Because of
uncertainty in reporting on problem groups such as "cliques,"
"crews," "posses," and other nontraditional collectives
that may be hybrid gangs, some police department staff spend an inordinate
amount of time trying to precisely categorize local groups according to
definitions of traditional gangs.
When training law enforcement groups on investigative issues surrounding
drug trafficking or street gangs, instructors must resist the tendency to
connect gangs in different cities just because the gangs share a common name.
If the groups engage in ongoing criminal activity and alarm community
members, law enforcement officers should focus on the criminal activity,
regardless of the ideological beliefs or identifiers (i.e., name, symbols,
and group colors) of the suspects. This practical approach would circumvent
the frustration that results from trying to pigeonhole hybrid gangs into
narrow categories and would avoid giving undue attention to gangs that want
to be recognized as nationwide crime syndicates.
The expanded presence of gangs is often blamed on the relocation of members
from one city to another, which is called gang migration. Some gangs are very
transient and conduct their activities on a national basis. However, the
sudden appearance of Rollin’ 60s Crips graffiti in a public park in rural
Iowa, for example, does not necessarily mean that the Los Angeles gang has
set up a chapter in the community. Gang names are frequently copied, adopted,
or passed on. In most instances, there is little or no real connection
between local groups with the same name other than the name itself. Gang
migration does occur, however.
According to the National Youth Gang Survey, 18 percent of all youth gang
members had migrated from another jurisdiction to the one in which they were
residing. Although gang migration is stereotypically attributed to illegal
activities such as drug franchising, expansion of criminal enterprises is not
the principal driving force behind migration. The most common reasons for
migration are social considerations affecting individual gang members,
including family relocation to improve the quality of life or to be near
relatives and friends. Moreover, in the National Youth Gang Survey, the vast
majority (83 percent) of law enforcement respondents agreed that the
appearance of gang members outside of large cities in the 1990s was caused by
the relocation of young people from central cities.
Thus, the dispersion of the urban population to less populated areas
contributed to the proliferation of gangs in suburban areas, small towns, and
rural areas.Law enforcement professionals may not be able to differentiate
among local gangs that have adopted names of the same well-known gangs from
other locales but have no real connection with each other until they begin to
interact with gang members through interviews, debriefings, and other
contacts. "Hybrid" versions will begin to display variations of the
original gang, such as giving different reasons for opposing rival gangs or
displaying certain colors. Investigators who take the time to cross-check
their local gang intelligence with that of other agencies concerning gangs
with identical names are likely to find some subtle and some glaring
differences