These people need housebreaking. 

REH

>From Military.com

The U.S. military is facing a "significant criminal threat" from gangs,
including prison and biker gangs, whose members have found their way into
the ranks, according to an FBI-led investigation.

Some gang members get into the military to escape the streets, but then end
up reconnecting once in, while others target the services specifically for
the combat and weapons training, the National Gang Intelligence Center says
in a just-released 2011 National Gang Threat Assessment/Emerging Trends.
<http://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/2011-national-gang-threat-as
sessment> 

Whatever the reasons, it's a bad mix.

""Gang members with military training pose a unique threat to law
enforcement personnel because of  their distinctive weapons and combat
training skills and their ability to transfer these skills to fellow gang
members," the report states. Gang members have been reported in every branch
of the armed forces, though a large proportion of them have been affiliated
with the Army, the Army Reserves or Army National Guard, it says.

The gang report is the third by the NGIC since 2005 and includes the most
information yet on gangs in the military. The 2005 report made no mention of
gang members in the armed forces, while the 2009 report devoted two
paragraphs to the problem and listed 19 gangs said to include
military-trained members.

The NGIC is a multi-agency operation -- federal, state and local - headed up
by the FBI to bring together intelligence on gangs and gang activity.

The latest report devotes four pages to the problem and lists about 50 gangs
with members with military backgrounds.

In the past three years, it states, law enforcement officials in more than
100 jurisdictions have encountered, detained or arrested a gang member who
was on active-duty or a former service member.

Younger gang members, who do not have arrest records, are reportedly making
attempts to join the military, and also attempting to conceal any gang
affiliation, including tattoos, during the recruitment process.

And given the large U.S. military footprint overseas, gangs and gang
dependents have found their way onto bases from Japan to Germany and
Afghanistan and Iraq, where the center recorded instances of gang graffiti
on military vehicles.

The report also specifically relates the 2010 cases of three former Marines
arrested in Los Angeles for selling illegal assault weapons the Florencia 13
gang, and a U.S. Navy SEAL charged in Colorado with smuggling
military-issued machine guns and other weapons from Iraq and Afghanistan
into the U.S.

"Gang members armed with high-powered weapons and knowledge and expertise
acquired from employment in law enforcement, corrections or the military may
pose an increasing nationwide threat, as they employ these tactics and
weapons against law enforcem4nt officials, rival gang members and
civilians," the NGIC report says.

The NGIC assessment is not the first to look at the rising problems of gang
members in the military. The Army's Criminal Investigation Division has done
a number of them over the years. It found the number of investigations of
gang-related violent crimes rising to 9 in 2005, after several years of
decline, with just 3 the year before.

Most Soldiers found linked to gangs are junior enlisted members, CID found.

"Overall, military communities continue to be a more stable, secure and
lawful environment than their civilian counterparts, especially given recent
access control and other security enhancements," Army CID concluded.

 

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