Jumped in Excerpt
Jumped in Excerpt
Jumped in Excerpt
“It’s rough out there,” Screech tells me, “I gotta protect myself.”
It is spring 2008. In the past six weeks two more gang members have
been killed. Screech—who asks me to call him by his “real” name, Kevin
Williams—has taken to traveling with a gun, strapped, everywhere he
goes. He is also jumpy, erratic, and quick to anger. When I tell him to
leave his gun at home, he stops talking to me. Three days pass without
my seeing him. Instead, my cell phone rings at all hours with calls from
his wife, Elena.
“I’m so worried about Kevin,” she tells me, her voice pitched high
with anxiety. “I wake up in the middle of the night and he is standing
at the window, staring out at the street. I tell him to come to bed, but
he won’t come. Sometimes he leaves—I don’t know where he is going.”
All this is happening at the start of a major evaluation project. I have
teamed up with two brilliant colleagues at UCLA, Todd Franke and
Tina Christie, to design a longitudinal study of former gang members
who come to Homeboy Industries for help. The three of us have just
been awarded enough money from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora
Haynes Foundation to fund the first two years of what will be a five-year
study. Julio Marcial, who has the soul of a researcher, ultimately comes
through with funding from the California Wellness Foundation to help
121
122 jumped in
with the remaining three years. It is a dream come true. But now the
real work begins.
I meet Kevin Williams during the proposal-planning stage of the
study, and he quickly involves me in all aspects of his life—gang activity,
love, and danger. He is talkative and funny, with mocha-colored skin
and gray-green eyes, the star of a gang-intervention class sponsored by
the Los Angeles County Department of Human Relations. “Spread-
ing Seeds” is a popular course with an unfortunate title: half its attend-
ees have already fathered multiple babies. But oddly enough, its blend
of new age mysticism and indigenous teachings appeals to homies,
whether black or brown. Kevin attempts, carefully, to explain the class
to me.
“I’m learnin’ that to move beyond the present, you gotta understand
the past—and the oppression of people of color.” But when I ask Kevin
about his personal history, the radical speak suddenly disappears.
“I guess I’m seein’ I always wanted a family,” he admits. “I never
met my father. I know who he is. He was a Black Panther. Then he got
locked up. I could find him but I don’t wanna. There’s nothin’ he could
do for me right now. When I was comin’ up there was no older figures
except who I met on the streets. They were gangbangin’ and stuff—I
learned their trade, I could see they were makin’ money offa drugs, but
I wasn’t sure this was what I was gonna do. But they were kinda my
family, ya feel me, that was it. I didn’t have anythin’ else.”
Kevin is one of my lost boys—he belongs to no one, not his neigh-
borhood, not even himself. Although he tells me he is an Eight Tray
Gangsta Crip, he shows no signs of the blind allegiance to the gang I
have witnessed in so many others. He reassures me that he is free to
talk with me “any night,” offering to drive to UCLA and meet on my
turf. He defies the stereotype of the gang member—if such an individual
even exists.
Criminal justice experts, law enforcement professionals, and poli-
cymakers have worked overtime to define gangs and describe gang
members. Ultimately, most agree that a gang consists of any group that
gathers together on an ongoing basis to “engage in antisocial or criminal
activities.” When determining the minimum size for gang activity, the
magic number is usually set at three. Gang members “identify with one
the lost boys 123
“This happens all the time,” Carol Biondi tells me when I ask her
about Kevin. She is my go-to person with good reason. Despite her well-
groomed beauty, affluence, and Hollywood connections, Carol is the
full-time watchdog of the Los Angeles County Department of Proba-
tion. She walks the camps and halls, organizes a Saturday newspaper
class at Camp David Gonzales, harangues authorities, reviews legisla-
tion, and serves on the LA County Children’s Commission. She is the
real deal.
“You get a kid who’s in the child welfare system,” Carol explains.
“They say something inappropriate and they get labeled a delinquent.
In this case Kevin mouthed off to the cops and they decided he belonged
in Probation. It’s that simple. And that wrong.”
“That’s how I caught my first juvenile probation case,” Kevin con-
firms, “for doin’ nothin’.”
One thing is obvious: somewhere along the line his mother ceded
Kevin’s parenting to the County of Los Angeles. “There’s no one gonna
be there for these children,” Big Mike has already warned me, and Kevin
is living proof. As I get to know him, I see that the all-too-familiar pat-
tern took hold once he was released from juvenile detention.
“I get home and I’m livin’ in one neighborhood territory of the
Eight Tray Gangstas—ETGs—but I’m supposed to go to my school
in 67 NHC territory. And I got big problems. I’m not in the neighbor-
hood—but it’s where I’m from and people just see that. And I feel like
I’m kinda part of them.”
In this alphabet soup of the absurd, Kevin faces multiple threats.
The ETGs command the largest black gang territory in LA—a little
over two and half square miles of real estate in South Los Angeles. As
part of this, there is ongoing conflict between the ETGs and the Rol-
lin 60s Crips dating back to 1979. This rivalry extends to all “Rollin
Os” gangs and to all “NeighborHood” (NH) gangs including the 67
NeighborHood Crips (67 NHC) whose turf contains Kevin’s middle
school. Despite continuing efforts to negotiate peace treaties, the rivalry
remains lethal.
“People were jammin’ me up all the time, askin’ me, ‘Where you
from?’ I had to answer, and I got so I could get along with everyone.
I didn’t wanna belong to a neighborhood, I just wanted to get along.”
Kevin chose street diplomacy as his problem-solving strategy.
the lost boys 125
The smarter homies, like Kevin, often possess some sort of personal
charisma rendering them capable of crossing boundaries. Despite claims
about how strongly the neighborhoods cleave to geography, there are
always the informal ambassadors who can negotiate the lines of gang
territory. Their acceptance, however unstable, depends on force of per-
sonality and the ability not to offend anyone. But there is a price to be
paid. Acceptance can be revoked at a moment’s notice. And, if you can
cross boundaries and be a “get along guy,” you are never going to move
up the food chain of the neighborhood. It’s the shooters who do well, the
guys who are willing to kill.
“There’s soldiers and there’s talkers,” Big Mike has told me.
It’s clear that Kevin is a talker. So is Ronny, who explains his ability
to go beyond borders in the neighborhoods.
“I had the love of my hood but I wasn’t gonna give up on friends
who claimed other neighborhoods—they were my brothers too. I told
the people in my hood the truth, I wouldn’t leave my friends.” Unlike
Ronny, Kevin does not blatantly declare his independence. Instead, he
uses a different strategy to “get along.”
“I was cool with people from warring neighborhoods ’cuz I could
do stuff, fixin’ cars, installin’ radios. This guy, Larry Walls, taught me
mechanics and computers. He and his wife were there for me. If I had
a problem they would come to the school. I wrote down they were my
grandparents on my emergency card.”
Kevin is inventive—what does not exist, he creates. He makes the
Walls his family. But Larry dies suddenly, there is no insurance, and his
widow goes to live with her daughter in another state.
“Yeah. That’s what happened. All of a sudden, I’m alone.”
Then, Kevin is shot. He is precise about when. Most homies keep
time by their arrests and lockups. It is childhood milestones courtesy of
the juvenile justice system. There are no photographs or report cards or
bronzed baby shoes here. Few gang members possess a social security
card, and their birth certificates are misplaced, lost. Some are undocu-
mented. Kevin’s only scrapbook is his body. He recalls his ages via scars
that bullets have left.
“I got hit when I was seventeen. After I got shot, I couldn’t go back
to school. I was at Jordan High but my enemies were there so I got put
on a home-study program. I tried home study for a minute.”
126 jumped in
In jail Kevin earned his high school diploma. But once he’s dis-
charged, he can’t find a job. Scrambling for a place to live, Kevin needs
money. He starts selling crack and weed.
“I had to make a livin’,” he tells me defensively. “Then one night at
my brother’s house I saw Homeboy on MTV. A light bulb came on and
I rushed down to see Father Greg—I remembered him from camp. I
started workin’ and I met my girlfriend, Elena. We were together for a
month. Then I had to go back into jail. I went somewhere that I coulda
avoided. Instead I listened to my homies—from the neighborhood.”
This is a story I hear again and again—wrong place, wrong time—and
the pull of the gang. Kevin was locked up again, for a violation of his
probation, serving five months. When he was released, he returned to
Homeboy Industries and married Elena.
“I know it’s not all perfect. I know what I got against me,” Kevin
says, thoughtful. “I wanna make money. This makes me wanna do cer-
tain things, like slangin’ or goin’ back to the neighborhood, that I gotta
fight within myself. It’s strange—I gotta fight myself to be a man.”
I hear an echo in Kevin’s words. My other lost boy, Ronny, could be
Kevin Williams’s twin—except he is a Blood and Kevin is a Crip. Still,
each possesses all the pieces that should lead to success, but nothing
comes together. Both are charismatic, charming, and very smart. Both
have long-term relationships with women who provide them with sta-
bility and financial security. And yet something is missing.
A month later, Ronny comes to work at Homeboy and immediately
endears himself to the staff. Hector Verdugo, the head of security at
Homeboy, takes him under his wing, suggesting that the two of them go
to school together. When I ask Hector if he is serious, he laughs.
“I can see the two of us holding hands, skipping along, at community
college, then at UCLA. You can help us get in.”
Hector then quietly adds, “No, I mean it. I’m serious.”
I want to believe him. The idea of Hector, the responsible leader
from the Homeboy management staff, studying alongside Ronny, the
favorite son of the Bounty Hunter Bloods—is irresistible. I ask Hector
why he has chosen Ronny.
“He’s just so fuckin’ smart,” Hector tells me. “And he can get along
with everyone.”
the lost boys 129
“I’m workin’ at the bakery, I’m feelin’ good. I’m workin’ on my rap
CD. Now all I gotta do is get into school. Things are gonna get better,
Jorja, I feel it.”
I smile and tell him that this all sounds good, that I am happy for him
and for Elena. It’s one of the first times I don’t feel it.