WASHINGTON--The continuing migration of Los Angeles-based gangs across the nation is a matter of growing alarm to law enforcement authorities at all levels, an FBI official told a Senate committee Wednesday.
Steven Wiley, who heads the FBI's violent crimes
section, said that criminal groups claiming affiliation with
the Bloods or Crips, which both originated in Los Angeles,
have been reported in 180 communities in 42 states.
Capt. James Mulvihill, head of the Los Angeles County
Sheriff's Department's anti-gang unit, testified that in
recent years other Los Angeles-based gangs have been
extending their reach. He said that the notorious 18th Street
gang--the largest of the area's gangs--and a rival Latino
group, Mara Salvatrucha, are among those "that have expanded
their territories beyond their traditional neighborhood turf"
to the East Coast and sometimes to the Caribbean.
The nationwide expansion has been in progress since the
late 1980s and has continued despite concerted campaigns by
law enforcement officers in Southern California and elsewhere
to curb gang activity, the law enforcement officials said.
And despite an influx of federal dollars for the hiring of
more community-based police officers, the expansion has
reached dire proportions, they warned.
The gang migration "has set in motion a social
phenomenon of violence and . . . defiance among youth" that
in turn has "drastically altered the violent crime problem of
communities across the nation," Wiley said.
The two officials testified before the Senate Judiciary
Committee as part of the panel's review of anti-gang
legislation co-sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)
and Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah).
Mulvihill testified that Los Angeles County's 1,250
identifiable street gangs--consisting of about 150,000
members--were responsible for nearly 7,000 homicides in the
last 10 years.
Feinstein said that the Justice Department estimates
that there are 652,000 gang members across the nation, making
the Los Angeles total nearly one-fourth of that number.
While avoiding specific endorsement of the bipartisan
bill, known as the Federal Gang Violence Act of 1997, Wiley
said that the FBI already is devoting more of its resources
to criminal gang activity. The legislation, among other
provisions, would authorize $20 million over five years to
hire additional federal prosecutors to crack down on
gang-related crimes.
The bill also would double penalties for criminal gang
activity and extend the Federal Travel Act--which bans
interstate or foreign travel to promote unlawful activity--to
cover violent gang crimes.
Given the nationwide nature of the gang problem, Senate
sources said that some form of new anti-gang legislation is
expected to be approved this year. President Clinton has said
that action by Congress to curtail gang crime is among the
highest priorities of his second term.
Thursday, April 24, 1997
Nationwide Spread of L.A. Gangs Is Alarming, FBI Says
By ROBERT L. JACKSON, Times Staff Writer