3/18/2005


LA CITY COUNCIL ARE ACCESSORIES TO MURDER

Anyone wanting to know about the 200,000 strong gang known as MS-13 needs to start with Heather MacDonald, who is to street gangs what Claudia Rosett is to the Oil For Food scandal. There are two huge street gangs: one is called the 18th Street Gang, which is conducting a ten year reign of terror on the West Coast, particularly in Los Angeles; the second is the MS-13, a 200,000 plus international terror gang that engages in everything from murder to computer hacking. Both U.S. gangs (MS-13 is international) are comprised mostly of illegal aliens immune from arrest because of the Los Angeles City council, which passed the infamous Special Ordinance 40 that makes cops into criminals if they ask an arrested gang member if he is here illegally or not. Most big cities are now using SO 40 even thought their local city governments haven't passed it to shield illegal criminals from arrest. There is a very good overview of the entire international structure of the gangs HERE. The thing that would help most would be if victims of crimes would sue the LA City Council members for accessories to the murders, robberies, and other mayhem committed by these illegal alien gang members. They have connections to Communist guerillas along the southern Mexican border, and international terror orgs. One small outtake from the above link:

In El Salvador, the availability of military-grade munitions at bargain-basement prices provides the MS in the United States with cheap and relatively easy access to heavy firepower. Spending U.S. currency in El Salvador, a hand grenade sells for $1 to $2, and an M-16 rifle for $200 to $220. On the United States end of the pipeline, there are a number of high-demand items, but topping the wish-list for the Salvadoran MS are handguns, automobiles and personal computers, none of which are easily found in El Salvador. In fact, demand for handguns is so high that they are often accepted as payment for drug transactions, then either sent back to El Salvador as bartered-wealth or for actual use. The situation is much the same with automobiles, which are stolen in the United States and exported to South America where they are often traded for drugs in deals with cartels. These transactions are so prolific and so vital that an estimated 80 percent of the cars driven in El Salvador were reported as stolen in the United States.
Get hip to this because it's very very bad.