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<text id=90TT1087>
<title>
Apr. 30, 1990: Up From The Streets
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 34
Up from the Streets
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Instead of dying out, Detroit gangs have been reborn as criminal
empires
</p>
<p>By S.C. Gwynne
</p>
<p> It was the kind of research project most social scientists
avoid. The researcher had to lay out $50,000 of his own money.
He spent six years in one of Detroit's most dangerous
neighborhoods in the company of two of the most violent street
gangs in America. He routinely asked highly personal questions
of edgy young men who earn small fortunes selling drugs and
have few qualms about killing people who inquire too closely
about their activities.
</p>
<p> For obvious reasons, most research on violent urban
subcultures is done with computer printouts, not with tape
recorders and notebooks on the mean streets. Not so with Carl
S. Taylor, adjunct professor of criminal justice at Michigan
State University and director of the Criminal Justice Program
at Jackson Community College. In 1980 Taylor set out to study
Detroit's two biggest and most powerful youth gangs: Young Boys
Inc. and the Pony Down. In the process, he encountered four
additional groups. The resulting book, Dangerous Society,
published in February by Michigan State University Press,
provides a harrowing portrait of how the gangs transformed
themselves from opportunistic street punks into sophisticated
drug-dealing empires that rake in hundreds of millions a year.
</p>
<p> Taylor's work is of far more than academic significance. His
major discovery is that even as Young Boys Inc. and the Pony
Down were unraveling in the mid-1980s following the jailings
of their leaders, they were being quickly and silently replaced
by far more sophisticated and highly secretive business
operations. Taylor's findings contradict the sanguine attitude
of fifth-term Mayor Coleman Young and his political allies, who
insist that the Motor City no longer has a serious gang
problem. Says inspector Benny Napoleon, who monitors gang
activity for the Detroit police: "We have nothing remotely
resembling a large, well-organized gang."
</p>
<p> Taylor presents convincing evidence to the contrary: the
groups have become less obvious to the police simply because
they have shifted into more covert and more profitable
enterprises. "Detroit kids just laugh when they hear people in
L.A. are still wearing colors," says Taylor. "What's sweeping
this city are what I call CEOs--covert entrepreneurial
organizations. They do not wear gold chains or beepers or Fila
sweatsuits anymore. They're probably wearing ragged clothes and
driving ratty cars. They've seceded from the union."
</p>
<p> Cocaine sales fueled the evolution of Detroit's gangs. They
began as what Taylor calls "scavengers," youths preying on the
most vulnerable residents of their neighborhoods. But when the
double whammy of crack and job cutbacks in the auto plants
smashed into Detroit's poorest areas during the 1980s, the
gangs developed "corporate" organizations with a concern for
the bottom line and enough discipline to use violence mainly
to protect their drug-dealing turfs.
</p>
<p> Though smaller and far less visible than the original Young
Boys Inc., which pioneered the use of hard-to-prosecute
juveniles to sell drugs, the new-style crews have mimicked its
security-conscious structure. "In Y.B.I., one of the keys was
that the left hand didn't know what the right hand was doing,"
Taylor says. "That's still true. At the top of each
organization you have what amounts to a wholesale operation."
</p>
<p> Though most of the membership is drawn from the impoverished
underclass, an increasing number of recruits from middle-class
families have been lured by the promise of quick financial
rewards. Taylor also discovered that female gangs, once
considered relatively harmless adjuncts to male crews, have
become dangerous, independent groups. In an interview with
Taylor's research team, one female gang member bragged of
ousting unwanted guests who tried to "bum rush" a party. The
guests fled, she said, after "I cut loose on their fake asses
with that Uzi."
</p>
<p> Taylor believes that gang members share a grossly distorted
version of the values mainstream Americans hold dear. The
difference is that gang members want money and status faster,
and are willing to kill to obtain them. Asked to identify his
role models, one 14-year-old cited the cocaine-snorting
protagonist of the movie Scarface and Chrysler chairman Lee
Iacocca. "Lee Iacocca is smooth and he be dissing
[disrespecting, in street lingo] everybody," the youth
explained. In some cases, parents encourage their children's
criminal careers. Said one: "My momma talk about how proud she
is of me making doughski. She used to dog me and say I wasn't
s---, but now she's proud."
</p>
<p> Taylor grew up in the West Side neighborhood from which both
Young Boys Inc. and the Pony Down sprang. He escaped with a
scholarship to Michigan State. While pursuing a master's degree
in criminal justice and a doctorate in education, he started
a private security company. He first became aware of Young Boys
Inc. when several of its red-sweatsuit-clad members swaggered
into a concert at Joe Louis Arena in 1980.
</p>
<p> Taylor urges an all-out war on the poverty, poor schooling,
broken family structures and dire job prospects that make the
urban underclass a seedbed for crime. Unfortunately, such
prescriptions are not only familiar but also too expensive and
time consuming to attract much political support. Detroit is
already a case study of what happens when the conditions that
produce gangs are allowed to fester. Warns Taylor: "We need to
face up to the fact that there is a major crisis in this city."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>