Graffiti News



Graffiti vandals kill to protect their work - 3 killed in run-ins with Los Angeles graffiti gangs

August 2nd, 2008


Artist Dartagnan Curiel, 31, said he used to scrawl graffiti in his Los Angeles neighborhood, but grew sick of the violence associated with the activity. He now paints murals with positive messages to encourage graffiti vandals and gang members to lay down their arms. “Why would you want to put spray paint on a kid’s face?” he says. “We live in the same community. We are all in this hellhole together.”

LOS ANGELES - One man got stabbed. Another got shot in the chest. A 6-year-old boy was temporarily blinded when he was spray-painted in the face.

And they were the lucky ones among those who have had run-ins with graffiti “crews,” or gangs.

Over the past 2 1/2 years in Southern California, three people have been killed after trying to stop graffiti vandals in the act. A fourth died after being shot while watching a confrontation between crews in a park.”We have seen a marked increase in these graffiti-tagging gangs taking to weapons and fighting to protect their walls, their territory, their name,” said Los Angeles County sheriff’s Lt. Robert Rifkin.

Los Angeles County has battled graffiti for decades, spending $30 million a year to paint over or clean up the emblems, names and images spray-painted on stores, concrete-lined riverbeds, rail lines, phone booths, buses, even police cars. On Wednesday, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a law requiring convicted graffiti vandals to remove their scrawl.

Taggers ‘target’ people who call police
For some taggers, protecting their work is akin to defending their names and their honor.

“If we see someone calling the police, then we target them,” said Mario Garcia, 20, who describes himself as a former tagger trying to become a professional artist. “You are trying to stop me from what I live, what I believe in and what I breathe? We are not going to let no one get in the way.”

Workers who remove the graffiti say they take caution if they find a crew at work. They wait until the taggers leave before cleaning up.

“We won’t say anything to them,” said Rogelio Flores, whose company Graffiti Busters contracts with Los Angeles to blast away the markings with high-pressure hoses. “We don’t know what kind of weapons they have.”

Police tell residents to resist the urge to confront graffiti crews.

“It’s not worth the risk,” Rifkin said. “Take a deep breath, back off and call law enforcement.”

Some of the violence has been between rival crews, which are increasingly acting like street gangs. And some of the bloodshed has involved real street gangs that mark their turf with their names or emblems. But some of the victims have been innocents.

In an attack last month, two youths spray-painted the face and body of the 6-year-old boy who spotted them scribbling gang signs on a wall near Compton. The boy recovered from chemical burns to his eyes.

On the same day, a 51-year-old auto mechanic was shot in the chest in Los Angeles when he confronted two suspected gang members painting the wall of his shop.

‘Write on your own wall’
Another man, Michael Lartundo, 26, was stabbed in the hand and arm after yelling at a group of graffiti vandals scrawling on a wall in March behind his brother’s house in suburban Whittier.

“I just told them it ain’t right,” Lartundo recalled. “I said, ‘If you are going to write on the wall, write on your own wall.’”

The most recent attack occurred July 15, when a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed after rival graffiti crews converged on a Los Angeles park for a fight. The victim was in a crowd of onlookers.

Last August, Maria Hicks, 58, was shot in the head and died after flashing her headlights and honking at a teenager spray-painting a wall near her home in Pico Rivera, a blue-collar suburb east of Los Angeles. Four people have been charged with murder.

Ten days after Hicks died, Seutatia Tausili, 65, was fatally shot and her grandson wounded when he told taggers to stop vandalizing a trash can outside their home in Hesperia in San Bernardino County. Three men were charged with murder.

Robert Whitehead was shot to death in 2006 in the Los Angeles County area of Valinda when he tried to keep taggers from marking a neighbor’s garage. Investigators arrested one man with alleged ties to the Mexican Mafia, a prison gang.

Artist Dartagnan Curiel, 31, said he used to scrawl graffiti and grew sick of the violence. He now paints murals with positive messages as a way to speak out against the bloodshed in his Los Angeles neighborhood and to encourage graffiti vandals and gang members to lay down their arms.

“Why would you want to put spray paint on a kid’s face?” he says. “We live in the same community. We are all in this hellhole together.”


Beautiful Losers film trailer

August 1st, 2008


Beautiful Losers film trailer from beautifullosersfilm on Vimeo.


Authorities Say New SF Graffiti Bill Ensures Punishment Fits Crime

July 31st, 2008

Legislation to crack down on San Francisco vandals was signed into law Wednesday by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, officials said.

The bill established a pilot project that will allow San Francisco to require graffiti offenders to perform graffiti cleanup when the offender engages in a civil compromise.Officials said that many offenders are escaping misdemeanor vandalism charges by settling cases outside of court, without ever appearing before a judge. In those cases, officials said the accused vandals usually agree to pay a property owner the costs of removing the graffiti”The signing of this law is a win for San Francisco neighborhoods,” said assemblywoman Fiona Ma. “Graffiti is blighting bus stops, MUNI, store fronts, and other properties … my hope is that the law will prove to be a success in San Francisco and can be replicated statewide.”

Officials said San Francisco spends more than $20 million annually to clean up graffiti and it is simply unfair that offenders are not being forced to do their part to clean up graffiti.San Francisco police Officer Chris Putz, who helped draft the legislation as a graffiti abatement officer, said the bill would likely curb local acts of vandalism.”This bill is a victory for every taxpayer and business owner who has been victimized by graffiti vandalism in the city,” he said.


Another Pussy Ass Pig! Caught on Tape

July 31st, 2008


New California graffiti law: Clean it up and keep it clean

July 31st, 2008

Gov. Schwarzenegger signs a law sponsored by the city of L.A. It requires convicted vandals to remove their scrawls and keep walls clean for a year.

SACRAMENTO — At the urging of Los Angeles officials alarmed about graffiti defacing the city’s many murals, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a measure into law Wednesday that requires those convicted of the vandalism to remove the scrawls and, in some cases, keep the tagged surfaces clean for one year.

The law was welcomed by many officials as another tool to use against a recent explosion of graffiti, but some gang experts were worried that it might put the offenders in jeopardy if they had to cover up graffiti by other gang members.The measure applies to graffiti on any surface, including blank walls.

Los Angeles, which sponsored the legislation, has recorded a significant increase in graffiti in the last three years, from 25 million square feet of graffiti-stained surfaces in 2005 to 31.7 million in the year that ended June 30, said Paul Racs, director of the city’s Office of Community Beautification.

Last year, the city received reports of graffiti at 653,520 locations, 40,000 more than the year before, he said.

Racs said graffiti was increasing partly because it is celebrated on the Internet.

“There are video games where the good guy is the tagger and the bad guy is the cop,” he said. “Graffiti is also used in advertising, so young people are getting a dual message.”

Artist Judy Baca, founder of the Social and Public Art Resource Center, has seen graffiti nearly cover her mural “Hitting the Wall” on the 110 Freeway downtown.

Baca said the city had cut funding for the creation and maintenance of murals.

“These kids don’t have the possibility of being a muralist themselves,” she said, so they angrily ruin murals with graffiti.

The measure makes it mandatory, instead of discretionary, for a court to order a defendant who is convicted of graffiti vandalism to clean up or repair the property when feasible. A judge could decide not to order a tagger to risk his life by keeping graffiti off a sign that hangs over the freeway.

The court also could order the defendant or a minor defendant’s parents or guardians to keep the damaged property free of graffiti for up to one year.

“By having to clear up the mess, they would realize how much effort and cost is involved in tidying up after them,” said Assemblyman Mike Davis (D-Los Angeles), author of the law.

Some gang experts said the requirement that young offenders remove others’ graffiti could put them in harm’s way.

“The cause for a lot of violence involves graffiti and either crossing it out or removing it,” said Khalid Shah, director of Stop the Violence, a gang intervention program.

He said Homeboy Industries closed a program that put gang members to work removing graffiti after two young people were shot to death while cleaning walls.


Live blogging - dvd archive project

July 29th, 2008

Me & Henry Chalfant shooting DJ Kay Slay aka Dez TFA

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A Video Clip - Dirty Fucking Pigs.

July 29th, 2008


Graffiti vandal nabbed by off-duty police officer

July 28th, 2008

An off-duty cop caught a graffiti vandal in the act of tagging up a Staples store in his neighborhood late Sunday night, cops allege.

Police say Edward M. Chimera, 22, of Cortlandt St., used a paint marker to write two separate graffiti tags on the rear wall of the Forest Avenue store.

The off-duty officer saw him and moved in to arrest him, and Chimera tried, unsuccessfully, to break free, according to court papers.

Chimera was charged with fourth-degree criminal mischief, making graffiti, possession of a graffiti instrument and resisting arrest.


Who’s up?

July 24th, 2008

Washington & 14th street.

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‘Green’ graffiti makes paint-free protests

July 22nd, 2008

Street artists are increasingly turning to non-destructive, paint-free forms of graffiti to make a point without permanently defacing property. Their urban pranks and social protests engage mobile gadgets, open-source software, and online social networking. They blend aesthetics from the hip-hop, punk, and do-it-yourself arts and crafts movements to convey messages from the silly to the politically provocative. Free speech, environmentalism, and anti-war messages are common themes.

Artists with the Graffiti Research Lab play laser tag by scribbling with light beams onto buildings. Targets have included the Roman Coliseum (shown here) and Brooklyn Bridge. For the projects, they use a camera, a laptop with open-source software, a projector, and a green laser. Equipment for the mobile, interactive laser shows can be mounted in a camper or car, or on a bicycle.

The summer tour of Graffiti Research Lab, an offshoot of the nonprofit Eyebeam arts center, is working on a new laser tag technology dubbed Green Lantern that can project images on the scale of Batman’s bat signal.

[Via:Link]


Henry Chalfants photo dvd archive

July 22nd, 2008

More photos from henry chalfants archive DVD project.

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Lee Quinones


Portsmouth graffiti artist busted after posting photos of work on Web

July 22nd, 2008

PORTSMOUTH — A local graffiti artist’s online requests for feedback on his work ultimately landed him in hot water with police this month.

Thanks to those online postings, police arrested Alan Hall, 27, of 100 Ledgewood Drive for allegedly “tagging” numerous properties in the city.

Online postings of graffiti in the city with the tag “SINS” led to Hall’s arrest last month on seven counts of criminal mischief, including one felony for spray-painting buildings and road signs all over the city.

Hall was arraigned on the charges Monday in Portsmouth District Court and ordered not to possess any paint products between now and his probable cause hearing.

Hall allegedly spray painted numerous properties in the city in April and May, including the pump house of the pool at Portsmouth High School, the rear of the old Regal Cinema on Lafayette Road, the back door of the Green Monkey restaurant on Pleasant Street, the rear of the Waterstone Development, which houses the Goodwill, Shaw’s and other shops on Lafayette Road, at least two road signs and a traffic control box, police said.

Hall is free on $2,500 personal recognizance bail.

According to a police report, Detective Robert Munson had seen the tag “SINS” around town, as well as in Manchester and along Route 101. He also received information that the person who spray painted the pump house had posted photographs on the Internet.

Munson found images of the vandalized property on a graffiti site called “Bombing Science” and was able to track them to Hall.

When arrested, Hall admitted to the “SINS” tag, Munson said in his report.

Hall’s probable cause hearing is scheduled for Aug. 5.

When arrested, Hall admitted to the “SINS” tag, Munson said in his report.”

When you get arrested shut the fuckup until you speak to you lawyer!!  This asshole gave them a case..


City reintroduces graffiti-removal program

July 22nd, 2008

James McBean gets ready to paint away more graffiti, as his 17 Ave SW building is often the target of urban artists looking for a canvas.

The downtown Beltline was once arguably a sight for sore eyes, but a recent city initiative has helped drain the color out of bothersome graffiti.
Last year as part of a Clean to the Core program, the city introduced a pilot program to help rid the city’s inner core of graffiti, and, since it went so well, has re-introduced the program this year.
“It’s been awesome. It keeps us busy and people may not see a lot of graffiti out there but it’s because we clear it up so fast,” Bylaw boss Bill Bruce told Metro, adding they have cleaned up thousands of square feet.
The program takes the onus off of the victims of graffiti by cleaning it up for them efficiently at no cost; all they have to do is call 3-1-1.
Neal Arya, owner of Saneal Cameras located in the Beltline is no stranger to graffiti-plagued walls and has nothing but praise for the program.
“They provide the clean up without putting the financial obligation on the business, but more importantly is the efficiency,” he said. “Especially because graffiti tends to attract more graffiti.”

[Via:www.metronews.ca]


Who’s Up?

July 22nd, 2008

40th street between 7th & 8th ave.

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posted using the wordpress iphone app


Bloging from my iphone test

July 22nd, 2008

West Bway & Canal st

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posted using the wordpress iphone app



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