Gang Crimes Ordered from Inside Prison
Cell phone messages allegedly called for murder, violent crimes
By: Dara Kerr, Oakland North
A coalition of law enforcement agencies has arrested four Nuestra Familia gang leaders and 30 gang members, California Attorney General Jerry Brown announced at a press conference in Oakland on Tuesday. Several of those caught were allegedly given orders to commit murder and other violent crimes by imprisoned gang leaders who sent them encrypted messages via cell phones.
The alleged masterminds were “incarcerated inmates that are supposed to be serving their time and out of circulation,” said Brown, who served as Oakland’s mayor from 1999 to 2007. “But because of the introduction of cell phones, these individuals in prison are maintaining their role, their hierarchical position in the gang.” Brown explained that the imprisoned leaders of Nuestra Familia are ordering the crimes from prison and the crimes are happening out on the streets.
Cracking down on violent street gangs like Nuestra Familia is one of Brown’s priorities as he launches into the final few months of his run for California governor. He has supported creating gang-free zones in Los Angeles and backed the Oakland Police Department in the 2008 investigation of the Acorn Gang, leading to the arrest of more than 40 suspected gang members in West Oakland.
Nuestra Familia is one of the most powerful of the seven prison gangs in California. It got its start in Folsom Prison in 1968, and its members are mostly Mexican-American or Chicano. With tens of thousands of members throughout the state and hundreds of members inside state prisons, according to the attorney general’s office, Nuestra Familia operates with a strict chain of command and has allegedly been responsible for murders, drug trafficking and weapons charges. The attorney general’s office said some of the members have ties to the Norteños gang, which is active in the Bay Area.
In operation “Street Sweeper,” during which these most recent arrests were made, 250 law enforcement agents, including several Bay Area agencies and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, spread across several California counties looking to take down the leaders at the top of the Nuestra Familia gang. Dozens of people have been arrested, the majority from Visalia and Salinas. In the course of the operation, agents realized that many of the gang members were taking orders from their bosses who were serving time in Pelican Bay State Prison, which is near the Oregon border.
“We are up against some very serious criminals, very sophisticated and with nothing else to do in prison than foment more crimes,” said Brown. “When they go to prison, they don’t miss a beat — they continue their associations, their communication and their criminal behavior.” Brown was not clear on how the inmates got the cell phones, but suggested they might have been smuggled in by visitors or guards. “Prison is supposed to punish, it’s supposed to be a place where people put their lives back in order, and when it becomes, literally, the college of crime, our system fails,” he said.
The attorney general’s office is looking to stop this type of communication by building cell phone towers that would block messages going in and out of prisons. “I believe we can take serious steps to curb this cell phone abuse and the abuse of this technology to foster crime,” said Brown. He said his office is also exploring cell phone jamming technology, but utilizing this method would require a change in federal law. The Federal Communications Commission does not presently allow prisons to jam communications.
Although the majority of people caught in operation “Street Sweeper” were from central California, Brown warned that Nuestra Familia gang activity is widespread and could include the Bay Area. “I don’t think any place is safe from this type of criminal enterprise,” he said. “It’s only safe if the prisons get better control of the inmates and we engage in greater control of the streets.”
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