Dec 2, 1993
Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles,
SUSAN BYRNES. Los Angeles
Times (pre-1997 Fulltext).
Los Angeles, Calif.: Dec 2, 1993. pg. 2
(Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los
Angeles Times 1993 all
Rights reserved)

Los Angeles Police Officer, Tony Newsom
Officers Dress Up in
Disguises to Unmask Dangers of Gangs; [Home
Edition]
The two "gangs" were to meet at noon. The
Thunderheads and the
Snakes would square off on the playground,
settling their scores once
and for all. In preparation, members
scrawled their insignias on
notebooks, daring the other side to mess
with them.
But these weren't ordinary gang members:
They didn't wear gang
colors. They didn't carry weapons. None were
more than 5 feet tall.
So Principal Ronald Ferrier, who caught wind
of the rumble, was
determined to "nip this thing in the bud."
He called in a Los Angeles
police gang intervention unit to confront
the Snakes and
Thunderheads-in real gang attire.
Dressed in high top sneakers,
baggy pants and dark sunglasses,
officers Tony Newsom and Michael Piceno
showed up at the school
Tuesday.
"Who's in a gang here? I heard there were
some gang members here," Newsom said as the students sat
perfectly still, mouths
agape.
"Who are the leaders?" Piceno asked. "I want
to talk to the leaders."
"If you guys are from a gang," Newsom said.
"You better act like you're
from a gang. Are you prepared to fight us?"

Tony
Newsom...
(on right)
"You're too big," one of the fifth-graders
finally said.
Though many gang prevention programs target
elementary school
children, Los Angeles police only recently
began trying the tactic of
posing as gang members. In less than 10
minutes, the officers seemed
to persuade the wanna-bes that playing gang
was a dangerous game.
"We just did it to hang out. It was all
bluff," confessed 10-year-old Corey Emmert
after the officers took off their costumes,
Superman-
style, and revealed their identities.