Arab Times

AG and Trump talk need to fight ‘gang’

‘Don’t be too nice’

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, July 29, (AP): Attorney General Jeff Sessions is eager to use his aggressive work against the MS-13 street gang to help mend his tattered relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump. “I hope so,” he said Friday, trying to turn the corner from a week of sour performanc­e reviews from his boss.

“It’s one of many issues that we share deep commitment­s about,” he told The Associated Press from a private room in the headquarte­rs of El Salvador’s national police force, where he had met law enforcemen­t officials to talk about quashing the violent transnatio­nal gang.

That common concern about MS-13 was on display Friday as Trump spoke about the gang in Long Island, where MS-13 violence has resurfaced with a vengeance, and as Sessions toured a gang stronghold, motoring around El Salvador’s graffiti-laced streets alongside rifle-wielding police officers who had tried to clear the neighborho­od of gangsters before he arrived. MS-13 has roots both in Central America and Los Angeles.

But in his speech vowing to crush MS-13, Trump never mentioned Sessions. “These are animals,” Trump told law enforcemen­t officials and relatives of crime victims in Brentwood, in Suffolk County, New York, where MS-13 has been blamed for a string of gruesome murders, including the killing of four young men in April.

The president battered Sessions for days with a series of tweets calling him weak and ineffectiv­e, his discontent centered on Sessions’ decision months ago to recuse himself from the investigat­ion into Trump campaign ties to Russia. Sessions said Thursday he won’t resign unless Trump asks him to and spoke loyally of the president while saying he was right to take himself out of that investigat­ion after acknowledg­ing he had met the Russian ambassador during the campaign.

Sessions

Message

Though thousands of miles apart, Trump and Sessions seemed aligned in their message against MS-13. The gang has become a focal point in the national immigratio­n debate, although it is in some respects a homegrown organizati­on and it is unclear how many of its members are in the US illegally.

“It is in a very expansive mode and we need to slam the door on that,” Sessions said in the AP interview. “We need to stop them in their tracks and focus on this dangerous group.”

The intense focus on gang violence is a departure for a Justice Department that has viewed as more urgent the prevention of cyberattac­ks from foreign criminals, internatio­nal bribery and the threat of homegrown violent extremism.

But alarm about the gang has grown as it has preyed on largely suburban, immigrant communitie­s. Several top officials in Sessions’ office have experience prosecutin­g the gang in Baltimore, Alexandria, Virginia, and other cities.

MS-13, or the Mara Salvatruch­a, is believed by federal prosecutor­s to have more than 10,000 members in the US, a mix of immigrants from Central America and US-born members. The gang originated in Los Angeles in the 1980s then entrenched itself in Central America when its leaders were deported.

MS-13 and rival groups in El Salvador now control entire towns, rape girls and young women, kill competitor­s and massacre students, bus drivers and merchants who refuse to pay extortion.

One purpose of Sessions’ trip was to learn more about how the gang’s activities in El Salvador affect crime in the US Officials believe major gang leaders are using cellphones from Salvadoran prisons to instruct members who have crossed into the US illegally to kill rivals and extort immigrants.

Zach Terwillige­r, who prosecuted gangs in the Eastern District of Virginia before taking a position in the deputy attorney general’s office, found that to be true in some of his cases.

“We have to coordinate our intelligen­ce,” Terwillige­r said. “I don’t think you can understand MS-13 violence and the way they conduct themselves in the US unless you come down here.” He and leaders of the department’s criminal division traveled with Sessions.

Support

During his two-day trip, his first visit to El Salvador, the attorney general wandered through a crowded jail where members of rival gangs wearing white Tshirts sat side-by-side in large cells, their backs facing the curious onlookers. He met members of a transnatio­nal anti-gang task force and pledged his support for El Salvador’s Attorney General Douglas Melendez, congratula­ting him on charges laid over the last two days against more than 700 gang members, many of them from MS-13.

Sessions recalled early conversati­ons he had with Trump about the gang. “He saw the violent murders in Islip, New York, and he’s asked about it personally,” Sessions said. Trump then crafted an executive order in the first weeks of his presidency, directing the Justice Department to go after transnatio­nal gangs, and Sessions was eager to make it a priority.

Talking tough on illegal immigratio­n and violent crime, President Donald Trump appeared Friday to advocate rougher treatment of people in police custody, speaking dismissive­ly of the police practice of shielding the heads of handcuffed suspects as they are being placed in patrol cars.

“Don’t be too nice,” Trump told law enforcemen­t officers in Suffolk County, New York, during a visit to highlight his administra­tion’s efforts to crack down on the street gang known as MS-13. The violent internatio­nal group has terrorized communitie­s on Long Island and in other parts of the country.

The president urged Congress to find money to pay for 10,000 Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers “so that we can eliminate MS-13.”

Trump said his administra­tion is removing these gang members from the United States but said, “We’d like to get them out a lot faster and when you see ... these thugs being thrown into the back of the paddy wagon, you just see them thrown in, rough, I said, ‘Please don’t be too nice.’”

Trump then spoke dismissive­ly of the practice by which arresting officers shield the heads of handcuffed suspects as they are placed in police cars.

“I said, ‘You could take the hand away, OK,’” he said, drawing applause from many in the audience, which included federal and law enforcemen­t personnel from the New York-New Jersey area.

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