Gang Indicators
Indicators of Possible
Gang Involvement
Excerpt from "A Community Response to Street Gangs"
(1997),
prepared by the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department
Gang Squad
Parents need to understand that prevention
is an important key to controlling gang activity within
our community. Learn the warning signs of gang membership
in order to better direct your children away from involvement.
it is important to understand that many of the following
indicators may be "innocent" by themselves, but
when put together they may strongly signal gang involvement.
-
Changes in the child's
behavior.
-
Not associating with
long-time friends and being secretive about new friends
and activities.
-
Changes in hair or dress
style and/or having a group of friends who have the same
hair or dress style.
-
Changes in normal routines
with new friends, such as not coming home after school
or staying out late at night with no explanation.
-
Suspected drug use,
such as alcohol, inhalants, and narcotic.
-
Unexplained material
possessions such as expensive clothing, jewelry, money,
etc.
-
The presence of firearms,
ammunition, or other deadly weapons.
-
Change in attitude about
school, church, or other normal activities.
-
Discipline problems
at school, church, or other attended functions.
-
Lower grades at school
or skipping school.
-
Change in behavior at
home-increase in confrontational behavior, such as talking
back, verbal abuse, name calling, and a disrespect for
parental authority.
-
A new fear of police.
-
Phone threats to the
family from rival gangs (or unknown callers) directed
against your child.
-
Photographs of your
child and others displaying gang hand signs, weapons,
cash, drugs or gang-type clothing.
-
Graffiti on or around
your residence, especially in a child's room such as on
walls, furniture, clothing, notebooks, etc. May also include
drawings and "doodling" of gang-related figures,
themes of violence, or gang symbolisms. When looking;
over a child's homework reports, be alert for the letters
"B" or "C" to be crossed out or inverted,
or these same letters being used improperly, or to replace
one another, such as the word cigarette being spelled
"bigarette".
-
Physical signs of being
in a fight, such as bruises and cuts and secrecy on the
child's part as to how they were received.
-
A new found sense of
bravery-brags that he/she are too tough to be "messed"
with.
-
Use of a new nickname.
-
A new-found sympathy
or defending of gang activity by your child.
-
Tattoos or "branding"
with gang-related symbols.
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