Archive for April, 2008

$128,000 bail set in graffiti case

Monday, April 28th, 2008

[Via:www.delawareonline.com]

Now 19-year-old Derrick Noel is in jail, facing more than 130 criminal charges for vandalism which officials said amounts to more than $500,000 in property damage.
Noel, who lives in the 2500 block of Newport Gap Pike in Prices Corner, is being held in Young Correctional Institution in Wilmingtonafter failing to post $128,000 secured bail.

The investigation into the suspect, who uses the tag “EASY,” “EASE” and the “Fast Hands Crew,” began April 8 when New Castle County police Cpl. Michael Hopkins stopped a car parked diagonally in the fire lane and saw two men quickly entering the car trying to hide abaseball bat.

When the officer told the pair to secure the bat in the trunk for safekeeping, police said he spotted a cache of spray paint cans, and an instrument designed to spray paint graffiti, along with albums of 216 photographs of graffiti images painted on rail cars.

Graffiti Vandals Caught After Two-Year Tagging Spree

Friday, April 25th, 2008

The crimes happen in seconds, but what is left behind can last for years. Two graffiti vandals are in custody after police say they went on a two year spree of tagging. Just two examples of why Nevada tax payers shell out $30 million a year to clean up the mess.

A sign outside a new elementary school shows happy kids saying, “Thank you for building our school.” But under the cover of darkness, two people took a cheap can of spray paint and did tens of thousands of dollars in damage.

“It is estimated that the damage done to the buildings there at the school that’s under construction is between $40,000 and $50,000,” said Officer Jose Montoya Metro.

Nothing was off limits. The front door to the school, poles and entire walls became a canvass board. It’s not a pretty picture.

Two young brothers confessed to police that they’ve been at this for two years.

“One of them is 12 and one of them is 14. You rewind back two years, put them at 10 and 12 years of age and this is something that certainly catches our attention,” said Montoya.

Metro tracked the vandals following their own graffiti tags. From the spray paint, the two juvenile suspects emerged. Their names aren’t being released, nor do we know where the parents were for the two years while the boys left graffiti across several neighborhoods.

“There’s a good chance that the parents may be held accountable for this type of damage because of their juvenile status,” said Montoya.

Tagging is a huge problem is this area.

“Only takes like ten seconds, go over there, they’re gone,” said student Robert Leyva. “It’s stupid. It’s not even worth going to jail for some paint.”

But after their two-year crime spree, two brothers are in jail. Police hope more parents will see the writing on the wall.

“It starts at home. We need to be responsible for our children. We need to know who they’re hanging out with. We need to know what they’re doing,” said Montoya.

We’re told the kids face several misdemeanor counts and a felony because the damage was so costly.

Metro says if you actually see someone placing graffiti, call 911. They say don’t approach the vandal because many are violent and carry weapons.

police graffiti

Friday, April 25th, 2008

this toronto policeman is asked to help fill in some graffiti work. say cheese.

[Via:www.graffitifilms.tv]

Graffiti Research Lab: Trailer

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Q&A with graffiti artist GHOST, whose work is in a Seattle gallery

Friday, April 25th, 2008

By Jeff Albertson [Via:Seattle Times]

New York City graffiti artist GHOST, or “Cousin Frank” to his friends, is a long way from stumbling through the dark recesses of New York’s subway tunnels looking for an idle train to “bomb.” The veteran graffiti writer, who got his start in the influential and well-documented New York City scene in the 1970s, is now pushing the art form from trains to gallery walls.

GHOST’s show at Seattle’s BLVD Gallery is a collection of highly stylized acrylics on canvas. The bright neon and pastel colors on clean white backdrops recall the “Wild Style” of graffiti art with its blocky letters and flashy colors; the comiclike characters he draws with big dopey eyes and sloppy wet tongues refer back to underground comic artists of the ’60s and ’70s.

GHOST spoke earlier this week by phone about his work and the transition from being a graffiti writer to an artist.

Q: What role have comics played in influencing your work?

A: As a kid I was more into Marvel [Comics], because of where I lived there wasn’t a lot of underground-comic kind of stuff; I wasn’t really in touch with that, but as I got older my friends turned me on to it. I was more into Rick Griffin [the artist who designed many early Grateful Dead posters], I thought his line work was amazing. To this day I think his stuff is incredible. For a long time I was strictly into black ink drawings. I never really liked color.

Q: Tell me about the transition from trains to galleries.

A: For years I was against it. ‘Cause I was just in that mind-set that graf belongs on trains and to this day I still believe that to a strong degree, even though I don’t do it anymore. As the trains got clean and I got older, I still had all this energy to paint and I just had to put it somewhere. I just drew for years after I stopped writing. At the time I never went to school to paint, it was just something I had to learn over time.

Q: Does it surprise you to find out who is buying your work? Not street-level hipsters, but serious middle-age collectors with money?

A: I was rather excited about the BLVD show because it was the first show I almost sold out. A lot of kids that look up to me or like what I do can’t afford it — but do I want to get to a place where I’m only selling to the rich who are gonna throw it in the basement somewhere and not even get seen or just wait for my death? Or is it gonna be like a kid who saves up his money and puts it in his house, cause I appreciate that more?

Q: When was the last time you “bombed a train”?

A: Quite a while [ago]. I only do legal stuff. I’m at that age, I don’t need problems in my life. I’m tryin’ to relax, and I don’t want to have to look over my shoulder every day.

Yet another graffiti snitch program!

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

City offers cash for graffiti tips
Hayward hopes $500 rewards will help rein in costly vandalism

By Matt O’Brien [Via:www.insidebayarea.com]

HAYWARD — See graffiti in action in your neighborhood?
You could be rewarded with $500 for providing information that helps catch and convict a graffiti vandal. The Hayward City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to launch a Stop Graffiti reward program to curb the illegal scribbling and spray-painting that cost the city an estimated $350,000 last year, not including unknown additional costs to private homes and businesses. By leaving a detailed tip on the new Stop Graffiti hot line, 510-5XX-5XXX, callers could become eligible for the award if the information proves helpful in solving a graffiti case. Hayward police say about 30 percent to 50 percent of local graffiti is related to gang activity, and officers arrested 24 people last year on gang-related graffiti charges.But the arrests hardly put a dent in a citywide problem that forced officials last year to replace 189 street signs, water-blast 360 graffiti-marred locations and otherwise remove 1,750 graffiti marks from sound walls, overpasses, control boxes and light poles. Officials said they will take $5,000 out of the city’s budget to provide the rewards, and later work with the county court system to replenish funds through penalties such as fines, restitution and liens on property. Councilman Bill Ward said he also wanted to “get the word out to parents or responsible adults” that they could be financially liable when a child vandalizes property with graffiti.Want to help remove graffiti this weekend? The Keep Hayward Clean and Green Task Force sponsors its latest litter clean-up and graffiti removal event from 8:30 a.m. to noon Saturday along Jackson Street and Cypress Avenue.

Horses bombing!

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

[Via:BBC]

Vandals sprayed red paint on the faces of two horses in Surrey.

The attack on the horses in Mayford, near Woking, took place between the afternoon of 15 April and the morning of 17 April.

Written in red on an adjacent bus stop in Guildford Road and a grit bin in Maybourne Rise are several expletives and the words “Matt Riley aka Barney”.

Police, who are trying to contact the horses’ owners, said the culprits had “cruelly targeted living creatures”.

Police are linking the horse attack to the graffiti on nearby sites.

Vandal Squad Cop Cashes in Graffiti Tales

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

[Via:razorapple.com]

Photo of NYPD Vandal Squad undercover at Adidas’ End to End Project by Trubdizzle.

For the past couple weeks, stories have been going around about a former NYPD vandal squad cop set to release a book on some of New York’s most prolific graffiti writers. This rumor was confirmed when Amazon added the forthcoming book to its website. The book, Vandal Squad by Joseph “Joe Blow” Rivera is expected to be released by Miss Rosen Editions, the “urban culture and lifestyle” imprint of Powerhouse Books, in December 2008.

Recently, Graffnews.com, which has sourced the most information on the book, posted a list of writers who are expected to be named, which include SI, LES, FEES, FACET, PEN, SHINE, DECK, CAP, MENOS, JA, FOE, and SKUF. They also posted an excerpt from Rivera about tracking down MENOS..

[Read More]

Tracy 168 Train Bombing Footage- super8 film 1974

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

ANTI-GRAFFITI ‘INSURANCE’

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

TRADERS TAKE OUT ANTI-GRAFFITI ‘INSURANCE’ AGAINST VANDALS

Vandalism by graffiti taggers has become such a persistent problem in Newquay that businesses are being asked to take ‘insurance’ against it.

A scheme is being set up for traders to pay into a fund which will pay for an on-call contractor to clean premises when they’re hit with spray paint.Guy Thomas, town centre manager for Newquay, has been putting the project together to combat the growing number of eyesore tags.

“The idea is to get as many businesses involved as possible so they give permission for their property to be cleaned and pay into a fund,” he said.

“That means it can be removed very quickly rather than being left. The whole idea is to encourage traders to remove graffiti rather than punish them for not doing it.

“We don’t want to have to go through planning law to fine people for not cleaning graffiti off their premises.”

[Read More]