Archive for the ‘Graffiti R.I.P’ Category

Subway graffiti Writer, 20, struck and killed by Manhattan-bound D train; spray paint found by bod

Monday, May 16th, 2011

 

The conductor said that he was unable to stop the train before fatally striking a 20-year-old.

Cans of spray paint were found near the body of a 20-year-old graffiti artist who was struck and killed by a subway in Brooklyn early Monday, police said.
The man, whose name wasn’t immediately released, was hit by a Manhattan-bound D train at the 59th St. station. Transit officials said the motorman tried to stop the train just after 5 a.m., but couldn’t bring it to a halt in time.
Police withheld the man’s name pending notification of his family. He was found in a tunnel. It wasn’t immediately clear if the man had already vandalized the interior of the tunnel or was about to tag it.
Service was stalled during the early part of the morning rush. Trains were diverted to the N line.

Via: NY Daily News

 

Graf Core 1.0 – Featuring Nace (R.I.P) & Chip

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Graf Core 1.0 – Featuring Nace (R.I.P) & Chip: Released in 1999, Produced By Videograf Productions.
Produced, Shot & Edited By Carl Weston
Music Produced by Carl Weston
Get the dvd @ www.videografproductions.net/store

Killed for his graffiti tag.

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

Brian Kachur

Two youths hit a 19-year-old over the head with a brick, then dumped him in the river. Why? For cross-tagging

MONTREAL – On a Saturday night in November 2009, three teenagers from Verdun headed out to a secluded area under a Highway 15 overpass where local youths gather to paint graffiti and drink beer.

The longtime friends were there to celebrate the upcoming 16th birthday of one of the boys. The youths, one 14-year-old and two 15-year-olds, were drinking beer when an affable 19-year-old named Brian Kachur showed up.

Kachur had spent the early part of the evening eating pizza and chatting with his extended family at a dinner in his Verdun home. While the rest of his family sat down to watch a film, Kachur told his mother he was going out “bombing.”

Kachur fancied himself a “graffiti artist” and his graffiti tag “Razor” could be found on buildings and cement pillars across southwestern Montreal. As he struck up a conversation with the three strangers, Kachur told the boys his tag name was Razor.

The name was familiar to one of the 15-year-olds, who had been miffed a while back after noticing that on two occasions, someone named Razor had spraypainted his name over part of his own tag – a frowned-upon practice in the graffiti world known as cross-tagging.

The youth had been trying to find out “who Razor was” and now the culprit was standing right beside him.

As the teenagers consumed beer, smoked marijuana and took ecstasy, the 15-year-old began to devise a plan to exact revenge on Kachur.

Kachur had no specific plans that Saturday night so he was likely happy to tag along with the three younger teens who shared his hobby.

Some details of what happened next are unclear because those involved were under the influence of drugs and alcohol.

However, according to evidence presented at the preliminary hearing of the 14-year-old, Kachur suggested they return to his house on Moffat St. so he could collect some more cans of spray paint.

While Kachur was in his house, the 15-year-old whose graffiti had been cross-tagged told the other boys he wanted to beat Kachur up. The 14-year-old agreed, but the other youth said he wasn’t sure whether he would participate.

After Kachur came out of his house, the four headed toward the St. Rémi tunnel. Along the way, the 15-year-old picked up a brick and asked his two friends to do the same. Some of the bricks were placed in a knapsack carried by one of the youths.

Kachur became uncomfortable when he noticed bricks being collected and he nervously joked that he hoped the bricks weren’t meant for him. One of the 15-year-olds reassured him the bricks were “for their protection” because he had been attacked at that spot once before.

The youths spent the next few hours doing graffiti in the industrial sector of Verdun.

Around 3 a.m., the 15-year-old put his plan into action.

He told Kachur that he had to meet his brother near the Verdun Marina so they could all attend a party.

As they made their way to a park beside the St. Lawrence River, the other 15-year-old boy decided to head home, uncomfortable with what was about to unfold.

The park beside the marina was familiar to Kachur. He had been there the day before and had started a new tag on a small pumping station in the park.

As Kachur was finishing the tag, the 15-year-old came up behind him and smashed a brick across the back of his head, according to testimony that he gave last December at the preliminary hearing of the 14-year-old.

As Kachur slumped to the ground, the 15-year-old struck him with the brick several more times and kicked him repeatedly, leaving him clinging to life. According to the 15-year-old, his 14-year-old friend also kicked Kachur and threw a brick at his head, although the younger boy claims he has no memory of this because he was intoxicated.

One of the boys then stomped on Kachur’s face.

The two teens then picked up Kachur’s 133-pound body and carried it more than 100 metres to the river’s edge.

They took off his shoes and trousers and dropped him into the frigid water.

The next morning, a man walking on a path beside the St. Lawrence River discovered Kachur’s body in shallow water near the marina.

Later that day, the 15-year-old who planned the attack returned to the park with a friend to retrieve one of the bricks.

André Bourgault, the pathologist who examined Kachur’s body, confirmed the victim received several forceful blows to the back of his head during the attack. There were also cuts on his face, his lip and his left ear. Kachur had very few defensive wounds, Bourgault testified at the preliminary hearing.

Bourgault also told the Youth Court judge that Kachur was still alive when he was dumped in the water.

“He took a few breaths in the water.”

Theresa Brochet picked up a newspaper while riding the métro to work on the Monday morning and shuddered at the headline: “Body pulled from St. Lawrence River.”

Brochet had been worried sick about her son after he failed to come home on the weekend. He wasn’t answering his phone and she couldn’t understand why he hadn’t returned messages she and her daughter, Laurie Ann, had left.

At lunch, she showed the article to a friend and said: “I hope this isn’t my son.”

Brochet had spent many years fretting about her son, a “sweet and charming” young man who was struggling to find his way in life.

As a boy, he was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which led to difficulty at school. He dropped out of school in his early teens and came off Ritalin because it made him ill. He had started smoking marijuana instead.

When he wasn’t tagging, he spent time with his father, Walter Kachur, and a small circle of close friends. He wrote rap songs about his life, but he lacked the money or the contacts to record his work.

His graffiti was an outlet for his artistic talent, his mother said, adding that she often pleaded with him not to tag on private property. Despite his difficulties, Brochet said, her son was a good boy who cooked her dinner when she was tired and baked her a cake on her birthday.

After her son’s death, Brochet said, she received a phone call from one of Kachur’s elementary school teachers. The woman told her that she had kept mementoes from former students and among them was a graffiti-style sketch of her name that Kachur had proudly presented to her when he was about 10 years old.

“She said he was so proud of it,” Brochet recalled.

Two months after Kachur’s death, in February 2010, Montreal police released the video showing the youths walking behind the tire store in Verdun the night Kachur was killed.

Within days, Brochet and Montreal police began receiving phone calls from people identifying the youths who had been with Kachur the night he was killed. Police questioned the teens and then let them go while they pursued their investigation.

After learning the identity of the 15-year-old boy, Brochet said she sent him a message on Facebook to set up a meeting. “You’re one of the last people who saw my son and I would like to find out what my son did the last few hours of his life,” Brochet told him.

The youth, who had devised the plan to assault Kachur, agreed to meet with her.

When he turned up at her house, he was dressed in his Sunday best and had neatly combed hair. “He had an angelic face,” she recalled. The youth sat in her home and expressed his condolences over Kachur’s death.

“Brian était un bon gars,” he said.

Two months later, in April 2010, Brochet received a phone call from the lead homicide detective in the case. He was calling with good news. Police had arrested the 14-year-old and the 15-year-old who had the temerity to visit her home two months earlier. Both teens were initially charged with second-degree murder.

Under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, the media is prohibited from identifying them because they are minors.

The detective later showed Brochet a photo of Kachur’s tag on a Metro grocery store in Verdun. It partially covered the tag of the 15-year-old. “This is why your son died,” the detective told her.

Two months ago, the 15-year-old, who is now 17, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in Youth Court in Montreal. A date for his sentencing has not been set.

The 14-year-old, who is now 16, pleaded guilty yesterday to a lesser charge of manslaughter. He received a three-year sentence.

Brochet said she finds it unfathomable that her son was killed because of a cross tag. She thinks that “two violent kids” used it as an excuse to beat up her son and wonders whether the 15-year-old was trying to “make a name for himself on the street.”

After the youth was arrested, police learned that he had told some friends that he had “killed Razor.”

Brochet said she can’t imagine what went through her son’s mind during the attack.

“Brian didn’t use his fists,” she said. “He didn’t know how to fight.”

In an emotional victim impact statement delivered in court yesterday, Brochet told Judge André Vincent that she is haunted by the sickening images of her son’s final moments.

“My son was far from perfect,” she said. “I loved him and he loved me. I will always remember the day his coffin was closed and I knew I would never see my son smile again.”

 

 

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

Graffiti artist found hanged in cell.

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

THE father of a graffiti artist found hanged in jail has hit out at the “incompetence” of the prison system.

An inquest into the death of 23-year-old Tom Collister, from Penge, has revealed multiple failures in the care provided.

Tom was found dead in his prison cell at HMP Camp Hill in Newport on the Isle of Wight on the morning of February 7 last year.

He had been serving a 30-month sentence for conspiracy to commit criminal damage, which had been slashed by 10 months four days earlier following an appeal hearing.

Tom, who lived with his mother in Stembridge Road, was in a gang of graffiti artists which carried out a two-year campaign of vandalism on trains and stations around south London.

During his sentence – the longest in the country ever given for graffiti offences – he was transferred to Camp Hill while his co-defendants remained in Wandsworth.

However he expected to return to Wandsworth to see out his sentence following his appearance at the Court of Appeal in London.

But Tom was left distraught when he was told by prison escort staff that he would be going back to Camp Hill instead.

He was found dead in his cell four days later.

Read more

Montreal graffiti writers mourn train deaths

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Spot where teens died is a tagging ‘hall of fame,’ says graffiti artist

Police haven’t released the names of the three teens killed by a Via Rail passenger train on Sunday morning, but people in Montreal’s graffiti community say they knew them and are mourning the deaths.

A video paying tribute to one of the dead graffiti artists has been posted on YouTube.
He went by the name Jays and the two-minute video shows some of his graffiti tags, much of them in Montreal’s Notre-Dame-de-Grace neighbourhood.
The teenagers, aged 17, 18 and 19, had jumped over a concrete wall to spray-paint graffiti under the west side of the Turcot interchange, said Const. Annie Lemieux.

“This is a pretty dangerous spot for hearing trains because you don’t hear them coming as well as you should,” she said. “It’s possible they didn’t hear the train coming fast enough to move off the tracks, so that’s what investigators will be trying to understand.”
Two other young men who were with the victims were not injured but were treated for shock. At first, police said they could face charges of trespassing and mischief, but the force now says no charges will be laid.

Sterling Downey, a graffiti artist and founder of the Montreal graffiti festival, said he was surprised when he heard about the accident, but only because the teens were experienced.”If you frequent railyards you know that Via Rail trains are the most dangerous things. So even in a case of five people painting you’d hope that maybe one person would be a lookout.” Still, Downey says danger comes with the territory.
“It’s a reality … of this game or this culture … and I understand how something like this can happen,” he said.

A Montreal graffiti writer who goes by the name Omen said the area where the teens were planning to spray-paint is popular with graffiti artists because they’re well-concealed and their tags are seen by many people.”It’s kind of a high-risk area, but it’s a good area to hit because it’s seen by all the commuters … they’re highly visible and that’s the attraction. It’s like a little hall of fame.”

He agreed with Downey that sometimes the hobby can be dangerous and wonders what kind of “peer training,” if any, the teens received.
“When I learned how to write trains, I learned with another guy and it’s common sense with a little bit of overcaution, because it’s not like street writing.”
Yannik Leaunier, who works at a plastics factory across the street from the graffiti-covered concrete where the youths were hit, said “there’s young kids coming here almost every night doing graffiti on the wall. We see them parking here often.”Two cars belonging to the graffiti artists were still parked near the tracks hours after the accident. Inside one were cans of beer, a couple of skateboards and a can of red spray paint.

‘A sad reminder’
The train was on its way to Montreal from Toronto when the accident occurred around 3 a.m. ET Sunday.

Emergency workers investigate after arriving at the scene where three teens were struck and killed by a Via train. (CBC)
Elizabeth Huart, who speaks for Via Rail, said “obviously the message just doesn’t go through …. trains can’t stop … and this is a sad reminder.”
She said the company is offering counselling to staff members who witnessed the grisly accident. “This is something that our locomotive engineers will never forget. It’s a very traumatic experience.

R.I.P. Rammellzee (1960 – 2010)

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Rammellzee was a good Dude!

Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD Coming April 10th.

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Videograf 10 – 20th Year Anniversary DVD Coming April 10th. from Carl Weston on Vimeo.

10 issues of Videograf in 20 years…Not Bad!

Video from the VGP Archive – Henry Chalfant’s 50th Birthday Party 1990

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Henry Chalfant’s 50th Birthday Party 1990 from Carl Weston on Vimeo.

Many of New York City’s top graffiti writers came to pay respect to Henry including:

Dondi – Rip
A-One – Rip
Frosty Freeze – Rip
Seen Ua
Doc Tc5
Web Tc5
Tats Crew
Bio
Nicer
Brim
Ken
Tkid
Deal
Sane – Rip
Smith
Ket
Ghost
Min
Ven
Revolt
Haze
Sharp
KenSwift
Crazylegs
Lee
Blade
Bom5
Noc167
Rammellzee
James Top
and many others..

A Subway Graffiti Artist’s Last Work, in the Bronx

Monday, July 20th, 2009

By Jennifer 8. Lee

On June 12, the graffiti artist Iz the Wiz had a rare show of his work at the Tuff City graffiti and tattoo studio in the Bronx, in which he spray-painted a mock-up subway facade with his bubble-letter “Iz” repeatedly. “You would have these pieces running like this 10 cars straight,” said Iz the Wiz, whose real name is Michael Martin. “When that hit the train station, bam! Impact. No doubt about it.”

The original premise of the subway facade was that it would be painted over and over again by different artists, similar to the brick walls in Tuff City’s backyard, which have attracted graffiti artists from around the world.

Then plans changed. “It was weird,” said Joel Brick, the owner of Tuff City, who goes by the name of MED. “He had the show, then he went back to Florida and five days later he died.”

So that subway facade is now considered the last work that was done by Iz the Wiz, arguably the most prolific graffiti artist, and was the site of a candlelight memorial service several days after his death.

Tuff City employees are deciding how to preserve the panels — whether to donate them to a museum, make them part of a traveling exhibit or disassemble them for galleries. Inquiries about the panel have come in from around the world.

“We’re not sure what is going to happen with it yet,” Mr. Brick said. “We just know it is not going to be painted over.”

Smokey Ferrer, a Tuff City employee who goes by the name N.B., said: “It was a part of graffiti history. I was standing right there. At the time I already knew he was pretty sick, he didn’t have that much time here.”

Mr. Martin had kidney disease, which he believed was caused by exposure to all the aerosol. There were questions about whether he would even do the show. “He wasn’t looking good,” said Teddy Ferrer, who uses the nickname PACK.

Once he died, on June 17 from a heart attack at age 50, Mr. Martin’s business partner asked the studio to stop selling any of the works.

Tuff City employees are proud to have hosted his last show, which attracted visitors from around the world.

“I’m happy that he went out with a good turnout, that he had respect and admiration from a lot of people,” said Mr. Brick, who was among those that grew up under the influence of Mr. Martin’s work. “He was a legendary figure in his era. The amount that he did was crazy. You’d have to go out every day. You have to live your life doing this to get the amount that he did at one time.”

Via:NYTIMES