Document #1183698
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
According to an officer attached to the
Gang Information Unit at the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD),
the Mara Salvatrucha gang, whose members are commonly referred to
as "MS" by the city's various anti-gang police forces, has been
operating in Los Angeles for some fifteen years (4 Apr. 1995). It
is a "traditional" gang, that is, it is well known to police for
its involvement in various crimes and offences, including drug
trafficking, auto theft, assassination of rival gang members,
murder, rape, etc. (ibid).
According to the police officer, the Mara
Salvatrucha gang first emerged in the mainly Hispanic communities
in Los Angeles, such as the West Side and South East districts. It
reportedly has almost a thousand members who are now scattered
throughout Los Angeles. Each member is tattooed with the initials
"MS" on some body part (arm, forehead, stomach, back, etc.). The
initiation ritual within the Mara Salvatruchas involves receiving a
beating from the other members of the group, thereby demonstrating
courage and ruggedness for potential confrontations with rival gang
members (ibid).
According to an officer with the Violent
Gang Task Force attached to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service – INS in Los Angeles, the Mara Salvatrucha gang is
one of the largest and most violent in southern California (The
Guardian, 17 June 1994).The daily newspaper The
Guardian reports that some seventy Salvadoran gang members
were deported from the United States in 1993 and hundreds of others
also left the U.S. under deportation programs or by choice. The
newspaper did not specify, however, whether the deported
individuals were Mara Salvatrucha gang members or whether they were
deported to El Salvador (ibid).
According to an investigative specialist on
street gangs with the Gang Awareness Intervention Network who is
also an instructor at the California Youth Authority in San
Bernardino south of Los Angeles, the name "Mara Salvatrucha" is
derived from the name "Los Maravillosos" (i.e. the wonderful ones),
a former Latin American street gang active in Los Angeles, while
"salva" is a contraction of "Salvador" or "Salvadoran" and
"trucha," in Salvadoran slang, means someone or something
intimidating, to beware of (6 Apr. 1995).
According to the specialist, the average
age of Mara Salvatrucha gang members is between 20 and 30, but
there are also a considerable number of young members between 8 and
14 years old (ibid). According to the data available, the
investigative specialist assesses the current number of gang
members at about 2,500 (ibid).
There is no official recruitment method, as
such, within the group. Young people who want to join the gang are
looking for an escape from problems related to unemployment,
alcoholism and violence which are often characteristic of their
family situation. They find, in the gang, the support and help of
young people who come from the same country and whose families are
experiencing similar problems (ibid). Others join the gang after
illegally entering the United States as "couriers" or "mules" for
drug traffickers who do business with the Mara
Salvatruchas. Those who refuse to join the group receive
death threats (ibid).
According to the investigative specialist,
the Salvadorans deported from the United States who belong to the
Mara Salvatruchas have established a branch of the group in El
Salvador and perpetuate the violent confrontations with the
repatriated members of rival groups (Los Angeles 18th and 38th
Street gangs). Furthermore, they commit the same crimes they were
involved in when they lived in Los Angeles (see appended document
faxed by the specialist to the DIRB).
According to a sergeant of the L.A. County
Sheriff's Department attached to the Operation Safe Street
anti-gang unit, there are currently between 2,000 and 4,000 Mara
Salvatrucha gang members, known as "Truchies" (6 Apr. 1995).
Many Mara Salvatrucha gang members are
former Salvadoran soldiers or guerilla fighters who fled El
Salvador during the civil war and entered the United States
illegally. The gang is noted for the mobility of its members and
the extreme violence used in their criminal activities. Their
crimes range from trafficking of hard drugs, such as crack and
heroin, to armed robbery and motor vehicle theft, including
extortion of small business owners located on gang turf on whom the
group imposes a "protection tax" (ibid).
According to the sergeant, the structure of
the Mara Salvatrucha gang is different from that of gangs in other
large American cities such as New York or Chicago, which are based
on a specific chain of command in which the title (chief,
lieutenant, killer, etc.) represents the function and power held by
the individual within the gang. Individuals who have contact with
drug suppliers or who are charismatic are the true leaders of the
Mara Salvatruchas, according to the sergeant.
Similar to various other Los Angeles street
gangs, the Mara Salvatruchas are perpetually fighting turf wars
with rival gangs. According to the sergeant, their turf extends
from north of Highway 10 to Hollywood and downtown Los Angeles.
For further information on the Mara
Salvatruchas, please consult the attached documents.
This response was prepared by the DIRB on
the basis of publicly available information to which the DIRB was
able to have access within the prescribed timeframe. This response
does not purport to be an exhaustive study of the country under
review or to be conclusive as to the merits of any particular claim
to refugee status or asylum. You will find attached the list of
sources consulted during the research carried out for this
information request.
References
L.A. County Sheriff's Department,
Operation Safe Street anti-gang unit, Los Angeles, California, 6
April 1995. Telephone conversation with a sergeant.
California Youth Authority, Gang
Awareness Intervention Network, San Bernardino, California, 6 April
1995. Telephone conversation with an investigative specialist.
Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD),
Gang Information Unit, Los Angeles, California, 6 April 1995.
Telephone conversation with a police officer.
Gang Awareness Intervention Network, San
Bernardino, California, 6 April 1995. Letter sent to DIRB.
The Guardian, 17 June 1994,
Tracy Wilkinson. "Gang Violence Becomes Latest American Export."
(NEXIS)
Attached documents
Gang Awareness Intervention Network, San
Bernardino, California, 6 April 1995. Letter sent to DIRB.
The Guardian, 17 June 1994,
Tracy Wilkinson. "Gang Violence Becomes Latest American Export".
(NEXIS)
The Los Angeles Times, 25
December 1994, Yvette Cabrera. "The Fall of Lafayette Park".
(NEXIS)
______, 23 December 1994, Geoffrey
Mohan. "East Valley Focus: Van Nuys; Gang Suspect Held in Youth's
Slaying". (NEXIS)
______, 16 June 1994, Tracy Wilkinson.
"Gangs Find Fresh Turf in Salvador". (NEXIS)
______, 26 September 1993, Robert J.
Lopez and Jesse Katz. "Mexican Mafia Tells Gangs to Halt
Drive-Bys". (NEXIS)
______, 12 July 1992, Jesse Katz.
"Latino Gang Carnage is Part of an Invisible War; Violence:
Killings in the Barrios are Largely Ignored, Although They Claim
Twice as Many Lives as in Black Areas". (NEXIS)
The Ottawa Citizen, 24 November
1994, evening edition, Carlos Castilho. "Salvadorans Fear
Expatriates' Return". (NEXIS)