Pubdate: Wed, 11 Feb 2009 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Arthur Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PARENTS DELIVERED MESSAGE ABOUT GANGS High schools and teenage parties are the recruiting grounds for gangs like the Independent Soldiers, according to RCMP Const. Leslie Smith. Gangs use the lure of drugs, easy money, respect and protection to draw youth into the gang life, she said. Smith was speaking at a parent and youth information session hosted by the Prince George District Parent Advisory Council, Monday. "We see gang members selling drugs at our schools. That's how they're recruiting, it's 'easy' money," she said. "But once you're in, it's hard to get out. (And) you will never be out of debt. I have yet to meet a newly-recruited member with a bank account - with anything to show for it." Gangs are essentially pyramid schemes, she said. The gang lords and upper-echelon gang members do make money, but the majority of lower-level gang members and pawns just make enough money to survive. Expensive clothes, "bling," cell phones and cars are often used to reward gang members - and give the appearance of wealth. Getting people addicted to drugs like ecstasy, crack cocaine and methamphetamine (meth) is another common recruitment technique, Smith said. Marijuana is used as a gateway drug to tempt youth to try other drugs, she added. "I have yet to meet someone who tried crack, or meth for that matter, four or five times and didn't get addicted. So many addicts I've talked to, crack is their life," she said. "(And) you don't know what is in that pill press. You don't know how your body is going to react to those chemicals." Many lower-level gang members are drug addicts, Smith said. They work as crack shack operators, drug mules, street-level drug dealers and prostitutes to feed their addictions. 'Gifts,' of free drugs, clothes or other items often come at a heavy cost, she said. They are used to get people into debt with the gang. Once you owe the gang, they own you and won't let you get out of that debt. Violence is used as means of collecting unpaid debts and keeping gang members in line, Smith said. Gang members are often brutalized by the same gang which claimed to offer protection and belonging. On Oct. 28, 2008 a young man was kidnapped from a house on Irwin Street and taken to another drug house, Smith said. The young man owed money to the gang. He was beaten and tortured to send a message to other gang members, Smith said. "He was sexually assaulted with a beer bottle. He was sexually assaulted with a golf club," she said. "He was forced to ingest his own bodily fluids. He was forced to ingest drugs to get him more in debt to the gang." On March 2, 2008 four gang members came to a house on Ahbau Street, Smith said. A man and a woman were at the home. The man was attacked with a machete while the woman was sent to get the money they owed the gang, she said. "I came out to this call. There was blood everywhere in this apartment," she said. "They tried to cut off his ear. His hand had to be put back together like a jigsaw puzzle." Members of the Independent Soldiers murdered three people in Prince George last year, she said, and there was over a dozen shootings linked to the gang. "That's why gangs concern me: they're bad shots. Every one of those shootings was supposed to end in the person being dead," she said. "They're bad shots and they've got lots of guns." In several of the shootings, it is only good luck that no innocent bystanders were hurt or killed, she said. In Prince George, there are a number of mid-level gangs at work, Smith said. Mid-level gangs tend to be newer and less-organized than traditional gangs like the Hells Angels, Mafia and Asian gangs. Some of the mid-level gangs known to have operations in Prince George include the Independent Soldiers, Renegades, The Crew, Game Tight Soldiers (GTS), Redd Alert and Indian Posse. The Independent Soldiers are particularly concerning to police because of the high level of violence associated with them. "When I first came here (five years ago), The Crew were cutting off hands and such. But in the last year or two, the Independent Soldiers have been the big concern," Smith said. Smith urged parents to talk to their kids about drugs and gangs. Youth with low self-esteem are often the most vulnerable to being recruited, Smith said. Being involved in sports, school activities, having friends and a supportive home are some of the best ways to prevent a youth from getting involved with gangs, she said. The best way to avoid problems with gangs is to not get involved, Smith said. But there are groups that can help if you've gotten in too far. Youth can call New Hope at 250-552-0890 or Reconnect at 250-562-2538 if they need someone to talk to. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug