Report says violent prison gang got start in Costa Mesa
Greg Risling
One of the fastest-growing gangs in California prisons first came to
attention earlier this decade in Costa Mesa, according to a report
released Thursday by the Anti-Defamation League.
The Nazi Low Riders have mushroomed into a dangerous, jail-based gang of
white supremacists accounting for 80% of violent acts in state prisons,
the report says.
However, Costa Mesa police dispute the report’s findings that some of the
gang’s origins can be traced to Costa Mesa and that the gang continues to
flourish in the area.
“The Nazi Low Riders is a prison gang that wasn’t born nor was it
fostered in Costa Mesa,” said an emphatic Police Chief Dave Snowden. “We,
like other cities in Orange County, have had incidents with the gang.
“We have taken an aggressive stance against hate crimes here in Costa
Mesa. That type of crime just won’t be tolerated.”
The report, which was released at the Orange County Jail, said the gang
is part of a growing, hate-filled menace to the public. Although the
number of gang members remains a few hundred strong, some people fear the
power that an allegiance of white supremacist groups could harness.
“The potential threat of the [gang’s] alliance with other white
supremacist groups is alarming,” said Sue Stengel, the league’s legal
advisor for the western region. “The anger, hostility and racism of NLR’s
members make then perfect candidates to act as foot soldiers for the
racist agendas of these [other racist] organizations.”Costa Mesa police
maintain they have taken steps to monitor and eliminate activity among
white supremacists here. There were at least five incidents between 1996
and 1997 involving the Nazi Low Riders in Costa Mesa. In one incident,
five teenagers reported to be associated with the gang attacked a
12-year-old Latino boy with a metal pipe while he was playing a video
game in 1996. The five were sent to Orange County Juvenile Hall.
Unlike Latino gangs, white supremacist groups don’t claim “turf” and are
more transient, police said, adding that there are a handful of “low
riders” still living in Costa Mesa. Authorities know their whereabouts.
According to the report, the gang traces its roots to the Aryan
Brotherhood, a loosely knit white supremacist gang that got its start in
state prisons. The Nazi Low Rider name is derived from a common slang
phrase for Latino gang members.
Although relatively few hate crimes here seem to have been spawned by the
gang, the viciousness of each attack is horrendous. Members have been
involved in a number of brutal crimes including one in which a machete
was used on two African American teenagers in 1995 and another in March
when a Wal-Mart employee was bludgeoned with a hammer.
“What we are talking about are small groups that aren’t really
prevalent,” said Rusty Kennedy, the executive director of the Orange
County Human Relations Commission. “But their acts are really potent ...
the most vicious attacks you can imagine. Their intent is to drive out
and terrorize entire populations.”
While the racist ideology is one of the gang’s cornerstones, authorities
said the gang also manufactures methamphetamine and attempts to recruit
new members.
Where the gang has gained its notoriety is with its presence in the state
prison system. Prison officers have given the low riders a “disruptive
gang status” tag because of their influence on other white supremacist
groups and the amount of violence they cause within the prisons.
“Their ideology is white supremacy,” said Joyce Greenspan, regional
director for the defamation league. “It’s clear their mission is to have
only a white world, no matter what the cost.”
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