Quantcast
Channel: BROWN KINGDOM
Viewing all 162 articles
Browse latest View live

ANAKRIME KROOKS

$
0
0
V'SSK'R 13'LSB

OxC KROOKS BASED IN ANAHEIM
VARRIO SOUTH SIDE KROOKS WERE ORIGINALLY PART OF THE "SICK OF SOCIETY KINGS" TAGGING CREW FROM OxC WHICH WAS PART OF THE LARGER SSK CREW WHICH OPERATED IN BOTH L.A. & ORANGE COUNTIES.

SEVERAL BRANCHES OF SSK EXISTED IN DIFFERENT AREAS. WHEN THEY GOT TO MOBBIN AND TAG'BANGING SEVERAL DIFFERENT VERSIONS WERE DERIVED OUT OF THEIR SSK INITIALS..

SOME SICK KINGS
SUI'SIDAL KINGS
SOUTH SIDE KINGS
SOUTH SIDE KRIMINALS
SEVENTEEN STREET KROOKS
AND SOUTH SIDE KROOKS

THE ORIGINAL BIRTHGROUNDS WERE IN THE L.A. PICO UNION BONNIE BREA CALLE

SSK USED TO GO EVERYWHERE ON MISSIONS, AND MEMBERS OF THE KINGS KICKED IT IN ALL SOxCAL COUNTIES. EVENTUALLY, THE GREATER SSK KREW BROKE DOWN INTO SMALLER MORE LOCALIZED KREWS. AND THEN SOME TURNED INTO THEIR OWN CLIQUES-TURNED-VARRIO. THE ONES IN BONNIE BREA BECAME THE BONNIE BREA WINOS AND MALDITOS CLIQUES. THE SSK IN OxC TURNED SOUTH SIDE KROOKS LOS BAGOS CLIQUE AFTER THEY MERGED WITH THE CAMBRIDGE AVE (CAVE BROWN GANG) FROM ANAKRIME, AND CAMBRIDGE AVENUE BECAME SSK NEIGHBORHOOD!

SEVERAL OTHER CLIQUES HAVE SPRUNG OUT AND HAVE THEIR ROOTS WITH THE ORIGINAL SSK AND THEY EITHER HAVE SETTLED DOWN IN A PLACE TO BECOME THEIR OWN, OR HAVE INCORPORATED INTO OTHER VARRIOS FROM THE SOUTHERN UNITED RAZA CAMP.. SOME OF THEIR BEEFS FROM THEIR TAG'BANGER DAYS HAVE CARRIED OVER, AND SOME PRIOR ENEMIGAS KREWS HAVE ALSO TURNED VARRIO, LIKE THE EK., EVIL KINGS/EVIL KIDS WHO NOW GO BY EVIL KLAN. SO HAVING STARTED OUT AS A TAG KREW RIVALRY, THEY CONTINUED ON TO BE RIVALS ON SUR KALLES!

..

THE STORY OF THE ANAHEIM REAL DEAL "KROOKS"

ANAHEIM VARRIO KROOKS 13 CAVE LSB

SOUTH SIDE KROOKS CAMBRIDGE AVENUE LOS BAGOS

SSK WAS ORGINALLY THE SICK OF SOCIETY TAGGER CREW FROM L.A. COUNTY. BUT THEN SSK STARTED GETTING UP EVERYWHERE AND THEN SSK STARTED GETTING INTO THE SAME KIND OF TAGBANGERS PROBLEMS OF THE TIMES, AND THEN THEY REALLY TURNED IT UP AND STARTED MOBBING HARD. THEY HAD MAD PLEITO WITH ANOTHER TAGBANGER KREW OF THE TIMES KNOWN AS THE EVIL KINGS WHICH LATER BECAME THE EVIL KIDS IN OXC AND EVIL KLAN IN L.A.

THE ORIGINAL SOUTH SIDE KINGS HOOD WAS SET UP ON L.A’s. WEST SIDE ON BONNIE BREA WITH THE WINOES AND MALDITOS CLIKAS. ANOTHER SSK KLIK THAT SET UP AND ATTAINED NOTORIETY WAS THE SEVENTEEN STREET KRIMINALS.

IN ORANGE COUNTY THE SSK KICKED IT AT CAMBRIDGE AVENUE IN ANAKRIME TOGETHER WITH THOSE THAT WERE KNOWN BACK THEN AS THE CAVE BROWNS GANG, WHICH WAS MADE UP OF JOCKS AND KIDS THAN WENT TO ANAKRIME & KATELLA HIGH SCHOOLS. THAT WAS BACK IN 1987 WHEN CAVE STARTED OUT AT THE SAME TIME THAT OTHERS LIKE KROGGER, PAULINE, WATER STREET AND THE OPTIONAL BOYZ WERE HAPPENING. DURING THOSE TIMES THE AVLS, WSA & PENGUINS WOULD HANG OUT WITH THE CAVE GANG. SOME OFF-AND-ON BEEFS WOULD OCCUR, BUT THAT WAS JUST THE NATURAL ORDER OF THINGS ON THE KALLE. BUT THEN SERIOUS PEDOS STARTED HAPPENING, AND THEN PLEITO WITH UNDERHILL CAME NEXT. SOME SSK WERE FORCED TO MOVE OUT, AND THEN LATER ONE OF THEIR ORANGE KOUNTY FOUNDERS WAS KILLED IN A CAR ACCIDENT. THIS WEIGHED HEAVY ON THE YOUNG KROOKS, BUT THEN NEW KROOK HEADS ROSE UP AND THEY BEGAN TO GET HARDER AND GREW DEEPER. SSK AND CAVE DECIDED TO CLIQUE UP AND THIS IS WHEN SOUTH SIDE KROOKS CAMBRIDGE AVENUE LOS BAGOS WAS KREATED. KAMBRIDGE AVENUE REMAINED THE NEIGHBORHOOD AND SSK GREW INTO A WEB OF HOMIES AND THE LOS BAGOS KLIKA CAME TO DOMINATE THE SCENE IN THE CITY OF KRIME.

LOPERS

$
0
0
LOCOS PARA SIEMPRE

~" L P S "~
ELE PE ESE
LATIN PRIDE SOLDIERS 
SINCE THE 1970s
1978 TO BE EXACT
BORN AT MADISON PARK, A.k.a. MAD PARK
IN THE BIG BAD CITY OF SANTA ANA

FROM THE MADISON PARK, AND
EASTSIDE NEIGHBORHOOD OF SANTA ANA

W ~> MAIN STREET
E ~> MINNIE STREET
N ~> FIRST STREET
S ~> EDINGER AVENUE

"CV" CALLE CINCO LOS BAD BOYS (CHICOS MALOS)
BIG MINNIE STREET LOS CRIMINALES
CHESTNUT STREET PLAYERS (LOS JUGADORES)
PINE STREET LOS PINEROS
MADISON PARK MAD PARK ORIGINALS
"CII" CALLE SEGUNDA LOS CASINOS
WEST SIDE TOWNER STREET (1980s)

ALSO HOLDING DOWN IN THE CALLES
THIRD, FOURTH, CEDAR, WALNUT & CYPRESS

L O P E R S
THE ANTELOPE CLAN

THE NAME COMES FROM A PERSONALIZED LICENSE PLATE FOUND BY THE OG HOMIES ONE DAY PARTYING AT THE BEACH, THEY WERE COOL WITH IT & RAN WITH IT, SO THAT’S HOW THE NAME WAS STARTED. LOPERS BLEW UP AND TOOK OVER MANY OF SANTA ANA’s SPOTS.

LOPERS IS REPRESENTED BY THE ANTELOPE, THE GRACEFUL AND SWIFT, FREELY-ROAMING “ANTLER”
THE SWIFT-REBEL WITH HORNS. THE LOPERS FAMILY ARE AMONG THE MOST PROLIFIC GANGS OF SANTA ANA, AND EVEN THO’ THEIR HISTORY IS BUT A MERE 4 DECADES OLD; MUCH YOUNGER THAN SOME OF THEIR RIVALS LIKE FxTROOP, LOGAN, DELHI & SANTA NITA FROM THE 1940s; LOPERS HAVE PUT UP A HARD FIGHT AND BATTLED TO BUILD A SOLID VARRIO, AND CLAIM A LARGE CHUNK OF SANTA ANA.

THE LOPERS RULE THEIR STREET ZONES. LOPERS HOMEBOYS ARE BATTLE TESTED AND HARDENED SOLDIERS OF THE STREETS. CONSTANT PLEITOS AND BROKEN LIVES DUE TO DRUGS AND SHIT HAVE ALWAYS CUT INTO THEIR NUMBERS, TAKING A TOLL ON THEIR RANKS, BUT EVEN STILL, THE LOPERS CLAN "THE QUOHADI KLAN" THE ANTELOPE CLAN, SURVIVES!

LIKE SHADOWS UNDER THE MOONLIGHT, LOPERS ARE ALWAYS AROUND

THE “ANTLER” IS THE SYMBOL OF THEIR REBEL LIFE!

JEFFREY STREET

$
0
0
Also Known as..
VARRIO TIJUANITA


A'JST
C x J
CALLE JEFFREY LOCOTES
= LOS RASCALS =

N ~ Cerritos Avenue
W ~ 9TH Street
E ~ Walnut Street
S ~ Calle de las Estrellas
The neighborhood is all apartment buildings in a quiet neighborhood. It is just east of Loara High School in Anaheim, and sits on the back side of Disneyland.

Published: Oct. 9, 2010

Anaheim residents have a party to celebrate an injunction against the Jeffrey Street gang.

ANAHEIM – The gang is called Jeffrey Street, but there no longer is a street by that name.

The neighborhood the gang claims, once known as Jeffrey-Lynne, is now called Hermosa Village.

On Saturday, neighborhood residents were treated to hot dogs and hamburgers to celebrate a recent court injunction against the gang. The party at Energy Field was hosted by the Anaheim Police Department and the Orange County District Attorney's Office.

Once one of Anaheim's most blighted, high-crime neighborhoods, Jeffrey-Lynne was transformed into Hermosa Village starting about 10 years ago as the city bought and renovated many of its two-story apartment buildings.

"It's way better than before," said Ariana Gutierrez, 15, a Loara High student who has lived in the neighborhood since she was 2. "It doesn't look so ugly."

Crime began to drop when the city did the renovations, Police Sgt. Juan Reveles said. Many of the gang members have moved out, he said. However, they still gravitate toward the neighborhood because it's where they feel safe, he said. Elsewhere, they're either in "no-man's land" or in an enemy gang's territory, he said.

After the renovations, Jeffrey Street was renamed Calle del Sol. When it was removed, the Jeffrey Street sign had a couple of bullet holes in it, Reveles said.

The injunction, served on 60 of the gang's most active members in July, gives the police an additional tool to use against the gang. It forbids two or more gang members to congregate inside a 1.59-square-mile "safety zone" bounded by Katella Avenue to the south, Nutwood Street to the west, Ball Road to the north and Disneyland Drive to the east.

Also forbidden are wearing gang clothing and throwing hand signs. Gang members subject to the injunction can be arrested and prosecuted for these activities, which would otherwise be legal. In the first two months of the injunction, there were nine such violations, but none in the third month, Reveles said.

It's the second gang injunction in Anaheim and the eighth in Orange County. Others are in Santa Ana, Orange, Garden Grove, San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano.

The ban on congregating keeps members from "posting up," or hanging out in public to attract members of rival gangs who might be looking for a fight, Reveles said. "Posting up" creates danger for gang members and non-members alike.

"What the lay person doesn't understand is that these people are willing to die for the neighborhood," he said.

Rogelio Franco, 35, used to live in Jeffrey-Lynne in the mid-1990s. He moved back a year ago to what is now Hermosa Village.

"There were a lot of gangs back in those years," he said. "Now it's different. It's like a new place."

Violent crime in the neighborhood is down 33 percent since the injunction was served, said Susan Eckermann, a deputy district attorney who prepared the injunction.

DOWN SIDE GARDEN GROVE

$
0
0




HARD TIMES Buena Clinton
Colonia Manzanillo SAN JUAN STREET
LAGUNA STREET
EVIL WAYS
BUARO STREET
EAST SIDE GANGSTER GROVE
DOWN CROWD
LOS ADDICTS
9 STREET 93 Locos
LOCO MEXICAN STYLE
WICKED MINDS
BASTARD FAMILY
ORGANIZED CRIME SUICIDALS
WS GRANDE GROVE
DOWN ONES
EIGHTEEN STREET
and PLAYBOYS


UNITED BY CRIME

$
0
0

according to their history lesson., they are an OG Santa Ana born lil' locos clique who had to get it together because of them getting shot at by other hoods around., no relationship to the Huntington Park's

UNITED BY CRIME is the name, and they call themselves the Original Cartel
they're centered around Bomo Park neighborhood in the South Coast district
they started out in 1990 at sadleback high school and hanged out on olive street
later their second generation established a second hood in the wilshire square district
they were once aligned with the Alley Boys due to a lot of family relations
but they didn't want to clique up and decided to run solo
Delhi tried to punk them as youngsters, that's when they stepped up to the plate
their motto is.,
we don't bang for the fame, we bang for the name!
21.2.3
200+ strong
their enemigas list is long, since they are one of Santa Ana's most hated gangs
Sycamore
Los Compadres
The Public Vandals
On The Blast
Lil' Brook
Lil' Hood
Santa Ana Browns
South Side Rifa
Barrio Small Town
Seventh Street
Calle Townsend
Lopers
Delhi amongst the most hated ones
and even FxTroop

Unstoppable Barrio Cartel
United Brown Chicanos
Using Big Cuetes

but UNITED BY CRIME 13 is the name

Never a tagger krew! Puro Young Locos

The UBC Cliques..
Ls Original Cartels
Cartel Side 21.2.3
Cartel Classics
Violent Cartels

SUR SIDE COLTONE

$
0
0
South Side Colton – A History of the Barrio

South Colton comprises an area of just under 1 1/2 square miles of the City of Colton in Verdugo County. It is surrounded by railroad tracks, and includes the area east from Rancho to 12th streets, south to Fogy, and north to the 10 Fwy. Many of the houses are of a very old age and deteriorating; much of the small commercial section is closed; with the streets in disrepair, and threatened now by urban renewal and private development.

With 85% of the population being of Mexican heritage, South Colton is one of the very few barrios in California that clearly reflects the entire scope of Chicano history, and presents all of the trends of Chicano working-class history in this our land.

The town of Colton was created by the Southern Pacific Railroad which intended to make it the railroad center of operations in Southern California. The Chicano Barrio (South Side Colton,) begun as a railroad labor camp adjacent to the railroad tracks, when the Southern Pacific Railroad brought in Mexican labor in the 1890s, and the Mexican immigrant community developed directly adjacent to the already well-established original San Salvador community of settlers from New Mexico, who had come to this river-bottom area in South Colton in 1843. The community was founded next to the tracks because that was where the marginal land could be found on account of the de facto segregation established by the Anglo community, making it the only affordable land close to work. Thereon after South Colton developed much in the same way as many other Chicano Barrios and Colonias did so throughout the Southwest.

1913, the Church of San Salvador was built in South Colton, and the two Spanish-speaking communities merged. The original San Salvador Church was built in Agua Mansa by the original community in 1853. It had, however, been abandoned in the 1890s, and was subsequently reconstructed in South Colton when the Barrio residents petitioned the Arch diocese for their own church. San Salvador Church, central to the religious, social, and political life of South Colton, still sits on the corner of 7th and M streets where it was built in 1913.

South Colton developed according to the economic, social, and political realities of the Mexicans who little by little, bought small lots and built their own designed homes with the help of family and neighbors, using any materials they could afford. Thus, the homes in South Colton are primarily small, wooden frame structures, many of which started out as shacks constructed of discarded lumber and corrugated metal. The design of the homes, the material used to construct them, and the use of the exterior space reflects not only the economic conditions and space needs of the Chicanos, but also their aesthetic and cultural sensibilities. In short, the Mexicans who created this community gave it the aesthetic form and texture they were familiar with in Mexico. They re-created a Mexican environment.

The Chicanos dire economic, social, and political conditions in South Colton, facing poverty, racism, and exclusion from socio-political institutions, forced the Chicanos in the Barrio to create their own institutions for educating their young and to provide for medical needs, as well as providing community economic assistance, going on to form even a labor union.

By 1910, South Colton had an underground Spanish-language academy, where Barrio youngsters were instructed in their community's language, values, and history after the regular school day and on Saturday mornings.

In 1913, community organizations included a mutual aid society, a committee for Fiestas celebrating Mexican national holidays, and a women's Blue Cross society. The mutual aid society helped each other with burial and other expenses when work-related and other calamities occurred. The Blue Cross members visited the sick and helped families when illness struck in the barrio. Celebrations of Mexico's national holidays, particularly the 16th of September (Mexican Independence Day) and Cinco de Mayo (Battle of Puebla celebration), were organized by the Patriotic Fiestas committee.

In 1917, Chicano United Workers organized a union and led a successful strike against the Portland Cement Company, one of Colton's major industries and its largest employer. The two-month strike resulted with the Trabajadores Unidos winning their labor demands, and subsequently, the union opened a cooperative grocery store which they called "La Union."

The period from World War I to the Great Depression brought in continued growth to Colton's two communities (Anglo & Chicano), however the South Colton Barrio did not receive its share of municipal funds and services for educational and recreation facilities. Streets in South Colton remained unpaved; sewage services were nonexistent. Chicano youngsters were segregated into “1” Mexican grade school with inadequate facilities and insufficient teachers, and were not welcome in the town's High School in Colton proper.The city's swimming pool was segregated; Mexicans could swim only on the day before the water was to be changed, and even the town's theater was also segregated. Except for work and some shopping, Chicanos and Anglos seldom interacted.

The community's social functions, including quinceañeras, baptisms, weddings, dances, community fiestas, and other social activities, were held in either the Parish Hall or a dance hall built in South Colton. The social life of the community revolved around these two halls, which were always decorated with brilliantly colored crepe paper, and with other ornaments reflecting the aesthetic sensibilities of the community. These activities involved the entire family, grandparents, parents, young marrieds, teenagers, and infants all attended the dances and celebrations. For young men in particular, local pool halls and taverns were major centers of social activity — a place to relax, have a beer, see friends, and talk over situations regarding family, work, and making ends meet. As the Chicano Barrio grew, both through the natural increase in births, as well as because of the continued immigration from Mexico and other parts of the Southwest, the Barrio became knows as "LITTLE MEXICO" and "CHOLOVILLE," names that were to survive until the decade of the 1950s.

In continuing to meet the community's entertainment needs and interests, as well as to counter the racism represented by the segregated Anglo-owned theater, two Chicano theaters showing Spanish-language films opened in South Colton. El Tivoli on 7th and O Streets and El Teatro Hidalgo, they not only showed Spanish language films, but were also centers for community activities and theatrical presentations, including those of the traveling bands of the circus. To ensure that Chicano youngsters had a place to swim on a daily basis and that the community had a recreational center, Chicano business owners built a stadium complex in 1922, calling it the International Stadium. They also built a swimming pool, a baseball diamond, and bleachers. Chicano baseball teams from all over Southern California’s Barrios came here to compete in an informal and unofficial, but very active, Chicano baseball league. All of these were the community's recreational life and youth activities revolved around these before the 1930s Great Depression years.

Repatriation and deportation of Mexicans during the Great Depression not only served to depopulate South Colton, but also effectively destroyed the developing economic and social stability of the Barrio. Many of the residents later returned, but they had lost their property and whatever savings they had accumulated before repatriation or deportation. South Colton never recovered from the effects from these programs, inflicted on their community by Anglo society.

During the period of WWII as the community sent its young men to war, and many more young people moved to urban centers where economic and educational opportunities appeared more accessible, those who stayed during and after the war, began to organize politically and began to challenge the Anglo establishment. The excessive force used by Colton police in what has been called the "Colton Zoot Suit Riot" was soundly condemned by Chicanos. They saw it as part of the attack against Mexicans which began in Los Angeles, when Anglo sailors and marines attacked Mexican and Black youngsters wearing "drapes," stripped and beat them, and then watched the police arrest them. Chicanos in South Colton launched protests against the police and demanded better municipal services from City Hall, desegregation of the schools, and a voice in local government.

Organization and political activity continued though the 1950s & 1960s as residents of the Barrio joined the wider-Chicano movement in the struggle for political participation and civil rights. Finally in 1979, Colton elected a Chicano mayor and two Chicanos on the City Council, as well as a Chicano school board member. But even though political gains have been won, South Colton remains economically depressed, and the Chicano Barrio is in danger of succumbing to urban renewal. The barrio now sits on prime industrial property, and private developers are anxious to buy out low-income property owners and make the area into an industrial park. Many of the original families still reside there; however, the population is increasingly composed of recent arrivals from Mexico. They, like the prior original inhabitants, have come in as low-wage labor in non-union industries; they receive low pay, few public services, and have few if any economic benefits or securities. But these newer residents come to a community that is essentially Mexican in speech, values, and customs, and they contribute mightily to its linguistic, social, cultural, and historical continuity as a Chicano community.

From the original Bandini and Lugo Spanish/Mexican land grants of the prior centuries, to the pioneer settlements of San Salvador, to the later influx of Mexican railroad camp laborers, through the merging of the two communities, and the subsequent development of a Chicano political class in South Colton, the Chicano Barrio experience is forever a part of history and the future of California.

EL MONTE CAMPS

$
0
0
~EL MONTE RIFA~

EL MONTE - THE WORD IS HISPANIC IN ORIGIN, BUT WHAT WAS IT'S ORIGINAL MEANING?

MOST ASSUME IT MUST PERTAIN TO A HILL OR A MOUNTAIN OF SOME SORT, BUT EL MONTE AS A PLACE HAS NO HILLS OR MOUNTAINS WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE DISTANT SAN GABRIELS.
IN THE 1770'S SPANISH SOLDIERS AND MISSIONARIES EXPLORED AN ISLAND BETWEEN TWO RIVERS, RICH IN SOIL, LOW-LYING, COVERED WITH DENSE GROWTHS OF SLENDER WILLOWS, ALDERS AND CATTAILS. THIS ISLAND PARADISE WAS BEST DESCRIBED BY THE SPANIARDS AS THE WOODED SPOT, MARSH, AND MEADOWS ALL IN ONE - THE CARACTERISTICS WERE CLEAR - WATER, WOOD (FUEL), AND SOIL, ALL THAT IS ASSOCIATED AS A PLACE DEFINED BY THOSE WITH A MASTERY OF THE SPANISH LANGUAGE TO BE DESCRIPTIVE OF "EL MONTE". NOT A HILL OR A MOUNTAIN BUT A BOUNTIFUL PLACE IN THE WILD.

THE RIVER TO THE EAST AND NORTH EAST WAS CHRISTENED "SAN GABRIEL" AND THE RIVER TO THE NORTH AND WEST WAS CHRISTENED THE "RIO HONDO".

EL MONTE PROSPERED AND GREW DURING THE ERA OF THE SPANISH MISSIONS (1770'S to 1830'S), THEN LATER UNDER THE LAND GRANT RANCHOS.

IN 1826 SMALL GROUPS OF AMERICANS COMING INTO THE AREA, REFERRED TO THE REST AND REHABILITATION AFFORDED HERE AS "CAMP MONTE" OR "MONTE CAMP", HENCE THE CAMP ERA BEGAN.
SOME OF THESE NEW ARRIVALS CHRISTENED THE RESPECTIVE AREAS WHERE THEY DWELT WITH NAMES SUCH AS "HICKS" AND "WIGGINS" IN REFERENCE TO THE NEW TENANTS OCCUPYING SOME OF THE LANDS.

WITH THE ADVENT OF THE 20th CENTURY, EL MONTE CONTINUED TO GROW AND PROSPER. ONE COMMERCIAL SEED COMPANY LEASED FERTILE TRACTS OF LAND IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE ISLAND AND GREW BREATHTAKING PLOTS OF FLOWERING PLANTS. THIS AREA BEGAN TO BE REFERRED BY THE FARMERS AS "LAS FLORES" A NAME WHICH PERSIST TODAY AS "EL MONTE FLORES"

EL MONTE CONTINUED TO GROW DURING THE EARLY PART OF THE CENTURY LARGELY IN PART DUE TO "LA REVOLUCION MEXICANA" (1910 to 1920). MANY OF EL MONTE BARRIOS TOOK SHAPE WITH THE MASS MIGRATION OF THOSE HOPE-FILLED MASSED WHOM FLED THE VIOLENCE IN MEXICO.

OTHERS MOVED IN FROM AREAS OF LOS ANGELES, LIKE THEY DID FROM BOYLE HEIGHTS, AN AREA KNOWN AS "THE FLATS" (OLD RUSSIA TOWN FLATS) WERE THEY FACED STIFF SEGREGATION FOR THEIR CHILDREN IN THE AVAILABLE SCHOOLS.

DURING THE 1930'S THE GREAT DEPRESSION BROUGHT DOLDRUMS TO EL MONTE JUST AS IT DID EVERYWHERE ELSE.
EL MONTE BEGAN TO CHANGE RAPIDLY FROM A "LIL FARM TOWN" TO A GROWING "BEDROOM COMMUNITY" WHERE PEOPLE LIVED BUT WORKED AND COMMUTED ELSEWHERE.

BY THE LATE 40'S AND 50'S THE CAMPS OF EL MONTE BEGAN TO BE BROKEN UP BETWEEN THE DIFFERENT CITIES AND COMMUNITIES TAKING SHAPE THROUGHOUT THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY.

FOLLOWING THE BUILDING BOOM OF THE 40'S AND 50'S, THE POPULATION EXPLODED AND IN 1958 A SECOND COMMUNITY OF EL MONTE WAS INCORPORATED AS "SOUTH EL MONTE" THIS COMPROMISED THE SOUTHWEST PART OF THE ONCE "WOODED ISLAND".

THE OLD EL MONTE NEIGHBORHOODS KNOWNS AS CAMPS WERE THE FOLLOWING

1 - LA MISION (SAN GABRIEL MISION AREA)
2 - LA COLONIA (LA SECCION)
3 - CANTA RANAS (WHITTIER NARROWS)
4 - CHINO CAMP (LA PUENTE)
5 - HICKS CAMP (FIVE POINTS)
6 - LA GRANADA
7 - LAS FLORES (EL MONTE)
8 - WIGGINS CAMP
9 - CAMP HAYES (MEDINA COURTS)

Along Valley Blvd is where the original Mexican migrants fleeing the Mexican Revolution of 1920 settled along, mainly in the two Camps of WIGGINS' and HICKS', then by the late 1920's a new Camp was formed - Camp HAYES which later became known as MEDINA COURT.

Originally CANTA RANAS was in an area around the Whittier Narrows Dam, but after the flood projects works began around the late 1940's/early 50's (because the area was flooded during the rainy season), many families moved out to adjoining areas, and today you find Varrio Canta Ranas in the city of Santa Fe Springs further down the river.



EL MONTE BARRIOS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EMF - EL MONTE FLORES - Rowland Street
=CAMP LAS FLORES

EMH - EL MONTE HICKS - Locos, Hickory Boys
=CAMP HICKS/FIVE POINTS

EMHS - EL MONTE HAYES - The Courts, TLS Tiny Locos
=CAMP HAYES/MEDINA COURTS

NSM - NORTH SIDE MONTES

NS EM - NORTH SIDE EL MONTE

SS EM - SOUTH SIDE EL MONTE

EL MONTE LIGA / LEGION

EMR - EL MONTE RIFA – Dukes

SSTM - SASTRE STREET MONTE

Note: I am still looking for more history and info on the camps and barrios of El Monte, so if any of you have some to share & help me out with, "It would be greatly appreciated".

VARRIO PACAS 13

$
0
0
BARRIO PACOIMA

By LADY JOKER
100% SUREñA

Barrio Pacoima or Pacas may not be the oldest, but it is by far the largest barrio, in numbers, in the valley. One of the reasons they are so large is because they are so fragmented, or diversified. They have at least 20 cliques or sub-barrios, with a minimum of 50 members. With this method even if you don’t want to join one clique theirs at least three other cliques that will fit your criteria. And some of the sub-barrios have cliques with in them, like Project Boys and Latin Times. They may be one of the most fragmented barrios in LA with their separate origins hard to trace. The hardest one to figure out is Pacoima Flats, which claims allegiance to some other Pacoima’s, yet still claims allegiance to the Flats. Latin Times apparently only claims Pacoima because of geography, not getting along with many of the other Pacoima cliques. Some of the cliques like Vaughn Street may have started out as a separate barrio, joined Pacoima, ended up not getting along with some Pacoima’s, but refused to stop claiming Pacoima. They are mainly divided into Boys and Locos cliques, which originally did not get along with each other. It is said that the Boys were all on the East Side of the tracks and the Locos were all on the West Side of the tracks, but this is obviously not true. There are Boys cliques on the WS and Locos cliques on the ES. Now some of the worst rivalries in Pacoima are between Boys cliques, The Pierce and the PJS. Most of the Locos get along, however. There are some Pacoima’s which are not Locos or Boys: P Criminals, Latin Times, Vaughn St, and a variety of Street cliques. Saying Pacoima isn’t saying one thing, unless you’re their rival. The original Pacoima is referred to as the Treces, which had a click called Tinys and Locos which were combined to make Brown Stoner Locos, but now there is apparently a Tinys click again. San Fernando and Pacoima is probably the longest going rivalry in the valley. I heard once that it started along time ago, probably in the 30s or earlier, when a man from Pacoima stole a horse from a man in San Fernando, and when the people from San Fernando found out they got the man from Pacoima and hung him with no trial, so the people from Pacoima retaliated and so on. I have heard this story in both directions though, so it is hard to tell, but it was bound to happen. Pacoima, mainly the PJs, has absorbed a lot of crews, with the biggest one probably being HPR. They have scattered members throughout the valley but they do not openly try to expand. If you count them as one barrio they are by far the largest in the valley.

Pacoima Criminals 13
ExS Pacoima Crazy Boys
Pacoima Van Nuys Boyz
Pacoima Goleta Street
Pacoima Project Boyz
Pacoima Humphrey Boys
Pacoima Chivers Street Locotes
Latin Times Pacoima
Pacoima Flats
Pacoima Latin Rascals
Pacoima Pierce Boys
Pacoima Lev Boys
Pacoima Knock Knock Boys
Pacoima El Dorado
South Side Locos
Brown Stoner Locos
Dead End Boys
Pacoima Ilex Street
Pacoima Pinney Street
Pacoima Paxton Street Locos
Pacoima Vaughn Street
Pacoima Cayuga Street Locos

~" P A C x T O W N "~

VARRIO HEAD HUNTERS RIFA

$
0
0



HEAD HUNTERS

HHS

WEST SIDE LOS ANGELES ORIGINALS

HANDSIGN: THE DOUBLE TRIGGER FINGERS ACHE

BANDANA: PURPLE, THE COLOR OF ROYALTY

BIRTHGROUNDS: FILIPINO TOWN LOS ANGELES
(1) RAMPART & BEVERLY, (2) DOUGLAS & TOLUCA

CLIQUES:
DUKES
RAMPART CRIMINALS
TINY MALOS
FRANKLIN BOYS
AVENUES
TINY KRIMINALS

THE FIRST HOMEBOYS THAT KICKED OFF THE HEAD HUNTERS GOT TOGETHER AROUND 1979 TO PLAY FOOTBAL ON THE CALLES AND PARKS; FROM THE SAME ERA LIKE THE DRIFTERS, ROCKWOORD AND PHANTOMS. HHS STARTED OUT AS A CLIKA DE HOMEBOYS OUT FOR THRILLS AND FRILLS, BUT WHEN THE VARRIO DIAMOND CHICOS WANTED TO CLIQUE THEM-IN IN THE VERY EARLY 1980s, WELL THE BATOS FROM HHS SAID CHALE AND THEN THE PLEITOS STARTED WITH DIAMOND, SO THAT’S WHEN HHS BECAME OFFICIAL BY HOLDING UP THEIR STREETS AND BECOMING A HOOD.

THE OG HOMEBOY “JOE” IS CREDITED TO HAVE BAPTIZED THEM WITH THE NAME OF HEAD HUNTERS. CAZADORES DE CABEZAS BECAUSE THEY WOULD GO OUT HUNTING FOR THEIR ENEMIGAS HEADS. NO MERCY, JUST PLAIN CRAZY. THOSE WERE THE TIMES.

HEAD HUNTERS TWO OG CLIQUES BEGAN AT THIS TIME; THE RAMPART CRIMINALS AND THE DUKES. THE RAMPART CRIMINALS EVENTUALLY FADED FROM THEIR AREA, BUT THE DUKES KEPT UP THEIR SMALL ORIGINAL NEIGHBORHOOD AROUND GLENDALE BLVD., COURT, DOUGLAS AND TOLUCA STREETS, WERE THEY REMAIN HOLDING UP THE DOUBLE ACHE TO THIS VERY DAY.

IN 1989 SOME OF THE HHS RAMPART CRIMINALS MOVED OUT TO FONTANA OUT IN THE INLAND EMPIRE. AND THERE THEY SET UP AND STARTED BANGING; AT FIRST THEY LANDED IN THE SOUTHRIDGE NEIGHBORHOOD OF SOUTH FONTANA, BUT BY THE VERY EARLY 90s THE HEAD HUNTERS HAD MOVED UP TO WEST FONTANA. IN FONTA IS WHERE THE HHS TINY MALOS CLIQUES WAS FORMED. THEIR ZONE IN FONTANA GOES FROM (E) REDWOOD, (W) POPLAR, (N) CERES, (S) SAN BERNARDINO. HEAD HUNTERS STARTED MAKING SERIO NOISE IN THE IXE, SO MUCH THAT IN 1996 THEY GOT AN INJUNCTION THROWN ON THEM; THE FIRST FOR ANY FONTANA GANG.

HEAD HUNTERS IN FONTANA HAVE REMAINED IN THE MIX EVER SINCE THEY FIRST ARRIVED, AND ARE STILL GOING STRONG; THIS MAKES THE HEAD HUNTERS THE LONGEST RUNNING EVER ESTABLISHED GANG FROM L.A. IN THE I.E.

DURING THE 1990s, HEAD HUNTERS ATTENDING CLECHA UP IN HOLLYWOOD, STARTED UP THE HOLLYWOOD ASSASSINS CLIQUE ON ARDMORE AVENUE. AND IN THE LATE 1990s OTHER HHS HOMEBOYS STARTED THE FRANKLIN BOYS CLIQUE IN FAR OFF WHITTIER. THE WHITTIER CLIQUE GOT HIT HARD BY LOCK UPS AND SHIT, SO IT’S MOSTLY GONE DEFUNCT BY NOW.

IN THE LAST DECADE OF 2K, THE HEAD HUNTERS HAVE ESTABLISHED THEMSELVES IN ORANGE COUNTY, SETTING UP CAMP IN THE CITIES OF ANAHEIM AND GARDEN GROVE. THE HHS CLIQUE IN GARDEN GROVE IS CALLED THE “AVENUES,” AND THE ONES IN ANAKRIME ARE THE TINY KRIMINALS CLIKA.

ALL THE DIFFERENT HOODS AND CLIQUES OF THE CAZADORES DE CABEZAS, NO MATTER WHERE THEY’RE FROM, THE I.E. OR O.C., THEY ALL CLAIM WEST SIDE L.A. IN ALLEGIANCE AND WITH RESPECTS TO THEIR HOMEGROUNDS; FROM WHERE THEY COME FROM!



BULLET VHHTRSX3

PUENTE 13

$
0
0


The City of La Puente is all colored in yellow (unincorp areas not included). The community of Valinda is outlined in green, seen on the northeast section of the map. Bassett is on the far north west side, and "La Hacienda Puente"(Happy Homes) is on the bottom side where you read Industry on the map.

La Puente was one of those many so-called hicks towns that where out there in the boonies; and the boonies seemed so far away from L.A. (20 miles) back in the 1930s and 40s., Back then the area was filled with muddy river beds, and rail road tracks criss-crossed the flat hills topography of the Puente Valley. Packed-dirt sidewalks were the norm in many of its neighborhood streets. It was a stereotypical Mexican place where you could fence in your property and raise chickens or goats, and hunt coons or roadrunners just a short distance from the roads and homes; the place was like country living.

After WWII, La Puente became a boom town. The place was prime marketing land for the realty companies which came in and divided up everything into "tracts" and laid it all out into "grids." .. So many families from L.A. and elsewhere moved to La Puente in the 1950's that for a time the place was called "kidsville," because there where just so many little folks on its streets; kids ruled; they owned the streets.

La Puente grew so much during the 1950's that it was incorporated as it's own City in the year 1956. La Puente for a time was the classical white urban city of the leave it to beaver kind of epoch. But just like it's twisted name of "LA" instead of "EL" Puente, it also had another story brewing under its topside look. White on the outside, Brown on the inside.

Thee History of the Bridgetown and of it's crazy "LA" instead of "EL" in its name goes back to to when the old Spanish explorers crossed over the hills from La Abra (La Habra), and upon coming down on the other side, they crossed over a bridge that they built over the San Jose (river) creek, back like in 1769; and according to folk legend the Spaniard explorer Portola named the region "Llana de La Puente" - meaning Plain of the Bridge., the "LA" instead of the "EL" is said to be because of the Portuguese that were with the Spanish, who use LA instead of EL., this same place later became a "Rancho," and when the Whites arrived, they took over the name; later their fields and farms attracted large crowds of gente; raza who came in droves during the 1920s and 30s, and by the 1950s, the time when the homes and freeway construction were taking place, simon, Chicanos made La Puente their home. And so first the Chucos who got it together as Old Town Puente Gents, and then later they went on to become Puente 13 Tinflanes.

TINFLANES, now there's a name for the books., so full of meaning!

P13 was founded in the early 1950’s in La Puente. At the time of its conception, it was known as the “Bridgetown Gentlemen,” or “Old Town Puente.” Later the gang became known simply as Puente 13.

Over the decades since, it has dramatically expanded its membership and territory into neighboring cities and communities, to include unincorporated county areas, and portions of Walnut, Industry, Hacienda Heights, and West Covina.

There are currently 14 subsets, or cliques of the Puente 13 gang.

New cliques were formed by members living in a particular geographical area, and were named accordingly (i.e. Happy Homes was founded by Puente 13 members residing in Hacienda Heights), and cliques such as Blackwood Street, Northam Street, Rama Street, and Dial Blvd. were founded by Puente 13 members residing on those respective street zones of Greater La Puente.

Currently its gang membership (active or inactive) is roughly between 600 to 1000 in numbership.

VARRIO PUENTE 13

CLIQUES & SUB-CLIQUES

TINFLANES
LOS NITE CAPS
SUNSET LOCOS
BECKNER STREET
BALLISTA STREET
RAMA STREET
CADBROOK
DUFF STREET
PERTH STREET
BLACKWOOD STREET
DIAL BLVD.
HURLEY STREET
NORTHAM STREET
EAST SIDE PUENTE
HAPPY HOMES PUENTE

IN MAPPING THE ZONES FOR EACH OF THE PX3 CLIQUES, IT APPEARS THAT NOT ALL THEM FALL WITHIN LA PUENTE'S CITY LIMITS.

NORTHAM STREET, EAST SIDE PUENTE AND HURLEY STREET FALL UNDER THE UNINCORP SOUTH SAN JOSE HILLS., AND DUFF STREET ALTHOUGH RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF PUENTE 13 TERRITORY, NEVERTHELESS DUFF STREET SITS MOSTLY ON UNINCORP LAND AS WELL., AND BLACKWOOD IS COMPLETELY OUT OF CITY BOUNDS, SINCE ALL OF ITS ZONE IS IN THE NORTHERN UNINCORP SECTOR., BALLISTA LIES ALL MOSTLY WITHIN CITY LIMITS, BUT IT MAYBE HAS A SMALL CHUNK OF IT WHICH FALLS TOWARDS THE GREATER UNINCORP COMMUNITY OF VALINDA.,

VALINDA FLATS, THE ROYAL MAJESTICS, ALWOOD STREET LOADIES AND THE DEFUNCT SGV CYCLONES ALL HAVE THEIR ZONES WITHIN UNINCORP VALINDA.,

THE OFFICIAL BOUNDARIES OF LA PUENTE ONLY HAS 2 VARRIOS THAT HAVE TURF INSIDE OF LA PUENTE, BUT DON'T CLAIM P13.,

THE FIRST ONE IS BASSETT GRANDE.,
BGR ZONE EXTENDS A LITTLE BIT INTO PUENTE CITY LAND, ALL THE WAY TO MAYBE ARDILLA AVENUE.,

THE OTHER VARRIO IS LIL HILL RIFA ON THE MOST SOUTHEASTERN TIP OF LA PUENTE, WHERE VALLEY BLVD MEETS AZUSA AVENUE.,

BOTH, BASSETT GRANDE AND LIL HILL, PLUS VALINDA FLATS ARE SWORN ENEMIES OF PUENTE 13 (ALL CLIQUES).,

THE VARRIOS TOWNSMEN, AND EAST SIDE DUKES, ARE BOTH IN THE UNINCORP AREA OF SOUTH SAN JOSE HILLS, OVERLAPPING IN SOME STREETS WITH NORTHAM, HURLEY AND EAST SIDE PUENTE.,

THE LAST VARRIO THAT THROWS UP PUENTE IN THEIR NAME IS HAPPY HOMES PUENTE, BUT THIS VARRIO LIES SOUTH OF LA PUENTE, IN AN OLD AREA NAMED "HACIENDA LA PUENTE" SOUTH OF THE CITY OF INDUSTRY; RIGHT THERE AS YOU'RE HEADING INTO HACIENDA HEIGHTS PROPER.,

BUT VARRIO HAPPY HOMES IS A TRIPPY THING BECAUSE IT GETS CONFUSING ON HOW IT ALL WORKS INTERNALLY WITHIN HAPPY HOMES.,

YOU HAVE HAPPY HOMES GRANDE, HAPPY HOMES PUENTE, LITTLE HAPPY HOMES, AND HAPPY HOMES TINY LOCOS.,

HAPPY HOMES GRANDE DOES NOT CLAIM PUENTE, BUT LITTLE HAPPY HOMES DOES, SO I DON'T HAVE A GRASP ON HOW THAT WORKS WITH VHxHR.,

THE LAST AREA THAT HAS REALTY IN UNINCORP LA PUENTE IS THE AREA KNOWN AS GREENBERRY LIL WATTS, NORTH OF FAIRGROVE AVENUE, CENTERED ON GREENBERRY. THIS AREA IS CONSIDERED THE "BLACK SIDE" OF TOWN, BUT THE BLACKWOOD PX3 CLIQUE SEEMS TO ROAM THE AREA AS WELL.,

THE DEFUNCT OLD "GREENBERRY BOYS & MIDGETS" (1970s) CLAIMED (PUENTE's) LIL WATTS NEIGHBORHOOD AS THEIR BARRIO.

PUENTE 13 CLIQUE ZONES

PX13 TS "TINFLANES"
THEY CLAIM DARK SIDE
AND THEY HAVE THE ABBEY STREET LOCOS
THAT WOULD PUT THEM IN THE SOUTHERN PORTION OF CENTRAL LA PUENTE
IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DIAL BLVD. CLIQUE

DBLS P13
DIAL BLVD LOCOS
CLAIM DARK SIDE
ZONE
NW: STIMSON AVE.
SW: VALLEY BLVD.
N/NE: MAIN ST.
SE: DALESFORD DR.

BWST BLACKWOOD STREET
ZONE
NW: SUNSET AVE.
SE: UNRUH AVE.
SW: AMAR RD.
NE: FAIRGROVE AVE.

BSTxP13 BALLISTA STREET
ZONE
E: AILERON AVE.
W: HACIENDA BLVD.
N: MAPLEGROVE ST.
S: AMAR ROAD / PUENTE CREEK (CHANNEL)

PSTxP13
PERTH STREET
ZONE
NW: UNRUH AVE. / PUENTE CREEK (CHANNEL)
NE: GIORDANE ST.
SE: HACIENDA RD.
SW: NELSON AVE.

CST / CBP13
CADBROOK
ZONE
WEST OF PERTH ST NEIGHBORHOOD
SW: NELSON AVE.
NW: PUENTE CREEK (CHANNEL)
SE: UNRUH AVE.

RSTxP13
RAMA STREET
ZONE
NW: WILLOW AVE.
SW: TEMPLE AVE.
NE: AMAR RD.
SE: ORANGE AVE.

DUFF STREET P13
ZONE
NE: AMAR RD.
SW: PRICHAR ST.
NW: CALIFORNIA AVE.
SE: UNRUH ST.

HSTxP13
HURLEY STREET P13
ZONE
SOUTH OF THE EAST SIDE DUKES BY SUNSHINE PARK
SMALL NEIGHBORHOOD
S: VALLEY BLVD.
W: TRAFALGAR AVE.
E: LA SEDA RD.

NSTxP13
NORTHAM STREET
ZONE
ALSO ON THE EAST END OF UNINCORP LA PUENTE
BY EAST SIDE DUKES, IN THE NOGALES NEIGHBORHOOD
N: NORTHAM ST.
S. VALLEY BLVD.
W. FAXINA AVE.
E: NOGALES ST.

BOTH HURLEY AND NORTHAM ARE ALL SOMEWHAT MIXED IN THERE
WITH TOWNSMEN AND EAST SIDE DUKES IN THE SOUTH SAN JOSE HILLS

BECKNER STREET ~ LOS HOMEBOYS
(DEFUNCT)
THE STRIP BETWEEN WILLO AVE. AND SUNSET AVE.
RUNNING PARALLEL ALONG TEMPLE & BECKNER.
BETWEEN RAMA STREET & DUFF STREET ZONES

GREENBERRY LIL WATTS
CENTERED ON GREENBERRY
N: FRANCISQUITO AVE.
S: FAIRGROVE AVE.
W: SUNSET AVE.
E: UNRUH AVE.

June 8, 2010
FEDERAL RACKETEERING INDICTMENT LEADS TO ARREST OF 8 MEMBERS, ASSOCIATES OF SAN GABRIEL VALLEY STREET GANG

LOS ANGELES – A joint federal-state law enforcement operation this morning led to the arrest of eight people linked to a San Gabriel Valley street gang who are charged in a federal racketeering and narcotics indictment that alleges the gang has engaged in violent crimes and methamphetamine trafficking that helped fund the Mexican Mafia.

Today’s arrests are the result of a 22-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury on June 2. The indictment names 17 defendants, 16 of whom are charged under the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. In addition to the RICO charges, the indictment alleges violent crimes in aid of racketeering, conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, firearms violations and other offenses.

The federal indictment that led to this morning’s takedown focuses on Puente-13, a street gang that was formed in the City of La Puente approximately 60 years ago. Puente-13 claims as its turf a large portion of La Puente, as well as unincorporated parts of the San Gabriel Valley and portions of nearby cities such as Hacienda Heights, Walnut and West Covina. The gang is comprised of approximately 600 members and includes at least 14 subsets or “cliques.” Puente-13 is aligned with the Mexican Mafia, as indicted by the “13" in the gang's name, which references the 13th letter in the alphabet – the letter M. The indictment states that the gang is currently controlled by Mexican Mafia member Rafael Munoz Gonzalez.

Members of Puente-13 are involved in the distribution of narcotics, particularly methamphetamine, according to the indictment, which also alleges that leaders of the gang extort drug dealers by collecting “taxes,” the payment of which allows drug dealers to operate in gang-controlled territory.

The RICO conspiracy count in the indictment alleges a series of specific overt acts, including the murder of a rival gang member who was punished for collecting taxes on behalf of Gonzalez without Gonzalez’s knowledge, several stabbings designed to deter victims from cooperating with law enforcement, and numerous instances in which gang members possessed firearms and narcotics for sale.

“Violent drug gangs continue to wreak havoc within our communities,” said Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent in Charge Timothy J. Landrum. “Today’s arrests send the message that law enforcement will continue to work together to take back our neighborhoods and get violent drug traffickers and gangs off our streets.”

Four of the defendants in the federal racketeering case are eligible for the death penalty because of their involvement in the 2006 murder of the rival gang member who was collecting taxes without authorization. Those defendants are: Rafael Munoz Gonzalez, also known as Cisco, 40, of La Puente, the Mexican Mafia member who allegedly controls Puente-13; Cesar Munoz Gonzalez, also known as Blanco, 36, of Rowland Heights, Rafael Gonzalez’s brother and allegedly the Mexican Mafia member’s top lieutenant; Steven Nunez, also known as Flaco, 30, who currently a state prisoner; and Angel Frank Torres, also known as Smiley, 34, who is currently a state prisoner.

The remaining 13 defendants face either life without parole in federal prison or prison sentences of up to 20 years if they are convicted of the charges in the indictment.

Those taken into custody this morning will begin making their initial appearances this afternoon in United States District Court in Los Angeles.

In addition to the eight arrested this morning, seven defendants were already in custody. Authorities are continuing to search for two defendants named in the RICO indictment – Adrian Rodriguez, also known as Trips, 25, of Huntington Park; and Henry Rick Zabala, 40, of La Puente.

This case is the result of an investigation conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department.

In addition to the agencies that conducted the investigation, several law enforcement agencies assisted in this morning's takedown, including the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives;
the United States Marshals Service;
the Pomona Police Department;
the Baldwin Park Police Department;
the La Verne Police Department;
the Montebello Police Department;
the El Monte Police Department;
the Huntington Beach Police Department;
the Gardena Police Department;
the South Gate Police Department;
and the Los Angeles Interagency Metropolitan Police Apprehension Crime Task Force (LA IMPACT).

April 19, 2011
The Injunction thrown on Puente Valley

A judge granted a preliminary injunction Tuesday that restricts the activities of gang members in 16 square miles of the San Gabriel Valley.

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office sought the civil injunction against members of Puente 13 and Bassett Grande, which are behind violence, drug sales and protection rackets in the Valinda Corridor and the city of La Puente, officials said.

Puente 13, a multi-generational gang formed more 60 years ago, is made up of more than 1,000 members believed to engage in narcotics trafficking and "tax" collection from other drug dealers, said Deputy Dist. Atty. Michael Fern. The gang includes at least 14 subsets or "cliques."

Puente 13 is aligned with the Mexican Mafia, represented by "13" in the gang name, referencing the 13th letter in the alphabet -- M.

Bassett Grande, with more than 300 known members, is Puente 13's primary rival.

A chunk of its hierarchy was indicted by federal prosecutors last year for racketeering in connection with methamphetamine trafficking.

The indictment stated that the gang is controlled by Mexican Mafia member Rafael Munoz Gonzalez.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James Chalfant granted the civil injunction, which designates the approximately 16-square-mile area a "safety zone."

The injunction covers the communities of Avocado Heights, Bassett, South San Jose Hills and Valinda. According to Fern, it is largest geographic area for which the district attorney's office has obtained such an injunction.

The injunction orders Puente 13 and Bassett Grande gang members not to associate with one another in public or possess weapons, narcotics or graffiti tools within the injunction area.

They also are barred from two parks in La Puente -- Bassett Park in the 500 block of Vineland Avenue and La Puente Park in the 500 block of North Glendora Avenue.

It prohibits members of those gangs from wearing gang apparel, trespassing on property and loitering in public places. It also imposes a 10 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew for the gang members.

A violation of the injunction can result in a six-month jail term.

To win approval, the district attorney's office produced Sheriff's Department tracking data showing how much gang graffiti there was in the injunction area.


SCALON CALLE A

$
0
0
By SHARK SCxCH A ST LS






VARRIO SCALON CALLE A from CHIQUES



INITIALS “SC” and "SCxCH"



The SCALON name started out as “ESCALON” meaning a “STEP”, but in time La Raza morphed the name into SCALON.



It originally meant a “STEP” away from La COLONIA de CHIQUES



CHIQUES is a Pachuco Raza term of endearment for OXNARD. All the Varrios in Oxnard can use it in their varrio name and placasos.



But La COLONIA is only a section of Oxnard on the east side of town, and COLONIA CHIQUES is only just one of the many Varrios within the city limits, so don't get it confused because COLONIA does not equal all of CHIQUES.



How did Oxnard get its moniker of Chiques?


In the 1930’s and 1940’s the drug trade and crime grew in Oxnard, and people began making references about Oxnard's Colonia comparing it to the gangland city of Chicago. This seemed to be rooted in several theories. One was the expanding drug trade and a growing belief that Oxnard was a major drug distribution point for southern California that stretched to the city of Chicago. There was also some migration of families who had arrived here from Chicago. Finally, there was also a proud belief by Oxnard’s underworld that their criminal activity paralleled Chicago, including the gangster culture made famous by Al Capone. People from Colonia began unofficially referring to their neighborhood as “Little Chicago”. “Little Chicago” morphed immediately into the Spanish Calo version “CHIQUES” which means Little Chicago.



Over time Chiques became a reference to not just La Colonia but to the whole city of Oxnard. Some even tattooed “Little Chicago” on their body. Chiques ultimately became attached to most of Oxnard’s Varrios.



La COLONIA is where it is said to have all started in regards to the Chiques Varrio gangs; that’s where all the Mexicans lived back in the days, in that Colonia neighborhood on the east side of town. Colonia kind of looks like a little East L.A. and even La Colonia’s Felisha Courts projects look like the the Aliso Village projects of East Los.



When Little Chicago was changed to Chiques, La Raza didn’t say Colonia Chiques, they just said Chiques; they in no way referred to themselves as Colonia. When the first chicanos moved out of there to Hueneme or to the south side of town, they referred to themselves as from Escalon, meaning a Step away from Colonia; that's when those living on the old east side of Oxnard started referencing themselves as from La Colonia Chiques, but those from Hueneme and the south side, also known as Escalon started to claim Chiques in their name before La Colonia ever did. Nevertheless, La Colonia goes back to the 1940s, possibly even the 1930s.



Scalon goes back to the early 1960s, maybe even the 50s.



Scalon was born in the Port Hueneme housing projects.



Scalon Chiques formed over a series of events almost as old as COLONIA CHIQUES.



They did not have any car clubs associated with the forming of Scalon, nor did they organize in as a definitive manner.



Members of Scalon Chiques referred to their different generations as “chapters”.



Chapter One, the founding clique was the generation, which existed in the 1960s. These are the older Homeboys who are in their fifties and are considered the roots of Scalon Chiques. Many from Chapter 1 are torcidos, while others are now Resting In Peace.



In the 1960’s Chapter One lived predominantly in the area they named the Hueneme Projects. This was low rent housing that existed in the area of Hueneme Road and Ventura Road in Port Hueneme. The families existed on income produced from working as field laborers and in civil service. Adjacent to the area is the Port of Hueneme and the Naval Air Station. Near these projects was a park known as “Moranda Park” where handball courts became a popular hang out. These handball courts were later torn down.



Families slowly moved from the area of the “projects” into Oxnard. They settled in areas near Community Park, A Street, Bryce Canyon Avenue and West Spruce Street.



In the late 1970s, Scalon Chiques lost its unique single identification to two new developing clikas in the south area of Oxnard; Calle A, and Calle Paula. Up to this point in time there had been only raza who claimed El Escalon, and everyone else was from La Colonia.



Varrio members who live west of Saviers Road became known as Scalon Chiques Calle A, and east of Saviers Road became known as Scalon Chiques Calle Paula.



The Chapter Two homeboys existed and held up the varrio during the 1970s.


The original SCALON Chapter Two hung out at the Spruce Street Alley which ran all the way west to Ventura Road. This same alley became home grounds for CALLE A, which in both their placasos and name; they continued to reference themselves as SCALON.


In 1980, most of Chapter Two CALLE A, moved to Charles Street and the area of Perkins Road. Older gente from Chapter One remained in the area of A Street and Bryce Canyon Road, mostly behind the Liquor Cellar located at Channel Islands Blvd. and Saviers Rd.



The birth of SCALON CALLE A, took place in 1978 at a party in which raza who lived on A Street responded with a shout out of “A STREET” in response to a shout out by some gente from “COLONIA”. This party which occurred on Patterson and Island Boulevard marked the birth of CALLE A.



Paula Street varrio formed around 1977. A clique of raza attended Channel Islands High School and lived in the Blackstock north neighborhood. They were always kicking it around the Island Plaza shopping mall. They became known as the MAYFAIR BOYS so named after a store in the mall.



In 1979, they took on the name of Paula Street after a residential street where many of them lived. Paula Street vatos were jocks from Channel Islands High School who did not sport tacas but always had the shaved heads. They appeared to have been the first group of raza to have shaved heads in Oxnard while most other raza from the streets kept long hair. PAULA STREET was constantly having pleitos with people from the nearby Cal/Gisler neighborhood. In 1979 COLONIA placed a “green light” on PAULA STREET.



In 1983, PAULA STREET approached CALLE A with a peace proposition to go up together against COLONIA CHIQUES. CALLE A declined, and Paula Street then went to the vatos from EL RIO for the same reason, but the vatos from EL RIO declined as well. EL RIO eventually aligned with CALLE A to battle COLONIA CHIQUES.



To be continued . . .

RANCHO SAN PEDRO

$
0
0



SAN PEDRO

~~>“HARBOR AREA”

S.P = The Port of L.A.

S.P. flies the flag colors of Black & Gold and the SUR 13 Blue flag.

The Black & Gold comes from the High School football team, the Pirates.

Amongst the lids that S.P. has sported are the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Seattle Mariners, and others like the University of Southern California "SC" lid used by the RSP Santa Cruz Street Locos clique.

The hand signs is a double-handed Big “S” and several others depending on the particular varrio or clique.

The main Varrio is Rancho San Pedro, A.k.a. The Ranch!

The name taken from the Rancho San Pedro housing projects built in the early 1940’s located within the borders of . .

(E) Santa Cruz Street,
(N) Mesa Street,
(S) Harbor Blvd. and
(W) 3rd. Street,

. . centered around Rancho Park on Centre Street & 2nd. Street.
The Rancho San Pedro housing projects together with the Verdes Del Oriente apartments are also home to the Dodge City Crips.
The name Dodge is a mis-translated English equivalent for Rancho that was adopted by the Cuzzins who formed their own gang at the projects in the early to mid 1970’s.
The actual turf claimed by Rancho San Pedro incorporates basically all of San Pedro, south of Cabrillo Street all the way down to the Harbor waterfront..

Rancho San Pedro’s cliques are the following (incomplete list)

NITEOWLS
SANTOS
LOCOS
8TH STREET LOCOS
3RD STREET LOCOS
MIDGETS
16TH STREET LOCOS NUTTY BLOCK
14TH STREET LOCOS
SANTA CRUZ STREET LOCOS
12TH STREET TROUBLES
2ND STREET PROJECTS

The RSP hang outs were many and spread out, never in the same place most of the time. Peck Park, Leland Park, Rancho Park, 2nd Street & Centre, Royal Palms, Point Fermin, Averill Park (The Hole), Cabrillo Beach, Summerland/Rena Park, 12th & Palos Verdes, 16th & Centre or Mesa, 3rd & Cabrillo, Oliver & Center, all of them depending on what was happening out in the streets.



Rancho San Pedro semi-gets along with most other SP Varrios like Varrio Leland Park from the neighborhood north of the Harbor Freeway surrounding the park that carries the same name.

Leland Park old borders are more-or-less the following. .

(S) Gaffey Street
(N) Leland Street
(W) Sepulveda Street
(E) Miraflores Avenue

Their initials are;
LP, LxP, LPSP, LPH, and LPB
Their cliques are:Hoods, Boys and Locos

Leland Park is presumably a break-off from RSP. That area was commonly referred to as the Leland Park Neighborhood, hence the name taken by the Leland Park “HOODS” clique.




RSP also has a love-hate relationship with the olden Park Western Loma Varrio that originated on the hillside ravine off of Western Avenue and Park Western Drive. The PWL original residents lived on the San Pedro hillside facing the Harbor northeast of Leland Park over by Channel Street. These residents were later relocated into the new housing development Channel Heights complex built in 1942, with most of the lower-income residents being pushed into the Housing Projects section called “Western Courts.”

The “Western Courts Projects” were located in the ravine area tucked-in just below Western Avenue and could be accessed through Park Western Drive. The name Park Western Loma was taken off the intersection of (if I remember correctly) Park Western Drive & Park Loma Drive streets that met up right in the middle of the neighborhood.

This neighborhood existed all the way up to 1980 when it was torn down and its residents scattered through-out the Harbor Area. Today, Capitol Drive runs right up the inclined hillside area, and new condominiums line the streets, but in olden times, the Chicano/Mexican community was nitty-gritty looking. There were horse ranches, dirt streets, spooky looking streets and homes, plus the old housing projects in the typical L.A. flats fashion. The streets were real dark and there were also plenty of pristine brush and greenery. The view over the L.A. Harbor below was magnificent, and the many steep dirt paths down the hill many times provided the PWL Homies an escape route from the juras. The place at the end of its days looked like a neighborhood straight out of the 40’s, a lil’ TJ you might say - at least, because the west side of the neighborhood west of Park Western Drive around Peck Park, that part of the neighborhood was very nice looking. Nevertheless, their Varrio was real tight-knit and a happy hood. Folks were friendly and everyone knew each other. La Raza from PWL was made up of both Chicanos & Mexicanos. Peck Park, many times heard referred to by the locals as Park Western was where the Homeboys and their familias would gather up on holidays & occasions. Carne asada, BBQ’s, lowriders, futbol, beisbol, quinceañeras, weddings, or simple weekend kickback, that was their park and that’s were other Raza from San Pedro could come up and get along with each other in peace.

Then came urban redevelopment; city government for many years prior had been working on tearing down the hood. They just could not accept this old Mexican enclave to continue to exist right dead smack in the middle of one of the wealthiest white communities in all of L.A. County. Park Western Loma existed tucked-in between Miraleste, Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills, and the upper middle-class of San Pedro (up the hill as the locals say). No other Varrio bordered PWL. Their closest neighbors were all down hill in Leland Park and Rancho San Pedro. And so, with force of politics and law, the Barrio residents filled with empty promises -- just like the old Chavez Ravine Barrio in Elysian Park -- was destroyed, so too PWL was razed. Its residents scattered through out the Harbor Area. First the projects were torn down, then soon after all the homes, and in their place were erected rows of condo’s and townhouses; well-planned with lit and paved streets. Nothing remained to remind the passer-by of the Barrio that once was; not even the trees nor the natural greens remained. La Raza was not given any chance to move back into the newly built homes; instead, they had to struggle to find a new home for their families. Many moved to other far away places, some to near-by towns like Carson and Longo; anywhere where their economic situation permitted them. Fortunally there were plenty of Homeboys that were able to keep their clan in San Pedro, and these Homies moved down the hill into the main Chicano/Mexican Barrio which back then (1980), was mainly south of Pacific Avenue and predominantly belonged to Rancho San Pedro. There existed in these grounds plenty of other Raza not affiliated with RSP, and with more Raza flowing in on the regular, it made for some interesting times to say the least. Many of these old and newer un-affiliated Raza were constantly met with rejection and hostility by The Ranch, and so too the PWL Homies were faced with instant beef with RSP.

The PWL vatos of them times consisted mainly of the 2 clikas of Malditos & Locos, but within the following year or so, their youngsters created the Chicos clika, the first generation formed outside their original grounds and these Chicos were real Stoners, bien locotes and with a real defiant attitude. Soon thereafter, they began to get it on with the RSP Midgets; then it escalated between the PWL Malditos/Locos and RSP 3RD ST/Locos cliques. Fortunally most of the conflict did not involve fierros, puros putazos y fileros, and that’s because back in them tiempos, an un-written rule of no cuetes between S.P. Raza was observed by most. Even though things would heat up between some, nevertheless there were always others from both sides who worked hard to cool things off; beef would die down somewhat or pleitos with out-of-town varrios would unite S.P. raza against their common enemies like Wilmas or Harbor City.

All the S.P. Varrios and raza Locos never have actually bonded together to fight as one, they all just simply do their own dirt. Some harder than others, some caught up and forced into action, others acting on opportunity, but with many remaining true to the cause.

During those early 1980’s many PWL vatos (not all) began to kick it together with the SPLS (San Pedro Locos) and in particular with some of those who had started up the “Barrio San Pedro” V’BSP’R who were holding up a whole two street section of the RSP projects where Beacon Street and Third Street met, just two blocks south of the DCC Mob & RSP Locos on Second Street & Centre.

BSP consisted of a motley crew of Cholos, Stoners, Bikers & Paisas. All those who either were rejected by The Ranch or by those who refused to join RSP for whatever personal reasons. BSP was kick-started by a combination of people’s, but the main protagonists came from an olden S.P. Car Club called Los “UNITEDS” which was formed in 1973 by several old-school familias of brothers and primos from S.P.. . These older vatos never much cared about gang-banging and shit, and they were mostly about fixing up their ranflas, getting stoned on yesca and partying in the true spirit of San Pipas. Since these older vatos were also “futbolistas y guanteros”, nobody really fucked with them, but the changing times kept creeping up on them and soon, more and more raza was found revolving around them; their carnalitos came of age and then came some vatos who were mas locos whom at the same time did not carry the same weight or respect like the older vatos.



Before you knew it, the newer Raza and these youngsters from the Uniteds started up their own gang in response to pressure from The Ranch. These vatos had a decent attitude towards anyone who was cool people and it did not really matter to which San Pedro crowd they belonged to or what clika they claimed. Many of the San Pedro Locos and Park Western Loma Homeboys soon gravitated towards this motley crew and even more than a few vatos from RSP joined their ranks.

BSP ranks grew by the day with many gente closing ranks with them. The vast majority of non-BSP simply chose to get along with them. The BSP vatos got along well with the LP Boys and no beef ever sparked off between them, and when PWL moved down the hill, these vatos from BSP & PWL were an instant brotherhood. Both these groups had the same problems, and both these groups seemed to carry the same attitude towards “La Vida Loca” and the local street politics, so while the Rancheros and the Crips on Second Street were handling their business, the BSP, PWL & SPLS handled theirs down the street.

Not all PWL vatos were that firme with BSP, but those that were soon started up plaqueando under one roll-call with BSP and they began striking up like one big clika as “BSPWL” 3RD STREET. Their block down the street was always jammin’ and it rivaled that on 2ND ST held by the DCC Mob & RSP.

BSPWL down on 3 RD & Beacon was always happening; the block would be packed all the time and the crowd got so huge that the 2ND Streeters, mainly the Cuzzins eventually came to the conclusion that it was best to co-exist than to be rumbelling with each other. The Cuzzins would score their yesca from the Mexicans and the Mexicans would score their juice from the Cuzzins.

Then the rock begings to make a real impact and the raza Bikers from S.P. kicked-it up a notch with the acido y los Paisas go heavy pushing that black tar and ice. The vatos from Santa Cruz re-introduced La Carga and bam! Now everyone was on a trip, tempers flared up, hot summer nights adding to the numbers out in the streets, short fuses and uneasy minds, the whole damn Harbor Area seemed to explode into warfare all at once. San Pedro, WS Wilmas, ES Wilmas, Carson, TxFlats, Barrio Pobre, KeyStone, Victoria Park, Gardena, everyone was out gunning for someone, still the partying continued every week while bodies kept dropping.

Enter Raza activists like End Barrio Warfare, Barrios Unite and local Veteranos whom start mediating and setting up juntas between the battling camps. They sponsored gatherings at pre-arranged parks and meetings on neutral grounds began to take place. Enemy Varrios meeting up to play beisbol, futbol con refin y birrias began to take place. The Homeboys are encouraged to bring their familias and many do so. The madness amongst some calms down some, but not all vatos attend, nevertheless firme gente is plentyfull while others carry on . . and in San Pedro? History continues on the making.

The DCC Mob & Rancheros semi-alliance breaks down and the whole shit on Second Street takes a turn for the worse. BSPWL reach their fullest, seems like they grew so quickly, adding so many to their confederation that their differences and loyalties between them went unnoticed. No real unification ever occurred and they whole scene breaks down. PWL never really goes on the recruiting, while more of their vatos keep moving out, out of town and out of state.

BSP breaks down, the clikas they had incorporated like the original Santa Cruz Locos (Guayabos) and the 11TH Locos turn towards RSP. The youngsters from Santa Cruz go on to become the RSP Santa Cruz Sreet Locos in the later 1980’s, and the 11TH Street locos merge with RSP 12TH Street; amongst those are some from S.C. ST. . . RSP’s Midgets mostly disappear, and their small short-timers 14 Sreeters clika also disappear. . Leland Park also stops recruiting and somewhat disappears, but being that their hood remains, they continue on, small but still around.. RSP then begins to loosen up on it’s recruiting policy, and more and more raza begins to claim RSP. Before you know it, everyone and their cousin is claiming Rancho.

The years go by and everyone who claimed BSP or PWL get’s torcido, OD’s, commits suicide, gets smoked or turns hypo, the rest calls it quits and fade away in the general scene. Even the big ass RSP 3RD ST clika with it’s dominance over the grounds by the YMCA dies down big time, having suffered many casualties to the same reasons; and their customary out in the open show of numbers and faces jumps in with the low-profile new times. This is where I leave it at . . . more S.P. drama would be nice to learn up on, but maybe it is best to leave the most current news from the hood out; maybe for another time in the future, on account that the entrance by Young Crowd, Calle Oliver, PJS Locos and the rest of the internal problems between some RSP clikas, still somewhat touch on delicate homegrounds issues, besides that “I’m out of the loop”!!! Which is another way of saying "I don't know what the fuck"!!!

This was part of the scene in San Pedro during the later 1970's and early 1980's.


To be continued . . .


The PoolHalls - on Pacific Avenue between 1st Street & Santa Cruz

The Car Wash - at Pacific Avenue & Sepulveda

Peck Park (PWL Park) - off of Western Avenue & Summerland

Leland Park (LPSP)- off of Summerland overlooking Gaffey Street & the 110 Freeway

Cabrillo Beach – off of Pacific Avenue, down 36th street

Royal Palms – down the cliff off of Paseo Del Mar

Point Fermin Park (The Lighthouse) – Gaffey & Paseo Del Mar

Sunken City – down the “cliffside” of Point Fermin Park

Angels Gate (The Lookout) – at the end of Gaffey & overlooking the town and the Pacific Ocean

Daniels Field – home of the PIRATES between 12th & 13th streets on Cabrillo Avenue

Parke De La Ocho / 8th Street Playground (Wino Park) on Mesa and 8 th Street

The Projects (RSP) – (N) Mesa Street, (E) Santa Cruz Street, (S) Harbor Blvd. (W) Third Street

Rancho Park (DCC) - at 2nd Street & Centre Street

Tobberman’s – at Santa Cruz & Grand Avenue

Averill Park (Stoner Park) aka The Hole – at 13th Street & Averill Park Drive

Friendship Park (The Top) – overlooking all of San Pedro & the Harbor off of 9th Street on Friendship Park Drive

Harbor Park – on Beacon Street between 7th Street & 13th Street overlooking Harbor village (Port’s-O-Call Village)

Spiro’s Burgers – on Pacific Avenue and 3rd Street

PWL Projects - (torned down) - off Western Avenue down the cliff off Park Western Drive. (Now fully redeveloped with Capitol Drive running through it)

These were the main gathering places and crusing spots to congregate at, but by no means the "individual clikas hangouts" - Each clika had its own spots, but those mentioned above were the spots that all could come together and party hardy. Pacific Avenue was the crusin' Avenue for all and there were several dance halls to kick it as well, such as the Dancing Waters, The Aquarium and the Army Hall.

VIVA SAN PEDRO!

WILMAS 13

$
0
0


WILMINGTON VARRIOS

EAST SIDE WILMAS
WEST SIDE WILMAS
NORTH SIDE WILMAS










THE VATO WEARING THE RED PENDLETON REPRESENTS EAST SIDE WILMAS, AND THE VATO WEARING THE BLUE REPRESENTS WEST SIDE WILMAS. . HYATT AND L STREET IS AT THE HEART OF EAST SIDE WILMAS.. AVALON BLVD DIVIDES ESW FROM WSW.. NORTH OF SEPULVEDA ALONG AVALON BLVD AS YOU HEAD INTO THE RAIL ROAD TRACKS NEIGHBORHOOD AREA THAT DIVIDE WILMAS FROM CARSON CAN BE CONSIDERED NORTH SIDE WILMAS, AND IN THE EAST SIDE ~> GHOST TOWN LIES NORTH OF PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY. . WILMAS IS ONE OF THE BIGGEST, HARDEST AND OLDEST VARRIOS IN THE HARBOR AREA. . THEY WERE ONCE ONE HUGE VARRIO BUT WITH THE PASSAGE OF TIMES, DIFFERENT STROKES FOR DIFFRENT FOLKS HAVE DIVIDED UP THE VARRIO AND VARRIO UNITY BECAME ALL BUT DEAD.

ONE OF THE OLDEST CLIQUES IN WILMAS IS THE "CHAIN GANG", SOME OF THE REST OF THE ESW WILMAS ARE AS FOLLOWS . . .

L STREET
MAHAR STREET BOYS
HYATT STREET LOCOS
LUMBER YARD MALOS
GHOST TOWN LOCOS
BANNING PARK LOCOS

SOME OF THE WEST SIDE WILMAS CLIKAS ARE . . .
THE OLD C STREET LOCOS AND DANA LOCOS
AND ONE OF THE HARDEST CLIKAS OF ALL WSW TIMES
~> THE WILHALL PARK LOCOS (WHPLS) ALSO KNOWN
AS THE WEST SIDE WILHALL.





THIS OLD ASS PLACASO SHOWS THE EAST SIDE AND WEST SIDE HITTING UP "UNITED". THAT'S HOW THEY WERE NOT TOO LONG AGO . . .

SAD TO HAVE SO MANY WILMAS RAZA FALL VICTIM TO THEIR OWN!

THE SAN PEDRO VERSUS WILMAS RIVALRY IS ONE OF THE OLDEST IN THE HARBOR AREA, BUT THE WSW VERSUS ESW PLEITO HAS BEEN ONE OF THE DEADLIEST BEEFS IN THE SOUTH BAY AMONGST WILMEROS.. THE NORTH SIDE WILMAS VIRTUALLY DISAPEARED BY THE START OF THE EARLY EIGHTIES, BUT I HEAR THEY STILL HAVE HEADS REPRESENTING.. THE ORIGINAL GHOST TOWN LOCOS WERE NOT ALL PART OF ESW., THEY WERE NOT THE SAME GTLS WHICH ARE A CLIKA FROM ESW IN PRESENT TIMES, THEY WERE OTHER VATOS THAT DID NOT ALL CLAIM ESW VARRIO, THEY JUST SIMPLY CLAIMED GHOST TOWN AS THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD GROUNDS AND THEY SHARED THE TURF WITH BOTH EAST SIDE WILMEROS AND WITH THE EAST SIDE PAIN BLOODS WHICH CAN STILL BE FOUND IN THE LAND.. THE WEST SIDE WILMAS WILHALL PARK LOCOS CAME OUT IN THE LATER 70s AND WENT ON TO CREATE A BIG NAME FOR THEMSELVES. WHPLS ARE STILL CARRYING STRONG.. IN THE DANA PROJECTS THE WATERFRONT PIRU’S CLAIMED THEIR SET ALL THRU THE 70s AND 80s UNTIL THE PROJECTS WERE TORN DOWN IN THE 90s.. IN THE LATE 70s AND EARLY 80s THE EAST SIDE WAS KEEPING STRONG WITH THE OLD “L STREET” LOCOS AS THE BACKBONE AND THE MAHAR STREET BOYS AS THE YOUNGER HEAVY FIREPOWER GENERATION. THE MAHAR STREET BOYS HEADQUATERED AT MAHAR AND DENNI STREET, ALL ALONG THE FRONT OF THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: WITH ONE HUGE CROWD AND A CRAZY ONE AT THAT. THE HYATT STREET LOCOS CAME NEXT IN THE MID EIGHTIES.




^ ^ ^ ^ THIS IS HOW WILMAS BREAKS DOWN . . .

OF COURSE THE DANA STRAND PROJECTS ARE GONE NOW . . .
AND THE GHOST TOWN NEIGHBORHOOD IS NOT WHAT IT ONCE WAS.

BARRIO EAST SIDE TORRANCE

$
0
0
ESxT is the B'EST

B'EST main heart of the barrio lies off Western Ave between 224th and 227th streets in the Harbor Area

Plaza Del Amo, 224, 225, 226, 227 228, Harvard, Denker and Normadale Park is all Barrio East Side Torrance

B’EST boundaries

(N) 223rd
(S) Sepulveda
(E) Normandie
(W) Western


The original neighborhood started on Menlo Street off of 228th between Vermont, and Figueroa.

B’EST never had any ties to any other neighborhoods period!! Never broke off any other varrio, B’EST is its own original creation.

TxFlats, La Rana, La Loma, Harbor City and Keystone varrios have been around much longer than B'EST and so naturally there is going to be some speculation about ties or breakoffs. But B'EST are no one's rejects, followers, etc. B'EST is the Original neighborhood from East Side Torrance.

B’EST is really within the "Harbor Gateway”. Which is part of L.A., and not City of Torrance proper. And B’EST isnʻt even patrolled by Torrance PD!!! LAPD Harbor Division patrols. Only when LAPD Harbor Division requests assistance, is when Torrance P.D. rolls in.

Varrio Bandana or Color: Straight Blue or Black, and Baby Blue.

Varrio Logo or Lid: Anything with the Carolina Panthers.

B’EST adopted the "Panther" as Thee Varrio symbol. All the Homies sport Panther jerseys and lids. And once you have proven to be a well established solid vato, you can get your Pantera placa tatted on you. Most all the veteranos have it stamped on their left or right forearm. Anyone that's hit the torcida and met B’EST Homies will tell you all the veteranos BʻEST vatos have the Pantera.

The speculation is that the Panther is the same as the Jaguar, and as all Raza knows, the Mayans and Aztecs revered these creatures because of their power and mysteriousness they possessed.

Original Clika: East Side Torrance Peewees, aka Pequenos. From the 1970's thru the late 90's. Still around but have given ground to the younger generations. B’EST has homeboys in their 50's pushing the PWS clika.

2nd Generation Clika: East Side Torrance Diablos. From the late 80's thru the late 90's. Solid B’EST motherfuckers who held down the varrio and stood tall during the 80s and 90s era wars...

3rd Generation Clika: East Side Torrance Lil Raskals. From the late 90's to present times. B’EST newest clika kicking up dust in the varrio and keeping it going strong. The Raskals Clika started after the Homeboy Alejandro" Lil Raskal" Rivera was killed. That was in the late 90's when most everyone from B’EST was away, locked up, in retirement, etc. Lil Raskal was the one recruiting and keeping the varrio going in those days. After he passed, all the little Homies who kicked it with him wanted a clique started after his placaso. They had to earn it and they did.

Some Raza may hear "TORRANCE" and think white people and nice neighborhood. Those same Raza may hear IE or SB and think the same thing. Move my family out there and get away from the "life"..

But BESTrust ~> is down with the business

B'EST don't fuck round !!!

I guess if the varrio was named EAST SIDE HARBOR GATEWAY people would get off the Torrance niceness thing, Que No?

With the times come many changes, and in 2008 la jura got an injunction thrown on little B’EST Varrio.. L.A. City came down hard with the injunction on the Varrio, and ever since they've started building condos and nice apts in and around Plaza Del Amo, so who knows, B’EST might be wiped out by City redevelopment, but never by the enemigas!

B’EST has earned their reputation, and are well known in the Harbor Area, and today the Varrio walks every yard in the pinta.

BARRIO x EASTSIDE x TORRANCE
TILL THE KASKET DROPS

L.A. COUNTY SIDES

$
0
0
This whole east side this, west side that., it serves a purpose., but it gets just mad confusing sometimes., por ejemplo, dog town., the older gente from the proyects all claim east side., some of the newer gente starting like in the 70s, claimed west side for the mere fact that the pjs landed on the wrong side of the river when the leeve was built., but dog town has very little to do with the west side other than having some pleitos with some., and then there's the nela/monte vista side which claims nela every day, even if the ogs are all from the pjs., if anything they should of just claimed east side because at the time when dog town set up up shop right there, there was also varrio NELA 13 around., besides that, back then, nobody really claimed nela., you would not catch an Avenues claiming nela., all that nela side came afterwards., so things change i suppose., just like that whole area code deal., from 213 to 310 to 323., hope your leave a piece of your sleeves clean for the next area code., right!?


IN THE WORLD OF VARRIOS, IT'S A TRIPPY THING HOW ALL "SIDES" AND "AREAS" BREAK DOWN IN A CITY LIKE L.A.

YOU GOT THE EAST SIDE, THE WEST SIDE, THE SOUTH SIDE, THE HARBOR AREA, SOUTH CENTRAL, THE SGV, THE 818, ETC, ETC.

BUT EACH ONE OF THOSE "SIDES" OR "AREAS" BREAK DOWN EVEN FURTHER, AND SOME VARRIOS CLAIM ONE SIDE WHEN THEY'RE COMPLETELY IN A DIFFERENT ZONE, OR EVEN CLAIM ONE THING, LIKE FOR EXAMPLE CLAIMING SOUTH CENTRAL, WHILE THE NEXT DOOR VARRIO CLAIMS SOUTH SIDE.

A RIVER, A FREEWAY, SOME HILLS, A CITY ZONE, THEY ALL SERVE TO BREAK DOWN THE CITY INTO DIFFERENT SIDES, AND IT'S ALL A TRIPPY THING., I GUESS YOU GOT TO REALLY GET INTO IT TO MAKE SENSE OUT OF IT ALL.

IN OLD CITY TIMES YOU HAD WHAT THE GABACHOS CONSIDERED EAST L.A., BUT THE EAST L.A. BACK IN THOSE OLD TIMES WAS NOT THE SAME EAST L.A. OF PRESENT TIMES (MARAVILLA/BELVEDERE/CITY TERRACE), NOPES, THE EAST L.A. BACK THEN WAS LINCOLN HEIGHTS., AND THEN THERE WAS THE GREATER EAST SIDE THAT WENT FROM ECHO PARK, ELYSIAN HILLS, AND TEMPLE BEAUDRY ON TO THE EAST GOING BEYOND THE RIVER AND UP TO THE HILLS STRETCHING FROM EAGLE ROCK TO BELVEDERE., EVEN THE IMMEDIATE AREA KNOWN AS THE LOW BOTTOMS (SOUTH CENTRAL L.A.) JUST SOUTH OF THE DOWNTOWN SKYLINE WAS CONSIDERED EAST SIDE.

WITH THE TIMES, THINGS HAVE CHANGED, AND NOW EVERYONE CONSIDERS THE EAST SIDE TO BE ALL EAST OF THE L.A. RIVER, FROM LINCOLN HEIGHTS TO WINTER GARDENS. BUT EVEN THE EAST SIDE TODAY IS BROKEN UP INTO EAST LOS AND EAST L.A. PROPER.

EAST L.A. PROPER IS MARAVILLA/BELVEDERE, CITY TERRACE, EASTMONT AND WINTER GARDENS, THAT'S THE EXTENT OF UNINCORP EAST L.A., BUT THE EAST SIDE LOS AREA INCLUDES BOYLE HEIGHTS, LINCOLN HEIGHTS, BROOKLYN HEIGHTS, ROSE HILLS, HAPPY VALLEY, EL SERENO, AND WYVERNWOOD.

BUT THEN YOU HAVE THE REST OF THE OLD EAST SIDERS IN NORTH EAST L.A. STILL CLAIMING TO BE PART OF THE EAST SIDE., MAINLY THOSE FROM HIGHLAND PARK, CYPRESS PARK, GLASSELL PARK, ARROYO SECO, AND MOUNT WASHINGTON., BUT THEN YOU WOULD LEAVE OUT OTHER AREAS WHICH ARE CONSIDERED TO BE PART OF N.E.L.A. POLITICS BUT ARE NOT NECESSARILY "EAST SIDERS"., AMONG THOSE ARE RIVERDALE, ATWATER AND ATWATER VILLAGE., WHICH BRINGS US TO THE QUESTION OF THE WEST SIDE.,

THERE'S WHAT IS CONSIDERED WEST SIDE, THEN THERE IS WEST LOS OR WEST L.A., WEST LOS (WEST LA) WOULD BE THOSE AREAS AND CITIES LIKE SANTA MONICA, VENICE, CULVER CITY AND SAWTELLE, AND THEN YOU THROW IN THERE WITH THE MIX THE COMMUNITIES OF MAR VISTA, PALMS, RANCHO PARK AND WEST LOS ANGELES PROPER., ALTHOUGH THEY ARE ALL TECHNICALLY WEST SIDE, ~> THE ACTUAL REDUCED "WEST SIDE" IS REALLY CONSIDERED TO BE JUST THE AREA CLOSER TO DOWNTOWN L.A. LIKE WESTLAKE, RAMPART VILLAGE, PICO UNION, KOREA TOWN, FILIPINO TOWN, ECHO PARK, LOS FELIZ, SILVER LAKE, WEST ADAMS, MID CITY, WILSHIRE, EAST HOLLYWOOD AND EVEN HOLLYWOOD ITSELF.,

EVERYTHING NORTH OF THE 10 FREEWAY, ALL THE WAY TO THE HOLLYWOOD HILLS, THAT'S THE WEST SIDE, ALTHOUGH VARRIOS SOUTH OF THE 10 FREEWAY ALSO CONSIDER THEIR AREA PART OF THE WEST SIDE, LIKE THE ONES IN THE COMMNUNITIES OF OLYMPIC PARK, JEFFERSON, WEST ADAMS AND MCMANUS.
BUT THE AREA OF L.A. BETWEEN THE 10 FWY, THE HARBOR FWY, THE CENTURY FWY, AND THE 405 FWY CAN BE SOMEWHAT OF A DILEMA. MOST VARRIOS IN THIS AREA CLAIM WEST SIDE, BUT SOME CLAIM SOUTH CENTRAL, AND SOME EVEN CLAIM SOUTH SIDE, ALL THE WHILE THE WHOLE AREA IS CONSIDERED TO BE "SOUTH WEST" SOUTH CENTRAL, OR EVEN THE WEST SIDE OF THE SOUTH SIDE, AND NOT REALLY PART OF THE WEST LOS WEST SIDE.,

THEN THERE'S THE SOUTH SIDE.,HERE IT GETS EVEN TRICKIER WITH THE WHOLE SOUTH L.A. DEAL, YOU HAVE THOSE THAT CLAIM SOUTH SIDE, THEN YOU HAVE THE ONES THAT CLAIM SOUTH CENTRAL, THEN YOU HAVE SOME THAT EVEN CLAIM CLAIM EAST SIDE., CASE EXAMPLES EAST SIDE CLANTON 14 STREET AND EAST SIDE PLAYBOYS.

FROM THE LOW BOTTOMS ON THE NORTH END, TO SOUTH LOS AND WATTS ON THE SOUTH END, TO THE L.A. RIVER ON THE EAST END, INCLUDING COLONIA VERNON, HUNTINGTON PARK, BELL, MAYWOOD, CUDAHY, SOUTH GATE, LYNWOOD, AND EVEN BELL GARDENS, THAT'S ALL CONSIDERED SOUTH SIDE L.A., THE GRAND EXCEPTION IS COMPTON (THE HUB), THEY CLAIM THEIR OWN, AND COMMUNITIES LIKE WILLOBROOK AND LYNWOOD GARDENS RIDE WITH THE HUB.

WHEN YOU GET PAST COMPTONE, YOU GET INTO WHAT IS CONSIDERED THE HARBOR AREA TODAY, BUT IN REALITY THE O.G. HARBOR AREA USED TO BE SOLELY THE TOWNS OF SAN PEDRO, WILMINGTON, LONG BEACH AND HARBOR CITY, THAT WAS THE EXTENT OF THE HARBOR AREA, BUT WITH TIMES OTHER TOWNS GOT HITCHED UP TO THE LABEL AND NOW ROLL WITH THE HxA HANDLE, LIKE LOMITA, CARSONE, TORRANCE, THE HARBOR GATEWAY AND GARDENA., IT BECAME SO THAT EVEN HAWTHORNE, LAWNDALE AND REDONDO MAY NOW CLAIM HxA.

HERE'S THE THING, THE WHOLE HxA IS ALL PART OF THE GREATER SOUTH BAY AREA, AND THE SOUTH BAY INCLUDES TOWNS LIKE LAKEWOOD, BELLFLORES AND EVEN PARAMOUNT, BUT NONE OF THOSE TOWNS CLAIM HxA.
WHICH BRINGS US TO THE NEXT AREA WHICH INCLUDES PARAMONTE, ARTESIA, HAWAIIAN GARDENS, BELLFLOWER AND DOWNEY. WHAT SIDE OR AREA DO THEY CLAIM? THEY'RE NOT HxA, THEY'RE NOT REALLY SOUTH SIDE L.A. AND THEY'RE NOT S.E.L.A. NEITHER., SO WHAT SIDE DO THEY CLAIM TO BE?

EVERYTHING NORTH OF THE 91 FWY AND EAST OF THE RIO HONDO IS CONSIDERED TO BE SOUTH EAST L.A., FROM NORWALK-LA MIRADA TO PICO RIVERA-WHITTIER IT'S ALL SOUTH EAST L.A.

THEN YOU GET INTO THE S.G.V. CAR, WHICH STRETCHES FROM PASADENA ALL THE WAY EAST TO LA VERNE, WITH POMONA ABSTAINING AND CLAIMING THEIR OWN.

PERSONALLY, I THINK THAT BASSETT, LA PUENTE, WALNUT, VALINDA, HACIENDA HEIGHTS AND ROWLAND SHOULD GO UNDER THEIR OWN HANDLE, THE PUENTE VALLEY HANDLE, BECAUSE THIS AREA IS WAY DISTANT FROM FAR OFF PLACES LIKE LA VERNE AND PASADENA. BUT SURE THING, THE OTHER TOWNS LIKE BOLEN, EL MONTE, SAN GRA, AZUSA, SAN DIMAS, DUARTE, WEST COVINA AND ROSEMEAD/SOUTH SG. SHOULD STAY SUR GANSTRO VALLEY., BUT PASADENA IS NOT ALL THERE WITH THE MAIN SGV AREA, SO I DON'T KNOW ABOUT THEM.

THE LAST AREA YOU GOT LEFT IN L.A. IS THE NORTH VALLEY, A.K.A. THE 818 (SAN FERNANDO VALLEY), BUT THE SFV IS A HUGE CHUNK OF TERRITORY, AND IT CAN BE BROKEN DOWN INTO MID-VALLEY, WEST VALLEY, AND THE SAN FER/SYLMAR/PACAS AREA ON THE NORTH EAST PART OF THE VALLEY.

BUT WHAT ABOUT BURBANK? ALTHOUGH BERBANK IS PART OF THE 818, THEY CAN NOT REALLY BE ON PAR WITH THE REST., BURBANK SHOULD MAYBE BE LUMPED IN TOGETHER WITH GLENDALE AND SUNLAND-TUJUNGA TO FORM THEIR OWN.. I DON'T KNOW.. I'M JUST SAYING.. SOME PLACES ARE HARD TO SQUARE IN WITH THE MAIN SIDE OR AREA..


It’s a trippy thing how all that claiming this side or that side works. For most hoods it is automatic what side they fall on, and by default, what side they claim. For other hoods, it is a pride thing, like pride for their city or their town. Still for some, it is about the notoriety of a place, a place which is not really confined to city maps or government boundaries (like the southwest and mexico). It doesn’t matter where the geographic line is drawn, that’s like a line in the sand. Neighborhoods are connected to the streets, and how those streets are connected is way more than simply parallel or horizontal lines drawn on a map to define a zone. In example, the Harbor Area, in ordinary regular civilian circles, the Harbor Area can also be called the South Bay, but in the world of L.A. Condado ranflas, the HxA is way more exclusive as to who claims it as its side.

The original Harbor Area was made up of four towns; San Pedro, Harbor City, Wilmas and Longo., that was it, but with time and the evolution of claiming sides, other towns latched on to the handle; Lomita, Torrance, Carson, Gardena, and the whole Gateway. Which I might add here that nobody in the HxA ever calls it the Gateway, that’s Torrance and Gardena plain and simple.

It is clear why North Side Longo and Dominguez Varrio would jump into the HxA car, but it is not so clear, at least from the outside looking in, as to why Little Lawndale and Hawthorne would do so, or for that matter even Redondo, since they’re all out there in sort of like their own side away from the main HxA focus points east of Crenshaw. A little limbo as to what side those towns are for reals; but who calls it? Who decides what side to claim? Comptone next to Gardena ain’t never claimed nothing other than The Hub., and both Paras, Bellflower or Lakewood to my knowledge also ain’t never claimed HxA, even though they are clearly in the South Bay geographical zone.

So how does it work in the calles., when, why and who decides for a varrio or town what side to claim?

Lennox and Inglewood decided on west side instead of south side or harbor area, but why didn’t they ever create a ‘west bay’ or something like that, together with the west los towns like Santa, Sotel, Venice, Culver City and Rancho Park? That probably would have been more appropriate, but the monster has multiple heads, and it is complicated but yet simple to understand.

Me entiendes?

VARRIO LA RANA

$
0
0
LA RANA

Everyone in the Harbor Area knows or has heard about LA RANA in Torrance.

La Rana is one of those Varrios that have been dying off, but never really goes away. You hear about them, but you never really see them, or so it goes. Even so, they’ve managed to make the headlines from time to time. La Rana must be a real tight-knit family oriented varrio these days. Their neighborhood history goes back to the 1920s/30s, but the varrio is more well-renown for its crazyness during the 1950s and 60s. It managed to stay active well into the 70s, but by the 1980s it was mostly gone, mainly on account of the heavy industry that blew up around their neighborhood. Even though the barrio did grew up amidst industry; Nevertheless, the new industry took over more and more lots and pieces, and its streets disappeared, with many of its homes done away to create new and wider streets., To where eventually all that was left of La Rana is the strip between Van Ness Way and Crenshaw along Del Amo Blvd. That’s all that remains today of the old La Rana, some 100 homes along that strip. That’s if you don’t count the neighborhood area where V204ST (Southwest Village) is located at.

La Rana once roamed all the zone in-between Dolanco Junction (TxFlats) on the east; 190TH on the north; Torrance Blvd on the south; and west to Madrona/Prairie Avenue. But VLR has always been centered on Del Amo Blvd. The place is completely surrounded by industrial plants and business parks these days. Mobil refinery on the north, Dow Chemical to the west, PS Business Park and Honda R&D to its south, with Van Ness Avenue and another business park cutting it off from V204TH.

La Rana is said to have adopted the name because of a near-by little lake or pond; some have even called it an old swamp area, where you could hear the frogs croak and sing through out the night. That little lake of a pond was there going back to the 1800s.

The area was known as El Pueblo; hence the name of the Pueblo tiny little Recreation Center , dead smack in the middle of the neighborhood. In fact, Del Amo Blvd was oldenly known as PUEBLO street (Camino del Pueblo), when it was still a small dirt street back in the (Mexican Village) days.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/80643375@N00/280246500/

I’ve never known what cliques La Rana ever spawned, but looking at that rare Flickr picture of that gutted and worn out small market wall, there’s a placaso next to all the La Rana hit ups that read “ROAD GENTS”; Thus I wonder if that had anything to do with Del Amo Blvd ~> The Road to La Gente de La Rana (?)

On a hot sunny weekend if you pass through there you’re bound to see firme ranflas on those driveways of the strip, not in every house, but there’s some, even though today those homes on that calle don’t look ghetto barrio looking shacks or anything like that.

La Rana you could say is the only true "City of Torrance" Varrio because the other main Varrios in Torrance are really L.A. “Harbor Gateway”.

La Rana (Del Amo Blvd.) is technically in the section of town which is considered “East Torrance”. East Torrance goes from 190Th to Plaza Del Amo ~> entrance to the village of “Barrio East Side Torrance” on the southernmost tip of the town. I wonder if that has anything to do as to why there’s some real animosity documented between VLR & BEST (?).. since they’re both really from the same “SIDE” of town, on opposite corners, of course.

La Rana most definitely hates TxFlats, and they have also been known to put the clamp on V204TH.

V204ST is something of an abnormality in the area politics, since both La Rana & TxFlats are said to claim suzerainty over them. Both Varrios claim to have spawned V204TH, but I would lean more towards VLR getting 204 started, because I used to work with this vato from La 204 who told me so. The thing is, eventually, and like it happens everywhere else, V204TH went on a solo career, and then they went on to make the headlines that you all have read plenty about. But if 204 would of stayed VLR, it would of most definitely kept La Rana on the mainline of the streets in the Harbor Area. But as it stands, La Rana is the enigmatic old Torrance varrio that refuses to go away.



...................................

Old Neighborhood Has Long Outgrown Barrio Status
El Pueblo Thrives, Surrounded by Workaday World

May 05, 1985|JULIO MORAN, Times Staff Writer

TORRANCE — The face of industrial Torrance is changing after nearly 75 years. So, too, is El Pueblo.

Surrounded by industrial activity, El Pueblo--which means "the town" in Spanish--remains a residential island in a sea of warehouses and factories. But rather than being deserted or rezoned for industrial use over the years, El Pueblo has blossomed into a vibrant, well-kept, close-knit neighborhood.

And except for the shadows cast by the Mobil Oil refinery towers on one side and the frames of multistory warehouses going up on the other side, the 111 homes along Del Amo Boulevard between Crenshaw Boulevard and Van Ness Avenue are typical of other middle-class neighborhoods in this city.

"When it comes down to the nitty-gritty, we are Torrance," said Ruben Ordaz, 57, a lifelong resident of the area and president of the Pueblo Homeowners Assn.

Early Reputation

The neighborhood is also called Del Amo and La Rana, which means "the frog" in Spanish and got its name because a nearby pond was once full of frogs. The neighborhood has overcome a reputation as a poor, tough barrio and come to be considered a community of concerned homeowners whose votes are courted at each local election.

"The politicians know that we got about 100 votes," said Ordaz with a smile. "We usually vote in a bloc, so when we call we get a quick response."

Getting a bloc vote is easier, Ordaz said, because many of the residents are related. Ordaz's father, who moved here in 1925, still lives on the block, as do his uncle, aunt and several in-laws. When a family member dies, property is usually passed on to a relative.

Property values are slightly lower than in other neighborhoods in the city, but it still costs about $120,000 to buy a two-bedroom house here. An empty 50- by 100-foot lot has recently been appraised at $20,000.

High Offer for Home

"What do you think, just because I live in La Rana that I live in a shack?" Irene Ordaz, Ruben's wife, said she told a friend recently after the friend expressed surprise over her four-bedroom home. Ordaz said they have received offers of up to $150,000 for their home.

And the crime rate, once a major problem, what with youth gangs and drug dealers during the 1950s and 1960s, has dropped. Last year, a community watch program was organized.

Torrance Police Sgt. Wally Murker, a community relations officer, said the area may still have more drug problems than many sections of Torrance, but other neighborhoods have more burglaries. "I couldn't say it was any . . . different than other neighborhoods in Torrance," he said. "There are a lot of good people living there and they've got a good community watch program."

For the most part, living in the midst of industries has not bothered the residents. In the early years it was a matter of not biting the hand that fed them, Ruben Ordaz said, so residents tolerated the industrial noises and smells. Today, tighter pollution controls have eliminated most of the concerns, and the residents have learned to live with what remains .

Grew Up in Area

"Sometimes you wonder if your coughing is not because of Mobil or if your house is not going to blow up," said Joe Torres, 42, a receiving clerk. Torres grew up in El Pueblo, and except for a few years right after he got married, he has remained in the area.

But the possibility of industrial accidents is not a major concern. "My kids talk about it sometimes, but they also talk about nuclear wars and earthquakes," Torres said. "It's at the back of your mind, but it's a way of life here."

Surprisingly, there has never been any serious talk of rezoning the street for industrial use, city officials said.

"It's almost like a historical area," said Jeff Gibson of the city planning department. "I don't think it will ever get rezoned."

But city officials did not always look so kindly on what was originally referred to as the Mexican Village.

According to the book "Historic Torrance," land in the 1920s was designated for five uses: business, residential, industrial, unclassified, and "special quarters for non-Caucasians." It was in the "foreign quarters" that El Pueblo developed as the residential district for the Mexican labor that worked at Columbia Steel and Pacific Electric Railway.

Treading on Constitution

The book says Jared Sidney Torrance, the city's founder, admitted in his autobiography that segregation in his fledgling town "tread pretty hard on the toes of the Constitution of the United States."

Even former Mayor Albert Isen, whose father and uncle built the homes in the 1920s so workers could walk to the steel plant half a mile away, said the houses were "substandard, because that's all they really wanted and all they could really afford."

Ordaz, a former steelworker and now a custodian with the Torrance school district, said the homes remained in poor condition for many years, primarily because of language and cultural obstacles that kept residents--most of whom came from the small Mexican town of Purepero, Michoacan--from acquiring building permits for remodeling their homes.

Now those houses have been passed on to family members who are U.S.-born and who speak English. Many of the homes have been improved, and Del Amo, once a dirt road, is now a four-lane street with a center divider.

Spanish, once the only language spoken on this street, is hardly ever heard now. Even the one weekly Mass celebrated at St. Joseph's Catholic Church at the end of the block is said in English.

HARBOR AREA VARRIOS

$
0
0
L.A. HARBOR AREA VARRIOS ~ Past & Present

RANCHO SAN PEDRO
Santos,
Locos,
Midgets,
3RD Street Locos,
8TH Street Locos,
12TH Street Troubles,
16TH Street Locos,
Santa Cruz Street Locos,
Rancho Projects 2ND Street Locos.

PARK WESTERN LOMA SAN PEDRO
Malditos,
Locos,
Chicos.

LELAND PARK SAN PEDRO
Hoods,
Boys,
Locos.

BARRIO SAN PEDRO
3RD Street Locos,
11TH Street Locos,
Los Guayabos,
Los Uniteds.

SAN PEDRO LOCOS

SAN PEDRO STONERS

YOUNG CROWD

EAST SIDE WILMAS
Ghost Town Locos,
Lumber Yard Malos.
L ST Locos,
Mahar Street Boys,
Hyatt Street Locos,
Chain Gang,
Banning Park Locos.

WEST SIDE WILMAS
Willhall Park Locos,
Dana Locos,
Lil Rascals,
C Street Locos.

NORTH SIDE WILMAS

HARBOR CITY RIFA
Baby Locos,
Tiny Locos,
Lil Locos,
Peewee Locos

VARRIO HARBOR LOMA

VARRIO LA LOMA RIFA

VARRIO CARSON RIFA
Peewee Locos,
Deathman Locos,
East Side Carson Locos,
Catskill Street Locos,

Ravenna Street
Locos
Tiny Locos

Realty Street
Locos
Peewees
Gunners

NIGHTCRAWLERS RIFA

VARRIO KEYSTONE

VICTORIA PARK
Locos,
Tiny Gangsters,
Park Locos,
Peewees,
Midgets,
Niteowls.

DOMINGUEZ VARRIO 13
J Street Locos.

EAST SIDE TORRANCE
Lil Raskals,
Diablos,
Peewees.

204TH STREET
Peewees,
Locos.

VARRIO CENTRO TORRANCE
Locos

T x FLATS
Dukes,
Snipers,
Peewees.

VARRIO LA RANA

NORTH SIDE REDONDO
Los Nietos,
Lil Winos,
Sycos.

DEF BOYS
Chicos,
Killas,
Babys.

DEATH CROWD
Locos,
Lil Boys,
Riders,
Termites.

EVIL KLAN 13

HAWTHORNE 13

LAWNDALE 13
Chicos
154 ST
147 ST
Traviesos
Firmona Boys
Malitos
Baby Dukes

LIL MOBSTERS 13

CYCOS 13

DOG TOWN STONERS

LIL WATTS
Demons,
Dukes,
Winos,
Traviesos,
The Underground.

GARDENA 13
East Side,
West Side,
Baby Gangsters,
Lil Locos,
Cyco Locos,
Balas,
144TH The Fourth,
The Dead End.

LATIN TOWN PLAYBOYZ

BARRIO SMALL TOWN
4TH Street,
Locos,
Tiny Winos.

TE TOWN FLATS

BARRIO VIEJO
Old Town Longo

BARRIO POBRE
16TH Street.

PLAYA LARGA 13
10TH Street.

8TH STREET MADNESS
Midnites.

VARRIO 9TH STREET

CRAZY LATIN BOYZ

MID CITY STONERS / CRIMINALS
Long Beach Locos 19TH Street.

NORTH SIDE LONGO
Baby Gangsters
52ND Street,
Vagos,
Machos,
Market Street Locos,
Ninos Surenos,
Youngsters.

WEST SIDE LONGO
Cyclones,
Termites,
Stoners,
West Side Playboyz,
Summit Canal Street,
Sequina Street.

EAST SIDE LONGO
Chicos Malos,
Dukes,
Tiny Locos,
Stoners,
East Side Playboyz,
Lonely Boys,
Peewess,
Barrio Viejo (Old Town Longo).

In Memory of San Pedro Homeboys

$
0
0
RANCHO SAN PEDRO LOCOS





EL MONTE CAMPS

$
0
0
~EL MONTE RIFA~

EL MONTE - THE WORD IS HISPANIC IN ORIGIN, BUT WHAT WAS IT'S ORIGINAL MEANING?

MOST ASSUME IT MUST PERTAIN TO A HILL OR A MOUNTAIN OF SOME SORT, BUT EL MONTE AS A PLACE HAS NO HILLS OR MOUNTAINS WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE DISTANT SAN GABRIELS.
IN THE 1770'S SPANISH SOLDIERS AND MISSIONARIES EXPLORED AN ISLAND BETWEEN TWO RIVERS, RICH IN SOIL, LOW-LYING, COVERED WITH DENSE GROWTHS OF SLENDER WILLOWS, ALDERS AND CATTAILS. THIS ISLAND PARADISE WAS BEST DESCRIBED BY THE SPANIARDS AS THE WOODED SPOT, MARSH, AND MEADOWS ALL IN ONE - THE CARACTERISTICS WERE CLEAR - WATER, WOOD (FUEL), AND SOIL, ALL THAT IS ASSOCIATED AS A PLACE DEFINED BY THOSE WITH A MASTERY OF THE SPANISH LANGUAGE TO BE DESCRIPTIVE OF "EL MONTE". NOT A HILL OR A MOUNTAIN BUT A BOUNTIFUL PLACE IN THE WILD.

THE RIVER TO THE EAST AND NORTH EAST WAS CHRISTENED "SAN GABRIEL" AND THE RIVER TO THE NORTH AND WEST WAS CHRISTENED THE "RIO HONDO".

EL MONTE PROSPERED AND GREW DURING THE ERA OF THE SPANISH MISSIONS (1770'S to 1830'S), THEN LATER UNDER THE LAND GRANT RANCHOS.

IN 1826 SMALL GROUPS OF AMERICANS COMING INTO THE AREA, REFERRED TO THE REST AND REHABILITATION AFFORDED HERE AS "CAMP MONTE" OR "MONTE CAMP", HENCE THE CAMP ERA BEGAN.
SOME OF THESE NEW ARRIVALS CHRISTENED THE RESPECTIVE AREAS WHERE THEY DWELT WITH NAMES SUCH AS "HICKS" AND "WIGGINS" IN REFERENCE TO THE NEW TENANTS OCCUPYING SOME OF THE LANDS.

WITH THE ADVENT OF THE 20th CENTURY, EL MONTE CONTINUED TO GROW AND PROSPER. ONE COMMERCIAL SEED COMPANY LEASED FERTILE TRACTS OF LAND IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE ISLAND AND GREW BREATHTAKING PLOTS OF FLOWERING PLANTS. THIS AREA BEGAN TO BE REFERRED BY THE FARMERS AS "LAS FLORES" A NAME WHICH PERSIST TODAY AS "EL MONTE FLORES"

EL MONTE CONTINUED TO GROW DURING THE EARLY PART OF THE CENTURY LARGELY IN PART DUE TO "LA REVOLUCION MEXICANA" (1910 to 1920). MANY OF EL MONTE BARRIOS TOOK SHAPE WITH THE MASS MIGRATION OF THOSE HOPE-FILLED MASSED WHOM FLED THE VIOLENCE IN MEXICO.

OTHERS MOVED IN FROM AREAS OF LOS ANGELES, LIKE THEY DID FROM BOYLE HEIGHTS, AN AREA KNOWN AS "THE FLATS" (OLD RUSSIA TOWN FLATS) WERE THEY FACED STIFF SEGREGATION FOR THEIR CHILDREN IN THE AVAILABLE SCHOOLS.

DURING THE 1930'S THE GREAT DEPRESSION BROUGHT DOLDRUMS TO EL MONTE JUST AS IT DID EVERYWHERE ELSE.
EL MONTE BEGAN TO CHANGE RAPIDLY FROM A "LIL FARM TOWN" TO A GROWING "BEDROOM COMMUNITY" WHERE PEOPLE LIVED BUT WORKED AND COMMUTED ELSEWHERE.

BY THE LATE 40'S AND 50'S THE CAMPS OF EL MONTE BEGAN TO BE BROKEN UP BETWEEN THE DIFFERENT CITIES AND COMMUNITIES TAKING SHAPE THROUGHOUT THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY.

FOLLOWING THE BUILDING BOOM OF THE 40'S AND 50'S, THE POPULATION EXPLODED AND IN 1958 A SECOND COMMUNITY OF EL MONTE WAS INCORPORATED AS "SOUTH EL MONTE" THIS COMPROMISED THE SOUTHWEST PART OF THE ONCE "WOODED ISLAND".

THE OLD EL MONTE NEIGHBORHOODS KNOWNS AS CAMPS WERE THE FOLLOWING

1 - LA MISION (SAN GABRIEL MISION AREA)
2 - LA COLONIA (LA SECCION)
3 - CANTA RANAS (WHITTIER NARROWS)
4 - CHINO CAMP (LA PUENTE)
5 - HICKS CAMP (FIVE POINTS)
6 - LA GRANADA
7 - LAS FLORES (EL MONTE)
8 - WIGGINS CAMP
9 - CAMP HAYES (MEDINA COURTS)

Along Valley Blvd is where the original Mexican migrants fleeing the Mexican Revolution of 1920 settled along, mainly in the two Camps of WIGGINS' and HICKS', then by the late 1920's a new Camp was formed - Camp HAYES which later became known as MEDINA COURT.

Originally CANTA RANAS was in an area around the Whittier Narrows Dam, but after the flood projects works began around the late 1940's/early 50's (because the area was flooded during the rainy season), many families moved out to adjoining areas, and today you find Varrio Canta Ranas in the city of Santa Fe Springs further down the river.



EL MONTE BARRIOS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EMF - EL MONTE FLORES - Rowland Street
=CAMP LAS FLORES

EMH - EL MONTE HICKS - Locos, Hickory Boys
=CAMP HICKS/FIVE POINTS

EMHS - EL MONTE HAYES - The Courts, TLS Tiny Locos
=CAMP HAYES/MEDINA COURTS

NSM - NORTH SIDE MONTES

NS EM - NORTH SIDE EL MONTE

SS EM - SOUTH SIDE EL MONTE

EL MONTE LIGA / LEGION

EMR - EL MONTE RIFA – Dukes

SSTM - SASTRE STREET MONTE

Note: I am still looking for more history and info on the camps and barrios of El Monte, so if any of you have some to share & help me out with, "It would be greatly appreciated".

THEE ORIGINAL CRIMINALS

$
0
0
FSLC 42LC


VARRIO FORTY SECOND LIL CRIMINALS

42ND LIL CRIMINALES FORMALLY
“MID CITY LIL CRIMINALS”

MID CITY LIL CRIMINALS STARTED BY BIG RASCAL AND WOLF (ADRIAN) IN THE LATE 1970'S. THEY STARTED ON VALENCIA AND WEST OLYMPIC BLVD BY THE 10TH STREET SCHOOL; THE CLICK WAS CALLED "MCLC RED SHIELD BOYS" FOR THE PARK AND POOL REC’ CENTER ON UNION AND 11TH STREET'S. THE OG HOMEBOY'S LATER CHANGED IT TO FORTY SECOND LIL CRIMINALS ON OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA "LOS WINOS" CLICK AND LATER SOUTH SIDE 42ND LIL CRIMINALS 59 LOCOS IN THE 80S BIG RASCAL AND SOME OF THE HOMEBOY'S STAYED, WHILE WOLF AND THE REST MOVED ON TO KINGSLEY & 12TH STREET AND CLIQUED UP WITH THE “MID CITY STONERS” WHERE THEY REMAINED KNOWN AS THE MID CITY LIL CRIMINALS (MCLC) "KINGSLEY DRIVE LOCOS."

MCLS AND FSLC OG HOMIES ARE LONG LOST BROTHERS
“HERMANOS 4 LIFE”

FORTY SECOND LIL CRIMINALS 13 WINOS
WEST OLYMPIC AND GEORGIA VARRIO

SPEEDY, GADGET, MOUSE, HORSE, SPANKY, ANGA, SHORTY, CHOMBE, VICK, LUCKY, WOODY, SPUDS, SIGN, BEAST, FELIPE, SNEEZY, SUAVE, LAGA, GIZMO, SILLY BOY, SPOOKY, RISKY, CRAZY JAVIER, SHARKY LONE Y MAS

WEST LOS 42ND LITTLE CRIMINALS
WNS "WINOS"
KMLS "KENMORE LOCOS"

IN FULL FORCE!!!


SOY LIL SPEEDS @ MYSPACE.COM
42NDLILCRIMINALS.BLOGSPOT.COM
Q-VOS TO ALL THE FIRME HOMEBOYS FROM
42ND LIL CRIMINALS
LOS WINOS
59 LOCOS
CRAZY WINAS
MAIN ST GANGSTERS
BIG CRIMINALS

OUT SIDERS
DENVER LOCOS
ALACRANES MEX
REY 13 LS TIJUAS
NORTH CAROLINA LOCOS
Y MAS CLIKAS
Viewing all 162 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images

<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>