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by Erik Sass
, Staff Writer,
September 20, 2012
Either they didn’t realize that the police could see what they were saying online, or they simply didn’t care if they got caught -- but either way, I’m going to call them
morons.
I’m referring to the 49 members of two gangs from East New York -- the Rockstarz, whom I will also judge for their lack of creativity in naming themselves, and their rivals the
Very Crispy Gangsters, who may be guilty of many things, but not lack of creativity -- who earlier this week were indicted by the NYPD for a series of ten shootings, including three fatalities, over a
period of three years.
According to a report in the New York Times, the vendetta between the gangs erupted with the killing of a VCG member, Taquan Crandall, in September 2009. Gang members
boasted about the shootings on Facebook and also used the social network to intimidate each other, for example by requesting to be “friends” with members of the other gang and posting
photos of themselves in front of their houses. One defendant posted a picture of himself with trophies (a belt and watch) from someone he shot, with the caption: “I can’t give it back. You
can’t walk no more.”
At a press conference NYPD commission Raymond W. Kelly summed up their collective idiocy: “Because of these individuals’ insatiable desire to brag
about what they did, these investigators were able to draw a virtual map of their activities and bring them to justice.” Avon Barksdale would not be impressed.
This isn’t the first
major gang bust facilitated by online boasting. In January of this year the NYPD busted two other groups of well-armed morons from the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, the “Wavegang” and
“Hoodstarz,” for a series of shootings that killed three and injured more. Social media played a key role in nabbing 43 gang members from both gangs, according to Kelly, who said police
investigators “followed gang members on Twitter, on Facebook and on YouTube. By linking their boastings and postings on social media to active cases and other crime, these officers were able to
build this case.”
Last week I wrote about the NYPD’s new guidelines for officers using social media as part of criminal investigations, set out in a five-page memo from
commissioner Kelly. Police officers using social media can adopt aliases for their online work, as long as those aliases are registered with the department, and can also protect their anonymity by
using NYPD laptops with untraceable Internet cards, according to the new guidelines.