March 04, 2010 Come Back, Stonewall Jackson! Hispanic Gangs Invade Shenandoah ValleyBy A.W. Morgan
[Also by A.W. Morgan:
That Mount Vernon Statement: Beltway Right Ignores
Immigration (Again). But They Still Want Your Money]
The Shenandoah Valley is justly celebrated in American
history as the place where
Stonewall Jackson
made his name
driving back Northern invaders during the
Civil War—in
battles like
Cross Keys
and
Port Republic.
But now, thanks to federal immigration policy, it has
serious Hispanic gang problems, dating from the early
2000s.
About a year ago, a student at James Madison University
was leaving the
7-Eleven
on South Main Street in Harrisonburg, Va., to return to
his apartment. It was 2 a.m., hardly an unusual time for
a kid in the college town to
walk the streets near
campus.
Yet walking about the city that late is just as unsafe
as it common. Three members of the Mexican
SUR 13
gang attacked him, the city’s daily newspaper reported,
and beat him unconscious. They took $1 and a cell phone.
After
the crime, a friend of the victim texted the cell phone,
the newspaper reported, only to receive a scatological,
threatening text in return—the printable part said
“South Side
Sureneos run these 540 streets”. [Harrisonburg:
gang-member’s sentence twice that of sentencing
guideline recommendations,
January 26, 2010]
540 is the area code for the Shenandoah Valley.
Sureneos, (properly spelled
Sureńos)
stands for
SUR 13,
one of the murderous gangs
federal immigration
authorities
have permitted to spread nationwide because they are too
terrified of organized
Hispanics to
close the borders.
Two of the feral culprits were convicted and landed in
prison. But their cyberphonic claim isn’t far from the
truth. Harrisonburg is turning into a scaled-down rural
version of Los Angeles. Menacing young Hispanics run the
streets and join gangs;
racial gang fights with
blacks are
increasing. The cops
can’t lock them up fast
enough.
How fast is that? A judge sentenced the SUR-13 tough
guys who battered the JMU student on Jan. 25, the local
newspaper reported. The same day, he sentenced a member
of the Crips, the African American gang. Last October, a
judge sentenced a member of the rival African American
Bloods gang unit out of Newport News, Va., in a drug
shooting.
Harrisonburg had its first gang-related murder back in
2008. A young man connected to another unit of the
Bloods was
shot to death at a
party near JMU’s campus.
A criminal connected to that crime was involved in a
gang attack in the county jail, the newspaper reported.
He copped a plea and was released.
Across
the Valley generally,
the murder of Brenda
Paz in 2003
was law enforcement’s first wake-up call. Paz was the
MS-13 member found slashed to death in rural
Meem’s Bottom
near Woodstock, in Shenandoah County. So violent was the
attack, The New York Times reported, the killers nearly severed her head. They
stabbed her 16 times. She had agreed to testify against
her gang friends. As
The Times
explained it,
“The killing shook Shenandoah in ways
that can be hard for urbanites to comprehend. For weeks
following the discovery of
[Brenda
Paz], her murder was the talk of the towns along Route 11 in Virginia — from
the dairy cooperative in Strasburg, to the C.E. Thompson
& Son hardware store in Edinburg, to the old-fashioned
lunch counter at the Walton & Smoot pharmacy in
Woodstock, across Main Street from the sheriff's office.
This sort of thing simply did not happen in a place
where many families trace their ancestries in the region
to before the Civil War, where people still take the
time to stop in on their neighbors, where
few people say they
feel the need to lock their front doors.
This was not Washington, 80 miles and a world away to
the east. Folks here tended to worry more about
copperheads and rattlesnakes than about knife-wielding
murderers.”
[Hillbangers,
By Matthew Brzezinski, August 15, 2004] But
“knife-wielding
murderers” who belong to gangs are indeed what folks
in the Shenandoah Valley have to worry about now. In
2005, law enforcement officials identified 100 gang
members in Harrisonburg. Five years later, that number
has jumped to 850 members and associates.
Among the gangs: SUR 13, the major Hispanic gang in
Harrisonburg;
MS 13;
the Latin Kings. A
survey of area news reports shows that Hispanics are
committing more than their fair share of the mayhem.
Obvious conclusion: if they weren’t here, illegal or
not, SUR-13 and MS-13 wouldn’t be here either. Illegal
immigration is such that local law enforcement is
treading water to keep up with the workload.
Harrisonburg and its surrounding county, Rockingham,
have detailed three police officers and a sheriff's
deputy to work full time
on a gang task force.
Aside from the crimes listed above, authorities filed at
least 225 gang charges in 2009, the local newspaper
reported, including malicious wounding, robbery, arson,
larceny, credit card fraud, and, of course, gun
possession as a felon. In November, a member of the
Gangster Disciples was nailed on 46 charges. In October,
a
grand jury handed down
an indictment with 71 counts
against eight members of SUR-13 and one member of the
Crips.
One of
the first signs of gang activity is graffiti, or
“taggings”,
which marks a gang’s territory or presence. In June, the
newspaper reported that police logged a major increase
in taggings after gangs hit seven stores in
Harrisonburg’s main shopping strip in a nice section of
the city. In 2007, gang graffiti and associated activity
on the other side of town virtually ruined business in a
small shopping center after an anchor store moved out.
Gangs left their graffiti; prostitutes and public
drinkers
loitered
in the parking lot. It became, the newspaper reported,
“a gang-ridden hole”
that terrified shoppers. Unsurprisingly, a night club
catering to the city’s Hispanics had moved into the
shopping center. In
2006, city police nailed one MS-13 member because he was
involved in a fender-bender, the newspaper reported. His
gang tattoos tipped off police. In other words, gang
members are brazen and don’t much try to hide who they
are or what they are doing.
A side
effect of the rise of Hispanic gangs has been something
of a backlash among blacks. Gangs compete for territory.
In at least one case, Hispanics have pushed blacks off
their turf. An open air drug market in Harrisonburg near
an elementary school, which blacks once controlled, is
now under Hispanic management. Or should we call that
“Latino?”
[VDARE.COM note:
Some activists like
Latino better than
Hispanic,
because "Hispanic" suggests Spain, which is "historically white."
See
Hispanics (Sorry, Latinos) Discover
Racial Identity. What About Whites?,
By
Sam Francis,
September 8, 2003]
The city’s crime problem took a major turn for the worse
with illegal Hispanic — oops, ‘Latino’ — immigration,
and black victims of Hispanic violence sometimes strike
back to send a message.
Gangs are fighting elsewhere in the Valley as well.
About 70 miles north Interstate-81 from Harrisonburg and
closer to D.C., Winchester has much the same problem as
Harrisonburg. A member of the Bloods
landed a 5-year prison
sentence in Winchester for targeting a home associated
with a SUR 13 member.
In
2007, a local
television station
reported
that Winchester was home to 500 gangbangers who had
residents on
“high alert”. The Bloods were largest gang with
about 130 members, but the second largest was Sur-13
with 50-60 members. MS-13 boasted 30-40 members. If
the rate of increase in Harrisonburg holds true for
Winchester, then the number of gang members there is
also close to 850. So Harrisonburg and Winchester are
now home to nearly 2,000 gang members. The number
approaches the size of some small towns in the
Valley—the population of Woodstock, the town where
Brenda Paz was found sliced to pieces, is just 4,000. In
its story about gangs in the Valley after the murder of
Brenda Paz,
The
Washington Post
explained
the situation succinctly:
“Law enforcement officials in the
Shenandoah Valley say they believe sprawl from the inner
suburbs is the main reason for an appearance in the last
year or two of violent and largely Latino street gangs.
But there are other likely reasons, including a
well-established community of Latino immigrants in which
to blend, including thousands of Mexicans and
Salvadorans
drawn here for jobs in the
poultry,
plastics and
construction
industries.”[Gangs
Find Bucolic New Turf in Va.,
By Michelle Boorstein,
Washington Post,
May 30, 2004] The
New York Times
agreed:
“As far as law enforcement can tell,
MS-13 gang members arrived on the scene in Shenandoah
[County]
early last year. For them, the Hispanic communities
springing up around food-processing facilities across
the country present an opportunity to expand their
business interests — in particular, dealing
methamphetamine — and to attract new members. (For now,
the rise of rural gangs does not include
African-American gangs, which remain based in large and
midsize urban areas.)” In
other words,
industries that draw
large numbers of Hispanics,
many of them illegal aliens, also draw gangs who exploit
them and recruit new members, and as well move into an
area that, for all intents and purposes, is open
territory.
For example,
Cargill Meat Solutions
in Dayton, Va., just outside Harrisonburg, was the
target of a federal
immigration raid in 2008.
ICE officials nailed a former employee who was part of a
nationwide ring manufacturing and selling phony
identification using the Ohio Department of Motor
Vehicles. [Affidavit: Cargill Knowingly Hired
Illegally Documented Workers,
WHSV.com, PM Apr 22, 2009] Nearly three dozen illegals
working at the facility reportedly obtained fake
identification through the ring. And authorities
believed nearly 375 employees, 25 percent of the plant’s
workforce of 1,459, were illegal aliens. [Federal
Identity Fraud Trial in Harrisonburg,
WHSV.com, April
20, 2009]
Illegal aliens in particular and immigration in general
is a major issue — and expense — for taxpayers.
Harrisonburg’s newspaper
reported
in October that 13 percent of residents in 2008 were
foreign born, and 78 percent of those were not citizens.
And 81 percent of surrounding Rockingham County’s 3,659
foreign-born residents were not citizens.
Naturally, their children must be educated, so city and
county schools are spending millions on
English-As-A-Second-Language programs. In May, the local
newspaper reported that 1,751 of the city’s 4,232
students, about 41 percent, require ESL at a cost of
more than $1,400 a head. At $2.45 million for ESL in the city
alone, taxpayers are groaning under the weight of
immigrants without counting the crime. At least
75 percent of ESL spending targets Hispanics. Needless to say, officials told the
newspaper, “we
embrace the diversity”. Yeah, right. Whether the
Valley’s white and black families whose ancestors have
lived there since the late 18th century
embrace all this diversity, we are not given to know. We
do know they have not been asked. Gangs aside, immigrants caused myriad
other problems. Prosecutors frequently jail Hispanic
males who beat their wives and molest children. Because
many of the victims are illegal aliens, prosecuting the
offender becomes problematic because the victims fear
deportation.
That poses a real problem for prosecutors. No human
being deserves to be raped or otherwise molested,
regardless of immigration status. But if a victim is an
illegal alien, it affords a measure of protection for
the rapist or molester. And as with illegals in other cities,
immigrants in the Shenandoah Valley drink, drive and
kill, and they are frequently involved in shootings and
other violence.
In July, 2008, the newspaper reported,
sheriff’s deputies arrested 600 foreigners, a third of
them illegals. And in just seven months prior to March
2008, local authorities turned 72 illegal alien
criminals over to federal authorities via the 287g
program that coordinates federal and state efforts to
collar and deport illegal alien criminals. In
September 2007, the newspaper reported that just several
weeks of cooperation between the county
sheriff’s department
and ICE netted 38 illegal aliens sitting in jail. At the
time, the county sheriff said monitoring illegal aliens
could be a full-time job for more than one person. In
short,
illegal alien crime
is such that local law enforcement is treading water to
keep up with the workload.
The newspaper doesn’t appear to have published numbers
for 2009. But one needn’t be a pessimist to know things
haven’t much improved. Nothing, after all, has changed
with border enforcement. In
early February, Immigration and Customs Enforcements
picked up
a dozen of Harrisonburg and Rockingham’s
“criminal aliens”
in a wide-ranging raid of employers here and in Northern
Virginia and Washington, D.C. Presumably, the authorities will
deport them. And local law enforcement officials want
the illegals kept out once they are deported. But like a
successful second marriage, this expectation may be the
triumph of hope over experience.
Where is Stonewall Jackson when we need him?
A.W.
Morgan
[Email
him]
is fully recovered from prolonged contact with the
Beltway Right.
He now lives in America. |