing a black hat.

This is Upshaw's account of what happened next. And it starts with four words: Give me some money.

Upshaw told the two men he barely had enough to buy his cigarettes. They demanded his watch and a silvery ring that his estranged wife had given him. He shoved his hands into his pockets.

“I don't like (racial epithet), anyway,” Upshaw, who is black, remembered the short man saying and the taller man repeating. “(Expletive) Obama…and (expletive) (racial epithet).”

“I had a feeling one of them was going to strike a blow,” Upshaw said. “I don't know, I just felt a vibe.”

The short man grabbed Upshaw's hat off of his head and threw it in the street. Then the short man drew back his fist and slugged Upshaw in the chin.

Upshaw didn't say a word. He stepped into the street, retrieved his hat and continued on his way – smirking at his attackers. “They punch like little (expletive), man,” he said today. “His little punch wasn't nothing.”

He went into a liquor store to buy his cigarettes. He noticed a look of surprise play across the manager's face and turned to see that the taller man had followed him into the store. The man punched Upshaw in the side of the head, just above his left ear, and then ran.

Upshaw flagged down police, who caught Mancillas and Carbajal nearby. While he was being arrested, Carbajal told officers he was a gang member and liked to kill police officers, prosecutors said.

He and Mancillas each face felony charges of attempted robbery, street terrorism and hate crimes-related battery. They also face enhanced sentences for committing crime for the benefit of a criminal street gang. Carbajal was also charged with threatening a police officer.

Mancillas has a previous robbery conviction on his record and could be sentenced to up to 21 years in state prison on the latest charges. Carbajal faces more than ten years in prison if convicted.

The NAAChimP has received reports from across the country of racially motivated crimes in the days since Obama was elected as the first black president. National spokesman Richard J. McIntire said he had no hard statistics to show whether there has been an increase in such crimes; but anecdotally, “we can say, yes, there has been some backlash.”

“The election perhaps has brought out some of the ugliness and discrimination and the hateful behavior that lies just below the surface,” he said.

Upshaw was recovering today from the beating but said his head was still bruised and sore. He spoke freely about what happened to him but said he was not comfortable having his picture taken.

He did vote for Obama – “the man done changed the course of history” – but said that had nothing to do with the attack. He sees it the way prosecutors do, as a hate crime.

“You're attacking someone you don't even know, saying ‘(n-word) this' and ‘(n-word) that,'” he said. “What else can it be?”
 
Apartment Residents Say They’re Being Racially Discriminated Against

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KISSIMMEE -- Residents at the Kissimmee Court Apartments say they are being discriminated against because they are black.

The residents have already filed a complaint with the Housing and Urban Development Foundation.

Several dozen residents claim the apartment manager is discriminating against them because of their race.

Residents also claim the manager shows favoritism to Hispanic individuals and families.

They said what use to be an 80 percent black housing complex is now 80 percent Hispanic.


"The Hispanic population has been growing by leaps and bounds, and it would not be unexpected that it would also be in this complex, but I think the residents have a legitimate concern," said Mark Durbin, the city manager.
 
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