FEATURED AUTHOR
BILL VALENTINE
Bill
Valentine was born in Denver, Colorado, and later moved
to Salt Lake City, where he grew up and attended formal
school. As a young man he served in the army and then settled
in Santa Monica, California, and went to work for Schaefer's
Ambulance Service in Los Angeles.
It was as an ambulance crew member during the turbulent
1960s and '70s that Valentine got his first exposure to
street gang peculiarities – their propensity for violence,
their unflinching code of machismo, and their loyalty to
the parent gang. Another feature he saw repeatedly on gang
member victims – and one that particularly sparked
his interest – was their identifying tattoos. He recognized
even then that this skin art could and should serve as a
valuable tool for law enforcement personnel, especially
gang cops who had been given the responsibility of identifying
and validating illegal street gang members. At the time,
Valentine did not realize that he too would one day put
this knowledge to use in identifying prison gang members.
In 1974, Valentine moved with his wife and three children
to Carson City, Nevada, where he found employment as a correctional
officer with the Nevada Department of Prisons. The prison
system at that time was racked with gang violence. Inmate
murders and officer assaults were at an all-time high, and
the administrative officials seemed powerless to curtail
it.
The Aryan Warriors, a white supremacy gang, was regarded
as the most powerful. Most AW members were incarcerated
at the Nevada State Prison, a century-old maximum security
facility in Carson City. The Aryans were often challenged
by the Black Warriors, a violent African American group.
With fewer numbers, but equally violent, was the Tribe,
whose members were Native Americans.
The Aryans and the Natives got along fairly well, and both
regarded the Black Warriors as an enemy. For Valentine and
the other correctional officers, identifying these prison
gang members was relatively easy. Monitoring their activities,
paying careful attention to groupings on the yard, and developing
reliable informants worked reasonably well. What they lacked,
however, was an ID photo file that would validate gang membership
and stand up in court. The current administration made little
effort to compile one. And gang violence increased.
After three officers were savagely beaten and stabbed by
members of the Black Warriors, Nevada's governor moved swiftly
to replace the prison administrators, most of who had degrees
in education or psychology, with a tough, experienced San
Quentin prison warden, George Sumner. Sumner was lured into
Nevada with one express purpose: to lock up all gang leaders
and stop the violence.
The legislature appropriated enough money for Sumner to
install additional fencing around the housing units, along
with an armed catwalk and a revised culinary gun cage. To
house the most violent inmates, an isolated 40-cell super
max lockup block was constructed, incorporating the latest
state-of-the-art electronics.
Gang leaders were pulled up, interviewed, photographed,
and validated. The single most reliable gang membership
validator proved to be the gang-specific tattoo. Once validated,
the inmate was slammed in the new unit indefinitely and
was allowed out of his cell only briefly every other day
for exercise and a shower. Violence at max subsided dramatically.
Warden Sumner was promoted as director of prisons and replaced
by a sharp former army paratrooper.
During the mid-'80s, there was a sweeping change in the
prison population as younger and more violent inmates poured
into the system. African Americans claiming affiliation
with the Crips or Bloods were being seen with greater frequency,
and there was a dramatic increase in young Hispanic inmates,
many claiming affiliation with Los Angeles or Las Vegas
street gangs.
The new warden called a meeting of his sergeants and lieutenants
to discuss the problem. Valentine, now a sergeant, was given
the assignment of identifying and tracking all suspected
gang members among the newer generation of inmates. He was
encouraged to seek additional training but was told there
was no money available for this in the prison budget. He
would have to fund the training seminars himself. Cognizant
of the need for keeping abreast of the latest gang trends,
he began attending all available seminars on the subject,
most of which were out of state. He became an expert in
reading gang tattoos and compiled an extensive file on hundreds
of prison gang members within a few years.
When George Sumner left the Nevada prison system in the
early 1990s, it took a drastic turn. The new director of
prisons had an entirely different view of prison gang members
and how to best deal with them. Sergeant Valentine was called
into a meeting with the assistant director and told to stop
all gang identification efforts.
"To make a concerted effort to identify prison gang
members," Valentine was told, "does nothing more
than give them stature that they do not deserve. You are
hereby ordered to cease all activities pertaining to gang
identification." Furthermore, Sergeant Valentine was
advised that if he chose to continue attending gang seminars,
the prison could no longer provide him with administrative
leave. What this meant, of course, was that not only would
Valentine have to fund his own training, but he would have
to use his own accumulated annual leave.
His immediate supervisors, who were stunned by the latest
events, suggested that he continue working on his files
quietly. However, they cautioned him that if the administration
found out, he would most likely be severely reprimanded.
Valentine could have taken the easy way out and given up
the fight. But he, along with his immediate supervisors,
regarded the newly appointed director and his assistant
as neophytes from out of state, who would be around for
a short while and then move on. Thus, he continued working
on gang files quietly until, as predicted, the prison system
bid farewell to the director and his assistant.
The next director had been a longtime prison employee and
was a former official with the Department of Parole and
Probation. One of his top priorities, he announced, would
be to renew gang identification and tracking, with emphasis
on locking up all gang leaders. Once again, Sergeant Valentine
was permitted to work on gang identification without fear
of reprisal from his own administration.
After 20 years with the prison system, Sergeant Valentine
retired. He now spends his time writing, teaching gang identification
and management in the home and workplace, and working as
a consultant on gang matters. In 1995, Sergeant Valentine
published his first book, Gang Intelligence Manual
(Paladin Press), which became an instant success. In 1998,
he produced a two-part video (restricted to law enforcement
personnel) called Reading Gang Tattoos. His latest
book, released by Paladin in May 2000, is Gangs
and Their Tattoos.
Q & A
Paladin: Has the gang problem improved
at all since you published your first book, or is it only
getting worse?
Valentine: Sadly, the problem of illegal
gangs has continued to rise. Small-town America, at one
time isolated from big-city crime, has awakened to ponder
the realities of graffiti, group lawlessness and drive-by
shootings in their once quiet neighborhoods. This expansion
of gang activity from the larger cities into rural America
may be attributed in part to the efforts of big-city gang
members who have relocated in order to further expand their
criminal activities and empires. Despite the ever-increasing
law enforcement presence, gang activity continues to be
one of the nation's gravest problems.
Paladin: How has the ability to identify
gangsters helped police and prison guards deal with gang
violence and other activity?
Valentine: Gang tattoos are still the best
single identifier an officer can use when validating gang
membership. Using this criteria, street gang investigators
are compiling volumes of identifying photos and other data
on suspects. This information is stored on computer data
bases, disseminated and shared with other cooperating departments
nationwide. This has greatly enhanced the ability of law
enforcement agencies throughout the country to identify
and apprehend criminals. On the street, of course, the mere
wearing of a tattoo is not a crime and is only used as an
identifying feature. However, inside the nation's prisons,
the wearing of a gang tattoo can send the inmate to max
lockup for years. In California, for instance, when an inmate
is validated as a gang member, he or she is immediately
given a high-risk classification and moved to a high-security
institution.
Paladin: What is the newest challenge
on the gang front – both on the street and in prison?
Valentine: The newest challenge on the
gang front must be the emergence of the violent Mexican
drug cartels. These cartels are run by the most ruthless
gangsters yet seen in the Western Hemisphere, outdistancing
even the Colombian drug merchants. Just across the border
in Tijuana, cartel members have slaughtered scores of police
officers, judges, prosecutors, innocent bystanders, and
entire families, including children. On February 27, 2000,
Police Chief Alfredo de la Torre Marquez, 49, driving alone
after attending Mass, was cut down by cartel members who
pulled alongside his Suburban and opened fire with semiautomatic
weapons. Responding police counted more than 100 bullet
holes in him and the car. As of this date, no suspects have
been arrested in his slaying. However, one of the cars used
by the assassins was recovered and found to have been stolen
in Chula Vista, California, which exemplifies the ease with
which these persons move across the border. And herein lies
the threat to us. Nearly every major U.S. city has reported
the emergence of Mexican immigrant criminals, many of which
have ties to these drug cartels.
Inside the nation's prisons, this is even more evident.
Mexican immigrants – Border Brothers, Sinaloan Cowboys,
and other sophisticated criminal family members –
are forming their own prison gangs. These imports, at times,
will cooperate with the existing gangs in controlling the
prison drug markets. Others disavow this practice, preferring
instead to engage in open warfare with these existing gangs
for complete control of the prison rackets. And in some
of our prisons, where these immigrants now outnumber the
local talent, they do indeed control the drug market.
Paladin: In your opinion, which gangs
pose the biggest threat today and why?
Valentine: Difficult to say, since they
are all a threat to the nation's security. But those that
come to mind first are the ones that have developed a rigid
structure and maintain a strong leadership and are expanding
nationwide. This includes all gangs that ride under the
People Nation (Latin Kings and Vice Lords, for instance)
or the Folks Nation (Gangster Disciples).
These two pervasive organizations are spreading their poison
nationwide by recruiting extensively in disadvantagd areas
throughout the United States. And alarmingly, they have
targeted schools and playgrounds as recruitment pools. This
practice of getting to the nation's impressionable youth
so early may be creating a generational split that will
be difficult to overturn. And to compound the problem, young
females are joining the gangs and becoming every bit as
violent as are their male counterparts.
Another threat, often overlooked, is the political clout
these two "nations" have developed. In south Chicago,
for instance voting blocks made up of thousands of youthful
gang sympathizers have been able to sway the outcome of
local elections. Local political hacks play on this power,
in many instances, by developing strong friendships with
suspected gang leaders.
Paladin:
When you were working as a prison guard, how was your relationship
with gangbangers?
Valentine: Working inside the walls for
years afforded me the opportunity to observe gang members
(and other inmates) with their facades stripped away. By
this I mean a perceptive officer working face to face with
these people, year in and year out, should be able to discern
and use to his or her advantage the weaknesses, strengths,
and other characteristics and peculiarities of prisoners
– traits not so easily perceived by the street cop.
I got along fairly well with most inmate gang members.
I say most, because there were others – confrontational
inmates – with whom I didn't get along at all. And
as a line sergeant, I was expected to do what was required
to maintain security in the prison. With this type of inmate,
the taser, OC gas, or other use of force was generally necessary
to gain compliance. I personally didn't like to spend a
lot of time talking or negotiating with prison gang members.
With them, I learned that talking was time consuming and
usually inappropriate.
Fortunately, most of the hard-core gang members were in
lockup. This was the preferred method of controlling their
activities. That way, when one acted out or otherwise became
a problem, the problem was isolated to a small area –
usually his cell.
When out of his cell for a visit, classification, or other
procedures, the lockup inmate was usually restrained by
leg and belly chains. The exception to this was when the
inmate was out for exercise, usually in a restricted pen
and where there was overhead gun coverage. (Correctional
officers do not carry firearms in prison. Gun coverage is
provided by the perimeter towers and the rooftop gun posts
and catwalks.)
Paladin: Did you ever feel your life was
threatened?
Valentine: There were many times my life
was threatened by unruly inmates. But conwise inmates will
not threaten correctional officers because doing so brings
heat down upon them. For instance, we might have torn apart
a threatening inmate's cell many times in a single week
while looking for weapons. Things like this disrupt a prisoner's
day-to-day existence, and so most of them are not so vocal
(although they may be harboring such thoughts). But to answer
your question, prison correctional officers are grossly
outnumbered by inmates. And if the inmates prioritize harming
you above everything else, they will do it. They have the
numbers, the patience, and the strength to do so. A correctional
officer has to accept this fact and, of course, be prepared
at all times to utilize whatever advantage he or she may
have to prevent this from happening. Fear of the consequences
prevents most inmates from carrying out their threats.
Paladin: How did you deal with the day-to-day
threat of violence, and what was your most effective tactic
for avoiding it yourself?
Valentine: Contrary to popular thought,
violence in prison is not a daily event. Most days pass
uneventful. Although there are times when prison violence
is carefully conceived, most of the time it is unexpected
and jumps off suddenly. I learned to discern the subtle
cues that signaled impending problems. These include one
or more inmates trying to stare the officer down, unusual
groupings of inmates on the yard, more inmates asking for
protective custody, increased canteen sales, increased hostility
directed at the officers, and the time-tested "gut
feelings." Another invaluable help was information
gleaned from reliable informants.
Every savvy correctional officer who works the yard and
is face to face with inmates develops informants. Reliable
informants will let the officer know who is making weapons,
who is dealing drugs, who is planning trouble, and any other
significant circumstances. Does the inmate play a dangerous
game being a snitch? Absolutely! Snitches and baby rapers
(child molesters) are considered the lowest forms of life
in prison. Many have a short life span. What do the snitchers
expect in return? Favors: extra food, phone calls, a state
television set or radio, a different cell mate, a prison
job with a pay number (salary), or any number or other things
that tend to make time a little easier. Does the officer
step out of bounds by providing informants with perks not
available to the rest of the population? Yes, he or she
may. But it may be a matter of survival to do so.
Paladin: Do you see any end in sight in
terms of gang activity on the streets? What do you think
is the best way to try to curtail it?
Valentine: Drive-by shootings, mayhem,
and other violent criminal activity have become a nighttime
occurrence on America's streets. I see no quick end to it.
I think the courts should hand down mandatory prison sentences
for anyone convicted of these types of crimes, especially
if a weapon is involved.
The feds could do more by mobilizing gang task forces and
going after the guns of the law breakers, while lightening
up on the law-abiding citizen. Will they? Possibly now,
with a new administration and an ethical attorney general.
And I personally feel the citizens should be allowed more
freedom in defense of their lives, homes, and property.
I support sensible gun ownership by law-abiding citizens
along with concealed weapon permits. The jurisdictions where
this is allowed show a sharp reduction in crime.
Victims' rights. We have all watched the courts bend over
backward to ensure the guilty party is afforded all of his
rights, while ignoring the plight of the victim. This is
wrong and should be amended. The victim is most often the
forgotten party.
Citizen patrols working under the guidance of law enforcement
agencies can be a valuable tool in neighborhoods that have
a high crime rate. Graffiti hot lines work to alert the
police of areas frequented by gang members. In conclusion,
it becomes imperative that the law-abiding citizen take
an active role in identifying and reporting to the police
the presence of gang activity in their neighborhoods.
GANGS AND
THEIR TATTOOS
Identifying Gangbangers on the Street and in Prison

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