РефератыИностранный языкGaGangs Essay Research Paper GangsIntroductionI A

Gangs Essay Research Paper GangsIntroductionI A

Gangs Essay, Research Paper


Gangs


Introduction


I. -A Los Angeles family takes a wrong turn into gang territory and is fired


upon. A 3-year-old is killed and her 2-year-old brother wounded.


-A Chinese immigrant in Brooklyn is kidnapped by a Chinatown gang which


demands ransom payments from her family. She is murdered when the family fails to pay.


-Two FBI agents and a police sergeant are murdered inside the Washington,


D.C. police headquarters by a gang member.


-A Pittsburgh police sergeant walking home with his daughter is killed with


his own gun after he stops and confronts a gang spraying graffiti on a street.


II. Resolved : that the Federal Government should pass laws to prevent the


development gang related youth violence.


Definitions-


1. Development: as defined in Websters Dictionary is ?to make more


elaborate; to enlarge?


2. Gang: as defined in Websters is ?A group of persons who are organized


and work together or socialize regularly; a group of adolescent hoodlums or


criminals; gang up on; to attack as a group.?


3. Violence: as defined in Websters is ?Physical force or activity used


to cause harm, damage or abuse?


4. Youth: as defined in Websters is ?The appearance or state of


appearing young; the time of life when one is not considered a adult; a young person?


III. Our current juvenile justice system is no longer adequate for


today’s hardened young gang members. Demographics indicated this problem is not


going away. In fact, only will get worse. This is a serious problem that can


not be left unchecked. If this is not addressed it will only lead to the decay


of our society. We must take action to combat gangs in a new way. Vice


President Albert Gore recently told the White House press corps, “Gangs have


been a major cause of the growth in violent crime in the past decade.” He cited


a Treasury Department report that found the presence of rival gangs, the Bloods


and the Crips, in 35 states and 58 cities across the country. At the same press


conference, Attorney General Janet Reno cited the impact of disabling one gang


in New Haven, Connecticut. Eighteen members of the “Jungleboy” street gang were


put in jail, and, according to Reno, New Haven’s murder rate fell by one-third


in 1993.


I. Outline of Need Arguments


A. Problem: Many highly rated experts warn of the impending youth crime crisis.


Youth violent crime has been rising dramatically for more than a decade. An


upward surge in youthful perpetrators of violence is complemented by an


unprecedented growth in youth living with little or no adult supervision.


Professor Dean Rojek, a sociologist at the University of Georgia, says, “For


decades violent crime was driven mostly by adults, with kids involved mostly in


property crime…. What’s been changing is that you have juveniles becoming much


more involved in violent offenses, with the use of weapons. If we add to this


more babies, you could have a multiplier effect… a mini explosion [in violent


crime by youth].” Gang’s only heighten this problem.


California authorities describe the youth gang as a “violent and


insidious new form of organized crime. Heavily armed with sophisticated weapons,


(gangs) are involved in drug trafficking, witness intimidation, extortion, and


bloody territorial wars. In some cases they are traveling out of state to spread


their violence and crime.”


According to the FBI, “The fastest growing murder circumstance is


juvenile gang killings.” Almost one-third of Los Angeles’ homicides are gang


related. Nationwide, the rate of violent offenses by gang members is three times


as high as for non-gang delinquents.


“Unless we act now,” says Attorney General Janet Reno, “to stop young


people from choosing a life of violence and crime, the beginning of the 21st


century could bring levels of violent crime to our communities that far exceed


what we have experienced.” Reggie Walton, a Washington, D.C. Superior Court


judge who handles juvenile cases, blames it on the disappearance of fathers.


Walton says fathers leave children to be raised by young mothers who themselves


are often struggling with mental or emotional problems, limited education,


poverty and addiction. Walton labels these children “walking time bombs.”


This time bomb has been in the making for some time. Today, and


historically, young males commit far more crimes than other age groups.


Teenagers commit the largest portion of all crime in America. More than one-


third of all murders are committed by offenders under the age of twenty one.


More murders and robberies are committed by eight-teen year old males than any


other group. (Paul McNulty, ?Natural Born Killers? Preventing the Coming of


Explosion of Teenage Crime?, 1995)


No matter the type of gang, most gang members are male. A Chicago study


of four police districts found that only 2 to 5 percent of gang arrested were


female. These females are typically auxiliary gang members.


Gang members range in age from 8 to 22 years old, but there are


exceptions where tenure is often well beyond 22 to perhaps more than 40 years


old. A counselor in a juvenile detention facility in California said: “(If) you


find a gang member who comes from a complete nuclear family, a kid who has never


been exposed to any kind of abuse, I’d like to meet him…. a real ‘gangbanger’


who comes from a happy, balanced home, who’s got a good opinion of himself. I


don’t think that kid exists.”


Sydney Harris, a nationally syndicated columnist, said, “Gang members


tend to be chronic losers, who can accomplish nothing individually, or who live


in so depressed an environment that only by banding together can they exercise


any influence over their lives. In both cases, they are as much to be pitied as


condemned.”


B. Significance: Young males belonging to a gang have been proved to be much


more violent than non-gang members:


Orange County, California probation statistics indicate that gang-


related youth had significantly higher law-violation rates (55.1


percent) than non-gang affiliated youth (26.4 percent). A study of


20 years of data collected by Philadelphia’s police gang unit shows that “gangs


engage in more violent behavior than do delinquent non-gang groups.”


A study in Wisconsin found that most violent crimes by youths were


committed by groups of three or more. This “pack” behavior, not


surprisingly, seems to be at the core of much of the rise in youth crime.


A study of New York City teenage gunshot victims found that 40 percent


were shot during school hours. Another study found that of


children and teenagers wounded in drive-by shootings in Los Angeles, 71


percent were “documented members of street gangs.”


Not only do gang members tend to be more violent than non-gang members,


but gang membership appears to prolong one’s criminal career. One study found


that a “large portion of persistent and dangerous juvenile gang offenders become


even more serious adult offenders.” Another study in California found that


previously-incarcerated gang members continued their lives of crime after being


released.


Gangs are spreading across the country and are not just limited to major


cities. Bernard Friedlander, a University of Hartford psychology professor and a


violence expert, says, “This is an American problem, not an inner-city


problem…. It’s spreading slowly…. On one level it’s simple fad imitation…


but on another level the isolation of youth is just as profound in some of the


more stable areas as in the inner city.”


The spread of gangs can be attributed to at least three factors. First,


parents, desiring to protect their gang-culture-saturated children from the


hometown gang’s influence, send them to relatives across the country. Sometimes


this strategy works. But many times this back fires and helps transplant the


gang culture into a new community.


The drug trade has created entrepreneurial gangs which fan out across


the country to expand their markets. Franchises of the Bloods and the Crips are


now in most metropolitan centers. With their expansion, they have introduced


collateral, gang-like violence, reminiscent of the Mob earlier in the century.


To an extent the entertainment industry contributes to the spread of


gangs. The gang culture, value system and mentality are sprinkled across the


country through movies and “gangsta” rap music. These cultural amplifiers


educate young audiences to gang values and attitudes. They denigrate women,


promote exaggerated manhood or “machismo,” and glorify violence. They also pass


on gang language, symbols, activities, and traditions.


According to Justice Department estimates, the United States has some


1,436 gangs and 120,636 gang members. They exist in all size communities and in


rural areas. The Justice Department figures are disputed by the National School


Safety Center, which in 1993 estimated that the Los Angeles area alone has at


least 959 gangs with approximately 125,000 gang members.


There are many types of gangs. Some are black, white, Asian, Hispanic or


other ethnic-centered gangs. Others are structured around territory, commercial


activities, corporate businesses, political agendas, religion, music and special


types of crime.


Race/ethnic-based gangs: Larry Rawles, deputy director of Philadelphia’s


Crisis Intervention Network, says, “When any ethnic group was at the


bottom, they formed gangs — the Jews, the Irish, the Italians.”


Gangs offered status, a sense of self-worth, and protection. Today, most


gangs are racially segregated (54.6 percent are African American and


32.6 percent are Hispanic). Blacks and Hispanics constitute the largest


numbers of youths arrested for gang offenses today.


The all-black rival gangs, the Crips and the Bloods, have an


estimated 70,000 members in Los Angeles County alone. They have


franchises in most states and metropolitan communities where they tend


to dominate the crack cocaine trade.


Darlyne Pettinicchio, a probation officer in Orange County,


California, says, “(White gangs are) punk rockers and heavy


metalers (

who) come from all socio-economic classes. They’re of


average intelligence and they’re capable youngsters. They have very little


parental authority. They’re usually angry. Their dance is violent.


Their music is violent. Their behavior is violent. They’re into


anarchy.”


Economic-based gangs: Some gangs are organized around a commercial


activity. Members may be all from a single race or the same


neighborhood or they may be very diverse. The glue that holds them


together is making money. They often see themselves as Robin Hoods or


Bonnie-and-Clyde types who practice their own version of free enterprise. A


close cousin is the corporate gang, which selects a type of industry or


business and dominates the field through intimidation and violence.


Territorial gangs: can be from any race or ethnic background. They lay


claim to a particular territory. They typically “tag” their territory


with gang graffiti and are willing to defend their turf to the death.


Professor Cornel West, a Princeton University social scholar, says in


his book Race Matters “The frightening result is a numbing detachment from


others and a self-destructive disposition toward the world. Life without meaning,


hope, and love breeds a cold-hearted, mean-spirited outlook that destroys both


the individual and others.”


The youth gang satisfies a void. It provides the child a sense of


identity, belonging, power, and protection. The gang satisfies the child’s


desire to feel secure. Living in a high-risk environment without paternal


protection, the young gangster satisfies his insecurities by aligning himself


with a gang, his surrogate family. The gang provides a protective barrier


against the outside forces. One gang member says, “Being in a gang means if I


didn’t have no family, I think that’s where I’ll be. If I didn’t have no job


that’s where I’d be. To me it’s community help without all the community.


They’ll understand better than my mother and father.”


This new “family” has a distinct set of values that affect every aspect


of his life. According to the Los Angeles District Attorney, “It confronts and


confounds adult authority on every level — sex, work, power, love, education,


language, dress, music, drugs, alcohol, violence. As icons of popular culture,


gangs not only represent a powerful group identity utterly inaccessible to


adults, they are surrounded with an appealing aura of outlaw danger.”


“Tagging” their territory with gang graffiti is common. It proclaims the


presence of the gang and offers a challenge to rivals. It may claim credit for a


crime. The denser the graffiti, the closer one is to the gang’s core territory.


The Crips often mark “B/K” for “Bloods killers.”


The gang problem is obviously a enormous one for Americas youth and must be


dealt with swiftly and effectively. My partner Tom will detail our plan later on


in this debate.


II. Outline of Plan


A. Program:


This program will detail ways of preventing some gang violence. No plan


or program could ever get rid of the gang problem as a whole. Our plan is


primarily focused on prevention but also includes some stricter laws as a


deterrent to others. Our aim is to significantly decrease the gang problem in


America.


1.Higher mandatory school enrollment age:


Higher the age a child can legally withdraw from school to the age of 18.


This would make sure all children had a better education. It would also keep


many involved in school and off the streets, with out as much time to commit to


criminal behavior. Preventing ?drop out’s? from causing trouble often related


to gangs. A exception to this law would be made for any High School or GED


graduate.


Cost: NONE; funding for these students is already in place


Enforcement: $50 fine for any illegal absence


2.More ?Real World? training in High Schools:


Make vocational and other job specific classes more available. Not all


teens can or want to, go to Higher Education. If they had a career path right


out of High School many would not join gangs for economic reasons. Computer and


other high tech training will be available and well as the traditional


Automotive, Construction, ect.


Cost: Federal Government will not build one Stealth B-1 bomber


plane ($1.1 billion). Funds will be diverted to local school districts with


the most need for equipment.


Enforcement:All federal funding of schools will be revoked from any


non compling local jurisdictions


3. National Curfue Law:


A 12:00 midnight to 5:00AM national curfew for all persons under the age


of 18. Exceptions would be made if the child was with a legal gardein or some


one over the age of 25. This has been very successful in reducing crime some


localities.


Cost:NONE


Enforcement:Any law enforcement officer can issue a (maximum $75


minimum $20) citation during regular patrol.


4. Expand the Drug Free School Zone Program:


Not only would drug penalties be doubled within a 1000 yard radius of


any school but also any crime that could be linked to gang activity the penalty


would also be doubled. From a illegally parked car to murder, all punishments


doubled for known gang members.


Cost: Funded via. sin taxes on items such as alcohol and


tobacco. Money would pay for extra patrols of school areas and added jail


time for those convicted.


Enforcement:Double punishment for any illegal activities that could


be related to gang activities. Quadruple penalties for any gang members


committing a drug related crime in those areas.


5. ?Drive by’s? act of terrorism:


By labeling thing such as ?drive by? shootings, or any violence directed


at the public in general, an act of terrorism they would be a federal offense


punishable by death. Committing a federal offense normally carries a much


higher sentence than that of local jurisdictions, and is punishable by death no


matter what state the crime was done in.


Cost: Negligible


Enforcement:Punishable by Death (Capital Offense); Mandatory life in


prison for any adult involved. Juvenile Mandatory 50 years.


6. Expand programs such as Head Start:


Expand pre-kindergarden programs such as Head Start to be avalible for


all, just like public school. Will give millions of children, 2 and up, a


preschool program who parents previously could not afford. Also lets parents go


to work and get off welfare programs.


Cost: The cost of the school would be offset by the amount of


single parents being able to go back to work and therefor not relying of


welfare and food stamps.


Enforcement:NONE


B. Solvency:


Individual programs such as Head Start, Curfew, Real World Training, and


Drug Free School zones, have all ready proved there worthiness. Either by


already partially implementation around the country or full implementation in


select cities and proven to work.


New ideas such as Drive By’s a terrorist act, and increasing the legal


age to leave school are both very workable ideas but have not to my knowledge


been tested in any fashion. These two programs need to be tested for say 1 year


before being implementing for the entire county.


C. Advantages:


While none of these six plans would do much to curb violent gangs alone,


all of them at the same time should make a noticed difference. Also side


benefits of my plan are:


Free preschool for all children older than 2 years of age


Allows single parents to work


Decreases gang and drug activity outside our schools


Gets tough with the most violent gang members


Encourages kids to stay in school


Better job training is offered for High Schoolers


III. Conclusion


“We’ve got so many kids out there who’ve lost hope, who believe in only


living for today,” says John Turner, chief of police for the city of Mountlake


Terrace, Washington. “They join a gang and get involved in criminal activity


because there aren’t any people taking them by the hand in simple terms and


pointing them in the right direction, giving them self-esteem and positive


feedback.”


Perhaps gangs exist because modern society has failed to harness the


male hunter/predator instinct and converted those energies to familial


provider/protector efforts. Delinquent young people lacking values, conscience


or a sense of remorse can easily find themselves drawn to the gang lifestyle.


Noted author James Q. Wilson writes in The Moral Sense that modern


society with its “rapid technological change, intense division of labor, and


ambiguous allocation of social roles, frequently leaves some men out, with their


aggressive pre dispositions either uncontrolled or undirected. Gangs are one


result.” Wilson says the profits from illegal drug sales provide gang members


economic opportunities which combine with their uncontrolled aggression to


develop a “warrior culture that under invests in family life.”


Converting male energy to familial provider/protector efforts has always


been the task of the intact family. But the nuclear family is declining,


especially in predominantly black inner cities where gangs dominate life and


rain violent crime. Many of these children join gangs to find purpose, security,


and self-esteem. The gang culture gives them a sense of belonging and remakes


their value system. Partying, fighting, and vicious gang loyalty become their


primary values, thus pushing aside virtues that favor family life. This is a


vicious cycle and it must be broken.


Given that youth gangs account for a disproportionate share of youth


violence, their potential for contributing to a future crime wave is enormous. A


recent decline in violent crime appears to be more a result of fewer teenagers


than better law enforcement. When the current bumper crop of elementary-age


children become adolescents, the violent crime rate is likely to explode.


Gangs are the powder magazine, they must be dealt with before the bomb


goes off.


Rebuttal extensions-


Population of 14-18 year olds


Now 17,620,472 5 Years18,628,635 + 6 % 10 Years


20,284,601+ 15%

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