Monday, February 23, 2009

Resources For Ending Violence in Our Communities

http://crimereports.com/map Type in Your Zip code for Crime Reports (sit down for these results) note: Many common gang and drug crimes appear all areas of Salt Lake County What Happened on Your Street recently?

http://www.great-online.org/ School Programs That Address the Problem

http://attorneygeneral.utah.gov/drugs.html
Utah Attorney General Website

High School Truancy
http://www.abc4.com/content/news/top%20stories/story/SALT-LAKE-CITY-ABC-4-News-Truancy-is-a-big-pro/Erarv189L0q7f5nYIXWyYA.cspx (juvenile crimes during school time)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMpemG-_cl0 You Tube Gangs in America

http://www.fox13now.com/news/kstu-graffiti-taggers-risk-life-i80,0,7369051.story


http://www.fbi.gov/page2/feb09/ngta_020609.html F.B.I. Resources

http://www.fbi.gov/inside/archive/inside020609.htm F.B.I. Resources

http://www.fbi.gov/page2/july08/gangs_071008.html F.B.I. Resources

http://saltlakecity.fbi.gov/community.htm FBI Community Outreach

http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/files/RIC/Publications/GangsCard_FBI.pdf Resources for Communities

http://www.policemag.com/Channels/Gangs.aspx Resources

Utah Criminal Codes: (Utah Gang Laws With Loopholes) a few have improved, but many have not!
http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/76_06.htm
http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/htm/76_06_010700.htm
http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/htm/76_06_010701.htm
Harassment: http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/htm/76_05_010600.htm
http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/htm/76_09_080300.htm Gang Recruitment

Terroristic Threat http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE76/htm/76_05_010700.htm

http://le.utah.gov/~2009/bills/sbillint/sb0118.htm

http://www.slsheriff.org/admin/media/crimeprevention/pdf/safe_neighborhood.pdf
Brochure from SLCO Sheriff Org
http://deseretnews.com/article/content/mobile/1,5143,705282976,00.html?printView=true

http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=6848672&page=1 Phoenix, AZ 2008 Kidnapping Capital of the U.S.A. (370 in 2008)

http://www.rules.utah.gov/publicat/code/r277/r277-436.htm Utah Admin Code R277
http://www.kutv.com/content/news/topnews/story/Bill-Proposal-For-Tougher-Gang-Law/gNEXuVDCV0-jkysAKF6JfA.cspx

WVC golf course murder http://www.ksl.com/index.php?nid=148&sid=5617893 (gang related)

2 comments:

  1. What Can Be Done To Help Solve The Problem Of Gangs ?

    http://myfloridalegal.com/webfiles.nsf/WF/KGRG-7FVPNR/$file/GangReductionReportWEB.pdf
    orney General
    Bill McCollum

    ii Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Introduction and Executive Summary
    Criminal gangs steal and destroy property, sell drugs to our children and commit acts of violence and
    brutality that threaten the safety and security of our citizens. The number of gangs and gang members
    has been growing steadily in Florida for years. For far too long efforts to address gang problems in
    Florida have been left to local law enforcement and community leaders with minimal federal and state
    support and no statewide strategy.
    In the summer of 2007, at the request of the Attorney General, the heads of affected state agencies and
    law enforcement associations gathered to address this issue and formulate a statewide strategy to combat
    gangs. Those participating in this executive group were:
    The Attorney General; Secretary of the Florida Department of Corrections; Executive Director of the
    Florida Department of Law Enforcement; Secretary of the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice; Secretary
    of the Florida Department of Children and Families; Commissioner of the Florida Department
    of Education; Director of the Florida Office of Drug Control; Director of the Florida Highway Patrol;
    President of the Florida Sheriffs Association; President of the Florida Police Chiefs Association; and
    President of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association.
    In December 2007, at the suggestion of this executive group, the Office of the Attorney General convened
    a summit of interested community leaders from around the state to help develop a statewide strategy.
    This document is the product of the efforts of the executive group and the participants in this summit.
    The mission of the Florida Gang Reduction Strategy is to increase the safety of the citizens of Florida
    by empowering Florida’s youth to reject criminal gangs as a viable option and by substantially reducing
    gang-related crime and violence in Florida.
    The goals to accomplish this mission are:
    1. Stop the growth of criminal gangs in Florida
    2. Reduce the number of gangs and gang members
    3. Render gangs ineffectual
    To meet these goals and accomplish the mission the strategy is built on three pillars:
    • Prevention/Intervention
    • Law Enforcement
    • Rehabilitation and Re-entry
    The key to the success of the strategy is coordination and cooperation among federal, state and local
    governments, law enforcement, elected officials, community leaders and the business community. In
    order to empower Florida’s youth to reject criminal gangs as a viable option a coordinated and cooperative
    effort of all parties must be focused on the same basic objectives.
    Executive Summary
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy iii
    Prevention/Intervention Objectives:
    Objective 1: Expose Florida’s gangs and their activities for their violent and destructive reality.
    Objective 2: Educate youth, parents and other mentoring adults to help Florida’s youth reject
    gang involvement.
    Objective 3: Mobilize communities to repel gang appeal to Florida’s youth.
    Objective 4: Provide effective prevention/intervention programs for those youth who are the most
    likely targets of gang recruitment and identified young gang members.
    Objective 5: Encourage and assist the creation of positive extracurricular activities and workforce
    development programs for Florida’s at-risk youth.
    Objective 6: Support existing and new community groups/coalitions that take a stand against criminal
    gangs.
    The strategy recommends that in addition to local gang prevention/intervention coalitions there be the
    formation of regional gang prevention/intervention and suppression task forces to share information
    and coordinate efforts at both the prevention/intervention and law enforcement level. Members of
    these regional gang task forces should include representatives of federal, state and local law enforcement,
    prosecutors, public defenders, the judiciary, juvenile justice, schools, area prevention/intervention
    programs, local government, and religious and community leaders.
    Law Enforcement Objectives:
    Objective 1: Compile a statewide priority list and target every major criminal gang in Florida for
    dismantling by arresting and prosecuting gang leaders and key gang members.
    Objective 2: Identify and target for arrest and prosecution all gang kingpins in Florida and seek life
    imprisonment sentences.
    Objective 3: Prioritize the prosecution of gun crimes related to gangs and gang members and target
    for prosecution those who provide guns to juvenile gang members ineligible to own or
    possess a gun.
    Objective 4: In areas of intense gang activity, build community policing, remove firearms from
    low to mid-level gang members and use injunctive powers to prohibit gang members
    from gathering.
    Objective 5: Improve intelligence gathering and information sharing on gangs and gang members and
    their activities among and between federal, state and local law enforcement, prosecuting
    authorities, schools and Juvenile Justice, Corrections, and Children and Families officials.
    Objective 6: Strengthen gang law enforcement and prosecution with more uniform, specialized
    training and designate one Assistant State Attorney in each judicial circuit whose sole,
    full-time responsibility is to prosecute and manage the prosecution of gangs, gang members
    and gang related crimes.
    Objective 7: Coordinate federal, state and local law enforcement/prosecution efforts toward the
    common objective of combating gang activity in Florida including setting priorities and
    targeting certain gangs, gang activities and gang related prosecutions all over Florida.
    iv Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Rehabilitation and Re-entry Objectives:
    Objective 1: Expand opportunities for criminal gang members in state or county correctional systems
    to participate in prison industry programs, educational programs, faith and character-
    based programs, drug treatment/rehabilitation programs and all other programs designed
    to rehabilitate offenders or assist offenders in preparing for re-entry into society
    upon completion of their sentences.
    Objective 2: Develop and implement specialized, individualized counseling and mentoring focused
    on motivating criminal gang members in state or county correctional systems to gain
    educational, vocational or job training, social skills, and lifestyle interests and habits
    that will turn offenders away from gang membership/participation and toward becoming
    productive members of society when released.
    Objective 3: Provide job placement for criminal gang members in state or county correctional systems
    upon release and provide a counselor/mentor for each such released offender to
    give guidance, assist with acquiring and keeping a job, educational advancement, and
    building positive relationships outside of gangs for a period of five years after release.
    Objective 4: Require all identified criminal gang members in state or county correctional systems,
    upon release, to register with an identified state office and keep their address, contact
    information and job status current for ten years after release and require such released
    offender to report in person for counseling to a counselor/mentor at least quarterly for
    the first five years after release.
    Objective 5: Train and qualify the necessary number of counselors/mentors/teachers to accomplish
    the individualized goals of gang member rehabilitation and re-entry from state or
    county correctional systems.
    The Florida Gang Reduction Strategy requires the collection and regular maintenance of solid data
    on gangs, gang members, prevention/intervention programs and monitoring and coordination of
    activities and initiatives designed to implement and effectuate the mission, goals and objectives of
    the strategy. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE), The Florida Department of Corrections,
    The Florida Department of Education, The Florida Department of Children and Families,
    Florida Department of Juvenile Justice, and many sheriffs’ offices and police departments collect
    some data on gangs, gang members and gang activities. Unfortunately, this data is incomplete and
    to date there has been no comprehensive collation of data from these various sources into a usable
    form. There is a need to formulate a method whereby the data collected by these various agencies
    can be pooled to facilitate the objectives of this strategy. Similarly, the development of a statewide
    repository of resources with respect to prevention/intervention programs for at-risk youth or community/
    non-profit programs targeted at youth likely to be recruited into gangs would be beneficial
    to the furtherance of the strategy.
    The 2007 FDLE survey of law enforcement and school resource officers shows that there are at
    least 1,500 gangs and over 65,000 gang members in Florida. According to Department of Corrections’
    officials, an analysis of inmate population indicates that all 67 Florida counties have gang
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy v
    member representation in the prison system. Therefore the need for a statewide comprehensive
    database is critical to the success of the strategy. The current “FDLE Gang Database” program
    was established following an earlier recommendation of a statewide grand jury and is designed to
    capture information voluntarily submitted by local law enforcement on gangs and gang members.
    However, based upon reports from local agency officials, the majority of Florida’s law enforcement
    agencies are not using the state system for various reasons. The most common reason stated is
    the lack of interfaces that would allow this data to be electronically uploaded from their Records
    Management Systems (RMS) to the FDLE system, thus eliminating the need for duplicate entries
    into two systems. Chiefs and Sheriffs clearly indicate that they do not have the time, staff or desire
    to enter the data twice.
    To implement the Florida Gang Reduction Strategy it will be necessary to create and maintain a
    group or body with a centralized office in the state to collect and collate data from all sources. This
    group will also coordinate and direct, where appropriate, federal, state and local actions for all three
    pillars of the strategy and measure success. For this purpose it was recommended that there be created
    a Coordinating Council on Gang Reduction Strategies to be chaired by the Attorney General and
    comprised of the heads of the following agencies: Commissioner of the Florida Department of Education,
    Executive Director of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Secretary of the Florida
    Department of Corrections, Secretary of the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice, Secretary of the
    Florida Department of Children and Families, Director of the Florida Office of Drug Control, Director
    of the Florida Highway Patrol, President of the Florida Sheriffs Association, President of the Florida
    Police Chiefs Association and President of the Florida Association of Prosecuting Attorneys.
    Under this plan the Office of the Attorney General and the Coordinating Council would be responsible
    for coordinating, implementing, and measuring the progress of the Florida Gang Reduction
    Strategy. The Office of the Attorney General and the Coordinating Council would seek the steadfast
    synchronization of gang reduction efforts throughout the state, building task forces, creating
    coalitions and assuring the flow of shared information and intelligence on gangs, gang members
    and progress on prevention/intervention and prisoner re-entry programs. It is anticipated that
    from time to time the Attorney General and the Coordinating Council will make recommendations
    to the Legislature and the Governor to further efforts in implementing the Gang Reduction Strategy.
    It is also anticipated that there would be periodic summits in the various areas of the state to
    bring together community leaders to counsel on ways the strategy can be improved or the implementation
    furthered. These summits would be arranged and directed by the Attorney General and
    the Coordinating Council.
    vi Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Table of Contents
    Background: The Extent of the Problem
    • Progression of Criminal Gangs in America
    • The Growth of Youth Gangs
    • Criminal Gangs in Florida
    • Addressing the Problem
    • Risk Factors
    F The Personal Cost of Joining a Gang
    F The Cost of Criminal Gangs
    F Individual Risk and Protective Factors
    F Family Risk and Protective Factors
    F School Risk and Protective Factors
    F Peer Risk and Protective Factors
    F Community Risk and Protective Factors
    The Strategy
    • Executive Group and 2007 Gang Reduction Summit
    • Mission
    • Goals
    • Three Pillars
    • Focus of the Effort to Defeat Gangs
    • Prevention/Intervention Objectives
    • Law Enforcement Objectives
    • Rehabilitation and Re-entry Objectives
    Concept of Operation
    • Coordinating Council
    • Regional Task Forces
    • Developing a Prevention/Intervention Plan
    • Law Enforcement Plan Developments
    • Rehabilitation and Re-entry Plan Development
    F The Department of Corrections and Re-entry
    F Emphasizing Re-entry
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy vii
    Measuring Success
    • Gang Data
    • Prevention/Intervention Data
    • Workforce Development/Training Programs
    • Drug Rehabilitation/Treatment Program Data
    • Inmate Re-entry Data
    • Community Involvement
    • Importance of Metrics
    • Gang Data from the Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (2001-2007)
    Resources
    • State Agencies
    F Office of the Attorney General
    F Department of Education
    F Department of Children and Families
    F Department of Law Enforcement
    F Department of Juvenile Justice
    F Department of Corrections
    F Office of Drug Control
    F Department of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles
    • Well Known Existing Prevention Programs
    • Other Programs and Resources of Interest
    Appendix A-E
    • A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    • B: First Interim Report of the Statewide Grand Jury on Criminal Gangs and
    Gang-Related Violence
    • C: 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment Recommendations
    • D: Florida Council on the Social Status of Black Men and Boys
    • E: Regional Gang Reduction Task Forces Map
    viii Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 1
    Progression of Criminal Gangs in
    America
    Criminal gangs have been prevalent in America
    since its beginning. The drastic changes that occurred
    with American lifestyles during the Industrial
    Revolution gave rise to the modern American
    gang. Notably, there was a high concentration of
    criminal gangs in 19th century New York City. The
    Five Points, a center of ethnic conflict in what is
    present day Manhattan, was a neighborhood where
    gangs with strong ethnic identities could grow and
    operate. Irish gangs had a solid hold on the Five
    Points, but gangs based on Polish, Italian and other
    ethnicities were also common.1
    The behaviors of the criminal gangs of that era
    were similar to the gangs we face in our communities
    today. Gangs fought over territory, robbed
    and mugged people and sometimes united to fight
    against gangs from other areas. Then, as now,
    their affects on the neighborhoods they touched
    were devastating.
    During the 20th century America experienced
    a gradual increase in criminal gang activity.
    Throughout the 1950s and ’60s, most criminal
    gangs were based in large metropolitan cities.
    Subsidiary gangs would be located outside the
    city in small suburban towns, while the development
    of an efficient road system and increasing
    high-speed transport availability assisted criminal
    gangs in their illegal activities.2 As the highway
    system matured and suburban-America grew,
    criminal gangs were able to expand their activities
    into communities remote from larger metropolitan
    cities. Over time, gangs adapted to the advances
    of law enforcement and adopted sophisticated
    technology and organizational techniques to become
    more efficient in their illegal behavior. Consequently,
    criminal gangs used their efficiencies to
    increase the destruction they inflicted on commu-
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    nities and increased their profits by controlling a
    larger market in illegitimate businesses, especially
    in the distribution of illegal drugs.
    The Growth of Youth Gangs
    As stated in a 2001 report from the Office of Juvenile
    Justice and Delinquency Prevention, “youth
    gang problems in the United States grew dramatically
    between the 1970s and the 1990s, with the
    prevalence of gangs reaching unprecedented levels.”
    Between 1970 and 1995 the number of cities
    reporting gang problems had increased seven
    fold.3 Moreover, the number of counties reporting
    gang problems in 1995 was 10 times the number
    of counties reporting gang problems in 1970.4 Nationwide,
    the last quarter of the twentieth century
    saw a significant and growing domestic crime
    problem fed by gang activity. Florida, in particular,
    saw a disproportionate increase in the number
    of youth gang members.
    The number of Florida counties reporting gang
    problems rose 23 percent between 1970 and
    1995.5 This upsurge vaulted Florida to a ranking
    of 4th in the nation among cities reporting youth
    gang problems.6 Within a quarter of a century,
    youth gangs had become a significant part of the
    gang threat to the public safety within Florida.
    Criminal Gangs in Florida
    Most gang activity in Florida appears to be centered
    in the Central, West and South Florida regions.
    Over the past three years Florida has seen
    a significant increase in crimes committed by gang
    members in smaller sized cities like Panama City,
    Marianna, Greensboro, Quincy, and Tallahassee.
    An assessment prepared by the Florida Department
    of Law Enforcement (FDLE) in November
    1991 indicated that there were more than 10,000
    documented gang members and associates and
    over 159 identified gangs in Florida.7
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    2 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Since the 1991 assessment,
    the number
    of gangs and gang
    members in Florida is
    continuing to grow. In
    October 2007, FDLE
    completed a statewide
    survey of law enforcement
    agencies, corrections
    and juvenile justice
    facilities and prosecutors
    in an effort to develop
    a thorough understanding
    of the scope of the
    criminal gang problem
    in Florida. Law enforcement
    reported increases
    in gang-related activity
    over the past 6 to 12
    months, and approximately
    1,500 criminal
    gangs with over 65,000
    members were identified
    by survey respondents.8
    The number of crimes
    committed by gang
    members continues to
    expand, as well. The
    number of felony convictions
    for gang members
    rose from 2,759 in FY 04-05 to 4,447 in FY
    06-07. This represents an increase of 61 percent in
    crimes committed by gang members in Florida over
    the past three years.9 This increasing gang presence
    is not just a Florida phenomenon, but a nationwide
    problem. According to the National Alliance of Gang
    Investigators Association there are at least 21,500
    gangs and more than 731,000 active gang members
    in the United States (excluding prison gangs, and
    motorcycle gangs.)10
    Addressing the Problem
    Criminal gangs pose a significant and growing
    threat to the safety and security of the citizens of
    Florida. If not stopped or reversed, this growing
    activity will translate into a much larger threat
    for Florida in the years
    to come. Our state must
    acknowledge the threat
    and take concerted action
    to address this danger to
    ensure the safety of its
    citizens. The ability of
    criminal gangs to recruit
    and grow is not isolated
    to the poor or urban sections
    of Florida. Nor are
    the adverse effects of
    gang-related crime unique
    to a single demographic or
    race. The damage done by
    gang activity has spread
    throughout our communities
    and across all demographic
    and social economic
    lines. The tragedy
    of an innocent life lost to
    gang violence is mourned
    well beyond the individual
    afflicted family.
    Despite increasing evidence
    of gang crime and
    violence throughout
    Florida, some communities
    continue to deny the
    obvious gang presence in their neighborhoods, a
    phenomenon reflected nationwide. Citizen pride
    regarding their towns and communities, as well
    as concerns for commercial and financial interests
    leads to a reluctance to admit to gang problems.
    Denying the problem leaves it to fester, thus
    allowing the gangs to thrive amidst community
    indifference. In order to combat the crime and
    devastation brought on by criminal gangs, communities
    must first recognize when gangs have
    gained a foothold in their neighborhoods. The
    success of gang reduction strategies will only be
    recognized when law enforcement, school officials,
    community leaders, business owners and
    local citizens collectively conduct a thorough and
    accurate analysis of the situation in their communities
    and when a gang presence is discovered,
    Factors Contributing
    to Violent Crime
    Percent of Agencies
    Identifying this as a
    Problem
    Gangs 77%
    Juvenile/Youth Crime 74
    Impulsive
    Violence/“Disrespect”
    Issues
    66
    Economy/Poverty/
    Unemployment
    63
    Release of Offenders
    from Correctional
    Institutions Back into
    the Community
    63
    Cocaine 61
    Poor Parenting 58
    Increased Availability
    of Guns
    56
    Methamphetamines 38
    Insufficient Prison/
    Jail Space
    38
    Top 10 Factors Identified as
    Contributing to Violent Crime
    Source: Police Executive Research Forum 2007 National
    Survey, Violent Crime in America: The Tale of Two Cities
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 3
    acknowledge the true nature of a gang presence in
    their community.
    Risk Factors
    The Personal Cost of Joining a Gang
    Joining a gang is quite costly to the individual. In
    a study of the economics of drug selling within
    a well organized gang, active gang members over
    a four-year period had roughly a 25% chance of
    dying.11 If the gang member managed to cheat
    death, he or she would still likely experience
    two nonfatal injuries and be arrested almost six
    times.12 In return for their risky activities, the
    gang member earns far less than what the “job
    duties” entail.
    Many who join a gang fail to achieve a high
    school diploma, substantially reducing life-long
    earnings potential.13 As a result, the low-level
    gang member earns only a third of those with
    a high school diploma.14 Even worse, low-level
    gang members make half the amount of those
    earning a legitimate wage without a high school
    education. Unfortunately, many of those who
    join gangs do not weigh the small gains attained
    through gang involvement with the large, detrimental
    and dangerous consequences that gang
    membership brings.
    The Cost of Criminal Gangs
    The cost to Florida for gang-related crime is staggering.
    The operating costs to manage the facilities
    incarcerating the over 4,400 identified gang
    members in prison exceed $130 million. Identified
    gang members on state probation cost the criminal
    justice system another $2 million per year. All
    together, convicted gang members cost Florida’s
    taxpayers more than $132 million a year.15
    Programs/Policies Implemented in Response to
    Increase in Violent Crime
    Percent of Agencies
    Implementing Program/Policy
    Hot Spots Enforcement 63%
    Community-Oriented Initiative 44
    Problem-Solving Policing 37
    Cooperation with Other Departments (e.g., drug task forces) 37
    Gang Suppression (enforcement) 37
    Shifts in Police Resources (moving desk officers to patrol, or reassigning
    employees based on changes in crime)
    28
    Drug Enforcement, Such as Crackdowns on Open-air Drug Markets 23
    Targeting for Enforcement of Repeat Offenders 22
    Hiring/Recruiting More Officers 20
    Federal Grant Programs (Weed & Seed, Project Safe Neighborhoods) 17
    Technology (cameras, radios, computer systems, CEDs) 15
    School Resource Officers 12
    “Zero Tolerance” of Low-Level Disorder Policies 12
    Juvenile Crime Programs 10
    Creation of a Gang Unit 9
    Programs/Policies Implemented in Response to Violent Crime
    Source: Police Executive Research Forum 2007 National Survey, Violent Crime in America: The Tale of Two Cities
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    4 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    While the cost of incarceration is significant, the
    costs gangs have on the juvenile justice system,
    county jail systems, and courts create an even
    bigger financial burden on Florida’s taxpayers.
    Moreover, the negative impact of gang-related
    activity affects Florida’s economy. The revenue
    generated to run government in Florida is fueled
    largely by the many tourists who visit. Increasing
    gang activity in our state will most likely
    discourage tourists from coming to Florida and
    the economic results could be devastating. The
    human cost, above all, is the most expensive
    bill Florida citizens bear. Victimization through
    personal injury, property crimes, and the ancillary
    effects of gangs perpetuating the illicit drug
    market impacts the safety and quality of life for
    our communities. Gangs cast a shadow of crime
    over the Sunshine State and represent a major
    threat to Florida’s way of life. There is no doubt
    that this danger is a growing reality and one that
    Florida must strive to eliminate.
    Individual Risk and Protective Factors
    Individual risk factors are personality traits and behaviors
    that may increase the likelihood that a youth
    will join a gang. Several studies have noted a few
    consistent individual risk factors specific to joining a
    gang. They include: general delinquency, antisocial
    beliefs, alcohol and drug use, and a propensity toward
    violence.16 Lowering the individual risk factors
    that youth deal with can be daunting, but can be accomplished
    by decreasing the number of risks youth
    are exposed to in their neighborhood.
    A young person’s proclivity to use aggression
    when confronted with problems in their personal
    life, or a fatalistic view of the world, are examples
    of individual factors that need to be addressed to
    limit the chances for those to expand into larger
    risks. If those individual risk factors are not tended
    to, youth will become exposed to additional
    hazards of substance abuse, illegal gun ownership
    and early sexual activity. All are threats that will
    lead to a higher probability of criminal gang activity
    for youth.
    The individual risks that youth face may lead to
    gang involvement. By confronting the individual
    risks and lowering their influence on youth,
    the individual may have a greater chance of
    mitigating any additional risk factors of their
    family, school and peers. Individual protective
    factors that have successfully decreased risk
    factors include a sense of purpose, a belief in
    a positive future, commitment to education,
    A Parent's Quick Reference Card
    Recognizing and Preventing Gang Involvement
    Warning Signs That Your Child
    May Be Involved with a Gang
    This quick reference guide provides common warning signs of gang
    involvement, but may not be all-encompassing. Parents should look
    for multiple signs to indicate possible gang involvement because
    some of these indicators alone, such as clothes or musical
    preferences, are also common among youth not involved in gangs.
    Parents are encouraged to familiarize themselves with local gang
    symbols, seek help early, and consider contacting school personnel,
    local law enforcement, faith leaders, and community organizations for
    additional assistance.
    • Admits to "hanging out"
    with kids in gangs
    • Shows an unusual
    interest in one or two
    particular colors of
    clothing or a particular
    logo
    • Has an unusual interest
    in gangster-influenced
    music, videos, movies,
    or websites.
    • Uses unusual hand
    signals to communicate
    with friends
    • Has specific drawings or
    gang symbols on school
    books, clothes, walls, or
    tattoos
    • Comes home with
    unexplained physical
    injuries (fighting-related
    bruises, injuries to
    hand/knuckles)
    • Has unexplained cash or
    goods, such as clothing
    or jewelry
    • Carries a weapon
    • Has been in trouble with
    the police
    • Exhibits negative
    changes in behavior
    such as:
    * Withdrawing from
    family
    * Declining school
    attendance,
    performance, behavior
    * Staying out late
    without reason
    * Displaying an unusual
    desire for secrecy
    * Exhibiting signs of
    drug use
    * Breaking rules
    consistently
    * Speaking in gangstyle
    slang
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 5
    ability to act independently (not easily succumb
    to peer pressure), and a sense of control over
    one’s environment. Ability for empathy, skills
    in conflict resolution and critical thinking are
    additional characteristics that build resiliency to
    risk behaviors in youth. These critically important
    protective factors are fostered through
    other areas of influence in a youth’s life such as
    family, schools and communities.
    Family Risk and Protective Factors
    The family is the first line of defense in identifying
    the signs of gang activity. Family dysfunction
    and lack of parental guidance can play a
    significant role in increasing the risk of youth
    joining a criminal gang. The guidance of strong
    family role models can decrease the chances of
    a young person engaging in criminal gang activities.
    The individual risks can be reduced with
    family guidance from parents, grandparents,
    other respected and responsible family members
    or legal guardians who reinforce the belief
    that joining a gang is not a viable option.
    A household that fosters a permissive attitude
    toward alcohol, drugs and violence is more
    likely to lead to youth gang activity. An important
    factor in positively nurturing children has
    been determined to be the number of times a
    week the child spends quality time interacting
    with the family. The correlation is one to one.
    The more times per week, the better the overall
    behavior of the youth; the fewer times, the
    worse the behavior of the youth.17
    Successful preventive programs will seek to
    engage and inform families of the dangers of
    criminal gang activity. Information and resource
    guides will be made available through
    several different prevention organizations. The
    literature provided to families will support a
    variety of practices that can assist their efforts
    in preventing gang involvement. Without a
    positive family role model, the remaining risk
    factors will only be compounded, making prevention
    an increasingly arduous task.
    School Risk and Protective Factors
    A student’s performance and behavior in school, as
    well as the school’s effectiveness in engaging, addressing
    and providing for the needs of their students,
    are important factors in determining school
    risk. A student who has a low-level of academic
    success or is classified as having a learning disability
    What Parents Can Do to Prevent
    Gang Involvement
    • Spend quality time with
    your child
    • Get involved in your
    child's school activities
    • Be a positive role model
    and set the right
    example
    • Know your child's
    friends and their
    families
    • Encourage good study
    habits
    • Teach your child how to
    cope with peer pressure
    • Help your child develop
    good conflict/resolution
    skills (See
    www .safeyouth.org/scri
    pts/teens/conflict.asp)
    • Encourage your child to
    participate in positive
    afterschool activities
    with adult supervision
    (recreation centers,
    organized sports, youth
    groups)
    • Take action in your
    neighborhood (create a
    neighborhood alliance,
    report and remove
    graffiti)
    • Talk with your child
    about the dangers and
    consequences of gang
    involvement. Let your
    child know that you
    don't want to see him or
    her hurt or arrested.
    Explain to your child that
    he or she should NOT:
    * Associate with gang
    members
    * Attend parties or
    social events
    sponsored by gangs
    * Use hand signs,
    symbols, or language
    that is meaningful to
    gangs
    * Wear clothing,
    including specific
    colors, which may
    have meaning to
    gangs in your area
    www.cops.usdoj.gov www.fbi.gov www.ojjdp.ncjrs.org
    To obtain details on COPS programs, call the
    COPS Office Response Center at 800.421.6770
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    6 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    is at a higher risk for
    gang affiliation than
    other students.18 Negative
    attitudes toward
    school, frequent truancy,
    suspension, numerous
    school transitions, and
    school dropout are recognized
    as risks for gang
    involvement. In addition,
    a student who feels disconnected
    from school or
    threatened within school
    is more vulnerable to
    gang recruitment.
    Students who perform at low levels of achievement
    may be at a greater risk of being pulled in the direction
    of criminal gangs because they desire the strong
    feelings of achievement that the gang provides
    almost instantly. Although the early infatuation
    eventually fades, the young gang member is often
    entirely immersed in the criminal gang lifestyle by
    the time he/she realizes it, and is often unable to
    separate themselves from the disastrous course. It
    is essential for parents and school officials to work
    together in identifying youth that run a higher risk
    of gang affiliation, and to work in concert to prevent
    at-risk youth from being initiated into a gang at an
    early age.
    Commitment to school is a major protective factor
    in buffering youth at risk of engaging in violent
    behaviors, such as those associated with gang
    activities.19,20 For youth at risk of gang involvement,
    developing a feeling of connectedness and
    commitment to school can reduce the likelihood
    that he or she will drop out of school and/or become
    involved in problem behaviors. Schools that
    provide a safe learning environment, establish
    discipline measures with positive supports, and
    create opportunities for students to participate in
    meaningful ways are characteristics of positive
    school climate. Schools are a fundamental part of
    any community’s anti-gang strategy because they
    have the unique advantage of fostering key protective
    factors for youth, reaching out to parents and
    families, creating partnerships with law enforcement,
    and strengthening
    linkages with
    community partners.
    Peer Risk and
    Protective Factors
    One of the strongest
    correlations of a youth’s
    risk for delinquency,
    substance abuse, and
    other forms of problem
    behavior is their tendency
    to spend time
    with peers who engage in deviant behaviors.21
    Youth are more likely to join criminal gangs if they
    have either a high commitment to delinquent peers
    or a low commitment to positive peers.22 If youth
    surround themselves with delinquent peers who
    use drugs or alcohol, distribute drugs, or have a
    high proportion of gang affiliation the likelihood of
    joining a gang goes up markedly.23
    Families and school officials can play a key role in
    identifying when youth tend to break from their
    normal routine to spend more time with unfamiliar
    groups of friends who may be negatively influencing
    the child. Actions to prevent children from
    joining criminal gangs should not begin when
    they reach high school, but must be initiated at an
    early age when the influence of family and teachers
    are at their most effective. Influencing when
    and with whom a child is allowed to spend time
    will decrease the opportunities of interacting with
    criminal gang members and positively influence
    their development.
    Community Risk and Protective Factors
    Cities, towns and rural communities are at risk
    of increased threats of criminal gangs when they
    tolerate cultural norms that support gang behavior
    and fail to invest the social capital to oppose gangrelated
    crime.24 Other risk factors at the community
    level associated with gang-related crime are the
    prevalence of drugs and weapons in a community,
    and the level of community disorganization.25 This
    is indicated by high crime rates, gang activity, poor
    ith h i d
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 7
    housing, lack of quality schools and recreational
    facilities, inadequate availability of social services,
    and a weakened infrastructure. Such an environment
    can severely limit youths’ opportunities for
    socially acceptable avenues of success.
    Communities that strive for economic sustainability,
    safe and health-promoting environments, availability
    of neighborhood resources, and a supportive
    law enforcement presence set the foundation
    for an environment that is inhospitable to gangs.
    Actively promoting positive social norms, social
    cohesion within and across neighborhoods, and
    creating opportunities for pro-social community
    involvement are community protective factors
    that foster resiliency in youth who are at risk of
    gang involvement. Communities that work with
    law enforcement and prevention experts have
    experienced successes in driving the presence of
    gangs out of their neighborhoods and have seen
    the crime rate of their neighborhoods decline.26
    End Notes
    1 Klein, Malcolm W. The American Street Gang:
    Its Nature, Prevalence, and Control. Oxford
    University Press 1997
    2 Klein, Malcolm W. The American Street Gang:
    Its Nature, Prevalence, and Control. Oxford
    University Press 1997
    3 Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention,
    The Growth of Youth Gang Problems in
    the United States: 1970-98 April 2001
    4 Ibid.
    5 Ibid.
    6 Ibid.
    7 Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Florida
    Criminal Street Gangs 1995
    8 Florida Department of Law Enforcement, 2007
    Statewide Gang Survey Results
    9 Florida Department of Law Enforcement, 2007
    Statewide Gang Survey Results
    10 National Alliance of Gang Investigators Association,
    2005 National Gang Threat Assessment
    11 Steven D. Levitt and Sudhir Alladi Venkatesh,
    “An Economic Analysis of Drug-Selling Gang’s
    Finances” Quarterly Journal of Economics, August
    2000
    12 Ibid.
    13 Lasley, James R. Age, “Social Context, and Street
    Gang Membership: Are Youth Gangs Becoming
    Adult Gangs?” Youth and Society Volume 23, No.
    4 June: 443-45l; Spergel, I. Youth Gangs: Problem
    and Response: A Review of the Literature. Assessment
    Part I. National Youth Gang Suppression
    and Intervention Project with the Office of
    Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Planning, U. S.
    Dept. of Justice, University of Chicago April 1992
    14 Baum, Sandy and Jennifer Ma, “Education Pays,
    the Benefits of Higher Education for Individuals
    and Society” College Board 2007 Steven D. Levitt
    and Sudhir Alladi Venkatesh, “An Economic
    Analysis of Drug-Selling Gang’s Finances” Quarterly
    Journal of Economics August 2000
    15 Florida Department of Corrections, Research and
    Data Analysis
    16 National Youth Gang Center, Why and How
    Youth Join Gangs
    17 The National Center on Addiction and Substance
    Abuse at Columbia University, The Importance of
    Family Dinners IV
    18 National Youth Gang Center, Why and How
    Youth Join Gangs
    19 Jessor, R., Turbin, M. S., & Costa, F. M. “Risk and
    Protection in Successful Outcomes Among Disadvantaged
    Adolescents.” Applied Developmental
    Science, 1998, 2, 194-208
    20 Department of Health and Human Services,
    Youth Violence: a Report of the Surgeon General
    2001
    Background: Extent of the Problem
    8 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    21 Dishion, T., Nelson S., and Yasui, M. “Predicting
    Early Adolescent Gang Involvement From Middle
    School Adaptation.” Journal of Clinical Child and
    Adolescent Psychology. 2005, vol. 34, No.1, 62-73
    22 Esbensen, F., Huizinga, D., and Weiher, A.W.
    “Journal of Gang and Non-gang Youth: Differences
    in Explanatory Variables” Contemporary
    Criminal Justice: 1993 pp. 94-116
    23 Curry, G.D., and Spergel, I.A. “Gang Involvement
    and Delinquency Among Hispanic and African-
    American Adolescent Males” Journal of Research
    in Crime & Delinquency: 1992 pp. 273-291
    24 Short, J.F. and Strodtbeck, F.L. Group Process
    and Gang Delinquency. Chicago, IL: University of
    Chicago 1965
    25 J. David Hawkins, Todd I. Herrenkohl, David P.
    Farrington, Devon Brewer, Richard F. Catalano,
    Tracy W. Harachi, and Lynn Cothern, Predictors
    of Youth Violence, Office of Juvenile Justice and
    Delinquency Prevention, April 2000
    26 Curry, G.D., and Spergel, I.A. “Gang Involvement
    and Delinquency Among Hispanic and African-
    American Adolescent Males” Journal of Research
    in Crime & Delinquency 1992 pp. 273-291
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 9
    The Strategy
    Executive Group and 2007 Gang
    Reduction Summit
    In the summer of 2007 the heads of all state agencies
    involved with youth and law enforcement met
    in the Office of the Attorney General to develop a
    statewide strategy to address the growing problems
    of gangs and gang violence in Florida. They were
    joined in this effort by the heads of key Florida law
    enforcement associations. To build upon a working
    draft prepared by this executive group in December
    2007 the Office of the Attorney General held a Gang
    Reduction Strategy Summit in Tallahassee. The
    two-day summit brought leaders from various state
    agencies, local law enforcement, community leaders,
    and prevention/intervention organizations and
    experts together. The framework of this strategy
    was discussed and approved at the summit.
    Mission
    The mission of the Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    is to increase the safety of the citizens of Florida
    by empowering Florida’s youth to reject criminal
    gangs as a viable option and by substantially
    reducing gang-related crime and violence in Florida.
    State agencies cannot singlehandedly combat the
    problem of gangs. There must be a series of cascading
    approaches, each adding to the impact of the
    others, between many state agencies, local governments,
    and community advocacy groups working
    in concert to oppose criminal gangs.
    Goals
    The goals to accomplish this mission are:
    1. Stop the growth of criminal gangs in
    Florida;
    2. Reduce the number of gangs and gang
    members;
    3. Render gangs ineffectual.
    Criminal gangs have been growing in Florida for the
    better part of the past 25 years. The first priority
    of the strategy is to stop this growth of gangs and
    gang members. That must be immediately followed
    by the reduction in the number of gangs and gang
    members. While it may never be possible to completely
    eliminate all criminal gangs and gang members
    in Florida, the strategy contemplates rendering
    what gangs remain ineffectual. Accomplishing these
    goals will greatly reduce crime and violence in our
    communities, save the lives of many at-risk youth,
    give many more youth in our state the opportunity
    for productive lives, save state and local government
    a lot of expense and costs associated with gangs and
    their criminal behavior, and make Florida a safer
    place to live and work.
    Three Pillars
    The strategy is based on three pillars:
    • Prevention/Intervention
    • Law Enforcement
    • Rehabilitation/Re-entry
    In recent decades law enforcement has been the
    principal entity attempting to control or resolve
    the problem of criminal gangs. Law enforcement
    will be much more efficient in its mission of
    public safety when it is partnered with prevention
    and re-entry efforts within the communities and
    throughout the state. The gang problem is highly
    complex. A well informed and coordinated effort
    to fight criminal gangs is necessary. This strategy
    will work to identify and target the problem
    with gangs and the youth they affect and enable
    communities to develop appropriate coalitions and
    action plans to successfully address the problem
    of criminal gangs.
    The Strategy
    10 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Focus of the Effort to Defeat Gangs
    Criminal gangs are the enemy of an ordered society.
    Defeating them necessitates identifying the
    key to their survival, appeal, and effectiveness. It
    is the premise of this strategy that the strength of
    criminal gangs in Florida is their ability to attract a
    continual stream of young recruits to their ranks.
    Denied that strength, gangs will dry up, lose their
    capacity to generate replacements and finally
    cease their criminal activity.
    The strategy, therefore, focuses its efforts toward
    making gang membership and gang activity less
    desirable for the youth of this state and turning
    at-risk youth away from gangs and toward things
    that will make them productive members of society.
    This strength of the gang system derives from
    its ability to cultivate zealous, aggressive members
    who seek to establish their reputation within the
    gang. Without that ability, the destructive capacity
    of the gang is gradually eroded and eventually
    dissipates completely. The gang itself becomes
    discredited and is seen in its pernicious reality – a
    collection of criminals devoid of social conscience,
    lacking any semblance of dignity and driven only
    by the petty, selfish interests of their leaders.
    Consequently, the prevention/intervention portion
    of the strategy must not only work to engage
    at-risk youths and gang members in alternative,
    constructive and educational activities and social
    settings, it must also aim at taking away the appeal
    of the gang. Denied the constant flow of new
    recruits, the gang will disintegrate. Eventually,
    the gang will cease to hold any attraction at all
    and become ineffectual.
    At the same time the prevention/intervention efforts
    are underway, there must be a coordinated law
    enforcement effort targeting the leaders of certain
    gangs for prosecution, disrupting gang meetings and
    activities and cutting off the supply of guns, other
    weapons and sources of income. Since many of Florida’s
    gang leaders come out of state prison, it is also
    essential that a special effort be made to intervene
    with gang members in prison with the objective of
    educating, training and making as many of them
    as possible constructive and contributing citizens
    of society upon re-entry. By doing so, some of the
    experienced gang leadership can be eliminated. In
    most cases this will contribute significantly to the
    decline and ultimate demise of the gang from which
    they came.
    The end state of this strategy is a Florida where
    criminal gang activity is minimal to non-existent and
    where gangs are no longer perceived as a desired
    option for our youth, but rather as the undesirable
    criminal organizations they represent. This strategy
    aims to minimize gang membership and reduce
    crime committed by gangs to an insignificant percent
    of total crime in all 67 of Florida’s counties.
    Prevention/Intervention
    Objectives:
    Objective 1: Expose Florida’s gangs and their
    activities for their violent and
    destructive reality.
    Objective 2: Educate youth, parents and other
    mentoring adults to help Florida’s
    youth reject gang involvement.
    Objective 3: Mobilize communities to repel
    gang appeal to Florida’s youth.
    Objective 4: Provide effective prevention/intervention
    programs for those youth
    who are the most likely targets of
    gang recruitment and identified
    young gang members
    Objective 5: Encourage and assist with the
    creation of positive extracurricular
    activities and workforce development
    programs for Florida’s
    at-risk youth.
    Objective 6: Support existing and new community
    groups/coalitions that take a
    stand against criminal gangs.
    Prevention is essential to the success of the strategy.
    The most effective and least costly way to
    stop the growth and reduce the number of criminal
    gangs and gang members in Florida is to convince
    youth never to join a gang in the first place.
    The first three prevention/intervention objectives
    are aimed at taking away the appeal of gangs to
    The Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 11
    at-risk youth. They contemplate a program being
    developed statewide or in a community or region
    to communicate to these at-risk youth the message
    that gangs are undesirable to belong to. In
    order to develop and deliver the proper message,
    prevention/intervention organizations and community
    leaders must study and thoroughly understand
    the motivational forces involved in gang
    membership and what makes gang membership
    appealing to youth. Then using this information
    the image of gang membership must be portrayed
    to these youth as something they would not want
    to be a part of.
    The remaining three prevention/intervention objectives
    concern providing constructive, educational
    and entertaining alternatives to gangs for at-risk
    youth. Since most youth recruited into gangs are
    missing some essential elements of family and
    community, these objectives include making up
    for what is missing as much as possible, and instilling
    hope and opportunity in those youth and
    a sense that they can dream big dreams and make
    them come true. While there are many prevention/
    intervention programs for at-risk youth, the
    objectives focus attention specifically on those
    at-risk youth in the community most likely to be
    recruited by gangs.
    Law Enforcement Objectives:
    Objective 1: Compile a statewide priority list and
    target every major criminal gang in
    Florida for dismantling by arresting
    and prosecuting gang leaders and
    key gang members.
    Objective 2: Identify and target for arrest and
    prosecution all gang kingpins in
    Florida and seek life imprisonment
    sentences.
    Objective 3: Prioritize the prosecution of gun
    crimes related to gangs and gang
    members and target for prosecution
    those who provide guns to
    juvenile gang members ineligible
    to own or possess a gun.
    Objective 4: In areas of intense gang activity,
    build community policing, remove
    firearms from low to mid-level
    gang members and use injunctive
    powers to prohibit gang members
    from gathering.
    Objective 5: Improve intelligence gathering and
    information sharing on gangs and
    gang members and their activities
    among and between federal, state
    and local law enforcement, prosecuting
    authorities, schools and
    Juvenile Justice, Corrections, and
    Children and Families officials.
    Objective 6: Strengthen gang law enforcement
    and prosecution with more
    uniform, specialized training and
    designate one Assistant State
    Attorney in each judicial circuit
    whose sole, full-time responsibility
    is to prosecute and manage the
    prosecution of gangs, gang members
    and gang-related crimes.
    Objective 7: Coordinate federal, state and local
    law enforcement/prosecution efforts
    toward the common objective
    of combating gang activity in
    Florida, including setting priorities
    and targeting certain gangs, gang
    activities and gang-related prosecutions
    all over Florida.
    With over 1,500 criminal gangs and thousands of
    gang members in Florida who engage in criminal
    activities across many jurisdictional boundaries,
    law enforcement efforts to suppress criminal
    gangs more effectively will require enhanced
    coordination, targeting, prioritization and aggressive
    approaches. The law enforcement objectives
    in this strategy are designed to accomplish this, and
    in conjunction with prevention/intervention community
    efforts to stop the growth of gangs, reduce
    their number and the number of gang members and
    ultimately render them ineffectual.
    The objectives contemplate a statewide effort
    to prioritize dismantling gangs. This is not a
    central command and control effort. It must be
    a cooperative effort among all law enforcement
    agencies, federal, state and local. To be successful,
    the strategy requires identifying, arresting and
    prosecuting key gang leaders in all targeted gangs
    The Strategy
    12 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    throughout Florida and seeking a life sentence
    for them. This will require improved intelligence
    gathering and information sharing and better
    trained and more specialized prosecutors including
    one designated assistant state attorney in each
    judicial circuit whose sole, full time responsibility
    is to prosecute gang members.
    With so much of the violent crime in Florida
    attributable to gang activities and its violence
    most often associated with guns, one of the
    objectives should be to do a better job of keeping
    guns out of the hands of gang members. In
    order to accomplish this, prosecutors will have to
    focus more on prosecuting gun crimes relating to
    gang members including prosecuting those who
    provide guns to juvenile gang members ineligible
    to own or possess a gun.
    In as much as gangs generally operate from a
    defined and comparatively small geographic area
    within a community, community policing targeted
    to areas of intense gang activity can make a difference
    and combined with the ability to enjoin gang
    members from meeting can disrupt and render
    gangs less effectual.
    Rehabilitation and Re-entry
    Objectives:
    Objective 1: Expand opportunities for criminal
    gang members in state or county
    correctional systems to participate
    in prison industry programs,
    educational programs, faith and
    character-based programs, drug
    treatment/rehabilitation programs
    and all other programs designed
    to rehabilitate offenders or assist
    offenders in preparing for re-entry
    into society upon completion of
    their sentences.
    Objective 2: Develop and implement specialized,
    individualized counseling
    and mentoring focused on motivating
    criminal gang members
    in state or county correctional
    systems to gain educational, vocational
    or job training, social skills,
    and lifestyle interests and habits
    that will turn offenders away
    from gang membership/participation
    and toward becoming productive
    members of society
    when released.
    Objective 3: Provide job placement for criminal
    gang members in state or county
    correctional systems upon release
    and provide a counselor/mentor
    for each such released offender to
    give guidance, assist with acquiring
    and keeping a job, educational
    advancement, and building positive
    relationships outside of gangs
    for a period of five years after
    release.
    Objective 4: Require all identified criminal
    gang members in state or county
    correctional systems, upon
    release, to register with an identified
    state office and keep their address,
    contact information and job
    status current for ten years after
    release and require such released
    offenders to report in person for
    counseling to a counselor/mentor
    at least quarterly for the first five
    years after release.
    Objective 5: Train and qualify the necessary
    number of counselors/mentors/
    teachers to accomplish the individualized
    goals of gang member rehabilitation
    and re-entry from state
    or county correctional systems.
    Several thousand gang members are incarcerated
    in Florida’s state prisons. Few, if any, of these
    gang members receive any targeted rehabilitation
    efforts while they are in prison. Most are released
    from prison within a few years of their incarceration.
    It appears that many of these released
    gang members go back to their communities and
    become the key leaders in their criminal gang.
    The rehabilitation and re-entry objectives of the
    strategy are designed to divert some of these
    incarcerated gang members from returning to
    their gangs when released. The more successful
    intervention programs are in prison the better
    The Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 13
    the chances of success for community efforts to
    dismantle and render ineffectual the gangs from
    which these prison inmates come.
    Rehabilitation and re-entry objectives of the
    strategy can be accomplished by using specially
    trained counselors and mentors to try to motivate
    gang members in prison to participate in rehabilitation,
    educational, and drug treatment programs
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Performance
    Measures
    represent means
    for tracking
    progress
    toward desired
    outcomes.
    Desired
    Outcomes
    define results
    to compare
    with actual
    performance.
    Objectives
    define the
    necessary
    actions to
    achieve the
    desired goal.
    Goals define
    the directions of
    the Strategy.
    Strategy
    develops
    statewide plan
    to get youth
    to reject gangs
    and reduce gang
    related crime.
    Strategy
    Goals
    Objectives
    Desired
    Outcomes
    Performance
    Measures
    designed to redirect their lives away from gang
    membership. Upon release from prison the objectives
    call for personalized assistance and monitoring
    for a number of years in order to place the
    former gang member in a job and steering him or
    her to a new life away from the gang.
    The Strategy
    14 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 15
    Concept of Operation
    Coordinating Council
    Working under the auspices of the Office of the
    Attorney General the executive group that initiated
    planning for the gang strategy will act as a coordinating
    council. The Attorney General and the
    council will coordinate bringing together prevention/
    intervention organizations, community leaders
    the business community and local, state and federal
    law enforcement that will form seven regional task
    forces in the state. While action and operational
    decisions will be made by organizational leaders,
    community leaders, and local elected officials, the
    Attorney General and coordinating council will
    provide guidance and assistance in achieving the
    objectives of the strategy. The council will work
    with the Department of Corrections and others in
    pursuit of the rehabilitation and re-entry objectives.
    The council will also coordinate the
    collection of data, develop and carry
    out a process for measuring the success
    of the strategy and periodically
    adjust it as may be necessary.
    Regional Task Forces
    The state will be divided into
    seven regions and a gang strategy
    task force developed within each
    region. The Gang Reduction Strategy
    regions will each have the same geographical
    composition as the state’s Domestic Security
    Task Force Regions.
    The Attorney General and the council will invite
    selected prevention/intervention organizations,
    community leaders, business leaders, elected
    officials and local, state and federal law enforcement
    for an initial organizational meeting in each
    region. It is anticipated that each task force will
    select a chairman who will be rotated periodically
    and that the task forces will hold regular meetings
    at least once a quarter. The Attorney General and
    the council will provide the task forces with as
    much guidance and data as possible. The regional
    task forces will not be statutory or official bodies
    of the state. Participation is completely voluntary.
    There will be no funding or material support from
    the state available to the task forces at the inception
    of this strategy.
    It is anticipated that by participation in the regional
    task force each unit of local government within
    the region and each law enforcement agency will
    benefit significantly. While gangs may have a
    comparatively small territory that they claim, their
    criminal activity knows no geographical boundary.
    The advantages of and benefits from a coordinated
    effort under the statewide strategy should
    be clear to all.
    y
    -
    egy
    ographiestic
    Security
    ncil will invite
    rganizations,
    rs, elected
    l law enforcemeeting
    in each
    ask force will
    ted periodically
    egular meetings
    ney General and
    Regional Gang Reduction Task Forces
    Concept of Operation
    16 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    It is essential that each task force develop its own
    plan of action, set time tables and carry it out.
    Also, it is hoped that each task force will provide a
    conduit of information back to the Attorney General
    and the coordinating council and assist in the
    collection of data necessary to measure progress in
    the strategy. The key component of the concept
    of operation is the networking and coordination
    of local community components. For the citizens
    of Florida to witness substantial declines in youth
    gang membership, school dropout rates and gangrelated
    crime, there must be a melding of the two
    powerful forces of law enforcement and prevention/
    intervention. Law enforcement agencies will
    become more productive in their operations when
    prevention gets youth to reject joining criminal
    gangs and prevention organizations see fewer
    youth losing their potential to gangs and can work
    with them to make positive choices in their lives.
    Developing a Prevention/
    Intervention Plan
    To be effective, each regional task force must develop
    a plan of action to accomplish the Gang Reduction
    Strategy in their region. All participants need
    to be open-minded, committed to the goals and
    objectives of the strategy and willing to think out
    of the box in developing and carrying out a plan.
    If existing prevention/intervention organizations
    participate and are willing to adapt their organizational
    goals and resources to meet the objectives
    of this strategy and the plan developed by the
    regional task force, they should be utilized to carry
    out the plan and achieve the objectives of the
    strategy. Where necessary, the task force should
    not hesitate to bring in a prevention/intervention
    program from outside the region or create such
    new programs as may be necessary. Local community
    involvement and leadership in a prevention/
    intervention program is essential for success.
    The plan must include proposals to get youth
    at-risk of being recruited into gangs to reject gang
    recruitment. The regional task force needs to
    study and understand the psychology involved
    and then develop a plan of action to discredit
    gangs in the eyes of these youth tailored to the
    specific communities and gangs in their region.
    Working with local television, radio, cable, and
    other media, there should be a media campaign
    prepared and carried out to further this objective.
    Simultaneously, working with parents, teachers,
    school officials and church leaders, an approach
    needs to be developed and carried out to discredit
    gangs in the schools and in churches and other
    community outlets that touch and interact with
    children most at-risk of being recruited by gangs.
    Mediums most frequented by youth, such as social
    networks like MySpace, Facebook, etc. should
    be utilized in getting the message out.
    The message to discredit gangs should be inclusive
    of the sexual exploitation of women so
    commonly associated with gangs, along with
    other criminal activities such as drive-by shootings,
    home invasions, assaults, batteries, etc.
    It should emphasize the contrast between the
    financial gains of the leader, as compared to the
    minimal gain of the lower level members. It
    should include a thorough exposure of the gang
    leadership’s brainwashing of the new recruits that
    requires them to give up all their individual rights
    and freedoms. It should expose the extreme brutal
    treatment of gang initiation and the violence
    inflicted upon any gang member who attempts to
    think independently or who attempts to leave. It
    should focus on the violent crimes new recruits
    are required to commit, and how this is used as a
    threat and control technique to keep them in the
    gang by threatening to expose their criminal activities
    should they attempt to get out of the gang.
    It should point out that new recruits, as well as
    their family members, are threatened in order to
    keep them in the gang, and that it is not uncommon
    for brutal attacks and deadly force to be used
    on family members rather than the gang member
    himself in order to force compliance with the gang
    leaders and the gang creed. The message should
    also focus on the early mortality rates of those associated
    with gang membership and the frequent
    criminal convictions that many gang members
    have which will result in denial of voting rights,
    limiting future employment, and any other negaConcept
    of Operation
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 17
    tive to gang membership that might dissuade an
    at-risk youth from joining a gang.
    The second major component of the prevention/
    intervention plan must be the providing of constructive,
    educational, and entertaining alternatives
    to gangs for at-risk youth and also compensating
    for the absence of social and family elements that
    most at-risk youth experience. It is anticipated that
    participating task forces will include many prevention/
    intervention organizations such as Boys and
    Girls Clubs, Urban League organizations, church
    groups, etc., which already have experience working
    in the local community at this level. What is
    most likely missing in the function of these organizations
    is specific targeting of youth most at-risk of
    being recruited into gangs and programs especially
    designed for this group.
    It is contemplated that under the guidance of the
    Attorney General and the coordinating council
    and with the cooperative effort of local law
    enforcement and other community leaders, these
    existing organizations will develop new, effective
    initiatives to address the target group. When a
    task force concludes that it would be beneficial to
    bring in a prevention/intervention program that
    does not exist in the region or initiate a new program,
    it should do so and make sure that cooperation
    and coordination with existing organizations
    in the region occurs. Often a single program only
    addresses a few of the needs, while a number of
    programs working together are much more likely
    to succeed. It is vital to our success that every
    possible expertise is brought to bear and pride in
    existing local organizations should not stand in
    the way of doing whatever it takes to accomplish
    the strategy objectives.
    Task forces should encourage support for existing
    faith-based programs and the establishment
    of new faith-based programs targeted at youths
    at risk of being recruited into gangs and existing
    gang members. Priority should be given to recruiting
    every church and religious leader in the region
    to participate. Not every at-risk youth will wake
    up and come to church and change their lives;
    therefore church leaders should be encouraged to
    go out into the community and target youth who
    are especially at risk of being recruited into gangs
    and where possible, gang members.
    The parents, especially those of at-risk youth,
    should be engaged. The Gang Reduction Summit
    found that parents desire additional education
    about the early signs of gang involvement and
    want to know the best way to intervene with
    their child when the early signs of gang involvement
    appear. They want to know how prevention
    or intervention can be supported by their
    local schools and community leaders. An effective
    plan will educate these parents and involve them
    in every way possible.
    Communities where gangs flourish often find
    gang members and youth at risk of being gang
    members involved in a culture that accepts
    and sometimes glorifies school truancy, school
    drop-out, drug use, and drug abuse. The prevention/
    intervention plan must include a program
    working with schools, parents, and community
    leaders to address these concerns, specifically
    with respect to the youth most at risk of joining
    a gang. Special steps should be taken to discourage
    truancy and school drop-outs among these
    youth. There should be targeted mentoring and
    after school tutoring programs. School resource
    officers should be actively engaged to assist and
    provide support. Youth at risk of being recruited
    into gangs should be given intense anti-drug
    education and, when needed, should be given
    priority in drug rehabilitation programs.
    Plans should give special attention to workforce
    development programs for these at-risk youth.
    Most who wind up engaging in criminal activity
    have never worked and have no job skills and no
    work ethic. Getting at-risk youth engaged in work
    force development suitable for their age group is
    very important and could make a real difference
    in whether they end up joining a gang or perhaps
    can be enticed to leave a gang if they have joined.
    The task force should consider developing a plan
    to reach out to local businesses and recruit them
    to participate in a workforce program and mentoring
    for these at-risk youth. After school based
    Concept of Operation
    18 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    programs that teach leadership skills, interviewing
    skills for potential employment, resume preparing
    skills, personal presentation skills, etc., should be
    a high priority of the task force.
    Last but not least, the plan should include a
    relationship with judicial intervention programs
    where at-risk youth have encountered the law. It is
    important to have working relationships with the
    courts and with the juvenile justice system. Teen
    courts and other alternative programs can be a big
    help. Where teen court programs or the like do
    not exist, the task force should examine existing
    programs in other communities and consider developing
    such programs within the region or within
    communities lacking these programs.
    Law Enforcement Plan
    Developments
    Each regional task force should have a law enforcement
    plan as well as a prevention/intervention
    plan. This may be one comprehensive document
    inasmuch as the objective is to coordinate
    both prevention/intervention and law enforcement.
    Whether there are two separate plans or a
    single one, it is very important that all participants
    in the regional task forces are involved in the
    preparation and planning for both the prevention/
    intervention and the law enforcement portions.
    The law enforcement plan should set a priority
    targeting every major criminal gang in the region
    for dismantling. The priority list should focus on
    the most violent and dangerous gangs first, but
    law enforcement intelligence and analysis will be
    the key in setting the priorities on the list. Within
    the targeted gangs the first order of business
    should be to make cases against the leaders, and
    get prosecutions and convictions under the new
    gang kingpin statute where possible. The idea is
    to take down as many gangs as possible within
    the region in a systematic fashion and try especially
    hard to put away the gang kingpins/leaders
    for life or for an extremely high number of years.
    The prevention/intervention plan should call for
    targeting first and foremost youth in the geographical
    area most likely subject to gang recruitConcept
    of Operation
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 19
    ment for the gangs that are being dismantled by
    law enforcement. At the same time intervention
    efforts should be made to try and peel off young
    gang members from these gangs that are not being
    prosecuted. By combining tough law enforcement
    with focused prevention/intervention efforts, it is
    more likely a particular gang can be permanently
    dissolved or rendered ineffectual.
    Because violence associated with gangs is on
    the upswing in Florida, law enforcement plans
    should prioritize the prosecution of gun crimes
    related to gangs and gang members. The task
    force should consider organizing “gun buy back
    days” and/or “turn in your gun days.” Special
    efforts should be made to prevent juveniles from
    getting access to guns through purchases at gun
    shows either illegally by an underage youth or
    through the assistance of an adult who makes
    the purchase for the youth.
    Where possible, the plan should call for community
    policing and the use of injunctions to prohibit
    gang members from gathering in areas of intense
    gang activity. More communities across the nation
    are turning to civil injunctions to prohibit
    gathering and association of gang members in
    certain public areas where criminal activities have
    previously taken place or are known to be taking
    place. The plan should call for taking advantage
    of a new state law with respect to the use of such
    an injunction and each community should consider
    developing local ordinances to assist law
    enforcement in this regard.
    It is important that the task force include representation
    from a wide spectrum of law enforcement
    in the region. State and federal enforcement
    officials should be included. The U.S.
    Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF),
    Postal Inspectors, Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
    agents, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), the
    Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and U.S.
    Customs should all be asked to participate. So
    should Immigration and Customs Enforcement
    (ICE) agents. Naturally, all relevant state agencies
    should be involved including the Florida
    Department of Law Enforcement, the Florida
    Department of Corrections, representatives from
    the Florida Department of Children and Families,
    the Florida Highway Patrol, the state Department
    of Transportation and Motor Carrier Compliance,
    state Fire Marshals, state Beverage officers and
    state Agricultural officers, etc.
    Including as many representatives from different
    law enforcement persuasions as possible is
    very important in putting together a team that
    can have a wide base of information to share.
    Improved intelligence gathering and information
    sharing on gangs and gang members is absolutely
    essential to the success of the task force and the
    strategy. Law enforcement plans should encompass
    guidance for intelligence gathering and information
    sharing among all law enforcement who
    partner in the task force and the many specialized
    law enforcement associations, such as the Florida
    Gang Investigators Association, Florida Narcotics
    Association, Florida Intelligence Unit, etc.
    Additionally, the task force should include a representative
    of all prosecuting agencies which have
    a presence within the region. They should be
    asked to help set the priorities and give advice on
    ways to control the flow of guns and use injunctive
    powers to prohibit gangs from gathering. The
    task force should encourage each state attorney
    in the region to designate at least one assistant
    state attorney in his/her judicial circuit whose
    sole responsibility is to prosecute and manage the
    prosecution of gangs, gang members and gangrelated
    crime. Gang prosecutions can be complex
    and very time consuming. While the resources
    of each state attorney are very limited, each will
    understand the very grave importance that needs
    to be placed on dismantling gangs in achieving the
    goals of this Gang Reduction Strategy.
    In conjunction with developing a law enforcement
    plan, each task force should develop and catalog a
    list of every known criminal gang and gang member
    in the region. A task force team should be
    organized to make this happen and to make certain
    that the list is clear of duplicates and updated with
    Concept of Operation
    20 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    regularity. Members of the task force should help
    guide what information should be gathered for this
    list. At least once a year, the coordinating council
    should be provided a copy of the list that is maintained
    by the regional task forces.
    Rehabilitation and Re-entry Plan
    Development
    With guidance and assistance from the Attorney
    General and the coordinating council, the Department
    of Corrections and local law enforcement
    agencies will make the rehabilitation and re-entry
    of criminal gang members a major component
    of the re-entry program. The Department of Corrections’
    re-entry initiative will also be designed
    to fulfill the objectives of the Gang Reduction
    Strategy.
    The Department of Corrections
    and Re-entry
    Last year approximately 35,000 inmates were
    released from Florida’s prisons. According to the
    Florida Department of Corrections’ 2006-2007
    Annual Report, Florida’s prison population was
    92,844 inmates (as of June 30, 2007). During
    this same time period, inmate admissions were
    37,864, an increase of 7.9% over the prior year.
    Corrections officials report that a third of released
    inmates return to Florida prisons within
    a 3-year period. Furthermore, the basic education
    level of Florida’s inmate population is at a
    7th grade level. When looking at literacy levels,
    0 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
    Year 7
    Year 6
    Year 5
    Year 4
    Year 3
    Year 2
    Year 1
    1995
    12,645
    1996
    16,830
    1997
    19,919
    1998
    15,841
    1999
    17,613
    2000
    19,535
    2001
    20,340
    2002
    20,009
    2003
    21,246
    2004
    23,348
    2005
    24,953 10%
    11%
    11%
    11%
    10%
    10%
    11%
    12%
    12%
    12%
    13%
    11%
    12%
    13%
    12%
    13%
    13%
    14%
    14%
    13%
    13%
    9%
    9%
    10%
    9%
    9%
    9%
    9%
    9%
    9%
    6%
    7%
    7%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    7%
    7%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    4%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    3%
    2%
    Percent Return to Prison
    Year of Release and Number of Releases
    Florida Recidivism Rates
    Overall three-year recidivism rate since 1995 is 32.8%.
    Data indicates that Year Two after release is the time period when most recidivists return to prison.
    Concept of Operation
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 21
    37.1% of the inmate’s have a literacy competency
    of an elementary student.
    Functional Literacy
    Grade 6-8.9)
    25%
    GED Prep
    (9-12.9)
    36%
    Basic Literacy
    (Grade 1-5.9)
    38%
    Literacy Skill Level - Total Population
    Ethnicity Median Literacy Level
    Black Males 6.0
    Black Females 6.1
    White Males 8.6
    White Females 9.7
    Other Males 6.1
    Other Females 7.1
    Tested Literacy Skill Level (Most Recent Tests of Adult Basic
    Education [TABE] as of June 30th, 2007
    General Educational Development (GED) Tests
    are available within the prison system, but many
    of Florida’s inmates initially do not have the
    education level necessary to obtain a GED or
    even prepare for a GED examination. Even a vocational
    certificate often requires an educational
    level of 9th grade or higher. With 64.2% of the
    population below this mark, a vocational certificate
    is often unattainable for some fifty thousand
    inmates every year. Not surprisingly, an ex-offender
    returning to the community is confronted
    by employers with statements such as “no job,”
    “no skills” and “not enough education.”
    Many returning ex-offenders also have some form
    of substance dependency. Approximately 64%
    of the inmates incarcerated in Florida prisons
    have been identified as having a substance abuse
    problem. While detoxification happens as a result
    of incarceration, many inmates will return to an
    environment where drugs are once again available.
    The potential for relapse can greatly hamper any
    re-entry service, such as educational and vocational
    programs, if substance abuse treatment is
    not provided. In fact, relapse dramatically reduces
    the chance for an ex-offender to maintain stable
    employment – a key factor in reducing recidivism.
    As indicated in Florida’s Drug Control Strategy,
    drug users are less dependable than other workers
    and decrease workplace productivity. Drug users
    compared to drug-free workers are also more likely
    to take an unexcused absence, get fired more frequently,
    and also switch jobs more frequently.
    While the Department of Corrections has the
    responsibility to supervise some offenders after
    their release from prison, the agency also supervises
    an even greater number of offenders sentenced
    directly to community supervision in the form
    of probation. Offenders on community supervision
    have some transitional programs available to
    them, however more programs must be provided
    in order to adequately address the problem of
    recidivism. With the Department of Corrections
    in the unique position of supervising offenders
    in the community and in prison, it affords them
    the opportunity to have an immense impact on
    gang members’ chances of leaving the criminal
    lifestyle behind.
    Many offenders while on probation or those being
    released from prison lack the knowledge of
    possible resources available to them in the community
    to help in their re-entry needs. Access to
    the resources, identifying the resources that are
    willing to serve convicted felons, and securing
    reliable transportation to visit these resources can
    be difficult to accomplish. Consequently, without
    recognizing and accessing legitimate support in
    Concept of Operation
    22 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    the community, many of these individuals return
    to their former ways, a lifestyle of crime and
    criminal gang involvement.
    Given these factors, it is not surprising that exoffender
    recidivism is predictable. Without skill
    development opportunities and support systems a
    return to criminal behavior is often very probable.
    Emphasizing Re-entry
    Many of these aforementioned barriers to successful
    re-entry were well documented in the December
    2006 report produced by Governor Bush’s
    Ex-Offender Task Force. Following that report
    and in response to the staggering statistics associated
    with those returning to the state correctional
    system, the Department
    of Corrections has made
    reducing recidivism a
    major focus. In May
    2007, the Department
    of Corrections changed
    its mission to state,
    “To protect the public,
    ensure the safety of
    Department personnel,
    and provide for the
    proper care and supervision
    of all offenders
    under our jurisdiction while assisting, as appropriate,
    their re-entry into society.” Coupled with this
    change to the mission statement, the Department
    set a goal for inmates to bring their recidivism
    rate down from its present rate (33%) to 20% or
    less by 2012. The Department envisions that, if
    accomplished, the criminal justice system will see
    a significant reduction in the demands that repeat
    offenders exert and provide safer communities for
    the citizens of Florida and those who visit the state.
    Current and future re-entry initiatives in place to
    accomplish this goal will be represented in the
    Department’s Re-entry Strategic Plan, expected to
    be completed by the end of 2008. Consequently,
    given that there are approximately 4,000 inmates in
    state prisons who have been identified as members
    of criminal gangs, and this population represents
    some of the greatest challenges to re-entry efforts,
    corrections officials need to incorporate initiatives
    specifically tailored for criminal gang members
    within the state correctional system.
    The objectives of this strategy contemplate the
    Department of Corrections developing and implementing
    specialized counseling and mentoring criteria
    designed to motivate criminal gang members
    in prison and under the community supervision,
    to gain educational, vocational and job training
    skills. Additionally, lifestyle interests and habits
    should be established that will turn them away
    from gang membership and toward becoming productive
    members of society upon re-entry. There
    is no doubt this will require training and qualifying
    a certain number of
    counselors, mentors and
    teachers to accomplish
    the individualized goals
    of gang member rehabilitation
    and re-entry.
    Therefore, it may be
    necessary for the Department
    of Corrections
    to seek grants from the
    federal government
    and/or private foundations
    with an interest in
    prisoner re-entry.
    As with many prisoners, gang member inmates
    will likely need drug treatment and rehabilitation
    services. While there may be legal or regulatory
    issues which restrict giving priority to criminal
    gang members in such programs as well as in education
    and training programs, every effort should
    be made to provide all gang member inmates who
    qualify, access to all available programs and to create
    new programs where necessary.
    The rehabilitation and re-entry plan should
    include detailed provisions for job placement of
    criminal gang members when they are released
    and for providing a counselor/mentor for each
    released offender to give guidance, assist with
    c
    t
    t
    o
    b
    T
    n
    p
    t
    f
    a
    t
    Concept of Operation
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 23
    acquiring and keeping a job, educational advancement,
    and building positive relationships outside
    of gangs for a period of at least five years after
    release from prison. This, too, may require additional
    funding from grants either at the federal
    level or from private foundations. The plan
    should include proposals to seek such grants.
    The strategy calls for all identified criminal gang
    members in state or county correctional systems,
    upon release, to register with an identified state
    office, and keep their address, contact information
    and job status current for ten years after release
    and that each released gang member inmate report
    in person for counseling to a counselor/mentor
    for a period of at least five years after release
    from prison. The rehabilitation and re-entry plan
    should address how this is to be structured and
    accomplished and include a plan and timetable
    for any changes in regulations or law that may be
    necessary.
    The Department of Corrections should call upon
    members of the coordinating council for any assistance
    they may be able to give in developing or
    carrying out this plan.
    Concept of Operation
    24 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 25
    Measuring Success
    The mission of the Gang Reduction Strategy is to
    increase the safety of Florida citizens by empowering
    Florida’s youth to reject criminal gangs as a
    viable option and by substantially reducing gangrelated
    crime and violence in Florida. The goals to
    accomplish the mission are stopping the growth
    of criminal gangs in Florida, reducing the number
    of gangs and gang members and rendering gangs
    ineffectual. To accomplish this mission and these
    goals, there must be a standard set of data collected
    annually to measure progress and success.
    Gang Data
    The number of criminal gangs and gang members
    in Florida is unclear. The Florida Department of
    Law Enforcement (FDLE) announced in October
    2007 the results of their first gang survey since
    1995. It appears from this survey there are at
    least 1,500 gangs and well over 65,000 gang members
    in Florida. Unfortunately, the 2007 survey is
    incomplete and may have duplications in it. The
    survey was directed to Florida’s sheriffs, police
    chiefs, and school resource officers. A very sizeable
    number of them failed to respond. Inasmuch
    as there is overlap among the jurisdictions of
    police, sheriffs, and school resource officers, it is
    difficult to analyze and sort out areas where duplication
    in counting may have occurred.
    The InSite Intelligence Database is a statewide
    database maintained by FDLE which is designed
    for the sharing of gang intelligence among all law
    enforcement agencies statewide. The system is
    contributed to on a voluntary basis. Many law
    enforcement agencies utilize their own database
    for storage of intelligence information and may or
    may not contribute to the FDLE statewide gang
    database. One of the reasons this occurs is the
    diversity of database products among local and
    state agencies. These agencies must duplicate
    their efforts if they are to share their intelligence
    statewide. Sheriffs and police chiefs have been
    unable or unwilling to assign staff for duplicate
    entries; therefore, the statewide database rarely
    gets updated with the information that is stored
    in local databases.
    It is the recommendation of this strategy that
    FDLE research all technological solutions available
    to find a way to allow local and other state
    systems to electronically upload their gang intelligence
    information into the statewide system in
    order to eliminate the need for duplication and to
    facilitate a complete statewide database that all
    law enforcement and criminal justice agencies can
    readily access and retrieve pertinent information
    on a timely basis.
    The Department of Corrections maintains a
    Security Threat Group (STG) management initiative
    that catalogs gangs and gang members in
    state prisons. From the data available, it appears
    that there is at least one gang member from each
    of Florida’s 67 counties serving in state prison.
    While this initiative appears very thorough with
    respect to those who are inmates and have been
    identified as potential threats to prison security,
    it is unclear whether it captures all criminal gang
    members serving time in state prison or whether
    some of those who are cataloged as gang members
    for prison purposes might not be members of a
    criminal gang in a local community prior to entering
    prison.
    As a consequence of the incomplete and loosely
    connected data on criminal gangs and gang members
    currently available, the coordinating council,
    together with regional task forces, must develop a
    simplified statewide system for the annual reporting
    of data on gangs and gang members. For the
    purpose of this strategy, the only data that needs
    to be collected annually is the name and geographical
    location of every identified criminal gang in a
    region, the number of members in each gang, and
    the nature and amount of criminal activity attribMeasuring
    Success
    26 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    uted to each gang during the preceding year (number
    of arrests and convictions of gang members).
    Each regional task force should designate a single
    member to be responsible for collecting the data
    from the region each year and submitting it to the
    Office of the Attorney General. It is suggested
    that the easiest way to accomplish this collection
    task would be for each sheriff to take responsibility
    for collecting the data from his or her county
    using the resources of the office and information
    solicited from each police department in the
    county, the county jail, and the school resource
    officers of all the middle schools and high schools
    in the county. The designated regional task force
    member should work with each sheriff and his
    or her designee to screen the data collected from
    the various sources within the county for accuracy
    and to make sure there are no duplications.
    The measuring period to be used in the collection
    of this gang data will be the fiscal year ending June
    30 of each year. It will be the responsibility of
    each regional task force to collect the data from its
    region, organize it and submit it to the Attorney
    General no later than September 30 of each year.
    It is recognized that for this strategy to meet
    its long-term objectives, law enforcement and
    prevention organizations will need more detailed
    data on gangs and gang membership than is outlined
    in this strategy. This is the data needed for
    metrics. It is the basic, fundamental data necessary
    to measure progress and success. Along the
    way, the members of the regional task forces and
    the coordinating council need to work with FDLE
    to improve and make more effective and efficient
    its periodic longer survey of gangs and gang membership.
    One of the first things each regional task
    force should do is to critique the current FDLE
    survey and make suggestions for improvement in
    the questions and data requested and help FDLE
    come up with a way to assure a more timely and
    complete response from those surveyed and a way
    to assure more accuracy and less duplication of
    data reported.
    The regional task forces and the coordinating
    council should also work with FDLE on improvements
    to InSite. Intelligence sharing is crucial to
    law enforcement and a more complete and workable
    database for intelligence sharing purposes to
    fight gangs would be invaluable. But the immediate
    goal is to gather the simple, basic data necessary
    for measuring progress and success.
    Prevention/Intervention Data
    Unfortunately, Florida has no state database identifying
    existing prevention/intervention programs
    directed toward at-risk youth, nor any criteria for
    grading or measuring the success of existing programs.
    There is no repository of information as
    to which, if any, existing prevention programs in
    Florida specifically target children at risk of being
    recruited into gangs or their effectiveness. The
    very fact that gang membership appears to have
    steadily grown in Florida for a number of years
    suggests existing programs are not working, or at
    best, have had a limited impact on gang recruitment
    and growth.
    The coordinating council or a designated state
    agency must gather a comprehensive list/database
    on all at-risk youth prevention programs operating
    in Florida. Included in this database should be an
    indication which, if any, of these programs specifically
    target children at risk of being recruited into
    gangs and how these programs operate.
    As the regional task forces are formed and organized,
    they will be asked by the coordinating
    council to compile a list within their region of
    all prevention/intervention programs directed
    toward at-risk youth and designate which, if any,
    of these programs specifically target children at
    risk of being recruited into gangs. For those that
    target youth being recruited into gangs, the task
    force should determine the model and/or methodology
    being used by the program to address
    this targeted group and provide this information
    to the coordinating council. The list should be
    comprehensive and include both faith-based and
    non faith-based organizations and programs.
    Where identifiable, mentoring programs should
    Measuring Success
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 27
    be included. In developing the list, the task forces
    should consider including local Boys and Girls
    Clubs; Urban League programs; YMCA programs;
    Police Athletic Leagues programs; United Way
    supported organizational programs; and any other
    after-school or community based programs or
    initiatives the task forces can identify.
    As with the collection of gang data, the regional
    task forces should also collect and revise the
    prevention/intervention program data on an annual
    basis for the previous 12 months of a fiscal
    year concluding on June 30 and report the data to
    the Office of the Attorney General by September
    30 each year. It is suggested that each task force
    identify a member to be in charge of the collection
    of this data and that a member of the task force
    from each county be designated to work with
    this person to collect the data and sort through it.
    All members of the regional task force should be
    called upon to contribute information and provide
    assistance in this effort.
    The collection of this prevention/intervention program
    data in each region is not only important for
    statewide measurement of progress and success, it
    is also essential for the regional task forces to have
    this data in order to succeed in their prevention/
    intervention objectives. The collection of the base
    data should be the first priority of each task force.
    A longer term goal of the coordinating council
    and the task forces should be the development of
    a methodology to measure the quality of success
    for prevention/intervention programs directed
    specifically at youth likely to be recruited into
    gangs. There appears to be a lot of literature on
    various prevention/intervention programs directed
    at these youth, but no known gauge exists
    for measuring the success or comparative success
    of these programs.
    Workforce Development/Training
    Programs
    A sub-set of the prevention/intervention programs
    for youth at risk of being recruited into gangs are
    those specifically designed to engage these youth
    in workforce development and/or training. As
    with most youth who engage in criminal activity
    and end up in state prisons, few gang members
    have developed marketable skills or held a job.
    Each task force should collect a list of all existing
    workforce development/training programs in the
    region. Most likely, these will be associated with
    area high schools, but there may be some prevention/
    intervention programs or community organizations
    with a workforce development component
    that exists separate and apart from the schools.
    While existing organizations that are trying to address
    youth vulnerable to gang membership may
    already have a workforce development component,
    the likelihood is that the task force will have
    to foster, develop or coordinate this component
    in their regions. It may be that the task forces
    will have to develop such programs specifically for
    the targeted youth. Only with a good database of
    existing programs and available resources will this
    be possible.
    Drug Rehabilitation/Treatment
    Program Data
    Studies indicate that drugs are intertwined with
    criminal gangs and gang members. It is believed
    that criminal gangs in Florida are the primary
    retail outlet for the sale of most types of illicit
    drugs. Many young gang members are drug users
    and may be addicted to one or more narcotics.
    The Gang Reduction Strategy contemplates a
    coordinated effort between the regional task
    forces and drug prevention/rehabilitation/treatment
    programs in the local communities. Task
    forces should collect a list of all such programs in
    their region and involve them in their effort as appropriate.
    This data should be readily accessible.
    Task force leaders should seek the assistance of
    the Florida Office of Drug Control to access this
    data and help with the coordination of all drug
    related issues.
    Measuring Success
    28 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Inmate Re-entry Data
    Working with the Department of Corrections,
    and the coordinating council, each regional task
    force needs to collect a list of faith-based and non
    faith-based programs in the region which provide
    assistance to inmates leaving state prisons. The
    development of organized efforts in the state by
    non-profit organizations to provide assistance to
    offenders in acquiring jobs is gaining support in
    several parts of the state. The programs of these
    organizations need to be identified and assessed
    as to the number of released inmates who are able
    to be placed in jobs each year and how successful
    they may be in terms of keeping these individuals
    employed once they have acquired employment.
    This data will be invaluable to both the task
    forces and the Department of Corrections in
    future efforts to divert gang members who leave
    prison from returning to a gang lifestyle. There
    are a few programs that exist in Florida that are
    specifically targeted to gang members who are reentering
    society, and task forces should consider
    working with the existing programs. Task forces
    should work with the Department of Corrections
    in developing job opportunities for gang members
    re-entering society and methods of mentoring and
    following them for a substantial period of time
    after release from prison.
    Community Involvement
    While the Department of Corrections will play the
    leading role in re-entry initiatives, community leaders
    and local law enforcement must also play an active
    role and partner in these efforts. Without local
    law enforcement officials and community leaders
    supporting community re-entry programs and addressing
    re-entry issues at a local level, the chances
    for sustainable success will be limited. Examples
    of quality partnerships exist all around the state.
    They include Jacksonville’s Re-entry Center (Jacksonville
    Sheriff’s Office), Broward County’s Re-entry
    Coalition, and the Pinellas County Ex-Offender Reentry
    Coalition. Coalitions and organizations such
    as these represent examples where state and local
    partnerships can work together toward executing
    a successful gang reduction strategy. Replicating
    these partnerships with local knowledge, combined
    with state resources, will provide continuity and
    effective re-entry programs for offenders who are
    members of criminal gangs both in state correctional
    systems and for those offenders on community
    supervision.
    Both community leaders and the Department of
    Corrections will call upon members of the coordinating
    council for any assistance they may be able
    to give in developing or carrying out this plan for
    re-entering ex-offenders.
    Importance of Metrics
    Metrics are essential to the carrying out of the
    objectives of this strategy. Each regional task
    force should not only develop a plan for carrying
    out its objectives, but also devise its own system
    to measure progress and success. The data to be
    gathered as described here will be necessary not
    only as information needed by the regional task
    force to develop its plans and carry them out, but
    also for the measurement of success and progress.
    In the same way, the coordinating council needs
    this data in order to measure statewide success
    and be able to determine what adjustments need
    to be made in the strategy.
    Measuring Success
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 29
    0%
    10%
    20%
    30%
    40%
    50%
    60%
    70%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    44.0%
    57.2% 55.4% 56.1%
    49.0%
    44.1%
    49.1%
    6.0%
    6.5%
    7.0%
    7.5%
    8.0%
    8.5%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    7.2%
    7.0%
    6.9%
    7.5%
    7.0%
    8.0%
    8.2%
    Reporting ever having
    belonged to a gang
    Percent of High School Gang Members That Joined Before Age 14
    Gang Membership Among Florida’s Middle and High School Students
    Gang Data From the Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (2001-2007)
    Measuring Success
    30 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    0%
    1%
    2%
    3%
    4%
    5%
    6%
    7%
    8%
    9%
    10%
    High School
    Middle School
    Middle & High School (Grades 6-12)
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    8.6%
    7.3% 8.1%
    6.5% 6.4%
    8.3%
    7.5%
    7.2%
    6.3%
    7.5%
    8.6%
    7.8%
    6.0%
    7.9%
    7.0%
    6.9%
    7.5% 7.0%
    7.2%
    8.0% 8.2%
    0%
    2%
    4%
    6%
    8%
    10%
    12%
    14%
    16%
    18%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    14.4%
    12.4% 12.1% 12.4%
    13.8%
    15.4% 15.5%
    Reporting that at least 1 of their 4 best friends
    had belonged to a gang in the past year.
    In the Past Year, How Many of Your Four Best Friends Had Been Members of a Gang?
    (Middle & High School Students)
    Gang Membership Among Florida’s Middle and High School Students
    Gang Data From the Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (2001-2007)
    Measuring Success
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 31
    6.5%
    7.0%
    7.5%
    8.0%
    8.5%
    9.0%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    8.6%
    7.3%
    7.5%
    7.8%
    7.9%
    8.6%
    8.3%
    Reporting ever having
    belonged to a gang
    0%
    2%
    4%
    6%
    8%
    10%
    12%
    14%
    16%
    18%
    20%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    16.7%
    14.3% 14.0% 13.4%
    15.5%
    17.1% 17.2%
    Reporting that at least 1 of their 4 best friends
    had belonged to a gang in the past year.
    Gang Membership Among Florida’s Middle School Students
    In the Past Year, How Many of Your Four Best Friends Had Been Members of a Gang?
    (Middle School Students)
    Gang Data From the Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (2001-2007)
    Measuring Success
    32 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    0%
    2%
    4%
    6%
    8%
    10%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    6.0%
    6.5% 6.4%
    7.2%
    6.3%
    7.5%
    8.1%
    Reporting ever having
    belonged to a gang
    0%
    2%
    4%
    6%
    8%
    10%
    12%
    14%
    16%
    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
    12.5%
    10.7% 10.5%
    11.5%
    12.5%
    14.0% 14.3%
    Reporting that at least 1 of their 4 best friends
    had belonged to a gang in the past year.
    Gang Membership Among Florida’s High School Students
    In the Past Year, How Many of Your Four Best Friends Had Been Members of a Gang?
    (High School Students)
    Gang Data From the Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey (2001-2007)
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 33
    Resources
    The Gang Reduction Strategy is a blueprint for
    organizing existing resources to stop and reverse
    the growth of gangs and gang membership in the
    state and render gangs ineffectual. It does not
    contemplate any additional government funding
    or increased manpower. Some re-allocation
    of existing manpower and resources by different
    levels of government and non-governmental entities
    will be necessary to accomplish the goals and
    objectives. But there are other types of resources
    available to assist.
    All of the state agencies participating in the coordinating
    council are available to help the regional
    task forces and their members and participants
    accomplish the goals and objectives of the strategy.
    Members of the coordinating council have
    agreed to donate staff time and resources to carry
    out its coordinating function and help collect and
    analyze data and identify materials and assets for
    the regional task forces.
    There are a number of prominent prevention
    programs around the nation that have had some
    success in fighting gangs. The regional task
    forces are urged to review and draw upon these
    programs for ideas and potential support of their
    plans. At the same time, each regional task force
    is expected to build its own plan and carry it out,
    not simply copy one or more of the other projects
    or programs.
    Where additional funding may be necessary,
    participants are expected to seek grants from nonprofit
    organizations or the federal government or
    draw upon support from colleges and universities
    where funding may have already been obtained
    for research, pilot projects or the like that could
    be correlated to the needs of the task forces and
    participants. There are a number of foundations
    in Florida and across the nation that have in their
    charters special interest in contributing to causes
    that relate to the gang issues in this strategy. The
    coordinating council is prepared to assist the regional
    task forces and participating organizations
    in seeking support from these foundations.
    State Agencies
    Each state agency participating in the coordinating
    council has expertise of its own that could be very
    valuable to regional task forces and participants
    in preparing plans and working to achieve the
    goals and objectives of the strategy. For reference,
    some of the applicable duties of each state agency
    are listed here along with an indication of some of
    their current responsibilities and activities that are
    related to anti-gang efforts and might give indication
    of how the agency can assist in the strategy.
    Office of the Attorney General
    As Florida’s chief legal advocate the Attorney
    General will take the lead in implementing this
    Gang Reduction Strategy. With the assistance of
    participating agencies, he will assure the role of
    the coordinating council is fulfilled and assist the
    regional task forces in planning and carrying out
    plans to utilize the strategy.
    The Attorney General will pursue enhancements
    to existing statutes or when appropriate the
    creation of new laws to combat criminal gangs.
    The Attorney General’s Office of Statewide
    Prosecution will continue its prosecution of gang
    members under the criminal racketeering statute.
    Charging under these laws not only enables
    prosecutors to seek stronger sentences against
    gang members, but also hampers the gang’s ability
    to generate the money they need to survive. Using
    the racketeering charge, authorities target the
    gang as an organized criminal enterprise, often
    useful when witnesses or victims are unwilling to
    testify against gang members.
    Resources
    34 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    A Statewide Grand Jury was convened in August
    2007 to investigate criminal gang activity. Several
    indictments have been issued and more are
    expected. The jurors also studied various criminal
    issues and made recommendations on needed
    laws to deter gang activities and punish those
    involved in these pursuits. A summary of the
    1st Interim Report of the Statewide Grand Jury
    on Criminal Gangs and Gang Related Violence is
    located in Appendix B of the strategy.
    Department of Education
    The overarching goal for the Florida Department
    of Education is the success of all Florida students.
    The Department sets strategic imperatives to develop
    and implement standards and measures that
    focus on high student achievement. School success
    is a strong protective factor contributing to
    the prevention of youth engagement in delinquent
    and other risk behaviors. A student’s school
    success is demonstrated through both academic
    achievement and level of attachment to school.
    Low academic performance can contribute to a
    student’s risk for gang affiliation.1 In addition, a
    school’s ability to engage a student can significantly
    influence a student’s behavior, including risk for
    gang involvement.2 Students who feel connected
    to school are less likely to engage in violent or
    deviant behavior.3
    There is a direct relationship between safe youth,
    safe schools, and academic success.4 The Centers
    for Disease Control reported, “Violence at school
    can inhibit learning, affect school performance,
    and even reduce school attendance.”5 The presence
    of gangs in schools can disrupt the learning
    process for students, and create a climate of
    threat, intimidation, and violence. The Department
    of Education will work with local education
    agencies to develop and/or enhance existing
    action plans targeted specifically toward reducing
    youth gang involvement. The Department
    will utilize the already existing infrastructure of
    district contacts for Safety and Security, Safe &
    Drug Free Schools, and Dropout Prevention to
    disseminate information regarding best practices
    for gang awareness training, gang suppression
    tactics within schools, gang prevention programs,
    and targeted gang intervention strategies. District
    and school level action plans should include a four
    pronged approach:
    Universal Prevention: Strengthen prevention
    services and positive school climate to improve
    academic and social outcomes for all students.
    Strategies/activities include:
    • Implement evidence-based substance
    abuse and violence prevention programs
    that include anti-gang self-concepts, and
    teach resiliency skills that empower youth
    to make good choices and reject gang
    involvement.
    • Implement a school-wide bullying prevention
    program.
    • Provide students with positive role models
    who offer nurturing, supportive, and
    caring relationships.
    • Employ consistent enforcement of policies
    and procedures for acceptable student behavior;
    discipline with positive supports.
    • Teach academic skills, social skill development,
    and critical thinking skills.
    • Engage parents/guardians by involving them
    in actively supervising youth behavior.
    • Access business/community resources
    and create partnerships with community
    organizations that support positive youth
    development opportunities such as afterschool
    programs.
    Campus Gang Suppression/School Level Targeted
    Intervention: Partner with law enforcement
    to create a school safety team to:
    • Assess threat of gangs on campus by
    identifying gangs and gang members on
    campus and surrounding neighborhoods,
    by identifying leaders and leadership
    structure, and by assessing how gangs are
    affecting campus.
    • Establish a neutral school by enforcing
    policies and procedures that do not tolerate
    gang identifiers, by removing graffiti,
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 35
    and by other methods that establish a safe
    and secure school zone.
    • Be consistent with enforcement of gang
    suppression strategies.
    • Implement effective reporting and documentation
    practices.
    Individual Level Intervention: Identify students
    who are at greater risk for gang recruitment and
    gang involvement. Types of intervention techniques
    include:
    • Establishing protocols for early identification
    for risk of gang involvement.
    • Employing research-based behavioral
    intervention methods.
    • Providing focused mentoring relationships.
    • Making student assistance programs
    available that provide additional supports
    for academic, social, and employment
    skills development.
    Parent and Teacher Training and Education:
    Be proactive by empowering parents/families and
    school personnel to be aware of gang activities
    and gang-involved youth.
    • Provide teachers and school personnel
    with training that includes gang awareness,
    conflict resolution, de-escalating
    methods for verbal conflicts, diversity
    training, self-defense training, and safe
    techniques to intervene in a fight
    • Provide parents and families with gang
    awareness resources, prevention, and
    intervention information
    Schools can create an organizational structure
    and culture that do not tolerate gang recruitment
    or gang activity on their campuses. More significantly,
    since children spend most of their time at
    school, schools are an excellent avenue to educate
    youth and their families about the negative
    consequences of gang involvement. Prevention
    and intervention settings can be localized within
    schools to empower youth to reject gang involvement
    as well as gang affiliation.
    Department of Children and Families
    The Florida Department of Children and Families
    (DCF) protects the vulnerable, promotes
    strong and economically self-sufficient families,
    and advances personal and family recovery and
    resiliency. The DCF delivers foster care, adoption,
    substance abuse, mental health, homeless and
    other services through local and community-based
    organizations. The DCF’s services to vulnerable
    children and youth positions the Department
    and its partners to support the Gang Reduction
    Strategy’s prevention/intervention pillar through
    normal daily operations.
    Even though most Department of Children and
    Families services to children and youth have an
    overall preventative effect, the agency will focus
    its activities on the most vulnerable populations
    for gang recruitment – children in foster care and
    young adults who have aged out of foster care.
    These children and youth come from dysfunctional
    families. They do not have strong ties to family
    or a trusted adult, have low self-esteem, and are
    likely to be a grade-level or more behind in school.
    Therefore, the Department of Children and Families,
    in cooperation with the Department of Education,
    Department of Juvenile Justice and the Office
    of Drug Control will enable children in foster care
    and young adults who were formerly in foster
    care to develop the skills necessary for successful
    transition to adulthood and self-sufficiency.
    The specific objectives associated with this goal are:
    • Ensure youth have an adult who is invested
    in his or her well-being, especially
    education.
    • Increase the number of youth graduating
    from high school and post-secondary
    education.
    F Increase the educational stability of
    children in foster care by increasing
    the number of foster children remaining
    in their same school, when
    feasible, or improve the transition
    between schools and school districts
    when school moves occur.
    Resources
    36 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    _ Facilitate youth having supports to
    enter into, and complete high school
    and post-secondary education.
    _ Enhance the supports to prevent
    school dropout, truancy, and disciplinary
    actions.
    • Enhance opportunities and supports for
    youth to fully participate in all aspects of the
    primary and secondary school experience as
    well as activities to enhance normalcy.
    • Increase the number of youth who obtain
    a job that provides a living wage by implementing
    “Operation Full Employment”
    to employ 100 youth in foster care in the
    Department; and challenging statewide
    employer/agency collaborations that help
    first-time workers enter and advance in
    the workplace.
    • Continue to support the development
    and implementation of a transitional
    living or subsidized independent living
    housing experience for those youth aging
    out of foster care at age 17 who will not
    have the option of remaining in a foster
    care family home or group home.
    • Provide substance abuse and mental
    health services for youth and families to
    reduce risk factors for gang involvement.
    • Assist Florida communities in developing
    substance abuse prevention coalitions
    that implement strategies to reduce
    environmental factors contributing
    to gang involvement.
    Also, the Department of Children and Families’
    Substance Abuse Program Office will collaborate
    with the Governor’s Office of Drug Control, Department
    of Health, Department of Education, and
    Department of Juvenile Justice to administer the
    Florida Youth Substance Abuse Survey.
    Department of Law Enforcement
    The Florida Department of Law Enforcement
    (FDLE) is committed to providing timely and accurate
    criminal justice information to prevent crime,
    solve cases, recover property, and to identify
    persons with criminal warrants, arrests, and convictions.
    The FDLE also provides statistical and
    analytical information about crime to policymakers
    and the public so that informed decisions can
    be made regarding the best way to combat and
    prevent crime. The agency is vital in providing an
    overall analysis of criminal gang activity and gangrelated
    crime in Florida.
    Gathering and deciphering actionable intelligence
    on criminal gangs is fundamental to successful
    suppression operations. As part of a comprehensive
    statewide strategy to address Florida’s violent
    crime problem, FDLE has partnered with local,
    state and federal agencies to develop a proactive
    enforcement effort to focus on major violent
    crime components which includes an emphasis
    on criminal gangs. The FDLE has coordinated
    regional summits with sheriffs, police chiefs, state
    attorneys, and other partners to discuss current
    initiatives and proposals to combat violent and
    gang associated crime throughout the state. The
    criminal gang component of FDLE’s statewide
    violent crime strategy includes the following:
    • Investigative/Enforcement Operations
    F Establishing regional advisory groups
    representing federal, state and local
    agencies. The advisory groups will
    meet on a regular basis to enhance
    existing regional violent crime teams
    by exchanging gang specific operational
    and investigative information.
    F FDLE has also designated a statewide
    coordinator for its gang-related
    investigative efforts.
    • Intelligence/Information Sharing
    F Expanding current intelligence
    structure and designating intelligence
    agents and analysts in each of
    FDLE’s seven regions. The unique
    responsibilities of these agents and
    analysts will be their focused collection
    efforts directed by the Office
    of Statewide Intelligence to identify
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 37
    current and emerging trends with a
    priority on criminal gangs.
    F Increasing the automation of gangrelated
    intelligence information
    through the criminal gang module
    of Florida Intelligence Site (InSite)
    which provides law enforcement
    agencies throughout the state with a
    secure database of active criminal intelligence
    and investigative
    information regarding
    gangs, gang members
    and gang-related
    crimes. FDLE
    will work with regional
    analysts to
    enter local agency
    intelligence information
    into InSite
    and provide InSite
    training to local law
    enforcement agencies.
    F Establishing analyst teams/pools in
    each FDLE region to enhance intelligence
    and information sharing.
    • Violent Fugitive Apprehension
    F Expanding the use of advanced
    technology that can aid investigators
    in rapidly identifying, locating, and
    apprehending violent criminals using
    cellular, global positioning satellite
    and computer technology.
    F Partnering with the United States
    Marshal’s Office to enhance violent
    fugitive apprehension efforts statewide
    with an emphasis on identifying
    and apprehending known gang
    members with violent criminal
    histories involving firearms.
    • Training and Awareness Programs
    F FDLE will provide specialized training
    to both internal members and
    local law enforcement on conducting
    major gang investigations. The
    agency will continue to develop
    and deliver basic, intermediate and
    advanced violent crime/criminal gang
    awareness and training for local law
    enforcement agencies.
    Department of Juvenile Justice
    The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ)
    will provide youth entering their system or in
    some cases youth at-risk of entering their system,
    effective prevention, intervention, and treatment
    services. DJJ is in a position to have considerable
    influence on a young person’s need or decision to
    become affiliated with a criminal gang. The agency’s
    sustained anti-gang efforts and commitment
    to prevention will ultimately impact criminal gang
    activity statewide.
    A Statewide Gang Steering Committee was formed
    within the Department with representatives from
    all program areas, as well as education, legislative
    affairs, general counsel, management information
    systems, and staff development and training. An
    Action Plan was developed which included:
    • A statewide assessment of current gang
    identification, intervention, and suppression
    practices.
    • A statewide assessment of current gang issues
    to identify the needs at the local and
    regional levels.
    • A statewide assessment of the current gang
    training provided to Department personnel.
    • Identification of gang awareness curriculum
    to enhance current training.
    • Identification of personnel to serve as:
    F Regional Gang Coordinators
    F Circuit Gang Liaisons
    F Local Gang Representatives
    F Certified Gang Trainers
    The Steering Committee outlined the following
    areas to be addressed for the Gang Free DJJ Initiative
    to be successful:
    Resources
    38 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Prevention: develop a
    comprehensive prevention
    program in collaboration
    with local community officials
    and stakeholders to
    prevent youth from becoming
    involved with gangs.
    Education: implement
    curriculum that addresses
    youth at all levels of gang
    involvement within our
    system and to provide additional
    gang-related training
    for all direct care staff.
    Identification: partner
    with the Florida Department
    of Law Enforcement to assist in identifying
    youth affiliated with gangs as determined
    by statutory criteria through the use
    of the already established FDLE gang data
    base InSite. Integrate the InSite system with
    the Juvenile Justice Information System to
    afford uploading of information gathered by
    DJJ personnel.
    Intervention: provide services to youth under
    the supervision of, or in the custody of, the
    Department that have been identified as gang
    associates, members, or at-risk to become
    involved with gangs. DJJ will target evidencebased
    programs that are proven effective in
    achieving desired outcomes or will include a
    research component to interventions that are
    not already identified as evidence-based.
    Suppression: maintain a “Gang Free DJJ”
    environment within all program areas by the
    incorporation of a “zero-tolerance” policy for
    any and all gang activity.
    Legislation: secure funding from the Florida
    Legislature to assist in the implementation of
    the Gang Free DJJ Initiative.
    Beginning with prevention, DJJ is taking a multidisciplinary
    approach to combat gangs. DJJ will
    be reaching out to local law enforcement agencies,
    the leaders of faithbased
    programs, community
    partners, and the citizens of
    Florida for assistance in its
    gang reduction efforts.
    Working with the most
    vulnerable children, strengthening
    families, educating
    communities, and providing
    pro-social activities for youth
    are paramount.
    The Department of Juvenile
    Justice has identified relevant
    curriculum and is in the
    process of piloting programs
    throughout Florida. Youth
    who are gang members, associates, or at-risk of
    recruitment within DJJ facilities and communities
    shall be provided services to assist them in understanding
    the dangers of gang involvement and the
    tools to disassociate from their gang.
    Representatives from DJJ have been working sideby-
    side with FDLE to allow staff to enter gang
    data that will interface with FDLE’s InSite. This
    collaborative effort will be a resource for law enforcement
    and will have a tremendous impact on
    DJJ’s ability to keep youth safe while in custody.
    This database will assist DJJ in identifying youth
    that are associated with gangs or are gang members,
    and putting the necessary services in place to
    meet their needs.
    Department of Corrections
    The Florida Department of Corrections will secure
    all gang members it receives in its prisons, deny
    them a base of operations or any chance to network,
    and take disciplinary action whenever any of
    them seek to continue gang-like behavior. To that
    end, in 1992 the Department began efforts in identifying
    the levels of gang activity within its inmate/
    offender population. Although corrections officials
    had not realized a significant number of disruptive
    incidents attributed to gang activity, national trends
    and an increase in the intake of younger inmates
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    prompted the formation
    of the Security Threat
    Group (STG) management
    initiative.
    The mission of the Security
    Threat Intelligence
    Unit (STIU) is to maintain
    a safe and secure operation
    for correctional/probation
    officers, visitors,
    and inmates/offenders by
    identifying, certifying and
    monitoring STG activity,
    coordinating all intelligence with fellow criminal
    justice agencies, and providing community awareness
    programs and education. After placement in
    the correctional system, the inmates prone to gang
    membership tend to mirror gangs in the community.
    An exception to the similarity exists in that
    prison gangs tend to gravitate and identify along
    racial lines, whereas the majority of gangs reported
    in Florida are multi-cultural allegiances.
    The result is the comprehensive intelligence gathering
    program that has given Florida a “blueprint”
    of gang activity. The STIU is now recognized as a
    national leader in STG identification, assessment
    and management. Although the STIU’s primary
    focus is on inmates and offenders, the unit is
    committed to sharing what they learn with other
    criminal justice agencies and the public.
    In response to the staggering statistics on the
    projected inmate population, the Department
    of Corrections has made reducing recidivism a
    major focus. It is important to note that each year
    approximately 34,000 inmates are released from
    the Department of Corrections.6 The STIU will
    continue to expand their synchronization with
    outside agencies by notifying local law enforcement
    when a gang member is released from
    prison. By enhanced coordination with local law
    enforcement, communities will be able to monitor,
    and when appropriate, provide services for
    the reintegration, or in some cases, the integration
    of a former gang member into a productive, lawabiding
    citizen.
    To accomplish the task of
    offender reintegration the
    Department of Corrections
    changed its mission
    in May 2007 to state, “To
    protect the public, ensure
    the safety of Department
    personnel, and provide
    for the proper care and
    supervision of all offenders
    under our jurisdiction
    while assisting, as appropriate,
    their re-entry
    into society.” Coupled
    with this change to the mission statement, the
    Department set a goal of bringing the recidivism
    rate down from its present rate of 32% to 20% or
    less by 2012. The Department envisions that, if
    accomplished, the criminal justice system will see
    a significant reduction in the demands that repeat
    offenders exert and provide safer communities for
    the citizens of Florida and those who visit the state.
    In addition to the re-entry of offenders, the Department
    of Corrections has also been contributing
    many hours annually in community service projects
    through inmate labor. Aside from contracting with
    the Florida Department of Transportation and local
    communities to keep roads, highways, and parks
    clean, communities and civic organizations can
    contract with the Department to aggressively eliminate
    gang graffiti and the other visible stains left
    by gangs. Graffiti and gang “tagging” are stigmas
    on Florida’s communities and without an effective
    means to continually remove them gangs continue
    to mark their territory on roads, buildings, and
    signs. Being vigilant and not tolerating any gang
    defacing neighborhoods will amplify the collective
    community resistance to gangs.
    Office of Drug Control
    The Florida Office of Drug Control (ODC), located
    in the Executive Office of the Governor, collaborates
    with the Office of Planning and Budget to
    implement a statewide drug abatement strategy
    that utilizes a three-pronged approach of drug
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    abuse prevention, treatment and counter-narcotics
    law enforcement efforts to limit the devastation of
    substance abuse in Florida’s diverse communities.
    The Office of Drug Control has developed powerful
    and persuasive prevention campaigns that
    the Gang Reduction Strategy can build upon. By
    working closely with other state and local agencies
    in the development of evidence-based prevention
    practices, substantial positive increases in
    Florida’s youth rejecting the use of tobacco, illegal
    drugs and prescription drug abuse have been
    achieved over the past seven years.
    In addition to lending expertise on drug abuse
    prevention campaigns, the Office of Drug Control
    has also developed anti-drug prevention coalitions
    in all 67 Florida counties. These associations have
    been instrumental in developing and implementing
    best practices in their community to address those
    substance abuse problems germane to their area.
    Leaders in Florida’s neighborhoods reject the idea
    that their cities cannot overcome problems relating
    to substance abuse. Rather, they have banded
    together to create broad based initiatives that have
    helped stem the tide of drug abuse in our state.
    Gang reduction efforts will therefore seek to mirror
    the successes that have been built by the Florida
    Office of Drug Control, and leverage the ODC’s
    expertise to get these 67 drug prevention coalitions
    to adopt a wider mission.
    The Office of Drug Control is uniquely positioned
    to develop and enhance initiatives for both gang
    prevention/intervention and suppression. First,
    because gangs derive much strength from narcotics
    distribution, continuing ODC’s successes in
    decreasing demand for drugs through effective
    drug prevention and treatment programs acts to
    reduce the potential financial resources available
    to gang-connected drug dealers. Simply put, fewer
    drug users mean fewer customers, and no business
    survives without customers. Secondly, in addition
    to their efforts to reduce drug demand, the Office
    of Drug Control has also played a critical role in
    furthering statewide law enforcement coordination
    by assisting with multiple statewide counterdrug
    interdiction operations over the past decade.
    Department of Highway Safety & Motor
    Vehicles
    The Florida Department of Highway Safety and
    Motor Vehicles (DHSMV), Division of the Florida
    Highway Patrol (FHP), aggressively attempts to
    reduce criminal activities occurring on Florida’s
    highways through detection, prevention, and
    enforcement of criminal laws relating to highway
    violence, transportation of illegal drugs/contraband,
    auto theft, driver license fraud, and other
    criminal activities. The work of the Department
    promotes a safe driving environment through aggressive
    law enforcement, public education, and
    safety awareness by reducing the number and severity
    of traffic crashes in Florida, preserving and
    protecting human life, property, and the rights of
    all people in accordance with the constitutions
    and laws of the United States and the state of
    Florida.
    The Florida Highway Patrol, Bureau of Investigations,
    is responsible for criminal investigations
    involving driver’s license fraud which at times
    involves identity theft, motor vehicle theft, title
    fraud, cargo theft, and other criminal activities associated
    with motor vehicles and drivers. According
    to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, statistical
    data shows the number of cases of identity
    theft and credit card thefts being perpetrated by
    gang members has increased dramatically.
    There are ten Florida Highway Patrol troops
    geographically located throughout the state that
    abuse prevention treatment and counter narcotics
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    participate in multi-agency operations and local
    task force operations. One of the local task force
    actions that targets violent criminals is Operation
    Safe Streets, which is a joint operation between
    the Florida Highway Patrol and the Jacksonville
    Sheriff’s Office. This program emphasizes high
    visibility patrol in geographic areas that are
    statistically over-represented in criminal activity.
    The FHP participates in the Multi-Agency Gang
    Task Force of Southwest Florida and in Palm
    Beach County, and troopers also participate in
    the Violent Crime Task Force.
    An essential part of the FHP is their Contraband
    Interdiction Program (CIP), which consists of
    specially trained troopers designated as felony
    officers and canine handlers. These troopers are
    strategically assigned throughout the state to patrol
    the interstate system and other highways in
    order to interdict drug couriers and other criminal
    activity. The CIP assists other federal, state,
    and local law enforcement agencies in the detection
    and apprehension of drug traffickers and
    other criminal offenders that utilize the roadways
    of Florida. The CIP is an active participant
    in various enforcement operations coordinated
    by the Florida Office of Drug Control.
    International, and to a smaller extent local
    criminal gangs, are aware of Florida’s position as
    an entry point for both legal and illegal products
    from around the world. The highway system
    will not succumb to unabated, widespread use by
    criminal gangs. The CIP is equipped with sophisticated
    drug detection equipment, such as fiber
    optic scopes, drug detection devices, electronic
    measuring devices, dual-purpose canines, and
    various other tools. The program will be important
    to cut off criminal gangs’ ability to traffic
    illegal drugs or conduct other illegal activities
    across Florida’s vast highway system.
    During the period 2003-2007 the FHP seized
    5,821 pounds of marijuana, 1,354 pounds of
    cocaine, 11 pounds of crack cocaine, 36 pounds
    of heroin, 15 pounds of methamphetamine, 9.1
    million dollars in U.S. currency and other types
    of illegal drugs, paraphernalia, and weapons. The
    total value of illegal drugs seized in this period is
    25.1 million dollars. These seizures resulted from
    7,464 drug cases and 16,209 drug related arrests.
    According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
    gangs are heavily involved in and use drug trafficking
    as their primary means of financial gain.
    Collectively, these efforts can have a significant
    impact on the financial resources of many gangs
    operating in Florida. The Florida Highway Patrol
    remains a key ally on the front lines of interrupting
    the flow of drugs and weapons. By providing
    enhanced training and through effective cooperation
    the FHP is positioned statewide to gather and
    share vital intelligence, apprehend gang members
    in transit, and keep Florida’s highways safe.
    Well Known Existing Prevention
    Programs
    There are many efforts that have been made
    across the nation to fight criminal gangs. Some
    have been more successful than others. Some
    have worked for a while and then not been so
    successful. All have some merit and may provide
    guidelines and ideas for the regional task forces
    to draw upon. What follows is a brief outline of
    some of the more prominent of these programs
    and projects.
    OJJDP Comprehensive Model
    On February 15, 2006, the Department of Justice
    launched an initiative to combat gang violence,
    under its Project Safe Neighborhoods. The strategy
    is twofold. First, prioritize prevention programs
    to provide America’s youth and offenders
    returning to the community with opportunities
    that help them resist gang involvement. Second,
    ensure robust enforcement policies when gangrelated
    violence does occur.
    As reported in the most recent National Youth
    Gang Survey, some 760,000 gang members and
    24,000 gangs were active in more than 2,900 U.S.
    jurisdictions in 2004, representing all 50 states
    and all cities with a population over 250,000. As
    most gang members join between the ages of 12
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    and 15, prevention is a critical strategy within a
    comprehensive response to gangs that includes
    law enforcement, prosecution, and re-entry.
    The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
    Prevention (OJJDP) developed a Comprehensive
    Gang Model that communities in Florida can use
    to build sustained coalitions. The model is based
    on five core strategies, with an emphasis on accurate,
    data driven assessments of the problem as
    being critical for the model to work. The following
    program development process will facilitate implementing
    the five core strategies, they include:
    1. Acknowledgment of the problem. The presence
    of a youth gang problem must be recognized
    before anything meaningful can be done to address
    it. If denial is present, it must be confronted.
    2. Assessment of the problem. Those with
    responsibility for addressing the problem-representatives
    of police, schools, probation, youth agencies,
    grass-roots organizations, government, and othersparticipate
    in identifying its nature and causes and
    recommend appropriate responses. The assessment
    results in an understanding of who is involved in
    gang crime and where in the community it is concentrated.
    This, in conjunction with other data and
    information, enables targeting:
    • Gang-involved youth
    • The most violent gangs
    • The area(s) where gang crime most
    often occurs
    3. Setting goals and objectives. Once the problem
    is described, goals and objectives based on the
    assessment findings are established. These should
    emphasize changes the Steering Committee wants
    to bring about in the target area.
    4. Relevant services and activities. Rationales
    for services, tactics, and policies and procedures
    that involve each of the key agencies are articulated
    and then implemented for each of the five
    core strategies. These activities must be closely
    coordinated or integrated to ensure that the work
    of collaborating agencies is complementary. Representatives
    of those organizations that will have
    the most direct contact with the target youth-police,
    probation, schools, and youth workers-should
    form an Intervention Team and have regular
    meetings to share critical information, plan, and
    act collaboratively on individual youth and gang
    activity in the target area. Thus, the resources of
    collaborating agencies are focused on a group of
    young people who are involved in gangs.
    It is important to remember that while youth
    gang members must be held accountable for their
    criminal acts, they also must be provided with
    services for their academic, economic, and social
    needs. Gang members must be encouraged to control
    their behavior and to participate in legitimate
    mainstream activities. At the same time, external
    controls on gang and gang-member behavior must
    be exercised. For some gang members, secure confinement
    will be necessary. For others, graduated
    degrees of community-based supervision, ranging
    from continuous sight or electronic supervision to
    incarceration, will be appropriate. It is important
    that youth understand that they will face consequences
    if they do not follow rules, laws, conditions,
    or reasonable expectations of the program.
    It also may be important to develop a set of
    incentives for compliance with the program. Thus,
    a range of services and sanctions is required, often
    in some interactive way. To be effective in this approach,
    an understanding of how a youth’s family,
    peers, and others are involved is important.
    This approach is very consistent with community
    policing, which promotes and supports organizational
    strategies to address and reduce the fear of
    crime and social disorder through problem-solving
    tactics and community-police partnerships. In this
    Model, gang unit, community policing, or other
    officers are involved in the problem-solving process
    at the street level while senior officers work
    with the policy makers.
    The work of the collaborating agencies is overseen
    by a Steering Committee of policy or decision
    makers from agencies and organizations that have
    an interest in or responsibility for addressing the
    community’s gang problem. These representatives
    should not only set policy and oversee the
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    overall direction of the gang program, but they
    should take responsibility for spearheading efforts
    in their own organizations to remove barriers to
    services, and to social and economic opportunities;
    develop effective criminal justice, school, and
    social agency procedures; and promote policies
    that will further the goals of the gang strategy.
    5. Evaluation. Results from evaluations have
    shown that the Model is effective in lowering
    crime rates among youth gang members. Preliminary
    results from an evaluation of five communities
    chosen as demonstration sites for the Model
    show that a combination of intervention, suppression,
    and prevention strategies, along with a coordinated
    team approach to delivering services, are
    effective in having a positive impact on reducing
    gang crime. For these reasons, the incorporation
    of a strong evaluation component as the initiative
    is taking form and throughout the life of the
    program is critical to assessing the impact of the
    program. Using the five core strategies, the OJJDP
    Comprehensive Gang Model supports a multifaceted
    approach that includes eight critical elements.
    1. Initial and continuous problem assessment
    using qualitative and quantitative data
    2. Targeting of the area and those populations
    of individuals most closely associated
    with the problem, as described in
    the assessment
    3. Mix of the five key strategies: community
    mobilization, social intervention,
    opportunities provision, suppression, and
    organizational change/ development
    4. A Steering Committee to oversee and
    guide the project
    5. A direct contact intervention team that
    includes police, probation, outreach staff,
    and others
    6. A plan for coordinating efforts of and
    sharing appropriate information among
    those who work with the youth on a
    daily basis, the Steering Committee, and
    persons within the partner organizations
    7. Community capacity building to sustain
    the project and address issues that are
    long-term in nature
    8. Ongoing data collection and analysis to
    inform the process and evaluate its impact
    These eight elements should be used to focus interventions
    toward specific types of criminal gangs
    (from sophisticated to loosely organized gangs) and
    varying levels of the problem (violent crimes, drug
    distribution, robbery or property crimes).
    OJJDP’s Gang Reduction Program is designed to
    reduce gang activity in targeted neighborhoods by
    incorporating a broad spectrum of research-based
    interventions to address the range of personal,
    family, and community factors that contribute
    to juvenile delinquency and gang activity. The
    program integrates local, state, and federal resources
    to incorporate state-of-the-art practices in
    prevention, intervention, and suppression. As part
    of this program, OJJDP has developed a Strategic
    Planning Tool to help communities assess and address
    local youth gang problems.
    The Gang Reduction Program is funding pilot sites
    in four communities characterized by significant
    existing program investment, strong indicators of
    citizen involvement, and high rates of crime and
    gang activity. The sites are located in:
    • East Los Angeles, CA (Mayor’s Office for
    the City of Los Angeles).
    • Milwaukee, WI (Wisconsin Office of Justice
    Assistance).
    • North Miami Beach, FL (Florida Governor’s
    Office of Drug Control).
    • Richmond, VA (Virginia Attorney General’s
    Office).
    The latest gang-related resources may be found on
    OJJDP’s Web site at:
    http://ojjdp.ncjrs.gov/programs/antigang.
    The PanZOu Project, Inc.
    The PanZOu Project, Inc. (Gang Reduction Program)
    in North Miami Beach, FL began as a grant funded
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    program through the Office of Juvenile Justice and
    Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP). The goal of the
    grant, awarded to the Florida Governor’s Office of
    Drug Control, was to reduce gang membership in
    the city of North Miami Beach. Initiated in 2004,
    the PanZOu Project is one of four pilot sites in the
    nation to receive the $2.5 million grant.
    The main goal of the PanZOu Project is to significantly
    reduce Haitian youths’ involvement in
    gang activity in the North Miami Beach area. The
    plan incorporates a broad spectrum of proven,
    research-based interventions designed to address
    the full range of personal, family, and community
    factors that contribute to high levels of juvenile
    delinquency and gang activity. This comprehensive
    gang model focuses resources in primary and
    secondary prevention, intervention, and enforcement
    initiatives to stabilize and build pro-social
    influences in challenged neighborhoods.
    The PanZOu Project is overseen by a committed
    group of professionals representing numerous
    criminal justice agencies and community and
    faith-based organizations. The steering committee
    is comprised of the following members:
    • Florida Department of Juvenile Justice
    • Florida Office of Drug Control
    • North Miami Beach Senior High
    • Fulford United Methodist Church
    • Miami Dade Juvenile Services Dept.
    • Mayor, City of North Miami Beach
    • North Miami Beach Police Dept.
    • City of North Miami Beach Parks and
    Recreation
    • City of North Miami Beach Neighborhood
    Services
    • The Miami Coalition
    • U.S. Attorney’s Office
    • Greater Miami Neighborhoods
    • Washington/Allen Park Weed & Seed
    • Sant La Haitian Neighborhood Center
    • Haitian Community Liaison
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    • State Attorney’s Office Community Outreach
    Division
    • State Attorney’s Office Gang Strike Force
    • University of Miami
    • Communities in Schools
    • Children’s Psychiatric Center
    • Community Members
    The role of the steering committee includes ensuring
    that the Gang Reduction Program is implemented
    according to the strategic plan identifying
    challenges and obstacles to implementing
    the program and solutions for overcoming such
    challenges. In addition, the steering committee
    also provide oversight in decisions regarding the
    effectiveness of the programs/strategies implemented,
    review and advise on terms of subcontracting
    and/or continuation of subcontracting,
    and assist in identifying the most effective strategies
    for future subcontracts.
    Research has proven that the most effective gang
    reduction model offers a range of programs that
    target the risk and protective factors of a community
    at various levels. The following outlines
    our best practice prevention, intervention and
    enforcement strategies for the Haitian community
    in North Miami Beach.
    Primary Prevention
    • Funded the Victory Park Neighborhood
    Resource Center in the target hot spot
    • Early Literacy After School Program for
    1st – 4th graders
    • Midnight Basketball Program with Youth
    Empowerment Training
    • Haitian Creole Festival and Teen Hip Hop
    Summit
    • Community workshops on criminal/juvenile
    justice and child welfare systems
    • Presentations and training to community
    agencies, parents, and school
    • Secondary Prevention
    • Alternative to Suspension Program
    • Police Eliminating Truancy Program
    • Strengthening Families Parenting Skills
    Program
    • Intensive Case Management
    • D.I.V.A’s (Developing Intelligent Voices of
    America) girls group
    • Man-UP! young men’s group
    • Youth Employment Program
    Intervention
    • Street Outreach
    • Intensive Case management
    • Multi-Disciplinary Intervention Team (police,
    probation, outreach, schools, service
    providers)
    • 6 Rounds to Success Boxing Program
    • On The Job Training Program
    • Individual/Family Therapy
    • Enforcement
    • Foot Patrol in target area hot spot
    • Gang Unit Intelligence and Response Team
    • Data tracking
    • Gang Enforcement and Prosecution Training
    • Multi-disciplinary intervention team members
    sharing information and referrals
    The PanZOu Project, together with the North
    Miami Beach Police Department and the Urban
    Institute, mapped gang crime and violence and
    determined the neighborhoods in most need of
    targeted enforcement as well as social services. By
    combining suppression activities and social services
    in the hot spot communities, the project reduced
    crime significantly in those neighborhoods.
    Information regarding the PanZOu Project is available
    on line at:
    http://www.northmiamibeach.govoffice.com.
    MPACT Project
    The Miami Partnership for Action in Communities
    Task Force Project (MPACT) is an anti-gang program
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    tion model funded by the Office of Juvenile Justice
    and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) and awarded
    to the Miami-Dade Schools Police. The funding for
    the demonstration project was awarded to four
    major cities in the United States: Miami, Cleveland,
    Houston, and Pittsburg.
    It is based on a previous model used in Chicago
    to reduce gang-related criminality among youths
    in urban communities. The program follows five
    main strategies: suppression, social intervention,
    organizational change, opportunities provision and
    community mobilization. The project began by
    recruiting at-risk youth between the ages of 12-22.
    To prevent youth from joining or falling back into
    a criminal gang, MPACT Project provides opportunities
    that foster positive life choices. It is the
    project’s conviction that youth who are given an
    opportunity to become productive citizens will select
    an honest path and turn away from engaging
    in criminal activities. Once the candidates have
    been assessed and identified as eligible for programmatic
    services, the project offers the targeted
    youth a wide range of collaborative programmatic
    services. The services include:
    • Opportunities in cultivating their minds
    • Marketable skills training and development
    • Personal development, while raising their
    self-esteem and confidence
    The personal development component emphasizes
    work ethics. Experiences gained in the program
    have been shown to facilitate a youth’s successful
    transition into the workforce and to positively
    cultivate their self-esteem and self-worth. Along
    with personal development, the OJT program is
    the main intervention strategy of the project. The
    OJT component expands the classroom learning
    experience by promoting youth participation in
    the labor market. The goal of the OJT program is
    to provide youths an opportunity to learn and apply
    marketable employment skills, which in turn
    fosters positive life choices and decreases the likelihood
    of criminality. The outcomes from Project
    MPACT have demonstrated that when the targeted
    youth in the program are given the opportunity
    to become socially-contributing and economicallyindependent
    members of society, the participants
    of the project have chosen to participate in legal
    and worthwhile endeavors.
    The outcomes so far achieved demonstrate that,
    when given the opportunity, the targeted youth
    have immense possibilities to become sociallycontributing
    and economically-independent members
    of society. That is the goal of every participating
    member of the project. MPACT is currently
    located in the northern end of Dade County and
    the long term goal is to spread throughout the
    county as the “best practices” model for gang
    intervention. One of MPACT Project’s long term
    goals is to expand throughout the state of Florida.
    Information about MPACT Project is available on
    line at: http://www.mpact.dadeschools.net.
    AMER-I-CAN Program
    Both the Amer-I-Can Program and the Amer-I-Can
    Foundation were founded in 1993, by NFL Hall of
    Fame running back and motion picture actor, Jim
    Brown, who through many years of experience
    as a community activist, recognized that in order
    to be successful, the attitude of the recipient is
    paramount.
    The Amer-I-Can Foundation for Social Change
    (AFFSC) operates nationally. The Amer-I-Can
    Foundation has affected positive change in
    the lives of tens of thousands of young people
    through life management skills training in
    schools, juvenile camps and communities. Additionally,
    Amer-I-Can has trained thousands of prison
    inmates, police officers, and deputies across
    the United States.
    Among its most recent accomplishments, Amer-ICan
    initiated a gang truce and cease fire agreement
    between rival gangs in Los Angeles, resulting in a
    significant reduction in gang-related homicides.
    Currently Amer-I-Can is running pilot programs
    in schools in three Florida counties: Manatee,
    Hillsborough and Brevard Counties. They started
    in the fall of 2007 and early signs of success are
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    remarkably good. Students identified for the program
    all have problems with school. Facilitators
    use a special curriculum to instill positive attitudes
    and motivate students to success that has eluded
    them. The program is based on a belief that the
    failure in personal development and the lack of
    self-esteem are the root causes of the aforementioned
    problems that plague our society today.
    By enlarging the scope of individual lives, introducing
    them to self-determination techniques, motivating
    them with goals, and showing them how to
    improve and achieve success and financial stability,
    lives will be saved that now seem to be lost.
    The challenge of achieving one’s full potential is at
    the center of the program. This life-management
    skills training program is designed to empower
    participants to take responsibility for their own
    self-determination. The program works with
    those whom society disregards, contending that it
    is never too late to attain a full, meaningful life.
    Amer-I-Can is comprised of the Amer-I-Can Program,
    which is a 60 to 90 hour, 15 chapter Life
    Management Skills curriculum that is designed to
    empower individuals to take charge of their lives,
    and the Amer-I-Can Foundation for Social Change,
    a non-profit organization created to offer social
    support and services to underserved populations
    and cities.
    More information on The Amer-I-Can Program is
    available on their website at:
    http://www.amer-i-can.org or at 2410 Gibsonwoods
    Court NW, Salem, Oregon 97304,
    503-391-2685 (phone), 503-391-2685 (fax),
    info@amer-i-can.org.
    Boys & Girls Clubs of America
    The Boys & Girls Clubs of America offers a program
    called “Gang Prevention Through Targeted Outreach.”
    This program is offered as one approach
    to resolving Florida’s ever-growing gang dilemma.
    This comprehensive approach uses effective techniques
    and strategies that direct at risk young people
    to positive alternatives offered by Boys & Girls
    Clubs statewide. Through an established referral
    network of linkages by local Clubs with courts, police,
    other juvenile justice agencies, schools, social
    service agencies and community organizations, as
    well as through direct outreach efforts, youth will
    be recruited and mainstreamed into Club programs
    as a diversion from gang activity.
    The Targeted Outreach approach acknowledges
    that youth most at risk of gang involvement are
    not seeking the constructive environment that
    Clubs have to offer. Through this initiative,
    programs are created to excite and attract targeted
    youth. Boys & Girls Clubs will provide positive,
    constructive activities that meet both the interests
    and needs of targeted youth. The Targeted Outreach
    approach is comprised of four components:
    1. Community Mobilization
    2. Recruitment
    3. Mainstreaming and Programming
    4. Case Management
    Boys & Girls Clubs throughout Florida will work
    with key community agencies to complete a community
    youth gang assessment. Additionally, they
    will assist in mobilizing community leaders along
    with Club staff to identify their roles and develop a
    community-wide strategy associated with each of
    the seven identified Regional Task Forces.
    The project will use two primary ways to actively
    reach out and recruit youth at-risk of gang
    involvement:
    • Direct Outreach (Boys & Girls Clubs’
    youth development professionals will use
    various techniques to get to know young
    people outside the Club and encourage
    them to join the Club).
    • Referral (Community organizations or
    agencies can refer youth to any one of the
    43 Alliance Member Organizations located
    throughout Florida).
    Upon recruitment, the targeted youth will be mainstreamed
    into regular Club programs in a non stigmatizing
    way, while tracking and case management
    services are provided for a full-year of participation.
    Resources
    48 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    A more detailed description of the Boys & Girls Clubs
    of America’s programming can be found on their
    various website and at program locations throughout
    the state. http://www.bgca.org/programs/
    More information on The Boys and Girls Clubs of
    America is available on their website at:
    http://www.bgca.org/programs or by contacting:
    Daniel Lyons, Executive Director of the
    Florida Alliance of Boys & Girls Clubs at: P.O. Box
    10334, Tallahassee, Florida 32302-2334 – Office
    229-768-3395, Fax 229-768-2330
    Phoenix Gang Intervention &
    Prevention
    The Phoenix Project is an Intervention and Prevention
    Program for High-Risk Youth, which is
    based in New Jersey but their highly successful
    and innovative resources are used nationwide to
    address the risk factors underlying gang recruitment
    and gang involvement, and provide concrete
    tools for both gang intervention programs and
    gang prevention programs. It provides evidencebased
    treatment and curriculum resources for use
    in correctional, probation, parole, detention, diversion,
    community, and school programs.
    The Phoenix Gang Intervention and Prevention
    program is a curriculum-based approach to building
    practical self-efficacy for delinquent youth,
    including gang members, to learn and practice the
    skills needed to resist risk factors, enhance protective
    factors, and to construct productive, crimefree
    lives. The mission of the Phoenix curriculum
    is to provide participants with the knowledge,
    skill, and attitudes necessary to change their lives
    and stop cycles of gang activity and involvement
    in the criminal justice system. The program is
    constructed on a foundation of two critical goals:
    1. Guide participants to develop practical selfefficacy
    in identifying and addressing the
    highest risk factors for substance abuse,
    violence, gang involvement, and other crimes.
    Participants learn to recognize high risk
    people, places, things, and situations, and
    acquire the necessary competence and confidence
    to handle these risks effectively by
    repeatedly practicing strategies and skills. Examples
    of these strategies and skills include:
    problem avoidance, problem-solving, refusal
    and escape skills, asking for help from safe
    and supportive people, feelings management,
    self-monitoring, use of emotional intelligence,
    and impulse control.
    2. Guide participants to identify and enhance
    critical protective factors or assets which can
    help them achieve productive, crime-free lives.
    Participants learn the fundamentals of character
    education, how to build values and behaviors
    that will lead to the selection of friends that are
    not gang affiliated, having empathy for others,
    developing positive goals and personal support
    systems, and participating in positive community
    organizations and activities.
    Criminal gang influence and activities vary by
    community and Florida’s prevention approach
    must be explicit for the needs of the community.
    The Phoenix Curriculum is extensive and can
    be specifically tailored to the requirements of a
    school or community. The program has a logical
    progression and is based on cognitive-behavioral
    treatment concepts.
    More information regarding the Phoenix Project is
    available on their website at:
    http://www.gangprograms.com.
    Gang Resistance Education and
    Training (G.R.E.A.T.) Program
    In 1991, the G.R.E.A.T. program was developed
    through a combined effort of the U.S. Bureau of
    Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF)
    and the Phoenix Police Department (PPD). The
    program began as an eight-lesson middle school
    curriculum that, in 1992, led to the Federal Law
    Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) joining
    forces with ATF and the PPD to expand the
    program nationwide. FLETC provided the support
    necessary to train G.R.E.A.T. instructors, and
    during that same year the first G.R.E.A.T. Officer
    Training was held. In 1998, the program added
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 49
    additional law enforcement agencies to assist in
    administering the program, and Florida’s Orange
    County Sheriff’s Office was selected as one of the
    law enforcement agencies.
    The G.R.E.A.T. program is a school-based, law
    enforcement officer-instructed classroom curriculum.
    With prevention as its primary objective, the
    program is intended as an immunization against
    delinquency, youth violence, and gang membership.
    G.R.E.A.T. has developed partnerships with
    nationally recognized organizations, such as the
    Boys & Girls Clubs of America and the National
    Association of Police Athletic Leagues. These partnerships
    encourage positive relationships among
    the community, parents, schools, and law enforcement
    officers.
    G.R.E.A.T. lessons focus on providing life skills
    to students to help them avoid using delinquent
    behavior and violence to solve problems. The
    G.R.E.A.T. program offers a continuum of components
    for students and their families.
    The G.R.E.A.T. program consists of four components:
    a 13-session middle school curriculum, an
    elementary school curriculum, a summer program,
    and families training.
    Five regional training centers provide training
    to sworn law enforcement officers to teach the
    G.R.E.A.T. curriculum in elementary and middle
    schools across the country.
    More information regarding the G.R.E.A.T. program
    is available on their website at:
    http://www.great-online.org or at: G.R.E.A.T.
    Program Training Coordinator, Institute for
    Intergovernmental Research, Post Office Box
    12729, Tallahassee, FL 32317-2729;Phone: (800)
    726-7070;Fax: (850) 386-5356; E-mail:
    information@great-online.org.
    Project Safe Neighborhoods
    Project Safe Neighborhoods is a nationwide
    commitment to reduce gun crime in America by
    networking existing local programs that target
    gun crime and providing these programs with
    additional tools necessary to be successful. The
    Bush Administration committed over $1.5 billion
    to this effort since PSN’s inception in 2001. This
    funding is being used to hire new federal and
    state prosecutors, support investigators, provide
    training, distribute gun lock safety kits, deter
    juvenile gun crime, and develop and promote
    community outreach efforts as well as to support
    other gun violence reduction strategies.
    The initiative has been effectively increasing
    federal firearm prosecution, and has achieved a
    higher rate of successful firearm prosecutions.
    Working in conjunction with local law enforcement,
    U.S. Attorneys in each of the 94 federal judicial
    districts have adapted the PSN strategy to fit
    the distinctive gun crime problem in their district.
    PSN was not built on a “one size fits all” approach,
    and each region or city has developed unique solutions
    germane to the needs of their community.
    Each district has designated a Project Safe Neighborhood
    point of contact in the U.S. Attorney’s
    Office to serve as the project coordinator and facilitate
    communication. Each U.S. Attorney is also
    encouraged to create specialized units within their
    office to target the most significant gun crime
    problems within their district. These specialized
    units have a narrower application of the initiative
    and will provide for maximum impact to ensure
    the safety of our communities.
    Project Safe Neighborhood has five elements
    that are required for a vigorous and successful
    gun crime reduction; they include partnerships,
    strategic planning, training, community outreach
    and public awareness, and accountability. These
    elements make it possible for increased prosecutions
    of violent organizations by aggressively
    using federal conspiracy, racketeering, narcotics,
    and all other available laws to attack and punish
    criminal gangs. Each district also engages in deterrence
    and prevention efforts through community
    outreach and media campaigns, and ensures that
    law enforcement and prosecutors have the training
    necessary to make the program work.
    Resources
    50 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    On September 26–28, 2007, the Department of
    Justice (DOJ) sponsored the Project Safe Neighborhoods
    Anti-Gang Training pilot in Dover, Delaware.
    Approximately 160 law enforcement agents and
    criminal justice practitioners attended the training,
    which presented the gang expertise of DOJ law
    enforcement and criminal justice professionals in
    a comprehensive curriculum. Intervention, prevention,
    suppression and re-entry strategies were
    presented, as well as a briefing on national and
    regional gang trends, a community gang problem
    assessment, and tips for working with cooperating
    witnesses and confidential informants.
    Due to the success of the pilot program and
    the positive feedback and suggestions received
    from attendees, twelve Anti-Gang Training sessions
    will be offered in 2008 at various locations
    throughout the country. In response to popular
    demand, the 2008 training programs will feature
    a separate track for gang prevention and intervention
    personnel. Visit http://www.iir.com/psnagt/
    for more information and to view the courses that
    are offered, or download the promotional flier.
    More information about Project Safe Neighborhoods
    is available on their website at:
    http://www.psn.gov.
    Boston Gun Project (Operation
    Ceasefire)
    The Boston Gun Project is a suppression program
    that targets youth and adult gang members in a
    multiagency effort. It is based on an analysis of
    homicide among Boston’s youth (age 21 and under)
    that determined that this violence is gang centered,
    neighborhood based, and concentrated in a small
    number of repeat-offending, gang-involved youth.
    The program was initiated in individual neighborhoods
    with an explicit communication campaign.
    This campaign begins with an orientation for
    community groups and is then often carried out
    face-to-face with gang members, who are given the
    message that gang violence has provoked a zero
    tolerance approach and that only an end to gang
    violence will stop new gang-focused suppression
    activities. The long sentences that offenders receive
    are publicized in high-crime neighborhoods. The
    program components described above build upon
    and integrate the efforts of grassroots organizations
    and the faith-based community.
    A multiagency, coordinated task force of 45
    full-time Boston police officers and others from
    outside agencies suppresses youth and adult gang
    violence and gun use. Suppression tactics include
    “pulling levers” to impose costs on offenders related
    to their chronic offending by serving warrants,
    enforcing probation restrictions, and deploying
    Federal enforcement powers.
    Under another component of the program—Operation
    Night Light—police and probation officers,
    working in teams, make nightly visits to the homes
    of youth on probation to ensure that they are complying
    with the terms and conditions of their probation.
    This helps target tough enforcement efforts
    against gang leaders. City “streetworkers” (gang
    prevention and mediation specialists) also work in
    tandem with police and probation officers, helping
    resolve conflicts and linking youth who want help
    with needed services.
    Simultaneously, the Boston Gun Project seeks to
    interrupt the self-sustaining cycle of fear, weapon
    use, and violence that appears to be driving youth
    violence in the city by reducing use of guns with
    a “coerced use-reduction” strategy and reducing
    access to firearms. To carry out this deterrence
    strategy, gang mediation specialists are deployed
    to gang hotspots, which are generally already
    known through mapping that shows gang overlap,
    intergang conflicts, and gun-related crime. Heightened
    surveillance for shootings, assaults, and
    other selected incidents triggers deployment of
    interagency crisis intervention teams with “swift
    and comprehensive attention.” After this “calming”
    operation, patrol officers continue to monitor
    the hotspot for reoccurrence of gun violence.
    The strategy that reduces access to firearms, using
    gun-tracing capabilities of the Boston Police
    Department and ATF, seeks to disrupt the illicit
    gun market. The rationale supporting the supplyreduction
    strategy is that disruption of the illicit
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 51
    market will interrupt fear-driven gun acquisition
    and use, thereby reducing gang violence in
    Boston. Using Federal firearm laws, the project
    “makes the market much less hospitable by strategically
    removing the most dangerous gang and
    drug offenders from the streets, and stemming the
    flow of firearms into Massachusetts”.
    Evaluation results are not yet available, although
    gun homicide victimization among 14- to 24-yearolds
    in Boston is reported to have fallen by twothirds
    since the project began. Because homicides
    were dropping nationwide among this age group
    during the project period, the evaluation will
    compare Boston’s homicide trends to trends in a
    sample of other cities.
    More information regarding the Boston Gun Project
    is available on line at: http://www.ncjrs.gov
    and also on the U.S. Department of Justice website
    at: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/pubs-sum.
    Project Exile
    Project Exile was an expedited federal prosecutive
    effort by the United States Attorney’s Office,
    B.A.T.F., U.S. Marshal, and F.B.I., in coordination
    with the Richmond Commonwealth’s Attorney’s
    Office, Richmond Police Department, and the Virginia
    State Police to remove armed criminals from
    Richmond streets. The project has expanded into
    Norfolk\ Newport News, VA, and Rochester, NY.
    During the early 1990s gun violence plagued the
    city of Richmond, Virginia, and made it one of the
    worst five cities when it came to per capita murder
    rates. In 1997, before the implementation of
    the project, 140 people were murdered, 122 with
    firearms. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Richmond
    developed and carried out an aggressive, innovative,
    and creative approach to reduce violence
    called Project Exile.
    The project took advantage of stiffer bond rules
    and sentencing guidelines in federal court. All felons
    with guns, guns/drug cases, and gun/domestic
    violence cases in Richmond were federally prosecuted,
    without regard to numbers or quantities.
    The project was fully integrated and coordinated
    with local police, state police, federal investigators
    (BATF/FBI), and local and federal prosecutors, to
    promptly arrest, incarcerate, detain without bond,
    prosecute and sentence violent criminals. In court,
    bond was routinely and successfully opposed,
    and prosecutors obtained mandatory minimum
    sentences. Project Exile quickly, efficiently, and
    successfully prosecuted a large number of gun
    crimes, with a significant long-term impact on
    criminal behavior.
    Prosecuting violent criminals was one of the
    components of the initiative, but a major factor
    was a media outreach effort to get the message to
    criminals about the possession of illegal firearms.
    To effectively transmit this message a community
    coalition was built that consisted of business, community
    and church leaders. A media effort was
    created that sent the clear message: “An illegal gun
    will get you five years in federal prison.” This motto
    and the request for citizens to anonymously report
    illegal gun possession was placed on billboards, city
    buses, television commercials, and on over 15,000
    business cards that were distributed on the street
    by local police. The outreach program was successful
    by increasing citizen reports about illegal gun
    possession and also energized the community to
    support police efforts.
    The city of Richmond identified seven obstacles
    that were encountered during their implementation
    of Project Exile. Each obstacle was eventually overcome
    and lead to the realization of the initiative.
    1. Obtaining the commitment of investigative
    agencies to bring the cases forward.
    2. Coordinating with local police to insure immediate
    intake of cases from the street level.
    3. Simplifying and streamlining the incident/
    case reporting system to bring charges
    quickly.
    4. Avoiding “turf consciousness” among the various
    police and prosecutorial levels.
    5. To ensure smooth operations there must be
    coordination between the court, U.S. Marshall,
    and prison personnel.
    Resources
    52 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    6. Establishing an active citizen organization to
    give support to the prosecution effort, primarily
    through creation and support of the media
    outreach effort.
    7. Establishing a cooperative working relationship
    with the news media to insure that the
    cases are covered and word is further passed
    that the prosecution program is in effect.
    Several innovative policing practices were formed
    during the 1990s, and it is believed that these
    practices assisted in producing fewer violent
    crimes in our major metropolitan cities. Project
    Exile was a new policing initiative that crafted a
    clear message and strict adherence to the federal
    gun laws. Richmond’s firearm homicide rate
    steadily declined each year after the project was
    initiated.11 Originators of the project insist that
    the positive gains made in Richmond can be duplicated
    in other cities. The key to the replication
    is having a city build a coalition with the will to
    implement the plan.
    More information regarding Project Exile is available
    on the Virginians Against Handgun Violence
    website at: http://www.vahv.org/Exile or
    at: P.O. Box 271, Norfolk, Virginia 23242-0462;
    Phone: (757) 623-7918; Fax: (757) 622-3953; Email:
    info@vahv.org.
    Chicago Gang Intervention Strategy
    At the start of 2003, the citizens of Chicago were
    experiencing an escalation in narcotics-related
    gang homicides. Many of the criminal gangs in
    Chicago had become highly sophisticated and
    well-organized. The Mayor’s Office and the Chicago
    Police Department realized that their response
    to gang activity had to counter the increased sophistication
    of the criminal gangs that they were
    confronting.
    A key component of the city’s new strategy to
    combat criminal gangs was the use of targeted
    enforcement strategies that deployed police officers
    to locations where gang crime was occurring.
    Chicago was able to move officers into locations
    where there was a high density of gang-related
    crime by creating an intelligence center that
    would be able to predict where violent gang activities
    were more likely to occur next. The creation
    of the Deployment Operations Center (DOC)
    produced a unique blend of accountability and
    intelligence-led policing that produced substantial
    declines in the rate of violent crimes.
    Weekly meetings are held at the DOC with the
    city’s five Area Chiefs and their district Commanders.
    The predictive analysis, combined with
    street level gang intelligence that is provided by
    the Department’s tactical response units, special
    operations, and area narcotics enforcement teams,
    provides District Commanders with the ability of
    directing effective deployment assignments to officers
    in the field.
    The intervention strategy in Chicago is viewed
    as an effective way of staying one step ahead of
    criminal gangs and defuses their ability to buy
    and sell illegal drugs and commit acts of violence
    against members of the community. By the end of
    2004, the city of Chicago experienced a twentyfive
    percent reduction in homicides, 1,100 fewer
    intentional shootings, and more than 10,000 guns
    were recovered in the city.12
    Other Programs and Resources of
    Interest
    National Youth Gang Center
    The National Youth Gang Center (NYGC) is a
    valuable resource in supporting gang prevention
    and intervention programs. The center is located
    in Tallahassee and has been supporting practitioners,
    researchers, and policy makers, since 1995
    with statistics, publications, training and technical
    assistance on youth gangs. Its goal is to deliver
    assistance that can be translated easily into policy
    and practice. The NYGC website features a great
    number of gang-specific publications that are fully
    downloadable, a database of gang legislation that
    is searchable by state or by topic and an interactive
    list called GANGINFO that provides practitioners
    with a forum for sharing ideas.
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 53
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.iir.com/nygc
    Helping America’s Youth
    Helping America’s Youth is a nationwide effort to
    raise awareness about the challenges facing our
    youth, and to motivate adults to connect with
    youth in three key areas: family, school, and the
    community. All of the youth-serving agencies in
    federal government worked together to establish
    a single set of criteria for rating the performance
    of youth-serving programs. The focus of this
    effort was on program designs that had demonstrated
    results through evaluation. More than
    180 programs that address a wide range of risk
    factors were identified and have been included in
    a searchable database on the Community Guide to
    Helping America’s Youth website.
    For each program, the database includes information
    on the program design, the risk factors that
    are addressed, the target group, the evaluation
    design, outcomes, references for further information,
    and a point of contact. The database can be
    used to identify programs for potential replication.
    However, it can also be used as a point of comparison
    for existing local programs that are working
    to accomplish the same ends. The Helping
    America’s Youth website can also be a good source
    for community leaders to search and locate federal
    resources already available in their neighborhood.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.helpingamericasyouth.gov
    Florida Safe and Drug Free Schools
    Within the Florida Department of Education
    Office of Safe Schools, Safe & Drug Free Schools
    serves to promote and support safe learning environments
    by addressing issues of student safety
    and academic success on state, district, and school
    levels. Safe & Drug-Free Schools is a federally
    funded project through Title IV, Part A of the No
    Child Left Behind Act of 2001. It is a cornerstone
    of youth drug and violence prevention and intervention
    efforts within the State of Florida.
    Through Safe & Drug-Free Schools, the Department
    of Education assists school districts in their
    substance abuse and violence prevention efforts
    by supporting school-related evidence-based
    programs and strategies. Safe & Drug-Free funds
    also support services and activities, such as K-12
    science-validated prevention curricula, school
    climate approaches, conflict resolution, social skill
    development, student assistance programs, peer
    resistance training, parent programs, and peer
    mediation programs. The office trains teachers
    and other program implementers/coordinators
    throughout the state in drug and violence prevention
    science. The website contains information on
    evidence-based programs and practices, Florida
    best practices, and hot topics such as bullying prevention,
    internet safety, and social marketing. The
    website also includes an extensive list of links to
    other prevention resources.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.fldoe.org/safeschools/sdfs.asp
    The Search Institute
    The Search Institute is an independent nonprofit
    organization whose mission is to provide leadership,
    knowledge, and resources to promote
    healthy children, youth, and communities. To
    accomplish this mission, the institute generates
    and communicates new knowledge, and brings
    together community, state, and national leaders.
    At the heart of the institute’s work is the framework
    of 40 Developmental Assets, which are
    positive experiences and personal qualities that
    young people need to grow up healthy, caring, and
    responsible. Search Institute’s 40 Developmental
    Assets are concrete, common sense, positive experiences
    and qualities essential to raising successful
    young people. These assets have the power during
    critical adolescent years to influence choices
    young people make and help them become caring,
    responsible adults.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.search-institute.org/assets/
    Resources
    54 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    U.S. Office of Special Education Programs
    Technical Assistance Center on Positive
    Behavioral Interventions and Supports
    The OSEP-funded National Technical Assistance
    Center on Positive Behavior and Intervention
    Supports was established to address the behavioral
    and discipline systems needed for successful
    learning and social development of students.
    The Center provides capacity-building information
    and technical support about behavioral systems
    to assist states and districts in the design of
    effective schools.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.pbis.org/main.htm
    Prevention Institute
    Prevention Institute is a non-profit national center
    dedicated to improving community health and
    well-being by building momentum for effective
    primary prevention. Primary prevention means
    taking action to build resilience and to prevent
    problems before they occur. The Institute’s work
    is characterized by a strong commitment to community
    participation and promotion of equitable
    health outcomes among all social and economic
    groups. Since its founding in 1997, the organization
    has focused on injury and violence prevention,
    traffic safety, health disparities, nutrition and
    physical activity, and youth development
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.preventioninstitute.org/home
    PeaceBuilders®
    PeaceBuilders is the research-validated violence
    prevention youth program approved for the federally
    funded Safe and Drug-Free Schools Act. It is a
    comprehensive program launched in organizations
    that shifts the entire climate to a peaceful, productive
    and safe place for children, teenagers, parents,
    staff and faculty.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.peacebuilders.com
    Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy and
    Drug-Free
    This site is provided by the U.S. Substance Abuse
    and Mental Health Administrations Family guide.
    It provides information and resources on such topics
    as:
    • Talk with Your Child
    • Get Involved
    • Set Rules
    • Be a Good Role Model
    • Teach Kids to Choose Friends Wisely
    • Monitor Your Child’s Activities
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.family.samhsa.gov/default.aspx
    National Youth Violence Prevention
    Resource Center
    A federal resource for communities working to
    prevent violence committed by and against young
    people. The mission of the NYVPRC is to provide
    key leaders in communities—city managers/
    leaders and community leaders—with dynamic
    resources to help support their efforts to plan,
    develop, implement, and evaluate effective youth
    violence prevention efforts.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.safeyouth.org/scripts/topics/ school.asp
    Multijurisdictional Counterdrug Task
    Force Training & the Southeastern
    Public Safety Institute of St.
    Petersburg College
    The Multijurisdictional Counterdrug Task Force
    Training (MCTFT) program provides unique
    tuition-free, courses covering all aspects of counterdrug
    law enforcement and training support for
    community anti-drug coalitions. The program is a
    federally funded partnership through the Department
    of Defense between the Florida National
    Guard and St. Petersburg College. The program is
    nationally responsive and is located at the SouthResources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 55
    eastern Public Safety Institute (SEPSI) of St. Petersburg
    College. SEPSI is a state-of-the-art facility
    with a wide variety of special features to enhance
    in service training.
    In addition to the MCTFT training, St. Petersburg
    College also offers a gang-related investigations
    program. St. Petersburg College is the first and
    only college in the nation to offer a gang-related
    investigations specialty track as part of the Public
    Safety Degree Program. Staff from the college
    conducted a national needs assessment to identify
    key course topics that would enable public safety
    professionals and students to understand and deal
    effectively with domestic and international criminal
    gang issues and investigations. These courses
    were designed and are taught by leading national
    experts in criminal gangs.
    Eight courses were developed by St. Petersburg College’s
    curriculum planners in response to a thorough
    review of existing literature and current research.
    These courses include: Introduction to Gangs and
    Crime, Intervention and Prosecution Techniques for
    Gangs, Gangs and Terrorism, Contemporary Topics
    in Gang Investigations, The Incarceration Connection,
    Central America Gang Assessment, Technology
    and Gang Intelligence Sharing, and Practicum. Additionally,
    there are five upper division gang classes
    under Gangs Enforcement Management to include:
    International Gang Awareness for Public Safety
    Administrators, Geographic Information Systems
    in Gang Enforcement, Forecasting Trends in Gang
    Enforcement, Political and Socio-Economic Impact of
    Gangs, and Management of Tactical Gang Units and
    High Risk Operations.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.mctft.com or
    http://www.spcollege.edu
    Weed and Seed
    Weed and Seed, a community-based strategy
    sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice
    (DOJ), aims to prevent, control, and reduce violent
    crime, drug abuse, and gang activity in designated
    high-crime neighborhoods across the country.
    The strategy involves a two-pronged approach:
    law enforcement agencies and prosecutors cooperate
    in ‘weeding out’ violent criminals and drug
    abusers and public agencies and community-based
    private organizations collaborate to ‘seed’ muchneeded
    human services, including prevention,
    intervention, treatment, and neighborhood restoration
    programs.
    A community-oriented policing component
    bridges the weeding and seeding elements. The
    strategy is a multi-level plan that includes four
    basic components: 1) law enforcement, 2) community
    policing, 3) prevention, intervention, and
    treatment, and 4) neighborhood restoration. Four
    fundamental principles underline the Weed and
    Seed strategy: collaboration, coordination, community
    participation, and leveraging of resources.
    More than 250 Weed and Seed sites exist, ranging
    in size from several neighborhood blocks to several
    square miles, with populations ranging from
    3,000 to 50,000.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ccdo/ws/welcome
    Florida Community Prevention
    Coalition Directory
    Prevention is the linchpin of the strategy. To create
    a strong anti-gang prevention effort there needs
    to be wide-ranging support in the community to
    continually reinforce the message to our youth
    that gangs offer no viable future. Over the years
    Florida’s prevention experts have attained substantial
    positive gains by developing the fortitude in our
    youth to reject tobacco and drug use. Prevention
    campaigns have developed highly effective messages
    to raise awareness and also educate youth,
    parent, teachers, and the community about the
    repercussions of many dangerous behaviors.
    Building on the success Florida has attained in increasing
    the number of youth who reject tobacco
    and drug use as a legitimate way of life, the strategy
    will build upon the already strong prevention
    effort in the state. A good source of information
    on community prevention coalitions is the Florida
    Resources
    56 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Office of Drug Control’s Community Prevention
    Coalition Directory. The directory is located on
    the Florida Alcohol and Drug Abuse Association’s
    website, and is a good first step for community’s
    to assess and expand prevention efforts in their
    area to include gang reduction.
    More information is available online at: http://
    www.fadaa.org/fcc/documents/Coalition_Directory.
    pdf
    The Center for the Study and
    Prevention of Violence
    The Center for the Study and Prevention of
    Violence (CSPV), a research program of the
    Institute of Behavioral Science (IBS) at the University
    of Colorado at Boulder, was founded in
    1992 to provide informed assistance to groups
    committed to understanding and preventing
    violence, particularly adolescent violence. CSPV
    works from a multi-disciplinary platform on the
    subject of violence and facilitates the building
    of bridges between the research community and
    the practitioners and policy makers.
    CSPV has a threefold mission. First, collect research
    literature and resources on the causes and
    prevention of violence, and provide direct information
    services to the public by offering topical
    searches on customized databases. Second, CSPV
    offers technical assistance for the evaluation and
    development of violence prevention programs.
    Third, CSPV maintains a basic research component
    through data analysis and other projects on
    the causes of violence and the effectiveness of
    prevention and intervention programs.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.colorado.edu/cspv/
    National Gang Intelligence Center
    The National Gang Intelligence Center (NGIC)
    is a multi-agency effort that integrates the gang
    intelligence assets of federal, state, and local
    law enforcement entities. The mission of the
    NGIC is to support law enforcement agencies
    through timely and accurate information sharing
    and tactical analysis of federal, state, and
    local law enforcement intelligence. The NGIC
    is focused on the growth, migration, criminal
    activity, and association of criminal gangs. Their
    intelligence assessments, intelligence bulletins,
    and joint agency intelligence products serve as a
    centralized intelligence resource for gang information
    and analytical support.
    NGIC is staffed and supported by a number
    of partnering agencies including the Bureau of
    Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives,
    Bureau of Prisons, Department of Defense, Department
    of Justice, Department of Homeland
    Security, Department of Housing and Urban Development,
    Department of State, Drug Enforcement
    Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation,
    Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
    National Drug Intelligence Center, and United
    States Marshals Service.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/ngic
    Florida Gang Investigators Association
    The Florida Gang Investigators Association (FGIA)
    was formed in 1993 by criminal justice professionals
    who wanted to promote and facilitate
    the exchange of criminal gang intelligence and
    information among criminal justice professionals.
    The FGIA provides leadership in developing and
    recommending policies and strategies to prevent,
    control and eliminate gang crime, administer professional
    training, as well as assist criminal justice
    professionals and the public at large in identifying
    and tracking gangs, gang members and gang crime
    throughout Florida.
    FGIA provides a professional organization for
    both employees serving within the criminal
    justice system, as well as the public at large that
    share a common goal of preventing, intervening,
    and suppressing gang activity throughout Florida.
    This mission is carried out by the organization
    through enhanced interagency intelligence
    exchange, legislative activism, citizen awareness,
    Resources
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 57
    innovative anti-gang awareness, operational
    tactics, and by providing professional education
    and training.
    More information is available online at:
    http://www.fgia.com
    End Notes
    1 Howell, J. Youth Gang: An Overview. Juvenile
    Justice Bulletin August 1998
    2 Ibid.
    3 Blum, R. School Connectedness: Improving the
    Lives of Students, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins
    Bloomberg School of Public Health 2005
    4 Modzeleski, William. US Department of Education:
    Safe and Drug-Free Schools Program,
    American School Health Association 2003
    5 Centers for Disease Control, School Health
    Guidelines to Prevent Unintended Injuries and
    Violence, 2001
    6 Florida Department of Corrections, 2005-2006
    Annual Report
    7 United States Conference of Mayors, Gang
    Intervention & Gang Violence Prevention, published
    2006
    Resources
    58 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 59
    874.01. Short title
    This chapter may be cited as the “Criminal Street
    Gang Prevention Act of 1996.”
    874.02. Legislative findings and
    intent
    (1) The Legislature finds that it is the right
    of every person, regardless of race, color,
    creed, religion, national origin, sex, age,
    sexual orientation, or handicap, to be secure
    and protected from fear, intimidation, and
    physical harm caused by the activities of
    criminal street gangs and their members. It
    is not the intent of this chapter to interfere
    with the exercise of the constitutionally
    protected rights of freedom of expression
    and association. The Legislature recognizes
    the constitutional right of every citizen to
    harbor and express beliefs on any lawful
    subject whatsoever, to lawfully associate
    with others who share similar beliefs, to
    petition lawfully constituted authority for
    a redress of perceived grievances, and to
    participate in the electoral process.
    (2) The Legislature finds, however, that the
    state is facing a mounting crisis caused
    by criminal street gangs whose members
    threaten and terrorize peaceful citizens and
    commit a multitude of crimes. These criminal
    street gang activities, both individually
    and collectively, present a clear and present
    danger. The state has a compelling interest
    in preventing criminal street gang activity,
    and the Legislature finds that the provisions
    of this act are necessary to maintain the
    public order and safety.
    (3) It is the intent of the Legislature to eradicate
    the terror created by criminal street gangs
    and their members by providing enhanced
    penalties and by eliminating the patterns,
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism
    Enforcement and Prevention
    profits, proceeds, instrumentalities, and property
    facilitating criminal street gang activity,
    including criminal street gang recruitment.
    874.03. Definitions
    As used in this chapter:
    (1) “Criminal street gang” means a formal or
    informal ongoing organization, association,
    or group that has as one of its primary
    activities the commission of criminal or
    delinquent acts, and that consists of three or
    more persons who have a common name or
    common identifying signs, colors, or symbols
    and have two or more members who,
    individually or collectively, engage in or
    have engaged in a pattern of criminal street
    gang activity.
    (2) “Criminal street gang member” is a person
    who is a member of a criminal street gang
    as defined in subsection (1) and who meets
    two or more of the following criteria:
    (a) Admits to criminal street gang
    membership.
    (b) Is identified as a criminal street gang
    member by a parent or guardian.
    (c) Is identified as a criminal street
    gang member by a documented reliable
    informant.
    (d) Resides in or frequents a particular
    criminal street gang’s area and
    adopts their style of dress, their
    use of hand signs, or their tattoos,
    and associates with known criminal
    street gang members.
    (e) Is identified as a criminal street
    gang member by an informant of
    previously untested reliability and
    such identification is corroborated
    by independent information.
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    60 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    (f) Has been arrested more than once
    in the company of identified criminal
    street gang members for offenses
    which are consistent with usual
    criminal street gang activity.
    (g) Is identified as a criminal street gang
    member by physical evidence such as
    photographs or other documentation.
    (h) Has been stopped in the company of
    known criminal street gang members
    four or more times.
    (3) “Pattern of criminal street gang activity”
    means the commission or attempted commission
    of, or solicitation or conspiracy to
    commit, two or more felony or three or
    more misdemeanor offenses, or one felony
    and two misdemeanor offenses, or the
    comparable number of delinquent acts or
    violations of law which would be felonies or
    misdemeanors if committed by an adult, on
    separate occasions within a 3-year period.
    (4) For purposes of law enforcement identification
    and tracking only:
    (a) “Criminal street gang associate” means a
    person who:
    1. Admits to criminal street gang association;
    or
    2. Meets any single defining criterion
    for criminal street gang membership
    described in subsection (2).
    (b) “Gang-related incident” means an incident
    that, upon investigation, meets any
    of the following conditions:
    1. The participants are identified as
    criminal street gang members or
    criminal street gang associates, acting,
    individually or collectively, to further
    any criminal purpose of the gang;
    2. A reliable informant identifies an
    incident as criminal street gang
    activity; or
    3. An informant of previously untested
    reliability identifies an incident as criminal
    street gang activity and it is corroborated
    by independent information.
    874.04. Criminal street gang
    activity; enhanced penalties
    Upon a finding by the court at sentencing that the
    defendant committed the charged offense for the
    purpose of benefiting, promoting, or furthering
    the interests of a criminal street gang, the penalty
    for any felony or misdemeanor, or any delinquent
    act or violation of law which would be a felony or
    misdemeanor if committed by an adult, may be
    enhanced. Each of the findings required as a basis
    for such sentence shall be found by a preponderance
    of the evidence. The enhancement will be as
    follows:
    (1) (a) A misdemeanor of the second degree
    may be punished as if it were a misdemeanor
    of the first degree.
    (b) A misdemeanor of the first degree
    may be punished as if it were a felony of
    the third degree. For purposes of sentencing
    under chapter 921 and determining
    incentive gain-time eligibility under
    chapter 944, such offense is ranked in
    level 1 of the offense severity ranking
    chart. The criminal street gang multiplier
    in s. 921.0024 does not apply to misdemeanors
    enhanced under this paragraph.
    (2) (a) A felony of the third degree may be
    punished as if it were a felony of the
    second degree.
    (b) A felony of the second degree may
    be punished as if it were a felony of the
    first degree.
    (c) A felony of the first degree may
    be punished as if it were a life felony.
    For purposes of sentencing under chapter 921
    and determining incentive gain-time eligibility
    under chapter 944, such felony offense is ranked
    as provided in s. 921.0022 or s. 921.0023, and
    without regard to the penalty enhancement in
    this subsection. For purposes of this section, penalty
    enhancement affects the applicable statutory
    maximum penalty only.
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 61
    874.05. Causing, encouraging,
    soliciting, or recruiting criminal
    street gang membership
    (1) A person who intentionally causes, encourages,
    solicits, or recruits another person to
    join a criminal street gang that requires as
    a condition of membership or continued
    membership the commission of any crime
    commits a felony of the third degree, punishable
    as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
    or s. 775.084.
    (2) Upon a second or subsequent offense, the person
    commits a felony of the second degree,
    punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s.
    775.083, or s. 775.084.
    874.06. Civil cause of action
    A person or organization establishing, by clear
    and convincing evidence, coercion, intimidation,
    threats, or other harm to that person or organization
    in violation of this chapter has a civil cause
    of action for treble damages, an injunction, or any
    other appropriate relief in law or equity. Upon
    prevailing, the plaintiff may recover reasonable
    attorney’s fees and costs.
    874.08. Profits, proceeds, and
    instrumentalities of criminal
    street gangs or criminal street
    gang recruitment; forfeiture
    All profits, proceeds, and instrumentalities of
    criminal street gang activity and all property used
    or intended or attempted to be used to facilitate
    the criminal activity of any criminal street gang
    or of any criminal street gang member; and all
    profits, proceeds, and instrumentalities of criminal
    street gang recruitment and all property used
    or intended or attempted to be used to facilitate
    criminal street gang recruitment are subject to seizure
    and forfeiture under the Florida Contraband
    Forfeiture Act, s. 932.704.
    874.09. Crime data information
    The Department of Law Enforcement may develop
    and manage a statewide criminal street gang
    database to facilitate the exchange of information
    pursuant to the intent and purpose of this chapter.
    CS/CS/HB 43 – Criminal Activity/
    Criminal Gangs: Effective October
    1, 2008
    During the 2008 Legislative Session, the Legislature
    passed CS/CS/HB 43- which will amend
    Chapter 874, Street Terrorism Enforcement and
    Prevention, (Appendix A), upon the signature of
    the Governor. HB 43 can be located at:
    http://www.flsenate.gov/data/session/2008/
    House/bills/billtext/pdf/h004305er.pdf
    Key provisions of the bill include:
    I. Enhanced tools for law enforcement
    and prosecutors
    Gang Kingpin Statute - Makes it a first degree
    felony punishable by Life for initiating, organizing,
    planning, financing, directing, managing, or
    supervising criminal gang-related activity
    Important provision in dismantling gangs; this
    language mirrors the statute for an organizer dealing
    in stolen property.
    Definitions for criminal gang members - The
    bill streamlines definition of criminal gang member
    and criminal gang-related activity in Ch. 874,
    Florida Statutes; leaves it up to a jury rather than
    a judge which conforms with recent US Supreme
    Court case law.
    Prohibits use of electronic communications
    to further criminal interests of a gang - Updates
    our statutes to reflect new technology being
    utilized by gang members to recruit new members
    and facilitate gang activity
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    62 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Prohibits the distribution of videos and still
    photos for the purpose of promoting a gang
    by showing illegal gang activity
    Prohibits use of unlawfully issued identification
    for the purpose of benefiting, promoting,
    or furthering the interests of a criminal gang
    (3rd degree felony)
    Adds gangs to jurisdiction of the Violent
    Crime Drug Control Council - Allows for law
    enforcement agencies to apply for additional
    funds for their long-term investigations into gang
    activities in their communities (no grant monies
    were provided in the 2008-2009 budget)
    Makes it a third degree felony to intentionally
    cause, encourage, solicit or recruit a person to
    become a criminal gang member that requires
    as a condition of membership or continued
    membership the commission of any crime.
    Such offense is a second-degree felony if it is
    a second or subsequent offense.
    RICO predicates - Adds new offenses to definition
    of RICO predicate incidents: Fleeing to elude;
    Accessory after the fact; Sexual battery (for gang
    “sex-ins”); Broadening the burglary from “smash
    and grab” to all burglaries under 810; Registration
    Violation; Criminal mischief (i.e., graffiti)
    Florida Racketeering law has specifically identified
    street gangs as a racketeering enterprise for years,
    but many of the most commonly committed gang
    crimes are not current predicates.
    Gang Felons in possession of firearms - Makes
    it a felony of the first degree punishable by life for
    a convicted felon 874 offender to be in possession
    of a firearm
    Bullet-proof vest provision - Makes it a 3rd
    degree felony to possess a bullet-proof vest while
    engaging in a criminal act such as aggravated assault,
    robbery, kidnapping, criminal gang-related
    offenses and drug-trafficking offenses
    II. Witness Protection
    Witness Tampering - Strengthens witness
    protection laws by using the underlying criminal
    act as the starting benchmark for penalties for
    tampering and harassment.
    Example: Defendant who is charged with strongarm
    robbery, a second-degree felony, will now face
    a new second-degree felony for witness harassment
    or a new first-degree felony for witness tampering
    instead of current provisions of law which
    would provide only a third degree felony.
    Pre-Trial Bond - Requires that gang members are
    held in custody until their first appearance the
    next morning to give the State an opportunity
    to argue for reasonable bond conditions to close
    the revolving door of pre-trial bond—which will
    provide additional protections for witnesses.
    Example: DUI offender must remain in jail for 8
    hours; domestic violence offender must be held
    until first appearance.
    III. Law Enforcement Intelligence
    Gang Registration - Requires adjudicated gang
    offenders to identify themselves as such when
    they register with law enforcement—failure to
    register is a 3rd degree felony
    Assists with criminal intelligence; a law enforcement
    officer safety issue
    Information sharing - Authorizes FDLE to notify
    law enforcement agencies that criminal gang
    member reports must be entered into statewide
    criminal database
    Improves criminal intelligence capabilities for law
    enforcement
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 63
    IV. Protecting Neighborhoods
    Public Nuisance - Defines gangs or their members
    engaged in criminal gang activity to be a
    public nuisance and allows for civil injunctions to
    be sought to restrain nuisance behavior
    Allows for arrests of individual violators who
    violate a court-ordered civil gang injunction (very
    similar to domestic violence injunctions that have
    existed for years)
    Designates people at the place-- not the place itself
    ; similar provisions have been enacted and used
    effectively in California and Texas
    Gang offenders - Prohibits probationers or community
    controllees who are gang members from
    knowingly associating with other criminal gang
    members or criminal gang associates, except as
    authorized by law enforcement or prosecutors for
    the purpose of aiding in criminal gang investigations
    Example: If you’re a SUR-13 gang member on probation
    for auto-theft, you would be violating your
    probation to attend a SUR-13 gang meeting.
    V. Other
    Creates a coordinating council on gang reduction
    strategies within the Department of Legal
    Affairs.
    Appendix A: Chapter 874 Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention
    64 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 65
    Appendix B: First Interim Report of the
    Statewide Grand Jury on Criminal Gangs
    and Gang-Related Violence
    EIGHTEENTH STATEWIDE GRAND JURY
    Case No. SC 07-1128
    FIRST INTERIM REPORT OF THE STATEWIDE GRAND
    JURY
    CRIMINAL GANGS AND
    GANG-RELATED VIOLENCE
    December 2007
    West Palm Beach, Florida
    Appendix B: First Interim Report of the Statewide Grand Jury on Criminal Gangs and Gang Related Violence
    66 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Grand Jury Summary
    We, the members of the Eighteenth Statewide
    Grand Jury, find that gangs and gang violence
    are on the rise in Florida, as in many parts of the
    country. We see the increase not only in the rising
    number of gangs and their membership, but
    also in the number of violent crimes committed
    by gangs.
    We also find that though some progress has been
    made, Florida’s overall efforts have fallen short.
    This shortcoming is particularly striking in the lack
    of resources dedicated to law enforcement and
    prosecutors fighting gangs. In addition, we find
    that Florida’s criminal laws must be revised and
    re-written to ensure the intent of the legislature can
    be carried out to “eradicate the terror created by
    criminal street gangs and their members.” 1
    As a result of our findings, we make several
    recommendations to address the most immediate
    issues: 1) strengthen our criminal statutes and
    eliminate loopholes, 2) make modest yet critical
    increases in funding to law enforcement investigators
    and prosecutors, and 3) increase communication
    and the sharing of information within the
    law enforcement community.
    In addition to reviewing testimony for this Interim
    Report, we received testimony that provided the
    basis for us to return a True Bill for Racketeering
    and Conspiracy to Commit Racketeering against
    eleven defendants who are members of a gang
    based in Palm Beach County. The testimony about
    their gang reinforced the testimony we had previously
    received about the gang problem in Florida.
    End Notes
    1 Section 874.02(3), Florida Statutes.
    Recommendations
    I. Funding and commitments must be made
    for law enforcement and State Attorneys
    that allow for experienced and trained gang
    investigators and prosecutors who implement
    an investigator-prosecutor approach
    within dedicated gang units. Gang prosecutors,
    investigators, school resource officers,
    on-site school juvenile probation officers,
    and analysts must be funded in every
    circuit. Additionally, training and funding
    should be allocated to support the creation
    of specialized judicial divisions to focus on
    gang prosecutions much like specialized
    divisions have been created for domestic
    violence, juvenile and career criminals.
    II. Florida Statute Chapter 874 must be redrafted
    and modified in order for Prosecutors to
    enhance a defendant’s sentence.
    i. A “[c]riminal street gang member” under
    statute 874.03(2) must be redrafted
    so that it is more clear and usable by
    prosecutors. It is recommended that the
    statute be redrafted to state as follows:
    (2) “Criminal street gang member” is a
    person who is a member of a criminal
    street gang as defined in subsection
    (1) and who meets two or more
    of the following criteria:
    (a) Admits to gang membership.
    (b) Is identified as a criminal gang
    member by parent or guardian.
    (c) Is identified as a criminal gang
    member by a documented reliable
    informant.
    (d) Adopts the style of dress of
    known criminal gang members.
    (e) Adopts use of hand signs of
    known criminal gang members.
    (f) Wears tattoos of known criminal
    gang members.
    (g) Associates with known criminal
    gang members.
    (h) Is identified as a criminal gang
    member by physical evidence.
    Appendix B: First Interim Report of the Statewide Grand Jury on Criminal Gangs and Gang Related Violence
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 67
    ii. Under chapter 874.03(2), a paragraph
    should be written which states that it
    is the intent of the legislature to allow
    a single piece of evidence or a single
    incident to prove more than one criteria.
    iii. “Pattern of gang activity” is defined
    under statute 874.03(3) and is required
    under statute 874.03(1) in defining a
    “criminal street gang.” Section 874.03(3)
    should be redrafted so that the definition
    of “pattern of gang activity” is less
    limiting and is not based on a defendant’s
    prior convictions.
    iv. Section 874.04 allows for enhanced penalties
    upon a finding that the defendant
    committed the charged offense “for the
    purpose of benefiting, promoting, or furthering
    the interests of a criminal street
    gang...” The legislature should clarify
    that proof of “benefiting, promoting,
    or furthering the interests of a criminal
    street gang” includes non-monetary benefits
    including but not limited to gaining
    credibility, status, or reputation.
    v. Section 874.04 allows for the enhanced
    penalty provisions to be enhanced upon
    a finding by the court at sentencing
    once proven by a preponderance of the
    evidence. This appears to be unconstitutional
    as it would enhance the potential
    penalty beyond the statutory maximum
    without having the issue determined by
    a jury. Therefore, statute 874.04 must be
    reworded to require a jury finding of the
    enhanced penalty using the beyond a
    reasonable doubt standard.
    III. The legislature should create a provision under
    Ch. 874 which creates a criminal offense
    for Gang Injunction Violation.
    IV. The legislature should add a three year
    registry requirement for defendants who
    have been adjudicated as gang members
    under Ch. 874 and make failure to register
    by a convicted gang member a third degree
    felony. Registered gang members under this
    provision should not be published outside
    of law enforcement records. A convicted
    gang member under Ch. 874 will be required
    to have his or her driver’s license indicate
    that he is a registered gang offender.
    V. Convicted gang members who are in possession
    of a firearm should receive an additional
    enhancement under Ch. 874.
    VI. Create additional qualifying predicate
    offenses under the RICO statute c. 895. Additional
    predicates should include:
    i. Fleeing and Eluding
    ii. Criminal Mischief (including gang graffiti)
    iii. Burglary – all sections
    iv. Gang Injunction Violation
    v. Failure to Register as Ch. 874 Offender
    vi. Sexual Battery, Ch. 794, and Lewd &
    Lascivious crimes, Ch. 800, pursuant to
    gang initiation.
    VII. It should be clarified in statutes that juvenile
    adjudications of delinquency may serve
    as predicate offenses for a RICO charge.
    VIII. A gang kingpin provision should be created
    that mirrors the dealing in stolen property
    statute for anyone who “manages or directs”
    gang activity.
    IX. A defendant who commits a felony and
    qualifies under Ch. 874 who has three prior
    felonies on separate sentencing dates should
    be eligible to receive a more severe punishment
    as a repeat gang offender.
    X. Convicted felons who are prohibited from
    owning guns must also be prohibited from
    owning, possessing or using bullet proof vests.
    XI. The legislature should recommend that the
    Florida Bar Rules Committee and the Supreme
    Court consider the creation of a Rule
    of Criminal Procedure similar to Federal
    Rule 35(b) to allow for mitigated sentences
    beyond sixty days for gang members who
    cooperate with law enforcement against
    their fellow gang members.
    XII. Witness protection must be improved by
    creating a new bond structure for gang deAppendix
    B: First Interim Report of the Statewide Grand Jury on Criminal Gangs and Gang Related Violence
    68 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    fendants. If a judicial circuit has a standard
    bond schedule, the standard bond should
    be doubled for any offense committed by a
    gang member. A gang member who is out
    on bond should be prohibited from contact
    with known gang members or witnesses.
    Prior to a gang member’s release on bond,
    the State should be given a mandatory opportunity
    to be heard at first appearance
    before the bond is set.
    XIII. Witness protection programs must be made
    more useful. Funding should be made
    available for witness protection in a manner
    that will encourage its use. A program
    through FDLE or State Attorney’s Offices
    should be created that supports relocated
    witnesses with housing, jobs, and counseling.
    A victim/witness program should be
    created which allows a person to establish
    a new identity under special circumstances.
    Law enforcement must be made aware of all
    witness protection programs.
    XIV. Witness intimidation and tampering statutes
    must be strengthened in instances in
    which a defendant who is charged with
    an offense attempts to tamper with or
    intimidate a witness. The crime of witness
    intimidation or tampering should be
    the same felony offense level as the most
    serious underlying offense and one level
    higher on the severity ranking chart than
    the most serious underlying offense. The
    bond amount for witness intimidation or
    tampering should be higher than the bond
    amount for the underlying charge. A third
    party who is charged with witness tampering
    or intimidation should receive the bond
    amount, felony offense level, and severity
    ranking in the ease against the original
    defendant in cases where the bond amount,
    felony offense level, and severity ranking
    would be higher if this step-up were used.
    XV. Data collection and sharing must be improved
    across the State of Florida. A Gang
    Fusion Center should be created at an
    already existing law enforcement facility
    to gather, evaluate, and disseminate data
    to the law enforcement on the street, adult
    and juvenile probation officers, and to prosecutors
    so that they may make real use of
    the information. The Center shall be staffed
    by state and federal agents from police,
    sheriffs, corrections, school resource officers,
    analysts and immigration agents. Data
    collection must be standardized and streamlined
    on a new FDLE Gang Form which is
    used by all law enforcement. InSite must be
    used and populated by all law enforcement.
    All departments seeking grant funding
    must be required to participate in InSite
    data program. Registration information for
    a convicted gang member must be collected.
    A defendant will be required to pay the fee
    for registration.
    XVI. The legislature should adopt laws to severely
    punish gang offenders who commit
    gun crimes. Convicted felons who are gang
    members and commit any gun crime should
    face lengthy prison terms.
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 69
    The National Alliance of Gang Investigators Associations
    (NAGIA) believes that implementation
    of the following recommendations will greatly enhance
    the ability of criminal justice professionals
    and communities to effectively address the gang
    problem together.
    Federal Role in the Gang Problem
    The gang problem is found throughout the United
    States, in communities large and small. There is a
    great need for a consistent and ongoing response
    to gangs at all levels, from the local to the state
    and federal levels. This response should be based
    upon best practices and should be flexible enough
    to deal with both rapidly changing trends and
    gang problems, which can vary greatly from one
    locality to another. Because gangs are a national
    problem, there is a need for a cohesive national
    response that supersedes agency boundaries.
    Gang Denial
    The education of the public, school administrators,
    community leaders, and law enforcement
    officials concerning the detrimental effects of gang
    denial is critical to controlling gang growth and
    its impact on the community. Public and institutional
    denial of the existence of gangs and a lack
    of proactive community measures are perhaps the
    greatest contributing factors in the alarming increase
    in the number, size, and strength of gangs.
    Denying the presence of gangs in a community
    significantly hampers effective prevention of gang
    growth and development during the early stages
    when violence is limited and active measures can
    effectively deter the problem.
    Appendix C: 2005 National Gang Threat
    Assessment Recommendations
    Law Enforcement Intelligence
    Sharing
    The sharing of gang intelligence is an issue of
    great concern throughout all levels of law enforcement.
    Usually, the most effective sharing of information
    takes place informally between individual
    law enforcement officers. The problems endemic
    in sharing information among the many federal
    law enforcement agencies exist to a large degree
    within some local law enforcement agencies.
    Gang, narcotics, homicide, and other units within
    municipal police departments must ensure that
    intelligence is communicated department-wide.
    In addition, law enforcement administrators need
    to recognize that the gang problem transcends
    geographic borders, making it essential that gang
    investigators meet regularly with their colleagues
    from other jurisdictions and receive advanced
    training at seminars. Because of the violent nature
    of gang members, both inside prisons and in
    communities, the sharing of information among
    criminal justice professionals has become an issue
    of public safety. NAGIA strongly recommends
    that all law enforcement agencies consider membership
    in their local RISS center to facilitate the
    sharing of gang-related intelligence through the
    RISS National Gang Database, conferences, and
    information sharing meetings.
    Gang Definitions
    There is a need for standardized definitions of
    a gang, gang member, and gang crime. If criminal
    justice professionals are to effectively work
    together and share gang-related intelligence across
    jurisdictions, it is imperative that they employ the
    same standards to determine what constitutes
    Appendix C: 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment Recommendations
    70 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    a gang, gang member, and gang crime. Many
    states do not have a gang definition, either formal
    or commonly understood, among jurisdictions
    within that state. In fact, there are many different
    definitions among jurisdictions at the state and
    local levels, which make it difficult to have a common
    discussion on gang issues. The lack of a common
    definition also contributes to the complexity
    of quantifying the nature and extent of the gang
    problem. NAGIA representatives have developed
    a recommended definition of the term “gang” to
    facilitate a national discussion:
    Gang: A group or association of three or more
    persons who may have a common identifying
    sign, symbol, or name and who individually
    or collectively engage in, or have engaged in,
    criminal activity which creates an atmosphere
    of fear and intimidation. Criminal activity
    includes juvenile acts that, if committed by an
    adult, would be a crime.
    Uniform Crime Reporting of Gang
    Activity
    In order to comprehend the scope and dimension
    of the gang problem and to accurately measure
    the effectiveness of anti-gang programs, there is
    a need for uniform crime reporting on gangs and
    gang activity. Accurate reporting is needed not
    only from municipal and county law enforcement
    agencies but also from schools. The standardization
    of gang definitions may help alleviate this
    problem. The FBI’s full implementation of the
    National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS),
    which collects information reported through
    the Uniform Crime Reports (UCRs), will also help
    in this endeavor.
    Correctional Intelligence
    There is a lack of intelligence coordination between
    police departments and corrections officials.
    This is largely due to the fact that many
    officers are unaware of the wealth of intelligence
    related to gangs and gang members available
    within the corrections community. Corrections
    officials and databases within federal, state, and
    local prison systems are an unexploited source
    of vital intelligence. Many correctional facilities
    identify gang members, validate gang membership,
    and have the capability to monitor mail,
    telephone calls, and visits. NAGIA encourages
    police agencies to work cooperatively with corrections
    departments through partnerships involving
    information sharing, fugitive apprehension, and
    specialized enforcement.
    Gang-Related Training
    The explosion of gang activity in the United States
    has resulted in a tremendous increase in the availability
    of training about gangs. However, information
    presented at some of these training programs
    and conferences is outdated, inaccurate, or inappropriate
    for the local situation. NAGIA believes
    that there is a need to identify and support worthwhile
    training sessions, conferences, instructors,
    and events related to gang training. This endorsement
    will help to ensure that only accurate and
    up-to-date information is disseminated to criminal
    justice professionals and others who have a need
    for instruction.
    Legislation
    Increased awareness of gang activity has led to
    a proliferation of federal, state, and local gangrelated
    laws with varying degrees of effectiveness.
    There is a need to identify and track legislation
    pertaining to gang prevention and suppression
    issues and to provide well-informed guidance
    to legislative sponsors. There is also a need to
    catalog and evaluate existing legislation to provide
    examples of beneficial statutes to those seeking to
    shape new legislation. The National Youth Gang
    Center maintains a comprehensive list of state
    and local gang legislation on its Web site at: http://
    www.iir.com/nygc/maininfo.htm#Legislation.
    Appendix C: 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment Recommendations
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 71
    Gang Officers
    Experience in working with gangs is important
    to law enforcement’s success in their anti-gang
    strategies and goals. Many police departments
    have formed gang units and have developed specialized
    positions within these units. The ability
    of officers to effectively combat gangs is greatly
    enhanced by accumulated on-the-job experience.
    Many police officers and other law enforcement
    agents routinely rotate into other job assignments
    every few years, thereby diminishing the institutional
    knowledge of a particular unit. Expertise
    regarding gangs is particularly difficult to maintain
    because gangs on both local and national
    levels are unpredictable and readily adapt their
    methods of operation to changing circumstances.
    Therefore, it is critical that at least some of the
    personnel involved in gang enforcement have
    extensive experience working with gangs. NAGIA
    recommends that law enforcement agency administrators
    consider these factors when rotating or
    reassigning personnel from a gang unit.
    Community Responses to Gangs
    Law enforcement alone will never successfully
    eliminate the threat of gangs. Other community
    agencies and partners, including schools, juvenile
    justice agencies, grassroots community organizations,
    faith-based organizations, social services organizations,
    and others, must work together to address
    the problem of gangs in the local community
    and to provide youths with opportunities to opt out
    of the gang lifestyle. NAGIA strongly recommends
    that law enforcement agencies reach out to social
    service agencies, nonprofit community assistance
    agencies, faith-based groups, schools, and private
    businesses to promote a comprehensive and coordinated
    community action plan to deal with gang
    suppression, intervention, and prevention.
    Appendix C: 2005 National Gang Threat Assessment Recommendations
    72 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 73
    Executive Summary
    Black Males and Black-on-Black
    Crime: An Overview
    For its inaugural report, the Florida Legislature
    charged the Council on the Social Status of Black
    Men and Boys with investigating the factors causing
    the continuing crisis of Black-on-Black crime.
    This report is designed to address the statutory
    charge and provide a foundation upon which the
    Council and the Florida stakeholders can conduct
    future research and derive additional and more
    expansion recommendations for change.
    Black-on-Black crime is an on-going crisis. Nearly
    30 years ago, in August 1979, Ebony magazine
    published a special issue on “Black on Black Crime:
    The Causes, The Consequences and the Cures.”
    Publisher John H. Johnson asserted that the basic
    premise of the special issue was that Black-on-
    Black crime had reached such a critical level that
    it threatened the very existence of Blacks as a
    people. High rates of Black-on-Black homicide,
    unemployment, delinquency rates among Black
    youth, and disproportionate rates of adult incarceration
    and community unrest, led the publisher
    to remark that “as in the 19th century, there is no
    flesh in America, as Frederick Douglass said…as
    cheap as Black flesh.” Noting that the facts and
    figures cited in the article had nothing at all to do
    with the “social characteristics” of Black people
    who he argued have never been more criminal
    than other groups, Johnson argued that Blacks
    are simply more often exposed to environments
    that have produced higher levels of social frustration
    and social disorder in all groups. Johnson
    concluded by dedicating the special issue to what
    he described as the “overwhelming majority of
    Blacks, who are victims, not perpetrators of Black
    on Black Crime…and primarily to the perpetrators
    of crime whom he described as more often than
    Appendix D: Florida Council on the Social
    Status of Black Men and Boys
    not, victims of their own crimes and of a society
    that condemns them to lives of frustration and
    rage and emptiness.”
    Johnson’s appeal to the words of Frederick Douglass
    to clarify the relationship between Blackness
    and criminality, are important for understanding
    the context and implications of Black-on-Black
    crime, then and now. The intellectual debates and
    scholarly writings of Douglass and the noted social
    scholar and political historian W.E.B. Dubois
    are also frequently drawn upon to explain the
    relationship between Blackness and criminality,
    and the economic, social and political implications
    of “Black criminality.”
    Murder may swagger, theft may rule and prostitution
    may flourish and the nation gives but spasmodic,
    intermittent and lukewarm attention. But
    let the murderer be Black or the thief brown or
    the violator of womanhood have a drop of Negro
    blood, and the righteousness of the indignation
    sweeps the world. Nor would this fact make the
    indignation less justifiable did not we all know
    that it was Blackness that was condemned and
    not crime. (W.E.B. Dubois)
    Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced,
    where ignorance prevails, and where any
    one class is made to feel that society, is an organized
    conspiracy to oppress...and degrade [it],
    neither persons or property will ever be safe…
    (Frederick Douglass)
    The research presented in this report highlights
    some of the issues that are conducive to alleviating
    Black-on-Black crime, and the recommendations
    made by the Council are designed to alleviate the
    frequency and intensity of Black-on-Black crime.
    This report includes innovative and thoughtful
    findings from the Council’s five committees:
    Improving Economic Outcomes, Improving
    Educational Outcomes, Improving Foster Care and
    Appendix D: Florida Council on the Social Status of Black Men and Boys
    74 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Families, Improving Health Outcomes and Legislative
    Review. As a result of the Council’s charge
    to investigate the factors “causing black-on-black
    crime from the perspective of public health related
    to mental health, other health issues, cultural
    disconnection, and cultural identity trauma,”
    (Section 16.615(8)(b), Florida Statues) the Council
    worked diligently to release the recommendations
    located throughout this report. As the committees
    addressed such varied topics, the best way to
    summarize all the findings was through the “Top
    15 Recommendations” listed below.
    Top 15 Council Recommendations
    Economics
    1. Analyze the participation rates of Blackowned
    firms and the dollar amounts awarded
    through bidding and/or direct contracting
    with state agencies. In conjunction with the
    Office of Supplier Diversity, identify those
    products and/or service codes where minority
    business enterprises, especially Black-owned
    firms, are under-represented. Inform the
    Black business community as to the product
    and/or service codes that are in need of more
    Black business participation.
    2. In consultation with other entities such as the
    Florida Regional Minority Business Council
    and the Florida Minority Supplier Development
    Council, develop an assessment tool to
    identify business capacities, strengths and/
    or weaknesses. This assessment tool should
    be utilized to: a) Determine award capacity;
    b) Create business development programming
    for the contracted business; c) Project
    capacity increases during multi-year contracts,
    including potential renewals; and d) Identify
    a corporate industry peer success coach to be
    a resource to Black business participants.
    3. Encourage and support opportunities for
    joint-ventures between and among Blackowned
    businesses, to increase contract performance
    capacities, shared costs and increased
    outcomes. Support community resources such
    as the Florida Regional Minority Business
    Council and Who’s Who, developed by Pam
    and Jerome Hutchinson. Also, continue to
    work with the Office of Supplier Diversity, to
    continuously highlight and publish an online
    directory of all minority business enterprises
    including Black-owned businesses by product
    and service codes. Moreover, the Council will
    work to ensure the online business directory
    is accessible to all state and municipal purchasing
    entities as a resource.
    Education
    4. Review the statewide and district level
    policies, procedures and outcomes of school
    discipline throughout Florida. Require all
    public and charter schools to collect student
    disciplinary data, including teacher/SRO referral
    rates, suspension rates and grade distributions
    (along with rationale and outcomes)
    for all K-12 teachers and staff. Data must be
    disaggregated by race, gender, violation, and
    punishment. Create a reporting tool to track
    incidents and compare punishments. Require
    training of all principals, teachers and SRO
    officers on school disciplinary procedures.
    5. The Department of Education, School Superintendents
    and Department of Juvenile
    Justice (DJJ) staff should partner to evaluate,
    amend and/or rescind K-12 zero tolerance
    policies and practices to eliminate the referral
    of youth to DJJ for misdemeanor offenses.
    6. Identify intervention programs with proven
    records of success working with Black
    Males, such as Role Models of Excellence.
    Beginning in 2008, establish 5,000 Role Models
    of Excellence programs in every county
    within the state with the goal of having a
    Role Models of Excellence Program in every
    school by 2012. Develop peer mentoring and
    other special intervention programs such
    as the Young Black Male Discovery Project
    programs for Black males in all elementary,
    middle and high schools.
    Appendix D: Florida Council on the Social Status of Black Men and Boys
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 75
    Foster Care and Adoption
    7. Require school districts to implement Kinship
    Care Support Programs. Non-relative care givers
    should receive cash benefits for caring for a
    dependent child. Encourage friends of parents
    or god parents to care for their loved ones.
    8. Community based care (CBC) agencies serving
    foster youth should offer weekly Independent
    Living skills (IL) classes to all current and
    former foster youth age 13 to 23, as well as
    transportation for the youth to enable them
    to attend the classes. They should also offer
    weekly IL skills classes at all facilities to
    ensure that institutionalized youth receive the
    same training.
    9. Promote adoption though “One Church, One
    Child” (OCOC). “One Church, One Child” of
    Florida needs to be restored to recruiting,
    preparing and approving families for children
    in foster care in need of adoption service. Appropriately
    and adequately funding OCOC will
    allow the agency to work along side the resolution
    of key barriers to placements of children,
    i.e. access to the children to know who they
    are and preparation of children for adoption.
    Health
    10. The state should invest in a public education
    campaign to promote the benefits of
    early screening for health care. This should
    include use of mass media, dissemination
    of information in public and private schools
    as well as non-traditional systems such as
    mobile medical units.
    Legislative Review
    11. Appropriate $250,000 for the Council for fiscal
    year 2008-09, including the hiring of an
    Executive Director (FTE with full benefits).
    12. Eliminate the Council’s sunset date by passing
    Senate Bill 546. The Council should also be
    made a permanent commission.
    13. Establish at least one local Council on the
    Social Status of Black Men and Boys in each
    of Florida’s sixty-seven counties, to serve
    as a network for communication, education
    and action.
    14. Reestablish the Governor’s Ex-Offender Task
    Force (Governor Bush’s original task force
    sunsetted in January 2007).
    15. Support the study and recommendations of
    the Department of Juvenile Justice’s Blueprint
    Commission.
    Recommendations
    1. Florida’s state agencies should review and
    analyze the participation rates of Black-owned
    firms, including but not limited to the number
    of individual businesses and the dollar
    amounts awarded, of Black-owned firms
    which provide goods and/or services through
    any form of bidding and/or direct contracting.
    2. Identify those product and/or service
    codes where Black-owned firms are under
    represented.
    3. Create informational venues to educate the
    Black business community as to the product
    and/or service codes which are in need of
    more Black business participation.
    4. Florida’s state agencies, in consultation with
    other entities such as the Florida Regional
    Minority Business Council, should develop an
    assessment tool to identify business capacities,
    strength and/or weaknesses. This assessment
    tool should be utilized to: 1) Determine
    award capacity; 2) Create business developmental
    programming for the contracted
    business; 3) Project capacity increases during
    multi-year contracts, including potential
    renewals; and 4) Identify a corporate industry
    peer success coach to be a resource to Black
    business participants.
    5. Florida’s community college and university
    systems should offer short-term entrepreneurship
    educational activities and/or courses
    to promote business ownership and offer educational
    programming in the areas of management,
    marketing/advertising, client developAppendix
    D: Florida Council on the Social Status of Black Men and Boys
    76 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    ment, governmental procurement, and other
    areas of best of practices.
    6. Create more financial incentives from state
    and local governments for new businesses
    and expansion of current businesses for the
    small and disadvantaged businesses across
    the state.
    7. Encourage community development/re-development
    organizations to support mixed-use
    projects to provide affordable commercial
    space for new business growth and employment
    opportunities within Black communities
    across the state.
    8. State and municipal entities should encourage
    joint-venturing opportunities between Blackowned
    business to increase contract performance
    capacities, shared costs and increased
    outcomes in the Black community.
    9. State and municipal entities should conduct
    a historic review of their contracting policies,
    procedures and actual awards of contracts
    to determine the barriers to entry of Blackowned
    businesses and/or the most prevalent
    reasons why Black-owned businesses have
    not received bid awards and/or direct contracting
    opportunities.
    10. Support community resources such as the
    Florida Regional Minority Business Council
    and Who’s Who, developed by Pam and
    Jerome Hutchinson, to highlight and publish
    a statewide periodical of Black-owned businesses
    by product and service codes. Distribute
    this contact periodical to all state and
    municipal purchasing entities as a resource.
    11. Florida should develop a comprehensive
    program designed to stem the tide of foreclosures
    within the Black community, which was
    more disparately impacted by unfair lending
    practices than any other ethnic community.
    12. Florida must work with municipalities and
    insurance vendors to aggressively and materially
    decrease the burdensome costs (taxes and
    insurance) associated with homeownership.
    13. Florida must increase the resources necessary
    to materially increase the educational outcomes
    of the Black community in parity with
    all other ethnic communities. (See also the
    recommendations of the Education Outcomes
    Committee)
    14. Florida must develop and implement strategic
    and tactical plans to increase the presence of
    high-wage employers within the state, while
    decreasing the exponential growth and perpetuation
    of low-wage jobs.
    15. The State, municipalities and Florida’s business
    communities should look at greater economic
    opportunities for goods and services by
    and between Florida and the CARICOM.
    16. Develop an accountable matrix to monitor the
    success of municipal, state and/or federally
    funded programs in materially impacting the
    lives of participants economically, socially,
    educationally and with regards to health.
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 77
    Appendix E: Regional Gang Reduction
    Task Forces
    78 Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Notes
    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy 79
    Notes
    Office of Attorney General
    Bill McCollum
    State of Florida
    The Capitol PL-01
    Tallahassee, FL 32399-1050
    www.myfloridalegal.com

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  2. What Can Be Done To Help Solve The Problem Of Gangs ?

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    Florida Gang Reduction Strategy
    Office of Attorney General
    Bill McCollum
    State of Florida
    The Capitol PL-01
    Tallahassee, FL 32399-1050
    www.myfloridalegal.com

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