https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0JdIx-h5SY
LOS
ANGELES, California – Behind a metal fence, a woman opens her cell phone and
reads a news report about the arrests of 21 leaders of the Mara Salvatrucha
gang, including one who murdered a man in 2015 – just steps from her home in
the Hollywood neighborhood.
“I
worry, because many of them are still free,” said the woman, who asked to
remain anonymous because she fears gang reprisals. “To be honest, I don't think
the Mara will ever end.”
Hollywood
is one of the Los Angeles neighborhoods that are home to some of the 30 or so MS-13
clans, known as clicas, that operate
in the city, according to the FBI, which participated in a massive police raid
in May 2017.
The
raid led to the arrests of 21 gang chiefs and operators as well as new charges
against 20 people already in prison. Three gang members remain fugitive.
“By
taking these high-profile criminals off the streets of Los Angeles, we will
impact the gang's structures and its ability to maintain control through
violence,” said Deirdre Fike, deputy head of the FBI office in Los Angeles,
when the raid was announced.
Neighbors
and activists say they fear that authorities are planning more raids against
MS-13 members in Rampart, the neighborhood of West Los Angeles where the gang
was born in the 1980s, and that the raids could lead to the deportation of undocumented
migrants with no criminal records.
Authorities insist that neighbors should feel safer after the
raids. But many residents
of the Hispanic neighborhoods that have been hostage to the Mara Salvatrucha's
violence for several decades said they doubt there will be significant
changes.
“They put a lot of them in jail, and we still see the gang
graffiti. There are children who are growing up with that idea, to join the
Mara Salvatrucha,” said one man who works on Hollywood's Western Avenue. “It's
like Mexico. They arrest one narco, and another takes over.”
A diminished gang?
The Los Angeles Police
Department claims that the MS-13, which started to grow strong 20 years ago
when it linked up with the Mafia Mexicana – whose chiefs still control many of
the Hispanic gangs in California from prison – has been weakened in the greater
metropolitan area.
More than 700 gang members have been arrested since 2007,
according to LAPD figures. Regarded
as the most violent gang in the city from 2012 to 2014, it's now ranked seventh
and its membership has dropped from 1,200 to 800. Police believe that's because
some gang members were deported to Central America and others moved to
other parts of the United States.
The
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency has reported that the
Department of Homeland Security arrested 7,051 MS-13 members from 2005 to 2016
as part of a still ongoing effort to deport the worst gang members from the
United States.
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said he's been
following the MS-13 for 30 years, when it changed from a group of refugees from
El Salvador's civil war who joined forces to defend themselves from other Los
Angeles gangs to an international criminal organization with clicas in several countries.
“The
MS targets migrant communities. They extort them, they rob them, they rape
them, they kill the them,” Beck, who was a captain in the Rampart station, said
when the raids were announced. “That has changed. In recent years we have seen
a decrease in MS activities, and its membership has dropped.”
"What's your barrio?"
Official
figures show that the Aug. 15, 2015, shooting death of Edis Maldonado Bustillos
was the fourth murder in Hollywood since 2014. There have been no murders so
far this year in the predominantly Hispanic neighborhood.
Maldonado, 38, was in the Little Salvador restaurant on Western
Avenue when Carlos Alfredo “Little Boy” Cardoza Lopez, identified as an MS-13
leader, teed him up with the question, “What's your barrio?” Court documents
show Cardoza, 23, shot him five times.
He
was one of the gang members arrested Wednesday, and could face the death
penalty for the murder.
A
few steps from the restaurant, the door of an old garage bears the gang's
territorial graffiti: MS in five-foot high letters. The owner of the building
tried to cover it up with white paint, but it remains very visible.
“They
are going to repaint the letters soon,” said Mario Rojas, who collects garbage
around the streets of Hollywood. “This is their neighborhood, and they will not
leave it.”
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