Jump to content
JG:RP sedang menjadi korban serangan DDoS dengan skala besar. Semua tanggung jawab terkait ini sudah diserahkan penuh ke pihak hosting provider. ×

[COPASSSSSSSSSS] Mara Salvatrucha 13 Figuero Locos


pablo123

Recommended Posts

Posted
Image

Glen Park's early history
Glen Park is a lower income and upper working class neighborhood within the Eastside Los Santos district of Los Santos, San Andreas. The neighborhood was founded by the municipal government of Los Santos in 1876, making it one of the oldest neighborhoods inside of Eastside Los Santos.

The neighborhood was once considered one of the most impoverished areas of Eastside Los Santos in the many decades after its founding and still is. Originally, from the 1870s to the 1940s, it was typically third behind Jefferson and East Los Santos in terms of how impoverished it was. Over the past 70 some years, however, the most worst off neighborhoods in Eastside Los in terms of impoverishment have varied. Just like with the other aforementioned neighborhoods, Glen Park originally had a mixture of Mexican American, African American and Caucasian American residents, most of whom were living well below the poverty line. All residents of the neighborhood who were active in the workforce performed blue collar work, which was mostly unskilled and semi-skilled at the very most. Greek, Italian and Irish immigrants who had decided to settle in Los Santos after migrating down from the Northeast and Midwest had little to no choice but to live in Eastside Los and the Las Colinas Valley due to the discrimination and prejudice that they faced in other districts of the city such as Westside Los Santos and Northern Los Santos; a considerable amount of these migrants went and lived in Glen Park right upon arriving in the city.

The first Mexican American barrio within the neighborhood was established in 1912 when the area attained a majority of Mexican American residents. The vast majority of Mexican American youths who resided in Glen Park circa the early 1910s conformed to the Chicano subculture, which was just beginning to come to prominence during that era. Other areas of the neighborhood circa the 1910s were home to a near pluraity of Greek American, Italian American and Irish American residents, who's ancestors had resided in the Las Colinas Valley and other neighborhoods of Eastside Los for multiple generations at that point.

Throughout the First World War, the Interwar period and the Second World War, the neighborhood went through sweeping socioeconomic and sociopolitical changes which resulted in a drastic increase of resident population, through the racial and ethnic demographics remained virtually the same.

Lower income and upper working class Caucasian Americans, African Americans and Mexican Americans throughout the late 1940s, 1950s and 1960s settled in the area from other Eastside Los neighborhoods such as East Los Santos, Jefferson and unincorporated Los Flores. Additionally, a large number of Greek Americans, Italian Americans and Irish Americans during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s migrated into Glen Park from the Melrose Avenue area of East Los Santos as a part of the white flight phenomenon.

In the late 1950s through to the early 1970s, Glen Park was one of many focal points throughout Eastside Los Santos and South Central Los Santos for the Mexican American and African American civil rights movements. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the Black Panther Party and the National Council of La Raza had very prominent presences in the neighborhood. Additonal civil rights movements which were informally headquartered in the neighborhood included the 2nd wave feminist movement and LGBT pride movement.

Throughout the entirety of the 1980s and most of the 1990s, the final wave of immigrants entered Eastside Los Santos and the Las Colinas Valley. These immigrants consisted of civil war refugees and socioeconomic immigrants from multiple Central American countries such as Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua along with Mexican immigrants, most of whom were illegals, who were fleeing socioeconomic and sociopolitical corruption, drug cartel violence and extremely high rates of unemployment throughout Mexico. Initially, the Central American and Mexican refugees/immigrants consisted of families but the exact people coming in by the mid 1980s to the late 1990s consisted of young men and young women who came, largely to work within the country, state, city, district and neighborhood. These Central American and Mexican immigrants formed their own barrios throughout the neighborhood from the early 1980s to the late 1990s; the first Salvadoran barrio ever on the west coast was founded in Glen Park circa 1981 and was informally named the Santa Ana Park. Almost all of these Central American immigrants nowadays are middle aged to elderly, and have long since assimilated into the local subcultures of Eastside Los Santos and to a lesser extent, the Las Colinas Valley. They've helped to create 1st and 2nd generations of Americans born to Central American, and to a far lesser extent, Mexican refugees and immigrants.
 
Image


Glen Park in the current era
Glen Park in the modern day is well known for its community's strong attachments to the cultures of Mexico and Central America. Additional cultural influence comes from African American ghetto subculture, peckerwood subcultures along with the Americanized cultures which originated from Greek, Italian and Irish immigrants and their later American ancestors.

 

latest?cb=20090515052751

Glen Park is widely known throughout Eastside Los Santos for their ample amount of small businesses which are owned and operated by Mexican and Central American immigrants, along with Mexican Americans who conform to the Chicano subculture. These small businesses primarily consist of trades businesses, public works, retail stores, supermarkets, warehouses and restaurants.

The Spanish language, and to be specific, the Mexican and Central American dialects of it, are widely spoken by the Latino Americans and Latin American immigrants who both reside and work within the neighborhood.

During multiple times of the year, public festivals and street parades are held which commemorate significant events and historical dates within Spanish, Mexican and Central American history.

The Feast of San Gennaro has taken place within the neighborhood since 1951 and is always co-ordinated by the Italian Americans living there.

 

 

Image

Crime and gangs within Glen Park
The chronic cycles, which are all locally contained, of: poverty, high rates of unemployment, a poor educational system, horrible community cohesion and generally bad policing by law enforcement have always contributed to the activities of independent criminals and street gangs in the neighborhood. Additional cycles which are more hidden and exclusive to individuals which include but are not limited to: broken homes, dysfunctional families, drug addictions, addictions to certain personal activities, alcoholism, mental illness, involvement in petty crime and incarceration are prime external factors for why many individuals within the neighborhood have always taken to blue collar crime in order to personally, financially and logistically provide for themselves.

In the 1900s and 1910s, the earliest Mexican American, Caucasian American and African American street gangs were formed in the neighborhood. They consisted of loosely organized groups of youths who banded together in order to protect themselves within the neighborhood's schools and community sports associations, and of course, within the streets. These street gangs greatly widely proliferated during the 1920s and 1930s and began committing blue collar crime in the streets in order to provide for themselves. In the same time period, they all began fighting with each other in schools and in the streets in the form of fist fights, school brawls and large brawls in the streets. During the 1940s and the 1950s, the fighting over street gang turf became deadly as melee weapons and firearms became popular tools for settling disputes which ranged from petty to meaningful. During the early to mid 1960s, these street gangs began selling soft, psychedelic and hard drugs in order to monetarily and logistically provide for themselves.

In the late 1960s to mid 1970s, the Mexican American street gangs in the neighborhood fell under the banners of the Sureños and 18th Street gang, while the African American street gangs fell under the banners of the Bloods and Crips. The Caucasian American street gangs gradually conformed to the peckerwood, skinhead and neo-Nazi subcultures.

The consolidation of major Los Santos-borne street gangs within the neighborhood inevitably led to a surge of non-violent drug crime and violent crime, as well as bloody street wars over turf and age-old rivalries.

Most street gangs by the late 1970s had put their fighting and old rivalries aside. Instead, they began diverting their efforts into efficiently carving up the neighborhood into turfs which were used to facilitate the sale of illegal narcotics, stolen firearms and stolen gproperty. Anti-gang patrols were set up by the Los Santos Police Department, originally in 1979, and these patrols continue to take place today.

The Petrulli crime family operated within the Italian American and Greek American quarters of Glen Park from the 1940s until their demise in the 1990s. Given their fearsome, respected and infamous influence over the entire city of Los Santos, they were largely left alone by the local street gangs over a five decade long period. When the Petrullis were wiped out in a long and bloody war with the Valenti crime family throughout all of the 1990s, their old rackets such as extorted small businesses, automotive vehicle theft rings, illicit narcotics sales, the sales of stolen firearms and the sale of stolen property were quickly taken over by the local street gangs.

Throughout the 1980s and for the majority of the 1990s, the situation with non-violent drug crime, violent crime and street gang related crime got worse almost tenfold with the arrival of Central American war refugees and socioeconomic immigrants to the neighborhood. These Central American immigrants, while the majority of them arrived legally and were hard working, brought over vicious criminals who formed their own street gangs that infiltrated the first Salvadoran barrio of the city. The Mara Salvatrucha Stoners eventually came under attack from the Sureños, 18th Street gang, Bloods and Crips throughout the entire Eastside by 1987, which led to unlikely alliances being formed between Latino American and African American street gangs in Glen Park. The Mara Salvatrucha Stoners made up for their initial lack of numbers by instilling fear and hatred towards themselves within residents of Eastside Los Santos by carrying out horrifically barbaric tortures, murders and assassinations of their rivals in street gangs, organized crime, law enforcement and public life. During the 1990s, the street gang crime filtered down from the hardcore gangbangers to the everyman who was uninvolved with any sort of crime, which created large and irreparable damage between the African American, Chicano and Central American communities of Eastside Los. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the landscape of street gangs was forever altered when the Mexican Mafia (eMe) forcibly brought the Mara Salvatrucha under their umbrella and made them become the Mara Salvatrucha 13.

While other street gangs continue to exist within Glen Park, the Mara Salvatrucha 13 has risen in the past few years as being the most influential. They rule the Central American populace within the neighbourhood like an iron fist and have instilled fear and hatred among the locals. The street gang is moving towards a monopoly on the locale's illicit narcotics and stolen firearms sales, car theft rings as well as crimes of a heinous nature such as those which are sexually predatory in nature. Two sets within Glen Park, the Parkview Loco and the Figueroa Locos are the most socially influential and criminally powerful of the Mara Salvatrucha 13.
Last edited by West Mareros on Wed Aug 29, 2018 8:51 pm, edited 58 times in total.
M.I.P Mousie FLS
  • Replies 37
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Posted

Reserved.

Image

MARA SALVATRUCHA 13
The Mara Salvatrucha (MS) is a large Salvadoran street gang created in Los Santos, San Andreas during the early 1980s. It was in the lower income and working class neighborhood of Glen Park on the east end of Los Santos that the first Mara Salvatrucha clique started.

The MS in Los Santos is split into two separate 'programs'. The Los Santos (Sureño) program and the Salvadoran (Tax Free) program. The Salvadoran Program consists of various 'oldschool' MS13 cliques that continue to resist the Mexican Mafia's power to this day and therefore condone criminals acts such as rape, child molestation and other particularly heinous acts that are typically frowned upon by Sureños in general.

However, due to the greenlight on non tax paying MS cliques and pressure from rival street gangs, many of these cliques are defunct with many of their surviving members either falling in line with the Sureños, fleeing Los Santos or being shot down in the streets or in prison by rivals from the Bloods, Crips, Sureños, Norteños or even by members of other MS13 cliques that wish to strengthen their ties to the Mexican Mafia.

The earliest cliques to fall under the Mara Salvatrucha's Los Santos Program in Glen Park, East Los Santos and South Central Los Santos are: the Rampart Locos (RLS), Park View Locos (PVLS), Adams Locos (ALS), Coronado Lil Cycos (CLCS), Tiny Locas De Coronados (TLCS), Leeward Grandes (LGS), Normandie Locos (NLS), Hyatt Criminals (HCS), West Los Bagos Locos (BGLS), Temple Locos (TLS) and the Centrales Locos (CLS)

Other well known sets that came to fruition in the late 1990s - early 2010s include: the Vinewood Locos (VLS), Fremont Locos Westside (FLSW), Arbutus St Tiny Wynos (TWS), King Boulevard Locos (KBLS), and the Figueroa Locos (FLS).

MS-13 cliques that resisted the Mexican Mafia's power in Southern San Andreas and as a result and as a result are greenlit and considered to be under the Salvadoran program include but are not limited to the Southbridge Locos (SLS), Gilmore Avenue Locos (GLS), Lynwood Park Locos (LPLS), Artesia Locos (ALS), Oak Hill Locos (OHLS), River Valley Locos (RVLS), Lowden Locos (LLS) and the Hillside Locos (HLS).

The Mara Salvatrucha in Los Santos has evolved from simply being a street gang comprised of impoverished war refugees with guerrilla, paramilitary, military and career criminal backgrounds. It has taken the next step up to becoming a large coalition of individual street gangs known as cliques. The Mara Salvatrucha maintains a physical presence in the United States, Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. It also has ties to criminal organisations operating in Canada and the European Union.
 
Image

MS-13 FIGUEROA LOCOS
The Figueroa Locos (MS13 FLS) also known as Figueroa's Finest are a small and tight knit clique of the Mara Salvatrucha 13 transnational criminal organization located in the slum of Glen Park, West Los Santos. The clique is a fairly new clique of the Mara Salvatrucha 13, having been founded by Salvadoran, Guatemalan and Honduran immigrants in 1998. This particular MS clique is located along West 7th Street and Figueroa Avenue inbetween S Park View Street and S Alvarado Street in the Glen Park neighbourhood of Northeast Los Santos.

The Mara Salvatrucha Figueroa Locos were one of the original subsets of the Lowden Locos Salvatruchos (LLS), founded by impoverished and illegal socioeconomic immigrants from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras in 1998. Over time, the clique grew out and began recruiting Mexican immigrants and Mexican Americans from Glen Park, thus making it the first multi-ethnic clique of the Lafayette Locos Salvatruchos.

In 2002, four years after its founding, the Figueroa Locos broke away from the Lowden Locos due to being disaffected by the latter's pro-rape and pro-sexual abuse stance to criminal activity. This caused a bloody, seven month long civil war within the Lafayette Locos and ultimately led to the street gang's total demise. While the Figueroa Locos reigned supreme, they also faced new enemies such as the Crazy Riders 13, Wanderers 13, Sin Town Mafia Crips and the last active remnants of the 18th Street Rosemont Lil Cycos over a dozen years. The street gang, over this twelve year long period, fuelled their street wars through their illicit narcotics and firearm dealing business.

Since the resurrection of the Wilmer Parque 13 in 2013, and the resurgence of old rivals such as the Wanderers 13 and Crazy Riders 13 in the following years, the Figueroa Locos have been operating under the radar for the most part, some members also resorted to low level organized crime in order to feed themselves and their families.

Their involvement with organised crime formally began when illegal Nicaraguan immigrant and Figueroa Locos shotcaller, Roberto Cordua, was incarcerated in the Pleasant Valley State Prison on a sixteen year sentence for narcotics trafficking in 2011. While incarcerated in the Pleasant Valley State Prison, he associated himself with the Mexican Mafia in the medium security facility of that state prison. Here, he brought the Figueroa Locos under the protection of the Mexican Mafia, thus securing it as one of the many street gangs which it is nominally in control of. Eventually, in 2014, Roberto Cordua was bumped up to the maximum security facility of the state prison for stabbing a Mexican American child molester to death on the orders of his bosses. For his involvement in a second murder, in which he slit the throat of a Norteño as he slept in his cell, which took place in the maximum security state prison a mere eight months after arriving there, he was transferred to the San Andreas Correctional Facility. He remains locked up in the Secure Housing Unit (SHU) and remains in close contact with Mexican Mafia members who control turf all throughout East and Central Los Santos. He is serving two consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole, and despite this, his deportation order which is to be served upon his release from state prison, still stands.
The Figueroa Locos have remained traditional in that their members are predominately of Guatemalan, Salvadoran, Honduran or Nicaraguan ethnic heritage. They will recruit Mexican immigrants and Mexican Americans but remain reluctant to do so. Recruitment into the clique in general is very selective, and only the most bloodthirsty and brutally violent individuals are allowed to get jumped in. The clique's main focus nowadays is on instead of making money for themselves through lucrative criminal activities such as drug dealing and stolen/illegally modified weapon sales.

The Figueroa Locos are friendly towards all other Mara Salvatrucha 13 cliques that follow the LS program's ideology.. They are allies of the Mexican Mafia, Geer Gang Crip and former allies of the Rolllin 20's Neighborhood Bloods,. Their rivals consist of local gangs which include but are not limited to 18th Street, Crazy Riders 13, Wanderers 13, Playboy Sureños , Wilmer Parque 13 and the So Hated Sureños 13 gang.

The Figueroa Locos are also known to hold vicious rivalries with all Mara Salvatrucha 13 cliques under the Salvadoran Program, who they view as traitors to MS13 in general, However their most fierce rivalry thus far was the Lowden Locos (LLS) who were once childhood friends of many of the founding members of the FLS clique.
Mara Salvatrucha 13 Figueroa Locos is a street gang faction with a community esque atmosphere. We are portraying a close-to-defunct Mara Salvatrucha 13 (MS13) click which is heavily based off of the real life Francis Locos (FLS), Normandie Locos (NLS) and the Parkview Locos (PVLS) MS-13 cliques that come from the Downtown area of Los Angeles.

That being said, in order to join, you need to know how to portray a character from the West Coast of the United States and must be informed on both West Coast (Especially California's) vernacular along with being familiar with slang used by Central Americans in Southern California.

Our main focus is the character development behind each character, we encourage others to have the same focus. We do require screenshot permission to post on our thread. Do not be discouraged if your screenshots are not acceptable and/or removed. We are here to help anyone make improvements for their screenshots.

We fall under the historical timeline of Sureno Vida / El Vertido's Mara Salvatrucha 13 History.

Credits to Sureno Vida for the thread.

To learn more about the faction and to obtain permission to post screenshots, you're encouraged to join our Discord Channe
  • 2 weeks later...

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...