Archive for the ‘California Graffiti’ Category

South L.A. tagging gang crackdown leads to 19 arrests

Friday, February 11th, 2011


Authorities said Wednesday they arrested 19 members of a South Los Angeles tagging gang during a search warrant operation.

A group of 250 L.A. County sheriff’s deputies executed 17 search warrants and six probation checks on members of Boyd David San King, or BDSK, which has allegedly caused more than $200,000 damage to city buses, trains and infrastructure, authorities said.

A command post for the operation was set up Wednesday near the Green Line’s Hawthorne station at 11230 Hawthorne Boulevard in Inglewood.

The search warrant crackdown began at 7 a.m. and continues until about noon, said Lt. Vince Carter, who is overseeing the operation for the Sheriff’s Department Transit Services Bureau.

With more than 200 members spread out from Los Angeles to Las Vegas, the gang is responsible for more than 500 tags in South L.A., according to authorities, who said they began investigating the gang about six months ago. Much of the damage occurred near the 105 and 110 freeways, Carter said.

“The group started out as a small tagging crew and eventually evolved into a gang,” he said.

Via:Latimes

SF graffiti costing taxpayers millions?

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Looks like a nice place to take a tag.

Snitching Pays? – Residents cash in graffiti vandals

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Two San Francisco residents who caught graffiti vandals red-handed will receive $250 rewards from the Department of Public Works.

In the first case, on March 11, the resident spotted vandals tagging a wall near Mission and 18th streets and called 911. He trailed the vandals along Mission Street and identified a suspect to police officers, who made the arrest and gathered photo evidence. A second check went to a resident who reported a vandal spray-painting the trailer of a truck on March 21 near Fulton Street and 44th Avenue. The vandal dropped the can and ran but police took him into custody.

“The citizens are eyes who can help us report graffiti and it’s even better when they see it in the act,” said Mohammed Nuru, the department’s deputy director for operations.

These are the fourth and fifth checks handed out this year through the Graffiti Rewards Fund, which gives monetary thanks to residents who provide information that help arrest and convict vandals. Cases must result in prosecution and residents must cooperate throughout the process in order to get the money.

Many cases have not yet led to rewards because it takes a while between the identification and the trials to wind their way through the system.

The city spends more than $20 million annually abating graffiti, and the department alone will spend $3.7 million this year, said the department’s spokeswoman Christine Falvey.

More than likely, vandals are repeat offenders, Nuru said, making it all the more critical for residents to keep their eyes and ears open.

“First-hand witnesses definitely allow us to change the behavior of those vandals,” he said.

While the number of graffiti instances on public property has decreased, tagging on private property has increased, according to the city controller’s annual street and sidewalk maintenance report for fiscal year 2009-10.

The department encourages people to call 311 when they spot graffiti, and 911 when they see it in the act.

A 20-year-old writer (KAUE R.I.P.) was hit by two cars and killed near Los Angeles after spraying graffiti on the freeway’s center divider.

Monday, December 13th, 2010

Poetic justice? Graffiti artist killed by cars after tagging freeway?

That’s a fucked up headline usa today put up on their website yesterday!

A 20-year-old tagger was hit by two cars and killed near Los Angeles after spraying graffiti on the freeway’s center divider, the Los Angeles Times reports.

For long, freeways in California and other cities across the nation have been turned into blighted messes by rampant graffiti spraying. But it turns out that tagging can be a deadly hobby. Raul Garcia Jr. of Lynwood and two other men had been tagging on the Long Beach Freeway in Compton when they were struck around 4 a.m. Saturday, the California Highway Patrol told the Times.

Garcia was struck by a Nissan Maxima that had just merged into the far left lane. He was then thrown into another lane and struck by another car. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

There have certainly been other serious injuries and deaths over the years among taggers. Daniel Supple, suspected of tagging the word “Ozie” all over Los Angeles, was critically injured in 1997 when he fell from an overpass in Los Angeles while tagging. That’s his tag in the photo. He fell 100 feet.

Via:usatoday

A group of graffiti writers shoot at man after he confronts them.

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

LA PUENTE, Calif. — Investigators say armed graffiti vandals confronted by a Southern California motorist got into their vehicle and chased the man, peppering his car with bullets. The motorist wasn’t hurt and the two suspects are in jail. Deputy Benjamin Grubb says the motorist confronted the vandals at about 8:35 p.m. Sunday on Main Street in La Puente. Grubb says in a statement that 21-year-old Edmond Gail and 26-year-old Raul Montesdeocala then got into their vehicle and chased the man, firing several rounds that struck the man’s car. There are no injuries. The suspects’ vehicle was stopped minutes later by deputies who arrested Gail and Montesdeocala. Bail is set at $250,000 each.

By The Time I Get To Arizona – opening June 25, 2010

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

By The Time I Get To Arizona – opening June 25, 2010 from 33third Los Angeles on Vimeo.

Produced by: Viejas Del Mercado

Sponsored by:
33third Los Angeles / 33third.com
Montana Store Los Angeles
Puma

Saturday June 26th
7:30-10PM

Open to the Public

Featuring Works By:
Axis
EL MAC
RETNA
MEAR
KOFIE
DABS & MYLA
ESTEVAN ORIOL
THE PHANTOM
DASH 2000 FIDEL
VYAL
EYE ONE
HASTE
RITZY PERIWINKLE
ACAMONCHI
CACHE
CODAK
JAMIE GERMS ZACARIAS
KOPYE
SURGE

Mid-City Arts Gallery
5113 W. Pico Blvd.
Los AngelesCa. 90019
(310) 694-3460

midcityarts@gmail.com

LA photographer cleared of felony charges in graffiti case

Monday, May 17th, 2010

LA Photographer Cleared of Criminal Charges

LA photographer Jonas Lara had his day in court today. The criminal charges against him were dropped and the judge issued a court order for the release of his camera equipment, which had been held as evidence since his arrest on February 2, 2010.

Lara was fighting a charge of aiding and abetting two graffiti artists whose work he was documenting when the three men were arrested in South Central Los Angeles. (More on the case here.)

The photographer established a legal fund and appealed for donations after he was unable to convince his public defender that his rights as a photographer to document the work of the artists had some bearing on the case against him.

In just over a week, enough friends and colleagues in the photo community responded with donations for Lara to pay the retainer for The Kavinoky Law Firm, a group of California-based criminal lawyers.

Joel Koury, the attorney who represented Lara in court this morning, says his strategy was to “go in with guns blazing,” which caught the prosecutor off guard, because key evidence—pictures that the police claimed they took showing Lara’s hands with paint on them—had apparently gone missing. Koury says he doubts that the police ever took them.

The prosecutor, judge and Koury then discussed a formal diversion plea for the vandalism charge, which would have required Lara to perform community service over the course of 18 months before the case would be dismissed. Koury told the judge he would talk to Lara about agreeing to a six-month probationary period, but instead Lara and the attorney decided to stay on the offensive, refused the deal and pushed for a trial.

Koury also showed the prosecutor character letters colleagues had written on Lara’s behalf, proof that Lara was in art school and had published books of his work, and proof that he had a photography business registered with the IRS.

“We’re not talking about some gang member, we’re talking about an actual photojournalist,” Koury says he told the prosecutor. “Just because a photojournalist takes a picture of someone committing a crime does not turn the photographer into a criminal,” he adds.

The prosecutor then offered to knock the charge down to trespassing and agree to an informal diversion plea, but again Lara and his attorney refused.

Koury says he asked the prosecutor what was really important to her in the case, and she responded that the property owner had paid $200 to have the graffiti murals cleaned off the wall of the building.

Koury says that though he believes he would have beat the trespass charge in a jury trial, he offered at Lara’s behest to agree to have Lara pay the $200 restitution fee to the property owner in exchange for the charge being reduced to a disturbing the peace infraction.

Though Koury says he feels “a little bad” that Lara paid the restitution, the deal guaranteed Lara could walk away from court today with no criminal record rather than having to go through a jury trial.

The LAPD has still refused to return Lara’s camera equipment despite the judge’s order. When Lara went to the police station to retrieve his equipment the police were “really pissed off,” he says, and attempted to question him further about the February 2 incident.

Koury says it is just a case of “cops being a little bit stubborn.” He expects Lara should have his gear back in a day or so.

Lara first met with and hired The Kavinoky Law Firm yesterday afternoon. The firm, which typically commands retainers in the five figures, agreed to represent Lara for far less “because we were pissed off,” Koury says. “It was ridiculous that [a photojournalist] would find himself in that position.”

Via: www.pdnpulse.com

LA Photographer Faces Criminal Charges, Appeals for Help

Thursday, May 6th, 2010
Los Angeles-based photographer Jonas Lara faces up to a year in prison if convicted of aiding and abetting two graffiti artists whose work he was documenting when the three men were arrested on February 2, 2010 in South Central Los Angeles.

Lara has declined two plea deals and has pleaded not guilty to the charge, believing that he was within his rights as a photographer to be at the scene documenting the work of the artists. However Lara says his public defender, David Gottesmann, has so far refused to consider his rights as a photographer as part of the defense. “Every time I bring [photographer’s rights or First Amendment rights] up, he just laughs at me,” Lara says.

Jeff Sedlik, Lara’s former teacher, has offered to testify on his behalf to establish his credibility as a photographer, but Lara says Gottesman insists that the case has nothing to do with Lara being a photographer.

Lara has appealed for help with the case to rights organization like the ACLU, but Lara says the organizations have told him they do not get involved in criminal cases.

If convicted, the Art Center College of Design graduate and former US Marine would be unable to enter the MFA program at the School of Visual Arts, into which he was recently accepted, in September.

Recognizing the need to hire a private attorney, Lara has established a legal fund to solicit help from friends, family and colleagues. Lara’s jury trial is scheduled for next Tuesday, May 11.

Lara’s camera, lenses and memory cards, which he uses to make a living, were also seized, and have not been returned to him.

When he was arrested, Lara was working on a long-term project for which he has documented the work and creative processes of 30 visual artists. Lara met the two graffiti artists at an abandoned building in South Central Los Angeles to photograph the pair as they worked on the illegal mural.

An LAPD helicopter spotted the group of three men and a patrol car was quickly on the scene. The artists attempted to walk away from the scene and were apprehended, Lara says. He remained at the scene and was arrested, although the arresting officers never let Lara know what he was being charged with.

The photographer says the officers were understanding when he explained his reason for being at the scene. They told him they needed to process him, and that he would be free to go in the morning. After advising Lara that it would be dangerous to leave his car in the neighborhood, one of the officers even drove Lara’s car to the police station so he could avoid a towing fee.

Once he got to the police station, however, Lara’s situation became much more precarious. The police held Lara for eight hours before telling him he was being charged with felony vandalism. He was held for 26 hours in total.

Two weeks after being bailed out by his wife, Lara was arraigned and the charge of felony vandalism was downgraded to a misdemeanor. At a pretrial hearing Gottesman told Lara that rather than vandalism, he was now being charged with damaging a fence at the scene. Then the charge was later switched again, this time to the misdemeanor of aiding and abetting. Prosecutors now claim Lara was acting as a lookout for the two graffiti artists.

Lara started his legal defense fund when it became clear to him that the charges against him would not be dropped. Those interested in donating to Lara’s legal defense fund can do so here:

Jonas Lara Legal Defense Fund Paypal Page.

Paypal payments can also be directed to donate@jonaslaradefensefund.org.

Via: www.pdnpulse.com

Vigilante Vigilante Preview Clip

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Vigilante Vigilante Preview Clip from max good on Vimeo.

Vista officials declare war on graffiti writers

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Vista authorities have their own message for taggers:

“We want them to know that we’re going after them, and it’s going to cost them a lot of money — not only that but jail time,” said Elvys Cabrera, the graffiti investigator for the Vista sheriff’s station.

The arrest Monday of a 16-year-old boy who is believed to be responsible for $100,000 in damage from graffiti vandalism over the past year marks the latest of more than a dozen arrests by Vista deputies since March.

The boy has been booked into Juvenile Hall on 232 counts of felony vandalism. The Sheriff’s Department is investigating 85 other acts of vandalism that also may be connected to the teenager, Cabrera said.

The latest arrest was significant, because no one else in recent memory has come close to causing as much damage as the suspect arrested Monday, Cabrera said. Last week, deputies arrested a tagger allegedly responsible for $40,000 in damage over a two-year period.

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