The bloody history of the Bloods gang. Gangs of Los Angeles: Crips vs. Bloods Gangs of Los Angeles: Crips vs. Bloods

While hippies preached peace and love, sunbathing on the sunny beaches of Los Angeles in the early 70s, dramatic events took place in the depths of the black ghettos. There were also young people living there who wanted change. They loved drugs and freedom, but were not pacifists. Children from black neighborhoods are used to taking everything by force. Their society was divided into "red" and "blue", creating a feud that lasted for decades.

In order to understand the reasons for this war, we must turn to the origins of street crime in the United States. Black Americans, driven into the ghetto, lived on bread and water and passionately tried to get out of this impasse. Young people earned money for their daily bread by hook or by crook. Mostly uneducated black youths were engaged in robbery, theft, and selling drugs and weapons.
Tensions grew at the bottom of society, which reached its climax in 1969. This is the turning point in the criminal history of the City of Angels. The kids, who did not get the lead of World War II, wanted to live easily and carefree. Their inspirations were their older brothers, who became famous in the ranks of the terrorist group Black Panthers. But the former ideals gradually faded into the background. A typical substitution of concepts occurred, and money became synonymous with freedom. Blood money. A young man, Ray Washington, from a poor neighborhood in Los Angeles, together with his bosom friend Stanley "Tookie" Williams, decided to form his own gang, which he called the Avenues Cribs (after the name of the area where he lived). Suddenly the small street punks felt real power. Inspired by the ideas of the Black Panthers, they redefined the concept of street control to suit modern realities. The result was the first organized crime group, nicknamed the Cribs after the incident with elderly Japanese tourists. Since it was fashionable for guys to walk with canes, the Japanese took them for cripples (cripple - disabled). The group grew and gained strength. In the absence of real competitors, many criminal “generals” finally lost their conscience and began to terrorize members of small gangs who could not provide real resistance. For the time being, for the time being. Everything changed in 1973, when the limit of patience was exhausted. The guys from the group Piru Street Boys did not share something with one of the leaders of the Crips, and were not afraid to come into conflict with such a powerful enemy. Suddenly there were many supporters who were also tired of the lawlessness of presumptuous cripples. Dozens of small gangs sent their envoys to the legendary meeting in Compton, where it was decided to create an “anti-Cribs” alliance, which was dubbed the Bloods (translated from English as “bloody”). The gang's color became red. The guys wore red bandanas on their necks and heads in order to distinguish their own from strangers. But there was no fundamental difference between “Bloody” and “Crippled”. They were all ordinary thugs and robbers. They sold drugs, sold stolen goods, ran rackets on the scale of their own neighborhoods, killed each other and confronted the police. Soon the gangs acquired their own subculture, which implied a whole complex of complex rituals. In order to join a gang, you had to endure beatings from several active members. The girls were taken only after they passed through the hands of all the bosses. The “Bloody” marked their territory with special graffiti, which was a mixture of English and African dialects spoken by their ancestors. Soon a new product was released onto the US drug market. Crack became a cheap and highly sought after drug. Both gangs enthusiastically began selling it. But, as in any business, the drug trade has to expand the market sooner or later. And the first Bloods flocked to the east coast to establish a network there for the sale of poison. They recruited subordinates even from among the Latinos, successfully competing with the “blues”. The first agents were sent to state federal prisons. There they were establishing a system of prison branches, which was supposed to “protect” brothers serving their sentences. In 1972, there were 11 gangster groups in Los Angeles. Another 4 operated in Compton, one each in Athens and Inglewood. After 25 years, there were already 138 of them in Los Angeles, 36 in Compton, 14 in Inglewood, and 10 in Long Beach. In total, there are over 300 gangs in Los Angeles and its environs. The number of groups grew exponentially. Soon the first gangsters appeared who were able to “break out among the people.” For example, the famous Snoop Dogg was a member of the Bloodies. The gangs waged war for three decades. No one will undertake to count the number of victims of this confrontation. But in 2004 they had to call a truce because difficult times require radical solutions. Due to the fact that the American government has tightened laws and introduced entire programs to combat street banditry, the boys from the ghetto felt the breath of the law on the back of their heads. Over the years, the gang war has subsided. The territories are divided. The market too. The former children have grown up and prefer to do business rather than wave pistols on the streets. The younger generation is being brought up in a different way. Yes, clashes still happen, but even gangsters understand that bloodshed will not leave them a chance to survive in this world. However, if some Cribs accidentally wanders into the Bloods area, you won't envy him.

If in 1975 there were barely 13 thousand gangsters in the city, then by 2000 there were already 80 thousand of them, and the number of gangs increased to 700. The primacy of gangs developed precisely at this time and, starting from the 80s, the most powerful groups remain: Crips, Bloods, Pirus, as well as Latin American gangs Mara Salvatrucha and 18th Street gang.

Each of them has tens of thousands of participants, which is why their structure turns out to be quite “loose.” The same Crips consist of groups that are often at odds with each other, and the Bloods union was created as a fragile confederation of African-American gangs to fight the Crips and Mexicans.

The so-called "Young Affiliates" of the Grape Street Crips gang. We would call them “sixes”

Members of the Grape Street Crips gang depict the shooting of a junior high school student

But they don’t sit around playing video games - they have fun in the open air and with friends from the area

Gangster from the Grape Street Crips wearing the gang's signature purple hoodie

This appears to show two rival gang members from different branches of the Crips at the time of the 1992 truce (then gangsters united against the police during an urban riot)

Members of the Mexican street gang 18th Street Gang arrested

Gangsters from the Grape Street Crips again

Grape Street Crips posing with the letters G and W, 1988

The Los Angeles area of ​​Watts, especially the Jordan Downs complex, plays a critical role in the development of gangster culture. It was here that the famous Crips gang was born, whose branches spread throughout LA. Now in the city there are about 200 groups that have left the Crips, which does not prevent them from actively quarreling with each other.

Still the same Jordan-Downs, Watts. In the area

Leader of the Sons of Samoa (Sons of Samoa) - a gang of Polynesian origin at war with the Crips. Here he is pictured paralyzed after being attacked with a gun.

You obviously can't blame gangsters for forgetting their bros who find themselves in wheelchairs

Another photograph of the paralyzed leader of the Sons of Samoa

Here you can see another attribute of a gangster: a bandana and different variations of wearing it

A stereotypical gangster trait: displaying the letters of one's gang and generally identifying oneself with these signs. This one, for example, is from the Crips:

And this one is from the feuding gang community, the Bloods:

And this young patriot actually wears a badge with the name of the gang:

Dodge City Crips Second Street Mob graffiti, San Pedro. The group is clearly not racist

It was generally fashionable to take pictures in front of a wall with the names of your bros

Grape Street Watts Crips gangster poses with a shotgun

East Coast Baby Dolls - sister, female branch of Samoan gang Sons of Samoa, Long Beach

Coast Baby Dolls again


Girls from Coast Baby Dolls in a fight

Members of the Mexican gang East Side Longos, which is part of the Sureños conglomerate. The most famous gang from Long Beach. For some reason, Asians are not particularly liked

The Malditos - minor branch of the East Side Longos gang

Most of these images were taken by German-born photographer Axel Koster. As an immigrant, he himself experienced the difficulties of socialization in Los Angeles, one of the most crime-ridden cities in the world. It is amazing how easily this visiting German managed to gain the trust of different, and even opposing, gangs. He could take a photo of the paralyzed leader of the Sons of Samoa and immediately go to the area to the Crips, who just shot him.

There are many illegal groups in the world that control industry, engage in smuggling, sell drugs, kill and rob. The idealization and romanticization of the bandit image is rampant on both sides of the ocean, but who are these guys? Where did they come from and why are they still at large? Our selection includes only the most famous organized crime groups, repeatedly glorified by prison folklore and Hollywood films.

16. Nazi Low Riders
The Nazi Rioters, or NB, are a white supremacist prison gang operating in Southern California. They are closely associated with larger and more well-known gangs such as the Aryan Brotherhood and the Ku Klux Klan. Feuding with Nuestra Familia, Bloods, Crips, Norte?os, Mara Salvatrucha and the Los Angeles Crime Family. The Nazi name does not refer to anti-Semitism, but rather to racism itself, and the term "rebels" is borrowed from Latin American gangs.

The National Library was founded back in the 70s, and by 1996 they only had 28 members. They have grown since then, and currently the gang consists of about 5,000 people, including those on the outside and in prison. NBs often commit acts of racist violence in prison in order to move up the prison hierarchy. Members of the NB may have tattoos depicting swastikas and SS insignia. A tattoo with the letters NLR is most often inked on the stomach, back or neck, and although it means Nazi Lowriders, its wearer can easily decipher the tattoo as No Longer Racist. Sometimes Nazi Low Riders is written in Old English script or runes. The group is active against blacks, Hispanics, other minorities and “race traitors.” There is a well-known case of William Ritchie, who stole the keys to handcuffs in prison and cut the face and neck of a black prisoner with them.

Gang members often hang out near high schools, fast food joints, and bars in an attempt to recruit potential new gang members. They make money through various types of illegal activities, but primarily through the trafficking and production of methamphetamine.


15. Mara Salvatrucha
The international criminal organization Mara Salvatrucha was created by Salvadorans in the early 1980s in Los Angeles to combat street gangs. Slang for "Salvadoran Stray Ant Brigade" and often shortened to MS-13. They are found in Los Angeles, although they are found in other areas of North America and Mexico. According to various estimates, the number of this criminal syndicate is approximately 70,000 thousand people.

Mara Salvatrucha engages in many forms of criminal activity, including drug, arms and human trafficking, robbery, racketeering, contract killings, kidnapping for ransom, car theft, money laundering and fraud.

A distinctive feature of the group's members are tattoos all over their bodies, including on the face and inside. Tattoos not only show gang affiliation, but also tell about criminal history and status. Today it is one of the most influential gangs in North and South America, Mara Salvatrucha works closely with Los Zetas.


14. Barrio Azteca
The Barrio Azteca gang emerged from the El Paso prison in Texas in 1986. They quickly went from a street gang to a heavily armed paramilitary cartel that was able to provide serious competition to the Sinaloa Cartel. Their main principles are ruthlessness, violence and terror, and their “business” specialization is drugs, murder and kidnapping.

The Barrio Azteca prison gang received armed support from the Juarez cartel, in return the gang helps control drug trafficking in Juarez. The gang reportedly has approximately 5,000 members, including those in prison in Mexico, as well as more than 3,000 prisoners in the United States. These guys are known for prison riots. The official color of this gang is turquoise. In recent years, gang members have called themselves the "Almighty Aztec Nation." There is no central leadership in this gang, but despite this, the gang operates in more than thirty countries.


13. Hell's Angels
An organized crime group from the United States began as the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club, one of the world's largest motorcycle clubs, with its chapters (branches) around the world. According to the legend posted on the official website of the motorcycle club, during the Second World War the American Air Force had a 303rd heavy bomber squadron called “Hell’s Angels”. After the end of the war and the disbandment of the unit, the pilots were left without work. They had no choice but to go against their “cruel country, ride a motorcycle, join motorcycle clubs and rebel.”

This is probably one of the most famous gangs on this list. The Hells Angels have grown significantly since their beginnings in 1948. Many members of this organized crime group claim that they joined the club solely for peaceful purposes - to help organize fundraisers, Bashkir parties and other social events. But along with legal activities (sales shops, repair shops, sale of goods with symbols), the Hells Angels are known for illegal activities. Law enforcement agencies in a number of countries call the club a “motorcycle gang” and accuse them of drug trafficking, racketeering, trafficking in stolen goods, violence, murder, etc.
Serious crimes, drug and human trafficking, extortion and other illegal activities have been associated with the gang throughout their long history. The head of the Australian chapter was even convicted of contract murder. But again, this does not change the fact that they also own many legitimate businesses, such as gyms and tattoo studios.

When police raided 30 properties in Spain owned by gang members, they found military-grade weapons and ammunition, kilos of cocaine, neo-Nazi literature, body armor and $200,000 in cash. And according to reports from Sweden, 12 chapters of this organized crime group (which include approximately 170 members) are responsible for 2,800 crimes in this country.


12. United Bamboo or Bamboo Union
The Taiwanese group United Bamboo, also known as Zhu Lien Bang, is part of the Chinese triad. They specialize in drugs, weapons, kidnapping and the illegal movement of people across borders. Unlike most other gangs, they have been able to develop good relationships with foreign major criminal organizations, allowing United Bamboo to be very successful in operating its business overseas.

The Bamboo Gang has approximately 100,000 members, making it one of the largest gangs on this list. While most gangs do not have clear leaders, Yao Yao Huang Shao-Tsen has been the gang's official boss/ruler since 2007. Banda was not afraid to get his hands dirty in politics, including political assassinations (for example, journalist Henry Liu in 1984, he opposed the Kuomintang ruling Taiwan at the time). The assassins, both members of the Bamboo Union, were sent by the Taiwanese Military Intelligence Bureau.

The gang also came to public attention in 2013 when Chinese hitman Bai Xiao Ye was arrested and convicted of murder, kidnapping, extortion and conspiracy to commit murder. Bai was sent by the Bamboo Union to force one Li Wen Jun to repay a $10,000 debt, when he refused, Bai stabbed him 32 times. Prosecutors later concluded that Bai made his living by contract killings for the Bamboo Union.


11. Mungiki
This is one of the most aggressive sects in Kenya, which arose in 1985 in the settlements of the Kikuyu people in the central part of the country. The Kikuyu gathered their own militia in order to protect the Maasai lands from government militants who wanted to suppress the resistance of the rebellious tribe. The sect, in essence, was a street gang. Later, large detachments were formed in Nairobi, which engaged in racketeering of local transport companies transporting passengers around the city (taxi companies, car parks). They then switched to waste collection and disposal. Each slum resident was also obliged to pay representatives of the sect a certain amount in exchange for a quiet life in his own shack.


10. Aryan Brotherhood
The Aryan Brotherhood appeared in California's San Quentin prison in 1964, immediately earning a reputation as the most dangerous gang in the United States. Members of the Aryan Brotherhood are easily recognized by their tattoos with Nazi and Satanic symbols. This is not an ordinary gang in the classical sense; it is more of a prison community, not dangerous to people on the outside. Members of this criminal organization kill a huge number of people in prisons. Only 0.1% of prisoners belong to the Aryan Brotherhood, which accounts for about 20% of all murders in US correctional institutions.

The gang was originally created in the 1960s to fight against the Black Guerrilla Family, a gang of blacks. Outside of prison, gang members waste no time in extortion, drug trafficking and murder for hire.

In 1974, Charles Manson was denied membership because, among his other victims, he killed a pregnant woman (Sharon Tate, wife of Roman Polanski). The high-profile trial of AB leaders in 2002, which was presented as the defeat of the group, nevertheless ended with the fact that the leaders of the group, Barry Mills and Tyler Bingham, who were accused of 32 murders, are still alive.

A spin-off gang, the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, was formed in the 1980s and has approximately 30,000 members.


9. Almighty Vice Lord Nation
Wow the title! The AVLN gang originated in Chicago back in 1958, and they have approximately 35,000 members.
In the very beginning, the AVLN (then known as the Vice-Lords) committed robbery, theft, robbery, intimidation, extortion and violent attacks. They then tried to change their public image by renaming themselves the Conservative Vice Lords.

While they were doing something socially useful (creating recreation areas for children, for example), of course, their criminal activities continued. Small gangs began to join them, and eventually, everything became more significant. For example, business owners who did not pay for protection began to die en masse.

Willie Lloyd (pictured above), who at one point was the leader of the AVLN, quit drugs in 2001 after several arrests. You may not be shocked that he was assassinated three times, and successfully in 2003 - since then he has been paralyzed from the neck down.

Traditionally, the ALVN are allied with the Bloods gang (against the Crips).


8. Crips
The African-American gang Crips appeared on the streets of Los Angeles in 1969, compared to other thugs on our list, they look like pretty calm and nice guys. However, their numbers, stupid activity and excellent weapons make them one of the most dangerous gangs in the United States. The Crips are primarily involved in drugs, robbery, extortion and murder.

The gang was founded by 15-year-old Raymond Washington and his friend Stanley "Tookie" Williams. The Crips are predominantly African American. As of 2007, the Crips membership is estimated to be approximately 40,000. She is known for her confrontation with the Bloods alliance, whose numbers are smaller than the Crips. A distinctive sign of gang members is wearing bandanas and blue clothing, and sometimes carrying canes. In order to join a gang, a man must commit a crime in front of witnesses, and a girl must have a relationship with a senior member of the gang.

In 1971, gang members attacked elderly Japanese women, who then described the criminals as cripple, since all the attackers were wearing canes. Local newspapers wrote about this incident, and a new name was assigned to the gang - Crips. In 1979, Washington was shot and killed at age 26. The second founder of the gang, Stanley "Tookie" Williams, was arrested for the murder of four people and sentenced to death. While imprisoned for about 25 years, Williams was engaged in literary activities, in his works he convinced teenagers not to participate in criminal groups. Williams was nominated for the Nobel Prize nine times (five for peace and four for his literary works), was awarded the US Presidential Award, and a film about his life was made in Hollywood. Despite some public protests, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger refused to grant his clemency, and Williams was executed on December 13, 2005.

Currently, the Crips gang is considered one of the largest in the United States. The gang at various times included rappers Eazy-E, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Nate Dogg, MC Ren and others.


7. Bloods
The gang's identifying color is red. The Blood Alliance (Bloods Alliance) is an alliance of African-American street gangs in South Central (Compton, Inglewood), as well as the suburbs of Los Angeles, which was created to confront the Crips gang. Existing since 1972, this union was formed as a result of a meeting of gang leaders unhappy with attacks by the Crips. All the dissatisfied were gathered into a single “Family” by members of the Piru Street Boys gang - Sylvester Scott and Benson Owens. As more and more violence occurred between gangs, the Pirus were able to convince others to band together and form the Bloods.

Individual confederation groups of 3 or more members are called sets or trays. Although the coalition only includes African-American gangs, individual sets consist of Latinos, Asians and whites. Whites can also be found in the main gang.
While the Crips outnumbered them 3 to 1, the Bloods also became known for their extreme brutality; and by 1978 there were already 15 sets.

The rivalry between the Reds and the Blues became very famous and was shown in many films and comics. The plot of the South Park episode "Crazy Cripples" (2nd episode of the 7th season) is based on the conflict between the Crips and Bloods gangs.


9. Latin Kings
The Latin Kings are considered one of the largest gangs in the world consisting of immigrants from Latin America. The group was born in the mid-60s in New York, Chicago and Detroit.
In the United States, the “kings” were, as a rule, young people from poor families who came from Puerto Rico and Mexico. The group has its own “Constitution” and “flag”, which depicts the flags of these two states and the symbols of the gang.
In recent years, more and more people from other Latin American countries have joined the ranks of the Latin Kings, and the gang members themselves began to call themselves the “Almighty Nation of Latin Kings,” or simply “the Nation.” Traditional colors - yellow and black, as well as a wreath of five arrows and a crown are already familiar to millions of people in different countries.
Books and films are dedicated to the activities of Latin Kings. Despite the lack of central leadership, the gang operates in 34 countries around the world, and the total number of its members reaches 100 thousand people. There are 25 thousand “kings” in the USA alone.


5. Sinaloa Cartel / Sinaloa Cartel
The Sinaloa Cartel is the largest drug cartel in the world, whose leader, Joaquin Guzman Loera, also known as El Chapo, has been declared public enemy number one. Moreover, at the same time he is considered one of the most influential people on the planet according to Forbes magazine, being between the editor-in-chief of The New York Times Jill Abramson and the Speaker of the US House of Representatives John Boehner.
Although Loera is now in prison, his cartel continues to successfully conduct its business, engaging in drug trafficking, and also not disdaining murders, kidnappings, extortion and pimping.

The Sinaloa Cartel has been in operation since 1989, has 500,000 members, and owns large amounts of land and real estate in Mexico and around the world, including 11 countries in Latin America (e.g. Brazil, Argentina, Colombia), as well as countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Spain, Philippines and West Africa.

When they kill (and believe me, they kill often), they like to post the videos online as a warning to rival gangs. There are rumors that in exchange for permission to bring a huge amount of drugs into the United States, the Sinaloa cartel leaked information about its competitors to law enforcement agencies.

Recently, Jorge Martin Torres, one of the cartel's top money launderers, was sentenced to 44 months in prison. Torres was allegedly responsible for helping buy planes for El Chapo, and he received $300,000 in drug proceeds and also bought another one for $890,000. In addition, Torres purchased Maserati, Mercedes, BMW, Lamborghini and other exotic cars for El Chapo and his brother Alfredo.


4. Los Zetas
The origins of Los Zetas in the 90s were former Mexican special forces soldiers, who were originally the mercenary army of the Golfo Cartel. In the early 2000s, they formed a separate criminal group, and in a very short time it became the most equipped and dangerous gang in Mexico. Their specialization is kidnapping, extortion, murder and drug trafficking. In August 2011, a gang burned down a casino in Mexico, where the fire killed 52 people.
The gang has more than 3,000 members in 22 Mexican states, as well as Guatemala and the United States.

Los Zetas don't just kill, they frequently post their videos online. In 2011, Mexican authorities recorded 193 cases of people being brutally tortured and killed by the Los Zetas gang. Women were sexually assaulted while men were tortured.

In 2011, they carried out the Ellendale massacre in Coahuila, where more than 300 civilians were killed. The gang was also involved in a prison riot in 2012: then 44 members of the 44 Gulf cartel, a rival gang, died, and 37 Seta members escaped from prison.


3. Triad 14K
14K (??K) is one of the most numerous and influential triads in Hong Kong. According to one version, the name comes from the 14 members who stood at the origins of the organization; on the other - from the address of the headquarters in Canton; the third - from 14-karat gold. The Triad was created in 1945 in Guangzhou as an anti-communist organization. After the civil war and the flight of the Kuomintang from China, the headquarters was moved from Guangzhou to China in 1949, and the union included many military and civilians who had nothing to do with the secret societies themselves. Therefore, the name of the union had to be changed to “Association 14” (later shortened to “14K”).

In March 1975, in Amsterdam, three killers shot and killed the leader of the Dutch branch of 14K, Chun Mon, nicknamed “The Unicorn”. Chun Mon became the first Chinese crime boss in Europe and controlled large heroin supply lines.
In the 90s, 14K was considered the largest triad in the world. Fleeing police pressure, 14K went beyond Hong Kong and acquired strong positions in southeastern China, America and Europe, while at the same time going even further into the shadows. In 2008, members of 14K were involved in the kidnapping of a Chinese family for ransom in New Zealand.

As of 2010, “14K” had more than 20 thousand members in its ranks, united in thirty subgroups. The triad is most active in Hong Kong, Macau, China (Guangdong and Fujian), Taiwan, Thailand, Malaysia, Japan, USA (Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago), Canada (Vancouver, Toronto and Calgary), Australia (Sydney) , New Zealand, Great Britain (London) and the Netherlands (Amsterdam). Compared to other triads, 14K is considered one of the most violent criminal groups in Hong Kong.

14K controls the wholesale supply of heroin and opium from Southeast Asia to China, North America and Europe. The triad is also involved in gambling, loan sharking, money laundering, arms and counterfeit goods trafficking, pimping, human trafficking (illegal immigration), racketeering, robbery, arson, contract killings, kidnapping for ransom and fraud.


2. Solntsevskaya Bratva
When it comes to crime syndicate families from Russia, the most influential is Solntesvkaya BRATVA. Founded back in the 1970s, they currently have not many members, around 5,000, but they are certainly making their presence known all over the world.

They have unpronounceable names, and by the time you finish the sentence, you may already be dead. They are capable of any crime imaginable. But they make most of their profits from heroin sales and human trafficking. They are also known to collaborate with Colombian drug cartels in the transportation of cocaine. Their income may also be linked to stock market gambling as well as credit card fraud.

Connections have been established between Semyon Mogilevich and the mafia. Mogilevich is known to the FBI as the most dangerous bandit in the whole world, involved in contract killings, extortion, arms trafficking, and also involved in drug trafficking at the international level.

In 2014, the Solntsevskaya organized crime group was noted as the gang with the highest income in the world - according to Forbes, their income is $ 8.5 billion.


1. Yakuza
The Yakuza are organized crime syndicates in Japan, similar to triads in other Asian countries. The social organization and work characteristics of the Yakuza are very different from other criminal groups: they even have their own office buildings, and their actions are often and completely openly written about in the press. One of the iconic images of the Yakuza is their intricate, colorful tattoos all over their bodies. The Yakuza use a traditional method of manually injecting ink under the skin, known as irezumi, as a form of proof of bravery as the method is quite painful.

Of course, this list would not be complete without them. The Yakuza dates back to the 17th century and currently has over 100,000 members. There are 3 main yakuza syndicates, the largest is the Yamaguchi-gumi family, with 55,000 members. Back in 2014, Forbes reported that their income was $6.6 billion.

The Yakuza is based on the values ​​of the patriarchal family, the principles of unquestioning obedience to the boss and strict adherence to a set of rules (the mafia code), for violation of which inevitable punishment is provided. Stability and longevity for Yakuza clans are ensured by both specific connections between the boss and his subordinates, and the preservation of horizontal (“brotherly”) relationships between ordinary members of the group.

The Yakuza is closely woven into the economic and political life of Japan and has a number of distinctive features that are unique to it. Unlike other criminal organizations in the world, the yakuza does not have clearly defined territorial zones of influence, it does not rely on family ties as the structural basis of its organization and does not seek to keep its internal hierarchy, number or composition of leadership secret (most yakuza groups have their own official emblems do not hide the location of headquarters and the names of bosses; in addition, many of the groups are registered under the “roof” of various patriotic or far-right associations and associations).

In the 1950s, three main types of yakuza emerged - bakuto, tekiya and gurentai. Bakuto traditionally made money in the field of gambling and bookmaking, and also traded in pimping, fraud in trade, construction and the service sector. Tekiyas were engaged in speculation, selling defective and counterfeit products at markets and fairs, and also extorting money from the owners of shops, nightclubs and restaurants. Gurentai operated primarily in places where entertainment establishments were concentrated, where they controlled prostitution, sold stimulants and pornography, not disdaining petty thefts, extorting debts and blackmailing rich clients of brothels (also Gurentai, despite the strict ban on firearms in occupied Japan, were the first to withdraw from traditional swords and began to use pistols to resolve conflicts). In addition, all categories of yakuza were actively recruited by the authorities to contain and suppress the leftist movement, trade unions, anti-war and anti-American demonstrations.

In March 2011, representatives of various yakuza syndicates (especially members of the Sumiyoshi-kai and Inagawa-kai) provided significant assistance to victims of the devastating earthquake that occurred off the east coast of Honshu.



Crips
(from English “Cripples”) is a street gang, a criminal community in the United States, consisting primarily of African Americans. As of 2007, the number of Crips members is estimated at up to 40 thousand people.

A distinctive sign of gang members is wearing bandanas (and clothing in general) in blue shades, and sometimes carrying canes. In order to join a gang, a guy needs to commit a crime in front of witnesses. The famous C-walk dance also originated among the gang. It has developed its own slang and alphabet.

Bloods often call themselves Damu ("blood" in African Swahili) or Dawg (DOGS). Bloods members decorate themselves with tattoos of a dog, usually a bulldog. Bloods also use the acronym M.O.B. (Member of Blood or Money Over Bitches).

In 1971, gang members attacked elderly Japanese women, who then described the criminals as cripple, since all the attackers were wearing canes. Local newspapers wrote about this incident, and the gang became known as Crips.

Currently, the Crips gang is considered one of the largest in the United States. Its members are charged with murder, robbery, drug trafficking and other crimes. Most of the Crips are in California, where it began to develop

Rappers Snoop Dogg and Xzibit left the Crips

Snoop Dogg
Xzibit

Bloods(English bloods - Bloody) is one of the US street gangs, founded in 1970 in the suburbs of Los Angeles, California. The Bloods are known for their "war" with the Crips street gang. The creation of the Bloods occurred after a small gang from Compton, the Piru Street Boys, did not find understanding with the significantly superior Compton Crips and entered into open conflict with them. In an effort to gain support from other gangs, the leaders of the Piru Street Boys gathered all the other non-Crips street gangs in Los Angeles, and it was decided to create Bloods Alliance. Since the Crips wore a blue bandana as an identification mark and dressed primarily in blue, red was adopted as the color of the Alliance, a red bandana was adopted as an identification mark, and Bloods (English blood - Blood) was adopted as the name, that is, “Reds.” .

Like any gang, the Bloods have their own slang and their own alphabet (English alphabet with modified symbols). Using these symbols, gang members "mark" their territory with spray paint, leaving tags. In Bloods slang, Crips gang members are called Crabs.

Also among the gang, the B-walk (Blood Walk) dance appeared, which is an analogue of the C-walk (Crip-Walk), created in the Crips gang as a way of transmitting signals between gang members and recognizing each other

Produced by Tupac Shakur Marion Suge Knight, Jr. there was Bloods.

The main rivals of the Reds and Blues in California are the Latin Kings - Spanish-speaking gangs consisting of descendants of Mexican and South American immigrants. The Latin Kings are approximately equal in size and influence to both the Bloods and the Crips, and they also operate throughout the country, although their traditional territory is considered to be the southern and western states, and primarily California. Recently, there has been a rise in Asian criminal gangs.

Territory: Los Angeles
Criminal activities: drug trafficking, robbery, murder, extortion, document forgery
Number of members: 50,000

The American gang Crips (from English “Cripples”) currently has about 50,000 members. She has her own style of clothing, her own slang and alphabet. His five-time Nobel Prize nominee, who never received a pardon from Arnold Schwarzenegger, was executed by lethal injection. The gang was founded by an ordinary fifteen-year-old boy.

Just as Arkady Gaidar commanded a division at the age of 16, the American Raymond Washington gathered his own gang at the same age. Youth itself is extreme, and if it is accompanied by external stimuli, it becomes warlike.

A truly young era began after the Second World War. The world breathed a sigh of relief after remaining alive after this all-human meat grinder, and the young felt like masters of a new life.

The igniting spark in youth culture was the Beatles, Elvis Presley, then Jim Morisson and Janis Joplin. More to come: the hippie mass movement, free love, LSD. In 1968, colossal student unrest took place in France, after which President Charles de Gaulle resigned. Even in China, cut off from the rest of the world, young Red Guards become the main force of the Cultural Revolution. Students and schoolchildren beat up elderly officials and parade them through the streets in jester outfits.

The peak of the young upsurge was 1969. In the USA, it is felt especially acutely, because not everyone can bliss out on the heavenly beaches of California. The dark-skinned generation could not afford any of the new conquests. All they saw was their ghettos, poor living conditions and lack of better prospects. Then the hour of Raymond Washington comes. In one of the areas of Los Angeles, he gathers strong young blacks who are ready for much more than their wealthy peers.

The gang makes its first capital by robbing elderly Japanese women. It is important to note that Raymond immediately showed himself to be a talented organizer. Just as Adolf Hitler once dressed the Nazis in brown shirts to unite people at the subconscious level, so Raymond introduced a single style of appearance for his gang: blue scarves, black leather jackets and canes. It was thanks to the canes that the gang got the name Crips, that is, lame cripples. The injured Japanese women used this word to describe the robbers, and for a long time the detectives could not figure out who needed to be caught.

Raymond was helped by his friend Stanley "Tookie" Williams, a fellow fifteen-year-old criminal maniac. Both of them dreamed of raising the banner of the Black Panthers, of building an organization that would rule the American streets as a kind of social or even political force. Looking ahead, it must be said that they failed to realize this dream. The Crips still live exclusively in crime. And, perhaps, this is where its strength and vitality lie.

Rivals and criminologists have branded the Crips gang "defective." They say that the fifteen-year-old founding “fathers” did not have the intelligence to organize a single control center. However, if there really was such a center, there would be a chance to easily deal with the gang. Eliminate him and the Crips will disappear. Another thing is spontaneity. She is invincible.

But let's go back to basics. After the elderly Japanese women, the Crips turn their attention to wealthier citizens. For three years, the scourge of robberies has been sweeping the western and southern areas of Los Angeles, as well as its suburbs of Compton and Inglewood. Simultaneously with the extraction of capital, young bandits have to fight with adult thugs who do not want to give up their piece of the pie. Fights and shootings happen almost every day. And time after time youth wins. By 1972, the Crips accounted for 55 murders of seasoned competitors.

In addition to gaining experience in street fighting, the gang develops its culture. A specific slang arises, understandable only to initiates. The C-walk dance and its own direction in music appear. The art of graffiti is developing greatly. It serves as a secret message for the Crips. Every stroke of the wall paintings conveys strategic information to the gang members, and neither the police nor the competitors are able to decipher it. Finally, almost Masonic initiation rituals emerge. To join a gang, a guy undertakes to commit several murders in front of a “commission” from the Crips, and a girl voluntarily gives herself up to several authoritative bandits at once.

By the 1980s, the Crips were mastering the science of drug trafficking. Their traffic covers Central and South America. A new drug, crack, becomes the gang's signature product. New York also falls under the influence of the Crips. Newspapers and television explode with reports of the victorious march of a gang of young people. The police are powerless to stop this terrible force.

It was during this triumphant period that both founders left. In 1979, at the age of 26, Raymond Washington is shot, and Stanley "Tookie" Williams goes to prison for the murder of four people. He is sentenced to death.


Williams has been awaiting execution for 25 years. In prison, he discovers his remarkable talent as a writer. His works have been nominated for the Nobel Prize five times. He is awarded the US Presidential Award. The public asks to pardon him and abolish the death penalty. However, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who had the responsibility to decide on the pardon, turned out to be inexorable. On December 13, 2005, Williams was given a lethal injection.
But life goes on. The “old men” are being replaced by new bloodthirsty and greedy black bandits. They lead Crips members down the beaten path of murder, rape, drugs.