Varrio Nuevo Estrada

Varrio Nuevo Estrada 13
Founded1940s[1]
Founding locationBoyle Heights, Los Angeles, California, United States
Years active1940s–present
TerritoryEast Los Angeles
EthnicityChicano (Mexican American)
ActivitiesMurder, drug trafficking, racketeering, extortion, assaults, drive-by shootings and illegal gambling
AlliesMexican Mafia
Sureños
RivalsWhite Fence[2]

Varrio Nuevo Estrada, also known as VNE13,[3][4][5] is a Chicano criminal street gang founded in Boyle Heights, California, in the Estrada Courts housing projects. VNE is one of 34 gangs in a 15-square-mile area east of downtown Los Angeles.

History

Varrio Nuevo Estrada formed in the housing project community of Estrada Courts in Boyle Heights after the government relocated many poor families into the area in the early 1940s.[1] Today VNE is still one of the most prominent Hispanic gangs in eastside of Los Angeles.[1]

Location

Varrio Nuevo Estrada has expanded to other local communities such as East Los Angeles, Montebello, and Lancaster. VNE cliques include the Tiny Winos, Tiny Locos, Devils, Ninos, Chicos, Cutdowns, Dukes, Tiny Dukes, Tiny Gangsters, Termites, Santos, Spantos, and Malos in Estrada Courts, Tick Tocks, and Tiny Locos in Montebello, Primos in Lancaster and Rosamond and Southill which sits in parts of Montebello, Bell Gardens and Downey. They are primarily a Los Angeles County gang and there is no validated evidence of subgroups outside of Southern California.

Culture

Varrio Nuevo Estrada places great admiration on those that have died in the Varrio. One well known example of this is the mural in memory of one such VNE member located at 3328 Hunter Street in Boyle Heights.[6] The artist, Daniel Martinez, painted the mural in 1973. Like many other gangs they place a great deal of importance on respect, loyalty and trustworthiness. They have old ties to the Mexican Mafia and unite under the Sureño banner in the California Prison System despite rivalries.

Criminal activity

Varrio Nuevo Estrada is so notorious that the Los Angeles City Attorney petitioned the court for a permanent gang injunction against them on November 15, 2004.[7] Even with the gang injunction, VNE continues to exert influence in their respective territories. They are still involved in a variety of criminal activities from murder,[8] arms trafficking, drug sales to drive-by shootings, assaults and various other petty crimes.[9] Like most other street gangs, Varrio Nuevo Estrada gets the majority of its income from street level narcotics distribution.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Vigil, J. D. (2002). A rainbow of gangs: street cultures in the mega-city. (p. 52-53). Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
  2. ^ People v. Galarze leagle.com (January 3, 2011)
  3. ^ Moore, J. W. (1991). Going down to the barrio: homeboys and homegirls in change. (pp. 35). Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
  4. ^ Bag, A. (2011). Violence girl: East L.A. rage to Hollywood stage, a chicana punk story. (p. 66). Port Townsend, WA: Feral House.
  5. ^ "VNE - What does VNE stand for? Acronyms and abbreviations by the Free Online Dictionary". acronyms.thefreedictionary.com. 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2012.
  6. ^ Puchalsky, R. (Photographer). (2002). In memory of a home boy. [Web Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.grconnect.com/murals/html/r10img2121.html
  7. ^ City of Los Angeles, City Attorne'ys Office. (2004). People of the state of California v. Varrio Nuevo Estrada. Retrieved from Los Angeles City Attorney website: http://atty.lacity.org/stellent/groups/electedofficials/@atty_contributor/documents/contributor_web_content/lacityp_006702.pdf
  8. ^ Alonso, Alex (2007). "Another Gang Related Shooting Murder and a $25,000 Reward Offered by Nick Pacheco". streetgangs.com. Retrieved January 23, 2012.
  9. ^ CNN Staff Writer. (2011, March 23). L.a. police identify baseball fan beating suspect as gang member. CNN News. Retrieved from [1]