I was speaking to a couple people before about the Practices Our goverment uses to push people out that are not wanted due to being aq Minority, Poor or both. This article only justifies the points I was making. Isnt it funny that a small city like West Sacramento AKA Brodrick would need such a strong law when nobody cared about that little city until $800,000 Homes were being put up on the other side or the old 'Hoods. Seperated by a 15 foot high concrete fence it is mirroring the San Ysidro, CA/Mexica Borderline. The roads dont connect unless they are Major roads.
They would never put a law like this to work in Sac County cause if they did they would have This Intellectual Hounding them more than i already am. This article is in this weeks Sacramento News & Review nand hase My Partners 50 year old dad on the cover.
Read the Story and drop your Input on the Law being put on these Mexicans and deprivasion of the Freedoms we should all have................
Round up the hood!
West Sac police have put hundreds of citizens on a gang-suppression list. What if you’re not in a gang? Too bad.
By Cosmo Garvin
Being a gang member is not a crime anywhere in the state of California. But being labeled as a gang member by police in West Sacramento, even if you insist you aren’t one, can cost you your freedoms of speech, travel and association
The Yolo County district attorney has credited a controversial gang-suppression tactic with reducing violent crime in West Sacramento dramatically in the last few months. The “gang injunction,” as it is informally called, is aimed at the Broderick Boys, described by the district attorney as Yolo County’s most powerful and vicious street gang. “Residents live in constant fear of random violence breaking out at any moment on the streets, sidewalks and local parks in their neighborhood,” reads the district attorney’s complaint against the Broderick Boys.
But the anti-gang dragnet has swept up people who say they have no connection to gangs or gang crime.
For example, there is Mario Savala, a 45-year-old ex-boxer. He has tattoos, inked when he was 15 years old, that police consider gang tattoos. His criminal record in Yolo County adds up to misdemeanor possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia (a pipe for smoking pot).
Then there are Manuel Valencia III and Sergio Flores, two young men who have been convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol but otherwise have no criminal records.
All were born and raised in the West Sacramento neighborhood of Broderick. But because of the gang injunction, they have lost their right to move freely in their own neighborhood, they aren’t allowed outside at night, and they could be locked up for associating with anyone else the police deem to be gang members. So far, police and prosecutors have refused to tell SN&R exactly why these individuals are on the list.
The West Sacramento gang injunction creates a 3-square-mile “safety zone” that encompasses the northern half of the city, in the older working-class neighborhoods of Broderick and Bryte. The broadly worded injunction imposes a 10 p.m.-to-sunrise curfew on those identified by the West Sacramento Police Department as members of the Broderick Boys street gang. The injunction also makes it illegal for those identified by the police as gang members to associate with each other in public.
Since the injunction was ordered by a Yolo County Superior Court judge in February, around 90 people have been served. It could spread to include hundreds more. The district attorney’s office says it knows of at least 300 Broderick Boys.
But none of these alleged Broderick Boys were given a day in court to contest the injunction or the allegations that they are gang members. And opponents of the gang injunction say it’s no coincidence that the gang crackdown comes at the same time as an influx of new, more affluent neighbors.
When Manuel Valencia III was 23 years old, he was caught driving under the influence of alcohol. He is still on probation for that crime.
Valencia has no gang-related crime on his record. He has no convictions on his record at all, aside from the DUI: no graffiti, no drugs, no robbery and no assault.
And yet, for reasons Valencia says are still a mystery to him, he was specifically targeted by the gang injunction.
According to his mother, Patricia Cano, who was visiting the house at the time, “They came with four SUVs and three undercover cars. They were all suited up in SWAT-team gear, like they were looking for mass murderers or something.”
Not finding Valencia at home, the police went looking for him at his job at the Blockbuster distribution warehouse on West Sacramento Avenue. “The officer said, 'You’re being served. You are a known gang member.’ And I was like, 'What?’”
Valencia likes to wear a red Budweiser beer cap, with a big “B” on it. The Budweiser B has appeared in police photographs as a recognized gang symbol, often incorporated into tattoos. Valencia said that, yes, the B could stand for Broderick. But he says there is a big difference between having pride in the place you are from and being a gangster.
“I’m sure there are people who are into that stuff. But it’s not me,” he said.
Valencia said he was told he could prove to police that he was no longer in the gang. But he said he wasn’t going to start this process, because that would mean having to admit he was a gang member in the first place.
More chilling for Valencia, he said he was told by one Yolo County district attorney that his name was being placed in what the attorney called a “terrorism database,” where it would remain for five years. A spokesperson for the West Sacramento Police Department, Lt. Dave Farmer, denied that people served with the gang injunction were being listed as potential terrorists. The Yolo County district attorney, David Henderson, did not return calls requesting an interview.
The gang criteria leave a lot of room for interpretation. The criteria used by the West Sacramento police to “validate” someone as being part of a gang include wearing gang colors. Red is the color associated with the Broderick Boys. Using gang signs can get you on the list. Like a virus, associating with other people who have been identified as gang members can get you listed as a gang member.
That gives the police enormous power to label people as gang members. “The clothes don’t make the man, you know,” said Valencia. “For them to come and speculate that I’m in some gang, it’s ridiculous.”
Sergio Flores is another 25-year-old with no gang tattoos and no record of gang crime. Like Valenica, he got a DUI back in 2004. And like Valencia, he insists that he has nothing to do with the Broderick Boys.
They would never put a law like this to work in Sac County cause if they did they would have This Intellectual Hounding them more than i already am. This article is in this weeks Sacramento News & Review nand hase My Partners 50 year old dad on the cover.
Read the Story and drop your Input on the Law being put on these Mexicans and deprivasion of the Freedoms we should all have................
Round up the hood!
West Sac police have put hundreds of citizens on a gang-suppression list. What if you’re not in a gang? Too bad.
By Cosmo Garvin
Being a gang member is not a crime anywhere in the state of California. But being labeled as a gang member by police in West Sacramento, even if you insist you aren’t one, can cost you your freedoms of speech, travel and association
The Yolo County district attorney has credited a controversial gang-suppression tactic with reducing violent crime in West Sacramento dramatically in the last few months. The “gang injunction,” as it is informally called, is aimed at the Broderick Boys, described by the district attorney as Yolo County’s most powerful and vicious street gang. “Residents live in constant fear of random violence breaking out at any moment on the streets, sidewalks and local parks in their neighborhood,” reads the district attorney’s complaint against the Broderick Boys.
But the anti-gang dragnet has swept up people who say they have no connection to gangs or gang crime.
For example, there is Mario Savala, a 45-year-old ex-boxer. He has tattoos, inked when he was 15 years old, that police consider gang tattoos. His criminal record in Yolo County adds up to misdemeanor possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia (a pipe for smoking pot).
Then there are Manuel Valencia III and Sergio Flores, two young men who have been convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol but otherwise have no criminal records.
All were born and raised in the West Sacramento neighborhood of Broderick. But because of the gang injunction, they have lost their right to move freely in their own neighborhood, they aren’t allowed outside at night, and they could be locked up for associating with anyone else the police deem to be gang members. So far, police and prosecutors have refused to tell SN&R exactly why these individuals are on the list.
The West Sacramento gang injunction creates a 3-square-mile “safety zone” that encompasses the northern half of the city, in the older working-class neighborhoods of Broderick and Bryte. The broadly worded injunction imposes a 10 p.m.-to-sunrise curfew on those identified by the West Sacramento Police Department as members of the Broderick Boys street gang. The injunction also makes it illegal for those identified by the police as gang members to associate with each other in public.
Since the injunction was ordered by a Yolo County Superior Court judge in February, around 90 people have been served. It could spread to include hundreds more. The district attorney’s office says it knows of at least 300 Broderick Boys.
But none of these alleged Broderick Boys were given a day in court to contest the injunction or the allegations that they are gang members. And opponents of the gang injunction say it’s no coincidence that the gang crackdown comes at the same time as an influx of new, more affluent neighbors.
When Manuel Valencia III was 23 years old, he was caught driving under the influence of alcohol. He is still on probation for that crime.
Valencia has no gang-related crime on his record. He has no convictions on his record at all, aside from the DUI: no graffiti, no drugs, no robbery and no assault.
And yet, for reasons Valencia says are still a mystery to him, he was specifically targeted by the gang injunction.
According to his mother, Patricia Cano, who was visiting the house at the time, “They came with four SUVs and three undercover cars. They were all suited up in SWAT-team gear, like they were looking for mass murderers or something.”
Not finding Valencia at home, the police went looking for him at his job at the Blockbuster distribution warehouse on West Sacramento Avenue. “The officer said, 'You’re being served. You are a known gang member.’ And I was like, 'What?’”
Valencia likes to wear a red Budweiser beer cap, with a big “B” on it. The Budweiser B has appeared in police photographs as a recognized gang symbol, often incorporated into tattoos. Valencia said that, yes, the B could stand for Broderick. But he says there is a big difference between having pride in the place you are from and being a gangster.
“I’m sure there are people who are into that stuff. But it’s not me,” he said.
Valencia said he was told he could prove to police that he was no longer in the gang. But he said he wasn’t going to start this process, because that would mean having to admit he was a gang member in the first place.
More chilling for Valencia, he said he was told by one Yolo County district attorney that his name was being placed in what the attorney called a “terrorism database,” where it would remain for five years. A spokesperson for the West Sacramento Police Department, Lt. Dave Farmer, denied that people served with the gang injunction were being listed as potential terrorists. The Yolo County district attorney, David Henderson, did not return calls requesting an interview.
The gang criteria leave a lot of room for interpretation. The criteria used by the West Sacramento police to “validate” someone as being part of a gang include wearing gang colors. Red is the color associated with the Broderick Boys. Using gang signs can get you on the list. Like a virus, associating with other people who have been identified as gang members can get you listed as a gang member.
That gives the police enormous power to label people as gang members. “The clothes don’t make the man, you know,” said Valencia. “For them to come and speculate that I’m in some gang, it’s ridiculous.”
Sergio Flores is another 25-year-old with no gang tattoos and no record of gang crime. Like Valenica, he got a DUI back in 2004. And like Valencia, he insists that he has nothing to do with the Broderick Boys.