The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW TRACKING AREA GANGS IS BECOMING MORE DIFFICULT

Clayton’s gang activity is less overt than in the past, officials lament.

- By Tammy Joyner tjoyner@ajc.com

When Clayton County police detective Rodney Bryant began tracking gangs seven years ago, they were easy to spot.

Gang-bangers wore certain identifiab­le colors. Grafitti as well as gang symbols, including hand signs, were boldly displayed. They staked their claim in certain parts of the community.

As Clayton becomes home to more residents with temporary ties to the county, authoritie­s say gang activity is more fluid, not bound by neighborho­od or county lines. The county’s gang activity isn’t as overt as in the past but it’s on par with gang activity throughout metro Atlanta, where authoritie­s say gang membership is on the rise as new members are documented in the region almost daily.

“You used to see them running around on TV. Everybody had colors on. It’s not that easy anymore,” said Major Bruce Parks, head of the Clayton gang unit.

Gangs have become adept at social media, using it to communicat­e and keep tabs on each other, authoritie­s say. They’re committing crimes — and bringing their

beef across county lines and state borders.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on sat down with the gang unit recently to talk about gang activity in the county. The unit said their work has become more complicate­d as gang activity and crimes, rivalries and beefs have spread beyond street and neighborho­od disputes.

The unit declined to give specifics as to the size, names and territorie­s of gangs in the county but did identify seven key gangs. The unit did not want to give undue notoriety to the gangs by naming them.

In Clayton, a lot of gang activity is centered around apartment complexes where residents come and go, Parks said. Some gangs may have up to 50 members while others may have as few as a dozen, Parks added. Drugs, car theft and home invasions typically help finance their operation, authoritie­s say.

Gang activity may not appear to be as overt as 10 to 15 years ago, but the reasons kids join gangs remain the same, as Clayton school officials recently learned during a series of gang awareness programs.

“They join because they feel it’s protection,” said Thomas Trawick, head of safety and security for Clayton schools. “Some ( join) because they want to be part of an organizati­on. They felt people in the gang care about them because they don’t have that support system at home. Some do it for the excitement. I told them it’s a dead end that leads to prison or death.”

Despite the recent bump in violence, the head of Clayton’s juvenile court system said Clayton’s gang activity is nowhere near what it used to be. In 2006, Clayton’s juvenile courts recorded 98 gang-related activities. Today, that number is nine, Clayton Chief Juvenile Judge Steve Teske said. Teske attributes the decrease to a series of initiative­s in recent years with the local school district, courts and law enforcemen­t that has cut the number of students going into the judicial system.

Clayton’s gang activity does not operate in a vacuum.

Authoritie­s say they are aware of at least 40,000 gang members in metro Atlanta but suspect there are far more. For every documented gang member, there are at least another three gang members operating under law enforcemen­t’s radar, according to James Hurley Jr. of the FBI’s Safe Street Gang Task Force’s Atlanta division. Hurley noted gang membership is on the rise as new members are documented in the metro area each day.

“As people move and migrate to the suburbs or even back to more congested areas such as intown, gang members move too,” Hurley said. “It is not uncommon in the metro area for gang members — even gang leaders — to live in cities or even counties other than where the bulk of their gangs’ criminal activities occur.”

“What we’ve seen and I’ve prosecuted is gangs come in from other parts of the metro area and wreaking havoc,” said Kathryn Powers, executive assistant district attorney in the Clayton District Attorney’s office. She is part of the DA’s major case division, which includes prosecutio­n of gangs. One way the division keeps tabs on gangs is through social media.

In the past five years, metro Atlanta authoritie­s have seen an influx of national gangs, with many local gangs linking up with or being absorbed by the national gangs. Some of the gangs metro Atlanta authoritie­s have encountere­d include The Gangster Disciples, East Coast and West Coast Bloods sets, various Crips sets, Vice Lords, MS-13, 18th Street Gang, Aryans, Surenos and La Gran Familia.

Today’s gangs are more organized, have better-defined hierarchie­s and are tied to other gangs outside metro Atlanta. Gangs have become more brazen. In addition to drug dealing, armed robberies and identity thefts, gangs are committing more mur- ders, shootings and assaults, according to the FBI’s Safe Streets unit.

That point was brutally underscore­d with the Oct. 22 killing of 15-year-old Daveon Coates and his 11-yearold sister, Tatiyana. The Clayton siblings were believed to have been killed by Chattanoog­a gang members looking for another teenager who was not home at the time. Authoritie­s also are looking into whether a third unrelated teenager’s Nov. 1 death may be gang-related.

“It’s a shocking series of acts. In my seven and a half years, I’ve not seen this type of loss of life for these aged children in this short of time,” Powers said. “I wish I had an explanatio­n for it. I was born and raised here and I can’t think of one thing that would have led to that at one time.”

The killings prompted Clayton school officials to hold a series of gang awareness rallies at the county’s 11 high schools. The district plans to do similar rallies at the middle schools this month.

“Everything that happens in the community does have an impact in the schools,” Clayton Schools Superinten­dent Luvenia Jackson said. “We want to be more preventive. We want the children to understand how things happen in the community, their subdivisio­n really impacts all of their other environmen­ts.”

In his five months on the job, Clayton schools security chief Trawick said he has not seen any gang activity on school grounds.

“I’m not going to be naive and say we don’t have gangs in the school,” said Trawick who headed Clark Atlanta’s security force before joining Clayton schools. All high school students are checked to make sure no guns are coming on campus, Trawick said. The district will return to using metal detectors when students return this month.

 ?? PHIL SKINNER / SPECIAL 2016 ?? Clayton County Schools Police Chief Thomas Trawick listens to student Quincy Jean-Louis after an assembly of Jonesboro High students about the consequenc­es of being involved in gangs.
PHIL SKINNER / SPECIAL 2016 Clayton County Schools Police Chief Thomas Trawick listens to student Quincy Jean-Louis after an assembly of Jonesboro High students about the consequenc­es of being involved in gangs.

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