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Post by Rattboy on Feb 20, 2011 8:38:36 GMT -8
dumb ass lil puppet from lvl is in the news again...
A drive by in Grandview sends a man to the hospital. It happened around 6 p.m. on the 100 Block of Birch St. Grandview Police say 21 year old Luis Flemate was walking in the area when someone drove by and fired multiple shots. Flemate was shot several times in the leg and taken to the hospital. There are no suspects at this time and police believe this is gang related.
should of stayed dead after he faked his death a couple years back LOL what a stupid ass kid...too bad he only got shot in the leg
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Post by theken206 on Feb 20, 2011 15:29:20 GMT -8
hahahahahah^ clownin dogg
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Post by Brad on Feb 20, 2011 21:17:38 GMT -8
I remember that, his family sent me death threats for calling him out on the net that he faked his death. LOL.
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Post by Brad on Feb 24, 2011 21:25:00 GMT -8
Gang-related stabbing reported in Yakima 02/24/2011
YAKIMA, Wash. -- A young man was stabbed in the abdomen Thursday afternoon in the parkway along South Naches Avenue.
His age and condition were not immediately available, however police took another male into custody.
Police said the victim was in the parkway south of Walnut Street with a group of others when they were approached by gang members. It was not immediately clear what prompted the stabbing.
The victim was taken to local hospital.
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Post by Brad on Mar 1, 2011 8:15:26 GMT -8
BENTON COUNTY SEES GANGS HEADED ITS WAY
KENNEWICK, Wash.—Sheriff Steve Keane said Benton County needs an anti-gang team to be ready for criminal gangs as they move into the Tri-Cities.
An estimated 1,000 gang members representing 30 gangs already are here, Keane said.
The sheriff told county commissioners Monday that it would cost $370,719 to assemble a team of five sheriff’s officers, including a supervising sergeant, to be ready for the inevitable gang invasion.
The sheriff said two of his officers did an assessment of the gang problem in Yakima County communities to get an idea of what to expect in Benton County.
They learned:
• Half of Sunnyside’s police resources are used to combat gang activities.
• Yakima had 17 gang-related homicides in 2010, while the Tri-Cities had one suspected gang-related homicide.
• There were 52 drive-by shootings in the Lower Valley, not including Yakima, last year. Benton and Franklin counties had 15.
• Yakima County spends $7.3 million a year housing gang members in its jail, which includes about 225 gang-related inmates on any given day. Benton County’s annual jail spends about $2.5 million to house about 50 gang members a day.
• Sunnyside Hospital incurred about $4 million in indigent care expenses treating victims of 39 gunshot victims in 2010, most of which were believed to be the result of gang activity.
While the problem in Benton County isn’t near what it is in Yakima or other Lower Valley communities, Keane said the gangs are moving east toward the Tri-Cities.
To wait until the gang problem is evident is too late, he said.
"The biggest threat to our community is gangs, for safety and the (other) affects to our communities. It is a growing problem," the sheriff said.
Keane said Yakima County’s communities are looking for any way possible to push the gang activity out of their areas, which could bring the problem to Benton County.
"So with more pressure on gangs in Yakima, they might come here?" Commission Chairman Leo Bowman asked.
"Yes, that is expected," said Keane, noting that Sunnyside officials are trying to use a housing law that would prevent known gang members from being able to rent housing in the city.
"Violent gangs are already here. How do we respond before it’s too late?" Keane asked.
He said the gang team would be a start.
It would have one sergeant and a deputy recruited from current employees, plus three deputies to be hired, and two cars bought specifically for the team.
"A lot of experience and oversight is needed. (The team) has to be able to move quickly in teams of two," the sheriff said.
Keane said the offensive move against gangs will be a comprehensive approach to intervene, suppress and prevent gang activity. And it will rely on community partnerships to develop resources for getting people out of gangs through education and encouragement.
Kennewick Police Chief Ken Hohenberg said a gang team is the right approach because his department has seen success by being proactive on gang-related crime.
"We hear that gang members don’t like coming to Kennewick because we have a reputation of arresting them," Hohenberg told the commissioners.
Keane’s request for the gang team funding comes two months after he took office.
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Post by Brad on Mar 11, 2011 20:48:16 GMT -8
LITTLE VALLEY LOKOTE GETS 88 YEARS FOR HOMICIDE
YAKIMA, Wash.— A Lower Valley man was sentenced this morning to more than 88 years in prison in connection with a driveby shooting last summer in Sunnyside.
Raul Alvarez, 18, was separately sentenced to 43 months for helping conceal the identity of a vehicle that was used to flee from the scene of a shooting that killed a 15-year-old.
Both prison terms will run at the same time.
Alvarez was charged in connection to the July 17 death of David Baldonado, as well as a drive-by shooting that did not hurt any of the targeted gang rivals earlier that month.
Alvarez, who police say has connections with gangs, was sentenced to 1,065 months in prison during a Friday morning appearance in Yakima County Superior Court.
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Post by Rattboy on Mar 12, 2011 7:49:12 GMT -8
Thats what he gets, fuckin coward...RIP lil David,justice is being served for you my friend.
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Post by Brad on Mar 12, 2011 12:09:30 GMT -8
Ive been seeing online that a LVL named David "Filero" Castro committed suicide yesterday or the day before I think. Hella people are commenting on my MySpace/Facebook pages.
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Post by Rattboy on Mar 12, 2011 17:03:48 GMT -8
hmm where is he from?
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Post by Brad on Mar 12, 2011 18:10:16 GMT -8
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Post by Brad on Mar 14, 2011 9:03:50 GMT -8
Yet another shooting in Sunnyside, teenage girl shot while sleeping. The news said her brothers were gang members, most likely they were the target.
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Post by Brad on Mar 14, 2011 15:45:16 GMT -8
MULTIPLE SHOOTINGS ROCK THE LOWER VALLEY OVER NIGHT/ THIS MORNING.
SUNNYSIDE, Wash. — Sunnyside police are investigating two Monday morning shootings, one that struck a 16-year-old girl while she lay in bed.
At about 12:45 a.m., police received a call about shots fired in the 1100 block of Tacoma Avenue near Sunnyside Community Hospital. Officers determined multiple shots were fired from a nearby alley with an assault rifle, said Charlotte Hinderlider, a police spokeswoman. They believe the suspects were riding in a dark-colored, foreign-built sedan.
The 16-year-old was struck in the back, Hinderlider said. She is being treated at a local hospital.
Police would not disclose the girl’s name, but she was not likely the target of the shootings, Hinderlider said. She is a good student who faithfully attends school, Hinderlider said.
However, she lives with brothers who detectives believe are gang members, Hinderlider said.
Within a few minutes of the Tacoma shooting, officers responded to a report of shots fired in the 700 block of Bagley Drive near Sierra Vista Middle School.
Nobody was struck or otherwise injured, but investigators concluded bullets from a similar rifle struck a residence multiple times.
Those with information about the case, especially the suspect vehicle, are asked to call Sunnyside police at 509-836-6200.
Grandview Police, Washington State Patrol troopers and the Yakima County Sheriff’s deputies assisted.
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TOPPENISH, Wash.—A 22-year-old Zillah man was shot in the shoulder about two miles northwest of this Lower Valley city early this morning.
Alejandro Arreola was parked along North Track Road near Winaway Road between 4:00 and 4:30 a.m. when another car pulled up, Yakima County Sheriff’s Office Chief Criminal Deputy Stew Graham said. The victim got out of his car and was shot before the other car sped off, staff at Toppenish Community Hospital told a sheriff’s deputy. The victim was conscious and alert but unable to provide any additional details, Graham said.
He was shot in his upper left shoulder, and his injuries do not appear life-threatening. His wife, who was with him during the incident, drove him to the hospital, Graham said.
Around the same time there was another Lower Valley shooting, this one handled by Yakama Nation Tribal Police, which has not responded to a call seeking comment.
Yakima Sheriff’s Office Chief Civil Deputy Dave Thompson said a man about 38 years old was shot in the lower leg, but he did not know anything else about the tribal agency’s case.
Yakima County deputies are also investigating an overnight drive-by shooting in which nobody was hit at a house on the corner of Buena Way and McDonald Road just north of Toppenish. The house has a history of trouble, Graham said.
"We don’t know how to count the bullet holes, because you can’t tell the old ones from the new ones," he said.
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OUTLOOK, Wash.—Four known gang members are in custody in connection with a drive-by shooting early this morning in which a home in Outlook was hit by multiple bullets.
The shooting happened at 4:15 a.m. on First Avenue, targeting a home with known ties to gang activities, Yakima County sheriff’s Sgt. Mike Russell said in a news release.
Seven people including several children were sleeping inside, and several of the occupants narrowly missed being struck by bullets, according to the release.
Several minutes later a sheriff’s deputy just outside Zillah spotted a car matching the one involved in the shooting.
"The deputy turned around, caught up to and eventually stopped the vehicle," according to the news release.
Four men with gang ties were inside but no guns. Deputies returned to the place in the road where the car was first spotted and found three guns, including an SKS assault rifle with mounted bayonet, on the shoulder. Along with the SKS rifle were a scoped .22-caliber rifle and a .40-caliber semiautomatic handgun.
Two of the weapons were determined to be stolen. All of them will be investigated for ties to previous shootings in the area.
Those arrested were a 32-year-old man from Granger, a 28-year-old man from Grandview, a 20-year-old man from Granger and an 18-year-old believed to be from the Spokane area. All of them were booked into the Yakima County jail on suspicion of felony assault, drive-by shooting.
The oldest three also may face charges for being felons in possession of guns. The 32-year-old has eight felony convictions. The 28-year-old and 20-year-old have three felony convictions apiece.
The suspects names are as follows- Nicholas James, Armando Lopez, Jamie Lopez and Jesus Mancilla.
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Post by Ese-Serio on Mar 14, 2011 21:49:06 GMT -8
gang life is just fucked up.
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Post by Rattboy on Mar 15, 2011 5:40:07 GMT -8
no shit huh,makes you think maybe you should change your life around or u can be like me and send letters to your best friend for the rest of his life in prison...
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206
New Member
Posts: 48
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Post by 206 on Mar 15, 2011 17:22:04 GMT -8
wonder who would win if there was a war between all the gangsters in yakima vs tacoma vs seattle lol
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