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News
Cleveland Gangs Part 1:
Less Gang Activity Shows Hope For a Safer City
Aired December 27, 2000
A recent survey of law enforcement agencies throughout
the state identifies at least 700 gangs in Ohio, with members totaling
more than 13,000. Those numbers are actually lower than those of a similar
survey done four years ago. But State Attorney General Betty Montgomery
says the 2000 study is considered more accurate, and that comparing it
to the 1996 survey may be misleading. She stops short of concluding the
threat of gangs is waning, but that suggestion does jibe with the assessments
of some gang experts here in Cleveland, as 90.3's Bill Rice reports.
Bill RiceMichael Walker, Director of Partnership
for a Safer Cleveland, says gang activity in the Cleveland area is unequivocally
down. The Partnership works to reduce violence among city youth. Walker
has been working with kids through the organization for 14 years. He says
gang problems in communities tend to be cyclical.
Michael WalkerThere will be a period where
there's not really a large problem, then you see a growth and it 'll get
some attention, maybe a couple of high level incidents where it'll get
some media attention or newsworthiness, then an effort to quell it -- they'll
create a unit. There will be very high vigilance and then it'll get quiet
, and then it'll resurge again, and that's been the case with gangs in
this country.
BRWalker says the proliferation of crack
cocaine led to an escalation of gang activity in the early 1990s, reaching
a peak about 1995. Crack use has subsided somewhat since then, and many
of the hard core gang members have, one way or another, been neutralized
or removed. Again, he says, it runs in cycles.
MWYou have a lot of gang history, a lot
of injuries, a lot of incarcerations. When you see enough of your friends
get killed, or are shot or paralyzed you say that's the dumbest thing
in the world. Look at the prison population. That population has risen
in Ohio dramatically. Where do most of these inmates come from? The city
of Cleveland.
BRWhile gang activity may be down, Walker
says its still a big problem, and a Cleveland Police Department survey
obtained by 90.3 WCPN® bears that out. The survey, submitted as part of the
state study, identified 66 criminal gangs in the city of Cleveland, some
with familiar names like the Crips, the Bloods, Vice Lords, Gangster Disciples,
as well as Aryan Brotherhood and Skinheads. These are what Walker calls
"corporate gangs": those involved in serious criminal activity.
MWVandalism, armed robbery, drug trafficking,
the use of weapons, assaulting, raping -- those are the groups that we
have to be most concerned about in this county.
BRWalker's own estimate of dangerous criminal
gangs is lower -- 30 to 45 he says. Their members are both adults and juveniles.
Then, he says, there are what he calls "wannabe" juvenile gangs, less
pernicious but still troublesome. They're a nuisance to the community,
cause problems in schools, and their members often escalate to the criminal
level.
Both the Cleveland Police Department and Cleveland Municipal
schools declined to interview for this story. Some speculate officials
want to keep the subject of gangs out of the public eye, that talking
about it will just draw attention to the problem and hurt the city's image.
That's been an issue in the past, according to Ken Trump, a former coordinator
of the youth gang unit at Cleveland Municipal Schools.
Ken TrumpThe biggest problem we had here
was denial. We didn't have gangs, according to one educational leader
in Cleveland years ago, we had organized student youth misconduct. We
weren't allowed to discuss it publicly, not only to the media, but to
parents and community officials, and the longer we have denial the more
entrenched these problems become.
BRTrump calls this the ostrich syndrome,
and says it, too, runs in cycles.
KTWe've seen across the country people officially
in denial in many cities, they come out of it for awhile, and in many
cases they go back into denial. It's almost like well, we've solved the
gang problem, it's not a big issue anymore, we're going to move on to
something else. And that's kind of ridiculous, you always need some kind
of level of awareness and monitoring and activity.
BRBut the Cleveland survey indicates police
are paying attention. The department has a special gang unit that monitors
and documents gang activity. And it's operated a gang prevention program
in the Cleveland Public Schools since 1997. And it's participating in
the state gang prevention initiative recently unveiled by state Attorney
General Betty Montgomery.
Betty MontgomeryIt's a first for Ohio. We
put together prosecutors, law enforcement, probation, parole, corrections
agencies, who will be organized to share the current gang intelligence
information and trends.
BRCarol Rapp-Zimmerman is Deputy Director
at the Ohio Department of Youth Services -- the state agency that deals
with teen-age criminals, and a cosponsor of the state effort.
Carol Rapp-ZimmermanWe're going to talk about
information, we're going to equip ourselves for the short term, but we're
also going to learn what we can do to try and avert some of these problems
in the future.
BRExperts say the main key to averting criminal
gang activity lies in giving teens more structure and supervision in their
lives, a luxury that, in some quarters, is hard to come by. Bill Rice,
90.3 WCPN®, 90.3 FM.
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