Archive for October, 2008

Organised vandals delaying our trains

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

GRAFFITI vandals are damaging and delaying hundreds of trains a month – and their methods are becoming increasingly brazen.

Connex asset protection officers have turned up a nocturnal gang who set up trestle tables for their gear as they prepared to “graffiti bomb” carriages, and detected interstate and even international offenders.

In recent months, Connex has recorded up to 180 incidents of vandalism a month — with graffiti top of the list — damaging and delaying hundreds more services.

Connex spokesman John Rees said vandals who had been nabbed included one from Germany.

“There are certainly networks of these vandals, and they are grandstanders — we’re finding more and more often that when a group is tagging or graffiti ‘bombing’ a train, there’s a ‘watchdog’, and there’s someone who’s got a digital camera taking photos,” he said.

“Often, they’ve flown into the city for one night, they get a hire car and find their targets, they hit our trains, and they’re already posting it up on internet networks on the way back to the airport.”

Graffiti clean-up costs Connex more than $11 million a year. New public transport contracts will see operators fined if they do not clean up damage efficiently.

[www.news.com.au]

CHECK OUT ROBOBAMA

Sunday, October 26th, 2008


ROBAMA from ROBAMA on Vimeo.

Whos up? – Brooklyn

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

Just passed this a few minutes ago. Brooklyn

Brooklyn Bombers

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

“DICK HEAD” Vallone Urges DA: Get Tough With Graffiti Vandal

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Anti-graffiti warrior City Councilmember Peter Vallone Jr. has asked Queens DA Richard Brown to prosecute an Astoria graffiti vandal “to the fullest extent of the law, even if it means going to trial”.

“They caught this punk red-handed, now we should make sure he pays for destroying our neighborhoods,” Vallone declared. “I want this crime etched on his criminal record forever.”

Vallone was talking about KXXXX AXXX, 32, who he described as a career criminal. AXXX was arrested by 114 Precinct cops for spray painting the Marathon Bank branch on Broadway last Thursday.

AXXX was arrested after a brief chase. The officers said he had in his possession at the time etching acid, which Vallone described as a new graffiti tool that vandals use to permanently mark windows on buildings and subways. This dangerous product cost the MTA $11 million a year for window replacements, he said.

Vallone said AXXX, whose tag is “SIDE”, has a long criminal history, including arrests for burglary, robbery and drugs.

Possession of etching acid makes AXXX’s case particularly egregious, Vallone said, because, unlike other forms of graffiti, some of which can be painted over or cleaned, etching acid burns streaks that cannot be removed into materials. In addition, the lawmaker said, the substance can also be extremely dangerous. If someone comes into contact with freshly applied acid, it can cause serious burns.—John Toscano

Augor & Revok – The Dark Knights

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008


Augor x Revok x The Dark Knight (video Logan x Keegan) Meatpost.com from Meat Post on Vimeo.

Teen arrested for felony vandalism – $10,000 in graffiti damage

Monday, October 6th, 2008

A 17-year-old boy was arrested Friday night in Gilroy after authorities determined he was responsible for about $10,000 of graffiti damage within the community, police said.The Gilroy Police Department’s Anti-Crime Team contacted the boy at about 9:30 p.m. and found he was in possession of aerosol spray paint cans, which is a misdemeanor, according to police.

The boy was then arrested and transported to the Police Department.
Officers contacted the boy’s parents, who allowed the officers to search the boy’s bedroom, according to police. Additional evidence of graffiti-related crimes was located in his room, police said.

An investigation revealed that in addition to the $10,000 in graffiti damage, the boy had committed around 300 graffiti acts, with at least 20 of those being felonies, according to police. Authorities also learned community members and local government agencies were victimized by the boys actions, police said.
Anyone who wishes to be a snitch can report graffiti @  hotline at (408) XXX-XXXX.

Graffiti Writer Utah slapped with $10,000 bail tag

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

A globe-trotting graffiti goon accused of desecrating historic Back Bay with her artistic upchuck was held on $10,000 cash bail yesterday after several of her victims painted a picture of solidarity by standing up in court.

“We want every community to push back and clean up,” Anne Swanson, co-chairman of The Graffiti NABBers, told the Herald. NABB stands for Neighborhood Association of Back Bay.

The terrorist taggers the city and private citizens mop up after are “young people who think it’s a cool thing to do and just don’t think about the rest of us. They have no developed social conscience,” said Swanson, who has a degree in fine art.

Graffiti, she said, “has nothing to do with art. It’s pure ego.”

Danielle Bremner, 26 – a student at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York, whose mother is a high school teacher and whose father is a retired Big Apple cop – pleaded not guilty in Boston Municipal Court to 33 counts of tagging.The pale, lank-haired woman who signs her work “Utah” has been a fugitive from prosecution in Boston since May 2007. Bremner faces similar charges in East Boston, Quincy and her native New York. She was captured in August at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport returning from a summer spent backpacking across Europe with friends.

Prosecutor Patrick Driscoll Jr. said Bremner is to blame for “tens of thousands of dollars” in damages to Back Bay buildings, much of which was documented in photographs by Swanson and presented to Judge Annette Forde.

Bremner’s attorney, William Keefe, told Forde his client has little reason to flee.

“The probable disposition in this case is going to be a lengthy suspended sentence,” he predicted.

But Jake Wark, spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley, told the Herald, “Graffiti in any neighborhood contributes to a climate of lawlessness, and that’s a climate we won’t tolerate.”

[Via:bostonherald.com]

I’ll keep tagging, graffiti fan says

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Meet Zion. You don’t know him, but there’s a good chance you detest him.

Zion exists with you, although he doesn’t feel entirely at one with you.

You belong to the “normal community”. He belongs to the graffiti community.

Standing in a long alley next to Horton Park Golf Club in Maroochydore, the walls of businesses that line the alley heavily marked with graffiti, Zion agreed to talk to the Daily after a campaign was launched to rid the Coast of graffiti.

It’s his attempt at shedding light on a culture that’s repugnant to most people.

With his identity shielded by his street name and the respirator he wears when he paints, the 20-year-old looks like the archetypal Coast youngster – three-quarter pants hung low at the back, T-shirt, New York Yankees baseball cap worn slightly to one side, Adidas shoes.

For someone who devotes a large part of his life to defacing public property, he’s surprisingly respectful, referring to anti-graffiti crusader Graeme Hall as “Mr Hall”.

Zion shares at least one thing in common with Mr Hall: both have no idea what makes the other one tick.

Mr Hall’s mission is to rid the Coast and Australia of the graffiti he considers an eyesore.

Zion’s mission is to paint as many walls as possible – and he never wants to stop.

The serious element in Zion’s world refer to themselves as “writers”.

He says “taggers” are usually kids who paint their aliases on things like street signs and power boxes.

There are around 50 hard-core writers on the Coast, people like him who have reached a high level and regard themselves as artists.

“We’re just promoting art,” he says, adding the overall number of graffitists is in the hundreds.

Zion, who started as a tagger in high school, doesn’t want to talk too much about himself – he prefers to let his writing do the talking.

“It’s not about you as a person,” he says. “It’s more about your world, your art.”

A labourer who is currently between jobs, Zion reckons Mr Hall and his kind are wasting their time.

Mr Hall has painted over a large section of graffiti on the Sunshine Motorway as part of his Mission Brown initiative and secured a promise from main roads minister Warren Pitt for the government to continue the job.

Ironically, the brown paint Mr Hall uses is an eyesore to Zion – and a red flag to a bull.

“It’s a fresh canvas to me,” he says.

“It’s all about who can keep it up the longest. It could go on forever.

“It’s something in your blood. Once you have a taste for it, you don’t want to put it (the spray can) down.”

There’s a message for Mr Hall and others opposed to graffiti on one of the walls in the alley. It reads: “Mission Brown Makes Me Frown”.

[Via:www.thedaily.com.au]

‘DOPE’ accused of graffiti vandalism on Staten Island’s South Shore

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

An 18-year-old from Staten Island’s Meiers Corner neighborhood was arrested after being caught red-handed while spray-painting the tag “DOPE” on a mailbox and an electrical box at the intersection of Stieg and Barlow avenues in Great Kills on Thursday.

Christopher X. XXXXXX, of Gansevoort Boulevard, faces 20 days in jail after admitting to that crime and another one which he and four others are accused of spray-painting a van. The van incident occurred Wednesday on nearby Country Woods Lane.

Christopher, of Gansevoort Boulevard, pleaded guilty at his arraignment today in Stapleton Criminal Court to two misdemeanor counts of making graffiti — one for each episode.

Judge Matthew A. Sciarrino Jr. told the defendant he would be sentenced as a youthful offender to a combined 20 days in jail, three years’ probation and 20 days of community service. Sentencing is set for Nov. 14.