
Living In Gangland: Former Gang Member Makes New Life
From: Northwest News Network (N3)
Series: Living In Gangland
Length: 05:09
[Living In Gangland: Former Gang Member Makes New Life
040811JR_GangsPart4.wav Feature 4/8/11 5:08 JR/CF]
CALDWELL, Idaho - Most new gang members join when they’re about 13 years old. They think the gang will give them prestige, a sense of belonging and protection. But it often doesn't pan out that way. Gang members become much more likely to be the victims of violence and crime. Many want out. But it’s not easy to do. This week we’re taking a look at what police say is a resurgence of gang activity - especially in rural areas. In part four of our series Living In Gangland, correspondent Jessica Robinson learned how one Idaho man got out of a gang ... and stayed out. [SOQ 5:08]
[Host Tag: Reporter Scott Ki (kee) of Boise State Public Radio helped with this story.]
Alfonso Santos learned how to make a gang sign around the same time he was learning to read.
Alfonso Santos: “I was in Head Start I remember, and my uncle’s like ‘Hey, come over here real quick.’ He’s like, ‘Hey, throw it up,’ and I’m like ‘Alright.’ So I’m on one knee, throwing up the E. And, I thought that’s cool right there you know.” [:12]
The E was for East Side Locos. Alfonso says in the ‘90s his uncle started a branch of the Texas gang in Caldwell, Idaho. It became the biggest in town. Alfonso officially joined around the age of 13.
Alfonso Santos: “That’s when I actually you know, got in it, started going around with guys, starting stuff, just making a name for myself. And I did too, man.” [:08]
It wasn’t a drug thing. Mainly, the East Side gang in Caldwell is a street gang – which means graffiti, theft, but most of all, beating up rivals. Like this one time Alfonso was in the car -- with his mom.
Al fonso Santos: “We were at a stop light and right next to me there’s like four guys, some rivals of mine. They looked at me, and they started throwing up West Side, starting their stuff. I got out of the car and right there started punching the guy’s window in. Right there at the stop light, there were cars behind me, I didn’t care. I just always wanted to fight. I was ready to die for my hood, for my family, for my gang.” [:19]
[Music from car stereo]
Alfonso takes me on a drive around town. To some of the places he hasn’t been to in a while.
Jessica: “So this is where you were living?”
Alfonso Santos: “Yeah this is my old house that got shot at.”
Back then, Caldwell police were still trying to figure out how to respond to the sudden rise in gang activity in the small town. In one month alone in 2004, there were 130 shootings in Caldwell. Alfonso saw friends get shot. His uncle went to prison. Alfonso was in and out of juvie himself. His mom begged him to stop, especially after the fourth drive-by shooting on their house.
Alfonso Santos: “So those rooms got hit. And that’s my mom’s room. It was just, it was horrible.
It was around then that Alfonso says he began to realize something. The gang may have called themselves a family. But being one of them was threatening the lives of Alfonso’s actual family. So at a gang meeting, he declared he was out.
[Fade out car amb]
Unfortunately, leaving a gang isn't like canceling a gym membership. That became clear late one night, after Alfonso thought he was done. A member of the West Siders caught him out alone.
Alfonso Santos: “And I heard the door slam. And he fires, boom!”
Alfonso ran.
Alfonso Santos: “He was just shooting rounds.”
… Until one grazed his ankle.
Alfonso Santos: “It stung and then I fell.”
He was there on the pavement when the rival gang member caught up with him.
Alfonso Santos: “He turned me over and puts the gun in my face and I’m just there looking at him. He smirked, you know you’re done dude, and he just pulled the trigger, and it clicked.”
No more bullets.
Alfonso Santos: “Oh man! And he’s like, ‘F---!’ That’s what he said.”
The man kicked Alfonso in the gut and bolted.
Alfonso Santos: “And right there I was like that’s it, I’m done with this, I gotta start doing something. I don’t want this no more.”
If Alfonso’s life were a movie, this is where we’d cue the montage.
[Music: “Your Body” by Pretty Ricky]
Alfonso Santos: “I changed so much, I started dressing different, preppy. My whole attitude different. I changed completely. The way I dressed, talked, people I hung out with.”
Jessica: “Did you walk differently?”
Alfonso Santos: “Yeah, I used to walk like a little gangster, like I was all bad and stuff.” [:15]
This self-makeover started to do the trick. It started to convince his old gang and his old rivals. But he still faced constant harassment from both sides -- for a year and a half. Turns out, the toughest part of getting out -- was learning how to back down.
Alfonso Santos: “And sometimes I’d get hit, you know, get sucker punched and it just, oh, like, I felt like I lost my pride. I felt like crap. The whole year in a half it was like that. And finally they started to realize, this guy really don’t want anything no more.” [:12]
So, this is the part of the story where I tell you that Alfonso is the rare exception. That most gang members only get out through prison or through death, right?
No.
In fact, thousands of kids are going through this same difficult process right now. So says Arlen Egley, a researcher with U.S. Department of Justice.
Arlen Egley: “This is a finding in gang research that shows up again and again, in different cities, using different methods, surprising to many, is that most kids who join a gang, leave within one or two years.” [:13]
Egley says, like Alfonso, most kids join because they have friends or family in the gang. They think it will keep them safe. And like Alfonso, they realize it doesn’t.
Arlen Egley: “And in fact it’s often the violent experiences they have in the gang that leads them to say, okay, this is not protecting me, I don’t want to be part of this gang anymore.” [:11]
[Amb at Alfonso’s house]
Alfonso Santos: “That’s my little boy right there. That’s my little guy! Ezrah, say hi!”
Ezrah: “Goh”
Alfonso is 21 now. He’s been out of gang life for almost five years. He’s working in a furniture store and trying to be a good father.
Alfonso Santos: “I’m so lucky, that I’m still out here. I mean, before when I was gang banging if I died people would be like, it’s cool he’s dead, you know. One less gang member we have to worry about. And I always thought about that. I want my life to mean something.”
Alfonso and his fiance just got approved for a home loan. He has new friends now. In fact, one of his closest friends was once one of those rivals in one of those cars … a former West Sider, who’s straightened up his life too. He’s dating Alfonso’s sister. And they often all have barbecues together.
[I’m Jessica Robinson reporting.]
Reporter Scott Ki of Boise State Public Radio helped with this story.
Copyright 2011 Northwest News Network
---------
Extras
Web links:
Gang information from the Idaho Department of Corrections:
idahogangs.com
Nationwide survey of gang membership:
http://www.nationalgangcenter.gov/Survey-Analysis
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Piece Description
[Living In Gangland: Former Gang Member Makes New Life
040811JR_GangsPart4.wav Feature 4/8/11 5:08 JR/CF]
CALDWELL, Idaho - Most new gang members join when they’re about 13 years old. They think the gang will give them prestige, a sense of belonging and protection. But it often doesn't pan out that way. Gang members become much more likely to be the victims of violence and crime. Many want out. But it’s not easy to do. This week we’re taking a look at what police say is a resurgence of gang activity - especially in rural areas. In part four of our series Living In Gangland, correspondent Jessica Robinson learned how one Idaho man got out of a gang ... and stayed out. [SOQ 5:08]
[Host Tag: Reporter Scott Ki (kee) of Boise State Public Radio helped with this story.]
Alfonso Santos learned how to make a gang sign around the same time he was learning to read.
Alfonso Santos: “I was in Head Start I remember, and my uncle’s like ‘Hey, come over here real quick.’ He’s like, ‘Hey, throw it up,’ and I’m like ‘Alright.’ So I’m on one knee, throwing up the E. And, I thought that’s cool right there you know.” [:12]
The E was for East Side Locos. Alfonso says in the ‘90s his uncle started a branch of the Texas gang in Caldwell, Idaho. It became the biggest in town. Alfonso officially joined around the age of 13.
Alfonso Santos: “That’s when I actually you know, got in it, started going around with guys, starting stuff, just making a name for myself. And I did too, man.” [:08]
It wasn’t a drug thing. Mainly, the East Side gang in Caldwell is a street gang – which means graffiti, theft, but most of all, beating up rivals. Like this one time Alfonso was in the car -- with his mom.
Al fonso Santos: “We were at a stop light and right next to me there’s like four guys, some rivals of mine. They looked at me, and they started throwing up West Side, starting their stuff. I got out of the car and right there started punching the guy’s window in. Right there at the stop light, there were cars behind me, I didn’t care. I just always wanted to fight. I was ready to die for my hood, for my family, for my gang.” [:19]
[Music from car stereo]
Alfonso takes me on a drive around town. To some of the places he hasn’t been to in a while.
Jessica: “So this is where you were living?”
Alfonso Santos: “Yeah this is my old house that got shot at.”
Back then, Caldwell police were still trying to figure out how to respond to the sudden rise in gang activity in the small town. In one month alone in 2004, there were 130 shootings in Caldwell. Alfonso saw friends get shot. His uncle went to prison. Alfonso was in and out of juvie himself. His mom begged him to stop, especially after the fourth drive-by shooting on their house.
Alfonso Santos: “So those rooms got hit. And that’s my mom’s room. It was just, it was horrible.
It was around then that Alfonso says he began to realize something. The gang may have called themselves a family. But being one of them was threatening the lives of Alfonso’s actual family. So at a gang meeting, he declared he was out.
[Fade out car amb]
Unfortunately, leaving a gang isn't like canceling a gym membership. That became clear late one night, after Alfonso thought he was done. A member of the West Siders caught him out alone.
Alfonso Santos: “And I heard the door slam. And he fires, boom!”
Alfonso ran.
Alfonso Santos: “He was just shooting rounds.”
… Until one grazed his ankle.
Alfonso Santos: “It stung and then I fell.”
He was there on the pavement when the rival gang member caught up with him.
Alfonso Santos: “He turned me over and puts the gun in my face and I’m just there looking at him. He smirked, you know you’re done dude, and he just pulled the trigger, and it clicked.”
No more bullets.
Alfonso Santos: “Oh man! And he’s like, ‘F---!’ That’s what he said.”
The man kicked Alfonso in the gut and bolted.
Alfonso Santos: “And right there I was like that’s it, I’m done with this, I gotta start doing something. I don’t want this no more.”
If Alfonso’s life were a movie, this is where we’d cue the montage.
[Music: “Your Body” by Pretty Ricky]
Alfonso Santos: “I changed so much, I started dressing different, preppy. My whole attitude different. I changed completely. The way I dressed, talked, people I hung out with.”
Jessica: “Did you walk differently?”
Alfonso Santos: “Yeah, I used to walk like a little gangster, like I was all bad and stuff.” [:15]
This self-makeover started to do the trick. It started to convince his old gang and his old rivals. But he still faced constant harassment from both sides -- for a year and a half. Turns out, the toughest part of getting out -- was learning how to back down.
Alfonso Santos: “And sometimes I’d get hit, you know, get sucker punched and it just, oh, like, I felt like I lost my pride. I felt like crap. The whole year in a half it was like that. And finally they started to realize, this guy really don’t want anything no more.” [:12]
So, this is the part of the story where I tell you that Alfonso is the rare exception. That most gang members only get out through prison or through death, right?
No.
In fact, thousands of kids are going through this same difficult process right now. So says Arlen Egley, a researcher with U.S. Department of Justice.
Arlen Egley: “This is a finding in gang research that shows up again and again, in different cities, using different methods, surprising to many, is that most kids who join a gang, leave within one or two years.” [:13]
Egley says, like Alfonso, most kids join because they have friends or family in the gang. They think it will keep them safe. And like Alfonso, they realize it doesn’t.
Arlen Egley: “And in fact it’s often the violent experiences they have in the gang that leads them to say, okay, this is not protecting me, I don’t want to be part of this gang anymore.” [:11]
[Amb at Alfonso’s house]
Alfonso Santos: “That’s my little boy right there. That’s my little guy! Ezrah, say hi!”
Ezrah: “Goh”
Alfonso is 21 now. He’s been out of gang life for almost five years. He’s working in a furniture store and trying to be a good father.
Alfonso Santos: “I’m so lucky, that I’m still out here. I mean, before when I was gang banging if I died people would be like, it’s cool he’s dead, you know. One less gang member we have to worry about. And I always thought about that. I want my life to mean something.”
Alfonso and his fiance just got approved for a home loan. He has new friends now. In fact, one of his closest friends was once one of those rivals in one of those cars … a former West Sider, who’s straightened up his life too. He’s dating Alfonso’s sister. And they often all have barbecues together.
[I’m Jessica Robinson reporting.]
Reporter Scott Ki of Boise State Public Radio helped with this story.
Copyright 2011 Northwest News Network
---------
Extras
Web links:
Gang information from the Idaho Department of Corrections:
idahogangs.com
Nationwide survey of gang membership:
http://www.nationalgangcenter.gov/Survey-Analysis




