Jim
Bramlett
(27 Apr 2007)
"MS-13 is not a new Microsoft
program"
Dear friends:
MS-13 is not a new Microsoft computer program. As mentioned before, it
is a violent gang spreading like wildfire across the U.S. and Central America.
And the 18th Street Gang is not a neighborhood bowling club.
On April 25 I explained how “in the days of Noah,” Genesis says the earth was
“filled with violence.” In Matthew 24, Jesus said it will be the same
way before the rapture.
If it is that way before the rapture, think how bad it will be after
the rapture when the restraining influence of the church is gone. Lost
people, including maybe anti-rapturists, will find themselves in a literal hell
on earth. You don’t want to be there.
Yes, there has always been violence and murder, starting with Cain and Able.
But it was worse just before the flood. And it will also be worse just
before the rapture. The ark was a type of Christ, and those who entered
found safety. Those who enter Christ will also find safety.
Worldwide violent movements such as Al Qaeda are spreading. Former CIA
director George Tenet said yesterday that Al Qaeda is already in the U.S., just
waiting for orders, thanks largely to lack of border control, which can be blamed
on all administrations, but especially the present one which remained complacent
even after the 9-11 wake-up call. Al Qaeda may be waiting until they have
portable nukes in place so their strike will be devastating and final.
Most of the American public is too blindly consumed with Anna Nicole Smith,
Don Imus, and Al Sharpton to notice, but Al Qaeda is already working with MS-13
to prepare for their attack on the U.S. According WND, "captured
al-Qaida leaders and documents, the plan is called the 'American Hiroshima'
and involves the multiple detonation of nuclear weapons already smuggled into
the U.S. over the Mexican border with the help of the MS-13 street gang and
other organized crime groups."
Below is a new article by WorldNetDaily on the gang situation. Like the
spread of perversion and AIDS, California is again at the epicenter.
Jesus' words in Luke 21:36 have never been more relevant: "Watch therefore,
and pray always that you may be counted worthy to escape all these things that
will come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man.” (NKJV.)
Jim
__________________________________
Ultra-violent gang found in 42 states
Central American members move to Los Angeles, then branch out
Posted: April 27, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern
By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador – Cliques of the ultra-violent Latin American MS-13
gang have been identified in 42 U.S. states, according to the director of an
FBI
task force, speaking at a conference here.
Another violent group, the 18th Street Gang, is in 37 states, said Brian Truchon,
director of the FBI MS-13 National Gang Task Force, or NGTF.
As WND
reported, Truchon spoke at the Third Gang Enforcement Conference 2007 conference,
which is focusing on MS-13.
"One thing we figured out with the on-going cases was that Los Angeles
is our starting point," Truchon stressed. "When the gang migrates
throughout the U.S., there is always a road back to L.A. From L.A., there is
always a road back to Central America."
The FBI has identified 13 core cities for MS-13 in the U.S.: Los Angeles, Washington,
Baltimore, New York, Houston, Charlotte, Sacramento, Seattle, San Francisco,
Las Vegas, Omaha, Newark and Boston.
Currently, the FBI has in excess of 110 MS-13 investigations in 40 different
FBI field offices. For the 18th Street Gang, the FBI has more than 20 on-going
investigations in 15 FBI field offices.
The FBI has found foreign connectivity from MS-13 and the 18th Street Gang back
to El Salvador, Mexico, Guatemala and
Honduras.
"One piece of information a particular FBI field office develops may fit
into an international puzzle," Truchon emphasized. "The information
might actually help us with a case we are developing in an entirely different
city."
Truchon said individuals in gang cliques in the U.S. often are influenced by
gang members in Latin America, even from within the prisons.
"Gang members in a prison in El Salvador are able to reach out from prison
and kill gang members in L.A.," he said.
Truchon reported that deported members from Hollywood Locos Clique incarcerated
in Ciudad Barrios Prison, El Salvador, were found to be able to impact MS-13
gang members in Virginia. Sailors Clique MS-13 gang members imprisoned in Quezaltepeque,
La Libertad, El Salvador, were also found to exert an impact on gang members
in Virginia.
"We find a great deal of movement and communication between gang members
in the U.S. and their counterparts in Mexico and El Salvador," Truchon
said.
The FBI has NGTF has instituted a criminal file/fingerprint retrieval initiative
known as the Central American Fingerprint Exploitation (CAFÉ). The CAFÉ initiative
has been developed to retrieve the criminal fingerprints from the countries
of El Salvador, Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras.
FBI currently has 3 million criminal fingerprints from Central America and Mexico.
Preliminary results on test batch of first 180,000 prints show over 3,800 hits
(11.75 percent) on existing records 86 hits to active wants. Offenses include
murder, armed robbery, sexual assault, burglary, numerous drug related charges,
and immigration violations.
The FBI's MS-13 task force also has entered a Transnational Anti-Gang Program
to place FBI agents permanently in El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Chiapas,
Mexico, to investigate and counter trans-border gang activity.
"We are making progress in understanding the international connectivity
and flow of people and information between MS-13 and 18th Street in the U.S.,"
Truchon told the conference. "We are going to pursue joint proactive investigations
with Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. We will apply the analytic
efforts of the National Gang Intelligence Center to the effort."
Truchon said that in the FBI's efforts to disrupt and destroy gangs like MS-13
and 18th Street, it has to "reach across jurisdictions, not only from the
federal NGTF at the FBI, but now across to law enforcement officers in Mexico
and Central America."
Joe Trias, a program manager overseeing gang investigations at U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, headquarters, told the conference Operation
Community Shield has arrested some 1,362 MS-13 members or associates since the
program was initiated in February 2005. Of these, 343 were arrested criminally.
Some 637 of the arrestees were found to have had criminal histories.
El Salvador was by far the leading country of origin for some 754 of the arrestees,
followed by Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras.
"We believe that MS-13 controls the smuggling corridors along the Mexican
border, for both drugs and weapons," Trias told the conference.
"MS 13 is not going away," Trias said. "We are seeing second
generation MS-13 members and MS-13 recruitment is increasing. We also see signs
of a more formal criminal structure developing within MS-13, both in the United
States and in Central America."