This Is For The Mara Salvatrucha is the first non-fiction narrative about the MS-13. It tells the story of Brenda Paz, a young street gang member who betrayed her gang and became an informant, revealing a previously unknown threat across America.

by Samuel Logan

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Archive for the ‘Security’ Category

Sharing Intel to fight transnational gangs

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

A friend sent along a link I wanted to share with you here. The FBI is working closely with El Salvador to combat the MS-13 and M-18 street gangs.

The members of a new international group formed to help fight the violent MS-13 and 18th Street gangs were meeting for the first time last month at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia when the reason for the group’s existence became perfectly clear: representatives from El Salvador and Mexico realized they had been tracking the activities of the same MS-13 suspect. Now both countries could benefit from their collective intelligence efforts.

“These gangs are transnational, and right now they pretty much cross our borders for criminal activity at will,” said L.T. Chu, an FBI intelligence analyst with our MS-13 National Gang Task Force and the program manager for the new group—the Central American Intelligence Program (CAIP).

The FBI is involved in investigative partnerships to battle transnational gangs, but CAIP, whose members are primarily from Central America, is the first organization to focus exclusively on intelligence.

At the annual Policia Nacional Civil Anti-Gang conference last spring in El Salvador, Chu said, “We determined that one of our weaknesses was exchange of intelligence. We realized that it was crucial that we set up a forum and a mechanism to exchange this information.”

That thinking is very much in keeping with the Bureau’s overall post 9/11 efforts to become a proactive, intelligence-gathering organization that prevents criminal activity rather than responding to crimes after the fact.

A joint initiative of the FBI and the State Department, CAIP consists of veteran criminal intelligence analysts from the U.S., El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, and Canada who work gang-related matters. Besides intelligence sharing, the objective is to standardize reports and other intelligence products and to minimize the communication gaps between countries—gaps that currently allow gang members to operate across borders.

At its first meeting—the group will meet three times a year at rotating host countries—interpreters assisted participants who spoke little English or Spanish. But even with the language barrier, everyone understands the significance of CAIP’s mission.

“Gangs are a huge problem in Guatemala,” said Heber Ramirez, chief of intelligence analysis for Policia Nacional Civil de Guatemala. Through an interpreter he explained, “It is very important that we have established relationships with these countries so that we can track gang activities across borders.” And as CAIP works toward standardizing how intelligence products are produced, he added, “We will be reporting very specific information in very specific ways that everyone can understand.”

Douglas Funes, who heads the transnational gang unit for the Policia Nacional Civil in El Salvador—which includes two embedded FBI agents working gang-related investigations—agreed that CAIP will be a vital weapon in fighting gangs.

El Salvador is “contaminated” by violent gangs, Funes said, and MS-13 alone has some 15,000 members in the country, including many members in the prison population. “Perhaps the most serious problem with MS-13,” he added, “is that they are constantly recruiting new members.”

“MS-13 and 18th Street are developing constantly and changing their methods,” Chu said. “The only way to fight them is to understand their organizations from the top down. And the only way to accomplish that is through cooperative intelligence sharing across borders. That is why CAIP is so important.”

First TV segment! CNN Int’l - Connect the World

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

I took a call today from CNN in London, and they’ve asked me to be on the CNN Int’l show, Connect the World with Becky Anderson. I’m told it will be a 4 - 6 minute segment, starting at 4:30PM, EST.

I’ll be talking about the presence of Mexican drug trafficking organizations across the world, focusing on India and China, the Americas, the US, and Europe.

Hopefully they’ll plug my book!

Tune in if you can…

QnA part V

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Q: Gang violence is a daily reality for some Americans, but certainly not all. Why should everyone be concerned about gang growth in this country? What can we do to control and limit it?

A: The MS-13 no longer limits recruitment to Latinos. There are many cases of Caucasian members. Cops across the country consistently say that parents are the last to know. The best way to limit street gangs is to invest in young people with more parental attention. The next best option is to create after school programs that keep young teens off the streets. Prevention goes much farther than intervention or rehabilitation.

Q. What are the best prevention strategies?

A: Awareness and after school activities are two of the most effective strategies used today. Facilitating classroom discussions and raising street gang awareness among parents go a long way toward helping children and their parents recognize a street gang presence in their lives. More importantly, parents who know the signs of street gang involvement are in a better position to address their child’s participation before it becomes too late. Oftentimes, however, parents work until late, creating a gap in time between school and when parental supervision in the evening. This after school period is when most gang recruiters strike. After school programs, such as team sports, are very effective at filling this gap and giving kids an organized outlet away from the enticing influences of gang members.

Q: Several of the law enforcement officers involved with Brenda Paz’s case made an heroic effort to help her escape gang life. Why, in the end, was it not enough?

A: Brenda was the first teenager in the history of the US Witness Protection program to enter without adult supervision. The program, which was designed for middle-aged mob informants, not pregnant teenage girls, failed to provide Brenda with the love and attention she so needed. She was alone too often, and eventually, at the deepest moment of her loneliness, the only person she thought to call was her boyfriend, an MS-13 member. He eventually betrayed her, which is ultimately what led to her death.

Secure communities

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

In radio interviews I often speak about the Latino immigrant communities and explain how members of the MS-13 “hide in plain sight.”

They certainly do, and now if immigrants are arrested for a crime (not for undocumented status), there is an Dept. of Homeland Security program, dubbed “Secure Communities“, that has access to a number of databases which allows law enforcement to see the complete criminal past of the person they’re investigating.

This program does have some drawbacks, but it does take a step in the right direction in terms of communication - the one element that is so crucial and so lacking when we look at the federal-to-local connections in place to help stop groups such as the MS-13 from growing.

QnA, part III

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Q: How is the MS-13 structured?

A: The MS-13 is a network with numerous, interlinked groups spread across 42 states and over 1,200 cities in the United States. These groups, called “cliques”, are loosely organized with one older leader, called the primera palabra or “first word”, a secretary, a treasurer, and, often times, a number of members who specialize in stealing cars, smuggling illegal immigrants, or murder.

When I interviewed the MS-13 member Veto, a “first word” in Brenda’s clique in Texas, he was serving time in a maximum-security prison. He told me of his goal to expand the MS-13 across Texas, in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Brownsville. With his cliques in place, he planned to operate a human smuggling ring, bringing Salvadorians through Mexico and up to Brownsville before sending them to Los Angeles and Northern Virginia. His contacts in El Salvador would have also facilitated this process.

The MS-13 is also a transnational gang, with close ties to thousands of members who live in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. From prison cells near San Salvador, senior MS-13 gang members can make one phone call and the next day someone in Charlotte, North Carolina will be found dead, stabbed to death. Such an extension of power - across nations - is part of what makes the MS-13 one of the most dangerous street gangs in America.

QnA with Samuel Logan

Monday, July 6th, 2009

My publisher, Hyperion, and I have developed a QnA style interview that details some behind-the-scenes-aspects of the book, the MS-13, and a macro-level picture of immigration, deportation, organized crime and some of the other issues that overlap with this book.

I’ll post one question and one answer on an intermittent schedule, starting now:

Q: Why does the FBI call the Mara Salvatrucha (or MS-13) the “most violent gang in America”? Why is it growing so quickly?

A: The MS-13 brought the machete to the streets of LA. This low-tech weapon is particularly gruesome; it closes the distance between gang members and their victims. These guys use knives to kill people - decapitations are like a calling card. No other gang in the US is this comfortable with violence.

The MS-13 has grown quickly because all members are ordered to recruit; expansion is a constant preoccupation. Another important factor is the reality that many young teens in America’s immigrant Latino communities are left alone a lot. They have little love and support at home because parents are too busy working multiple jobs to scrape by, and in the underserved communities where many immigrants live, there are few options for after school activities. Enter an MS-13 recruiter who offers friends, something to do, and, most importantly, dignity. Soccer games followed by a BBQ are the most popular MS-13 recruiting events across the country.

Let’s talk about the MS-13, immigration, and border violence

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Last week, I was invited by Silvio Canto to talk about my book, immigration, border issues, and matters of street gangs and organized crime in both Mexico and the United States.

Here is the link to the blog talk radio show.

One item, in particular stood out, and it didn’t even come up during our conversation. Silvio had called me the day before just to chat and get straight what we would talk about (thanks for that, Silvio!), and he brought up a very interesting slice of history called the Bracero guest-worker program. I know a thing or two about organized crime and street gangs, but I’m still very much a student of the immigration debate, so I’ll just quote here what was published in the WSJ.

I favor a comprehensive immigration bill that combines stepped-up border enforcement with a large guest-worker program and a method by which we can bring illegal immigrants out of the shadows of our society. I’ve written before about how President Eisenhower’s Bracero guest-worker program reduced arrests of illegal aliens at the border from over a million in 1954 to only 45,000 by 1959. The number of arrests remained under 100,000 a year until 1964, when President Lyndon Johnson ended the program under pressure from labor unions.

Now, as the immigration debate heats up later this year (and probably well into next), I have to wonder about the chances a modern-day guest worker program might have.