Posts Tagged ‘Dumb Shit’

Texas graffiti writer to serve two, not eight years – Two years is still to long for 7′Gs of damage!

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

CORPUS CHRISTI — Last week a judge gave a graffiti vandal the maximum sentence: eight years. But it turns out the most he can serve is two.

Sebastian Perez, 18, pleaded guilty Dec. 11 to three graffiti charges along with possession of marijuana, all state jail felonies.

He admitted to a spray-painting spree that lasted from March to August and caused more than $7,300 in damages.

He gave a tearful plea to 148th District Judge Marisela Saldaña for probation. Instead she had handed down the maximum two years in state jail on each count and stacked the sentences.

But Perez’s attorney, Steven Giovannini filed motions on Thursday asking the graffiti terms either be redone to run at the same time or reduced to probation.

He cited law that says if a defendant is found guilty of more than one offense arising out of the same criminal episode and prosecuted in a single action, the sentences must run concurrently. There are some exceptions, but he said none applied.

He also pointed out in another motion that judges are required to place defendants on probation for a first-time felony marijuana charge in cases where the amount is less than a pound and the defendant has no prior felony convictions. Both instances applied in Perez’s case.

Saldaña brought Perez back to court. She ordered he serve the three, two-year graffiti sentences at the same time along with two years probation on the drug charge.

District Attorney Carlos Valdez said his office had been pleased Perez received eight years, but after talking to his attorney agreed that it had to comply with the law.

Valdez added prosecutors would continue to seek the maximum sentence for graffiti vandals.

Giovannini said on Friday that Perez had shown remorse for his actions long before his guilty pleas. He said even when he visited Perez in county jail on Tuesday Perez had talked of wanting to join a graffiti cleanup crew before being transferred to state jail.

“He was really repentant and remorseful,” he said.

Via:www.caller.com

Classical music deters graffiti artists in subways

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Can classical music deter graffiti artists and prevent youth gathering in the subways?

The Council of Dartford, Kent, England has decided to play classical music in subways and pedestrian tunnels. For now, the speakers primarily play music of Gustav Mahler, but they plan to add Mozart and Handel as well.

According to the Telegraph, Jeremy Kite, Dartford Council leader calls this experiment a success. “People told us they feel safer and they are enjoying the music.” Subways in Blackburn and Burney have also experienced a reduction of graffitti and youth gatherings.

Given the success of subway classical music in Kent, would such an experiment work in New York City? Would passerbys be willing to exchange rap for Ravel, Tupac for Tchaikovsky, Eminem for Elgar? It would be quite interesting to see how subway patrons at 149th St. Grand Concourse, Hunts Point, or Woodlawn respond to Mahler and Mozart. Via:www.examiner.com

Taking boy to court in graffiti case proves costly

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

He’s 9 years old and facing the long and astonishingly well-funded arm of the law. So far, we’ve sent the boy to a psychiatrist and to a psychologist and next month, we’ll pay for him to see another shrink.

If she agrees that the boy might – might – be made competent to stand trial, we’ll spend six months teaching the kid about the court system so that we can make him pay his debt to society.

Or, we could just make him pay his debt to society.

Actually, we can’t do the latter. The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office has a policy against such things.

Fortunately, money is apparently no object in this county – pay no attention to that $32 million hole in the budget – and so we are spending thousands to bring this 9-year-old to justice. And, apparently, others like him.

“I see this all the time,” said Robert Dodell, Matthew’s taxpayer-supplied attorney. “Do I think it’s a waste of money? Yeah.”

A spokesman for the County Attorney’s Office says it’s rethinking the policy.

Matthew is a fourth-grader in El Mirage, a soft-spoken kid who loves basketball and skateboarding. A kid who had never been in any trouble until October, when he and three friends decided to deface the neighborhood park with graffiti. Damage estimate: $200.

A few days later, he was called to the principal’s office during math. Waiting for him was an El Mirage police officer, who read him his rights and released him to his parents after he admitted to using a Sharpie to write his initials and one other thing – police say it was an obscenity, Matthew says it was “Sk8″ – on the playground.

Matthew would face his day in court, but first he would face his parents, Christine and Paul, who were none too pleased with their son. “We grounded him,” Paul said. “He wasn’t allowed to play basketball, video games or anything like that for a couple of weeks. What he did was wrong, and he knew what he did was wrong.”

In December, Matthew was summoned to juvenile court, where his parents expected that he would admit his wrongdoing and be ordered to clean up the park. They were all for that.

But attorney Dodell, after talking to Matthew, felt the boy wasn’t competent to stand trial given his age, and so Judge Janelle McEachern ordered a mental-competency evaluation.

Apparently, Dodell was right because the two doctors agreed that the boy doesn’t understand enough about his rights and such to stand trial.

One of the two, however, felt that he could be “restored” to competency – taught enough about court proceedings to face the judge.

The result: Matthew has been ordered to see a third doctor next month – a “tiebreaker.” If she agrees that he can be made competent, we’ll be sending a “restoration specialist” to his school for up to six months, to tutor him about the system.

Dodell says it’s a complete waste of money, but a necessary one. The courts have no choice but to do a full-blown mental-competency exam – the same one given to the St. Johns kid accused of two murders – because the County Attorney’s Office has a policy against putting kids like this into a diversion program.

“In a diversion program, it would probably be some community-service hours, pay for it, and maybe write an essay or attend class on why this is terrible for the community,” Dodell said.

In other words, the same punishment that any judge would likely order, just minus the thousands in psychiatric, legal and “restoration” bills.

Mike Scerbo, spokesman for the County Attorney’s Office, said that the no-diversion policy for graffiti has been in effect since 1995. On Thursday, he defended the policy, noting that the act of writing graffiti is a big problem and adding that it wasn’t the prosecutor’s call to order mental exams.

“It’s the judge’s discretion as to how to deal with the case,” he said. On Friday, Scerbo told me the office is developing a diversion program for such cases.

It probably won’t come soon enough for Matthew, who on April 16 will meet with yet another psychiatrist. No worries. Just put it on our already overburdened tab.

We’re good for it.

We are good for it, aren’t we?

Via:www.azcentral.com

Father & Son Accused Of Graffiti

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

Authorities in Merced say they were tipped off by a concerned citizen who saw a 32-year-old teaching his 13-year-old son how to paint graffiti. Officers arrived on the scene but Felipe Ramos and his son took off. The two were arrested a short time later at their home not far away. Ramos is already on felony probation and is now facing felony graffiti and contributing to the delinquency of a minor charges. His son is also looking at graffiti charges.

Graffiti vandals caught through MySpace page

Monday, December 1st, 2008

NORRISTOWN — A mysterious graffiti vandal sought by police for 18 months left behind a clue at the site of one defaced property that made her easy to find — the address of her MySpace page.

Melanie Brockway, 23, has allegedly “tagged” about 100 locations in Norristown with her graffiti symbols, according to the Norristown Police Department. A 17-year-old boy was also arrested for graffiti vandalism in the borough.

Brockway, an unemployed Norristown mother of two children, allegedly spray painted graffiti on numerous houses, garages and businesses in the West End, as well as newspaper boxes, electrical boxes at Latshaw Field, and on playground equipment at Crawford Park and another park on West Lafayette Street. Her graffiti vandalism is estimated to have caused $10,000 in damages; the estimated damage of the teenager’s graffiti is at least $20,000, according to police.

Brockway, who graduated from Norristown Area High School in 2003, left a sticker identifying her MySpace account and directed anyone interested in contacting the “artist” to contact “Devient Art.” The Haws Avenue woman has two MySpace sites, according to police. She even offered to give away T-shirts. “She calls herself an aspiring artist,” said Norristown Police Chief Russell Bono. “She did that all over town.”

Graffiti often conjures up images in the public’s mind of violent gangs, but in the past two years, Norristown police have dismissed this idea. The gang perception is a mistaken one, at least in Norristown, according to Detective Lt. Kevin McKeon.

“They think it’s gang related, and it’s not,” he said.

The teenager boy, also a Norristown resident, is responsible for between 150 and 200 graffiti tags, Bono said.

Police Detective Raymond Emrich and Officer Nicholas Santo have been trying to catch a vandalism suspect since last year. After the arrests, the officers photographed the vandalism.

“Unless you catch them in the act, it’s very difficult to arrest anybody,” the chief said.

After tracking Brockway through her online account, police questioned her and she allegedly admitted to “tagging” all areas of Norristown with her distinctive “SKTCH” and the acronym “DVNC,” according to a criminal complaint.

Accompanying the majority of the graffiti was a symbol with a face in the center and insect-like “legs” extending out and curling up at the ends. On her MySpace page, the woman is pictured seated on one of the legs of the design.

On Nov. 24, Emrich and other Norristown police officers obtained a search warrant and went through the 23-year-old suspect’s house. Police discovered cans of spray paint and “practice tags” showing the same style letters and symbols found around town.

Brockway was arrested and taken into custody. At the police station, she gave a statement confessing to tagging “80 to 100 properties, probably more.”

When police searched the teenager’s house on Stanbridge Street, which he shares with his parents, they found graffiti paraphernalia, stencils and cans of spray paint.

The suspects have been charged with institutional vandalism and criminal mischief. Because the damage is $10,000 or more, the latter charge is a felony offense.

Does graffiti hurt?

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

[Via:sfist.com]

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.

Vista Teen in Custody for 25 Separate Acts of Graffiti – wow he’s up 25 times!!

Friday, April 11th, 2008

A teenage boy was in custody Friday on suspicion of 25 counts of graffiti in Vista, authorities said.

The boy, whose name was withheld because of his age, was arrested at school Thursday morning after San Diego County sheriff’s deputies served a search warrant on his home and found “numerous items relating to graffiti tagging,” said sheriff’s Sgt. Joe Mata.

The boy faces numerous counts of felony and misdemeanor vandalism related to 25 separate acts of graffiti within the city, according to Mata.

Details of where the graffiti was left and what led authorities to suspect the boy were not immediately released.

Will Somebody Stop This Madness?

Monday, April 7th, 2008

More Crack Than Harlem!!

Assed Out!!