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Topic: Street gangs still active in US military (article)
heavenlyboy34's photo
Mon 07/19/10 04:52 PM
From The New American Magazine, presented without comment.

http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/usnews/crime/4070-gangs-still-active-in-us-military

Gangs Still Active in US Military


Dennis Behreandt | The New American
Monday, 19 July 2010


Despite efforts to stop them, criminal street gangs have been active inside the U.S. military. And, according to one recent report, the situation has gotten much worse.

In 2006, Jeffrey Stoleson, a sergeant in the Army Reserve then in Iraq, described an unbelievable scene to reporter Frank Main of the Chicago Sun-Times. Based on Stoleson's account, and the many pictures he had taken, Main wrote: "In a storage yard in Taji, about 18 miles north of Baghdad, dozens of tanks were vandalized with painted gang signs.... Much of the graffiti was by Chicago based gangs," according to Stoleson.

Since then, Congress has banned members of the military from being in street gangs, and the Defense Department put the ban in its rulebooks last November. But that hasn't slowed down the apparent growth of gang activity inside the military. According to Stoleson and others, it has only gotten worse.

Stoleson, described by Main as a "Wisconsin corrections officer" when not serving as a sergeant with the National Guard, returned home from his latest tour in Iraq in January, where he worked with the Army to set up a prison facility near Baghdad. As before, he said the signs of gang activity were all around.

"I saw Maniac Latin Disciples graffiti out of Chicago," he told Main. According to Main's report, Stoleson also saw "a lot of graffiti for Texas and California gangs, as well as Mexican drug cartels."

An unnamed Chicago Police officer, who Main says "retired from the regular Army and was recently on a tour of Afghanistan in the Army Reserve" echoed Stoleson's comments. Noting that Bagram Air Base was covered in Chicago gang graffiti, the officer said the problem "seems bigger now."

The Police officer, who described gang activity in the military as "scary," told the Sun-Times that "he has arrested high-level gang members who have served in the military and kept the ‘infantryman's bible' — called the FM 7-8 — in their homes." That book, Main notes, "describes how to run for cover [and] fire a weapon tactically."

But gang members with military experience often have more to rely on than a printed "how-to" manual for warfare. "Gang members are coming home now with one or two tours," Stoleson said. "Some were on the field of battle."

Once back on the streets domestically, militarized gangsters can present an even greater threat to civilians and law-enforcement personnel.

A tragic and deadly example of the potential danger posed by militarized gang members is the ambush of police officers in Ceres, California, in 2005. Hoping to lure officers into his trap, at approximately 8 p.m. on January 9 of that year, Lance Corporal Andres Raya fired his assault rifle in front of a liquor store. Going inside the store, he told the clerk that he had just been shot at, and asked that the police be called. Raya then waited for the police to arrive. He then shot and killed police Sergeant Howard Stevenson, and seriously wounded officer Sam Ryno. Stevenson's death, in particular, was essentially an execution. Having wounded the officer, Raya ran to him and ended his life with two shots in the back of the head.

It was later determined that Raya was a gang member. A January 14, 2005 press release from the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Department noted: "Authorities have discovered information during the investigation into the Ceres Police Shooting that shows Andres Raya was a Norteño gang member." They also discovered a video tape belonging to Raya that had been seized on December 28 following a burglary at the Ceres High School. According to the Sheriff's Department: "The videotape shows Raya smoking what appears to be marijuana in several different clips, ‘throwing' gang signs, and showing gang graffiti while bragging that he wrote it. It also showed a United States flag that had been cut up and arranged on the high school gymnasium floor to spell out ‘F... Bush'."

Raya's attack on police in Ceres was exceptional for its violence, but militarized gang members have been involved in several crimes. Sun-Times reporter Frank Main said that another unnamed Chicago police officer "who searches homes for drugs and guns, said gang members targeted by his team are sometimes current or former members of the armed forces." That officer told Main: "We recently arrested a guy in the reserves for crack [cocaine]. He was a gang-banger."

In fact, as recently as 2007, a multi-agency federal law enforcement task force reported that some gang members known to have committed crimes were being recruited. The report titled "Gang-Related Activity in the US Armed Forces Increasing," dated January 12, 2007 and prepared by the National Gang Intelligence Center (NGIC) found that "US criminal courts have allowed gang members to enter the service as an alternative to incarceration. Several incidences wherein gang members have been recruited into the armed services while facing criminal charges or on probation or parole have been documented."

In one such case, the report found that in 2005 "a Latin King member was allegedly recruited into the Army at a Brooklyn, New York courthouse while awaiting trial for assaulting a New York police officer with a razor."

While gang members make up only a fraction of military personnel, the 2007 NGIC report found that their presence causes an increase in crime, and that "Gang incidents involving active duty personnel on US military bases nationwide include drive-by shootings, drug distribution, weapons violations, domestic disturbances, vandalism, assaults, extortion, and money laundering."

Among the most disconcerting "operations" carried out by gang members in the military involve the theft and trafficking of weapons. In 2006, for instance, "an incarcerated US Army soldier and active gang member identified 60 to 70 gang-affiliated military personnel in his unit allegedly involved in the theft and sale of military equipment and weapons. The solider reported that many of the military personnel in charge of ammunition and grenade distribution are sergeants who are active gang members. The soldier also reported that military commanders were aware of the actions of these gang-affiliated personnel."

That information resembled an interview conducted by authorities one month earlier in which "a former Marine and Gangster Disciple member incarcerated in Colorado detailed how easily soldiers — many of whom were gang members — stole military weapons and equipment and used them on the streets of US cities or sold them to civilian gang members."

Similarly, the NGIC report noted that in August of 2005 "a US soldier in San Antonio was suspected of supplying arms — including hand grenades and bullet-proof vests — to the Texas Mexican Mafia (Mexikanemi), according to uncorroborated but reliable FBI source information."

While uncorroborated, that alleged trafficking is similar to other cases in which trafficking in arms and equipment stolen from the military did occur. In one outrageous case in 2005, an "associate Blood member" was working as a military police officer at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming when he "was charged with theft of body armor stolen from the base." Air Force investigators were able to purchase "vests from gang members following the subject's arrest for the armed robbery of several gas stations located off base."

Since then, while gang members are officially banned from duty, the 2009 National Gang Threat Assessment [PDF] produced by the NGIC along with the National Drug Intelligence Center supports the contention that the gang threat in the military has not subsided, or has gotten worse. According to that report:

Members of nearly every major street gang as well as some prison gangs and OMGs [Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs] have been identified on both domestic and international military installations. Deployments have resulted in gang members among service members and/or dependents on or near overseas bases. Additionally, military transfers have resulted in gang members, both service members and dependents/relatives, moving to new areas and establishing a gang presence.

In closing its look at gang members in the military, the NGIC warns, ominously: "While the number of gang members trained by the military is unknown, the threat that they pose ... is potentially significant...."


Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 04:54 PM
Gangsters be they whatever ethnicity are the great American way.

We have always had them.

heavenlyboy34's photo
Mon 07/19/10 04:58 PM
Edited by heavenlyboy34 on Mon 07/19/10 05:00 PM

Gangsters be they whatever ethnicity are the great American way.

We have always had them.


The article doesn't single out any ethnicity in particular, so your comment makes no sense.slaphead The good thing about Al Capone-type gangsters is that they supply products and services that the State prohibits (like alcohol in the 20's, and "illicit" drugs now). The kind of gangs mentioned in the article, however, do not serve any positive purpose whatsoever.

InvictusV's photo
Mon 07/19/10 05:01 PM
This is nothing new..

There were gang members in my flight. We had a staff sergeant that was found hogtied with a bag over his head shot execution style on the west side of Albuquerque.. The OSI concluded that he was a member of the bloods and had been dealing drugs for about 4 years.

The worst part about it was he had a secret clearance and was in charge of the entry control point at a nuclear weapons storage area..

Talk about a wake up call..

Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 05:01 PM
Edited by Dragoness on Mon 07/19/10 05:01 PM
Gangsters being an American problem throughout history, doesn't make sense?slaphead

heavenlyboy34's photo
Mon 07/19/10 06:52 PM

Gangsters being an American problem throughout history, doesn't make sense?slaphead


Your comment was unclear, so I fixed it. You're welcome. :smile:

Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:01 PM
:thumbsup:

Duffy's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:01 PM
Okay so I am not up on gangsters.
Does anyone know anything about the Arian Nation? Who they are, what they are, and what they do?

Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:12 PM

Okay so I am not up on gangsters.
Does anyone know anything about the Arian Nation? Who they are, what they are, and what they do?


Arian Nation is a white supremacist group of militants. They believe in violence and are terroristic in their actions.


Duffy's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:40 PM
Are they still active? Or just pretend? Still around, and where. Any in Washington state?pitchfork

Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:55 PM
Arian Nation in Grant County?
by weaver51 (Subscribe)
Posted on: Feb 20, 2010 at 4:50 PM PDT
Channel: On the Scene
Location: John Day Oregon

Wednesday Evening the breaking news coverage of the Blue Mountain Eagle states that representatives of the Aryan Nation have been in town looking at real estate. These gentlemen state that they have plans to move their headquarters into Grant County, and the Aryan nation plans on holding their nation wide meeting here. For more information visit web site at http://bluemountaineagle.com
There will be a meeting held Friday the 26th at the Grant County court house featuring legal advisors for dealing with the situation. The people of Grant County will pull together to keep this blight out of our beautiful country.

http://www.katu.com/younews/84867727.html


I don't know about Washington but apparently they are here.

Dragoness's photo
Mon 07/19/10 07:58 PM
http://www.adl.org/learn/ext_us/aryan_nations.asp?xpicked=3&item=an

Lots of information here.

mightymoe's photo
Mon 07/19/10 08:41 PM

Are they still active? Or just pretend? Still around, and where. Any in Washington state?pitchfork


one of the biggest arian propeties in the US..

Duffy's photo
Wed 07/21/10 04:30 PM
what is a propeties?

mightymoe's photo
Wed 07/21/10 05:14 PM

what is a propeties?


where they live

Duffy's photo
Fri 07/23/10 10:07 AM
u mean property?

Lpdon's photo
Fri 07/23/10 06:26 PM

Okay so I am not up on gangsters.
Does anyone know anything about the Arian Nation? Who they are, what they are, and what they do?


The Aryan Nation isn't a gang, but the Aryan Brotherhood is. They are a racist neo-nazi gang. They started out as and are primarily a prison gang. They are the one of the smallest gangs but are also one of the most dangerous. It was reported that they are responsible for over 18% of all murders in the Federal Prison systems, that is a lot.

They are also a major distributor of Meth and other drugs. They are also very hipocritical because they are allied with most of the hispanic gangs.

Lpdon's photo
Fri 07/23/10 06:35 PM

Are they still active? Or just pretend? Still around, and where. Any in Washington state?pitchfork


They are the first domestic terrorist orginization bades in all 50 states. They are headquartered in Idaho. Only a small fraction was in Washington, your thinking of a group caled "The Order" Bob Mathews that was aligned with the AN and shared the same views, who had a training camp and base in the Whidbey Island.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Mathews

There is also concern that the Aryan Nations are forming with Al Qaeda over the hatred for the US Government and the Jewish people.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Kreis_III

Lpdon's photo
Fri 07/23/10 06:35 PM


Are they still active? Or just pretend? Still around, and where. Any in Washington state?pitchfork


one of the biggest arian propeties in the US..


Nope, Idaho.

Lpdon's photo
Fri 07/23/10 06:50 PM
Oh and The Order also had over 60 acres of land in Metaline Falls, Washington.

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