Most Gang Members Use Social Media
"Activities online are sparking violence offline," said David Pyrooz, the co-author of a study of Internet gang activity published earlier this year. "That's when it gets real serious."
Some
gang members are using online tools to plan crimes, recruit members or
challenge and threaten rivals, said Bruce Ferrell, the president of the
Nebraska-based Midwest Gang Investigators Association. Many of those kinds of
back-and-forth
"dissing" between rival gang members come in the form
of rap lyrics that are recorded and posted online, he said.
One
such online rap war had a deadly effect in Chicago last fall after someone shot
and killed gang-affiliated rapper Joseph Coleman. That prompted several
retaliatory killings, police in the city said.
Much
of the threatening and harassing words that gang members spew toward one
another online may seem trivial, but it can "spark an all-out gang
war," said Pyrooz, an assistant professor at Sam Houston State University
in Texas.
"What
the Internet does is what word of mouth used to do," he said. "It
provides them with a wide platform to promote their reputations."
And
it is happening in Kansas City, where law enforcement officials have estimated
that 2,500 to 3,500 people have been involved in gang activity in recent years.
"They
are real savvy with social media," said Ron Hunt, a Kansas City community
activist who works with young people seeking to get out of the gang lifestyle.
The
study of online gang activity was conducted in five large cities, including St.
Louis but not Kansas City. Researchers interviewed nearly 600 people, about
two-thirds whom were active or former gang members, Pyrooz said.
Gang
members use social media at about an 80 percent rate, which is consistent with
the general population, he said.
But
gang members engage in "criminal and deviate" behavior online at a
higher rate than other people, the study found. Besides the threatening and
harassing behavior, the gang members are more likely to do such things as
illegally download files, arrange drug sales, sell stolen goods or post and
watch videos of street fights.
Nearly
20 percent of the participants in the study said their gangs had their own
websites or social media pages. About one-third of those said the pages were
password-protected.
One
thing that struck Pyrooz was how technically savvy young gang members were. The
"digital divide" that once separated residents of large urban areas
from those in more affluent communities has disappeared as a result of handheld
technology, he said.
On
the streets, gang members go online to monitor the movements of police officers
and warn one another or give an "all clear" when officers depart,
said Ferrell of the gang investigators association.
Ferrell
said one social media phenomenon occurring on the West Coast is "flocking."
It is a type of flash mob in which gang members text one another to show up all
at once at a specific place to commit a crime. It can involve breaking into a
home or stealing from a business.
Officer
Steve Edwards of the Overland Park Police Department said gang members have a
propensity to post pictures of themselves and their friends online. Sometimes
they are pictured holding guns, money or drugs.
"That
can help us locate where they are and who they are hanging out with," he
said.
With
the wide use of social media today, it is imperative that police agencies learn
how to employ it effectively, said Lauri Stevens of LAwS Communications, which
trains law enforcement officers to effectively use social media.
Beyond
using social media to track gang members and their criminal activity, police
also must learn how to gather evidence so it can be used to successfully
prosecute the criminals, she said.
Stevens
said there has been very little legal precedent in that area, particularly when
it comes to cell phones and other hand-held devices.
State
courts have split on whether police can obtain evidence from cellphones without
search warrants.
Lawyers
for a California man who was linked to a gang-related shooting by photos police
obtained from his cellphone have petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for a
hearing on the issue.
This article originally appeared in The Kansas City Star.
http://www.govtech.com/public-safety/Most-Gang-Members-Use-Social-Media-Study-Finds.html
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