The City of Los Angeles is the birthplace of the most notorious and violent street gangs in America. We have exported this brand of urban terrorism throughout the world and become infamous for our contribution to humanity's collective misery. Now is the time to change that image. Just as we became known as the origin of the problem, it is now time that we are recognized as the source of the solution.
In order to create this solution, the Los Angeles Police Department must do two things better than ever before: First, we have to restructure our organization so it can more effectively focus resources on the problem, and we must continue to include our federal and local law enforcements partners in the process. Second, we have to embrace the total solution to gang violence and recognize that just as law enforcement did not create the problem, we cannot view ourselves as the sole solution. That total solution involves prevention to stop the flow of our youth into gangs, intervention to rescue those already involved and interrupt the violence that rocks our communities, suppression to deter criminal acts through effective law enforcement and re-entry to provide an alternative future to gang members returning from incarceration.
We have a convergence of opportunity that may never occur again. There is strong political leadership from Mayor Villaraigosa who has created the Office of Gang Reduction and Youth Development (GRYD) under the Reverend Jeff Carr. Collaborative efforts are being formed in the County of Los Angeles driven by Sheriff Lee Baca, the Board of Supervisors and their Chief Executive Officer Bill Fujioka. Connie Rice and the Advancement Project have not only provided us with a plan of action, but are working with all our partners developing many of the programs described in these initiatives. And most importantly, the Chief of Police, William J. Bratton, has set the sights of the Department squarely on this problem and declared that these initiatives will be our top priority throughout the coming year.
These initiatives are:
Reduction of Gang Crime
Since 2007 gang crime in Los Angeles has dropped by 11 percent. Even
though this is an impressive achievement we continue to see the
devastating effects of gang violence in our community. In 2009, the
Department reaffirms its commitment to reduce gang violence by 15
percent. Achieving this goal will mean 26 fewer murders and over 1,000
fewer victims of gang crime.
Strategic Operations Commander and RACR
A newly designated Strategic Operations Commander will work with our
Real Time Crime Center (RACR) to deploy our considerable discretionary
resources to emerging gang crime and trends. This will focus the
hundreds of officers assigned to our Gang units, Metropolitan Division,
Crime Reduction and Reduction of Warrants (CREW) Task Force and others
on problems as they develop. This is a measure aimed directly at the
prevention of gang retaliation murders, stopping the next killing. This
Commander will be assigned during evening hours and work with RACR to
identify gang trends or incidents as they occur and move resources
throughout the City to address them.
Gang and Narcotics Division
Gangs, guns and drugs are a deadly combination. Beginning January 4,
2009, our Detective Bureau combined our Narcotics Division and Gang
Operations Support Division into the new Gang and Narcotics Division.
Combining these two entities will bring together over 300 detectives
who will be specifically focused on disrupting violent gangs who
support their lifestyle through the trafficking of narcotics and guns.
This division will also expand the successful High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Areas Task Force concept to address violent gang crime.
COMPSTAT
COMPSTAT has proven to be the Department's most effective tool to set priorities and change culture. Every COMPSTAT session will focus on gang crime reduction and the emphasis of the priorities established in these initiatives. Effective use of gang injunctions, partnerships with intervention, ongoing prevention or re-entry programs are but a few of the strategies to which commands will be held accountable.
Gang Intervention
We recognize that not only must intervention be approached from a
professional standpoint and become responsive to crime as it occurs,
but that the Department must learn to value intervention as an asset in
violence interruption. To achieve these goals we will continue to
support the initiatives developed by the Mayors GRYD Office as well as
the development of a Gang Intervention Academy. We will also provide
training on gang intervention and its protocols to all of our officers
who deal with gang crime as part of their normal assignment.
Expansion of Community Law Enforcement and Recovery (CLEAR) Sites
Over the years, CLEAR has proven to be an effective tool in reducing
violent gang crime. Each CLEAR team is a true partner with the LAPD,
District Attorney's Office, City Attorney's Office and Probation
Department. In 2009, it is anticipated that the California Department
of Corrections will commit dedicated resources to CLEAR. In addition,
the Mayor's Office has secured funding to support additional CLEAR
sites.
Executive Ad Hoc Committee on Gangs
Our Department will continue this highly successful police management
accountability session convened to provide executive law enforcement
officials a means to evaluate the progress of our collaborative crime
abatement efforts. In these sessions, decision-makers from all our law
enforcement partners will examine and adjust the enforcement
initiatives that were implemented to address gang trends in our City.
Graffiti
The impact of graffiti is more than a visual eyesore. The effects of
graffiti, especially gang graffiti, can paralyze and intimidate an
entire community. As a result, the Department will work aggressively in
2009 to reduce graffiti vandalism by establishing a staff officer as
the Department's graffiti coordinator and developing a tracking system
to gauge our impact on the issue.
Top-Targeted Street Gangs
Click here to view chart
1. 18th Street Westside (Southwest Area)
2. 204th Street (Harbor Area)
3. Avenues (Northeast Area)
4. Black P-Stones (Southwest, Wilshire Areas)
5. Canoga Park Alabama (West Valley Area)
6. Grape Street Crips (Southeast Area)
7. La Mirada Locos (Rampart, Northeast Areas)
8. Mara Salvatrucha (Rampart, Hollywood, and
Wilshire Areas)
9. Rollin 40s (Southwest Area)
10. Rollin 30s Harlem Crips (Southwest Area)
11. Rolling 60s (77th Area)
12. Toonerville (Northeast Area)
13. Florencia 13 (77th, Newton)
14. Barrios Van Nuys (Van Nuys Area)
Top-Ten Gang Members
Continue the Top-10 Gang Member program and emphasize its importance in COMPSTAT.
Gifts for Guns
Partner with the Mayor's Office and Los Angeles Sheriff's Office in "Gifts for Guns"program.
Expanding Gang Expertise
Our success with remaining in front of gang crime trends is directly
proportional to whether our Department is prepared to invest in
additional resources devoted to preventing these crimes. To that end,
an additional 400 specialized uniformed officers will receive dedicated
training in gang history, culture and trends. Although these personnel
are not Gang Enforcement Detail officers, they will nevertheless be
offered more sophisticated training that will enable them to work more
effectively in various regions frequented by gang members.
Bureau Authority
The Department's Office of Operations director has tasked each
Operations Bureau Chief to design a set of proposals that will address
gang problems that are intrinsic to their individual commands. This
will allow each commanding officer the opportunity to modify the gang
prevention approach in their Areas as the situation warrants.
Growth of Gang Enforcement Details
Our renewed commitment to eradicate gangs in our communities now also
compels us to realign our enforcement posture in a way that will allow
us to regulate criminal gang behaviors. In the coming months, each of
the Area Gang Enforcement Details will have the ability to assign
additional personnel to gang enforcement duties without negating our
obligation to our primary service delivery system – patrol.
Deployment of the Violent Crime Motor Enforcement Team
Although many of the crimes committed by gang members occur from the
confines of moving vehicles they operate, we have yet to focus our
enforcement efforts specifically at the type of transportation
identified and used in violence episodes. The Violent Crime Motor
Enforcement Team will be a platoon-sized cadre of motor officers
deployed in high crime areas throughout the City. The primary objective
of these personnel will be, through the enforcement of select
California Vehicle Code statutes, to help significantly reduce the
number of drive by shootings and other major assaults that occur in
gang-infested areas.
Development of a "Secure Gang Blog"
In an effort to increase the "velocity" with which we identify,
decipher and respond to occurrences that are gang-related, our
Department is developing a secure internal "cyber blog"into which Area
watch commanders will have the ability to record gang crime abstracts
and other relevant information for immediate sharing with others
throughout the City. Plans for the future include making this
information instantly available to officers in the field as well as
other police jurisdictions who may wish to participate.
Support of Prevention and Re-Entry Programs
The Department has developed many successful programs that deter our
youth from entering gangs. We will continue to support those
initiatives, and continue to work on the expansion of re-entry programs
already being conducted in our Operations-South Bureau and other parts
of the City.
Here we go again. All show no go. Must be re election time of year again.
Posted by: J | January 30, 2025 at 08:21 PM
All fluff. No substance. How many cops need to be shot outside their homes until the politicians let the cops and deputies take the gloves off.
We should be wiping the streets with gangsters, not trying to hold their hands or forcing cops to play softball against gangsters in good will (it has happened in OVB).
ICE should be deporting them by the thousands. And if they are living with parents, they should be held accountable. (Evicted from their govt funded homes and fined).
Locking them up for short periods is a farce. Jail time is the junior college and state prison is the university. They earn more stripes/street cred for time served.
Stop trying to coddle these street thugs so that you can make everyone feel good. You CANNOT compete with the lifestyle that gangs has to offer; power, prestige, cars, guns, money, and girls.
Being a thug is cool to youths today who emulate athletes, rap artists and actors on TV and in movies.
A after-school basketball camp or job fair won't do it. They grow up in these neighborhoods and are constantly being picked on and intimidated by gangsters. It's only a matter of time until they join them. Oftentimes, its through no fault of their own. They can't help it if their mom and dad are gangsters.
And all these "top" targeting of gangs does nothing other than to embolden and validate their gang. They love seeing their gang or varrio on TV and in print. They now seem themselves as Al Capone and Scarface.
Posted by: Fed up Gang Cop | February 02, 2025 at 11:46 AM
Couldn't agree more with the Fed up Gang Cop's blog. Where have you administrators been. Gang members consider it an honor to have their name in the papers and on the media. Funny, clear back to the "Hammer Task Force" the gang problems in L.A. have only become worse. At least the "Hammer Task Force" started out right. Then some new program came in and we began to cottle these street thugs with "programs" to rehabilitate these rebellious punks. Yes, as the Fed up Gang Cop stated, It's time to clean up the streets with these homeland terrorists. If you want to rehabilitate these punks, make it very undesirable to be a gang member in the jails or prisons. Get Sheriff Joe from Arizona. He seems to make incarceration undesirable for his inmates. Let the cops go back to PROACTIVE ENFORCEMENT. Get the justice system to hand out sentences that hurt.
Posted by: Gang Victim | February 03, 2025 at 08:09 PM
What a waste of time, energy and efforts. We don't need a bunch of politicians and a politician chief trying to re-invent the wheel every year. No matter what you make it out of, it is still a wheel. Use a gun, go to jail. I am sick and tired of giving these GFN's (Good For Nothings) a second, third, fourth, and fifth chance at a new start. We need more schools and more jails and prisons. It is my opinion that no every kid is going to be a high school or college graduate, and some, maybe more than we would like to acknowledge, will be dropouts and worse, convicted criminals who need to be jailed more than they need to take english and history. What do you think?
Posted by: James duggan | February 12, 2025 at 08:25 PM