December 18, 1998, Friday,
Home Edition
SECTION: Metro; Part B; Page 3; Metro Desk
LENGTH: 527 words
HEADLINE: RASH OF VIOLENCE CLAIMS 8 IN SOUTH-CENTRAL L.A.
BYLINE: PETER Y. HONG and KURT STREETER, TIMES STAFF WRITERS
While the nation's eyes are on the bombing of Iraq, another armed conflict is
raging in South-Central Los Angeles.
Eight people have been shot to death in the area patrolled by the LAPD's South
Bureau since Sunday, and police believe most of the killings stem from
gang rivalries.
An assault-rifle attack Wednesday night left four wounded and a 16-year-old boy
dead at Florence and Normandie avenues.
The intersection became known worldwide when Reginald O. Denny was pulled from
his truck there and beaten on live television during the outbreak of the 1992
riots.
A drop in crime had given residents at least a temporary respite from
spectacular violence.
Homicides for the first 11 months of
1998 in the South Bureau area were down about 40% compared to the same period
of 1997. The bureau covers most of Southwest and South-Central Los
Angeles--where all of this week's killings occurred--as well as San Pedro.
But the shaky peace was shattered this week, apparently as rival gangs
began fighting for supremacy in the area, investigators said.
The violence began about 1 p.m. Sunday, as a 16-year-old boy was standing in
front of his home in the 2200 block of Southwest Drive. Three men drove up in a
sport
utility vehicle and shot him several times in the upper body.
The youth, who police said was a gang member but whose identity was not
available, died about 30 minutes later at Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical
Center.
Four hours later,
Darryl Lamont Caviness, 31, was talking with friends on the sidewalk in front
of an apartment building in the 1800 block of 64th Street. Two men walked up to
the group about 5:30 p.m. and shot Caviness, who died at King/Drew, police
said.
Wednesday's slayings began just before 10 a.m. Benson Harris, 42, and Derrick
Bowie, 34, were standing on the sidewalk in front of an apartment building in
the 6000 block of 10th Avenue when a man walked up to them and opened fire,
killing both.
That attack was
followed--about 12 hours later and two miles away--by the Florence and
Normandie shootings. About 9:15 p.m., five teenagers were standing in front of
a Normandie bungalow about a block south of Florence when they were cut down,
apparently by gunfire from one or more
assault rifles. Neighbors said they heard a burst of 15 to 20 shots.
The five youths--four male and one female--were taken to nearby hospitals. One,
Dwight Blanton, died shortly afterward, police said.
All of the shootings are believed to be gang-related, and detectives are still
investigating whether and
how the incidents might be linked.
Along with the five gang-related slayings, three other people were shot to
death in the area this week. Police said they believe that those killings arose
from drug deals.
On Monday, four men were shot in a house in the 100 block of
East 81st Street. Police said the gunfight sprang from a drug robbery about
6:20 p.m. Javier Garcia Chavez, 27, died at the scene. Rafael Gaona, 26, died
at a nearby clinic, where he and others had fled after the shooting.
Miguel H. Arreola,
25, was shot to death Tuesday about 11 a.m. in an apartment in the 1900 block
of Florence.