Pubdate: Wed, 05 Apr 2006
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
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Copyright: 2006 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Lynn Doan, Times Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

CITY REPORT LINKS GANGS TO AIDS 'TIME BOMB'

Phillip "Muck" Brown once lived the life of a true gangster.

By 17, he was a professional car thief, a PCP abuser and a "war 
chief" for a Crips gang in West Los Angeles. But in the summer of 
1987, while he was serving a two-year prison term, his dangerous 
living caught up with him. He learned that he was HIV-positive, a 
result, he said, of shooting up cocaine, heroin and other drugs.

For years, he lived "on the down low," telling no one but a probation 
officer. "It's about pride," said Brown, 48. "When you're a gangster, 
reputation is all you have."

Brown is part of what Los Angeles health officials are calling "a 
ticking time bomb" in the AIDS epidemic. A city-commissioned study to 
be released today identifies gang members as particularly vulnerable 
to infection by the human immunodeficiency virus, not only because of 
high-risk behavior but also because of fallacious beliefs about the 
disease and a tendency to stigmatize those who have it.

"We were stunned - amazed - that nobody's looked at this before," 
said Stephen Simon, the city's AIDS coordinator. "Here's a high-risk 
population that obviously engages in high-risk behavior, one that is 
uninformed and realizes it's uninformed, and there is no data on this 
population."

The $75,000 study, among the first of its kind in the country, 
surveyed 300 gang members, about half of whom agreed to be tested for HIV.

One tested positive, and almost 90% said they'd had unprotected sex 
in the last 12 months. Also, 31% said they believed that a vaccine 
had recently been developed that prevents HIV infection; 54% said 
their friends would stay away from them if they were infected with 
HIV; and 91% said their communities needed more information on the virus.

"All you need is one simple viral transmission for it to spread to 
the entire group," said Simon. "It just hasn't, by luck of the draw."

Simon will recommend that his office collaborate with gang 
intervention groups and launch an informational campaign.

The report "was shocking," said Councilman Tony Cardenas, who chairs 
the city's gang violence committee and will introduce a motion 
endorsing Simon's recommendation, which could cost up to $200,000.

"The first thing that came to my mind is that this is a deadly 
bullet, when a gang member's ignorance and macho attitude puts their 
lives at risk and [those of] their own family members."

In the international arena, the issue is nothing new.

The United Nations doles out thousands of dollars in grants to 
organizations targeting at-risk youth - some of them gang members 
formerly from the U.S. - for HIV/AIDS prevention.

El Salvador-based Homies Unidos, which has become a refuge for former 
gang members deported from the United States, received a $36,000 
grant to battle the spread of AIDS among its clients.

Luis Romero, head of the program in San Salvador, said infected gang 
members approached him pleading for help. So many of his clients come 
from the United States that he launched "Project Welcome Home," in 
which the group greets deportees at the airport to offer services.

Although gangs have not been the focus of HIV/AIDS prevention in the 
United States, officials have known that minorities account for most 
new AIDS cases.

In 2004, minorities accounted for 72% of the 42,331 AIDS cases 
diagnosed in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention. African Americans make up 18% of the AIDS 
cases ever reported in California, although they account for 7% of 
the state's population.

In Los Angeles, where an estimated 39,000 gang members live, 
cash-strapped nonprofits, including the Minority AIDS Project, have 
attempted outreach through Brown and other former gang members.

"Somebody took a chance on me," said Charlie Parker, 51, a former 
gang member and peer health educator with the Minority AIDS Project. 
"I wanted to be able to give back to the community because I had a 
chance to live. I felt it was my duty."

The group's executive director, Victor McKamie, who is also a former 
member of the Crips, hit the streets with a rap song detailing the 
risks of HIV. He handed out blue condoms to Crips gang members and 
red ones to Bloods, adhering to the gangs' signature colors.

Brown, who is unemployed and on disability, spends his days promoting 
prevention. He helps to dispel the stereotypes and misinformation 
about HIV victims that he says still prevail among gang members.

"For them, it's not even about whether to tell their friends that 
they're HIV-positive," he said. "If they have HIV, they probably 
don't even know it yet."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman