Pubdate: Sun, 01 Mar 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Katie Mercer GANGSTERS STRUT ONLINE Young-Gun Wannabes Using Internet To Glorify Thug Lifestyle The next generation of street thugs is at our fingertips, literally. They call themselves gangs and they've got the criminal charges to back up their rep. But unlike most organized crime groups, they're glorifying the thug lifestyle in the most public of forums -- online. "It's once again become cool to be associated with a street gang," says Robert Gordon, director of Simon Fraser University's criminology department. "With the availability of the Internet and networking sites . . . they are communicating more online now. "So, rather than marking territories with violence or making their presence known by wearing particular uniforms or clustering in particular places, they are transferring all of that to the cyber-world." It's an activity that's become known as "net-banging." Gangs use the web to recruit, intimidate, distribute information and strut -- going so far as posting photos and videos of members posing with guns, money, bling and what appear to be drugs. Take "hug a thug," for example. It's the social-networking group for Family Affiliated. FA is a Kamloops-based group of prolific offenders and petty criminals. They post when they're released from jail, identify who to write in prison and list "no goods" or rats. Included in its membership is Ryan Jones -- the online alias for 24-year-old Shane Allen Messent of Surrey, who was gunned down after a botched home invasion in southeast Vancouver on Feb. 17. The majority of the members have a laundry list of charges and convictions for weapons- and drug-related offences. Prominent FA members, such as 26-year-old Jessie Hanaghan, mug for the camera, throwing gang signs and showing off FA tattoos. His father, 45-year-old Stephen Hanaghan, was shot dead by Mounties in Kamloops in 2005 after he rammed a stolen pickup into a police car. The Kamloops Mounties, who have been monitoring the online group since its inception, don't consider FA a gang even though members may look and act the part. Canada's leading gang expert disagrees. "If they are groups of three or more people with some sort of commonality -- whether it's a name or colours, whatever -- and they are involved in any criminal activity, let's call a spade a spade. They're a gang," says Michael Chettleburgh. By that definition, Kings of Surrey can also be considered a small, street-level gang. The group, which runs the Facebook group "J45&D45-Kings of Surrey," brazenly posts photos of members with guns, cash and "half a key." Members have been in and out of prison for gun, drug, robbery and assault crimes. But these groups don't stop there. Members of both FA and Kings of Surrey belong to and have started up groups whose purpose is to identify rats. Groups such as "Snitches get stitches," "Talk s--- get hit," and, "If you roll with PCs don't crack my name. No cheezeaters!" seem to pop up and disappear overnight. The content of the latter group was deleted earlier this week, including a posting that called out another member for being a "rat troll." RCMP spokesman Cpl. Peter Thiessen says he's uncertain whether this sort of intimidation can affect cases. "The fact that someone chooses to post someone's name and state that this person is an informant, or a rat, or a fink, or whatever, doesn't mean that it's factual," he said. Chettleburgh says this sort of behaviour is all part and parcel of B.C.'s burgeoning street-level gang problem, which needs to be addressed before groups grow. According to Chettleburgh, there are about 1,300 gangs operating in Canada -- the majority in the Lower Mainland. They include youth gangs or wannabe groups, street gangs and organized crime groups. But the lines between them are fuzzy, with members switching sides and groups evolving or disbanding. Take the Red Scorpions or the UN. They're technically large street-level gangs who are somewhat organized and hierarchical. Their membership can be fluid, with members sometimes belonging to two or three gangs. On the other hand, organized crime groups such as the Hells Angels tend to be extremely hierarchal, with defined rules of conduct, lifelong membership and oaths of secrecy. Groups such as FA and Kings of Surrey are technically street-level gangs with wannabe aspirations, he says. But that doesn't mean they can't hit the big time or that their members won't be recruited. "The path to being a strong, vibrant gang is an evolutionary one," says Chettleburgh. "But that's why we need to pay attention to these younger groups. They're at the margins. They're selling some drugs. They're doing some s---. "Can they become the next Red Scorpions? Sure. If they have the right conditions, if they're committed, if they have access to drugs. They can become that." Most of them won't, he says, adding redemption is possible for the majority of gangsters. "Not every street-gang member is a Bacon brother. I would say 15 per cent are the real hard-core guys, they're the soldiers who are committed," he says. "Those individuals we can't molly-coddle. We can't hug a thug. The other ones we can actually turn around." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin