Pubdate: Mon, 6 Sep 2004 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2004 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Jessica Portner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) POLICE TASK FORCE LOOKS FOR GANGS ON PENINSULA Cops Launch Effort To Halt Increase In Number Of Crimes Darting into a dark driveway, Jesus Gonzalez Lopez didn't spot the cops on the San Mateo street until the SWAT-trained team spilled out of unmarked cars to surround him. The burglary suspect, sporting the blue-dot tattoos associated with the Sureņos gang, emptied his pockets of contraband: methamphetamine and ceramic spark plug parts handy for shattering car windows, police said. ``It's guys like this that are causing problems for people around here,'' said San Mateo police officer Bryan Thompson. The recent sweep that netted Lopez was part of the San Mateo County Sheriff's Department's new, multi-city gang task force. The effort was set up this summer to derail a surge in gang-related crime in northern San Mateo County cities unaccustomed to such levels of violence, which includes at least three murders. The cities of San Mateo, San Bruno, South San Francisco and Daly City have registered 28 incidents of gang crime so far this year, nearly double last year's tally of 15. What worries police is the violent nature of the crimes: three-fourths of this year's incidents are homicides and assaults. Police attribute the crimes, in part, to gang members who recently immigrated here or were pushed out of other communities after police crackdowns. Critics have questioned the police use of gang sweeps, saying they simply spread gang members to neighboring Bay Area towns. But Marc Violette is happy to see the police on his street. Violette, who lives in San Mateo with his family in a house ringed by neatly pruned bushes, said his street has spruced up since the 1970s, when crime was rampant. But Lopez's arrest and a recent drive-by shooting across the street have rattled Violette, who likes to chat with neighbors on his porch as his son plays with his favorite stuffed animal. ``You can't let these guys take over,'' he said. ``They need to clean up the place and shake it down.'' Police believe a big reason for the rise in gang-related crime in northern San Mateo County is members coming from East Palo Alto after a gang crackdown there two years ago. Other gang members are sweeping south from San Francisco, police say. Meanwhile, gang leaders from Mexico and El Salvador have been lured by the lucrative methamphetamine trade and by family ties in the area. A 1990 study that tracked gang migration patterns in several hundred police jurisdictions nationally found that about 60 percent of the shifts were for social and family reasons and 20 percent for drug-selling opportunities, while the rest moved because of police crackdowns or other factors. With all of the migration, police say members of the rival Norteņo and Sureņo Latino gangs are now jostling for power in territories dominated by Pacific Islander gangs. San Mateo County Sheriff's Sgt. Tom Gallagher, the task force's leader, pumped up rap mixes on the stereo one recent night as he maneuvered through South San Francisco behind a caravan of four unmarked police cars trolling for parolees. A reason to cruise gang hideouts en masse is to develop a roster of new arrivals, he said. Looking for violators ``We want them to realize that being a gang member here is not acceptable, and make this less of a desirable neighborhood to operate in,'' said Gallagher, sidling up to a what he said was a known Norteņos hangout. Their strategy is to visit known gang members, watch for drug deals and arrest those violating parole. Octavio Reyes, wearing a red baseball cap that cops said marked him a Norteņo, bristled when a pack of officers frisked him for weapons as he stood in front of the building about 7:30 p.m. ``This is harassment,'' said Reyes, who was not arrested. ``You don't see any gang members around here.'' Gallagher said another goal of the task force is to break apart groups of young gang members that have grown stronger during the summer. Officers hope to disentangle allegiances before clashes erupt on campuses. Color confusion As part of their sweep, officers searched for gang members as young as 12 who may be committing assaults or vandalizing property in an East Daly City dirt lot, where Norteņos initiate wannabes by beating them bloody. Daly City police officer Jamie Draper said the white-on-black graffiti wall behind the dirt lot is like a local Norteņos hall of fame. One three-foot scrawl, reading ``R.I.P Mr. Solo,'' memorializes Aurelio Cerdas, who was shot to death at age 16. Draper tries to educate parents to track their children's whereabouts and to pay close attention to their wardrobes. ``A lot of them are out with no supervision, and parents don't question why 90 percent of their children's clothing is red,'' he said, referring to the Norteņos' color. Police said it's been tougher to spot gang members recently because of gang leaders in prison telling members to inhibit identification by not wearing gang colors. At the same time, police said, the seemingly pervasive merchandising of gang clothing, such as T-shirts emblazoned with names of gangs, has made detection more difficult, because non-members are sporting gang gear. Some residents say they've been stopped solely for the way they dress and others because of their ethnicity. Gang sweeps across the country have been effective in dousing new gang-driven flare-ups -- at least, in the short term, according to several experts. Since July, the San Mateo County task force has nabbed more than 20 suspected criminals on charges ranging from vandalism to murder -- including Lopez, who faces charges of possessing drugs and burglary tools. But Cheryl Maxson, a criminology professor at the University of California-Irvine, said gangs can go underground, downsize their operations or shift towns. Trisha Violette, cradling her infant on her San Mateo porch, said the sweeps offer only temporary relief. ``It's like a hornets' nest,'' she said. ``You spray them, and they scatter to a neighborhood not far away.'' Success, experts say, hinges on whether offenders taken from the streets get often-expensive social services. ``When you throw enough bodies at a problem, you can reduce it,'' said Maxson. ``The issue is, how long can you keep it up?'' - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin