-Caveat Lector-

Asian Street Gangs and
Organized Crime in Focus

A Rising Threat From the Far East

On February 9th of this year, two young men of a criminal bent burst through
the doors of the Chinatown Community Center at 250 W. 22nd Street and
threatened the directors, Mark Lee and Houlin Li, with physical harm unless
they immediately agreed to cancel a neighborhood festival which they deemed
objectionable. The two offenders identified as members of the Hip Sing and
On Leong organizations were arrested later that day by Chicago Police
assigned to the 21st District, and charged with acts of intimidation.
Seventeen other men were picked up for similar offenses at the Chinese New
Year celebration in this secular, highly insulated community where
close-mouthed secrecy prevails.

Behind the pleasing facade of Asian restaurants, bakeries, herbal medicine
drug stores, and gift shops pandering to suburbanites and tourists,
investigators have been tracking a major heroin trafficking operation
involving the importation of multiple kilos of heroin brought into the
neighborhood for resale on the street.

These incidents underscore the ever-evolving, ever changing face of
organized crime in Chicago - the rise of Asian street gangs.

The Chicago Police Department’s Asian Task Force, formed in October 1989,
has been disbanded in favor of an “International Enterprise Crime Task
Force,” headquartered out of 219 S. Dearborn and under the auspices of the
FBI and the Illinois State Police

The tide of foreign nationals pouring into this city from Southeast Asia,
the Caribbean, Mexico, and South America have forced law
enforcementofficially to divert thinly stretched resources across the board
to counter each new threat.

Skilled investigators like Pat McCarthy of the Chicago Police Department are
constantly on the trail of Asian gangbangers, but their task is never an
easy one because of the mobility of the criminals they deal with. Very often
a gangbanger from another city will arrive in Chicago, complete a specific
“job,” and slip away in the night without leaving behind a clue as to their
identity. This is particularly true in the growing Vietnamese community.

Asian crime is difficult to investigate, even harder to prosecute because of
the reluctance of the victims to approach the police. The vast majority of
the people the gangs target are Asian, and because of long standing mistrust
and suspicion directed against the police and the government - attitudes
that took shape overseas in the face of brutal political oppression - it is
often hard to gauge the extent of the local problem.

Immigrant Belizians, Hmong, ethnic Chinese, and Vietnamese have organized
street gangs that in some ways, constitute a greater danger to the public
safety than Larry Hoover’s army of drug runners who peddle dime bags in the
projects. The Belizians, it was pointed out by Detective John Sebeck of the
Chicago Police Department at a recent gang crimes seminar sponsored by the
National Gang Crime Research Center at Chicago State University, shoot first
and ask questions later.

The Chinese gangs in Chicago have evolved out of two old and historic
community organizations - the Hip Sing are active in the Uptown community
along the lakefront. The On Leong, a Tong sharing the same name as the On
Leong Merchant’s Association, are a South Side group.

The first American-based “Tong” - the literal translation means “meeting
hall,” is an extension of the merchant associations that were first
organized in 1847 in San Francisco as a means of preserving cultural
identity and providing a social outlet. Not every member of a Tong is
criminally inclined. Not every Tong however, has peaked the interest of
federal and local law enforcement as the On Leong right here in Chicago.

In the early 1990s, the On Leong Merchant’s Association was the focus of a
federal racketeering trial that exposed the links between the Chicago outfit
and a multi-million-dollar gambling ring headquartered along 22nd Street. On
Leong traces its Chicago roots to the 19th century where it existed as a
social and benevolent organization to indoctrinate Chinese immigrants to the
American way of life.

During the 1991 federal racketeering trial of 11 Chinese businessmen accused
of running a gambling game from inside the On Leong “casino”- a continuing
enterprise that netted $2 million dollars between 1974 and a police raid in
April 1986 - prosecutors secured conviction on tax conspiracy charges
against Wilson Moy, often described as the unofficial “mayor” of the
Chinatown community.

Former mob attorney and federal informant Robert Cooley testified during the
trial that Moy and another man gave him $100,000 to pass on to former First
Ward Alderman Fred Roti and Pat Marcy, the mobbed-up secretary of the First
Ward Democratic Organization in order to “influence” the outcome of the 1981
William Chin murder case in the Cook County Circuit Court.

The jury failed to reach a verdict on this specific charge in the
five-month-long racketeering trial.

Hip Sing has a storefront office in Uptown. On Leong is still a viable force
in the South Side Chinatown neighborhood. There are those who are of the
opinion that the organizations are still not divorced from their criminal
past, and that little has changed.

The rigged gambling games continue, we are told, in a secure location not
far from the former On Leong building on Wentworth Avenue where the arrests
were originally made. Since the doors were padlocked by the “G” and the
records seized, the On Leong headquarters has been converted into the Pui
Tak Center, a religious and cultural meeting place.

Meanwhile, restaurant owners, local merchants, and small time bookies
running popular Chinese gambling games like “Fan Tan,” allegedly continue to
pay street taxes to the 26th Street Chinatown “crew,” which oversees the
outfit’s interests in this part of town.

The presence of the Hip Sing and On Leong in Chicago is traced to the early
years of this century when the original Chinatown located between Polk
Street and Congress, re-located to 22nd Street and Wentworth Avenue -
following the migration of the Levee vice merchants, gambling bosses,
tricksters, and dope fiends from downtown into the South Side badlands.

The affiliated gangs of the Tong are well organized and entrenched in their
respective communities, according to Jim Brongiel, an Asian organized crime
specialist for the Office of International Criminal Justice, a University of
Illinois think tank that trains Chicago Police sergeants and lieutenants
through an executive development program, as well as publishing “Criminal
Justice International.”

“We have seen large amounts of money being laundered through various Chicago
banks from businesses that use the word “international” in their dealings,”
Brongiel explains. “Asian gangs, with close links to sophisticated criminal
organizations like the 14K Triad, the largest triad on the Chinese mainland,
are involved in money laundering, illegal gambling, counterfeiting, the
theft of computer software, and the smuggling of illegal aliens into this
country.”

The Triads are secret criminal societies that were organized in the 17th
Century to oppose the rule of Chinese Dynasty. They continued to flourish in
Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Burma, and Taiwan through the
modern era.

Hong Kong triads have turned up in Great Britain, and Australia long before
the British relinquished control of their colony to China.

The traffickers who deal in human cargo are known as “snake heads.” For a
$15,000 commission, the snakehead who is based in China, will smuggle an
illegal alien into the U.S. with the vague promise of employment and a
stable life awaiting them at the end of the journey; a journey fraught with
all kinds of hardship and peril. Many of these undocumented aliens arrive in
Chicago every week. Some of them are criminals who import ancient ethnic
hostilities that can erupt into gang warfare and murder at a moment’s
notice.

There already exists a bitter ethnic rivalry on the North Side of the city
between the Vietnamese and the Filipinos. The Vietnamese, recent arrivals to
American shores, tend to work for the better organized, more sophisticated
Chinese gangs like the North Side Hip Sings and the Hung Mun Tong, serving
as their “muscle.” The Hung Mung (“Red Door)”) and its satellite gang, the
Hung Ching composed of underage children, are involved in home invasions and
drug trafficking.

“There is some recent evidence that the North Side Hip Sing and Hung Mun
gangs are merging and forming alliances for common purpose,” Brongiel
reports.

Home invasion robberies have escalated across the country since the fall of
Viet Nam in 1975, and the exodus of thousands of Vietnamese refugees into
the U.S. The victims of these relentless and often brutal gangs are most
often other Vietnamese, Laotian, or Chinese citizens because they are the
easiest prey. Home invasions of this type have been reported in Highland
Park, Naperville, Westmont, Glen Ellyn, and Glendale Heights, dispelling the
illusion of the supposedly “crime-free” suburbs. The Wolf Boys, Black
Widows, and Local Boys are three Vietnamese gangs currently active in the
Chicagoland area.

The Vietnamese “BTK” is another street gang with a national presence. “The
Vietnamese gangs are pre-disposed to violence,” Jim Brongiel reports. “Very
often they carry out the “heavy work” for the Chinese groups. They can be
easily identified by the presence of three dots on the hand signifying their
membership in the gang.” Burn marks and skin tattoos commonly signify
membership in Asian street gangs.

The West Coast remains the stronghold of Asian organized crime activity,
particularly within the communities of Santa Ana and Garden Grove, in Orange
County, California. The importation of drugs from the “Golden Triangle”
region of Thailand, Burma, and Laos is a prime source of revenue as the
gangs take root in their respective communities.

“Ice,” the crystalline, smokeable form of methamphetamine, has turned up on
the West Coast in recent years. Ice originated in Japan reportedly around
1919, but is being produced in Hong Kong, Korea, Japan, Thailand, and the
Philippines for distribution in the U.S. Thus far, the drug is mostly
confined to West Coast communities, but the situation is likely to change as
the Asian street gangs and tong groups shift their base of operation to the
hinterland. Tong gangs have fanned out across the U.S. and are particularly
active in Maryland, Los Angeles, and New York City. Houston’s Asian
community was hit particularly hard in 1996 with numerous drive-by shootings
and continuous gang warfare. During the 1970s and 1980s, the Wah Ching, a
Chinese street gang organized in 1966, came to control most of the criminal
vices in the Chinatowns of Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco. Their
extortion and protection rackets are reminiscent of decades-old Mafia
activity. The power of the Wah Ching on the West Coast was never seriously
threatened until 1989 when a new criminal organization, the Wo Hop To triad
of Hong Kong began moving into the San Francisco Bay Area. In recent years,
there has been a consolidation of power between these two groups and the
evolution of an Asian “super gang.”

Having realized the benefits of applying structure and organization to their
criminal endeavors, some West Coast Vietnamese and Chinese “gangsters” are
being recruited into the Crips and Bloods gangs. Their presence has been
detected in the greater Midwest, notably in Minneapolis-St. Paul and central
Wisconsin where Hmong youth have formed a dozen Crip gangs, and at least
five “Blood” gangs.

The Hmong are an ethnic Chinese people who migrated from their native land
in the 18th century to the mountainous regions of Laos, Thailand, Burma, and
Vietnam. They poured into the West Coast in large numbers following the end
of the Vietnam War and have filtered into the American heartland ever since
that time. The Hmong people - a sizeable community resides in the Argyle
Street neighborhood of Uptown - were often the victims of extortions and
shakedowns by Asian gangs.

The West Coast is still the gateway to America’s riches for the Asian
peoples of the world.

Chicago remains the historic hub of Mid-America; a way station to the world
and a destination point not only for the decent, law abiding immigrants from
around the world escaping the yoke of poverty and political repression, but
for the criminally inclined as well.
http://www.ipsn.org/asg08107.html


Bard

Visit me at:
The Center for Exposing Corruption in the Federal Government
http://www.xld.com/public/center/center.htm

Federal Government defined:
....a benefit/subsidy protection racket!

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