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Area incidents prompt probe of Native Mob

Officials look for payoff in sweep of violent Native American-based gang

Posted: January 27, 2012 - 10:03pm

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Members of the Native Mob gang have shot rivals in Minneapolis, sold drugs in Duluth, and thrown boiling water in a person’s face in Crow Wing County. Authorities say they’ve also assaulted an informant on the White Earth Indian Reservation and shot up houses from Cass Lake to Mille Lacs.

This week’s federal indictment of 24 suspected Native Mob members will disrupt the activity of one of Minnesota’s most violent gangs and could bring some communities a reprieve from violence, authorities said. But it likely won’t dismantle the organization — which is highly structured, active in prison, and wields power from the Twin Cities to reservations throughout Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.

“I consider Native Mob to be one of the most significant and problematic Native American-based gangs in the country, because of their organization ... their influence in so many communities and because of their clear propensity to engage in criminal behavior,” said Christopher Grant, a national Native American gang specialist in Rapid City, S.D.

The gang, made up of mostly American Indian men and boys, started in Minneapolis in the 1990s. Some of its original members were connected to another street gang, but broke off and formed their own group, Grant said.

The gang has about 200 members, according to the indictment, and is actively recruiting new ones, including kids.

Inspector Mike Martin, a gang expert with the Minneapolis Police Department, called the Native Mob one of the most violent gangs in Minnesota and said it is feared by other community members. He said the gang has been especially problematic on Indian reservations, which typically have fewer resources to deal with crime.

He said this week’s indictment — one of the largest gang-related indictments in Minnesota — will have an impact because of its scope. It contains 47 counts going back several years, and charges all 24 defendants with conspiracy to participate in racketeering, alleging they used violence and intimidation to keep the gang in power.

“One of the problems traditionally has been these individuals feel they can commit crimes in the city or on one reservation and then go hide in another reservation or another state,” Martin said. “I think the federal authorities and state authorities here have sent a message to them that you can run but you can’t hide and we will bring them to justice.”

The indictment paints a picture of a structured, violent gang that held monthly meetings where members encouraged the assault or murder of their enemies, including rival gang members, government witnesses, informants or anyone who showed disrespect.

While there are hundreds of American Indian gangs in the country, Grant said, most are loosely organized and might have as few as five members.

According to the indictment, the Native Mob is different. It’s led by a chief and a co-chief, who delegate and encourage criminal acts, maintain discipline, and facilitate meetings. Other leaders are responsible for duties such as responding to external threats or punishing those who disobey the gang’s rules and bylaws. And leaders from other regions represent their area at meetings.

New members need a current member to vouch for them, and members identify themselves through gang tattoos, clothing or jewelry. They also refer to each other by gang names or use the term “fam” — short for family, the indictment said.

The indictment shows a clear connection between gang members on the street and its members in prison. About half of the people indicted already were in custody, authorities said, and the indictment prompted a statewide prison lockdown to keep word about arrests from getting out.

According to the Department of Corrections, as of Dec. 30, 144 of the state’s 9,158 inmates had some affiliation with the Native Mob — with roughly 60 of those people classified as active members.

Don Rothstein, assistant director of Department of Corrections’ office of special investigations, said the Native Mob is one of many active, violent groups in the state’s prisons. Only about one-third of all inmates are affiliated with gangs, he said, yet that population accounts for about two-thirds of violent crimes inside prison walls.

Communication between gang members and the outside world is monitored but isn’t cut off entirely, Rothstein said, because part of a prisoner’s rehabilitation includes contact with family members and the outside world.

Bill Ziegler, president and chief executive of Little Earth of United Tribes, an American Indian housing community in Minneapolis, said his community is a gang-free zone, but the indictments will have an impact on violence in the surrounding neighborhood.

He said the American Indian community needs to use this break from violence to show kids other ways to feel a sense of belonging and protection.

“We failed these kids somewhere along the line,” he said. “We as a community better view this as maybe we have a little bit of a reprieve, a little bit of breathing room, and we better plug something in to replace gang violence.”

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Dave1958
0
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Dave1958 01/29/12 - 05:03 am
1
0

Indian's

The State let's them get away with this beahvior because they are scared of there treaty right's! which is B.S. We the whites better start to defend our country!!!!!!!!!!!!!

minnesnowda
18163
Points
minnesnowda 01/29/12 - 10:06 am
0
1

We whites better defend our country?

Please, this comment (along with the numerous spelling errors) make me feel like I am witnessing Bubba Land.

Gangs happen because of a lack of education, employment and opportunity. It does not matter what race the young people are, those factors impact them all.

lelandism
508
Points
lelandism 01/29/12 - 10:11 am
0
1

Get over it

Dave, treaty rights and gangs are about as closely related as meth labs and the Taliban. So put your sheet back on your moms bed and read a book for once. No one is going to join you in an insurgent uprising against the coalition forces of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe just so you can legally keep more walleyes. Area lakes are harmed more by zebra mussels and four-lane highways to the cities than by gill nets. I think gill nets should be banned but tourists are "taking over" a lot more than Indians.

What book? Glad you asked. Start with Aristotle's "Rhetoric" and learn how thin most political arguments are today and ask yourself why such basic skills as debate aren't part of elementary education.

lelandism
508
Points
lelandism 01/29/12 - 10:23 am
0
1

Gangs grow

Minnesnowda (gotta luv than name;~), kids are available to gangs because of "a lack of education, employment and opportunity" but casinos offer a different dynamic. Native kids can get education and employment - there are opportunities.

So, why don't they use them?

The Dave1958's of this world will insist that they don't because they are inferior. Ultra-liberals will insist they've had so much taken away and don't have enough given to them. Both have a point!

There are a lot of kids who choose to work the opportunities and it's a delight to watch them grow. But multi-generational poverty, fetal-alcohol affects, and some enabling are among the variables that hold many of them back.

pdnet15
15950
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pdnet15 01/29/12 - 03:04 pm
1
0

snow and lelend

I find it interesting how you defend the Indians by attacking Southern people. Bubba land and white sheets? You are no better than someone using the "N" word for a black, or "K" for Jewish people. Thank you for showing your true colors! And for those who want to continually say we stole the land, hardly. We stole it no more than the Ojibwe stole from the Sioux!

lelandism
508
Points
lelandism 01/29/12 - 09:57 pm
0
1

Victim Envy

pdnet15, I find it hilarious how you prove you have never studied rhetoric and probably never will. Had you done so you would never have used the lame "attack" routine so poorly. I did not attack anyone, least of all Southern people (implying ALL people who live in the Southeastern United States were 'victims' of my post). LaL

I made an association that you failed miserably to disprove or even meet with a relevant counter point.

I also find your powers of observation rather obvious when you spell "lelend" from "lelandism".

And I find your avoidance behavior rather telling when you are so eager to lay down your victim card that you fail to even consider the other points presented (aside from moral relativity of real estate acquisition).

Is it any surprise that so many people are duped by a dumbed-down media blitz and moronic political debate? America needs to start putting some effort into thought itself and quit being vacuumed up by the trends of fashionable stupidity.

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