A SOUTH AMERICAN IMPORT
by Investigator Al Valdez
Orange County District Attorney's Office
Street
gangs form for a variety of reasons. The United States has experienced the
growth of many types of street and prison gangs
within the last 20 years. During
this time period, influxes of legal and illegal
refugees into the United States have had a documented effect on the
formation of new street gangs.
In
the early 1980s, a violent civil war began in El Salvador which would last more than 12 years.
Approximately 100,000 people were killed
in the war, and more than
one million people fled from El Salvador to the
U.S.
The Salvadorian
refugees and immigrants initially settled
primarily in southern
California and Washington, D.C.. Some of the refugees and immigrants had
ties with La Mara, a violent street gang from El Salvador. Others had been members of
paramilitary groups like the Farabundo
Marti National Liberation Front (FMNL) during the civil war. FMNL was made
up of Salvadorian peasants who were trained as guerilla fighters. Many were adept at using explosives,
firearms, and booby traps.
Most of the Salvadorian refugees settled in
the established Hispanic neighborhoods of the "Rampart" area of Los Angeles. However,
Salvadorians were not readily accepted into the Los Angeles Hispanic community, and were frequently targeted by local Hispanic gangs.
As a result, in the late 1980s, some refugees and refugee members of La Mara and
FMNL formed what is now known as the Mara Salvatrucha (MS) street gang in Los Angeles. Like many other street gangs, MS initially formed for protection, but quickly developed a reputation for being organized
and extremely violent. MS membership continues to be fed by refugees from groups like
FMNL.
Since its inception in California and Washington, DC, Mara Salvatrucha has expanded into Oregon,
Alaska, Texas, Nevada, Utah, Oklahoma, Illinois, Michigan, New York,
Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, Florida, Canada, and Mexico.
MS is unique in that, unlike traditional U.S. street gangs, it maintains active
ties with MS members and factions in El Salvador. Mara Salvatrucha is truly an
international gang.
Mara Salvatrucha gang members maintain contact between groups in the
United States and El Salvador for several specific reasons. In El Salvador, a hand grenade sells for $1.00-$2.00 U.S.
currency and an M-16 rifle will sell for approximately $200.00-$220.00 U.S. dollars. This
communication and alliance provides a mechanism for MS gang members to
access military-style munitions and also establishes a network to traffic illegal firearms into the United States.
Although military weapons seem to be readily available to this gang, street intelligence indicates they often have difficulty obtaining
handguns, which are not readily available in El Salvador. This creates a demand for small arms by MS members in the U.S. and El Salvador.
This demand is so high that MS members will often take handguns as payment for drug transactions.
The guns are then sent back to El Salvador, or used in the United States.
MS is also
involved in exporting stolen U.S. cars to South America. The cars are
often traded for drugs when dealing with cartels.
It is estimated that 80% of the cars driven in El Salvador were
stolen in the United States. Car theft is a lucrative business for MS.
The Mara Salvatrucha gang is involved in a variety of criminal enterprises.
As with members of other gangs, MS members seem willing to commit almost any crime, but MS gang members
tend to have a higher level of criminal involvement than other gang members. MS members have been involved in
burglaries, auto thefts, narcotic sales, home
invasion robberies, weapons smuggling, car jacking, extortion, murder,
rape, witness intimidation, illegal firearm sales, car theft and
aggravated assaults. In terms of drug trafficking activities, common drugs sold by MS members include cocaine,
marijuana, heroin, and methamphetamine. Mara
Salvatrucha gang members have even placed a “tax” on prostitutes and
non-gang member drug dealers who are working in MS "turf." Failure to pay up will most likely result in violence.
Originally, only Salvadorians could become members of
Mara Salvatrucha. However, MS now includes members from Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. Mara
Salvatrucha also has a few African-American members. MS has broken the race barrier for membership, but most new members
are still selected because of their ethnic (Central American) background. The
majority of MS gang members are between the ages of 11 and 40 years old.
Mara Salvatrucha members identify themselves with tattoos such
as the number “13," or trece in Spanish. MS gang members will also use the Spanish word sureno, meaning
"southerner" to identify themselves. Sometimes sureno is abbreviated to
SUR.
These terms make reference to
the fact that MS gang members like to claim they
are from southern California as opposed to northern California, and are rivals with northern California gangs. Often, this rivalry is taken outside the state of
California. Additionally, Mara
Salvatrucha gang members have several ongoing rivalries with large southern California gangs, including the 18th Street gang, and in California, commonly attack 18th Street gang members on
sight. There are many Hispanic gangs, including MS, which use the number “13," and the terms sureno and SUR as identifiers, including street/prison gangs outside of California.
Thus, it is important to identify specific tattoos used by the Mara Salvatrucha gang, which include “M” or “MS,” in addition to the 13 or SUR identification. Another common tattoo seen is “Salvadorian Pride.” There
is also a good chance that the member will also have the name of his
particular clique tattooed on his/her body. Other tattoos encountered with MS members have included
pentagrams and other occult symbols. These can be confusing when found in conjunction with gang tattoos and can cause misconceptions
of Satanic involvement by the gang.
The most common hand sign used by MS members is the letter M formed by using three fingers and
pointing the hand downward. This handsign can resemble the pitchfork sign used by Folk/People Nation gangs from the Midwest, and can be made with the fingers pointing up or down. The symbols used as tattoos are also used in
graffiti and personal writings.
In general, Mara Salvatrucha members show no
fear of law enforcement. They are not easily intimidated and frequently act
defiantly. Mara Salvaltrucha gang members have been responsible for the
execution of three federal agents and numerous shootings of law
enforcement officers across the country. MS gang members have been known
to booby-trap their drug stash houses using antipersonnel grenades on the assumption that these structures will be
searched by law enforcement. MS members at one time often bragged of assaulting law enforcement officers as a means of showing their loyalty
and commitment to the gang. However, these claims have never been confirmed. Today, assaults on law enforcement officers are not required for
membership, but are always an option. Thus, officers dealing with MS members (or any street gang members, for that matter)
should always use extreme caution.
Law enforcement and the courts have used two primary methods to deal with criminal activity by MS: arrest/incarceration and deportation.
Between April 1994 and August 1995, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
arrested and deported more than 100 MS gang members to El Salvador. Many Mara
Salvatrucha gang members are currently in the United States illegally and are concerned
about deportation. If a gang member is deported to El Salvador, there is a chance they will be targeted by the Sombra Negra
(Black Shadow) death squad. Sombra Negra and similar groups are legendary in Central America.
Gangsters and citizens alike believe that the Sombra Negra is made up of rogue cops and military personnel who target unwanted
criminals and gang members for vigilante "justice." While the presence of these death squads is officially denied by the governments of Central American countries,
many MS members in the U.S. believe these groups exist, and fear that they will be targeted after being deported. Honduran MS gang members have the same fear.
Sombra Negra has claimed responsibility for the deaths of several MS gang members in El
Salvador. The existence or belief in the existence of these death squads could also be a chief motivation for hardcore MS gang members to come to the
United States.
Al Valdez is currently employed as a District
Attorney Investigator for Orange County, California. Valdez has a
total of 21 years of experience with a special emphasis on narcotic and
gang investigations and prosecutions. Currently, he is assigned to
the North County T.A.R.G.E.T. (Tri-Agency Resource Gang Enforcement
Team) Gang Unit for Orange County.
Copyright © 2000 Al
Valdez. All Rights Reserved.