Watch the video exclusive surveillance tape of murdered casita victim Rosa Garcia.
All along busy Florence Avenue, between Halldale and South Denker, two blocks from the corner where riots erupted over the Rodney King jury verdict in 1992, the air is pungent with the smell of onions and corn tortillas rising from Vicki’s Tacos, a silver lunch truck. On very late weekend nights, there’s usually a line for her tacos once the nearby clubs, El Tiburon and El Nuevo Reno, close, at 2 a.m.
For eight years, Victoria Cortes has fed the after-hours crowd from the same spot, making hers one of the rare businesses still operating on the 1500 block of Florence — openly operating businesses, that is. The others are a tire shop, and a liquor store whose night employee peers out from behind a bulletproof partition. The rest of the storefronts — a sewing shop, hair salon, church hall and 99-cent store — are shuttered. The gloomy alleyways that parallel Florence Avenue attract “street elk” — horribly mangy dogs forgotten by society, which dash between the buildings like coyotes hunting a meal.
The area is a testament to urban decay, gang domination and municipal neglect. Now, it’s the center of a strange new wave of south of the border–style lawlessness. “Casitas” are the problem, though most L.A. residents have never heard of them.
Literally, the Spanish word translates as “little houses.” In Puerto Rico, casitas are community clubhouses surrounded by gardens, where men and women gather on Friday nights. In Mexico, the word is often used to describe a person’s home: “After a hard day of work I am going to my casita,” says Abelardo De La Pena Jr., acting director of the Mexican Cultural Institute.
But in Los Angeles, casitas are a window into secret speakeasies filled with Mexican and other Central American legal and illegal immigrants. They operate in what appear to be shuttered, recession-emptied storefronts or hollowed-out homes. But inside, after entering through secret backdoors or camouflaged hallways, patrons can get almost anything they want, in a one-stop shop: drugs, gambling, heisted cigarettes, after-hours booze and “B-girls” — slang for “bar” girls, or prostitutes, who charge about $60 for sex.
“You never find good people there,” Cortes says, as she glances from her taco truck across Florence Boulevard toward a vacant, yellow building that, until recently, was a heavily fortified after-hours casita cleverly veiled behind a 99-cent bargain store dubbed Fanny’s — after its chunky, 5-foot-tall operator.
Casitas are “indicative of what goes on down south” of the border, says LAPD Homicide Detective Bill Ritch, a young investigator who, as a U.S. Army reservist, has completed two tours of duty in Iraq. “It’s a derivative” from Central America, and what Ritch calls “a violation of all our laws and our standards.”
Yet some casitas have grown so bold they pass out business cards; one was brazenly operating next to a tattoo parlor within a block of LAPD’s 77th Street Area Community Police Station. Similar clubs thrive in many Mexican, Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan towns and villages, where, Ritch says, there’s often “no vice unit. No [building] code process. They pay off the Federales. Here, it’s the same thing. The draw is the B-girls, alcohol and drugs.”
But in L.A., rather than paying off corrupt cops and building inspectors, casitas operate below City Hall’s radar — and they pay their sizable taxes to somebody other than the government.
In the troubled neighborhoods just 10 miles south of L.A.’s gleaming downtown, even legit businesses are often forced to pay stiff taxes to gangs or other entrenched criminal groups. Because they operate off the books, the casitas are even more vulnerable, paying “taxes” of about $500 to $1,500 per week each to the gangs, which in turn pay a kickback to the Mexican Mafia.
L.A. officials have no idea how fast casitas are spreading in the city’s hundreds of closed storefronts and industrial buildings. It wasn’t until a few years ago, when the violence began, that police realized a new problem was percolating in mostly Latino and black neighborhoods long controlled by the Florencia 13 gang south of the 10 freeway, where unemployment has skyrocketed to 21 percent. Aside from beatings and vandalism, at least six people have been murdered in or around casitas. One man — convicted of murder two months ago — was furious over losing a game of poker at a casita on West Gage Avenue in late 2007. Sandra Ramirez saw the enraged shooter firing randomly inside the tiny, crowded house, as drunken gamblers scrambled over card tables, running for their lives toward a backdoor — the front exit had been illegally bolted shut, a practice common in undeveloped nations.
A witness to another murder refused to testify at a preliminary hearing last year, preferring jail time to publicly stating that, two years ago, he allegedly saw Jose Vital shoot his business partner Ricardo Flores inside their jam-packed casita, which was ensconced in a drab, abandoned warehouse on South Avalon Boulevard. Within a week of the September 2007 shooting, which played out in front of numerous casita guests, Flores’ decomposed body was found in the trunk of his nonpermitted “bandit” taxicab — parked in a police tow yard. (Vital’s trial has not begun.)
But it was the January 2008 strangling of Rosa Garcia that revved up the federal and local task force, Operation Treadstone, which had been delving into L.A.’s growing casita phenomenon for only four weeks when she was slain. The pretty, likable young woman with sad eyes had been a familiar face at Vicki’s Tacos, chatting happily as she stood in line. She was found in an alley across the street from the taco truck, two blocks from Florence and Normandie.
Nobody knew Garcia’s full story, but she’d been a B-girl off and on for years, dancing and peddling beers to the men who frequented two casitas — Fanny’s, in the abandoned 99-cent shop, and another one a block away, tucked between the liquor store and a closed hair salon in a cheesy neighborhood mini-mall.
Her murder “kind of haunts us all,” says Sergeant Alma Burke, a no-nonsense cop who supervises the 22-member Operation Treadstone task force. “We really focused more time on [the proliferation of casitas] after her murder.”
LAPD doesn’t pretend to grasp the extent of the casita problem. When the task force began in December 2007, Burke recalls, the police were so perplexed by what they were unearthing in the wasted old houses and barricaded storefronts that, “we thought the B-girls were human-trafficking victims.” Today, the cops know better, as they struggle to understand and stop the latest crime phenomenon in South L.A.
Operation Treadstone was a risky 18-month investigation in which Burke’s 22-person undercover crew of federal ATF agents, vice cops and detectives donned gangwear and grew long hair in order to fit in while haggling with hardcore gang members; the cops bought everything from illegal weapons to meth. Their goal? To catch casita operators and crack down on the legally licensed but shadowy neighborhood bars that help the casitas to thrive by funneling them customers after hours, often in illegal taxis that are part of the underground system.
Vice cops and federal agents quietly launched Operation Treadstone — named after Robert Ludlum’s fictional CIA operation in The Bourne Identity — after a man was shot inside a casita hidden in a dilapidated former mom-and-pop store in a house on Vermont Avenue.
Last June 25, in a sting targeting five casitas, the task force searched 19 homes, apartments and businesses; arrested 27 members and associates of the 18th Street gang; nabbed 15 weapons, more than $42,000 in cash, 18 slot machines, four stolen cars and about 200 pounds of illegal fireworks; and took three endangered children into protective custody.
Undercover agents entered a defunct mom-and-pop store turned casita at 6012 South Vermont Avenue, known as El Guero — “whitey,” after its light-skinned proprietor, Angel Rivera; it appeared abandoned, its windows and doors boarded up. Inside, they found a jammed casita bustling with about 60 men and B-girls, customers supplied by nearby bars such as Chalino’s, according to police. Rivera, a Mexican national and felon with known ties to the 18th Street gang, was raking in illegal cash. In a dungeonlike, windowless hovel in the back, officers found a filthy, blue, foldup mattress — the B-girls’ workspace.
Cops actually remembered Rivera’s loungelike casita from two years earlier, when undercover LAPD officers went inside on another case — and were offered a bucket of six Corona beers for $30, served up, bizarrely, by aging gang members employed as waiters. The cops busted several people that night, but the casita remained open because authorities had their hands full with bigger cases.
LAPD vice officer Melendez (who prefers his first name remain anonymous) explains how the system works: “At the casitas, the doorman will ask the girl if she knows you. She will vouch for me. I make friends with her, so she will back me up. ... They don’t just allow anyone in there. You have to be invited, which is where the legitimate bars come in.”
Explains ATF agent Mike Hoffman, “A lot of time, people are dropped off by bandit taxicabs. The one on Vermont — there were so many people there, and not a lot of cars parked out front. They keep it as low-key as possible. But that is the unique angle in this whole case: These places exist, and they’re a little underworld.”
Now Rivera, who ran the casita on Vermont, is charged with felony possession of a firearm, among other crimes. At his private home near South Park a few miles away, detectives found cocaine, guns, ammunition, a cache of cameras, cell phones and iPods — and four slot machines.
Casita operator Fanny Barros, a Guatemalan national and alleged former B-girl, was busted, and cops closed down her 99-cent-store location, charging her with attempting to buy stolen booze and cigarettes from an undercover cop.
One of the biggest coups for cops was the arrests of members of the De Los Angeles family, who, police believe, are high-level 18th Street gang associates. The 18th Street gang has been crossing into Florencia 13 territory with the blessings of the Mexican Mafia to prey on casitas, extorting taxes and installing slot machines, from which they take up to $1,000 a week while forcing the casitas to pay the winning gamblers. The U.S. Attorney is prosecuting drug felon Felipe De Los Angeles, a slippery Mexican national who attorneys say illegally crossed back into California after he was deported in 2004 upon his release from state prison. (De Los Angeles was acquitted of a 1995 murder on Hollywood Boulevard; LAPD detectives still believe he is guilty.) Cops arrested De Los Angeles’ older brother George, who was found with body armor, ammunition and pistols. Another brother, Victor, was also arrested, and a female relative, Guadalupe Calixto, was taken into custody after selling meth to undercover feds.
The boldness of the casita crime wave is sobering for both the cops and the communities in which they operate. One casita, shut down in June, was just a block from the 77th Street police station. There, on South Broadway, proprietor Rigoberto Vasquez had scrawled a fake street address on the front of his building, apparently in a crude effort to confuse the cops.
On nearby Hyde Park Avenue, cops busted a casita tucked inside Palafox’s Iron Works, a ramshackle salvage yard where Calixto, a De Los Angeles family member, was the proprietor. There, police stumbled upon an employee living in a makeshift wooden lean-to, relying on a cook stove — an image straight out of rural East Asia.
The cops tend to catch casita operators for lower-level felonies, like receiving stolen cases of beer or cigarettes, but the criminal activity goes deeper: A month before the June raid, two Mexican men were gunned down as they walked toward the casita at Palafox’s Iron Works. LAPD Homicide Detective Refugio Garza says two Latino friends of the slain men, who, he believes, are eyewitnesses, continue to insist that they saw nothing that night and have refused to cooperate. “A lot of them still think they shouldn’t report a crime because they will be deported,” Garza says with disgust.
Rosa Garcia, 35, was a regular at Florence Avenue’s El Tiburon, a gritty Mexican-style bar with a wooden shark’s head gracing the entrance. Beer is cheap: $3 for a can of Modelo. Patrons listen to ranchero-style music and Latin American pop hits or chat up seductively dressed women who lean near the bar.
These women are B-girls, who dance or keep men company at clubs for cash despite a sign at one bar, El Felix, which reads, in Spanish: “No B-girls!” A beer and the company of a B-girl cost $10, while sex (if engaged in) is $40 to $60. “A guy pays $10 for the beer, five goes to the bar and five goes to the girl,” says LAPD Homicide Detective Tommy Thompson.
“Girls get hooked on meth, hang out at these places and reach bottom, and go back to their families to clean themselves out,” Thompson says. “There is a constant rotation of people.”
Taco truck operator Victoria Cortes met Garcia seven years ago, when the El Tiburon was called Las Hadas, after a famed resort in Mexico. Garcia lived with a roommate on West 120th Street, and her son Steven is believed to be living with a relative in L.A.
Garcia disappeared after the last ownership change, and when she returned she was “skinny,” Cortes recalls. “She didn’t care anymore. She didn’t care about her body. She didn’t care about herself.”
Sgt. Burke says many B-girls turn to prostitution out of desperation, and keep their activities quiet because “in Hispanic culture it is a sin. You are going to hell if you are promiscuous.”
Although Garcia worked as a B-girl, police believe she wasn’t involved in prostitution at the time of her death. One of her frequent haunts was Fanny’s, a claustrophobically small speakeasy with slot machines and a jukebox.
“After El Nuevo Reno closed [at 2 a.m.], many people would go inside” the casita, says Ted Park, an amiable man who runs Fast Tire on Florence Avenue next to Fanny’s. “I open my shop at 8 a.m., and I would see many people walking around dazed and hung-over.”
Sitting on a chair pulled into the middle of the parking lot, a middle-aged Latino adds, “I heard the females [at Fanny’s] were beautiful. Top dollar.” He didn’t frequent it, he says, because it was too expensive, yet he knew “they sold beer for $2.”
It must have been profitable, because Fanny Barros was paying about $500 in “taxes” weekly to the 18th Street gang. Not long ago, the gang that had been shaking her down stole the illegal slot machines at Fanny’s, commandeering them from their real owners, an elusive group of Armenian gangsters who had been providing Fanny 20 percent of the slot-machine take. Later, the 18th Street gang reinstalled the slot machines at Fanny’s but cut her out of their profits even as they forced her to pay any winning gamblers.
For all the underground riches that flow through these casitas, they don’t look like much. One urban tableau recalls the slums of Rio: In the alleyway near the back entrance of Fanny’s, a soiled mattress serves as a makeshift boudoir for B-girls and their customers, used condoms and condom wrappers strewn around.
A disgusted neighbor, whose property line shared the alley with Fanny’s, has added 3 feet of new fence height and topped it with a nasty roll of barbed wire. He had no choice: People were continually jumping over his fence — to have sex in his backyard.
It was a typical, fed-up citizen who found Rosa Garcia. Not far down the street from the filthy mattress that served as a quickie mart for sex, a man sweeping outside his home found her seminude and barefoot body near some trash. Her small, black-leather purse was still wrapped over her right shoulder and tucked by her side. She had no driver’s license or California identification except for a Golden State Advantage EBT card bearing her name. Oddly, a tape measure was found near her body.
Police say Garcia was already dead when she was dragged several feet. Her black, high-heeled wedge sandals were found where the drag marks began.
LAFD paramedics who arrived at the grisly scene placed her blue jeans over her nude lower body out of respect. LAPD’s Grim Sleeper Task Force was called to determine if she might be a victim of the serial killer, who has been killing mostly women and dumping their bodies in South Los Angeles alleyways since 1985.
“She was in an alley at Florence and Halldale, which is only a block from where [Grim Sleeper victim] Thomas Steele was found,” says Detective Cliff Shepard, but police say the Grim Sleeper was not involved this time.
Victoria Cortes recalls that Rosa Garcia walked past her taco stand at around 10 p.m. the night she died, on her way to hang out at El Tiburon. Then at 2 a.m., Garcia visited the taco stand with her roommate and two Latino strangers. Cortes remembered one of the men from earlier. She had served him tacos, and he’d borrowed a lighter. She described him as a construction worker or painter. He was wearing workman’s boots — and had a measuring tape clipped to his jeans.
“They were joking, and she was pretending she was strangling him,” Cortes recalls.
Cortes never saw Garcia again. “When we were working here, they were killing her,” Cortes says. “I got goose bumps. I thought they maybe tried to rob her. I got afraid. ... Maybe she didn’t want to go to bed with this guy [or] maybe she took his money.”
It’s just after 10:30 p.m. on July 22, and a special roll call is under way in the basement squad room of LAPD’s 77th Street station, where the Operation Treadstone task force and cops from several cooperating LAPD stations have gathered.
It’s one month after the task force’s June raid that closed five casitas, and now the room is filled with burly uniformed officers and muscular undercover cops in jeans and rock T-shirts. They ooze testosterone, and the place has the feel of an audition room for the World Wrestling Federation. Some chat amiably, while others lean against the walls with their arms crossed, their guns resting in their holsters. There’s mild tension in the air. Or maybe that’s just how a visitor sees it.
Things get very quiet when a group of LAPD brass walks in to explain tonight’s raid on five bars in South L.A. The commander, using PowerPoint, describes the licensed bars they plan to crack down on, and the 12 men and women named in felony warrants.
One key aim of the evening is to hobble the legal bars that feed into the casita network. The cops are slightly on edge. A previous raid ended before it got started, when City Attorney Carmen Trutanich shut down the operation, arguing that the cops lacked search warrants to enter the clubs. Police were finally going out without search warrants, which, they maintain, are not needed.
This night’s targets are well-documented nuisance bars that perpetually violate city codes and, police say, regularly sell drugs and weapons. Last year, for example, undercover ATF agents purchased drugs and six guns inside Chalino’s, and an El Felix Bar security guard sold undercover agents cocaine and meth, bought cases of beer from them and paid with drugs, and brokered a deal to let the undercover agents purchase a Glock .40 caliber handgun for $600.
More than 100 cops are soon swarming South L.A. on this warm July night, raiding such bars as El Tiburon, Chalino’s and El Nuevo Reno. (L.A. Weekly was allowed to accompany the officers.)
At Chalino’s, on South Broadway, a heavyset B-girl sits at the bar, her jet-black hair arranged in a ponytail up-do that cascades from the crown of her head to below her hips, her breasts nearly escaping her short, red-satin dress’s “sweetheart” bodice. She is all of a piece, her look completed by a pair of outlandish, red, high-heeled Grecian sandals whose red-satin laces crisscross her legs to just below her knees. Her area of interest this night is an older Latino nursing a beer. She’s almost certainly earning $5 to sit with him for about 15 minutes.
When L.A. Weekly asks two B-girls nearby a few questions, they look away, glare at the police and speak Spanish among themselves. Nobody runs. Safe in this legal bar, they know the police will only haul away wanted gang members and felons, or cite a bar owner if he or she is breaking liquor-license laws by serving minors or selling drinks after hours.
Certain L.A. residents might get an uneasy feeling from Chalino’s, even though it is near the 77th Street police station and is licensed by the state Department of Alcohol Beverage Control. Displayed proudly on a shelf next to Jesus candles, rosary beads and a poster of a big-breasted Budweiser girl is a bust of Jesus Malverde, the Mexican “patron saint” of narcotics traffickers. Remarks one undercover federal agent who spots it, “It’s amazing that it’s so brazenly sitting at the front of the bar.”
By evening’s end, police have visited several legitimate bars and snared bar crawlers, including a wanted burglary suspect, and even a bar employee posing as a security guard.
Although the City Attorney’s Office has tried to stop these rough licensed bars from acting as feeders for illegal speakeasies — the city recently filed two abatement procedures against El Tiburon and El Felix Bar — casitas pop up like pimples on a teenager. Since the big June raid, Burke believes that Mexican and Guatemalan nationals, as well as the 18th Street and Florencia 13 gangs, run by the Mexican Mafia, have opened at least eight more casitas.
Jose lives with his young family on the trashed-and-neglected Hoover Street, not far from a casita that moved there from Vermont Avenue. The casita was shut down on June 25, but its owners simply reopened another one, next to a Hoover Street alternator shop. Jose says, “I never complained, because I know how [casita owners] would react.” But, “Every weekend, we would see something happening.”
So, taking an action police say is far too rare, Jose’s neighbor finally complained to LAPD.
“My friend has a van,” he explains. “It got damaged on the side. I know how they work. The bars close at 2, then they open the casitas. They would pass by my house, drunk, talking loudly, smoking and drinking around the corner. Someone started a fire in a trash can. They gave everybody a hard time for two or three months. We reported it to the police.”
Authorities responded by ordering the owner to close the new Hoover Street casita, but it will most likely reappear somewhere else, supplied with new customers by the gritty licensed bars that work in symbiosis with them. On September 11, the day after the L.A. city attorney filed nuisance-abatement procedures against the El Tiburon and El Felix bars, Sgt. Burke was parked outside El Felix with undercover officers who’d gotten a tip that nonpermitted strippers were already back, performing illegal table dances for customers for $1 a song.
In a city as big and troubled as L.A., the police and politicians are largely reliant on residents themselves to stand up and refuse to accept what is unfolding around them. In the lobby of the 77th Street police station is a poster offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of the person who killed Rosa Garcia. In the poster, Garcia’s sunken eyes contrast starkly with her lovely face.
Leads on that case have all but dried up, except for a surveillance tape made the night she died, retrieved by police from a security camera installed years ago by Vicki’s Tacos. The video shows a nameless Latino with a measuring tape, flirting with Rosa Garcia.
Reach the writer at cpelisek@laweekly.com.
I should like to know the criterion for posting on this site. My posts disappear.
I'm a writer and enjoy participation in news commentaries. I see all kinds of spam, vitriolic language, partisan and racist views. But apparently all things are ok so long as you're not critical of the article or you provide insights that differ from the status quo.
I'm an expat living away from California, is that the problem? I think we have a serious social and political issues with overbearing government, insidious corporatism, and the loss of our Bill of Rights. Am I the only one?
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yea go to Hard Rock or Hollywood and pay 6.00/10.00 for a warm beer. how arrogant and uppity and bla bla bla people wanna stay close to home. ya want they should go to fullerton and get killed by police?
that's what you los angelino's get for letting the city fall into the urban decay it now is.
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Folks, these "casitas" are not legally authorized. Period. This is more of the rampant corruption in our city. The zoning people know about it. The cops know about it. The City Hall knows about it. This city is operating this way for a political reason:
Cheap labor, and votes.
This is defacto slavery. Otherwise, we would see the various governments jumping to increase legal immigration from Mexico. That would solve the problem immediately. So why are we not seeing LEGAL immigration quotas being increased drastically?
The "undocumented" (funny, euphemistic term) send MONEY back to their country of origin. They plan on retiring their once they save up enough to buy a true "casita". Meanwhile, back here in "El Norte", they are only able to work for sub-par wages. some unscrupulous business people (read: 100's of thousands of 'em) just want to make a buck and they don't really care what else happens, so they hire 'em no questions asked.
The governments, which are now mainly staffed with one particular political party (the evil one...the other one is the dumb one), have figured out that naive voters who have not carefully looked at political facts in the US will obviously vote for their party, which is always protrayed as the party of the people, and the one most sympathetic to the common man (a total lie, when you examine how big government and big business are joined at the hip).
So, those who really do favor the immigrant, would want to crack down on this, and remove each and every one of the existing local goverment leaders, then, while they are at it, crack down on every business hiring 'em, and then jack up quotas of immigrants like 100 to 200 times what they are now.
Of course they will need to do this over the strenuous objections of the Calderon administration (which is just as culpable as is the USA).
going to the bar is slavery? get a grip. you're worried illegul messicans gonna get a job. you need more skills or confidence.
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Mexico is in North America.
And yeah, because no one in the United States who isn't Hispanic does drugs solicits prostitutes gambles or takes illegal drugs.
"Idicative of what goes on down South." Have you ever been there? Have you lived there for any significant amount of time?
You racist pricks make me sick.
Just because other people do it to, doesn't make it acceptable. Oh, and I have spent plenty of time south of the border, and the drug use and prostitution was at least much more visible. Maybe there wasn't more of it than there is here, but it sure seemed like it...
Those so quick to whine racism too often confuse it with fact. These are facts being reported, about the casitas, if you don't like them, change your behavior and that of your "culture". What I want to know is how all of these "legal" bars were ever licensed? How can an illegal, felon immigrant be able to own one of these "bars"? Did Trutanich sign the papers himself? If not,(and even more if so!), get rid of all of them and all the human-offal ridden casitas with them. If permits/licenses were granted, they can just as easily be revoked. Arrest and deport. Repeat. Although sad for Rosa Garcia, here is another illegal (now formerly) on OUR EBT system. That should also be illegal. Arrest and deport...
This article isn't racist, at least not too much. It's sensational, and it hits at some painful facts, and these facts recall some negative stereotypes. Maybe it could have been written more sensitively. Maybe don't use a term like "south of the border" because that has a lot of negative baggage. It could have been handled more like the SGV whorehouse story.
Most of the others saying its not racism - you are just confused and sound foolish, because you don't even know what racism is. Or, worse, you are racists.
The content is not racist. It's describing a real problem of speakeasies opening up in vacant storefronts.
The real racism here is embedded in the history and existence of South Central L.A., an issue which the rest of LA has not fixed.
This article won't lead to doing anything positive for South Central LA. Just like the SGV whorehouse story didn't stop that problem. That's the real racism.
Since when does the LA Weekly hire Minutemen publicists to write their articles? Its not so much that the article is inacurate, its just that the paranoid sensationalism that drives the narrative that renders it offensive. And I was under the impression that the speakeasy was more or less an American inovation...
I totally agree with FSL from Pasadena. Latinos is not a race. That�s just some bullshit White America came up with (that�s another story). Why are Mexicans screaming racism towards Latinos? Casitas are a Mexican thing definitely not a Latino thing. They are giving all �Latinos� a bad name. I am happy the police are cracking down on them. And so no one will say that I am a Gringo. My ethnic background is Latino. And I could definitely assure you that Central And South American people don�t go to �Casitas�.So please stop giving the rest of us a bad name. Mexican is not a race it is a Nationality.
Latino But Not Mexican, Los Angeles, CA
Excellent article. Just because it exposes an ugly truth does not make it racist. There are only three races on the planet: Caucasoid, Mongoloid and Negroid. The issue of the U.S. being invaded by an estimated 14 million people from other countries is not a racial one -- much as the bleeding heart liberals would like it to be. It's an issue of people from certain countries invading another country. Nations used to go to war over issues such as this. If this were the Middle East or Eastern Europe, we would be taking up arms over this crisis. But we're too mamby-pamby. The weather here is too mild and the surf is so excellent, Dude.
The desire to have a sovereign border is too politically incorrect in this day and age. It offends too many people.
If we could muster up the "juevos" to enforce our immigration laws, it would go a long, long way in reducing other illegal activities, such as the ones depicted in the article. People who are used to breaking certain laws have no problem in breaking a series of other laws.
Thank you, LA WEEKLY, for having the courage to print this article. Of course, it would be a cold day in hell when we would read anything like this in the LA TIMES, a publication that pretty much has no problem with the phenomena of illegal immigration.
I dont see nothing wrong with the bars its the casitas ran by gang members that should be targeted by police. i drink at one of these bars the police is full of shit. they need to investigate better the bar that i go the only thing they did wrong was purchased beer from a undercover cop wow thats a big crime and they are trying to take their business away the city is full of it.
Wow! Think about how boring it was in the former USA before we got all this wonderful cultural enrichment from south of the border. Everywhere in this country that becomes more "Latinized" becomes so much more vibrant! Thanks people!!! Keep up the great work so we can someday reach our brightest hopes and aspirations of being another great "Latin American" country!
Bravo to the L.A. Weekly for excellent investigative work. There is absolutely ZERO racism going on in this extremely important article, as the politically correct reactionaries charge.
this article isn't racist, this artlcle sad and haunting and illuminates the isolation provided for residents of this huge city. i praise the writer.
Truly worthwhile reading......
I spent 30 years in Montebello/East LA/Hoover, etc... This story is not racist, I had no idea about them. Nice photos by the photographer. Can I be your apprentice :)
This is a racist article, oh geez how come this white girl doesn't write about her "white sisters" getting gang banged on video for porno out in San Fernando Valley. What about all the social decay that creates, oh yeah I forgot it's ok when whites do it. The LA Weekly is becoming more right wing on a weekly basis, look out FOX you got competition.
Wow, that is without doubt the fattest cop I have ever seen!
Is there a place left in America that's not dysfunctional? It's greatest cities are rotting away from the inside. Glad I made it out of the U.S. Sorry for the rest of you though.
LA is the worst city in the United States, next to New York.
Stop bitching about over population and move out of the craphole of city you all live in.
Live in reality, not some artificial concrete jungle.
Racism? This article is painful for a latino and Mexican American to read. But it is not racism. What is racist is the corrupt, very white Mexican elite that forces so many of its people into abject poverty. Take a look at spanish language TV to see how the racial caste system works throughout Latin America. The casitas are at the lower end of the caste system that is being imported into the US and they serve a purpose for the Mexican cartels that are operating more and more brazenly. I feel for the people of South Central who now must live under the oppression they thought they had left behind. This should be an eye opener to Latinos eveywhere. If we don't live up to our obligations as Americans, Latin America's corrupt ogliarchs will oppress right here in the land of the free.
So much ignorance all over the place. Since when are Latinos a race? There are black, white, east asian, indian (american), and mixed latinos. And since when do reporters have to match the genetic, national, or cultural make-up of the subjects they cover?
I DO NOT VIEW THIS ARTICLE AS RACIST AT ALL. IT IS GREAT THAT THIS WRITER BROUGHT THESE ISSUES TO THE PUBLIC EYE.PERHAPS THE WORD OF CHOICE IS WHAT BOTHERS OTHERS. THERE ARE OTHER AREAS OF THE CITY SUCH AS IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY WHERE SEVERAL "MASSAGE SPAS" SERVE AS UNDERCOVER SEX SERVICES. I MEAN, THIS IS HAPPENING EVERYWHERE! PERHAPS THESE AREAS CAN ALSO BE WRITTEN ABOUT. THIS CITY IS CHAOTIC AND REGARDLESS WHO WRITES THESE ARTICLES, WHAT CAN WE DO AS A SOCIETY TO MAKE IT A SAFER PLACE. THESE CRIMES ARE HIGHLY ORGANIZED AND IT IS SUCESSFUL IN A COMMUNITY WHERE IT IS HIGHLY SURROUNDED BY POVERTY AND CRIMES. THESE WOMEN ARE PROSTITUTING THEMSELVES BC THEY NEED MONEY! ITS ALL ABOUT MONEY AND POWER!
Try pressing the button on the left side of your keyboard, in between the tab and shift keys.
Why is it that when someone is bold enough to write about a problem affecting us in south LA all the others who don't live here and run away from this area scream racism. Then I beg you to let the casistas take their illegal activities to your neighborhoods. It's not just casistas, manhy of the illegal immigrants now have loud parties in their yards with flashing stobe lights keeping everybody up at night. The sole purpose of many of these activities is to sell drugs and alcohol. They charge people to come in and set up just like a club and the police never respond to noise complaints unless you tell them that there are gangs involved. We the decent, hardworking homeowners of south LA who did not run away from the city are suffering. So I don't want to hear any of you talk about racism. Let's talk about how this city council has sent our city into decay. Let's talk about the lack of police response to all these noisy parties in people's yards. WRITE ON LA WEEKLEY. AND I DON'T CARE ABOUT THE RACE OF THE WRITER. THANK GOD SOMEONE IS FINALLY ADDRESSING OUR PROBLEMS.
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I have lived in L.A. my whole life and sadly this story doesn't surprise me. Everyday I see my beloved city fall further into decay...schools, vandalism, illegal taco venders (not taco trucks) weekly yards sales by the same people..etc. Why should we tolerate this....we whom have lived here are whole lives are having our culture taken from us and turned into the 3rd world. I am also frustrated and tired of complaining with nobody to turn to...Nobody has a solution. This isn't about racism this is about QUALITY OF LIFE...
Yeah, and while your at it, lets put those "No Irish Need Apply" signs up and there'd be more jobs. And send all the Dagos back because they're all mafioso types and everybody knows it. Look at New Jersey for heavens sake.
We should reenact the "Sunset Laws", you know, the one where you have to be out of town before sunset if you of that particular color...
Move over baby, they ain't makin' new dirt and they just won't quit makin' new babies. The world is shrinking. Have a taco.
JH Gordonhttps://www.smashwords.com/boo...
PS. I remember LA 50 years ago. It was ugly then too. Nothing seems to have changed much except the minds seem a little narrower.
I wish I could say I was surprised by the responses so far. The issue with the casitas as I see it isn't that folks go there to drink and hang out in a culturally appropriate way. It's the trafficking in women, guns and drugs. The associated violence and murders.
Whatever your cultural background, those make it a police matter, and Christene's incredibly well-written story shows not only that - but also the complexity and richness of the culture around them.
This article is disgusting. I am shocked that the LA Weekly allowed it. A complete lack of understanding of the culture and status of illegal aliens and hispanics in this country. These bars are illegal but it is an issue for zoning and the state beverage control and not the LAPD, state and federal agents. These "law agents" have wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars of tax money for nothing. These cops should be protecting good citizens instead of busting illegals for minor drugs offenses. This country encouraged the illegals to come here and fails to properly deal with them now. Using military style police for this issue is crazy. The decriminalization of drugs, the deportation of illegals, and the proper clean up of our city would be a better article than trying to justify the police raids that accomplish nothing. The reporter tried to connect the horrible murder of the lady to the bars. The real story is the failure of the govt in being able to identify aliens in this country and track them and control their deportation.
Racism is judging a someone by their race, as the previous commentator does by insinuating that only latinos can accurately or fairly write about latinos issues and that an on point headline by an anglo is "racist".
As explained in the story these "casitas" ARE south of the border style. They are set-up and run in the same manner as small bars in other countries. That these actions legal or tolerated in Latin America are neither legal nor tolerated (sometimes) in this country is a symptom of the clash of cultures, but not of any kind of racism.
Those most racist themselves always find others to be racist just as theives think everyone around them is also a thief.
I know South American culture and I can confirm Casitas do exist. But so do so many other businesses, they and the casitas must be called "home grown". Thereare the little juice vendors or a barbecue taco or anticucho stands. They are the guy who repairs tires in the yard of his home or the woman who repairs bicycles and sells used ones. Call it a clash of cultures if you wish, but I call it a clash of the taxing agencies.
The "culture" of home grown mom and pop businesses only got squeezed out in the 1950s. I knew a man with a fruit stand, the fellow who had an ice box on the back of a Model A pickup and satisfied the neighborhood kids ice cream jones, and it was his wife who made the ice cream. Tax is what it's all about and the shock and disgust and fear mongering put out by those who would control would be humorous if it weren't so pathetic.
You've read about city governments who stopped people from growing food in their own yards. There's a guy living in a suburban area who got busted because he had a few chickens out in the country. The city even changed the zoning laws to screw with him because he had the temerity to tell them to stick it.
Now, even a couple of little girls selling lemonade are subject to the Big Brother mentality that is quickly ruining this country. But the casitas are more than "criminal activity" they represent a resilient humanity dealing with an economy made by bad tax laws that export jobs and crush the life out of anyone who opposes them. There are tax laws that allow corporations to deduct the money they owe "US" and divert it into political coffers. Everything else runs on OUR money because corporations pay very little tax or none at all.
The corporate homogenizing of America is in full press. We are allowing government to control every aspect of our lives. I say, let people survive as long as they don't hurt anyone else. The casitas open after hours hurt no one. That you can buy a joint or rent a hooker may be shocking but you can do the same thing at most any hotel in Vegas.
This is about selective enforcement. I say until they start busting criminal bankers on Wall Street, they have no right to enforce anything. That's why people are having to do anything they can to survive and government is criminalizing life.
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THESE STORIES ARE WHAT HAPPEN WHEN THE LA WEEKLY HAS NO LATINO WRITERS OR STAFFERS. "SOUTH-OF-THE-BORDER-STYLE"? GIVE ME A BREAK!!! BRING BACK LAURIE OCHOA!!!
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