Walker County Messenger

Chattanoog­a police warn Walker County residents about an influx of gang activity

- By Josh O’Bryant

Chattanoog­a police visited Rossville to inform residents about gang activity north of the state line when the Walker County Sheriff’s Department hosted a Gangs Community Education event at New Covenant Baptist Church in Rossville on March 30.

Chattanoog­a Police Department investigat­ors spoke to about 50, telling about how gang members could travel into Northwest Georgia.

Investigat­ors Colton Krumrie and Charles Decker spent time detailing what gangs are and how to identify gang members in public.

Photograph­s and video footage were not allowed to be taken during the meeting due to sensitive material in the presentati­on.

Residents asked several questions about gang activity in the area, including how to spot it, what gang member signs mean, and how to identify it in schools.

One of the largest well known gangs in Chattanoog­a are the Gangster Disciples. Other gangs in the Chattanoog­a area include varying sets extended from the Crips and the Bloods, with sets that vary form one another. Those sets will feud with other sets at a given time, investigat­ors said.

The investigat­ors informed those in attendance on why someone would join a gang.

Some reasons include protection from bullies in schools and neighborho­ods, self-esteem issues, issues at home (single parent families), peer pressure, being born into the gang life, garnering respect from peers, media influences like movies, music and social media.

Social media has played a larger role in gang activity as gangs will often recruit members or brag about what they do online.

There are even 17-year-old gang leaders, Krumrie said. Some join gangs as early as age 12. There are basically only two ways out of a gang: prison or death.

Krumrie said there is an uptick in meth and heroine sales among some of the gangs in Chattanoog­a.

Parents and grandparen­ts are encouraged to be aware of what their children are doing, posting online, on their school folders, just to name a few ways to deter a child from joining a gang.

 ??  ?? About 50 people attended a Gangs Community Education event at New Covenant Baptist Church in Rossville to learn more about possible gang activity in the area. (Messenger photo/Josh O’Bryant)
About 50 people attended a Gangs Community Education event at New Covenant Baptist Church in Rossville to learn more about possible gang activity in the area. (Messenger photo/Josh O’Bryant)

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