Posted on Wed, Sep. 26, 2007
Police target S. Florida's Haitian gangs
Automatic weapons. Rule by committee. Power-bestowing amulets. And extreme violence.
These are some of the features that police say distinguish Haitian gangs from other criminal groups in South Florida's tide of youth violence.
A Miami-Dade grand jury recently indicted two members of the Terrorist Boys gang. Authorities blame them for a dozen murders and scores of shootings in a bloody rampage that rocked the northern part of the county in 2002-03.
Police say they dismantled the gang in a complicated investigation that locked up 15 members on various murder, attempted murder and gun charges.
Gangs have proved so fearsome that the Justice Department vowed in May to spend nearly $50 million this year to battle gangs and guns.
A month earlier, U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta unveiled a task force that aims to crack down on gangs from Miami-Dade to Fort Pierce.
Observers say Haitian gangs surfaced in South Florida in 1992, months after a military regime seized control of Haiti and set off an exodus of a few thousand. Within a few years, the Zoe Pound gang emerged as a brutal force in Little Haiti, waging street-level fights against black Americans.
These feuds still exist. Last year, Haitian-American and African-American youths squared off in a turf war in Deerfield Beach, prompting BSO to launch Operation Cease Fire.
But police say these inter-ethnic battles have become rare because of a shift in demographics. In North Miami Beach, for example, the Haitian community is the clear dominating minority in the area, police say.
Haitian gangs quietly rose to power because they eluded the public eye by not assuming the conventional signs of gangs, such as red and blue colors and hand signs, police say.
''If it's not traditional, you don't see it,'' said Jodi Schuster, a North Miami Beach police detective who has investigated street gangs for 15 years and was involved in the Terrorist Boys case.
Most Haitian gangs fight among themselves, moving along Interstate 95 to peddle drugs and do their battles.
Automatic rifles known as ''choppers'' are their weapon of choice.
Unlike other gangs, Haitian gangs rule by committee rather than with a leader, so the group doesn't suffer a setback if the leader gets taken out. Such a structure means everybody's the fall guy.
''Three people get into the car,'' said Alex Morales, a detective with the North Miami Beach police department.
``They're all told they've got to empty the gun. . . . You look at scenes and there are 50 casings on the ground. It takes only one bullet to kill somebody.''
Police say gangs do this so nobody gets off. It also lends a sense of credibility.
''It shows you're fully committed,'' said Carter Hickman, a crime intelligence analyst for the Florida Department of Corrections. ``Everybody has to participate in the crime in order to be a member in good standing.''
Morales said gang members -- mostly teenagers and men in their 20s -- keep an eye on him as he does undercover work.
''They do counter-surveillance on us,'' Morales said.
In their quest for taking over drug corners, Haitian gangs employ aspects of Vodou to stay strong.
Morales said he has stopped gang members carrying amulets and crosses. One time, he stopped a gang member carrying a $2 bill folded seven times -- a signal to keep the money coming.
Inside was a black square, which is supposed to render gang members invincible.