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Officials vow to fight L.A. gangs

Garcetti and Bratton say police know the families behind the Glassell Park violence and will target them.

March 16, 2008|Jennifer Oldham, Times Staff Writer

Northeast Los Angeles residents concerned about losing their streets to gangs quietly filed into a Glassell Park middle school Saturday where frightened students were locked in for hours after a widely publicized midday shooting last month.

As kids kicked a soccer ball on a playing field outside, city officials, including Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton and City Council President Eric Garcetti, sought to reassure residents assembled in the school's auditorium that they will continue to put pressure on multi-generational gangs that for years have terrorized the compact community.


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"It took 60 years to get in this mess we're in," Bratton said. "Sixty years of gang growth in families that aren't breaking the cycle.

"We know who these families are," he said. "We are committed to putting them in prison."

The chief urged patience, saying he plans to work with other agencies to incarcerate gang members in other states, including Maine and Alaska, to break up a handful of families that run powerful local gangs.

Noting that they also live in northeast Los Angeles -- Garcetti in Echo Park and Bratton in Los Feliz -- they said they could empathize with residents' fear about a recent uptick in violence, but they added that a seven-year effort to clean up the area by building a new park and instituting Neighborhood Watch and after-school programs is paying off.

"A lot of Los Angeles saw our neighborhood and our community a couple weeks ago for the first time," Garcetti said. "But we've been working here for a long time."

Garcetti was referring to a Feb. 21 gunfight that started when gang members opened fire, killing a man near Aragon Elementary School in Cypress Park as he held the hand of his 2-year-old granddaughter.

As the gunmen drove off, several people who apparently knew the victim started firing at them. Minutes later, police pulled over a white sedan in Glassell Park.

Three men jumped out and opened fire; officers returned fire, killing one man and wounding another.

Residents said the shootout was an isolated incident and bemoaned the negative publicity it brought to their area, even as they acknowledged they are so fearful of gangs that they sometimes use code names when calling police to report gunfire on their streets.

About 100 residents went Saturday to Washington Irving Middle School, some with young children in tow, others using walkers to navigate the carpet-lined aisles in the dimly lighted hall, to hear from police and city leaders and to air their frustrations about continued violence.

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