Houston Chronicle

Anti-gang raids net 220 arrests

Houston police, U.S. marshals join forces in crackdown on violent crime

- By St. John Barned-Smith

U.S. marshals and local police announced Thursday that they had arrested 340 people, including 220 suspected gang members or associates, during a monthslong crackdown in gang-infested Greater Houston.

The arrests came as part of an initiative called “Operation Triple Beam,” an effort the Marshal’s Service mounts each year in coordinati­on with local law enforcemen­t in cities around the country.

“You’re leveraging resources — local agencies, federal agencies. Any time we can work together, identifyin­g some of the most violent criminals in our city and the surroundin­g area, that’s what we should be doing,” Houston Police Department Assistant Chief Troy Finner said at a news conference Thursday announcing the anti-gang initiative.

Finner was flanked by U.S. Marshal Gary Blankinshi­p, dozens of Houston police and law officers from other state and federal agencies.

The anti-gang campaign employes three major tactics, with a focus on tracking down fugitive gang members, increasing

street patrols in neighborho­ods with gang activities, and prosecutin­g gang members and seizing their assets, explained Deputy Marshal Richard Hunter.

As with previous gang operations, officials declined to identify criminal suspects arrested in the case or identify gangs they were associated with, saying they did not want to provide notoriety to criminal cliques or endanger ongoing cases.

Houston’s trouble spots

Houston is among parts of the state with a high concentrat­ion of gang activity, with more than 350 documented gangs and approximat­ely 20,000 gang members calling the region home. A 2017 report from the Houston Police Department’s Gang Division reported that 57 of the 302 murders committed in Houston the year before were gang-related.

Last year, a monthslong, nationwide dragnet targeting gang members by the Houston office of Homeland Security Investigat­ions resulted in 43 Houstonare­a arrests, including a number of MS-13 gang members.

Harris County, according to a DPS gang report released last year, provides members to some of the principal gangs including the Houstones, a local clique of the Tango Blast gang. Also operating in Houston are the Bloods and Crips; the Aryan Brotherhoo­d of Texas, a white supremacis­t prison gang; and the MS-13, which began in Los Angeles and spread to El Salvador and is considered among the worst because of its highly violent tactics.

“These groups pose the greatest gang threat to Texas due to their relationsh­ips with Mexican cartels, high levels of transnatio­nal criminal activity, high levels of violence and overall statewide presence,” the report noted.

After a series of brutal slayings by MS-13 gang members, state and local leaders have both turned attention on gang violence in the past year. In April 2017, Gov. Greg Abbott announced an effort to restore “law and order,” establishi­ng an around-the-clock tactical operations center and infusing an additional $500,000 to combat gangs. The FBI allocated at least 10 more agents to the area to help out.

In Houston, Chief Art Acevedo has also spoken out against gang violence, particular­ly over a spate of homicides dating back to late 2016 that have claimed the lives of 11 children.

“This community needs to be outraged,” the chief said late last month. “Your child could be the next.”

After taking over the force in late 2016, Acevedo also shifted investigat­ors to focus on violent crimes like shootings and aggravated assaults and assigned more officers to night shifts, when gang and gun violence more often occur.

Craig Bellamy, captain of the South Gessner Division, added that violent crime is down 14 percent since the gang operation began, and nonviolent crimes are down 11 percent. The 340 arrests included 11 homicide arrests, he said.

“We were able to achieve a lot more than we would have been able to on our own,” he said.

He said each arrest has an exponentia­l effect.

“One guy can commit a lot of crimes,” he said. “If they can commit murder, they’re capable of doing everything (else).”

Officers also arrested fugitives wanted in 68 assault cases, 44 robberies, 25 burglaries and approximat­ely 100 narcotics cases.

Successful since 2010 launch

Since the U.S. marshals launched the “Triple Beam” operation in 2010, it has conducted 45 similar operations nationwide, Hunter said, arresting about 6,000 people, and seizing 1,500 illegal firearms, and millions in narcotics and confiscate­d cash. It is the first time the Marshals Service ran the operation in Houston, he said.

A similar operation in San Antonio last year netted more than 200 arrests, 70 guns, nearly $250,000 in confiscate­d cash and $176,153 worth of drugs taken off the streets.

Along with arrests, law enforcemen­t officers in Houston seized 62 firearms, $60,000 in currency, and narcotics with a street value of over $1 million, making it the most successful such operation since the Marshals launched the program.

Finner thanked the marshals and suggested they stick around.

“You’re always welcome here in Houston; we hope you all don’t leave,” he said. “Lets go to another side of Houston and do the same thing over there.”

 ?? Karen Warren / Houston Chronicle ?? U.S. Marshal Gary Blankinshi­p announces the success of the joint Operation Triple Beam.
Karen Warren / Houston Chronicle U.S. Marshal Gary Blankinshi­p announces the success of the joint Operation Triple Beam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States