Archive for May, 2008

Graffiti bombers on the news!

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Psycho Graffiti Bombing!

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Wanna be a successful graffiti artist?

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Wanna be a successful graffiti artist? You might want to keep videotapes that show you vandalizing property off video sites like YouTube.

Authorities arrested 24-year-old convention planner Cyrus Yazdani on Tuesday, alleging that he is the notorious graffiti bomber known as “Buket.”

Investigators first got wind of the tagger through YouTube.

Los Angeles Sheriff’s Deputy Devin Vanderlaan  told the Los Angeles Times that he focused on the prolific artist thanks to viral YouTube videos (right) featuring “Buket” spraying his moniker midday on the freeway and a public bus.

“If he’s brave enough to tag on an MTA bus in the middle of the day, I’ve gotta find out who this guy is,” Vanderlaan told the Times.

Authorities estimate that Buket’s handiwork has caused $150,000 worth of damage in Los Angeles alone.

[Via:blog.wired.com]

Cyrus “Buket” Yazdani charged with nearly three dozen counts of felony vandalism

Friday, May 30th, 2008

On Tuesday, L.A. County prosecutors charged 24-year-old Cyrus Yazdani with nearly three dozen counts of felony vandalism, accusing him of spraying his “Buket” moniker on dozens of locations around the county. Yazdani is accused of tagging freeway signs and buses, his work videotaped and shown on YouTube.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies and officials with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have identified at least 20 “Buket” scrawlings along a stretch of the river spanning a couple of miles, causing an estimated $60,000 in damage.

[Via:www.latimes.com]

Yazdani pleaded no contest in July 2007 to three counts of felony vandalism and is on probation. If convicted of the current charges, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

He was being held on $100,000 bail, but prosecutors will ask that the amount be increased to $234,000.According to Sgt. Augie Pando of the sheriff’s Transit Bureau, the investigator on the case had been tracking Yazdani’s alleged activities for some time.

[Via:www.knbc.com]

Walls of L.A. River are a prime canvas for taggers

Friday, May 30th, 2008

A roughly two-mile span east of downtown Los Angeles is what authorities call a proving ground for graffiti vandals, including the recently charged ‘Buket.’
By Andrew Blankstein and Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

As the Los Angeles River bends into the vast industrial district east of downtown Los Angeles, it looks less like a waterway than a decaying open-air canvas for taggers.

This largely hidden channel that runs through two rail yards is what authorities describe as the ultimate proving ground for graffiti vandals vying for visibility and reputation.

This is not the graffiti you see in alleyways and storefronts. This is tagging on steroids, with monikers big and bold, containing letters that often are as big as garage doors.

The centerpiece is something officials say is the biggest tag they’ve ever seen: Three block letters that cover a three-story-high wall and run the length of several blocks between the 4th Street and 1st Street bridges. It spells out “MTA” — Metro Transit Assassins.

These huge graffiti projects take paint rollers, not spray cans.

Some of the most elaborate tags take days, said Sheriff’s Deputy Devin Vanderlaan. He points to one that is big enough to be a front lawn and is just an outline. “They are going to come back and finish that one,” he said.

Authorities allege that this was a favorite spot for “Buket,” allegedly one of L.A.’s most prolific taggers, who was arrested earlier this week.

On Tuesday, L.A. County prosecutors charged 24-year-old Cyrus Yazdani with nearly three dozen counts of felony vandalism, accusing him of spraying his “Buket” moniker on dozens of locations around the county. Yazdani is accused of tagging freeway signs and buses, his work videotaped and shown on YouTube.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies and officials with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have identified at least 20 “Buket” scrawlings along a stretch of the river spanning a couple of miles, causing an estimated $60,000 in damage.

Cleaning graffiti from the river is far more expensive than cleaning other areas. Officials use high-pressure water spray to remove the toxic paint. But hazardous-material crews must then dam and capture all the paint and water runoff to prevent it from getting into the riverbed.

Roland Gonzales, with the Army Corps of Engineers, estimates that the price tag for cleaning the roughly two miles of concrete walls could reach half a million dollars.

“We can paint today and they’ll be back here tomorrow,” Gonzales said. “It is a fresh canvas for them. . . . They will be right behind you.”

Graffiti began popping up along the river in large quantities in the 1970s, and despite efforts to paint over it, the vandalism continues to be a scourge, federal officials say. And that leads to whether the latest cleanup is worth it.

Among the most ornate taggers is one known as CAB. Using a salmon background, he blends a Jamaican green, yellow, sky blue, aquamarine and purple to make his letters stand out among the more mundane tags. Next to his, Buket’s neutral paints look like black-and-white TV in the age of high definition.

Authorities have tried to patrol the area but said catching the taggers has proved difficult. There are escape routes within a fence hop, Vanderlaan said, and taggers easily vanish into the industrial district.

As Vanderlaan surveyed the graffiti Thursday, a man in dark clothing with a black backpack scaled a fence and scampered up a support on the 1st Street bridge. But he quickly disappeared, apparently after noticing sheriff’s deputies.

As deputies made their way to the river, they spotted two men with spray paint cans covering the 4th Street tunnel entrance.

But upon further investigation, they were told the men were painting a set for “Terminator: the “Sarah Connor Chronicles,” a Fox television series being shot nearby.

[Via:www.latimes.com]

Bomb it Preview

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Philly cops charged in attack on graffiti artist

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

**Photo Used For illustration Purposes**

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Two Philadelphia police officers accused of beating a man they saw painting graffiti were charged Tuesday with assault and falsifying records.

Charges in the August attack come about three weeks after a videotaped beating of three suspects by a swarm of Philadelphia police shone a spotlight on the use of force in the department.

Authorities say Officers Sheldon Fitzgerald and Howard Hill III broke the graffiti painter’s jaw on one side and dislocated it on the other before throwing him head first into the back of a patrol car. The man was never charged with a crime.

“This is an unfortunate incident, but it is in no way a reflection on the entire department,” Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey said at a news conference Tuesday. “I do think that it is another statement that excessive force just will not be tolerated in our department.”

District Attorney Lynne Abraham said her office completed its investigation into the attack on David Vernitsky earlier this month after receiving a complaint of excessive force in November.

Vernitsky had attended a wedding and was spray-painting congratulations to the couple on the wall of a beauty supply house in the city’s Feltonville section when police saw him, officials said.

Vernitsky fled, but the officers caught up and beat him, kicking him in the groin, bruising his face and ribs, and knocking out three teeth, Abraham said at the news conference.

The officers released Vernitsky after they checked for outstanding warrants and found none, officials said. The 36-year-old Philadelphia man was taken by friends to a hospital, where he stayed a few days, Abraham said.

The officers didn’t document their contact with Vernitsky. Instead, officials said, the pair made a false entry in their log showing they were elsewhere at the time of the beating.

Fitzgerald and Hill were suspended without pay pending trial, Ramsey said. The pair was notified of the charges Tuesday and have 72 hours to turn themselves in.

A telephone listing for a Sheldon Fitzgerald was not in service Tuesday. No listing could be found for Hill or Vernitsky. A phone message left for John McNesby, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 5 in Philadelphia, was not immediately returned.

The officers, who have been on the force five years each, face charges of aggravated assault, simple assault, recklessly endangering another person, tampering with public records and conspiracy.

Earlier this month, a television news helicopter videotaped 18 city police officers and a transit officer kicking and beating three shooting suspects as they were dragged from their car. Ramsey said last week that four officers would be fired and four others disciplined for their roles in the beatings.

Prolific LA Tagger “Buket” Busted By YouTube

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

LOS ANGELES — Cyrus Yazdani is a 24-year-old San Jose State University graduate with a degree in art and a job as a convention planner in Las Vegas…

One of the most prolfic taggers in Los Angeles could be out of commission for awhile, thanks to YouTube. Sheriff’s deputies identified the man known as “Buket” after his work appeared on the popular video sharing web site.

“Buket” is featured in several heavily viewed YouTube videos defacing signs and buses. His most popular video, with nearly 170,000 page views, shows him scaling an overpass of the Hollywood Freeway near Melrose Avenue and tagging the structure as traffic speeds below.

Authorities say Buket’s moniker had adorned hundreds of freeway overpasses, concrete walls and transit buses across the state and southern Nevada. He is believed responsible for $150,000 in property damage along the Los Angeles River and in the areas patrolled by the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department.

“Buket”, whose real name is Cyrus Yazdani, was detained this morning when he showed up to meet his probation officer. Yazdani, 24, is expected to be booked on multiple charges of felony vandalism, sheriff’s officials said.

Law enforcement deals with hundreds of taggers across the city. But it is how and when Yazdani chooses to vandalize property that has earned him special attention from law enforcement, said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Sgt. Augie Pando.

“It’s blatant disregard for other people’s property,” Pando said.

Rather than work clandestinely or under cover of darkness, sheriff’s deputies say Buket prefers an in-your-face approach.

Another daylight attack captured on video appears to show “Buket” applying his moniker to an MTA bus as passersby and passengers watch in surprise.

The Internet, whether it’s YouTube or social networking sites, is helping fuel a new explosion in graffiti tagging, albeit with editing and soundtracks. But investigators say it also is helping them build better cases against the vandals.

[Via:ktla.trb.com]

Don’t like graffiti? He doesn’t care

Monday, May 26th, 2008

The ‘tagging bill’ may come down harder on graffiti vandalism, but the motivation of one prolific tagger suggests it probably won’t stop bored young men making marks on your fence or business. Marty Sharpe reports.

Meet Joseph Kitchener. The 24-year-old former P addict from Flaxmere has found a more addictive drug: graffiti vandalism. He is a prolific tagger and a “bomber” and boasts of “stuffing up” much of the North Island.

Kitchener epitomises all that people detest when they see their city or town defaced by vandals.

A seasonal fruit picker currently out of work, he’s a young, bored man with no interests and no ambitions that don’t include spraying paint on someone else’s property.

His idea of a good night out is to board a moving freight train in Napier, hang off the side of it with a bag-load of spray cans and “bomb” a shipping container before jumping off as the train nears Hastings. His friends – part of his “crew” – drive alongside filming him as he does it.

Kitchener won’t reveal the name of his crew for fear of being charged for numerous tags around the North Island, but says it includes four others in Hawke’s Bay, three in Hamilton and two in Wellington.

[Read More]

My spring of 2000 confrontation with vandal squad cop Joseph “Joe Blow” Rivera

Monday, May 26th, 2008

Bronx vandal squad cop Joseph “Joe Blow” Rivera didn’t like being video taped. So the very next day they pulled search warrant number two on me…I wonder if he’s gonna talk about this day in his up coming book? maybe he’ll talk about the lies he put on the second search warrant used against me.