Exclusive: Gangs Spreading In The Military
CBS News exclusive investigation: Gang activity is is known to be on
the rise in the U.S. military, concerning civilian and military
authorities alike. Thalia Assuras has the story.
Basic training to learn all about America's fighting force.
(CBS) U.S. Army Sgt. Juwan Johnson got a hero's welcome while home on
leave in June of 2004.
"Not only did I love my son - but my god - I liked the man he was
becoming," his mother, Stephanie Cockrell, remembers.
But that trip home was the last time his family saw him alive.
When Johnson died, he wasn't in a war zone, he was in Germany.
"He had finished his term in Iraq," his mother said. "I talked to him
the day before his death. He said, 'Mom, I'm in the process of
discharging out. I'll be out in two weeks'."
On July 3, 2005, Sgt. Johnson went to a park not far from his base in
Germany to be initiated into the 'Gangster Disciples,' a notorious
Chicago-based street gang. He was beaten by eight other soldiers in a
"jump-in" - an initiation rite common to many gangs.
"My son never spoke of joining a gang," Cockrell told CBS News
correspondent Thalia Assuras.
Johnson died that night from his injuries. His son, Juwan Jr., was born
five months later.
"I feel like I didn't prepare him enough to deal with this and I should
have," his mother said. "But how would I have known there were gangs in
the military? I could have had that talk with him."
Evidence of gang culture and gang activity in the military is
increasing so much an FBI report calls it "a threat to law enforcement
and national security." The signs are chilling: Marines in gang attire
on Parris Island; paratroopers flashing gang hand signs at a nightclub
near Ft. Bragg; infantrymen showing-off gang tattoos at Ft. Hood.
"It's obvious that many of these people do not give up their gang
affiliations," said Hunter Glass, a retired police detective in
Fayetteville, North Carolina, the home of Ft. Bragg and the 82nd
Airborne. He monitors gang activity at the base and across the military
"If we weren't in the middle of fighting a war, yes, I think the
military would have a lot more control over this issue," Glass said.
"But with a war going on, I think it's very difficult to do."
Gang activity clues are appearing in Iraq and Afghanistan, too. Gang
graffiti is sprayed on blast walls – even on Humvees. Kilroy – the
doodle made famous by U.S. soldiers in World War II – is here, but so
is the star emblem of the Gangster Disciples.
The soldier who took photos if the graffiti told CBS News that he's
been warned he's as good as dead if he ever returns to Iraq.
"We represent America – our demographics are the same – so the same
problems that America contends with we often times contend with," said
Colonel Gene Smith of the Army's Office of the Provost Marshal.
The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command reported 61 gang
investigations and incidents last year, compared to just 9 in 2004. But
army officials point out less than 1 percent of all its criminal
investigations are gang related.
"We must remember that there are a million people in the army
community," Smith said, "And these small numbers are not reflective of
a tremendous, pervasive, rampant problem."
The rise in gang activity coincides with the increase in recruits with
records. Since 2003, 125,000 recruits with criminal histories have been
granted what are known as "moral waivers" for felonies including
robbery and assault.
A hidden-camera investigation by CBS Denver station KCNC found one
military recruiter was quick to offer the waiver option even when
asked, "Does it matter that i was in a gang or anything?" That is well
within military regulations.
"You may have had some gang activity in your past and everything ... OK
... but that in itself does not disqualify...," the recruiter said.
Military regulations disqualify members of hate groups from enlisting,
but there is no specific ban on members of street gangs. Sgt. Juwan
Johnson's family says such a prohibition is long overdue.
"Just maybe we can save someone else's child ... somebody else's
husband ... somebody else's father," his mother said. "I would have
loved to have seen him with his child, I really would have -- that part
is hard, that part is hard."
This month a military court sentenced two of Juwan Johnson's attackers
to prison.
Original
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