Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Gangs Using Rosaries As Identifiers
While the recent case of a Schenectady, New York school principal who invoked the school's anti-gang paraphernalia ban to suspended a 13-year old student for wearing a rosary outside of his shirt has led to widespread criticism of school authorities, it turns out the principal may have been onto something. Alexandria, Louisiana Town Talk reported Saturday that in fact many gangs have turned to rosaries as a gang symbol after schools began prohibiting bandannas, specific clothing and hairstyles. The gangs tell their members to invoke religious freedom if they are called in by the school principal. According to a San Antonio (TX) Police Department handbook, gang members not only wear certain colors, but they also arrange beads to signal their rank. Jared Lewis, a former California police officer, says that rosaries are most popular among Latino gang members. He says that the Latin Kings gang use colored beads to mark members' rank in the gang-- five black and five gold beads for members; two gold beads for top dogs; while assassins wear all black. Members of the Netas, an East Coast gang with origins in Puerto Rico, wear 78 red, white and blue beads to symbolize the 78 towns in Puerto Rico. Prospective members wear all white beads before they join the gang.