Meanwhile, the Brady Campaign Against Gun Violence has released its 2008
State Scorecards, which grade states on how they are regulating law-abiding
citizens' Second Amendment rights, rather than criminals'.
The FBI's gang population estimate is up 200,000 since 2005. But Bruce
Ferrell, chairman of the Midwest Gang Investigators Association, whose group
monitors gang activity in 10 states, tells USA Today the number of gang
members may be even higher than the report's estimate.
"We've seen an expansion for the last 10 years," says Ferrell, who has
reviewed the report. "Each year, the numbers are moving forward."
From the story:
The report says about 900,000 gang members live "within local communities
across the country," and about 147,000 are in U.S. prisons or jails.
"Most regions in the United States will experience increased gang membership
… and increased gang-related criminal activity," the report concludes, citing a
recent rise in gangs on the campuses of suburban and rural schools.
Among the report's other findings:
•Last year, 58% of state and local law enforcement agencies reported that
criminal gangs were active in their jurisdictions, up from 45% in 2004.
•More gangs use the Internet, including encrypted e-mail, to recruit and to
communicate with associates throughout the U.S. and other countries.
•Gangs, including outlaw motorcycle groups, "pose a growing threat" to law
enforcement authorities along the U.S.-Canadian border. The U.S. groups are
cooperating with Canadian gangs in various criminal enterprises, including drug
smuggling.
Assistant FBI Director Kenneth Kaiser, the bureau's criminal division chief,
told USA Today gangs have largely followed the migration paths of
immigrant laborers.
He says the groups are moving to avoid the scrutiny of larger metropolitan
police agencies in places such as Los Angeles. "These groups were hit hard in
L.A." by law enforcement crackdowns, "but they are learning from it," Kaiser is
quoted as saying.
The story goes on to say that one group that continues to spread despite law
enforcement efforts is the violent Salvadoran gang known as MS-13.
Michael Sullivan, the departing director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives, told USA Today the gang's dependence on
shocking violence to advance extortion, prostitution and other criminal
enterprises has frustrated attempts to infiltrate and disrupt the insular
group's activities.
"MS-13's foothold in the U.S. is expanding," Sullivan says.
MS-13 is the abbreviation for the gang also known as Mara Salvatrucha. The
group gained national prominence in the 1980s in Los Angeles, where members were
linked to incidents involving unusual brutality.
Since then, it has formed cells or "cliques" across the U.S., says Aaron
Escorza, chief of the FBI's MS-13 National Gang Task Force.
The task force was launched in 2004 amid concerns about the gang's rapid
spread.
Escorza told USA Today a "revolving door" on the border has kept the
gang's numbers steady — about 10,000 in the U.S. — even as many illegal
immigrant members are deported.
Escorza went on to say that the FBI, which has two agents in El Salvador to
help identify and track members in Central America and the United States, plans
to dispatch four more agents to Guatemala and Honduras.
"They evolve and adapt," he says. "They know what law enforcement is doing.
Word of mouth spreads quickly."
Within days of the release of this federal report, indicating that gangs are
responsible for up to 80% of crimes in communities across the nation, the Brady
Campaign Against Gun Violence released its 2008 State Scorecards, which grade
states on how they are regulating law-abiding citizens' Second
Amendment rights, rather than criminals'.
The Bradys fail to mention how these measures will stop gangs and other
criminals, who almost universally do NOT obtain their firearms through gun
dealers or gun shows, who do NOT obtain permits in localities where they are
already required, who typically do NOT use tactical rifles in the commission of
crimes, and who, by their very nature, do not comply with laws of any kind.
They also fail to explain why they support disarming law-abiding citizens in
places where we know the vast majority of multiple-victim public shootings
occur.
If the Brady bunch were truly about "creating an America free from gun
violence, where all Americans are safe at home, at school, at work, and in our
communities," as they claim on their website, they would be supporting
legislation aimed at criminals like the murderous gangs responsible for 80% of
crimes in this country, rather than laws aimed at law-abiding American citizens'
right to bear arms for their own procection.
It is time for legislators to recognize that the gun ban lobby's real
goals are not to reduce crime, but rather to turn legitimate gun
ownership into a criminal act.
Chad D. Baus is the Buckeye Firearms Association Vice Chairman. www.BuckeyeFirearms.org