The violent incidents last week capped a month of gang-related violence
that resulted in the shooting of three young men by fellow Latinos, none
of whom had taken part in the Pico Collaborative.
The most recent spree of violence -- which resulted in the fatal shooting
of an alleged West Los Angeles gang member in the Pico Neighborhood on
Dec. 27 -- came after a year-long lull in gang-related killings.
The violence had peaked in October of 1998, when all hell seemed to break
lose in the Pico Neighborhood. Despite a 43 percent decline in gang related
crimes from the previous year, a month-long gang war resulted in the death
of four men in little more than two weeks.
On October 12, Omar Sevilla, 22, was gunned down on Pico Boulevard near
Sixth Street. Five days later, a man chased Juan Martin Campos, 28, into
the back room of a liquor store on the corner of Pico and 20th Street,
gunning him down.
On October 27, two brothers, Michael Juarez, 27, and Anthony Juarez,
19, were shot and killed inside a clothing store on the 2200 block of
Lincoln Boulevard in the early afternoon.
The following month, outraged residents took to the streets for a candlelight
vigil organized by de la Torre to protest the violence. That same month
Lares, then a field representative for former state senator Tom Hayden
and founder of the Santa Monica chapter of Barrios Unidos, had brokered
a peace treaty between the warring Santa Monica and Culver City gangs
that had been implicated in the four fatal shootings.
|
|
Osca de la Torre |
Manuel Lares |
Santa Monica High School Class of 1991
Childhood friends and public school classmates, Lares and de la Torre
had witnessed first hand the madness of gang life. De la Torre recalls
the Pico Neighborhood of his youth as a place wracked by crack cocaine,
which became widely available in the 1980s.
"Crack cocaine destroyed the neighborhood," said de la Torre.
"Either you were addicted to the money or addicted to the drug."
Lares recalled years of walking down the street in fear that he might
be killed in an area where residents existed instead of lived.
"The neighborhood was, like, to me the only thing I knew,"
Lares said. "There was a lot of violence, a lot of scary nights being
on the street. You were susceptible to the streets. There were things
done to me and my property. I had to survive
My thing was trying
to get to the next stage. I was trying to figure out how to survive."
De la Torre found support in several programs aimed at helping young
people, including the John Rossi Support Center, a privately funded organization
that closed in 1989 following Rossi's death. "He helped me a lot,"
de la Torre said.
In their senior year at Santa Monica High School, de la Torre and Lares
became active in Youth in Action (formerly Kid City), a City-funded outreach
program designed to give young people a voice, support and mentorship.
The program worked. The city's older, disenfranchised youth began speaking
out, actively challenging a teen curfew promoted by the Santa Monica Police
Department and approved by the City Council. The group produced a newsletter,
which in one issue discussed, among other things, condom use.
But within two years, the City cut off funding. Youth in Action was dead.
"It wasn't closed down right away," said Lares, one of the
program's first youth mentors. "It was slowly dismantled, kind of
like this fiasco we're in right now. There were a lot of empty windows
and a lot of false promises."
De la Torre, a passionate and intense man, helped plan Youth in Action
while he served as SAMOHI's student body president in 1990, the first
Latino to hold the elected position since 1948. But it was Lares, who
reaped many of the benefits.
"Manny ended up participating [in Youth in Action] more than I did,"
de la Torre said. "I went off to college."
At Chico State, de la Torre -- whose older brothers and sisters had dropped
out of school -- studied politics and as a senior was elected as that
school's first Latino student body president. A master's degree in political
affairs at the University of Texas at Austin followed, along with an offer
to work on higher education policy for the Texas legislature.
But instead of jumping at the chance de la Torre came back to Santa Monica
and the Pico Neighborhood, taking a position as an outreach specialist
at his alma mater through the school district's Alliance Program, which
offers outreach to SAMOHI students. He left the position at the end of
the 1999/2000 school year to focus full-time on Proyecto Adelante.
While de la Torre was in college, Lares quit SMC and received a hands
on education organizing programs to serve youth in housing projects throughout
Los Angeles County. A straight talker, Lares cites two key events as "epiphanies"
that led him to try to raise up the community he grew up in.
One day as a high school student, Lares got into an argument with a police
officer in class. The cop demanded to know why Lares had to "live
like that." A livid Lares in turn questioned the officer about his
lifestyle. The argument left Lares railing against the system -- and himself.
He started organizing.
Not long after that "something happened and I had to create a relationship
with someone from a different neighborhood that I didn't like," he
said. "We were able to mediate with the four warring gangs in West
L.A. We were able to call it quits on all life-taking acts
Between
'92 and '98 a lot of people's lives were saved.
"I [realized] I didn't have to turn my back on my neighborhood,"
Lares said. "That transitioned me from a person who caused chaos
to someone who caused peace."
Today Lares heads the Santa Monica chapter of Barrios Unidos (United
Neighborhoods), a national organization that works to keep kids out of
gangs through job training and activities. Unlike the two other groups
in the collaborative Santa Monica Barrios Unidos was established four
years before the City's request for proposal process and receives money
from a number of private foundations.
Although he lived in the same neighborhood and attended the same high
school, Ed Bell grew up in the Pico Neighborhood during an earlier more
peaceful time. Bell won't tell you how old he is, but he will tell you
that life in the Pico Neighborhood was different when he was coming up.
"It never came to the point of deadly force of people shooting each
other," the former SAMOHI football player recalled.
Tall, muscular and affable Bell remembers more options being offered
to the young people in his neighborhood. Like de la Torre, Bell participated
in programs offered by the John Rossi Center, and many of his friends
took part in the city-funded Cedar Program, which placed teens in city
jobs. While Bell did not take part in the program, as an adult he landed
a job with the City's Water Department.
But if life was less violent, the former Santa Monica College student
also recalls that it wasn't easy. "I didn't grow up with a silver
spoon in my mouth," Bell said. "I came up from the bottom."
Bell's mother was single and worked two jobs to support Ed and his sister.
"She never missed work. She had a great impact on me," Bell
said. "I ended up buying my own home. Now she doesn't work."
When Bell was 18, his mother introduced him to the Santa Monica Christian
Center. She asked him to attend the church for one month. If he didn't
like it, he never needed to go again.
Bell is now a deacon and president of the board of directors of the church,
which Pico Collaborative used as its headquarters.
It was in the spacious downstairs room of the church on Pico Boulevard
that Bell first met de la Torre. The men brought together the families
of two teenage boys - one black and one Latino -- who had been involved
in a shooting.
Months later they would join Lares and 28 other representatives of service
agencies vying for a planning grant offered by the City to bring programs
to the older youth of the Pico Neighborhood.
Tomorrow: The Pico Collaborative is born. |