Taggers, Tagger Crews, and Tag Bangers

LOS ANGELES

In my Compton High School days, I was on the production art staff specializing in large murals and Christmas windows. I belonged to a group called VIA for Very Important Artists. Today I still sign my drawings with the VIA VAL. Perhaps today, I might have been a tagger.

Everyone has seen these colorful crew and individual stylized “tag” signatures on any writable surface in our cities. Tagging is very different from traditional gang graffiti, or “placas” in Calo gang slang.

In Tagging the letter shapes and word spellings can be sacrificed for aesthetics, or the look. But in gang graffiti, the gang name or symbol must be clear to others. Reading gang writing-the newspaper of the street-is a necessity for gang investigators, but you must use lots of imagination to read most tags.

And you can’t blame these Taggers on Los Angeles; they were born in New York in the summer of 1970. “TAG” stands for Tough Artist Group, and the first recognized tag was TAKI #183. This was actually the nickname and badge number of a New York City firefighter. The Fireman was injured in an emergency situation while rescuing some people from a burning building. He was a hero, only problem was that he was also off duty. The New York City authorities did not grant him a medical retirement because he was not properly on duty at the time of the injury. Over the years he grew depressed and financially hard pressed fighting for his retirement.

The fireman’s younger brother tried to draw attention to his plight by writing TAKI #183 everywhere in the city. He wrote on buildings, street signs, and on the transit subway cars. Eventually he drew the attention of a New York Times reporter who tracked him down and wrote an article about the tagger and his fireman brother.

So the story has a happy ending because the city did finally grant the firefighter his retirement. Does this story sound familiar? That’s because it was depicted in a movie called “TURK #182.”

When hip-hop music became popular in New York, kids stood on corners with boom boxes and did pop lock and break dancing moves in front of murals on brick walls or old cardboard boxes. These murals colorfully depicted a New York, or at least an urban skyline. These original dancing graffiti artists and street poets were strongly opposed to gang violence. This tagging and “bombing” was most prized when it was the most visible to the most people. So early on, “going to the heavens” or tagging on high rise structures became important. Tagging busses, subway trains, and railroad cars got the tagging exposed all over the city, and hopefully across the country. This moving canvas spread the new “tough urban kid opposed to gang banging” life style across the U.S. and into Canada and Mexico.

Across the Americas, hip-hop kids began to compete for the tagger fame by “Getting up” in the most inaccessible places or the most times. Freeway signs, water towers, walls, and empty buildings began to be covered up by competing taggers and their “crews.” The “pieces” they painted became more and more elaborate, and as the open spaces were filled the cleverest styles stood out from the “surfus statik” of the less talented taggers.

Many crews that formed were difficult to track because they would change their tag or crew names. SLIME had back up names like SKUM and PUKE. TDK could mean Total Dance Kings, The Def Kings, Total Destruction Krew or just Those Dam Kids.

In Los Angeles in the 1980s, we had our most famous tagger, a young man who signed his tags “CHAKA”, which is street slang for drug dealer. Chaka was a 213 “oner” not associated with a tagger crew, but proficient as an army in getting his tag up.

Every bus, building, alley, and freeway overpass in Los Angeles had Chaka tagged on it in multiple places. I remember thinking that this was impossible for one person to write his name so many times in so many places from the Santa Monica shoreline to the Inland Empire. Repairing the vandal’s damage was estimated by the Rapid Transit District and LAPD to cost in the tens of thousands of dollars.

And Chaka’s tags, as destructive as he was, were just a drop in the bucket. The RTD (L.A.’s bus system) spends over $14 million and CALTRANS spends $2.5 million, a year on repairing and removing tagger vandalism. Additionally $9.5 million are wasted by L.A. Schools and $3 million by the Department of Public Works removing tags.

Eventually, Chaka was arrested and taken before a judge. The judge foolishly believed Chaka was just another innocent kid (an adult by this time), expressing himself in a cultural and artistic way. After securing his promise to respect the property of others and stop his tagging, the judge released him. Riding the elevator down from the courtroom in the Criminal Courts Building, Chaka defiantly spray painted his tag on the elevator back wall. Unfortunately for Chaka, he was caught by LAPD officers when the doors came open and he was returned to the courtroom. This time the judge was not so lenient.

Chaka served time for this, and later for drug trafficking. Like all good taggers he had a “back up” tag. His backup tag was ROACH. When I return to Los Angeles and drive around the city I see Chaka’s backup tag ROACH written everywhere. And that is the problem, taggers have a very difficult time not tagging.

Imagine you have a little male puppy you just bought. Someone accidentally left your fence gate open and the cute puppy escapes. The first thing that puppy will do is to go up to a tree, telephone pole, or fire hydrant and pee. This is an act of defiance and a challenge to other dogs. Some might say no, it is only what comes naturally to the dog. Let me ask you something, does the dog pee in his own bed? Does he pee near his own food? No, the puppy is marking out his territory and defying any claim by other dogs. If another dog should pass and smell the marking what will that dog do? It will pee over the other puppy’s mark. What will likely happen if both dogs come together? They will fight.

There are “leaders” in our communities that want to start programs that provide a public place for gang members or taggers to express themselves and their culture by painting murals. The 90 percent who are going to school, working, and staying out of trouble never get such an opportunity. The resulting mural is often a very negative depiction of militant racism, antipolice, and a glorification of the fallen homeboys in a place of prominence in the community.

So what do you have if you allow a colorful mural depicting the Lady of Guadalupe over the graves of the homeboys who were killed in gang violence and the name of the local gang or crew written in fancy Old English letters? You have pretty dog piss.

The local rival groups will find a way to pee over that mark. And if crossing out someone’s tag in the back alley will get you killed, what will crossing out the Lady of Guadalupe and the dead homeboys do? People have died as a result of such foolishness.

Once upon a time, the LAPD allowed a group of street artists to paint a mural on the side of a LAPD building near downtown Los Angeles. They should have checked out the preliminary drawings before they started because the mural turned out to be a huge negative painting of LAPD cops as pigs. To make matters worse, someone got a court order restraining the LAPD from painting over the art work so the cops had to endure this insult for months before they could clear it up in court.

Tagger crews often include people from different ethnic backgrounds and both male and female members. The boys are “Kings” and the girls are “Queens.” The most prolific are kids from 13 to 17 years old. Taggers dress like most other kids but can adopt gang-like dress. Mostly they wear baggy dark colored clothing or perhaps professional sport team clothing. Taggers need their tools so they often travel with various sizes of aerosol paint tips in a case. They carry “Mean Streak” paint markers, scribing tools, gloves, and sometimes weapons. They commonly “jack” or “rack” the aerosol paint, spray tips, and markers
by “rushing” a store in packs.

In the mid 1990s, the Los Angeles independent tagger crews were forced by the larger traditional gangs to become sub-sets or cliques of the traditional street gangs like Florence 13, 18th Street, and Mara Salvatrucha. Some resisted and became gangs of their own. The KAM (Krazy Ass Mexicans) was a party crew and tagger group that became a street gang. More and more frequently taggers began carrying weapons and shot at their rivals. These new gang-like taggers called themselves “tag bangers.”

As an artist I must say that some of their underground art work is very good. I wish I could post some of this graphics on this Web channel. My son attended college in Santa Cruz and some of his friends were outstanding taggers.

Today taggers sometimes use “slap ups” stencils and preprinted stickers to get up. Sometimes these “slap ups” are politically motivated and really have something to say. From our Neanderthal ancestor drawing in his fire lit cave, to “Killroy” in WWII, to today, people will continue to express themselves in graffiti.

Sgt. Richard Valdemar is retired from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department after spending most of his 33 years on the job combating gangs.

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