
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
In the first gubernatorial visit to Huntington Park in the city’s 90-year history, Gov. Pete Wilson told local leaders Tuesday that he would allocate $2.5 million to help small communities
like theirs fight gangs with civil injunctions against gang members. Similar injunctions, spearheaded by Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti and in place in parts of Norwalk, Long
Beach and Pasadena, ban identified gang members from participating in certain illegal and legal activities within an identified zone. Injunctions have prohibited people from carrying
beepers, riding bicycles, drinking alcohol, loitering and engaging in drug use or sales, among other things. Wilson said the injunctions are a “call to all decent citizens to say, ‘No more.’
” “Together we will fight juvenile gang violence with heart and soul,” Wilson said. “You do deserve help and we intend to see that you get it.” The proposed fund would expand the district
attorney’s Strategy Against Gang Environments program to communities that cannot afford the salary of a special deputy district attorney to draft and argue the civil injunction, at a cost of
more than $98,000 a year, Wilson said. The proposal to extend the program to Huntington Park comes after 11-year-old Erika Izquierdo was killed by stray gunfire last October. A gang member
allegedly shot the girl while she was sitting on her front porch with her father, Antonio, who attended Tuesday’s event to thank the governor and district attorney for their help. Calling
the injunctions a form of “community-based prosecution,” Garcetti told the gathered schoolchildren and church leaders that the injunctions have been a “phenomenal success.” “Injunctions are
giving hope to communities that had almost given up,” Garcetti said. “Gangs that were terrorizing neighborhoods and selling drugs are closing down.” While Wilson and Garcetti work to extend
the anti-gang proposal, civil libertarians and others are questioning in court whether the measures are constitutional--and whether the court orders are as successful as Garcetti says.
“We’re very discouraged by this action,” said Ann Bradley of the American Civil Liberties Union. “We’ve given ample evidence that these injunctions do not necessarily solve the problem.” The
ACLU and others have alleged that the injunctions are technically improper because they accuse people of criminal activities in a civil proceeding, meaning that those named have no right to
an attorney. What’s more, critics contend that the injunctions turn the zoned area into a quasi-police state, in which officers can unconstitutionally stop and search anyone they choose
under the guise of searching for injunction violators. The National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People and others have also alleged that the injunctions unfairly target African
American and Latino men. In his Huntington Park speech, Wilson anticipated his critics’ response to his proposal. “One of the most effective ways to nip gang activity in the bud is by taking
away their colors and their pagers, keeping them off the pay phones, not letting them camp out in front of their targets’ homes,” Wilson said. “Not everyone understands this. . . . If
anyone should be sued, it’s the ACLU for defying common sense.” Wilson also reiterated his tough-on-crime themes from last week’s State of the State address, urging support for a box that
could be checked off on tax returns allocating money to local law enforcement, and several measures that would provide harsher penalties for juveniles who commit violent crimes. MORE TO READ