Lee Quiñones (1989) – Videograf 10 Segment. Graffitivideos.com from Carl Weston on Vimeo.
Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD – OUT NOW!!
You can get this 2 hour dvd from: GRAFFITIVIDEOS.COM
Lee Quiñones (1989) – Videograf 10 Segment. Graffitivideos.com from Carl Weston on Vimeo.
Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD – OUT NOW!!
You can get this 2 hour dvd from: GRAFFITIVIDEOS.COM
Rammellzee was a good Dude!

Look at the styles in the background

Shadi caught one of New Yorks top bombers in action last winter.
I decided to go out and take photos at 5am during the snow storm and I noticed a shadowy figure in the darkness was doing his thing. I noticed him one second and the next he was gone. A few days later I noticed what he finished what he started.

Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD Coming April 10th. from Carl Weston on Vimeo.
Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD Coming April 10th…one of the featured artist is: Queen Andrea
Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD Coming April 10th. from Carl Weston on Vimeo.
10 issues of Videograf in 20 years…Not Bad!
Law enforcement agencies, judges and politicians around the country are stepping up their battle against graffiti artists. But the crackdown may only have emboldened them.
In March 2009, a man identified by Pittsburgh Police as “HERT,” the city’s second most-wanted graffiti artist, entered the Allegheny County Courthouse for an appearance stemming from a prior arrest.
But when he arrived, he was informed that police also had warrants for his arrest on 69 misdemeanors and four felony counts of criminal mischief based on estimated damages from vandalism caused by the 22-year-old’s alleged activities of spray-painting his tag on public and private buildings, railroad properties, and nearly a dozen neighborhoods in and around Pittsburgh’s downtown corridor. HERT was then handcuffed and escorted from the courtroom.
TV cameras were there to capture the moment, and Detective Daniel Sullivan of Pittsburgh Police Bureau’s Graffiti Task Force, made sure the media knew the significance of the arrest.
“He was the number-two tagger in the city, hitting more than 100 pieces of property, and that doesn’t include outside boroughs,” Sullivan told reporters, adding that HERT had caused an estimated $212,000 in damages to private and public property during his graffiti career.
The case of HERT, who is still awaiting trial, illustrates what some observers believe is an increasing crackdown on graffiti across the country. While, nationwide statistics on graffiti crime do not exist, the reallocation of police department budgets and resources suggests that cities are increasingly using prosecutions as a weapon to end the practice. For example, Graffiti Tracker, an Omaha, Nebraska-based company, which investigates graffiti crimes under contract with law enforcement agencies or sells them analysis software, is doing a thriving business. According to Timothy Kephart, Graffiti Tracker’s CEO, the company has over $1 million in contracts with police departments in 45 cities, towns and municipalities.
And more cities like Pittsburgh have created “vandal squads” dedicated to capturing high-profile graffiti artists, similar to the force New York City instituted decades ago.
But the subtext of this battle is cultural.
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