By LIZ GOFF
Peddling the chance to belong and be
accepted while they tempt with the forbidden thrill of graffiti, New York City gangs are
moving in on Queens intermediate and high schools in search of new life.
Gangs like the Bloods, Latin Kings,
Crips, Los Vatos Locos, El Esquadron, the Mexican Boys, the Netas and the Zulu Nation are
2,500 members strong in Queens, according to police estimates.
Queens gang-busting
cops told the PRESS that many young gang members are recruited while they are
behind bars. New gang members are often affiliated with graffiti gangs and
have been arrested for tagging and quality of life offenses, police said. The
teen recruits are often spotted by hardened gang members on Rikers Island who prey
on youths that come from unstable family situations, police said.
Eager to fit in, the teens are easily
educated by older gang members. Once back on the street, the recruits head back to school
not to get an education but to give other teens an education in the life of
Gangland, Queens, police said.
Authorities point out that it makes no
difference where your kids go to school. Shockingly, the gang recruits infiltrate schools
in the best Queens neighborhoods not just schools with notorious reputations.
And if you think the gangs recruit
only in high schools, think again, police said. Gang recruiters are just as
prevalent in junior high.
According to recent
U.S. Department of Justice statistics, children 12 and up make up the group who often find
it easiest to get a gun.

Police warn that graffiti can be
the
first sign of gang activity.
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Pre-teens and teenagers are very
vulnerable to suggestion, said Justice Department spokesman Robert Hubert. It
leads them into problems, into taking risks, Hubert said.
More than one-third of New York City
students were threatened with physical violence by other students during the 1998-99
school year, according to a recent federal and city study. About 21 percent of students
asked admitted they carry a weapon into school and on their way to and from school.
Police are utilizing a number of
techniques to reach students and make them aware of the dangers of gang involvement.
One such method is a visit by police
at the NYPD GREAT Unit (Gang Resistance, Education And Training).
The GREAT Program is similar to NYPD
drug prevention programs. Members of the unit visit schools over a 10-week period, talking
with students and offering them help with ways to say no to gang recruiters,
police said.
Police cadets have also been joining
classes at some city schools, posing as students to weed-out gang recruiters, sources
said.
Queens police are
continually infiltrating gang meetings in public spaces, often rounding-up dozens of
members.
The NYPD launched an all-out war on
drug-peddling street gangs in May 1999, sending teams of NYPD gang busters
onto the street.
Police officials said that by
establishing the expanded, centralized squads, the department is now able to attack the
gangs on all fronts, using all available resources.
The move took cops from gang units who
formerly worked undercover independently and assigned them to one unit a single
umbrella division that operates within the NYPD Organized Crime Control
Bureau.
Each borough (in Queens, Patrol
Borough North and South) has a narcotics module, a detective squad and a unit of plain
clothes cops who concentrate only on gang busting, police said. Each has at least two
supervisors to oversee the unit.
Police officials said the one
quarterback, one coordinator units have successfully uncovered new information on
gangs, led to better information-sharing and an all around smoother operation.
There are approximately 300 police
officers in the centralized squad but police officials said its not the
number of cops that counts, its the results they achieve.
Narcotics cops assigned to the units
focus on snaring gang members through buy-and-bust operations. The plainclothes cops
target gang hangouts and street locations, officials said.
Police gangbust-ers are working with
the FBI to buy drugs and guns from gang members a move designed to allow police to
arrest gang members on RICO (racketeering) charges and other tough federal statutes.
The cops are also working with
precinct detectives in gang-related cases, officials said.
According to the
NYPD, whether you call it a family, nation or association; whether you wear blue, red or
green; whether you joined for protection, excitement or money, all gangs have one thing in
common criminal activity.
Gang members are at an estimated 88
percent greater risk for injury, prison, and early death that other juveniles.
A youth gang
is an organized group of adolescents and young adults who participate in social, criminal
and violent activity.
Street gangs have long been considered
loosely organized thugs, engaged in petty thefts and drugs on a local level. But
todays street gangs are very different.
Gangs use children as young as
10-years-old because they know children under 13 receive a lesser penalty for convicted
crime.
Teens become gang
members through a variety of rites or an initiation process that may include
participation in criminal activity, studying (and learning) the Book of
Knowledge a gang bible, or by filing an application
and paying dues.
There are also blood rituals and
sexual rituals that recruits must pass to qualify for membership, police said.
What Are The Warning Signs? |
According to
police, parents should watch for:
Changes in clothing
Use of hand signs and signals usually as an alternate form of communication.
Tattoos or branding of the body with distinctive designs, logos or names.
Withdrawal from family involvement.
Unexplained cash, material items, wearing a lot of jewelry or medallions.
Drug/alcohol use
Abrupt changes in personality and behavior
Prefers to use a nickname or street name
Decline in grades at school
Truancy change of friends
Police recommend
that parents and educators take the following steps with teens:
Talk to your child or teenager. Discuss the consequences of being in a gang.
Be a good listener to your child and help them develop their self esteem.
Watch for negative influences, meet and greet friends and parents of friends.
Communicate with them about their hopes and dreams as well as their fears and
concerns.
Be a role model
Discuss the importance of school and good grades. Emphasize good study habits.
Establish rules and set limits. Be consistent and fair in punishment.
Volunteer at your childs school.
Demand accountability for time spent, money and clothes.
Spend quality time with your children.
Show respect for your childs feelings.
Many youths join gangs because they do
not receive adequate family attention, police said. Many teens feel that gangs provide
love, identity and status, and in turn, the teens develop loyalty to the gang.
According to experts, there are
different types of gangs including the following:
Street Gang
Youths hanging out at a specific
location. They may be loosely structured or highly organized.
Delinquent Gang
Members depend on one another to carry
out planned activities and to provide help if necessary.
Criminal Gang
Organized to obtain emotional
gratification that violent activity can bring. Leaders tend to be emotionally unstable
have a need to control and direct others.
Structure is constantly changing. Allies one day can become enemies
the next day. |