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- <text id=90TT1087>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Up From The Streets
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 34
- Up from the Streets
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Instead of dying out, Detroit gangs have been reborn as criminal
- empires
- </p>
- <p>By S.C. Gwynne
- </p>
- <p> It was the kind of research project most social scientists
- avoid. The researcher had to lay out $50,000 of his own money.
- He spent six years in one of Detroit's most dangerous
- neighborhoods in the company of two of the most violent street
- gangs in America. He routinely asked highly personal questions
- of edgy young men who earn small fortunes selling drugs and
- have few qualms about killing people who inquire too closely
- about their activities.
- </p>
- <p> For obvious reasons, most research on violent urban
- subcultures is done with computer printouts, not with tape
- recorders and notebooks on the mean streets. Not so with Carl
- S. Taylor, adjunct professor of criminal justice at Michigan
- State University and director of the Criminal Justice Program
- at Jackson Community College. In 1980 Taylor set out to study
- Detroit's two biggest and most powerful youth gangs: Young Boys
- Inc. and the Pony Down. In the process, he encountered four
- additional groups. The resulting book, Dangerous Society,
- published in February by Michigan State University Press,
- provides a harrowing portrait of how the gangs transformed
- themselves from opportunistic street punks into sophisticated
- drug-dealing empires that rake in hundreds of millions a year.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor's work is of far more than academic significance. His
- major discovery is that even as Young Boys Inc. and the Pony
- Down were unraveling in the mid-1980s following the jailings
- of their leaders, they were being quickly and silently replaced
- by far more sophisticated and highly secretive business
- operations. Taylor's findings contradict the sanguine attitude
- of fifth-term Mayor Coleman Young and his political allies, who
- insist that the Motor City no longer has a serious gang
- problem. Says inspector Benny Napoleon, who monitors gang
- activity for the Detroit police: "We have nothing remotely
- resembling a large, well-organized gang."
- </p>
- <p> Taylor presents convincing evidence to the contrary: the
- groups have become less obvious to the police simply because
- they have shifted into more covert and more profitable
- enterprises. "Detroit kids just laugh when they hear people in
- L.A. are still wearing colors," says Taylor. "What's sweeping
- this city are what I call CEOs--covert entrepreneurial
- organizations. They do not wear gold chains or beepers or Fila
- sweatsuits anymore. They're probably wearing ragged clothes and
- driving ratty cars. They've seceded from the union."
- </p>
- <p> Cocaine sales fueled the evolution of Detroit's gangs. They
- began as what Taylor calls "scavengers," youths preying on the
- most vulnerable residents of their neighborhoods. But when the
- double whammy of crack and job cutbacks in the auto plants
- smashed into Detroit's poorest areas during the 1980s, the
- gangs developed "corporate" organizations with a concern for
- the bottom line and enough discipline to use violence mainly
- to protect their drug-dealing turfs.
- </p>
- <p> Though smaller and far less visible than the original Young
- Boys Inc., which pioneered the use of hard-to-prosecute
- juveniles to sell drugs, the new-style crews have mimicked its
- security-conscious structure. "In Y.B.I., one of the keys was
- that the left hand didn't know what the right hand was doing,"
- Taylor says. "That's still true. At the top of each
- organization you have what amounts to a wholesale operation."
- </p>
- <p> Though most of the membership is drawn from the impoverished
- underclass, an increasing number of recruits from middle-class
- families have been lured by the promise of quick financial
- rewards. Taylor also discovered that female gangs, once
- considered relatively harmless adjuncts to male crews, have
- become dangerous, independent groups. In an interview with
- Taylor's research team, one female gang member bragged of
- ousting unwanted guests who tried to "bum rush" a party. The
- guests fled, she said, after "I cut loose on their fake asses
- with that Uzi."
- </p>
- <p> Taylor believes that gang members share a grossly distorted
- version of the values mainstream Americans hold dear. The
- difference is that gang members want money and status faster,
- and are willing to kill to obtain them. Asked to identify his
- role models, one 14-year-old cited the cocaine-snorting
- protagonist of the movie Scarface and Chrysler chairman Lee
- Iacocca. "Lee Iacocca is smooth and he be dissing
- [disrespecting, in street lingo] everybody," the youth
- explained. In some cases, parents encourage their children's
- criminal careers. Said one: "My momma talk about how proud she
- is of me making doughski. She used to dog me and say I wasn't
- s---, but now she's proud."
- </p>
- <p> Taylor grew up in the West Side neighborhood from which both
- Young Boys Inc. and the Pony Down sprang. He escaped with a
- scholarship to Michigan State. While pursuing a master's degree
- in criminal justice and a doctorate in education, he started
- a private security company. He first became aware of Young Boys
- Inc. when several of its red-sweatsuit-clad members swaggered
- into a concert at Joe Louis Arena in 1980.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor urges an all-out war on the poverty, poor schooling,
- broken family structures and dire job prospects that make the
- urban underclass a seedbed for crime. Unfortunately, such
- prescriptions are not only familiar but also too expensive and
- time consuming to attract much political support. Detroit is
- already a case study of what happens when the conditions that
- produce gangs are allowed to fester. Warns Taylor: "We need to
- face up to the fact that there is a major crisis in this city."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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