November 24, 1987, Tuesday, Home Edition
SECTION: Metro; Part 2; Page 3; Column 5; Metro Desk
LENGTH: 285 words
HEADLINE: CITY ATTY. MODIFIES PLAN TO CONTROL STREET
GANG
BYLINE: By PAUL FELDMAN, Times Staff Writer
BODY:
Responding to criticism that elements of his lawsuit against a street
gang might be unconstitutional, City Atty. James K. Hahn formally modified his
proposal Monday and is no longer asking a judge to bar members of a Westside
street
gang from associating with each other, from leaving their homes between 7 p.m. and
7 a.m. and from wearing
gang attire.
The city attorney's proposed
injunction against the Playboy Gangster Crips now calls for a sunset-to-dawn curfew for
juvenile members only and for prohibitions against two or more gang members
gathering in public places, according to Deputy City Atty. Bruce Coplen .
"It wasn't (Hahn's) intention to violate anyone's constitutional rights," Coplen said.
"(We're) accommodating some of the questions raised."
The gang nuisance abatement lawsuit, scheduled for its next court hearing Dec.
10, has stirred opposition from the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation
of Southern California, whose staff attorney Joan Howarth termed the initial
proposal as
"coming close to a police state."
Howarth said Monday that the revisions
"don't go far enough -- but it's movement in the right direction."
Authorities estimate that the gang has
at least 200 members and allege that some of them peddle drugs on the streets
of a 26-block neighborhood bordered by La Cienega and Robertson boulevards,
18th Street and Cadillac Avenue.
No gang members have responded in court to the civil lawsuit.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Warren H. Deering, who rejected Hahn's request
for a temporary restraining order as being
"too broad to grant," agreed last week to an ACLU request that gang members be granted the right to
criminal representation in court.