False Witness
In St. Louis, a former rival could end up springing Felix Key from a 28 year sentence.
In St. Louis, a former rival could end up springing Felix Key from a 28 year sentence.
Ryan Krull Riverfront Times Dec 2020 Permalink
Rio de Janeiro drug gangs are embracing evangelical Christianity.
Alex Cuadros Harper's Jan 2020 30min Permalink
A girl gang rules over a neighborhood.
Heather Kamins Guernica Oct 2019 15min Permalink
Inside the struggle to survive in a tiny Honduran neighborhood surrounded by competing gangs.
Azam Ahmed New York Times May 2019 25min Permalink
The teenager told police all about his gang, MS-13. In return, he was slated for deportation and marked for death.
Hannah Dreier ProPublica Apr 2018 30min Permalink
“GOD Almighty, you can get killed in Baltimore—for no reason at all.”
Barry Michael Cooper Spin May 1986 Permalink
In El Salvador, more and more young women are choosing—or being forced into—gang life.
Lauren Markham Pacific Standard Sep 2017 25min Permalink
The impact of a life map and a stipend on those in the gang life in Richmond, CA.
Jason Motlagh The Guardian Jun 2016 30min Permalink
“If we’re sitting here bored, getting high and we got guns around, it ain’t nothing else to do.”
John Eligon New York Times Dec 2016 10min Permalink
Three days, 64 people shot, six of them dead: Memorial Day weekend in Chicago.
Monica Davey New York Times Jun 2016 25min Permalink
In Brooklyn’s Brownsville, being in a gang can mean as little as being born on a specific block. Ackquille Pollard spent his final free days as a viral rap sensation, before being jailed as the leader of a sect of Crips.
Scott Eden GQ May 2016 25min Permalink
If you’re in a gang, the law can impose harsh penalties. But even though the police think they’ve got all the signs of gang membership down pat, it turns out that you can’t really tell just by looking.
Daniel Alarcón New York Times Magazine May 2015 25min
The Bandidos, Texas’s biggest motorcycle gang, say goodbye to one of their own.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Apr 2007 25min Permalink
How the feds went after Thick Neck, Guilty, Stomper, Gunner, Lucky, Menace, and the rest of the Amernian mob in Los Angeles.
Hayley Fox LA Weekly Jul 2014 15min Permalink
The gangs of Brooklyn’s Brownsville, an area with the higest concentration of public housing in America.
Eric Konigsberg New York Jun 2014 20min Permalink
On the rise of Indian Posse, the largest of Canada’s native gangs, and the fall of its leader.
Joe Friesen The Globe and Mail Jun 2011 45min Permalink
A respected anti-gang crusader shoots and paralyzes another man.
Robert Sanchez 5280 Jan 2014 10min Permalink
A Hells Angel informant’s path from destruction to redemption and back, and a family’s trouble with witness protection.
Vince Grzegorek Cleveland Scene Oct 2013 20min Permalink
The triple life of G-Rock: upscale house painter, lifelong Crip, FBI informant.
Guy Lawson GQ Jan 2000 20min Permalink
On L.A.’s Homeboy Industries, which offers former felons—including at least one disgraced CEO—the chance to work.
Douglas McGray Fast Company Apr 2012 20min Permalink
Rogue cops in the LAPD Rampart division’s anti-gang CRASH unit (Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums) were involved in everything from drug smuggling and bank robberies to, allegedly, the murder of Christopher “Notorious BIG” Wallace.
Chains, knives, fists, and, of course, those crude and unreliable homemade affairs called zip guns were the staples in the more vicious gang wars in the 1940s and 1950s. Today there is scarcely a gang in the Bronx that cannot muster a factory-made piece for every member—at the very least, a .22-caliber pistol, but quite often heavier stuff: .32s, .38s, and .45s, shotguns, rifles, and—I have seen them myself—even machine guns, grenades, and gelignite, an explosive. One gang, the Royal Javelins, has acquired some walkie-talkie radios.
Gene Weingarten New York Mar 1972 15min Permalink
Nicky Louie and the Ghost Shadows.
Mark Jacobson Village Voice Jan 1977 15min Permalink
The narcocorrido-immortalized Pacific coast traditionalists, the kidnap-crazed Gulf coast Zetas, and massacres that no longer seem tied to a discernible purpose; inside the ruins of the Mexican-American border.
Alma Guillermoprieto New York Review of Books Oct 2010 20min Permalink