How The Crips Gang Actually Works | How Crime Works | Insider
Tyrone White was a member of the 65 Menlo Gangster faction of the Crips gang in South Central Los Angeles during the late '80s and '90s, witnessing police brutality and the LA riots.
White held the position of a street soldier and participated in drug dealing, gangbanging, and neighborhood drive-bys. He later joined a police force in Oklahoma. After resigning, he went to jail for robberies.
White speaks with Business Insider about his experience as a gang member, the culture of the Crips, and the rivalry with the Bloods. He talks about money-making activities, clothing, and music. He also covers the role of celebrity Crips, such as Snoop Dogg and Big U, in gang prevention within California.
After he was released from jail, he pursued a career in acting and worked with the Eagle Ridge Institute.
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00:00 - Intro
00:42 - The Weapons
01:43 - The Drive-Bys
03:58 - The Beef
06:20 - The Recruitment
07:42 - The Culture
10:55 - The Hierarchy
13:00 - The Money
14:48 - The LA Riots
17:10 - The Expansion
18:53 - Becoming A Cop
21:48 - Prison
24:42 - The Aftermath
25:56 - Credits
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#gangs #HowCrimeWorks #Insider
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How The Crips Gang Actually Works | How Crime Works | Insider
Пікірлер: 5 500
This is exactly how these stories need to be told, from the complex perspective of someone that has lived it.
@Asarcasticfuck
Ай бұрын
It fucked my guy’s head,he lived in a different world.
@lukasevenson
Ай бұрын
super complex
@CubeInspector
Ай бұрын
Complex? Gang life isn't complex. It's what people with an inferiority complex do
@bonsaipiper3773
Ай бұрын
Yeah super duper complex.
@lubrew5862
Ай бұрын
It still sugar coated. Gangs nowadays and when he was in one wasn’t about defending your neighborhood. It was about money from drugs. Plain and simple. Gangs may have had that intent when they started in LA but this didn’t last for more than a moment. That is what history shows us
Imagine fighting to achieve absolutely nothing
@mr.b3168
Ай бұрын
That can be applied to anything.
@DrummerJacob
Ай бұрын
A good part of that racial group spends most of their life achieving absolutely nothing while destroying the country around them. They dont even have to imagine it, its in the DNA.
@MyTsha6p
Ай бұрын
History of the world..
@damieng657
Ай бұрын
And up to this day young kids are still joining gangs by choice
@jbmp1390
Ай бұрын
Imagine being so ignorant you can't understand why this happens.
My brother was a crip. Killed in 1995. 18 years old "defending" a neighborhood that was gentrified in the early 2000's. Incredibly pointless. EDIT: Thanks for the kind comments. That ish is still very painful. A couple of things to note...My parents owned their house, and they still own it. My primary point is that gangbanging is stupid IMO, but honestly, if you grow up in certain neighborhoods you have very few choices. My brother made bad choices, I did not. Also the people asking me to name the city and set... I tried, but every time I replied youtube deleted it.
@cromano6830
Ай бұрын
Cool!
@MagicPlants
Ай бұрын
I'm sorry for your loss. Genuinely.
@MagicPlants
Ай бұрын
@@cromano6830 you're disgusting
@JVung
Ай бұрын
If your brother was never a gang member he would have still be here with a job & family living the life. Eating bomb @ss food. It sucks when you’re not the lucky one.
@Ahzuv2
Ай бұрын
Rest in peace man
Everytime I see crips walk, I can't help but recall the South Park meme when they go "Wow, these guys really are crippled."
@JuanCavazos-vi9fk
10 күн бұрын
Lol
When my son was in middle school in the late 2000s they had former gang members in conjunction with the police come in the school and talk with the kids about the dangers of gang banging. My deepest respect and thanks to men like them and Mr White for doing so. It definitely had an impact on my son and his friends and I believe steered him in the right direction.
@user-hm9is5ke9i
3 күн бұрын
Uh, Walter White?
Imagine being a cashier at McDonald’s in the 90s and have a grown man walk up to you and order a “curger” with extra “cacon” oh and I want a “boke” for my drink
@christian4l517
Ай бұрын
😭
@MrDwightsimon
Ай бұрын
Fuckin losers 😂
@lorenzoross1314
Ай бұрын
😂😂😭
@victorespino5650
Ай бұрын
No one ever did that lol
@Segotti
Ай бұрын
Cripmac did on 55 criiipppp😂😂😂@@victorespino5650
In the 90s, I remember so many kids in my suburban middle school idolized gang members and all of sudden said "they were from the hood". I was like "you grew up like 5 houses down from me in a cul-de-sac."
@newntivessocial41
Ай бұрын
“Hard? Jimmy you always go home when the street lights come on. We literally rode your golf cart three houses down?!” 😂
@michelangelo5903
Ай бұрын
-was the same for me in high school graduated in 2016 and i really doubt it’s gotten any better since then lol
@robyee3325
Ай бұрын
That’s because music industry glorified gangster rap
@carmelobasco3369
Ай бұрын
You didnt have to add that bulljive in the end. You playing hard too mang hahahaha
@myronwilliams3340
Ай бұрын
Sadly it's still like that
I really like how he balances calling out racism and the police without exonerating the gangs and the "us vs them" mentality. That is still hard to find.
This thing that really hurts to hear is that people only unite to fight another group. It's never for a good cause except for pride. It's not just a gang thing. It's how we ALL are
@CombatMedic1O
Ай бұрын
Yeh but most people are not trying to cause street war in the US...like for real why do this in the country that gives you the most freedom.
@TjallieBrrr
Ай бұрын
@@CombatMedic1O people fight eachother over politics and sportsteams what are you talking about? Its human nature to identify with a group and fight to the death for it
@trademarktaz
Ай бұрын
They were fighting over drugs and money, the crack era was booming
@AnarexicSumo
Ай бұрын
@CombatMedic1O For most it doesn't give you any sort of freedom except poverty which is some of the worst in the developed world. Add to that medical costs that aren't seen in any other developed country and an incredible divide between rich and poor and an incredibly high incarceration rate and you find the perfect storm.
@macrc2129
27 күн бұрын
Speak for yourself. I'm my own man.
i was going down this path as a teen all my cousins and uncles are bloods, you couldn't catch me not wearing red, super glad i smartened up and got into cooking cant have time to be in the streets when you always in the kitchen.
@ChickenLegs-fp9py
Ай бұрын
Glad you had a brainwave, just make sure you stay there bro. Stay safe!
@Kay-fo2gw
Ай бұрын
i grew up with a lot of bloods. red bandannas in my bibles and things like that. and i ended up moving with my grandparents. although i miss it a lot. i’m glad im away from it, because i still have a life ahead of me .
@UserLbc
Ай бұрын
What set do you come from?
@rahsunallah2825
Ай бұрын
💯💯💯
@kj2nice
Ай бұрын
How much for a plate bro?
This was a captivating interview, damn.
Excellent video on gang life! Keep living positively my brother
Imagine the logic of these people fighting for no reason, and the grand prize is either death, or spending the rest of your life in prison.
@junebug1141
Ай бұрын
That was the governments plan all along
@astrozoo
Ай бұрын
Most start very young. Typical age to join is 10-14 years old. There's not much logic involved, it's about being part of something, having homies.
@jody61690
Ай бұрын
Sounds like the military going to war for nothing ! Yet they praise the soldiers ?
@Imbalanxd
Ай бұрын
now imagine just how bad things must be for them to choose those options. Let me guess, they're just irrational actors who actually had a bright flourishing future ahead of them?
@kkalayaan
Ай бұрын
If you grew up in it, you wouldn’t have to imagine it. You would understand it. Imagine these people judging those other people, yet have never walked a mile in their shoes. Imagine that.
From Crip to Cop - from one blue gang to another - dude really does love the color blue.
@davidmontoya6672
Ай бұрын
He works at Sam’s club now look it up😊
@gotanypain3083
Ай бұрын
Meanwhile his old rivals **riding as a firefighter **
@reidmackenzie7287
Ай бұрын
Bro was literally officer tenpenny
@dapanda2068
Ай бұрын
Are you a crip? You seem salty
@higgsxboson
Ай бұрын
@@davidmontoya6672He needs to work for IBM next & then he’s done w/ blue 😂
Informative!
Gotta say. Thank you for doing this video and teaching us about all this. It's difficult to understand all of what's going on without someone knowing what it's really like on a deep level. You've lived it, and you're telling us about it. Thank you much! Sorry that the cops didn't work with you like they should've. Also, very happy you were able to make it out.
"Sticks and Stones can break your bones but Names can get you Shot?"DAMN....
@kathyfugere6085
Ай бұрын
Or colors
@Npc1488-wc1kf
Ай бұрын
They dont need a reason What you are hearing are excuses, not reasons
@thebarbieinvestor5428
Ай бұрын
Mental Illness
@yaboidre5672
Ай бұрын
Words in general can get you shot and killed. Freedom of speech doesn’t exist in the ghetto.
@hillbilly4895
Ай бұрын
describes my 3 years of High School...thankfully, I made it out. Some didn't.
LA Gangs are now a tourist attraction
@justingarrett2239
Ай бұрын
That reminds me of the song How To Survive In South Central by Ice Cube
@isaakfrmla
Ай бұрын
@@justingarrett2239he saw it coming
@subzero-ws7wt
Ай бұрын
Just like O block
@raymanvermillionare2962
Ай бұрын
Fr so many people go there @@subzero-ws7wt
@Warren15G
Ай бұрын
Good
Great interview. Well spoken and succinct. More like this please Peace to everyone reading this 🙏
Real journalism. Thank you, Chris!
This sounds even dumber now than it did when I was 13 in 93'.
@juanshaftpatel7488
Ай бұрын
typical blks.. should be expected
@underarmbowlingincidentof1981
Ай бұрын
all conflict and factions sounds dumb when you're not part of it... sometimes all that's needed is two group of young boys with two different colors of scarfs and that's is. I mean even where I live sometimes people k*ll each other over football clubs. there's not even money to be made in there. people just want to be part of something I guess...
@tuelzalt
Ай бұрын
Sounds like the army too... when I was younger it sounded cool to fight about your country till you get older and see how the country treats ex military and other races. Then you learn about how America bullies everyone then your like who tf joins the army
@Johnny-Hash
Ай бұрын
@@underarmbowlingincidentof1981Naah it's dumb even when you're in it.
@SeveralOnions
Ай бұрын
@@underarmbowlingincidentof1981100%. It's so depressing to see people completely throwing away the context that these groups exist in
"Please don't die over the neighborhood. That your mama rentin' Take your drug money and buy the neighborhood. That's how you rinse it”
@whathappened246
Ай бұрын
Don't sell drugs and gang bang to begin with and don't rob or murder either. All evil
@realist4900
Ай бұрын
selling drugs to your own people is treasonous business
@caseyhermansen3699
Ай бұрын
Jay z for anyone curious
@Amxri.
Ай бұрын
@@JP-np8fj it’s jay z. Story of oj
@jameslee1374
Ай бұрын
Tbh as much it sounds the right thing to do , most people don't want to reinvest in a gang riddle hood. No one wants to be tge land lord dealing with gang members as tenants. If you ever own any property, you know what one bad teant can do, give you that sour taste in ur mouth and call a quits. Most ppl make money and re invest where it'll make sense to own and have vaule. You can own half ur gang hood and still xome out broke. All these rappers saying they would change the hood if they own it, the same one will sell that property for re development/ genderfication.
Wow! Thanks for sharing your story.
What a fascinating story! I'm glad to hear this man was able to make it out because so many gang members' lives ended early, either in prison or a cemetery. I hope the situation improves in the U.S.; we Canadians want you guys to succeed. Good luck. ✌️
Dude just said he joined a gang because he liked the color blue...
@2Exile0
Ай бұрын
He was so an adolescent. What do you expect?
@BM1982.V2
Ай бұрын
Didn't he say he was 10 when they started grooming him. Your quite impressionable at that age
@user-bm6xz6pq5z
Ай бұрын
When I was in middle school, lots of kids made up gangs or got b**lsy and joined a real one, just to be cool.
@GordoFabulous
Ай бұрын
Well, it first started out with a couple of questions before that. First, what is your name? Second, what is your quest?
@ifixman
Ай бұрын
😂
This guy at 15 yrs old: *drive by shooting* Me, today as a 37 yr old man: *eating one of my kids pizza lunchables*
@papashield3
Ай бұрын
Honestly, that's a better life in any sense. I'll pick yours in any lifetime
@adg9042
Ай бұрын
true, if you have a kid you have something to love and protect, these gang members oftentimes risk that
@murderc27
Ай бұрын
Why are pizza lunchables still so good as an adult?
@maxsweater2627
Ай бұрын
@@papashield3I second that
@devilsorchard1449
Ай бұрын
That's just because you're a smart one.
Thank you for this.
I love how he calls murder and drug dealing "west coast culture"
@SpartanArmy117
Ай бұрын
He unknowingly admitted the truth. We have a massive culture problem.
@reizayin
Ай бұрын
Is he wrong?
@oakblaze433
Ай бұрын
He's right. And I love the west coast and its cities; it could be easily be the best part of the country if they got their damn acts together. It's a massive culture and political problem
@BussinandDiscussin
Ай бұрын
Its just a really negative thing I would easily call so many other things WC culture like Surf Culture, Tech Culture, Hotrods, Low Riders, heck even Seattle Grunge or Fisherman culture, maybe Native Indian culture, Chicano culture. Way before that damn Bloods vs. Crips crap.@@SpartanArmy117
@AnarexicSumo
Ай бұрын
@@reizayinYeah honestly. The South particularly Louisiana, Mississipi, North Florida, Georgia, and OK has the highest incidence of murder and drug related offenses per capita.
People think gang banging is something to be glorified I grew up gang banging in Northern California as a Norteño and some of the things I did and some of the thing I risked going to jail or dying over were just plain stupid I’m glad I made it through with only a few battle scars
@_cali187x_3
Ай бұрын
Shut up chapete. Y’all were in the farms until La eme drop outs started the Norteno movement.
@rylordrylord7347
Ай бұрын
On 74hoover st agreed
@jayf8716
Ай бұрын
Norteño from where ?what town
@tonytiger3003
Ай бұрын
@@jayf8716don't worry about it. You ain't it boy.
@ej4458
Ай бұрын
@@jayf8716 norteno from sesame street, over there up over the stairs.
Im thankful for the life I have
@M_k-zi3tn
Ай бұрын
me too bro
@more3520
Ай бұрын
Gratitude.
@gamersnevercryever
Ай бұрын
Life starts out as a lottery
@ZH-fc8dw
Ай бұрын
Doin too much …
@YoinkMasterTony
Ай бұрын
I'm thankful for your mommy
This is an amazing video. Thank you for sharing.
"My name is Daniel Bag, I'm a former fortune 500 CEO, and this is how crime works."
@brianc0019
9 күн бұрын
Masterful 👍🏾
Fighting for a neighbor hood that you don't own has to be the dumbest way to start an argument and still an ongoing active gang wars.
@Coizerino
Ай бұрын
Easy for you to say
@thegoatmax4056
Ай бұрын
Gangs in general are dumb
@bunk95
Ай бұрын
Fighting? Humans fight?
@officialmotomoto
Ай бұрын
@@bunk95 Yeah humans fight. But I don't see any countries like Norway have a massive gang war problem. Humans choose to fight.
@cronic932
Ай бұрын
@@Coizerino whats that supposed to mean?
"When you goin' against war with one another, there's no winners. Now you can look at it and say 'okay, i shot more of they homies than they shot of mine' or 'I killed more of they homies or they killed of mine' but both sides are taking losses. So if both of yas are taking a loss of life, then there's no winners." Wisdom.
@thebluejay3145
Ай бұрын
Common sense
@jameslars7391
Ай бұрын
@@thebluejay3145 Wisdom is the ability to put common sense into practice.
@kingofwishfulthinking2490
Ай бұрын
Wait till you find out that most people have that “wisdom” to not join a gang in the first place
@humanbeeing4780
Ай бұрын
@@kingofwishfulthinking2490He was like ten, when they started initiating him. You’re not some genius for not being groomed as a child.
@darthutah6649
Ай бұрын
Tell me why are we so blind to see that the ones we hurt are you and me
"After you save lives, you have to create opportunities" 🔥
Gang life has always been horrible.
@holledervolksmusik9981
Ай бұрын
It's a last resort. Same with prison culture - basically having a dry place to sleep and shitty food is luxury.
@based8223
Ай бұрын
Just get a job lol@@holledervolksmusik9981
@magikindian
Ай бұрын
It might be horrible for you, but for the rest of us, it's the best reality show in history. Especially with social media
@djstackademikz
Ай бұрын
@@magikindianfacts I say this all the time. I don’t listen to drill music because it’s good music. I listen to it cause it’s like watching the hunger games. Always a new character then they get smoked in real life
@holledervolksmusik9981
Ай бұрын
@@djstackademikz its krazy all'ight - cities are renamed (O-Town), alliances rise and fall, like game of thrones with more glocks, moncler and smack
I grew up in the hood in the 60s and 70s. During my time the biggest handgun I ever saw was a 44 revolver but the weapon most common was a 38 revolver. Shootings were rare because of an un written rule of handling beefs with your hands and everyone walked away. What changed in the 80s was caused by the Iran Contra Scandal and I encourage you read the books by Gary Webb and Freeway Ricky Ross. Webb details the Governments involvement and Ross the effects it had in the streets. We had other Drugs but when crack came around it was highly profitable, highly addictive, affordable to the consumer until they lost their jobs or businesses. A Lawyer/Friend lost his practice when he switched from Cocaine to Crack.
@brandonfj5811
Ай бұрын
Bro this needs more likes not that many ppl actually know about the Iran-Contra Scandal they didn't even teach anything about it when I was still going to school.
@dirtditch3
Ай бұрын
@@brandonfj5811they don't want you to know about that..
@subzero-ws7wt
Ай бұрын
@@brandonfj5811Why would they wanna teach that in school? It doesn’t fit the system’s narrative
@BOnYTB
Ай бұрын
@@brandonfj5811you ever seen Snowfall? Obviously it’s Hollywood so it’s dramatized, but it’s a good show. Main character is loosely based on freeway, his plug was a fed moving guns for the “cause.” I knew about all that stuff before the show, it interested me a lot so I did quite a bit of research on it years ago. So when I heard about snowfall I immediately tuned in. RIP to the creator of the series, John Singleton. He did Boyz n the Hood. And of course, like other ppl said why would they want us to know about the gov doing any dirt like that? Not ideal for them in the slightest. Edit: same name btw lol
@BOnYTB
Ай бұрын
We’d be significantly better off if people still handled disputes with their hands. There were always shootings, but now ppl are petrified to actually fight and I don’t blame them. HIGH chance the loser is gonna go home and return with something etc. You can’t even use words anymore, Nipsey was trying to give back to his hood and show people the way out legitimately. He still got gunned down by someone in his own hood in front of his own business. Sad stuff. There’s a reason most ppl who make it out don’t return, Nip was a beloved figure in his community way before he passed. All it takes is one incident, one dumb kid with a fragile ego.
I remember growing up in the early 2000’s in south central couple minutes away from watts. I’m only 20 but I still remember the drive by, shootings, murders and how common they were. It rarely happens now but those were crazy times
@gregdahlen4375
17 күн бұрын
why does it rarely happen now?
@heidiramos6884
17 күн бұрын
@@gregdahlen4375 From my experience, a lot of families that were involved in gangs no longer live in that area, or they left that type of lifestyle behind due to having children. A lot of kids are more aware of the risk of being in a gang and instead pursue their education.
I remember Tyrone. I grew up on 69th & Hoover. Around the corner from the Menlo's. We were the only Mexicans in that neighborhood at that time. From 77 - the early 80's. The Menlo's in those days were Able, Black T, C-Capone, Killa Rob, Oran & DeVonne Douglass, etc. Me and Devo were childhood best friends. I lost touch through the years. Good to see T in this video. God bless you all. *Just a correction. DeVonne (Devo) wasn’t a Menlo. His older brother Oran was. LAPD put DeVonne in the gang file as a Menlo under Devo. But he was never put on. Cops were really dirty back then.
@jabigchad1749
Ай бұрын
connect
@suicidalbanananana
Ай бұрын
Hope you managed to leave that life behind you as well champ
@theghostofspookwagen4715
Ай бұрын
I hope you're living a good life now.
@pippadawg7037
Ай бұрын
This whole story reminds me of the old Roman strategy of Divide and Conquer. They would foster and nurture squabbles between different barbarian tribes, and in doing so they were able to rule large swaths of the world. They could do this openly, but it could also be done covertly, so that "beefs" that seemed to occur naturally between different tribes were actually fostered by Roman spies and proxies. You don't think that anything like this could have occurred in our society, do you? Nah, that's silly conspiracy theory.
@heir_to_the_promise
Ай бұрын
@@theghostofspookwagen4715 Blessed bro. God got us through those hard times. The 90’s was fun but dangerous on those L.A. streets.
Incredible journalism from Insider and salute to the OG Tyrone White for being courageous enough to share his story. Hope the cycle discontinues one day.
@Lortagreb
Ай бұрын
Hes a fake. He's never been a gangster. It's a fabricated story.
@ComfortAthletica
Ай бұрын
@@Lortagreb "he's fake" source: Trust me bro XD
@Lortagreb
Ай бұрын
@@ComfortAthletica There are a lot of the classic signs of lying: He describes being part of the "crips and bloods" gangs. Any crip or blood would never say that... They would say they were either a crip or a blood not part of them both. Even a former one. 1:00 The way he describes getting his first gun he slows down his speech giving himself small breaks to think up the details. Especially when hes gonna mention the gun and he looks up to the right trying to make something up before actually saying it. 2:00 hes describing his memory of shootings in the 80s as: "You could literally turn on the news every day and you [something about a shooting]". So the way he's remembering that were a lot of shootings is from seeing it on the news. Not being part of it. I'm sure there are plenty more in this video but I'm done watching it just after 2 minutes. Please be skeptical about the things you hear on the internet even when it seems to be a credible source!
@MegaSuperCritic
Ай бұрын
First starters, using “OG” as a salute of respect is certainly doing nothing to end the cycle. Kids wanna be an OG gangsta when they see old heads getting respect for it like this. Foolish
@AnarexicSumo
Ай бұрын
@@MegaSuperCritic No, kids want to make a few hundred dollars for 20 minutes of work.
Amazing insight on the good ol days!
wow, I loved hearing about this issue from someone with the complex dichotomy of having been on both sides of criminality… massive respect to this man for providing a generally unbiased recounting of gang life and cop life, without condoning or exculpating the actions of either. it’s people like HIM who will ultimately change this broken system. Tyrone, keep using your experiences and voice to speak out and educate those around you, on all sides of the law. hopefully, one day we can reach a place without all the corruption and brutality that breeds the socio-economic and racial divisions propping up the gang system.
You can see them around LA driving on their wheelchairs throwing gang sings
@Mustlovehorrorfilms
Ай бұрын
😂😂
@billmccormick4370
Ай бұрын
Everybody wanna put they dope on me; sayin' I won't get searched by the LAPD.
@brandonfj5811
Ай бұрын
signs*
@navithenavajo4714
Ай бұрын
@@billmccormick4370 It be true tho
@PaulResendez-zx6mr
Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
Having grown up in South LA and Compton this interview was very accurate and authentic. Good job bro! Continue to do positive things......
@ddramos956
Ай бұрын
😂😂😂 "positive things"?! Right 🙄🙄
@blackman9291
Ай бұрын
@@ddramos956 It’s definitely positive. He turned his whole life around and even if it may have took a while he’s sharing his story in hopes that other young men like himself don’t turn into this life.
So your crips had a peace treaty with some bloods because they were so close that you had to go through their hood to get to your hood, but you had beef with some other crips because they were so close that you had to go through their hood to get to your hood… makes total sense
@goatskin4487
5 күн бұрын
If you think about it, it does make sense. If your in close proximity with another group your ethier gonna become freinds or enemies.
@Christopherjoe
4 күн бұрын
@@goatskin4487 yeah, you can become friends, enemies, or neutral neighbors or acquaintances, but the reason you become one or the other is not the close proximity or you would have the same relations with everyone around you. There are other factors. It’s just funny that he said the reason he has a peace treaty with a rival gang is because they live close, and then he used that same reason to justify beefing with other crips
@frankgrimes7388
4 күн бұрын
I thought the exact same thing my friend.
@rustyjuice9493
3 күн бұрын
Makes as much sense as everything else he's talking about. The entirety of gangbanging is pretty mindless.
@zoiks6631
3 күн бұрын
These are not geniuses you’re talking about.
I moved to LA in the late 80s from Fort Lauderdale. I lived on Stocker and Crenshaw next to the famous Jungle. I really don’t know how I didn’t get caught up in the gangs.
Imagine they killing each other and they’re from the same community
@subzero-ws7wt
Ай бұрын
Don’t need to imagine! It’s happening everyday
@God4FT3R
Ай бұрын
Most killings are in the same community …
@Dogtubee
Ай бұрын
lol the mob did the same thing
@buravan1512
Ай бұрын
These are the Lowest of the community, they Dumb and Dangerous, nobody should worry about them.
@victorespino5650
Ай бұрын
Different turf
This is a great video! I'm thankful that you got out of that life and are sharing your experiences. Thank you so much!
I’m from Long Beach born and raised and my cousins are from Compton. I was born in 93. The early 2000’s was crazy when it came to drive bys too. I got family that are OGS from a bunch of hoods from 20s to nutty blocc to piru. Man it was crazy
This is intense!
Can't be robbing citizens and expect not to get touched. Appreciate the testimony
@ca6360
Ай бұрын
You wait till chaos hits you think illegals with no mf allegence to American citizens going to be on best behavior? Let alone citizens. Honestly let's join together like America supposed to be. I love Jim Brown BTW... met personally did not know who TF he was so was just straight respect as person to person. Nice guy straight up. At golf tournament. I was taking pics he was registering in. I never knew who was what in sports at these events, SOME HAS BEEN OLYMPIAN was like you know who I am.. holding his putter like a P@nis .. no pal sorry.
I use to work at “killa king” hospital” doing interviews of victims of gang trauma. This was 1990-92 and we would get tons of teens from Nickerson Gardens and Imperial projects in the hospital. The ER during those days was insane. So much potential lost as a result of inward hate turned outward! Come on black people we must do better!!!
Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@ej4458
Ай бұрын
don't forget the cia smuggling in drugs to black communities.
@AR15andGOD
Ай бұрын
once you do away with this racialist ideology then you will improve. Read the Bible
@paulbrungardt9823
Ай бұрын
Well Said .
@Lilgus84
Ай бұрын
You won’t tho. You’ll continue killing each other while the rest laugh. The Mexican community in America has accomplished more here in 50 years as a people then blacks have in 150.
The way he talks about the gang up and until now oh lord man dude is still passionate recalling those memories as if its his nationality and culture
cool video. Best of luck to you, Mr. White!
I grew up in suburbia and this brother motivates me to want more for myself. I’m broke but I won’t sell dope
@suzannecooper5323
Ай бұрын
When you can’t support your family with the jobs available to you, it can feel like it is your only choice.
@nickb7514
Ай бұрын
I grew up in a mix of suburbia and a rural area. But when you're hungry, you do what you gotta do. Dudes a joke but Blue Face said it best "if I go broke, somebody gettin robbed" or "if I go broke then it's kick door." Point is different strokes for different folks, but at the end of the day I won't go to bed hungry.
@datniggaeazye.5968
Ай бұрын
@@nickb7514 most street gangs don't exist to make money they just gang bang
@ForeheadPushUps
Ай бұрын
Francis Ngannou style!
@turtle811
Ай бұрын
Gotta start somewhere, majority of people start life broke and work their way up, just gotta put in the effort and stay motivated to get that bread.
Wow! Thanks for sharing your story. Way to turn it around and help educate others. I lost several friends to gang violence in the early and mid 90s. 😢
Great insight.
"If you say burger, you say curger" Iconic
Imagine wearing k-Swiss back then & not knowing .. lol
@benzobrimzs
Ай бұрын
Hahaha
@IamNightRot
Ай бұрын
Or eating crab legs like a slob
@pearce123456789
Ай бұрын
We had shoes called British knights. They banned them in our school because they had B.K. on the side.
@MR-bz5ye
Ай бұрын
@@pearce123456789 lol , I'm old enough to remember them. I'm an early 90's baby. They were just phasing out.
@shonuff5297
Ай бұрын
Same ishh in the Midwest. In the 90s so much was gang affiliated with GDs and VLs. Couldnt wear no Bulls attire or Georgetown Hoyas just to name a few. I always repped the Astros cracked 5 starter hat..
A lot of times I get serious anxiety, and I just feel like a loser stuck in my comfort zone. But after seeing youtube videos of so many messed up people, I honestly feel like I'm really not that much of loser in life.
@aintnoboulder
Ай бұрын
not being in debt, having a form of education and a job puts you up there anyways bro. even if you never left your house the knowledge you want to do more puts you above others
@stoundingresults
Ай бұрын
@thirddimensional, you write well spokenly, and intelligently, you're winning in my opinion
@B3Band
Ай бұрын
@@stoundingresults ironic
@SlappyBoy-my7wr
Ай бұрын
No your still a loser it's just your blessed compared to the others you look down upon😂
@Slimreaper3000
Ай бұрын
This mindset makes you a loser.
To me this is so oddly edited together. I guess I listed to a ton of podcasts, and I'd rather hear this subject in that format just telling his story linearly. This seems kind of jumbled up, talking about random topics. Still appreciate the insight though, its a great get to have this guy explaining things and very interesting.
this is awesome
Everyday comes with new information n learning. This video brings a lot of the things I saw back in the day into focus.
These youtube vids are getting intense lmao. Right off the bat, 15 secs in: "of course I participated in drive-bys :)"
Like 6 minutes into it and these sets are making easement and ingress and egress agreements with each other, it really makes you wonder if they're just doing it to have this appearance to everyone outside of these neighborhoods.
Excellent video
This is so insightful. Thank you for sharing.
To quote someone who did a lot of academic research on the subject, "I've asked eight different guys who were there, in the room, when the crips were founded and gotten twelve different answers about why they called themselves 'Crips'." No one knows how the crips got their name, there are some educated guesses but even the original sources gave conflicting answers. One thing we do know, however, is it was not originally an acronym for "Community Revolution/Resistance In Progress." That came later when, to skip a lot of context because it could it's own thirty minute video, someone had to come up with what CRIP stood for on some city paperwork and he decided to claim it was an offshoot of the Black Panthers.
@user-fh4nw6ct9y
Ай бұрын
These videos are propaganda. psyOp. They’re setting the narrative for those who don’t know; and trying to gaslight those who do like you.
@getampedmiku12
Ай бұрын
They were eating chips at the time, and they were Briish
@OldSchoolDudeGaming
Ай бұрын
Its because of the rico act, Look at when the crips were formed and when the rico act was formed... Not a coincidence.
@nekrataali
Ай бұрын
A lot of gangs that exist now were splinters from the BPP. As the FBI and COINTELPRO went to work, the conditions that created the Panthers didn't go away (if anything, they got worse). Efforts were made to keep the party going under different names, but all of the leaders had been killed or jailed. Instead of being led by educated adults, you had 17 year old high school drop outs trying to run a civil rights organization with middle school drop outs.
@GetGwapThisYear
Ай бұрын
@@getampedmiku12 that’s crisps dummy. Nice try doe
plz make a follow up vid
when he said the "55 crips" lol i immediately thought of Crip Mac 🤣
Thank you for sharing
When I first saw "blood" formed out with their fingers, I was legit impressed.
@WebSurfer447
Ай бұрын
Sad
@LordHollow
Ай бұрын
@@730holdings2 ah, ok.
@chiapets2594
Ай бұрын
Very sad
@complexblackness
Ай бұрын
@LordHollow Yup no one here in LA does that or California for that matter.
@LordHollow
Ай бұрын
@@complexblackness Thx. I have less than zero knowledge of the subject.
This was good interview the dope game era also bought the gangs too out of states open shops
In the early 90s, I was teaching at an inner city high school on the border of three gangs. After school, we'd have to do "bus" duty to watch out for drive bys. I was caught in the middle of two. Today the school has been re-opened as a GT school and homes in the area, that went for $10-20K at the time, have been renovated and all go for over a million plus.
@greywolf7577
22 күн бұрын
And what were you supposed to do if a drive by happened?
These type of dudes never leave town unless it’s on a doc bus
@infant5x341
Ай бұрын
Send us sum money blood
@khristionlouvatin6874
Ай бұрын
🤣😂
@ZeeMaxx-fr4th
Ай бұрын
cus*
@basidan4488
Ай бұрын
blood
Grew up in the LA area, 1 year younger than this guy - it's amazing how much of this was common knowledge at the time, and seems so insane now.
respect homie!!!
Glad you survived long enough to share this with the youth.
BOYZ N DA HOOD and MENACE TO SOCIETY represents that era
@saidismail5973
Ай бұрын
i-sa aLmasIh yEshuA jEsUs KhrIst yEsUs krIstUs 🇺🇦🇵🇸 🇰🇷🇲🇾 jhO lOw bEbaskan victoria amelina jhO lOw free gaze jhO lOw bEbaskan mh37zErO jhO lOw PercUma zayn rayyan AMIN
@Npc1488-wc1kf
Ай бұрын
Hardly It was far far worse
@lancecrane10
Ай бұрын
Snowfall is a good example of the govt involvement in the trade
@kmarsh9515
Ай бұрын
Milk comes from cows. What are we doing here?
@danfield6030
Ай бұрын
The movie "Colors" ,which is older than Boyz In Tha Hood, is by far the BEST movie about Crips and Bloods and it's from the 1980's. It's MUCH better than the movies you mentioned
26 Minutes well spent… thanks Insider!
Keep it real brother
@TboneWTF
Ай бұрын
LOL. He'll be trying to keep it to himself in the prison showers!
Like your style White. Taken lives: now you saving em.🦾on the DOC, dropping some real truth.Exactly What it is like, in Cali to NY.This man for real. Thanks for sharing
Awesome piece. Thank you for sharing your story Tyrone. I wish you continued success on your new journey.
Divide and conquer has been working for a very long time.
@sheilamorrison1954
Ай бұрын
I mean, people say that like they are free of the choice to do it. If you stop, it doesnt work. They chose it.
@strangewayfaringstranger
Ай бұрын
None of these people are conquering anything.
@WavyCrockettRXK
Ай бұрын
@@strangewayfaringstrangersay that do they face then
@Toni-to8je
Ай бұрын
Especially when you have a bunch of traitors of your own, doing it for money and fame.
@user-fh4nw6ct9y
Ай бұрын
PsyOp video.
i promise you id never be chillin outside on a sidewalk if im in a gang war
I like how he explains it like there is some kind of structure in the crops or bloods organizations.
Every body has a story to tell ? he change his life for his kids that was the best part of his story {Keep saving kids sir i respect that}
This is crazy, i love these videos. Well done! The only weird thing is the projector sounds between scenes, why is that? I bet half the audience doesnt know what it is.
@samidan91
Ай бұрын
No one likes the projector sounds
@OldSchoolDudeGaming
Ай бұрын
Its because it makes it seem more gritty.
yes seems preety accurate compared to my time in the streets
"I felt like the other police were discriminating against me, calling me a criminal, so, anyway, ... I went back to robbing people." :/
@raylopez99
10 күн бұрын
That's what made this authentic. Seems like the guy believes loyalty is worth more than doing the right thing for society. Without a strong family background or morals I guess we all would be that way, one neighborhood against another, kind of like how primates will fight over patches in the jungle. Dog eat dog. Even when he changed it was because he wanted to protect his family, not because he could care less about abstractions like doing the right thing. Racism against him also might have something to do with this attitude of 'crew society, what have they ever done for me?'
@emperorarima3225
10 күн бұрын
I think what he was trying to say was that because his police cohort didn't want to be friendly with him, he went back to gangs to fill that social void, and from there yes the crime followed. I don't even think it was about loyalty. When he tried doing the opposite and being an enforcer of the law he experienced hate. When he went back to breaking laws he had friends. It is sad, and you can tell from his voice he's kinda shocked/disappointed in his past self for making jail, especially because he did become a police officer. I'm sure he would have done the opposite if the police showed him love, and the gangs showed him hate.
@raylopez99
10 күн бұрын
@@emperorarima3225 Shows that for a tough guy like him he's still vulnerable to social pressure, which is understandable.
@bennyhath1789
10 күн бұрын
@@emperorarima3225 he could've gotten an honest job anywhere and befriended his coworkers. He didn't get a taste for wealth on a newbie cop salary that's for sure
@emperorarima3225
10 күн бұрын
@@bennyhath1789 But he chose law enforcement, and when he did he did not succeed at befriending his co-workers. Yes he should have done something different, but understandably, when he was repeatedly looked down on as a ghetto criminal, he went back to just hanging out with his old friends. I don't know why we bother listening to people if we aren't going to listen. He gave the specific events, talked honestly about his past. Both being proud of his gang affiliation and hating gang life. He never mentioned money, just a need for belonging, and he made the (wrong) decision to just go where he felt he belonged. He legit sounds like a changed man now so I don't see the motive to lie about money being the motive since he's had an even more shameful reason to be a part of it. He admired gang members and wanted to be a part of that. And to be clear, I am not saying "rejoining the gang and committing crimes was the right thing to do", or excusable, just that it is understandable. The only reason I originally responded is because the original comment made Tyrone sound like a hypocrite, when he was more of a failure, trying to leave the gang, but being pushed away by the police, getting pulled in by the gang and allowing himself to succumb to those forces.
this is why fathers are so important
@robyee3325
Ай бұрын
Exactly
@whathappened246
Ай бұрын
Nah, people with dads can become evil too, in fact plenty. We need Jesus, and of course, our REAL Father, YHWH.
@AdamAg
Ай бұрын
Underrated Comment*
@dazzledave
Ай бұрын
@@whathappened246 Bro speaking the truth 💯
@xxraptorsc0pezxx
Ай бұрын
@@whathappened246 Preach it brother🙏🏻🗣📣
GPS: "Turn right on MLK JR BLVD" Me: No thanks I chose life
@pskarnaq73
Ай бұрын
Heard this years ago "MLK and Rose Parks devoted their lives to peace, but the most dangerous streets in America are named after them."
@OtmbEl
Ай бұрын
You hear MLK IN VEGAS you know that the hood no doubt 😂
@michaeldaniel73
Ай бұрын
@@OtmbElsame in St Louis
@tressietes04
Ай бұрын
@@michaeldaniel73it’s every major city in America. Really makes one wonder.
@user-df1vc5eg6g
Ай бұрын
@@michaeldaniel73 Ditto in Memphis TN
never let a crisis go to waste
This kind of story is why it cracks me up so much that my friend group back in highschool is still (as far as I know) on the county books as a "gang." We had a name we called our friend group, and we hung out regularly together. You know what the worst thing we ever did was? We once threw corncobs on a road in the sticks, and mooned the cops as a group when they started spotlighting the field we were in. Then we ran for the fun of it through the swamp. Not even CLOSE to the reality of a "gang." ETA: thank you, sir, for educating us ALL on what being part of a gang actually entails.
Interesting interview
Shout out to this Legend for writing this history for us. Respect.
This is so complicated. First time I heard about the Crips and the Bloods, I figure symbol gang rivals wearing opposite colors. But hearing how even different blood and crip groups going after the same blue on blue and red on red is nuts.
I lived south of San Pedro in Albq. In the north there were concrete barriers doubled-up diagonally across almost every intersection to slow 💩 down. They didn't care, it wasn't drive-by's around me, it was park and get out and do mag dumps till you got tired. They hit the wrong house up the block with like 300 rounds. Old folks sleeping in the back were saved by multiple brick walls. It was nuts, 20 years ago I drove with a heater on my lap, car-jack preventive after the first attempt.
@gregdahlen4375
17 күн бұрын
What's Albq?
@memitim171
13 күн бұрын
I assume by heater you mean a gun and not a plug-in electric heater?
Damn its crazy to see somebody whos actually like giving you their perspective
@whitneyANDbunny
Ай бұрын
LMAO 😂 " I was a cop and they was racists.. they were like how we gunna trust me ? not even a minute later..." I was gang banging even when i was a cop , I was arrested" Lesson ??? trust your exitinct about ppl
I can confirm most of what he said. I was bangin' for Grove Street in San Andreas back in the mid-2000s.
@KingOfBunions
Ай бұрын
I disagree
@macksmith6694
Ай бұрын
That’s cap brodell
@heavensbeardedheathen6999
Ай бұрын
Nah bruh it was back in the 90's when the game was based on that time period.
@etienneerasmus
Ай бұрын
On GTA yes
@captaincoon_
Ай бұрын
Oh nice! We have crossed paths, Spencer. I bang for Culver City Crips as of right now.