Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Studying the Police Response to Gangs
- 2 Setting and Methods
- 3 Historical Analysis of Gangs and Gang Control
- 4 Scope and Nature of the Current Gang Problem
- 5 Form, Function, and Management of the Police Gang Unit
- 6 The Gang Unit Officer
- 7 On the Job
- 8 Policing Gangs in a Time of Community Policing
- 9 Conclusion and Implications
- References
- Index
4 - Scope and Nature of the Current Gang Problem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Studying the Police Response to Gangs
- 2 Setting and Methods
- 3 Historical Analysis of Gangs and Gang Control
- 4 Scope and Nature of the Current Gang Problem
- 5 Form, Function, and Management of the Police Gang Unit
- 6 The Gang Unit Officer
- 7 On the Job
- 8 Policing Gangs in a Time of Community Policing
- 9 Conclusion and Implications
- References
- Index
Summary
There is nothing more insidious than these gangs. They are worse than the Mafia. Show me a year in New York where the Mafia indiscriminately killed 300 people. You can't.
– Police Chief William Bratton, Los Angeles Police Department (Arizona Republic 2002)We examined the gang problems of the four study sites by analyzing official police gang data collected by the police departments. In particular, we focus on recent trends in the numbers of gangs, gang members, and gang crimes in each city. This data serves as a common reference point to which we can observe the current or objective gang problem. When we refer to the “current” or “objective” gang problem in each city, our understanding of that is based on and limited by information provided to us. Although we attempted to gather official police data from each department dating back ten years or more for an examination of recent trends in gangs, gang members, and gang crime, many agencies had not collected this data or had not retained it. Some of the agencies were able to provide information for all ten years, but others were able to provide only one year's worth of data, and still others could provide official data only on some issues and for intermittent periods.
We also augment the official data with interview data obtained from gang unit officers as well as each unit's internal and external stakeholders.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Policing Gangs in America , pp. 91 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006