CRIME PREVENTION
Kaine Signs Bill to Punish Restaurants That Harbor Gangs
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Saturday, May 3, 2008; Page B05
RICHMOND, May 2 -- Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D) signed into law Friday a bill designed to crack down on bars and restaurants that promote gang activity in a state that has some of the toughest anti-gang laws in the nation.
The law will allow the Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to revoke or suspend the liquor licenses of businesses that act as meeting places for gangs. ABC agents may also fine the owners.
"Oftentimes, management of these establishments are not just innocent bystanders. They're willing partners with gang members, sometimes tacitly and sometimes actively supporting the criminal activity of these gangs," Kaine said.
The General Assembly passed a handful of anti-gang bills during this year's legislative session as part of a recent push in Virginia to prevent gang activity.
Law enforcement officials estimate that Virginia has at least 40 laws combating gangs. Many were championed by former attorney general Jerry W. Kilgore, who made gang enforcement one of his priorities, and his successor, Robert F. McDonnell.
Mindy S. Grizzard, who sits on the board of the Virginia Gang Investigators Association, said Virginia has a growing gang problem and a reputation in recent years for enacting some of the strongest laws in the nation to combat it. "Virginia does have a gang problem," Grizzard said. "It's there."
In recent years, the state has increased the penalties for recruiting or coercing someone into a gang, allowed judges to restrict interaction between gang members and expanded the list of crimes that make a person eligible for prosecution under Virginia's gang participation laws.
This year's law was written after agents noticed gang members congregating at certain restaurants and bars across the state, said Pamela O'Berry Evans, head of the Virginia ABC Board.
"It's not a rare occasion to have a case where gang activity is involved," she said. "This is a direct way of getting at that activity."
For years, community leaders were reluctant to acknowledge that the state had a gang problem, but experts say that has changed with the recent increase in gang-related violence.
State police arrested 328 people affiliated with 58 gangs in Virginia last year. Many more were arrested by local police.
The Northern Virginia Regional Gang Task Force, the largest law enforcement group of its kind in the state, made 585 arrests in the 2006-07 fiscal year. It estimates a 30 percent decrease in gang activity in its five-year history.


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