Pubdate: Fri, 20 Aug 1999
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times.
Contact:  (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Richard Marosi, Jason Kandel, Special to The Times

NAZI GANG CALLED KEY PLAYER IN DRUG TRADE

Violence: Sheriffs Of Los Angeles And Orange Counties Say It Is The
Fastest-growing Such Hate Group In The State And Is Linked To The
Distribution Of Speed.

Hate group discovered in Costa Mesa six years ago is now believed to be the
fastest-growing white supremacist gang in California and a major player in
the methamphetamine drug trade, according to a report released Thursday.

The study, the most extensive to date of the Nazi Lowrider gang, was
prepared by the Anti-Defamation League using state and federal crime data.
It was presented Thursday in Santa Ana by Sheriffs Lee Baca of Los Angeles
County and Mike Carona of Orange County.

They said the Nazi Lowriders are a rising force in street crime and drug
sales and have been involved in several high-profile hate incidents in both
counties.

Carona and Baca consider the gang so dangerous that they have segregated
Nazi Lowriders in county jails from other prisoners after repeated attacks
by members on black inmates in Los Angeles.

Members of the hate group allegedly attacked a 12-year-old Latino boy with
metal pipe in 1996 at a Mission Viejo video arcade, police said. More
serious incidents followed in Lancaster, where over the last three years
Nazi Lowriders have been accused of beating a black teenager with a
baseball bat and stabbing a black man several times in the back.

Carona and Baca also expressed concern that the group might be attempting
to unite other white supremacist gangs. "It's a menace we all have to
attack," said Baca, who said the Nazi Lowriders are now more of a problem
in his jails than the Mexican Mafia.

The group first caught the attention of authorities in Costa Mesa, where
members were running a drug ring. Gang membership grew from 28 in 1996 to
an estimated 1,300 nationwide in 1998, according the the study.

Unlike traditional street gangs, the Nazi Lowriders and other white
supremacist groups do not carve out specific territory, hate-crime experts
said.

"They are not typical of skinhead organizations and not well defined like
the Ku Klux Klan or Aryan Nations," said Chris Freeman, a research
associate for the Atlanta-based Center for Democratic Renewal, which
monitors far right-wing groups.

"They are roving gangs," Freeman added. " 'Street soldiers' is the term
used by white supremacists to refer to them. They hit and they leave and
they are hard to track and pin down..

The group has created its own culture, the study found, including hand
signals, language and dress codes. Members' bodies are often tattooed with
swastikas, pictures of Adolf Hitler and other Nazi imagery, it stated.

According to the report, members are typically in their late teens or early
20s. To join the gang, they must profess loyalty to the white race. Though
they express hatred for Jews, Asians and other minorities, the gang tends
to focus its hatred on blacks, the report said. In prisons, the gang often
allies itself with Latino counterparts in attacks on black inmates.

Tom Leyden, a former neo-Nazi skinhead who is now a consultant for the
Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, said the gang is unique in that it
operates under dual philosophies. It combines drug-selling expertise with
the primarily hate-based credo of skinhead gangs, he said.

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