Yet Another Bulletin Board
Sponsored by: The Fans!


Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register.
Nov 25th, 2024, 5:06am

Upcoming Premiere Dates:
Survivor 23, Season premiere
Thursday, September 14 (8:00-9:30 PM, ET/PT) on CBS




Home Home Help Help Search Search Members Members Chat Chat Member Map Member Map Login Login Register Register

| Fantasy Survivor Game | Music Forums | The '80s Server Forums | Shop Online |



Metropolis Reality Forums « Nine teens indicted in gang beatings »

   Metropolis Reality Forums
   Off-Topic Forums
   In the News
(Moderators: lakelady, yesteach, MediaScribe, Bumper, Isle_be_back)
   Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print
   Author  Topic: Nine teens indicted in gang beatings  (Read 229 times)
Rhune
ForumsNet Administrator
USA 
*****





29289456 29289456   rhune_1971   Rhune1971
View Profile Email

Gender: female
Posts: 292
Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
« on: Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:16pm »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
Thursday, October 2, 2003 Posted: 1:22 PM EDT (1722 GMT)
 

 
LAS VEGAS, Nevada (AP) -- Sixteen-year-old Christopher Morgan lived in a gated community with tennis courts and a golf course. He went to a good school in a safe part of town. His mother made Sunday dinner every week.  
 
But police said also he lived another life: as one of the 311 Boyz, a youth gang that beat several teens, leaving one needing titanium plates in his face, another with a broken jaw and a community wondering why.  
 
Unlike most gangs, police say the 311 Boyz came from middle-to-upper-class homes. Most were white. Many were students at Centennial High School, a campus tucked away in an affluent section of northwest Las Vegas.  
 
"They had every single opportunity," said Morgan's mother, Seaneen DeFoor, a cocktail waitress at a downtown hotel-casino. "It offends me to the core. That's not how he was raised."  
 
Police say the gang's symbol was the iron cross, a military honor and one of the most recognizable images of Nazi Germany. DeFoor said she didn't even know her son had a tattoo, let alone an iron cross on his back.  
 
Videos recorded by the teens show them laughing, joking, flashing their iron cross tattoos and yelling "311 Boyz" before fighting other teens. Police are investigating how the gang formed, but have identified about 40 members and associates and at least nine violent incidents.  
 
"It sickened me," Deputy District Attorney Christopher Laurent said after watching the videos. "I was concerned for my children. How do you send them to school after seeing that?"  
 
A rock attack
But attorneys and friends of some of the suspects dispute the police's portrait. Gabriel Grasso, a lawyer who represents 16-year-old Brandon Gallion, said the group was a party crew.  
 
"He's not a street kid. He's never been in trouble," Grasso said. He described Gallion as a regular high school kid from a working-class family, and said racist allegations are ridiculous.  
 
Police believe the gang may have taken its name from the three Ks in Ku Klux Klan; K also is the 11th letter of the alphabet. But Grasso said the group took its name from a rock band and the iron cross is a popular insignia among skateboarders and motocross riders.  
 
"These kids wouldn't know the first thing about the Klan," Grasso said.  
 
The group first made headlines after a hot July night when three teens in a pickup sped wildly through an upscale neighborhood in a mad dash to escape a group of 311 Boyz and get to a hospital. One of them lay bleeding, howling in pain from a broken arm and a shattered face after a softball-sized rock crashed through the truck's windshield.  
 
"They had good parents who provided them with all of the benefits of an upper-class lifestyle," said Deputy District Attorney Jonathan VanBoskerck. "These kids had all the blessings our society has to offer and this is how they thank the community."  
 
Nine teens were indicted in the rock attack. They face multiple charges, including attempted murder and battery with the use of a deadly weapon. Each faces a maximum of 60 years in prison if convicted.  
 
Party crew or gang?
Some of the teens' lawyers said it wasn't a gang attack but simply a party that got out of hand. The teens who threw rocks were just angry because one of their friends had been struck by the pickup, the lawyers said.  
 
At Centennial High School, some students expressed frustration that their classmates were charged.  
 
"I don't think these boys should be wasting away in prison for, like, the next 45 years," said Teri Dahl, 16, who has socialized with the 311 Boyz. "We're not spoiled kids, we're just normal kids who got caught up in something stupid."  
 
Irving Spergel, University of Chicago sociology professor and author of "The Youth Gang Problem: A Community Approach," said it's rare to have gangs in more affluent areas, although the 311 Boyz are not the first.  
 
"They're just a bunch of kooky kids that got out of control," he said. "These kids have to achieve something they're apparently not achieving in other areas of their existence."  
 
Morgan had been in trouble before, caught driving a stolen car and under the influence of drugs, but DeFoor, 38, thought her son was on track when he took up with a new group of kids.  
 
Then a police officer came to her door, telling her Morgan was a member of the 311 Boyz. "That he could be part of a racial gang, that floored me," said DeFoor.  
 
Morgan pleaded guilty this month to beating a teen with brass knuckles, and was sentenced to a youth correctional facility until early next year. DeFoor said she and her ex-husband tried counseling and drug treatment programs to help their son.  
 
"Where were the parents? Guess what? I was here the whole time," she said. "He was taught right from wrong. He was taught that at a very early age. But consequences didn't matter to him."
IP Logged
Back to top
Rhune
ForumsNet Administrator
USA 
*****





29289456 29289456   rhune_1971   Rhune1971
View Profile Email

Gender: female
Posts: 292
Re: Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
« Reply #1 on: Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:23pm »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

on Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:16pm, Rhune wrote:
"They're just a bunch of kooky kids that got out of control," he said. "These kids have to achieve something they're apparently not achieving in other areas of their existence."  

 
This is the WRONG attitude to take with this kind of situation.  It reminds me of a friend who had to take her husband to court multiple times for beating her and her children before the judge finally gave supervised visitations.  His lawyer described one of the beatings to the judge as, "just a spanking that got a little vigorous".
 
Getting a tattoo of a swastika and then beating people does not make you a "kooky kid" who's just trying to "achieve something".
« Last Edit: Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:24pm by Rhune » IP Logged
Back to top
MzWings
ForumsNet Member
Canada 
*




Praying for FN members/family health & happiness

    Grahndmahmah
View Profile

Gender: female
Posts: 0
Re: Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
« Reply #2 on: Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:53pm »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

on Oct 2nd, 2003, 2:16pm, Rhune wrote:
Nine teens indicted in gang beatings
Thursday, October 2, 2003 Posted: 1:22 PM EDT (1722 GMT)
 

 
"Where were the parents? Guess what? I was here the whole time," she said. "He was taught right from wrong. He was taught that at a very early age. But consequences didn't matter to him."

 
There's that word that keeps falling through the cracks:  CONSEQUENCES  If this mother realized that, why didn't she keep working with him (with the help of pro's) until it DID matter to him.
 
Believe me - I know full well the frustrations of being a parent and sometimes we just wanted to quit, give up, a few nights in jail would suit'em just fine - we felt beaten.  But we always got that second wind and the last blowup, we contacted TOUGH LOVE (which I've alluded to before).  
IP Logged

"Senility Prayer"...God grant me...
The senility to forget the people I never liked
The good fortune to run into the ones that I do
And the eyesight to tell the difference."







Back to top
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print

Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »

Metropolis Reality Forums » Powered by YaBB 1 Gold - SP 1.3.1!
YaBB © 2000-2003. All Rights Reserved.